tt^ttsentf H IffiiigiwI I THE MOST EVENTFUL PERIOD IN AMERICAN HISTORY. TOVVNSEND'S NATIONAL RECORD Concerning the Great Civil War and its Consequences^ Considering the recent events that attracted the attention of the world towards American affairs — the extraordinary conflict that thus particularly affected the political, military and social con- dition of our National Union, and, incidentally, the rights and interests of mankind generally — we may well revive recollections of th.^ patriotic movements in this Commercial Metropolis, while the rebel guns were yet thundering against Fort Sumter — when our Citizens first assembled to provide means for sustaining a National Govern- ment.t hen bankrupt, and threatened with de- struction — and when one of the speakers in our Chamber of Commerce, James Gallatin (him- self the son of a statesman prominent in estab- lishing American Freedom), enthusiastically in- voked his countrymen to arouse to the full importance of the crisis — saying that " History will make record of our proceedings, and that record will be consulted by future generations for encouragement, for instruction, and for warning through all time." And right well also may we remember the last words of the gallant Winthrop, one of the earliest martyrs of the battle-field, when his patriotic spirit breathed a hope that " some competent person would keep a careful record of events, for we were making History with lightning speed." But neither Gallatin, nor Winthrop, nor any other of the most sanguine men of that time, could then have formed any adequate idea of the long duration, the vast proportions, and immense con- sequences of the war thus forced upon us, for Na- tional self-preservation. \ Even now — after having witnessed in this last ecade more varied events and mightier results than flowed from any former century, it is diffi- cult for any one to conceive that any private citizen could have been found bold enough to undertake the task, and enthusiastic and brave enough to persevere amid extraordinary difficul- ties in forming a " Record " far surpassing any- thing which the above mentioned speakers could have imagined. And yet, it is in the power of any intelligent oitizen, by inspecting Townsend's great work in the "Society Library Building" in University Place, New York, to witness a most faithful and impartial " Record " of every event and person prominent enough for notice of any kind, on either side, during the convulsions of that prolific period, A " Record" which is a library in itself, creditable to the nation as well as to its author — a work so remarkable, that no one who has not actually examined it can have any adequate idea, except from concurrent statements of well-known Citi- zens, and Public Journals, and prominent Socie- ties, extracts from which we prefer to submit to our readers rather than attempt to describe, what is so vividly portrayed by so many others, in whose judgment the whole community have per- fect confidence. Differing as they may on poli- tical questions, it will be seen by the quotations we have impartially made, that all the writers and speakers concur cordially, in bearing testi- mony to the character of " Townsend's Record, and Encyclopaedia of the Great Rebellion, and its Consequences." After glancing at the Historical Collection which may be there seen — or even after reading the many concurrent testimonials herewith pre- sented, the reader will doubtless cordially ap- plaud and concur in the patriotic and generous feeling with which several prominent gentlemen are combining' to promote the public interests by helping Mr. Townsend in completing the great National Work, to which he has devoted nearly thirteen years of life and many thousands of dollars. The gentlemen to whom we allude are Governor Dix, Chief Justice Chase, John Jacob Astor, Peter Cooper, Moses Taylor, Mar- shall O. Roberts, Frederick De Peyster, Samuel L. Mitchell, Theodore Roosevelt, Adrian Iselin, Edward Cooper, John Taylor Johnston, George B. M'Clellan, Wilson G. Hunt, Mayor Have- meyer, Frank E. Howe, S. L. M. Barlow, Cyrus W. Field, Professor Morse, George Opdyke, John P. Townsend, William F. Gary, S. B. Chit- tenden, Benjamin H. Hutton, Jeremiah Curtis and Peter Townsend, who have each contributed $ioo towards making up a sum of at least $10,000 to promote the completion of this extraor- dinary undertaking — those gentlemen expressing, in the subscription paper, their "appreciation of the great service rendered to the cause of History by Mr. Thomas S. Townsend, of this city, in his self-assumed labors, for the benefit of this, and suc- ceeding generations, and as an evidence that his fellow-citizens are not ungrateful towards those who originate and carr}' out enterprises resulting in gn-at public good — to enable him to complete the remaining portion of the work upon whicli he has been so long and laboriously engaged." Gov. Dix says, in one of his letters, that histoically, the "value of this work is inestimable;" and it may be incidentally remarked that the pecuniary value, estimated by men who know the peculiar value attached to such "a Historical Treasury, by the managers of Great Libraries through the world, is variously set down at between $So,ooo and .f 100,000. And in connection with the eoiiple- tion of the work, it may be added, that very much of the most important matter connected with the war and its consequences, is even now (1873) ap- pearing in the dailj^ prints, in controversies be- tween men who were prominent on both sides, Confiiierate as well as National, during the whole ot the Civil Strife — as, for instance, between Jeilerson Davis and ex-Senator Foote, and also between Gen. Sherman and Gen. Wade Hampton concerning the burning of the city of Columbia, &c. — and proper regard for the truth of history, for "justice to all sides," renders it desirable that all Such matter shall be fully included in the '■ National Record." The names of Contributors for this patriotic purpose — a purpose in which the Nation at large is interested, far beyond Mr. Townsend indivi- dually — are inscribed as fast as received, on Memorial Tablets, besides being acknowledged tiirough the newspapers — 'SO that the American People, may know what citizens have aided in the completion of this great Record ok their Country's Ann.\i.s : And the veneration with which society remembers the prominent men who anywise aided the patriotic cause during our Revolutionary Era, clearly indicates that tliese "Memorial Tablets". will acquire increasing re- spect as time rolls by, in the estimation of the public, as well as of the families and descen- dants of the Contributors, to whose patriotic spirit these Mementoes, — more permanent than marble, — will form enduring monuments. Among the well-known gentlemen who have, through a dozen of years, watched the progress of this enterprise with the liveliest interest, the Rev. S. Iren.kls Prime may be early mentioned, as his knowledge (like that of the Rev. Henry W. Bellows, Gov. Dix, and a few others), " began with the beginning;" and his remarks about the char- acteristics of the work, may serve as an ap[)ro- priate introduction to the quotations made from the opinions expressed by many others. Dr. Prime made the following statement in one of his recent editorials in the New York Ohsen'er : " Upon the election of Mr. Lincoln to tlie Presidency, in i860, when the first mutterings of ilie coming storm were heard, Mr. Thomas S. Townsend, (son of the late John R. Townsend, of this city,) conceived the idea of collecting, and arranging in a form for ready reference, the chronicle of current events as it was given in the daily papers, as well as the comments and ad- dresses made, when the particulars were fresh in the minds of the writers and speakers of the day. With a clear perception of the merits of the metro- politan press, he considered that he should find in the pages of the New York journals, either in an original or extracted form, everything that 7uas loorth preset-c'ing ; for everything really of conse- quence, that appears in the papers of other cities some way, or some time, finds its way into the papers of New York city. Therefore, after care- ful consideration and examination of the ground, the author decided that between the objections of a too limited range, as not being exhaustive, and of a size too great to be really serviceable, the golden mean would be nearest found in con- fining the work to the Metropolitan Press." * * This Historical Record and Encyclopaedia, be- gun in i860 (when Secession had openly com- menced), contains nearly everything concerning the great national conflict — not merel)- down to the end of battle-fields, but to the close of the equally important strife connected with the re-organization of the National Union, by the re- admission of the Seceded States in 1870. And in this connection it is essential to remember, that much very valuable information concerning men and things on all sides during the war, North as well as South, has been attainable only since the close of the war, as it has been elicited by discussions in Congress, in Legislatures, in the public journals, in Historical Societies, and in the controversies of persons engaged on both sides, since the close of armed strife. " In short," says Dr. Prime, in the (9/'j-t'r{ every loyal and rebel re^t^iment — lists of political prisoners, army and navy officers (regular and volunteer), vessels on the blockade, vessels cap- tured, foreign (as well as American) editorials, extracts of national poems, accounts of battles and skirmishes, and thousands of other matters." " The Encyrloi);edia affords an index to the whole work, which is one of the most complete ever conceived and executed, as the history of any war." In a letter to Gen. Garfield of Ohio, the President of the Sanitary Commission (Dr. Bellows) further said, " I have watched for years its progress — consulted its authorities — and know the conscientious thoroughness and method of the work. * * * I do not believe that another man, competent to this task, could have been found in the countrj' — who would have given up so man}' years of his life exclusively to the under- taking. His peculiar persistency has carried it forward through extraordinary difficulties j and his character, his pride and his interests guarantee its completion. * * * I rnake bold to say that it [such work] will never be done again, and that Mr. Townsend's peculiar personality is the main reason why it is done now, and can alone account for the existence of the Record. * * * It seems to be almost a providential felicity that such a curious and unique Record exists." And in a letter to Mr. Townsend, the same gentleman (Dr. Bellows) says — " I have so often expressed my sense of its public importance ana 7'alue, that whatever weight belongs to my opinion is already in the scale. Thirty years hence, when perhaps the History of the War will begin to be fitly written, the indispensable importance of your Encyclopaedia will be universal!}' acknow- ledged. It will then be worth its weight in gold. Now, it requires rare skill and experience in weighing the value of such materials to estimate its importance. * * * i hold it to be quite providential thatyou should have had the foresight, the disposition, the ability, and the patience to undertake and carry so far forward this unique undertaking ; and I am profoundly anxious not only that you should be enabled to complete it, but that it should pass at once into the possession of your native city." The Hon. John Jay, American Minister in Austria, writing to ex-Governor Morgan, says — " I am asked to express to you my opinion of Mr. Townsend's ' Historical Record and Ency- clopaedia of the Great Rebellion, &c.' * * * It seems to me quite superfluous to add my tes- timony about the value of this work, to that of such admirable judges as Dr. Cogswell, Gen. Dix, and Mr. Bancroft, but, as I am thus requested, I beg leave to say, that I had the oppor- tunity of examining a large portion of the Record when the volumes were deposited for a while in the rooms of the Union League Club, in New York ; and that I entirely concurred in the reso- lutions adopted by that body, to the effect that, in their judgment, it was a work of National im- portance and should be the Nation's property." " With everybody else who has seen it," says Mr. Swinton, author of well known sketches of the Civil War, and formerly attached to the New York Daily Times — " I think the work of incal- culable value to history, and to the country ; and it is mortifying to think that it should not quickly be taken hold of by those who arc possessed of the power or the means. I wish that I had either." " Those at all conversant with the labor of historical research among old manuscripts and worm-eaten books, often bearing only remotely on the subject on which information is desired," says the New York Herald, in one of its latest commendator)' allusions to this work, "will com- prehend how important Mr. Townsend's 'Record' will prove to future generations of writers, in en- abling them to cull whatever information they may desire on any important point of the civil struggle, 7Liit/i the facility tJiat a banker eonsiilts his accounts. It has been a labor of love with the author, for otherwise he could never have toiled on for years, as he has done, without any encourage- ment except the knowledge of the benefit he was conferring on mankind. Such a work as this will lengthen the lives of the great men of the future, hy rendering unnecessary the immense waste of time which the want of ready and reliable information has hitherto imposed on historical writers. Some gentlemen recognizing the import- ance of this record, have agreed to subscribe to- wards a fund of $10,000 to enable Mr. Townsend to complete the work he has been so many years engaged upon, and we hope that the list will soon be completely filled. It is in the interest of History, that great guide of humanity, that the labors so long and perseveringly carried on should be brought to a- successful termination. Some fears have been expressed that this work would find its way to the British Museum, owing to the want of interest manifested in it b}' the public, and even by the learned Societies of America : but we cannot believe that there is such lack of patriotism in our public bodies. The materials for American history, which we have here gathered together, are peculiarly the property of the American people, and on no account should this useful National Record be allowed to pass into the possession of foreigners." " Every event of the struggle, however minute, has been placed by Mr. Townsend in one of sev- eral scores of huge elephant-sized -volumes, and these are accompanied by careful indexes and ana- lyses, so that, ataglance, any feature o{ any campaign maybe brought to light," says the New York Mer- cury. " Incredible labor has been brought to bear upon this enterprise ; and the system upon which it was prepared, was so philosophic, and compre- hensive, tbat the best critics in the land have expressed their admiration. We instance Mr. Townsend's ' Encyclopaedia of the Great Rebellion' as one of the many enterprises calculated to make the story of the war imperishable. * * * Such achievements should be National property — all honor to the patient, patriotic man who under- takes to record them !" " Now when we turn to our own Revolution, or to those of England and France, we may say, that no Country can present such a Historical Record as that which Mr. Townsend has given us from the daily press of this Country," says the New York Daily Express. " De Tocqueville found in the British Museum upwards of 12,000 French pamphlets, relating to the French Revolu- tion, but we sa)', that neither the British Museum, nor the Bibliotheque Imperial of Paris, can ever possess such a history or record of e\ents, as this admirably-arranged work of Mr. Townsend. * * * It will of itself be a guide and index to the events of the war; and will enable the future historian to bring up the panorama of the great contest, with all its striking and varying events and incidents. Mr. Townsend has given his sole and exclusive exertions towards the accomplish- ment of his object, and has placed the Country under lasting obligations to him." The New York World illustrates its general commendation by specific references to the lead- ing features of the enterprize under consideration, and its remarks were widely copied by European journals. The /rV/(/ said— •" There has not been a topic discussed, nor has an occurrence trans- pired of the slightest National moment, since the secession of South Carolina, whereof Mr. Towns- end has not secured, not only what in his judg- ment he might consider an impartial -^czowwx, but almost e7y Wm. C. Bryant, John A. Dix, E. C. Benedict, Jackson S. Schultz, J. Watts De Peyster, Charles K. Graham, S. Irenajus Prime, Henry W. Bellows, Charles P. Kirkland, E. D. Morgan, Charles P. Daly, Erastus Brooks, and other citizens. ¥ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 012 195 787 5 r.