| 
			
			
			ON LINCOLN'S MIND 
            
			 A bad idea for clearing Charleston Harbor 
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            [November 
			02, 2013] 
            SPRINGFIELD -- With Nov. 19 
			marking the 150th anniversary of the Gettysburg Address, the Abraham 
			Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum is featuring letters to or 
			by Lincoln, written between the end of Battle of Gettysburg on July 
			3, 1863, and his famous speech at Gettysburg. Each letter represents 
			one of the many issues he had to face as chief executive of the 
			nation during its greatest crisis.  | 
		
            |  With stalemate the order of the day, many citizens and friends 
			offered Lincoln unsolicited advice on solving some of the military's 
			most vexing problems. Case in point: Charleston Harbor. 
			Charleston's political and economic importance to the war effort was 
			clear to both sides: It was the birthplace of secession and a hotbed 
			for blockade-running. However, the massive harbor was extremely 
			difficult to invade due to its formidable fortifications (the famous 
			charge of the 54th Massachusetts at Battery Wagner was also part of 
			the larger campaign to take Charleston) and the preponderance of 
			Confederate mines or "torpedoes." 
			Here is one potential solution:
			 ___  Logan U. Reavis to Abraham LincolnOct. 19, 1863
 (Copy of letter transcript) 
			Central Illinoian Office 
			Beardstown Ill. Oct 19, 63 
			President Lincoln 
			Dear sir: As difficulties 
			naturally suggest remedies, the ingenuity of the war department is 
			brought to bear upon the difficulties in Charleston Harbor, and as 
			the difficulties consist in the rebel Torpedoes and their removal 
			would insure the success of our arms, may I not suggest one thing of 
			a novel nature to you, that you may consider whether their can be 
			any thing made of it. You are aware that there are a kind of people 
			in the world which owing to some freek of nature can see better in 
			the night than they can in the daytime now might not some of those 
			kind of men be hunted up and taken to gen. Gilmore and let him 
			arrange some small boats say not much larger than canoes, then let 
			ropes be prepared with hooks tied down in the manner of anchors, 
			then let these night seers quietly go out at night and pay out these 
			ropes in the manner of a sein, and then by dragging them in, the 
			hooks will catch the Torpedoes and the ropes holding them and that 
			way a good work may be done for our cause. Of course the idea is a 
			novel one, but may their not be some good in it. some of those kind 
			of people lived at Greenville Bond co. some years ago. If such 
			couild be used I suppose plenty could be found. RespectfullyL. U. Reavis
 
 
			 
 
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
			 Reavis was an Illinois lawyer and newspaper editor. His plan to 
			use the supposed "night seeers" of Greenville Bond County was 
			certainly bizarre but was far from the strangest military idea 
			offered to Lincoln. Regardless, the desperation to capture Charleston that undergirds 
			Reavis' scheme was very real. Indeed, Union soldiers did not occupy 
			the city until February 1865, and then only after almost a full year 
			of constant artillery bombardment combined with the approach of 
			William T. Sherman's army from the rear. Nevertheless, propositions like Reavis' surely did not hold the 
			key to Charleston Harbor, and Lincoln likely condemned this letter 
			to the same file that was home to numerous other supposedly 
			war-winning ideas that were discarded. ___ To see one of only five copies of the Gettysburg Address in 
			Lincoln's hand and to receive a free booklet titled "On Lincoln's 
			Mind: Leading the Nation to the Gettysburg Address," containing this 
			and other document stories, visit the Abraham Lincoln Presidential 
			Library and Museum between Nov. 18 and 24. 
            [By the editors of the 
			Papers of 
			Abraham Lincoln. Text from file provided by the
Abraham 
			Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum 
			and received from the Illinois Historic 
			Preservation Agency] |