| 
			
			
			
			 ON LINCOLN'S MIND 
            Rock Island Arsenal and a governor's pleading 
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            [September 
			28, 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. Each letter represents one of the 
			many issues he had to face as chief executive of the nation during 
			its greatest crisis. This week the letter is from Illinois Gov. 
			Richard Yates to President Lincoln. | 
		
            |  Richard Yates to Abraham Lincoln Aug. 5, 1863
 (Copy of transcript) State of IllinoisExecutive Department.
 Springfield Augst 5 1863.
 His ExcellencyAbraham Lincoln President &c
 Washington D.C.
 Sir:  I desire to submit 
			the within most important paper of Citizens of Rock Island and to 
			request your earnest attention. It certainly is of the utmost 
			importance that the Arsenal at R Island be at once commenced and 
			completed, and I trust that the transfer of the Island of R. Island 
			to the Iowa Military Department & jurisdiction will not for a single 
			moment be entertained, and that you will set the minds of the people 
			of R. Island and of the State easy by immediate direction to Capt 
			Reynolds A. Q. M. or in such manner as you may deem best.  Very Respectfully,Richd Yates
 Governor
 [Endorsement] Respectfully 
			referred to the Secretary of War.A. Lincoln
 Aug. 12. 1863.
 ___ (For a PDF copy of the handwritten document,
			click here.) 
			
			 
 
			
			 
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			 This letter from Illinois Gov. Yates amply demonstrated one of 
			Lincoln's other concerns: keeping all loyal state governors happy -- 
			especially Republican ones. Congress approved construction of the 
			Rock Island Arsenal in July 1862, and the long delay clearly grated 
			on Yates. Construction began three weeks later with the foundation 
			of the Clock Tower but did not conclude until after the war. 
			 With great armies marching throughout the nation and the fate of 
			the American Union in the balance, the construction and jurisdiction 
			of an arsenal deep within the North may seem insignificant, but the 
			politics of such decisions gave them great importance. Lincoln could 
			not merely ignore or delegate such a matter, as an incorrect 
			decision could lose him vital political support or generate unwanted 
			strain in his party -- less than a decade old when this letter was 
			written. Juggling competing personalities and interests was a major 
			concern, and a major distraction, for Lincoln. ___ To see one of only five copies of the Gettysburg Address in 
			Lincoln's hand and 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] |