.« '•ZMm' I'*.- J M V> '• . •;'^ ,-»'■'•.■ ■•-■'vii';. I- g MtmxA in %Mhmf AS WRITTEN BY FRIEND A.I^r) FOE. ^anxfilis-irLc^ IIlcl (PffUcLctL ^/tcLi^cs. cLn.cL ^izLcicn-CC Ln^a^e. i/te. ^j^LLitcL^-u. ^airLirLL&&Lan. in. /IVctslLLn.c^ic.n-, ^LtLcLuTci. af. tli.e. f^ciLu'-t. ^rbitiJ for |lrt6Hf£ Cirrulaticru anb Jufurt %tituxvit, — BY — JA^MES Is/L. SANDERSON, LATE LIEUTENANT COLONEl/aDDITIONAL AIDE-DE-CAMP, AND CHIEF COMMISSARY , OF SUBSISTENCE OF THE FIRST ARMY CORPS. J/' ■ W. E. SIBELL, STATIONER AND PRINTER, No. 5 WALL STREET 1865. 0J;>-C ^\.^ ^ 1> TO MY ENEMIES AND MY LUKE -WARM FRIENDS, I DEDICATE THIS BOOK. acknowledginff mjy indebtedness. tfiat I may prove fiow little I owe them. by their persistence in falsehood, and industry in wronff doing, have extorted my special wonder, by their unbecoming retice?ice and ungenerous silence, are entitled to my u?idisguised contempt. I tender my thanks for the substa?itial triumph they have afforded me. my regrets that they have proven false to themselves. my congratulations that they have failed alike in their active and passive injustice, in their positive and negative wrong. ^Brooklyn, JVovember, 7866. INTEODUCTION. After enduring, for nearly eight months, the horrors of a Southern prison, I found myself, almost on the very morning of my enfranchisement, (with a heart overflowing Avith joy,, and sincerely thankful to that Providence wdiich had so mer- cifully protected me from the ills and dangers of my incarcera- tion,) suddenly stripped of my happiness, and my liberty again restricted by the action of my own Government — which, for three years, I had manfully striven to uphold. On the very point of returning to my family, I was arrested by an order of the Secretary of War, and directed to confine myself to the limits of Willard's hotel. Conscious of no crime, I cheerfully yielded to the orders of my superior officer — confid- ently believing that a brief period would place me in possession of the allegations against me, to which I had little doubt of making a satisfactory reply. The fact of my arrest being an- nounced in the public journals, my friends, both military and civil, hastened to express their confidence in my honor, by personal visits. Among them was one who, more conversant with military usage than myself, intimated that the course pursued in my case was unusual and severe. Outraged at this information, I immediately called on my former commander and always friend — James S. Wadsworth, then temporarily stop- ping at the hotel. Confiding to him my troubles, he at once sought the Secretary of War, and, after briefly stating my services and character, asked that I should be treated in a manner commensurate with my deserts. Strongly prejudiced against me by the slanders of my enemies, this gentleman not 6