cc <. ^ ;^c^^ ^..;^.s^iKW*^' J ^f",f«r5^"''rf<^r (iClMi^'" f«c' ^^ V. ^^^CcC^ 1 ^ -s G E A N D CIVIC AND MILITARY DEMONSTRATION IN IIDXOII or TIIK pemaval of the ^Umainsi OK I 'JAMES MONROE, Fifth President of the United Statgs, FROM NEW-YORK TO VIRGINIA. V NEW-YORK: PUBLISHED BY U D O L P II O WOLFE ri Nos. IS, 20, AND 22 BEAVER STREET. 18 5 8. Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1858, by UDOLPHO WOLFE, in tlie Clerk's Office of the District Conrt of the United States for the Southern District of New-York. 3oi)U Xl. (Grni}, PniNTER, STEREOTVI-KK, A.VD BIXDKR, )6 A 18 JiCoB St., Fiiik-Pkoof Buii.Dii«r.!i, JS^ TO THE J SEVENTH reghmeistt. mu §m-%^ INTRODFCTION. Statesmanship, in which he distinguished liimself, was any evidence of greatness, then was Mr. Monroe a great man. It is not for us here, to recount his jiublic services ; but there were some which the usual notices of his life seem to have omitted. At one tune, before the acquisition of Louisiana, the Spanish Government demanded the relinquishment of our right to navigate the Mississippi River. This denial Mr. Monroe successfully resisted, and that in opposition to the views of many 2>rominent men. He was sent by Mr. Jefferson to France with the view of inaugurating measures, in concert with Mr. Livinff- ston. Minister resident in Paris, for the jrarchase of Xew-Orleans. When he arrived, he was sent for by Bonaparte, who offered to sell all Louisiana for twenty million of dollars, provided it was accej^ted at once. There was no time allowed to write home for instruc- tions. Mr. Monroe, on consulting with Mr. Livingston, found the latter was in favor of the purchase, but as Mr. Monroe was last from the United States, he left the sub- ject to him, who took the responsibility of concluding the bargain, without delay. A vessel was then immediately dispatched to the United States with the treaty on board.f After the purchase of Louisiana, the Spaniards claimed jurisdiction over the Pacific coast, fiom California to the British Possessions. This claim was resisted by Mr. Mon- * Seo "Memoirs of the Presidents of the United States and their Administrations." By Edwin Williams. New-York, 1851, p. 215. f Idem. P. 216. INTRODUCTIOX. XI roe, and the boundary-line between the United States and Spain was established, which acknowledged the Ter- ritory of Oregon, etc., as belonging to the United States, under its purchase from France.* He afterwards went to England, and fought manfully for the rights of our seamen, against the English claim of the right of search and impressment. As a member of Congress, under the Articles of Con- federation, he was the first to propose measures for the formation of a Constitution which should " secure a more perfect union." Under his administration, a more perfect system for the survey and disposition of the public lands was adopted. And the first pension laws passed, for granting relief to the soldiers and their families of the American Revo- lution. In 1814, while acting as Secretary of War, under Mr. Madison, he found that the Treasury was exhausted, and means were indispensably necessary to meet the concen- tration of British troops against N"ew-Orleans, and he found that forty thousand additional troops would be necessary to carry on the war, besides the sixty thousand authorized to be raised by an Act of Congress. Near the close of 1814, the fall of New-Orleans seemed ine- vitable. To raise funds for its defense, he pledged his private credit as subsidiary to that of the Government. By this act of devotion, he was enabled to furnish the neces- * See " Memoirs of the Presidents of the United States," etc. By Edwin Williams. P. 21G. Xll INTRODUCTION. saiy supplies. New-Orleans was saved, and a great vic- tory won for American arms.* This pure and great public benefactor closed his career on the 4th of July, 1831. The ceremonies incident to the removal of his remains to Virginia, Ave have endeavored to gather in the follow- ing pages. The most striking and prominent feature, attending their translation, was the turn-out of the distinguished volunteer corps, known over the Union as the National Gl'akd, or Seventh Regiment, who nobly acted as an escort to the remains from New- York to Richmond. Sketches of their movements on their voyage, their doings in Richmond, and their journey home, and the honor with which they were every where received, and the comi^liments every where bestowed upon them, and their soldierly-like conduct, are fully set forth in the suc- ceeding chapters of this work. There was a solemn grandeur in the ceremonies, which will long be remembered by all who witnessed them. The only circumstance which occurred to mar the pleasure of the trip enjoyed by the Regiment, was the accidental death of Laurens Hamilton, a young man greatly respected and beloved, and who was a worthy member of the Regiment to which he was attached. The facts relating to the melancholy event, and the return of his remains to the city, with an account of his funeral, are dulv recorded. ♦ See " Memoirs of the Presidents of the United States," eto. By Kdwin Williams. P. 118. I ixTRODrcTioN. xiii We submit these pages to tlie kind consideration of the iDublic, and to the attention of the rising generation, who may learn, from the example of a great and good man, that their highest aspirations should be like his, to obey God, honor their country, and labor to defend and to preserve its liberty and union forever. Xkw-York, 1858. OBSEQUIES OF PRESIDENT MONROE IN 1831. The interment of President Monroe's remains in the Secontl Street Cemetery, took place on the Vth of July, 1831, and was one of the most imposing ceremonies ever witnessed in New- York. The announcement of his death was appropriately noticed by the various legislative, lite- rary, commercial, and judicial bodies in New- York, Avho universally passed resolutions expressive of their high re- spect for the deceased, and in favor of attending the funeral. The body was taken by a guard of honor from the resi- dence of his son-in-law, Samuel L. Gouverneur, accompa- nied by his near relatives and friends, and deposited on a platform Avhich was erected for the occasion, and draped with black cloth, in front of the City Hall, where Presi- dent Duer, of Columbia College, but recently deceased, delivered an appropriate address. The body was from thence taken to St. Paul's Church, the pulpit and reading desk of which were clad in mourning, where the solemn service of the Episcopal Church Avas read by the Rev. Bishop Ondcrdonk and Dr. \Yainwright. The procession moved in the following order, as arranged by the Committee of the Common Council, of which Al- derman Cebra was chairman : Major-General Morton's Division of Artillery under arms. Two battalions of Infantry, in reversed order, as an escort. The Sexton. Tlic Rev. Clergy. Pall Bearers. David Brooks, Col. John Tisumbull, Gov. A. Ogden, N. J. Thomas Morris. Relatives of tlie Deceased. Pall Bearers. S. L. Southard, N. J., Col. Richard Varick, John Watts, j. furgerson, u.s.n. TIk' Hearse containing the Bo had 1-eceived from them an acknowledgment, expressing pleasure at the steps already taken, and hoping that the New-York Virginians Avould be accorded the honor of forming the immediate escort of the body. They Avere unable to report exactly the order of ceremonies, but thought that the body woiild be disinterred on the 2d proximo, lie in state, at the City Hall, until the morning of the 3d, and then be embarked for Richmond. The report was adopted. The Chairman read the folio win o- letter from Gen. Winfield Scott, accepting the position of one of the pall- bearers, which had been tendered by the Committee : "Washington, Juue 22, 1858. Dear Sir : It is my hope and expectation to be in New-York oii the forenoon of the 2(1 proximo, the day appointed by the proper authorities for the exhumation of President Monroe's remains, as I feel that there will be a special propriety in my presence on that in- teresting occasion, as I was one of the personal friends of the ex-Pre- sident, who attended him throughout his last illness, and closed his eyes. I, therefore, readily accept the position to which I have had the honor to be assigned by the Committee you represent. I remain yours trulj^. "Winfield Scott, Major H. Hill, New- York. On motion of Mr. .Pattei'son, it was decided to confer upon the Committee the power to appoint the delegation to proceed to Virginia, and on motion of Mr. Sullivan, it was decided that the Committee should wait upon and consult with the delegation from Virginia. The meeting- then adjourned. The Committee of Arrangements remained in confer- ence after the meeting, and considered the best mode of makins: the disinterment and removal of Mr. Monroe's remains satisfactory and acceptable to the relatives of the deceased, one of whom had by a letter written to Gov. Wise, expressed a wish to have the removal made with as little demonstration and as quietly as possible. 2tj KEMUVAI. OK XHJi KEMAINS Tliu Connnon Council Committee had made all pre- liminary and necessary arrangements on the subject of delraying expenses, etc. While tlie friends of the family desired that the disinterment should be conducted in the most quiet manner, without display, and at as little ex- pense as possible. A sub-committee was appointed to wait upon Mr. S. L. Gouvei'neur and Col. Monroe, the parties in question, and induce them to yield to the wishes of the city authorities, and to the public feeling generally. The Committee then adjourned to meet at the same place at eight P.M., on the 26th inst. On convenhig at the time appointed, the sub-commit- tee reported that they had held a conference with Col. Monroe and S. L. Gouverneur, Sen., and S. L. Goiiverneur, Jr., and had prevailed upon them to yield their private wishes on the subject, and permit the civic and military procession to take place on the 2d of July ensuhig, as previously contemplated, with the imderstanding, that the disinterment should be privately made at five A.M., at the Marble Cemetery in Second street, on the 2d July, in presence of the relations of the family, and of delegations from the Committee of the Virginians, and of the Com- mon Council. That the remains should be conveyed to a church, or to a private residence in Fourteenth Street, and to be afterwards under the control of the city authorities. This arrangement Avas ratified between the sub-com- mittee and the relatives, who reported jointly to the Committee of the Common Council, who concurred in the arrangement. The rei)ort was accepted by the Virginia Committee of Arrangements, who thereupon opened the doors and invited Col. Tx'fferts and Quarter-master Winchester into tli«' loom. 'I'lic (\)lonel stated that the Seventh Regiment OF JAMES MONKOE. 27 had chartered the steamship Ericsson, and hoped that the Committee wouhl accept of the invitation to accom- pany the Regiment on board of that steamer to Virginia. He stated that the Regiment wonkl muster about five hun- dred men and officers for the excursion. It was expected that Mr. O. Jennings Wise, and Mr. Wni. Mumford, the Committee from Virginia, would have been present ; but it was understood that they had engaged lodgings at the New-York Hotel, where they had not arrived up to eight P.M. It was resolved to call a general meeting of the Vir- ginians and their descendants for the 28th June. The Committee then adjourned, after which, several members called upon Messrs. Mumford and Wise, who had, in the mean time, arrived at their lodgings. The Committee had agreed, on the suggestion of Dr. Jones, with the relatives of Ex-President Monroe, to visit his grave next day (Sunday) at six P.M., and they extended an invitation to Messrs. Wise and Mumford to accompany them. At the appointed hour, several members of the Com- mittee met at the New-York Hotel, and proceeded to the Marble Cemetery in Second street, near Second Avenue, in carriages. Among those present, were Colonel Monroe, and S. L. Gouverneur, (relatives of the deceased,) Major Henry Hill, Robert Blow, O. Jennings Wise, William Mumford, Colonel Lefferts, Quarter-Master Winchester, Chapman J. Leigh, Dr. Jones, and others. The vault in which the remains of Mr. Monroe rested was near the centre of a beautiful cemetery, kept in the neatest order. Mr. Gouverneur stated that he had pur- chased the vault, in Avhich his remains were interred, for five hundred dollars. After a pleasant stroll over the grounds, during which the Sexton and Mr. Gouverneur pomted out the tombs of 28 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS several distinguished persons in the same grounds, inchid- ing those of General Morton, who commanded the mili- tary at Mr. Monroe's funeral in 1831, and also those of Stephen Allen, Thomas Addis Emmett, and others, the party returned to the hotel. ^^■. THIRD AND FINAL MEETING OF THK VIKGLMANS AT THE METrtOPOLITAN HOTEL, ON THE THIRTIETH JUNE. Col. Wm. M. Peyton was called to the Chair, and Mr. Price was appointed Secretary. REPORT OF THE COMMITTEE. Major n. Hill, U.S.A., on behalf of the Committee, submitted a report in reference to the projected order of arrangements, in conformity with the programme adopted by the Common Council Committee. The report further stated that Mr. N. H. Campbell had accepted the office of Marshal of the Virginians, and had already conferred with the Grand Marshal of the day. The following named gentlemen had been selected as a Committee (with power to elect their own Chairman) on the part of the Virginian residents of the Metropolis, to proceed with the remains to the native State of the deceased, viz. : A. B. Wood, Chapman J. Leigh, James A. Patterson, Col. Wm. M. Peyton, William Bell, Major Henry Hill, U.S.A., Algernon S. Sullivan, Dr. B. Dennis, Major S. S. Anderson, Wm. 11. Price. I OF JAMES MONROE. 29 A funeral badge had also been adopted from the de- sign of an amateur artist, a young Virginian — Mr, Wil- liam L. Shepherd. A courteous invitation had been re- ceived by the Committee from Wm. Mumford and O. Jennings Wise, Esqs., to go by the Jamestown, as the guests of the State of Virginia, and had been accepted. On motion of Mr. A. S. Sullivan, the report was ap- proved. Copies of the badge were then distributed. It was a very neat aflair, printed upon white silk ribbon, about eight inches long and two wide, with the following inscription : Ceremony of the Disinterment and Removal from the City of New-York, Of the remains of JAMES MONROE, President of the United States. A.D. 1817—1824, To Virginia, his native State, July, 1858. Ti-ibute to his memory by Virginians and their descendants in New-York. Here follows the Virginia coat of arms, with the well- known motto of : " Sic Semper Tyrannis," and the figure of Liberty, crushing the figure of Despot- ism beneath her feet. Notice was given on behalf of the Virginia and New- York Steamship Company, that the Jamestown would sail on Saturday at three P.M., " sharp," and all purpos- ing to go by her, were requested to be on deck in due season. A note having been received by Major Hill from Lieut. Gen. Winfield Scott, that the prostration of health would prevent his serving as pall-bearer on the 2d July, when, on motion, Capt. John R. Garland was appointed a pall-bearer in his place. 30 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS KEMABKS OF MR. MUMFORD. The Chairman observed, that no doubt the meeting would be pleased to hear from the Virginia delegation. He perceived one of them present, and would take the liberty of calUng upon him for a few remarks. Mr. Wm. Mumford, (from the Richmond Committee,) in reply, said that he did not know that he could say any thing to more interest the meeting than to give a simple statement of what had been determined upon originally by the authorities at home. The Legislature only in- tended to send a committee of gentlemen to take the re- mains from New- York to the place where they were to lie. New- York had indeed been kind and generous, and her people seemed determined to make a display that would do honor to themselves and to the memory of James Monroe. Virginia would respond to that gener- osity. The Seventh Regiment would be entertained by the city of Richmond during their stay, while the Com- mittee and Common Council would be entertained as the guests of the Governor and the State. The people of Richmond had provided a beautiful place for the repose of the dead. To that spot Governor Wise proposed to take the remains of Jefferson, Madison, and Monroe, and there they would rest beneath hoUywood trees, whose never- fading leaves would be a fit emblem of their undying fame. There, too, on the ojiposite side, was the tomb of Pow- hatan, and the spot where the Indian maid pleaded for the white man's life ; and there again, while their noble river would chaunt a peaceful requiem, there was the almost breathing image of their country's Father point- ing to those tombs on the hill — pointing to the virtues and integrity of those men whose remains would be quietly reposing beneath the hallowed earth. He assured the Committee of a hearty welcome in Richmond. Majoi- Ilill then read a brief resmne of Mr. Monroe's I OF JAMES MONROE. HI military and political career, which was much applauded, and which we give as follows : BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF PRESIDENT MONROE. The following is a brief sketch of the remarks made by Major Henry Hill, U.S.A. : James Monroe, the fifth President of the United State, was de- scended from the Scotch on his father's side, and from the Welsh on the side of his mother, who was Elizabeth Jones, born in Westmore- land county, Virginia. Mr. Monroe was born on the Potomac river, in the same county, on the 28th of April, 1758, where, a century be- fore, his paternal ancestor, the original grantee, resided. He received his education at William and Mary College, and entered the Revolu- tionary army as a cadet in 1776. He was soon after appointed a Lieu tentant, and joined Washington in New-York in the summer of the same year. He was engaged in the actions at Harlem Heights, White Plains, the retreat through the Jerseys, and at Trenton, where he received a ball through the shoulder. For his gallantry and zeal in this engagement, he was jiromoted to a captaincy, and rose to be aid-de-camp to Lord Sterling, with the rank of ilajor, serving in that capacity during the years 1777 and 1778, and distinguishing himself at Brandywine, Germantown, and Monmouth. At Brandywine he fought by the side of Lafayette when that officer was wounded. Towards the close of the war Gen. AVashington conferred upon him the rank of Colonel, " but as he was unable to raise an army in Virginia, already exhausted by former conscription, he devoted him- self to the study of the law, under Thomas Jefferson." His sagacity, firmness of pui-pose, and plodding perseverance soon marked him out as one adapted for civil offices. He was elected a member of the Assembly of his native State in 1782, a member of the old Congress in 1783 ; was again elected to the Assembly of Virginia in 1787, and was a member of the Vii'ginia Convention in 1788. Pie was elected to the United States Senate in 1790 ; served until 1794, when he was appointed Minister Plenipotentiary to France. On the nomina- tion of Mr. Madison, he was appointed Governor of Virginia, an office which he held for three years. In 1803, he was appointed Minister Extraordinary to France, to act in conjunction with Mr. Livingston, the Minister resident there. This mission was of the greatest conse- quence to this country, and terminated in the acquisition of Louis- iana. The same year he was appointed Minister to London, and the next year Envoy to Spain. In 1806, he was again sent to England, :V2 IIKMOVAL 0¥ THK REMAIXS to negotiate in conjunction with Mr. Pinekney Avith tlie Fox Minis- trj-. In 181(J, he was again elected to the Assembly of Virginia. In 1811, he was appointed Secretary of State by Mr. Madison, and lield that office until 1814, when, because the War Department was in a ver}' embarrassed state, and at tiie earnest solicitation of Mr. Madi- son, (against the advice of his friends, because it was then considered a lower grade of office,) he accepted of the administration of that department ; and the State department being left purposely vacant, he performed the duties of both these laborious and important branches of the General Government. lie refused, under these cir- cumstances, to receive the higher pay of Secretai-y of State. In 1817, he succeeded James Madison as President of the United States. In 1821, he was reelected President by an almost unanimous vote, one member from New-Ilampshire voting in favor of J. Q. Adams. The Government of Mr. Monroe was characterized by a vigorous and enlightened patriotism. He encouraged the army and increased the navy, and in these matters his attention descended to minute partic- lars. He caused those foreign naval expeditions to be sent out to the West-Indies, the Mediterranean, the coast of Africa, and the shores of South-America, which gave instruction to our officers, augmented the number of our seamen, protected the national commerce, and caused the country to be universally respected by distant nations. He made vigorous exertions for the abolition of the slave-trade, and encouraged the establishment of the principles of free commerce with all nations. His resolution to defend the Independent South- American Governments against all European interference was bold and sagacious. He ordered the coasts to be accurately surveyed, and fortifications to be erected at the most important and most eligi- ble places. It was during his term of office that Florida was ceded to the United States. After his term of office as President of the United States, though Very poor, he refused the command of the army offered to him by John Quincy Adams, in 1828; but he did not disdain to accept the office of Justice of the Peace, which gave him no pay, in London county, Virginia, where he lived a sliort time. His character was one of high impulses of lionor and sterling in- tegrity of principle. At the end of his second term as President of the United States, Mr. Monroe retired into private life, and died at New-York, at the house of his son-in-law. Mi: Governeur, on the 4th of July, 1831, and was interred in a beautiful private cemetery of his finiily, the ccr«- OF JAMES MONROE. 33 monies of liis funeral being conducted by the city, on a scale of great magnificence. In the language of John Quincy Adams : " Mr. Monroe strengthened liis country for defense, by a system of combined fortifications, military and naval, sustaining her rights, her dignity and honor abroad ; soothing her dissensions, and con- ciliating her acerbities at home ; controlling by a firm though peace- ful policy, the hostile spirit of European alliance against republican South- America ; extorting by the mild compulsion of reason, the shores of the Pacific from the stipulated acknowledgment of Spain ; and leading back the Imperial Autocrat of the North to his lawful boundaries, from his hastily asserted dominion over the Southern ocean. Thus strengthening and consolidating the federative edifice of his country's union, till he was entitled to say, like Augustus Cfesar, of his Imperial city, that he had found her built of brick, and left her constructed of marble." REMARKS OF COL. PEYTON". When Major Hill concluded his biographical sketch of Mr. Monroe, a call was made upon the Virginians present to add some remarks in the way of a commentary upon what had been read, but as there was no response from the audience, the meeting, at the suggestion of Dr. Jones, requested that their Chairman, Col. Wm. M. Peyton, should respond. Upon which. Col. Peyton rising, re- marked : That it would of course give him great pleasure to contribute all in his power to tlie gratification of an assemblage of Virginians. But, he said, he had been so entirely withdrawn from public affairs for many years, and had engaged so little in extemporaneous speak- ing for the last ten or fifteen, that he felt great distrust in himself. So much so, said Mr. Peyton, that even in the simple reminiscence and commentary called for, he would hardly have had the temerity to take the floor, but for the guide-boards afforded him along the route of his travel, in the valuable sketch of Mr. Monroe's life, which had been just read to the meeting, and for the execution of which they were so much indebted to the care, diligence, and fidelity of Major Hill. I listened, said Mr. P., to that sketch with the greatest interest and pleasure, and found my bosom swelling with pride that its subject 2* 84 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS W.1S a Virginia n. Under the glow of these feelings, said Mr. Pey- ton, with the pulsations of my heart, and the convictions of my mind controlled by the just and graphic picture of Major Hill, I will endeavor to give expression to some of the emotions and reflections wliieh animated me in conmion, I have no doubt, with all present, as we followed Major Hill along the pathway of Mr. Monroe's life, where all the mile-posts were inscribed with the cardinal virtues, and all the guide-boards pointed to his " country's welfare" as the great goal of a statesman's labors. It is a noble record, gentlemen, said Mr. P., a spotless escutcheon, under which every descendant may proudly write his name, and to which every statesman may revert as a pure fountain of patriotic inspiration. A gentleman near me, says Mr. P., asks me to give the meeting my personal reminiscences of Mr. Monroe, and my own notions of him as a man and as a statesman. This friend, said Mr. P., in mistaking me for a cotemporary of Mr. Monroe, gives me credit for a greater age than I am entitled to, or disposed to claim. I knew Mr. Monroe only as a boy knows an old man. I was just coming on the stage of action, and he was passing off. The effulgence of his light was dim- med and painfully flickering in its socket, when I first made his ac- quaintance. My opinion, therefore, of Mr. Monroe is not derived from personal recollection, but from the noble record of which I have just spoken — I mean the record read by Major Hill. Mr. Monroe, said Mr. P., is a noble representative of an age pro- lific in great men — men who had passed the ordeal and been chas- tened by the fires of a revolution on principle. Men whose ambi- tion was nurtured on wholesome food, and who, De Tocqueville, the great political philosopher of France, says, would have been intellect- u.al giants in any nation, at any period of the world. The aims of such men, said Mr. P., were always patriotic, and their claims to public favor and distinction were based on a laborious, energetic, enlightened, and faithful administration of public affairs. Coming forth from a revolution in which they had pledged to each other and to the cause, " tlieir lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor," they set to work earnestly and honestly to put in motion and j;ive efiiciency and success to what they had created at so much cost of blood and treasure. It was, said Mr. Peyton, in the midst of such men, surrounded by such circumstances, breathing such an atmosphere of self-sacrificing virtue and heroic devotion, that Mr. Monroe learned his first lessons and bad stamped upon him the glorious impress of the age. OF JAMES MONROE. 35 Mr. Monroe, said Mr. P., was born just one hundred years ago. Of course, on the 4th of July, 1776, the natal day of American inde- pendence, he was but a stripling of seventeen years. He had just been clothed with the Baccalaureate honors of old William and Mary College, in sight and hearing, if not witliin the very precincts of the temple where the thunderu of Henry's eloquence had first shaken the foundations of British power, and broken the magic spell of English authority. Having at so tender an age, said Mr. P., neither the years nor the experience to qualify him for influence in the councils of his countrj', he felt that h'e would be more useful as a soldier in the field. Ac- cordingly, with that " reliant modesty," if I may use such an expres- sion, which marks his whole career, he went into the army a simple cadet, which my friend Major Hill tells me, differs but Utile from a common soldier. Occupying thus, said Mr. P., an humble rank in the army, he had already, before he attained his majority, placed this island and all the coterminous country under the deepest obligations to his valor. He had, whilst yet in his " teens," fought in the battles of '■' Harlem Heights" and " White Plains." He had endured the jDrivations and sufferings of the memorable and disastrous retreat across the Jerseys, led the van and been severely wounded in tlie gallant attack on Trenton, and had distinguished himself so signally in the battles of Brandywine, Monmouth, and Princeton, as to elicit the admiration of all, and secure the good opinion and friendship of the immortal Washington. Being recommended to Virginia by Washington, as qualified for the command of a regiment, and the State making an inef- fectual eft'ort to raise one for him, he then, by the advice and under the guidance of Mr. Jefi'erson, turned his attention to civil affairs. In this path his success was but the counterpart of his military ca - reer. From the period of eligibility, he was called to fill first one important station and then another, advancing step by step from a seat in the Legislature to a seat in Congress. From presiding over the Commonwealth of Virginia as Governor, to a seat in the United States Senate. Then as Minister Plenipotentiary to the Courts of France, Spain, and England, when our government was just settling upon its foundations, and all its relations as one of the ftimily of na- tions had to be arranged, and that too, when the disturbing causes of the French Revolution had disjointed every thing in the old world, and the position of a minister could .only be filled by a man of expe- rience, ability, and courage. 36 REMOVAL OF THE EEMAINS Returniag, said Mr. P., from these missions with his matured diplo- matic wisdom, to fill the first place in the Cabinet of Mr. Madison, and finally, as the crowning gkny of his well-spent life, called by his fellow-citizens to fill the highest place in their gift. I do not mean, said Mr. P., to weary you with details. It is not, said Mr. P., my purpose to dwell on the specific acts or the policy of Mr. Mon- roe's public measures; that would occupy too much time, and would require patient preparation to do it justice. I prefer for the present to dismiss all that, and take another view, in which, as is proper on such an occasion as this, all heads and all hearts may unite harmo- niouslj'. You have seen, gentlemen, said Mr. Peyton, from Major Hill's sketch, that the entire life of Mr. Monroe was spent in the service of his country ; and when viewed, now after the lapse of a generation, when the grave has closed over the little bickerings of party strife and the malevolence of rivalry, when time, in the exercise of its be- nevolent influences, has blunted the sharpedgesof political prejudice, you will find all men agree in saying that that modesty which is so often the accompaniment of merit, Avas one of his most striking cha- racteristics. That the self-sacrificing, enduring virtue, the faithful and laborious effort to discharge all public trusts with strict refer- ence to the public good, were traits to which he was justly entitled. All admit that he was unstained by low and vulgar demagogueism. That he never soiled the ermine of official position by dragging its robes through the dirty pools of pot-house sewerage. All agree that his views were broad, liberal, and statesmanlike ; while as the Co- rinthian capital to the noble column of his public character, sat In- tegrity presiding in peerless beauty, and pointing to a long fife spent in public trusts, all of which had been discharged without one dollar sticking to the palms of his hands. Living a lifetime, said Mr. Peyton, in the full enjoyment of the public confidence, without liaving in a single instance abused that confidence, and actually retiring from the Presidency, after a life- time of public service, so poor that a friend had to loan him a few dollars to reach his humble home in Virginia. This last fact I re- ceived from the gentleman himself who loaned him the money. He narrated all the facts to me last night when we were dining together, and if I were to give you the name you would see that its truthful- ness admitted of no question. This is true Roman virtue, said Mr. Peyton, and presents an example of patriotic fidelity, Avhich at the present juncture of our affairs, when offices are valued by the facili- ties afforded for spoliation, may offer a healthy rebuke to the corrup- tion of the times. OF JAMES MONROE. 3*7 As to the private life of Mr. Monroe, Mr. Peyton said the breath of calumny has rarely touched it. It stands unstained and above reproach. His private, as well as his public life, courts scrutiny, and is esteemed in proportion as it is examined and understood. It is true, he said, that the envy and jealousy of ignoble minds had for a wliile obscured his fame, but tlie steady light of his deeds shone brightly upon his country, and dissipated the clouds scattered over his memory. The silence of the grave itself has only hallowed his memor}' and softened without sullying the splendor of his fame. When ordinary men of factitious reputation drop into the grave, said Mr. P., the public remembrance of them soon dies out. The Lethean stream passes over them and obliterates all remembrance of them and their deeds. But when men truly great die, their loss sinks deep into the public heart. Their acts are immortal, and after- generations, when enjoying the fruits of their labors and their genius, call them up for new honors at their hands — they reembalni them and offer up every tribute of gratitude and admiration. Such testimony, said Mr. Peyton, was the best evidence of true greatness, and such is the testimony in the present spontaneous outburst of a great nation in their distinguished and j^rofound homage to a statesman of another age. Mr. Peyton then drew as a corollary from Mr. Monroe's life, the lessons of virtue, patriotism, fidelity, and integrity taught by it, contrasting them with the lamentable deficiency of the times, and portraying in strong colors the immortal grandeur of the one, as contrasted with the narrow and ignoble baseness of the other. We regret that we are unable to follow the Colonel more fully to the close of his eloquent speech, or to do justice in our brief report to the ability he disj^layed in Hs delivery. His address was listened to with profound attention, interrupted by frequent bursts of applause, and at its conclusion he sat down amidst the cheers of all present. On motion of Mr. A. S. Sullivan, a Committee of seven was appointed to wait upon the Messrs. Leland, and thank them in the name of the resident Virginians of New-York for their extreme liberality in furnishing the Committee Avith all necessary accommodation for their meeting, free of charge. This Committee consisted of Mr. Sullivan, Col. Peyton, Mr. Lee, and Dr. Jones, who 38 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS duly tendered the thanks of the meeting to the Messrs. Lelands, Col. Peyton acting as spokesman, to which Mr, Leland replied in a neat and appropriate manner, exj^ress- ina: the satisfaction felt bv himself and colleagues at beino- able to aflbrd a room for their meetings, Avhich Avould be at all times at their service. An adjournment sine die was then moved and carried. After the meeting had adjourned, sine die, on motion of Dr. Snodgrass, another meeting was forthwith called and organized, to consider the j^ropriety of forming here- after an Old Dominion Society in the city of New- York, for social and benevolent purposes. "Whereupon, Colonel Peyton Avas called to the chair, and William H. Price was ai^pointed Secretary. On motion of Dr. Snodgrass, a Committee of five was appointed, with authority to call a meeting, on some future day, of Virginians and their descendants resident in New- York and its vicinity, for the purpose of organiz- ing an Old Dominion Society in New- York. The Committee was accordingly apj^ointed, as follows, namely : Dr. Snodgrass, Robt. H. Gallagher, Wm. Bell, A. R. Wood, Col. Wm. Peyton, Wm. H. Price. It svas suggested that the anniversaries of the Society should be held on the anniversary of the landing at Jamestown, on the 13th May, 1607. After some general conversation, the meeting adjourned sine die. Proceedings of the Common Council of the City of New- York. At a meeting of the Board of Councilmen, held on the 27th of May, 1858, the following Message Av^as received from His Honor tlie Mayor of the city : Mayor's Office, New- York, May 27, 1858. To the Honorable the Common Council: Gentlemen : Tlie Legislature of the State of Virginia passed, at OF JAMES MONROE. 39 its last session, a resolution providing for the removal of the remains of Ex-President Monroe, now interred in this city, to Richmond, the capital of his native State. I have received, in connection with this subject, the accompanying letters, one from George W. Mumford, Esq., Secretary of the Com- mittee of the Legislature, and the other from Samuel L. Gouverneur, Jr., Esq., the grandson of the late President Monroe, in relation to the disinterment of the remains, and the time at which the removal thereof should take place. I would recommend that a Committee be appointed by your Hon- orable Body, to consult with the authorities of Virginia, and the relatives of the illustrous deceased, in reference thereto, and that such measures be adopted on the occasion as will not only testify the great regard of the citizens of New- York, for the memory of this de- parted patriot and sage ; but will express, at the same time, their deep sympathy with their brethren of Virginia, in the pious act of placing, within their own soil, the ashes of a distinguished and honored son. Daniel F. Tiemann, Mayor. Executive Department, Richmond, May 19, 1858. To THE Honorable Daniel F. Tiemann, Mayor of the City of Neiv- Yorl: : Sir: Your favor of the 17th instant, addressed to Mr. William Mumford, has been received. Since writing his letter, he has re- ceived information, stating who the proper representatives of Mr Monroe are, and while your kindness, in offering to obtain the infor- mation, is appreciated, it becomes now unnecessary. By direction of Governor Wise, I have now to request that you vpill, in your official capacity, as Mayor, grant the permission desired for the removal of the remains of the late President Monroe, from its present place of interment in New-York, to the city of Richmond, and that you will also obtain the like permission from your City Inspector. It is desirable that the representatives and relatives of the family should be present at the disinterment, if agreeable to them. I have requested Mr. Samuel L. Gouverneur, Jr., who is the nearest lineal descendant, to appoint the time for the ceremonies, and to confer with you to ascertain what time will best suit the authorities of New-York. Very respectfully, etc., George W. Mumford, Secretary of the Committee. 40 EEMOTAL OF THE REMAINS Treasury Department, Washington City, D. C, May 21, 1858. Sir : I have received a communication from Mr. G. W. Miimford, Secretaiy of State of Virginia, asking my consent, as the grandson, and only lineal male descendant of the late Ex-President James Monroe, to the removal of his remains from the city of New-York to that of Richmond. He states that you have already been addressed by him, and consulted in relation to the details concerning the time and manner of the jiroposed removal. The action of the Legislature of Virginia meets my cordial approval, and it therefore now onlj' re- mains, (the consent of the city authorities of New-York being first obtained,) that you communicate to Mr. Mumtord and myself, the time and mode of removal, which would be most pleasing to your- self. I would merely suggest, that the Fourth of July, the anniver- sary of his death, might, with propriet}', be selected as the day on which his remains should either leave New- York, or be received in Richmond. I am, Sir, respectfully, Your obedient servant, Saml. L. Gouverneur, Jr, Daniel F. Tiemann, Esq., Mayor of New- York. In connection therewith, Councilman Judson oiFered the following resolution : Resolved, That a Select Committee of five be appointed, to confer with a like Committee of the Board of Aldermen, (if appointed,) and his Honor the Mayor, to make the necessary arrangements to further the object of removing the remains of E.v-President James Monroe, by the authorities of the State of Virginia, from this city to Rich- mond, Virginia, and that the Comptroller b«, and is hereby directed to pay the expenses thereof, provided that they do not exceed the sum of ($1500) fifteen hundred dollars. Councilman Cross moved to strike from the resolution the appropriation of money. Which was carried. Subsequently, Councilman Dunn moved a reconsidera- tion thereof. Which was carried. On motion of Councilman Dunn, the first part of the OF JAMES MONROE. 41 resolution, ending with the word "Virginia," was then adopted. The Resolution, as amended, was sent to the Board of Aldermen for concurrence. On reaching that body, it was amended by adding one thousand dollars to the fit- teen hundred — making the sum twenty-five hundred dollars, for the purpose of defraying the expenses of the removal of the Ex-President's remains. The Board appointed the following persons a Commit- tee of five, to act wath the same number, on the part of the Common Council, as a joint Committee of Arrange- ments, to superintend the removal. The Committee named were : Thomas ^Y. Adams, Michael Murray, Michael Tuomey, John Lynes, James Owens. As amended, the resolution was sent back to the Board of Councilmen, when on motion it was adopted, nem. con., and the following Committee of five appointed to act, with a similar Committee, on the part of the Aldermen, as a joint Committee of Arrangements, namely : Charles H. Haswell, Thomas A. Dunn, George P. Bickford, Charles G. Cornell, Seymour A. Bunco. The joint Committee thus appointed by the Common Council, held a preliminary meeting on the iVth June, at Avhicli Thomas W. Adams was chosen to act as chairman, when, after the transaction of some informal business, the Committee of Arrangements adjourned to meet again on the 19th June. On assembling in the City Hall, at the time appointed, Richard Scott w^as appointed to act as Secretary to the meeting. After discussing proposed plans to carry out the cere- monies, in a becoming manner, sub-committees were 42 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS appointed to correspond Avith the Virginia anthorities, to t-onsult with tlie Mayor, and investigate the most suit- able means for carrying out the wishes of the Common Council, when the Committee adjourned to meet again on the 2 2d June. Competition of tlie Military to escort the Remains to "Virginia. At the time appointed, June 22d, the Committee of Arrangements reassembled, according to appointment. Alderman Adams presided, and when the Committee was organized, he directed the Clerk to read the follow- ing dispatch, received from the Secretary of the Com- mittee of Arrangements at Richmond. The Clerk read as follows : Richmond, June 15, 1858. To Daniel F. Tieman, Mayor of New- York : The Committee will remove the remains of President Monroe from the cemetery to the steamboat on the 3d of July next, at four o'clock in the evening. For this purpose they will be in New-York on tlie 26th inst., and they will conform to the arrangements of the Common Council of the city. GEORGE W. MUMFORD, See. of State. The communication was ordered to be placed on file. The Chairman now asked if there w'as any one in the room that desired to consult with the Committee, or sub- mit any proposition for their consideration. Major Henry Hill, of the United States Army, as Chair- man of the Committee of Virginians in New-York, arose and said : Mr. Chairman : The object of the Committee appointed by the Virginians of New-York, is to cooper- ate wdth the citizens of New- York in the removal of the remains of President Monroe to Richmond. We want to haA'e the views of the city of New- York before we can act, and we now desire to have these views made known through this Committee. We are only a Com- mittee, however, of Virginians, by birlh or descent, resi- dent in New-York, and we desire the information in order OF JAAIES JIONROE. 43 to be able to report. We would desire to act as a guard of honor, as pall-bearers, or in some other like capacity. The Chairman of the Committee replied that he would lay the matter before the Committee, and he felt assured that they would aiford the Major all the information and facilities in their power. Colonel Lyons, of the Eighth Regiment, next took the stand. He said that he represented the Eighth Regi- ment and portion of the Committee of the corps who have been considering the present matter. He would request that the Committee of the Common Council would review the claims of the Regiment as the citizens of New- York, and as that corps was the tirst to apply to be appointed to escort the remains of President Monroe from New-York to Virginia, he hoped they would be al- lowed the privilege of forming the escort. The Regiment would be satisfied to defray their own expenses, if neces- sary, and would have the requisite number of men which the Committee might designate. Capt. Blauvelt, of the same Regiment, next rose and urged the claims of the Regiment, on the grounds, first, that it is one of the oldest corps in the State ; secondly, that they have not pushed themselves forward in any matter of this kind for many years ; and thirdly, they are equal in every respect to any Regiment in the city, except in point of numbers. The Chairman announced that the Committee would take the matter into consideration. A motion was made to appoint a Sub-Committee of Arrangements. Considerable argument followed ; but it was finally lost, and the Committee then went into recess for fifteen minutes. The recess having expired, Maj. Hill came again before the Committee and said : Mr. Chairman, I have conferred with the Committee of Vii-ginians at present in this build- 44 REMOVAL OF THE KEMAIKS inf. and it is their wish, if not inconsistent with tlic views ()f the Committee sitting here, that they act as pall-bearers, with a badge, arranged according to some form prescribed by the Committee, and of which you will be informed. They have also appointed a Committee of four to consult with you and hear your views, if it is agreeable to the Com- mittee now sitting here that they should adopt this course. We would like to know the result of your de- liberations to-day as soon as possible, in order that we may know how to act ourselves. Chairman — I will lay the matter before the Committee and hear their action. It Avas now moved that the immber of pall bearers be thirty-three, or one for each State iu the Union, as the whole matter is one in which the nation feels interested. The motion was seconded and adopted. It was then moved that the Virginians in this city be entitled to appoint eight pall-bearers out of the entire number. An amendment providing that six be inserted instead of eight was lost, and after some discussion the original motion was seconded and adopted. A communication Avas received from the Scott Life Guard, requesting that they be allowed the honor of forminsT the escort during the removal of the remains, and it was ordered on file. Colonel Leflferts, of the Seventh Regiment, now ad- dressed the Committee. He had nothing to add to what he had stated to the Committee at their first meet- ing. The Regiment would feel honored by performing escort duty on the day of the ceremony in New-York, and as to their proceeding to Richmond, as a guard of honor, steps had been taken to ascertain the views of the Regiment, and he supposed that they Avould go. If so, a steamer would be chartered, and on their return a OF JAMES MONKOE. 45 visit made to Baltimore, and perhaps other cities. If the thino- was undertaken, he had no doubt it would be carried out to the satisfliction of the city authorities, and with credit to the Regiment. The Committee now directed the Clerk to inform the Comraitte of Virginians, who were in session in an ad- joining room, of the action they had taken regarding their desire to be permitted to act as pall-bearers. This being done, they adjourned till one o'clock on next Saturday afternoon. From the following paragraph in the New- York Ex- press^ it would appear that the Seventh Regiment intended carrying out their patriotic intention of accompanying the remains to Richmond, even if they had not been ap- pointed to that duty by the New- York Council : Tlie National Guard (7th Regiment) intend to pay the memory of James Monroe, Ex-President of the United States, the honor of es- corting his remains from New- York to Virginia. The steamer Ala- bama has been chartered for this purpose, and besides officers, music, and attendants, about 600 of the rank and file will join in the trip. The departure will be on the 3d of July, and the party will leave the steamer at City Point, and take the rail or small steamers up to Richmond. After attending to the obsequies at Richmond on the 5th, the Regiment will return via Baltimore, passing a day in the Monumental City, and another at Wasliington and Mount Vernon, returning to New-York by water from Baltimore. The cost of the trip will be about $15,000. Many military invita- tions have been sent to the Regiment here, but at Richmond, the capital of Virginia, where the Governor and State authorities have the matter of arrangement in charge, it is supposed that the New- Yorkers will be the guests of the State and city. The military and public spirit which contemplate such a celebration of a great day and an interesting national event, is worthy of all praise. Saturday, June 26th. The joint Committee met according to adjournment. 46 KKMOVAL Oe TUJS KEMAIKS Alderman Adams, the Chairman, called the meeting to order. The Secretary read the minutes of the preceding meet- ing, A letter was read from Huyler & Putnam, offering, free of charge, a metallic burial-case for the remains, such as were used for Clay and Webster. The following letter from Richmond was then read : Richmond, June 15, 1858. Hon. Daniel F. Tiemann, Mayor of the City of New- York : The Committee appointed to superintend the removal of the re- mains of President Monroe, have wished to consult the proposed ceremonies in honor of his memory, and liaving originally intimated that to be their purpose and desire, through the Secretary of the Commonwealth, they determined to suit your action before making any definite arrangements themselves. In the mean time the agent of the Virginia Steamship Company kindly offered the steamship Jamestown to the Committee, and as Mr. Gouverneur liad suggested the 4th of July as the diiy, eitlier for the disinterment or reinterment — that day happening on Sunday, and the steamer leaving on the 3d, the Committee tliink that the convenience and wishes of all par- ties would be best served by fixing upon Saturday as the proper day for the proposed ceremonies. This arrangement, merely anticipat- ing the celebration of the 4tli one day in New-York, and delaying it one day in Richmond, they believe would not materially interfere with the usual public demonstrations, and would satisfy officers commanding military posts along the route of travel ; would be agreeable to civil and military authorities in Virginia, and alto- gether we would secure a more general and convenient manifesta- tion of respect for the memory of the illustrious dead. With these vicAvs, our Committee have accepted the offer of the steamer James- town for the 3d, and with great deference they hope that this ar- rangement will be agreeable to yourself and the Committee associated with you. They have made no programme, and will cheerfully yield to the city authorities of New-York in any administrations of respect they may think proper to make on this interesting occasion. Mr. Wise and myself will be in New-York on the 26th inst., when we will have the honor of seeing and conversing with you in person. With great respect, George W. Mumfobo, Secretary of State. OF JAMES MUXKOK 4/ After the communioation was read and filed, the Sub- committee of Arrangements were called upon to report, and they stated that they had been on board the steamer Jamestown, and considered her well adapted to the pur- pose for which she is ofiered. Some discussion then arose as to the military corps that should form the guard and escort. Captain Blauvelt appeared, and warmly advocated the claims of the Eighth Regiment, and Lieut. G. W. Turnbull, of 3d Co. N. G., spoke for the Seventh, and Colonel Vosburgh Avished to have it understood that the Seventy-first Regiment has not been a competitor for the honor. A resolution to the effect that the Eighth Regiment should form the guard and escort was lost. The following resolutions were then offered by Coun- cilman Haswell, and they were unanimously adopted : Resolved, That the Committee accept the services of the Eighth Regiment, New-York State Militia, as an escort and guard of honor to escort the remains of the late President of the United States, James Monroe, to the City Hall, till they are removed therefrom. Resolved, That this Committee accept the services of the Seventh Regiment New-York State Militia as an escort and guard of honor to accompany the remains from the City Hall to Richmond, Virginia, provided the Regiment will bear its own expenses of travel, mainte- nance, etc. The adoption of these resolutions seemed to give gen- eral satisfaction. General Sandford now took a seat in the room where the Committee were in session. The Chairman stated what action they had taken respecting the services of the militia, and expressed himself assured that it was with his sanction and approval. General Sandford rose and said that the action af- forded him pleasure, and as commander of the militia it met his entire approbation. 48 REMOVAL OF THE KEMAl^S Some discussion now took place as to the pror)er time of the day for the ceremonies to commence. General Sandford being asked for his opinion on the subject, thought that four o'clock in the afternoon Avould be the best time, as the heat of the day would then be over, and as a greater number of people would have an opportunity of witnessing them than at an earlier hour. He believed that the civil and military bodies will be ready to move punctually at the hour appointed, and, therefore, would not consider four o'clock too far ad- vanced towards the evening. A motion, according with the view put forward, was then made and carried without opposition. Adjourned to June 27th. Meeting of Common Council Committee of Arrangements, at- tended by a Committee of Virginians, and the Relatives of Mr. Monroe, June 23d. Speeches of Mr. Gouverneur and Col. Peyton. The interest taken in the removal of President Mon- roe's remains from this city to Richmond, Va., seemed to increase among our citizens. The Committee of the Common Council having the matter in charge met again, and the room where the meeting was held was thronged by parties interested in their proceedings. In the mean time, the Committee of New-York Virginians were in session in an adjoining room of the City Hall, and the Common Council Committee, being desirous of knowing their views before they would conclude their own meeting, delayed their proceedings in order that an opportunity would be afforded for making them known. It was soon announced, howevei-, that the Committee of Virginians would be present immediately, and then Al- derman Adams, as Chairman of the Committee, asked if any military officers Avere desirous of being heard, and stated at the same time, that they had now an opportuni- OF JAMES MONKOE. 40 ty of speaking in reference to any thing connected with the subject now before the Committee, Lieutenant-Colonel Leiferts, of the Seventh Regiment National Guard, said that he had consulted with his corps on the subject of accompanying the remains of the de ceased President Monroe to Richmond, and had ascer- tained their sentiments regarding the matter. Meetings of the Regiment had been held, at which he was present, and they resulted in showing that a majority of tlic men were v,'il!ing and ready to accompany the remains to Richmond. The members of the Committee of Virginians and re- latives of the deceased now entered the room, and the Chairman of the Committee in session said he Avas anxious to hear what they or any of the relatives of President Monroe, had to lay before the Committee. Samuel L. Gouverneur, son-in-law of President Monroe, then rose and delivered the following address : Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Committee : I trust that there is no man who can doubt that the family of Mr. Monroe have heard with deep sensibility of the honors that the Common Council, the military, and the citizens generally of New- York have contemplated conferring on the memory of their illustrious relative, James Mon- roe. Sir, we have been deeply impressed by hearing of these inten- tions, and we are more so, when we recall to mind the associations of former days, for we feel that the present expression of feeling is only the reechoing of those that were expressed on the occasion of, and after, his death in Kew-York. I know several of those who fol- lowed Mr. Monroe to his tomb, and also that they can bear testimony that the remains were honored by the people of New-York in a manner that was never surpassed. By this, the people of this city did honor to an illustrious American, to James Monroe as a states- man, as President of the Union, and they did honor to Virginia, the land of his birth. When we took him to the grave we left him there for a time, anticipating that the State of Virginia would soon recall the remains of her son to his native State. Under the impression that this would be done, I myself placed this simple inscription on his coffin, which may be seen and read, if the vault is opened, to this 3 50 KKMOVAL OF TUE KEMAIXS day, namely, " James Monroe, of Virginia." Tliat, gentlemen, was the name he bore ■while lie lived, that was the name he was known by when he died, and that is the name that marks his tenement in the tomb. Now, gentlemen, I am about to state to you, calmly and frankly, what havebeenmy views from the commencement on this matter. I am not insensible to the remarks and feelings which, through time and want of a proj^er knowledge of the real character of James Monroe, have grown up adverse to the honor of his memory. But I have felt that this was the man who was to me as a father, in my early days — the one to whom I was then most attached — that he had been the father whose daughter I have married and whose memory I would cherish ; in short, gentlemen, I felt that same feeling that any one of you would feel, if you knew that the bones of your father were to be taken up and carried from one place to another. On the occasion of the present proceedings in relation to Mr. Monroe's remains, gentle- men, my feelings have been aroused, and I do feel that I would like to see the ceremonies carried out in the manner the Common Council have proposed, with the exception of the removal from the burying- place where he now lies to some building in the city, to be after- wards named. In accordance with the simple habits of James Mon- roe himself, this first part of the ceremony should be done with all possible quietness and without the most remote approach to ostenta- tion. I wrote to the Governor of New-York State upon the subject, and stated that if it were possible the remains could be removed quietly, even to Virginia, I would like it to be done. He wrote about the measures that were going on here in reply to my letter. I have communicated with Governor Wise on the subject, also ; but of course nothing definite could result from these proceedings. I learned from him, however, that a deputation from Virginia would be here on Saturday, and that they would be ready to consult with the Common Council of New-York on the subject, and that it was principally in their hands at that time. I was also told that the authorities in Virginia would adopt and act upon whatever views they considered most consonant to those of the Mayor and Common Council of New-York. I am now willing, gentlemen, to leave the whole matter witli you, for I am one of the last that would interfere with the ceremonies you propose to make on this occasion. You will deem every word I say on this subject as my true sentiment, when I inform you that my mother was the sister of James Monroe's wife, and that my mother and another near relative now' sleep beside him in his tomb. I hail, as every man ought to do at the present time, the public expression of his native State which is now mani- OF JAMES MO^IIOK. 51 fested. Now, there is a rumor that has been circulated through the public press, the impression of -which I would like to remove. It is that the Virginians had an idea — and the resolution of the State of Virginia th-at was passed goes to confirm this — in which it is stated that his remains have been placed in a public burj'ing-place. I was astounded when I heard this, and I felt, at the time, they were un- der a wrong impression. Let any one come and see where the re- mains lie, and then he will be convinced that they do not lie in a place like the Potter's Field, but in as pretty a little private burial place as there is in the world. He lies there in a vault for which I paid $500, when he hardly left enough after his death to be called an estate. He lies next to my own mother and next to the nearest relatives he had in this world. On the 4th of March, 1825, Mr. Monroe retired from the Presidency the second time. He could not give a better evidence than he did during the terms in which the public trust was vested in him, than he did of his honesty when influencing the affaii's of his nation. I told Governor Wise that his burial here was no choice of his own, but it was done because his favorite daughter lay here, and because of the esteem in which he held and respect he had for the city of New- York. But at the time of his death he was annoyed by discussions concerning mat- ters connected with this vei-y same thing, until the poor old man at length sunk under the trouble they caused him, and died — yes, he died on the 4th of July here, while the chiming of bells, the boom- ing of cannon, the exultation of the inhabitants were announcing the anniversary of the greatest day America ever saw. At four o'clock in the afternoon he breathed his last. Now, gentlemen, you may consider these remarks inapplicable to the occasion ; but I feel it is the first time that the friends of Monroe's family have had an oppor- tunity to express to the public their deep sensibility to the manner and particulars of his death. When Mr. Goiiverneur concluded his address, Colonel William Peyton arose and spoke in these words : 1 am Chairman of the Committee of Virginians appointed to place the views of Mr. Monroe's relatives concerning the manner in which they desire the ceremonies attending the approaching obsequies be- fore you, with a view to meet the wishes of all parties. His rela. tions desire that his remains should be removed without any display of military attendance or otherwise. The Committee of Virginians having already the views of this Committee before them, have come 52 KEMOVAX OF THE REMAINS to the conclusion that it might be well to have the removal of the remains from the cemetery to the private house of his friends some- where in or near Fourteenth street, and to have it done as tlicy choose, and tlien to give the body into the hands of the city author- ities. So far, it ■will be at once seen, his relatives are disposed to award to the city of New-York all that is necessary in this matter. The New-York authorities have come forward in such a manner that it has become appropriate that the Virginians should accommodate themselves to the ceremonies that may be adopted by them. We, therefore, with this view, have appointed a proper number of pall- bearers, and we submit the rest to you. I am requested, further, to state that as soon as the body is removed to the residence it will be entirely for the city authorities to determine what will be done. The removing of the body from the vault is all that the Committee re- quire the Common Council to leave to the relatives of the deceased President and the Virginians. This is in brief what they desire should be done. The Chairman of the Common Council Committee now rose and said : The authorities of Virginia opened a correspondence with our Mayor on the subject of removing the remains of President Monroe to his native State. We believe that as Mr. ilonroe was a Virginian, the authorities of his native State had the first claim in every way to regulate our proceedings so far as was consistent in this matter. Mr. Monroe's remains we believe to be the property of the nation, and we will go on and make these ceremonies as imposing and as creditable to the nation as can possibly be done. Samuel L. Gouverneur, Jr., the grandson of President Monroe, and his only lineal male descendant, said that he agreed entirely with the Common Council of Xew-York, and hoped that he aj^preciated their intentions and mo- tives as he considers their actions deserved. OF JAMES MONROE. 53 Copy of a Letter to Gov. Henry A. "Wise, by Sam. L. Gouverneur, and published, (in connection with the Proceedings,) at the Re- quest of Col. James Monroe, to whom a Copy had been address- ed by the Author. Petersville, Frederick Co., Md., June 18, 1858. IIexry a. Wise, Governor of the State of Virginia : Sir : I have received a copy of a resolution of the General Assem- \)\Y of Virginia, providing for "the removal of the remains of James Monroe, Ex-President of the United States, from the public burying- ground in the city of New- York, to the cemetery at the city of, Richmond, A'"irginia, for interment; provided, that upon inquiry you deem it proper, and such removal may meet with the approbation of tlie family." The public life of James Monroe is written in the history of his country. The events of his private life — few years indeed — are known to a few surviving friends. On the 4th of March, 1825, he completed his second Presidential term. He soon commenced to reap the bitter fruits of a life devoted to the best interests of his country, regardless of his own. As a private citizen, he emerged from all his successive public trusts, with poverty as the emblem of his purity, and the badge of all his public honors. A loan from a near relative, reluctantly accepted, realized after his death, dis- charged the immediate demands in Washington, and bore him and his fiimily to that residence in which he had fondly ho2:)ed to end his days. Pressed, to a melancholy degree, by debts, almost impercepti- bly accumulated by time, with the occasional relief which two young relatives could afford, he struggled manfully with adversity for about five years. In the unexpected death of his devoted wife, in September, 1830, he realized the fact that his cup of earthly sor- rows was full to the brim. She had, with enviable graces of person aud mind, adorned every public position he ever held. She had nobly participated in all his troubles, and with her sudden loss, all the hopes of his declining years faded rapidly before him. A consti- tution of great original vigor exhibited symptoms of decided decay, and a mind nobly endowed in active sympathy, of gradual decline. His removal to New- York was the result of stern necessity, not of choice. At the solicitation of his family, in the residence of his youngest daughter, and in the society of his wife's relatives, herself a native of that city, he found all the beautiful sympathies which earth affords. His presence commanded universal respect. Public meetings gave a new impulse to prompt action in Congress upon 54 KEMOVAL OF THE REMAINS those claims which, in deep conviction of their justice, lie had made upon his country. In daily anxious suspense he awaited their deci- sion. The partial allowance it made came too late for him. Post- ponements and angry debates, marked by that bitterness of party politics which ever seeks a shining mark, had bi'oken down his noble spirit. The exhausted energies of nature could rise no more. On the 4tli of July, 1831, amidst all the exulting evidences of national pride which mark that day, associated now with the deaths of Adams, Jefferson, and Monroe, in humble resignation to Divine will, without a groan or a sigh, he ceased to live on earth. Let not the people of Virginia believe that his honored remains were treated with neglect. In no " public bui-ying-ground," in no " borrowed tomb," do they lie. In a vault, originally purchased by his daughters, in a beautiful private " cemetery," surrounded by many of the most res2>ectable and virtuous of his day, they have awaited the call of his native State. Two sisters of his wife, one my own dear mother, with others, relatives of her family, have slept around him. His death excited profound sympathy. The city authorities of New-York asked not the right to honor his memory, but the favor to be permitted, with aj^propriate ceremonies, to bury him at the public cost. His body was attended by a train of moui-ning relatives and friends from the humble dwelling where he died, through streets hung with emblems of public sorrow, to the City Hall. A noble tribute to his worth, from eloquent lijis, lately closed forever, was pronounced over it in the City Park. Funeral services before the assembled clergy, in one of the most venerable churches, were per- formed by the presiding bishop ; a procession, civil and military, of countless numbers, witnessed the whole population of a city draped in mourning, and hushed into solemn silence, save when the plaintive dirge told the sad office they performed, bore him to his tomb. Other similar spectacles may have exceeded this in gorgeous display, but in imposing solemnity it never was surpassed. AVhen his remains shall again be brought to light, you will find them distinguished by these few simple words : " James Monroe, of Virginia, 4th July, 1831 ; aged seventy-two years." They pointed significantly to his native State. To her soil he was devoted ; and to her people he was ardently attached. "To them," did he say, " I owe every thing. They never failed to stand by me. They will, one day yet, do justice to my memory." That day has dawned ; his words are verified. If the sentiment your action announces has been slow in expression, it will be r;ipi(l in progress. AVlien " the re- OF JAMES MOXKUK. 55 mains" of James Monroe shall have been deposited in his native soil, it will expand with time. His public and private virtues will yet be estimated at their real worth. Of the personal family associates of Mr. Monroe, Mr. Augustin Monroe, and Mr. James Monroe, his nephews, and myself, his son-in- law, only survive. He left four grandchildren, of whom tliree, the children of his younger daughter, are living. The youngest, Mr. S. L. Gouverneur, Jr., has, I learn from him, spoken for himself, and approves the removal. His eldest grandson, who bears his name, deeply afflicted by Providence, speaks through me. His only grand- daughter will abide my action. Representing these interests, the memory of my late wife, sole executor of Mr. Monroe, and possessed of his wishes, in regard to the final disposition of his body, I trust I do not exceed the bounds of delicacy or strict pro2:)riety in addressing myself to you. We approve "the removal," but respectfully suggest our wishes in regard to it. The long period during which " the re- mains have mouldered in the tomb," the season of the year, and otlier considerations, urge upon us the wish that it may be effected with as little display as possible, and withoiit any unnecessary expense to the people of your State. This we deem most in conformity with the character of our institutions, and the simple habits of life of the deceased. In the language of the resolution making the appropria- tion, only " so much thereof as may be necessarj^" will be expended in effecting the removal, and the balance will be disposed of as the authorities of your State may deem proper. Should you concur, as I hope you will, I will invite my son to ac- company me at an early day to New-York. He will personally superintend the disinterment of the remains in the presence of all the members of the family who may be pleased to attend. They will, in due form, be delivered to the charge of the persons selected bj' you, and an equal number of the nearest relatives of the deceased, to be conveyed to Richmond for interment, as you may direct. I am. Sir, respectfully, your obedient servant, Saml. L. Gouverneur. It is due, in reference to the above letter, to state, as we do, on the authority of its author and recipient, rela- tives of the late Ex-President Monroe, that they, on con- sultation with a Committee of Virginians resident in New- York, with some slight modification of the programme, so far as regards the mode of disinterment, nobly yielded their previously-exjiressed preferences on the subject. 56 llEMOVAL OF THE REMAINS This result was jointly communicated by them, and the Committee of Virginians, to the meeting of the Commit- tee of Arrangements on the part of the Common Council when in session, an account of which appears in the fore- going pages. The civic and military honors were duly appointed to take place as proposed, in a grand proces- sion, on July 3, from a private residence or church in Fourteenth street, or in that neighborhood, to the steamship Jamestown, in the vicinity of the Battery. It is proper also to state, that in the temporary absence of Governor Wise, of Virginia, Mr. Wm. Mumford, and Mr. O. J. Wise, the committee delegated by the Legisla- ture of Virginia, to visit New-York, and to receive the remains of Ex-President Monroe, replied to the above letter, and expressed their desire, as far as practicable, to conform l)oth to the wishes of the relatives of the de- ceased, and to the arrangements proposed to be carried out by the city authorities, and the Virginians resident here, who proposed to join, under their direction, the citizens of New-York, in duly honoring the remains of one who, by his pubhc services, had endeared himself to the whole nation. Arrival of the Committee from Virginia— Meeting of the Com- mittee of the Common Council— The Pall-Bearers appointed— Their Names— The Fifty-Fifth Kegiment competing for the Escort, etc., etc. June 28th. The Common Council Committee on the removal of President IMonroe's remains, held another meeting this afternoon. Alderman Adams called on Mr. Scott, the Secretary, to report any thing of interest that came to his knowledge since their last meeting. The Secretary reported as follows: I called on the OF JAMES MONROE. 57 a in file back, Next followed the hearse, surrounded by the Washington Greys, leading their horses, the hearse stop- ping inuuediately in front of the entrance. The carriages containing the pall-bearers then drove up, and alighted, entered the Hall, and formed in open order in the passage leading to the Governor's Room, to receive the body. Here some delay occurred, and they were kept waiting for some time, until finally the coffin was taken from the hearse and carried into the Hall, the pall-bearers marching at its side, preceding and behind it, to the Gov- ernor's Room, followed by the procession of Virginians, Here it was placed on stools provided for the purpose, and the pall-bearers gathered in a semi-circle around it, closely pressed by the people, who had been previously admitted to the room. Here they stood for some time, no one seeming to know what to do next, when, after consultation with Alderman Adams, Mayor Tiemann spoke as follows : By the arrangements of the Committee, the remains will now be taken charge of by the Guard of Honor. As they are marching in, the company present will be dismissed. The pall-bearers then departed, and the crowd about the coflin now became so great, and the curiosity to see it so intense, that the room had to be cleared to give the Guard a chance to move. The rest of the military Avere dismissed al)i)ut a qtiarter-past seven. Company C, of the I OF JAMES MOXROE. 90 Eighth Regiment, Capt. Burger, was detailed to stand guard over the body during the night, and several vacan- cies Avere promptly tilled by volunteers from other com- panies in the Regiment. There were ten men on guard for two hours, when they were relieved for four hours, and so on through the night. Next morning they were relieved by Company F, who took charge of the remains until the Seventh Regiment appeared. THE ARKANGEMEWTS FOR THE 3d JULY. Next morning, about half-past ten, the remains were escorted to the steamer Jamestown by the Seventh Regi- ment, where they were formally delivered to the Com- mittee of Virginians, by John Cochrane, on behalf of the city. The Seventh Regiment then embarked on the steamer Ericsson, which they had chartered, for Rich- mond. The Committee of the Virginians and the Com- mon Council, and a guard of twenty of the Seventh Re- giment, nnder command of Lientenants W, R. Harrison and G. W. Turnbull, accompanied the remains on the Jamestown. SUN-STROKE IN" THE PROCESSION. The only accident which occurred to mar the proceed- ings was that one of the color-bearers of the Eighth Reo-iment was sun-struck Avhile m line, and had to be taken home. During the moTdng of the procession minute-guns were fired from the Navy Yard, Fort Hamilton, and other naval stations, and numbers of city bells pealed forth the funeral toll. TEN O'CLOCK P.M. The City Hall was brilliantly lighted, and the Governor's Room was thrown open to the public. Numbers of our citizens and strangers availed themselves of the op- • portunity to pay a tribute of respect to Monroe's mem- 94 KEMOVAL OF THE REMAI>"S oiy. The Eightli Regiment were on guard, and were very courteous to strangers. Tlie Hall remained open durins; the night. THE REMAINS OP MONROE HONORED BY A SALUTE EROM THE PERSIA. The Royal Mail Steamship Persia, Captain Judkins, gave notice that a sahite would be lired by her on the occasion of the sailing of the steamer Jamestown, in honor of the departure of the remains of President Monroe for Richmond. The Remains removed from the City Hall to the Steamer James- town—Parade of the Seventh Regiment— Five Thousand Per- sons witness their Departure on board the Ericsson — The Remains delivered to the Virginian Committee on board the Jamestown— Addresses of Hon. John Cochrane, Mr. O. Jennings "Wise, and Mayor Tiemann— Scenes on the Docks, etc. In pursuance of the arrangements of the Committee, the National Guard formed m Lafliyette Place, on the morning of the 3d July, at ten o'clock. There was a large concourse of people present from an early hour, and several fashionably-dressed ladies occupied prominent places, where a view of the parade could be had. Owing to some unaccountable delay, however, the formation of the Re"-iment did not take place until near eleven o'clock. The men were attired in full uniform — gray pantaloons, and knapsacks. The colors were shrouded with crape, and the drums were also covered with black. The Regi- ment paraded to the number of five hundred and sixteen officers and men. The following comprised the field and staff: Colonel Duryea, 1 Lieutenant-Colonel Lefferts, 1 Major Crawford, 1 Adjutant Pond, 1 Captain of Engineers Launitz, 1 Pay-Master Carpenter, 1 Quarter-master Winchester, 1 OF. JAMES MONROE. 95 Ordinance Officer Dros, 1 Aid — Cajitain Cragin, 1 Troop of Horse, 30 Company 1 — Captain Bensel, 50 Company 2 — Captain Shaler, 54 Company 3 — Captain Price, 51 Company 4 — Captain Riblet, 48 Company 5 — Captain Speaight, 52 Company 6 — Captain Nevers, 54 Company 7 — Captain Monroe, 51 Company 8 — Brevet-Colonel Sliumway, 48 Company — (Engineers,) 7 Drummers, 17 Band, 45 The regiment presented a fine appearance, and elicited Avarm marks of approbation from all present, including Mr. O. Jennings Wise, Mr. Mumford, Colonel Peyton, and other Virginia gentlemen, who were early on the ground. The Regiment, shortly after eleven o'clock, broke into column by companies, and marched down Great Jones street. Broadway presented a very animated ap- pearance, and, as on the previous day, was densely crowded. The windows and balconies of the hotels, stores, private houses, and unfinished buildings, were also filled with spectators, who, however, maintained that de- corum which the occasion demanded. Some of the es- tablishments on the line of march were draped in mourn- ing. The stores at the corners of Broome street, and the mourning store, 579 Broadw\ay, were handsomely fes- tooned with white and black crape. One of the stores exhibited a monument with the following inscription : JAMES MONROE, OF ■\^RGINIA, DIED FOURTH JULY, 1831. AGED 74 YEARS. As the Regiment proceeded, the crowd increased, and by the time it reached the Park, there could not have been less than five or six thousand persons present. 96 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS THE CITY HAIiL. From an early hour on the morning of the 3d, the Go- vernor's Room, in Avhich the remains were left imder a gnard of honor of the Eiglith Regiment, Company C, under command of Captain Burger, was crowded by citizens and strangers. The arrangements made by the Committee for admitting the public, were very satisfactory, and no confusion arose. During the night the Guard was re- lieved three times, ten men on duty at a time ; and at seven o'clock yesterday morning Comjiauy F, Captain Buck, took charge of the remains. At ten o'clock precisely the funeral-car, drawn by eight gray horses, drove up to the City Hall, and was quickly surrounded by a large and inquiring crowd. At a quarter- past eleven, the Seventh Regiment, i:)reccded by a troop of horse, entered the Park and formed in line. A com- pany of Greys took up their position in dovdjle file from the entrance to the Hall down to the funeral-car. The Mayor, the Virginians, and the members of the Common Council, then ascended to the Governor's Room, and as- seml)led around the coffin. After waiting for some time, the Mayor advanced to the head of the coffin, and stated that he had been requested to make a few^ remarks, intro- ducing Mr, Cochrane, who had been deputed to deliver the remains to the Virginia authorities, on the part of the city of Xew-York. Mr. Cochrane had not arrived, and as time was pressing, and they wished to remove the re- mains to the steamer, he would read what he had to say. The Mayor then read as follows : Sir: It is now twenty-seven years since the body of the statesman and patriot, James Monroe, the remains of whom now lie before us, were deposited in the tomb, from which they have just been exliumed amid every demonstration of respect on the part of the people and authorities of this city, not only for the high position he once occu- pied, as Chief Magistrate of this our country, but for his elevated character, and the important services he had rendered to the Union. New-York, still cherishing his memory, has marked the event of the OV JAMES MONROE. 97 disinterment of his remains, for the purpose of their being laid be- neath the soil of his native State, Virginia, with that respect which is due a devoted patriot and honored citizen. The State of Virginia has delegated a Committee to receive them from the authorities of this city. You have been selected by the Committee of Arrange- ments of the Common Council, to make tliis delivery on their behalf, and this important duty is intrusted to you, with the full assurance, that it will be performed in a manner not onlj^ becoming the solem- nity of the occasion, but the exalted character of the deceased. His Honor then directed ]\[r. Wilson, the undertaker, to remove the remains. The coffin was then taken up by six bearers, and, fol- lowed by the pall-bearers, sentries, committee-men, etc., was carried down and placed in the funeral-car. Whilst the coffin was being placed in the hearse, the National Guard presented arms, the drums rolled, and all the military honors paid to a President of the United States were gone through. The Regiment then broke into columns, and, preceded by the band and staff, march- ed to slow time down Broadway to Liberty street, into West, and on to pier No. 13, where the steamer was lying. The scene on the dock and its vicinity Avas indeed a moat imposing sight. Hundreds congregated upon the ships, steamers, house-tops, and wherever a view could be had, to witness the procession as it passed. Even the roofing which covers the pier was filled with people, and to such an extent that it was at first feared it would fall in. One very striking feature in the ceremonies was, that when the remains passed through the crowd on the dock, hardly a head could be seen covered. Extending across pier No. 14, and directly in front of the covering over the dock, was draped in deep mourning the following inscrip- tion : TO THE MEMORY OF DEPARTED WORTH. After the Seventh Regiment had gone through the re- gular ceremonies, and the hearse had reached the gang- plank leading to the steamer, the guard right-about faced, 5 98 KKJIOVAL OF THE REMAINS and marched off the dock, and proceeded immediately to the steamer Ericsson, foot of Beach street. DELIVERY OF THE REMAINS — HON. JOHN COCH- BANE'S ADDRESS, AND MR. O. J. WISE'S REPLY. The Jamestown was newly painted, and very tastefully draped in mourning for the occasion. The coffin was cariied to the quarter-deck and set upon a low pedestal beneath an awning. The Hon. Mr. Cochrane, Mayor Tiemann, the relatives of the family, the pall-bearers, members of the corporation, etc., assembled around, Mr. Cochrane and Mr. O Jennings Wise standing at the head of the coffin. Mr. Cochrane then advanced, and in a most impressive and solemn manner, delivered the following address : It is now more than thirty yeai-s since a venerable stranger arrived in the city of New-York. The storms of state had bent his form, and private care was written on his brow. Released from the bur- den of official responsibilities, which he had never shunned, he sought in our scenes the tranquillity he craved so much. From this retreat he securely contem2:)lated the eventful vicissitudes of the world he had left, nor once regretted its honors, or missed its ap- plause. A domestic circle opened at his approach, kindred hearts cherished him, and the slope of his life gently declined, amid troops of friends, to the music of household associations. All revered him ; sauntering steps quickened at his appearance ; the citizen paused on the way, and the stranger in the gate, to look where passed James Monroe. It is thought by our city an honor thus to have sheltered the gathering years of one who had been the fifth President of the United States. A short time, however, passed, and the familiar form was seen no more. As if commissioned, on the anniversary of our country's independence, to bear a nation's gratitude to the Presence on High, his spirit burst its thraldom in that jubilee of freedom. He was mourned as only the good are mourned. He has never been forgotten. Earth has been strewed with the recurring tributes of more than twenty-five years of decay, and still the public heart has kept sentry at his grave. Seasons have come and gone ; moons waxed and grown dim ; and while all was changing, still unchanged has been the memory of New-York, that low upon its lap was laid the liead uf James Monroe of Virginia. Inviolate has been held the OF JAMES MONKOE. 99 sacred charge. It is true that liis deeds live after him, a common heritage for all ; but his body descended to the tomb, to await there tidings from the State he loved so well. Those tidings came, and our city paused; they came, and the busy mart was hushed. It was the demand of the father for his son — it was the voice of the mother seeking for her child. Men's hearts were touched by the appeal, and the very dead was stirred to filial sympathy. From his place of early sepulture we have removed the illustrious departed, and have borne his body hither, Virginians, to you. As we have come, the minute-gun has announced, to laud and sea, the sad funeral transit, and the nation veils its standards to our solemn rites. And it is meet that it should be so. By no sacrilegious summons, but with a reve- rent awe, has tlie silence of a former age been broken — the repose of its mighty dead disturbed, and the memory of the sage, like the lights of the tomb of Terentia, have diffused a genial radiance abroad. A general attention has been concentrated upon the revelation. The sacred truths of the olden time attend upon these hearsed bones, and have moved in procession with them. Again we seem to witness the old ancestral patriotism; again to listen to the precepts of a wisdom that no longer* walks the earth ; again the fathers are with us, and we move as within the halo of their presence. Virginians, we bring you here the casket we have guarded ; we now commit to your hands what so long has been intrusted to our own. Our work is finished, our duties done. We surrender to you this mortal ; you will crown it with emblematical immortality. We deliver to you this perishing record of the past ; you will inscribe upon it that just- ice he so affectingly craved of you for his memory in the future. Virginia — mother — it is thus that New-York gives back to you your son. As soon as Mr. Cochrane had concluded, Mr. O. Jen- lungs Wise (son of Gov. Wise) spoke as follows : Mr. Cochrane, Mayor Tieraann, Gentlemen of the Board of Common Council and Board of Aldermen, fellow-citizens of New- York, and you, fellow-citizens of Virginia, now resident in this great metropolis, my colleagues and myself are instructed by the Governor of Virginia to tender to you, to each and all of you, the sincere and earnest gratitude of the people of Virginia, for the general sympathy and kind cooperation with which you have volunteered in the perform- ance of a filial duty — by your kind participation in the honors pre- scribed by the association of Virginia, to be paid to the mortal re- mains and undying memory of James Monroe. In expressing thus 100 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS tlie thanks of the State nf Virginia, in obedience to our orders, it is perhaps, inappropriate, gentlemen, that we should venture upon any- further expressions of the sentiments which have just been so happily expressed, and which tend so much to raise the hearts and minds of all of us upon a level with the dignity of tliis occasion ; but I can not abstain from some slight reference to those memories so dear to us all, especially to those memories in which New-York and Virgi nia have a special interest. I can not abstain from some reference to the examples of James Monroe — to call your minds, gentlemen, to the true nature of the solemn ceremonies we are called upon to per- form. This is no mere pageant of State pride ; it is not even a tri- bute — a mere tribute — to the atfection of those to whom James Monroe was dearest while in life ; but tliis is a political solemnity. It is one of those political solemnities which are always necessary, in order to preserve a Republican government, by perpetuating the gi-eat traditions of public virtue. It is, then, to the example of James Monroe that I would point your attention. It is his example that we are assembled to embalm in the hearts of the people — the first great example of unswe^wing devotion to truth and liberty — the example of patriotism, which found no sacrifice too great for his country's good — the example of enduring application to every branch of study which could be wielded for its benefit, and the many ex- amples of personal wisdom, which he has imprinted upon her history for her future guidance and her destinj'. Gentlemen, the time at my disposal does not permit me to dwell at length upon all these memo- ries ; but there are some too precious to us all to be at all neglected. More than eighty years ago a high-spirited Virginian boy obtained a commission in the Continental armj^ He won honors at Brandy- wine, Monmouth, and Germantown. He accompanied the retreat through Jersey, by Washington's side, in "76, to cross the Delaware, and won a captaincy by an honorable wound at Trenton. But, gen- tlemen, this was not the opening of his military career. It was at Harlem and White Plains that he drew his sword in defense of his common country. Gentlemen of the Seventli Regiment, you have assembled to do honor to the memory of a fellow-soldier of New- York. I pass over the succeeding memories. We can not pause to contemplate the patient student in the law-office of Jeft'erson, who neglected the science of special pleadings to devote himself espe- cially to the study of national law. We pass over even his initiation into tlie civil service of the country, as a member of the Legislature of Virginia. We may pause a moment to look upon him in Con- gress in 1788. At that time, James Monroe voted against the accept- OF JAMES MONKOE. 101 ance of the Federal Constitution. The error, grave as it was, though but of judgment — and he recognized it in his later life — would have sunk, would have martyrized any naan of mere ordinary effiacncy ; he woukl have been a martyr to tlie Union party. Not so with James Monroe. It was recognized by the people of Virginia, and of the United States, that his services were indispensable. Two years afterwards, the Legislature of Virginia elevated him to the Senate of the United States, and shortly after that, the great leader of the Union party gave him an important post of Minister to France ; and here, gentlemen, we approach the period of a much greater triumph — the severest struggle, the proudest triumph that marks the career of James Monroe. At this time, the Presidential chair was occupied by a man of such spotless purity of character, who had performed the greatest services for his country, with an intellect so high above the capacity of most men, that his words fell upon the ears of his countrymen as if spoken by the voice of inspiration itself; corrup- tion, weakness, incapacity, and infidelity, shrank before him, before his words, as they were anathemas pronounced by an angel of God. It was in pursuance of his injunction and policy, that James Monroe called for the support of the people of the United States. It was James Monroe himself who prepared his own vindication, and it was a vindication as conclusive to himself as it was conclusive to the President. The State of Virginia gave a verdict in his favor, and expressed their approbation by electing him chief executive ; from that, James Monroe accepted a second time the office of Minister to France. Here, gentlemen, is another memory which proves that New-York, above all other cities of the Union, has a right to feel a great interest in this ceremony. It was during that service that he, in conjunction with New-York's accomplished and patriotic son, Robert Livingston, negotiated for the purchase of Louisiana. But I find, gentlemen, I am intruding too much upon your time, and I will confine myself to a few of these memories. While a soldier of the Revolution, and the exponent of the Avar of 1812, the statesman who, during thi.t war, had controlled the pen, the sword, and the purse of the State simultaneously, when he became President of the United States, was Commander-in-chief of the army, by reason more of his capacity and efficiency, than his political station — the first official act almost of James Monroe, as Commander-in-chief, was to inspect the military fortifications and war defenses of New-York. There is another memory to which we should refer at i;ll times, especially in the hour of danger to the Republic, when faction divides us within, or foreign foes threaten us from without, whenever — from whatever 102 EEAIOVAL OF THE EESrAINS the cause be — it becomes necessary to make all and every sacrifice for the weal of tlie Commonwealth. We can call to mind when two aged men met together here to recount over the toils and sacrifices they had endured and volunteered, and to count over the treasure of republican virtue, which they were proud to leave to their child- ren, and their children's children — when James Monroe and Lafa- yette joined hands for the last time in tlie name of the Republic and liberty. There are two other memories which mark the decline of the life of James Monroe. Devoted unceasingly to the service of his country ; obliged to resign offices in rapid succession — to chase from one to another in the constant claim on his patriotic efficiency — he had no time to devote to the cares of his private fortunes. He re- signed his office of President of the United States, to go to a home of poverty and want. (Sensation.) Gentlemen, a modern writer has touchingly observed, that " dignity in poverty is like the scent of the wild rose — none linger by the wayside to catch the fragrance of its perfume." But, tliank God, when a man has devoted toil and treasure to the service of his country, and when he has retired from the highest positions with honor, maintained honor, then we witness one of those moments when we can all stand with uncovered heads in the presence of honorable poverty. (Emotion.) It was all that time that kind hands and tender hearts helped the poverty of James Monroe in the city of New-York. This, gentlemen, gives you a right to participate in this ceremony, a right which Virginia would never question, but would most cheerfully relinquish before it was asserted. And New- York gave him a tomb in that beautiful ceme- tery, secured from public intrusion, but honored with public grati- tude. To retui'n thanks for all these duties which the citizens of New-York have performed towards James Monroe, is a task too great for my feeble abilities. I know no fitting mode in which to present the thanks of Virginia for this great benefit ; but I can not conclude without reference to a matter for the vindication of the honor of my native State. I have heard it said by some that Virgi- nia has allowed these hallowed remains to continue too long unnotic- ed by the public gratitude. Permit me to say that I can not concur in this censure on the gratitude of my State. You know, I know, that James Monroe's head was bowed down to the grave, partly by a series of personal animosities and political acerbities, which chased him even to the tomb. Was it not, then, appropriate, exceedingly proper, that every memory of dissent, every voice of dissonance, and every discordant tone, should be allowed to die away, and be obliterated from the minds of men, before Virginia OF ,IAMES MONROE. lUo proceeded, in the fullness of time, to pay tlu- merited iKnior to Uk; remains of her illustrious dead ? DEPARTURE OP THE ERICSSON". On the arrival of the Regiment at the steamer's dock, there were no less than five thonsand present to witness their departnre, among tlicni a large number of ladies, the steamers Washington and Hermann, which lay in the slips adjoining the Ericsson, being crowded Avitli tlio fiir sex. It was nearly half-past twelve o'clock when the Regi- ment arrived at the pier, and immediately marched on board, by gang-planks both fore and aft the vessel. The men were soon drawn up in line on the hurricane-deck at a shoulder-arms. Here they remained in the above position until the captain of the steamer gave orders to "let go," and the steamer began to move out into the stream. As soon as the wheels of the Ericsson were in motion, several hearty cheers went up, both from those on the dock and the guard on board the steamer. The Ericsson soon headed for the ISTarrows, and fired a salute, which was returned from the \yashington, Hermann, and Baltic, at the same time dipping their colors. As the Ericsson moved dow^n the river, a long white color un- folded itself, which displayed in black letters, " N". G." When opposite Jersey City, the Royal Mail steamship Per- sia fired a salute, and almost every steamship, packet, and steam-tug appeared to join in paying honor to tlie occa- sion. On their way down the bay the government forts commenced firing minute-guns, which was kept up until after the departure of the Jamestown. DEPARTURE OF THE JAMESTOWN. After the ceremonies had been concluded, the coftin was removed to the forward upper deck and deposited m the cabin arranged for its reception, the guard being 104 REMOVAL OF THE KEMAIXS left in charire. The Committee of the Common Council and Virginia Committee, together with their guests, amused themselves during the remainder of the time in and about the steamer, talking over the incidents of the day, until the time of her departure. At a little before three o'clock Mayor Tiemann, accompanied by Hon. Dan- iel E. Sickels, drove up on the pier, and were received by the Committee on board the vessel. Here they remained until the dejDarture of the steamer, when they, wishing all a safe journey to Richmond, bade them adieu. There were about one thousand persons present to wit- ness the departure of the Jamestown, and as she departed the Persia again fired several salutes, and the forts below kept up firing their minute-guns until she was clear out of sight. •>F JAMES MOXIIOE. 105 VOYAGE IN THE JAMESTOWN. The Salutes to the Jamestown on leaving New- York— the Guard of the Kemains— Guests on board— Incidents of the Voyage— Re- ception at Norfolk Harbor— Welcome by the Mayor and City Council and Naval Officers— Keception at Kichmond, etc. As the Jamestown shot out from her moorings on Sat- m-day, the 3cl July, at three o'clock P.M., Pier 13, Xorth River, she was received with simultaneous salutes from vessels and piers on both sides of the river, and in the stream. From the Cunard steamer Persia, the Havre, Hamburgh, and Bremen lines of steamships, the revenue cutter Harriet Lane, and multitudes of smaller craft, and the forts on Governor's Island, the booming guns sent forth a tribute to the memory of Monroe, while the flags of all the shipping were run down at half-mast. The Jamestown took a turn a short distance up the river, acknowledging the salutes by dipping her flag to half- mast, and then took her course for the South. In the lower bay she was saluted by the yacht Favorita, and likewise on passing Fort Hamilton. The body of the Ex-President was placed in the gen- tlemen's sitting-room on the upper deck of the James- town, which was appropriately draped with black and white muslin festoons and rosettes for the occasion. A special guard of twenty men was detailed from the Sev- enth Regiment to guard the body on the i^assage down, who were the guests of the steamship company. The detachment was under command of Lieutenant W. K. Harrison and Lieutenant George W. Turubull, and two Sei-geants, the remaining sixteen men being detailed, two from each company, from this service. On the passage down, two men were placed on guard at a time, being relieved everv two hours, so that the men had two hours 106 IlEMOVAL OF TIIK REMAINS on guard and six hours ofT. Messrs. O. Jennings Wise, and William Mumford, of the Richmond Committee, had especial charge of the remains, and the delegation from the New- York Virginians, consisting of Major Henry Hill, U.S.A., Major Anderson, J. A. Paterson, Dr. Den- nis, and A. R. Wood, accompanied them as an escort. The Joint Committee of the Common Council, of which Alderman Adams was Chairman, who had charge of the obsequies in New-York, and Hon. John Cochrane, were also on board, all being the guests of the steamship com- pany, who made every thing as agreeable as possible. Captain Parish and Purser J. M. Smith sustained the re- putation for urbanity and attention which they had ac- quired by their long experience on this line. The voyage to Norfolk hax-bor was not distinguished much from ordinary sea-voyages, except that the most desirable weather prevailed. Sunday was so generally observed on board as to suit the tastes of the most rigid Sabbatarian, notwithstanding the proverb that "there is no Sunday outside of seven fathoms water." The James- town carried her flag at half-mast during the entire trip, as also the flag of the company. At ten o'clock on Sun- day morning the Roanoke, of the same line, passed, diji- ping her flag to half-mast in lionor of the occasion, and flring a gun, which was acknowledged from the James- town. THE RECEPTION IN NORFOLK HARBOR. Much surprise was manifested at not overtaking the Ericsson, with the Seventh Regiment on board. It was not believed that she could have been passed during the nio-ht, and all eyes were constantly on the look-out to try and descry her in the distance. On reacliing Norfolk harbor, ofl" Ca})e Henry, a heavily-loaded river steamer ^\•as discovered bearing down upon the Jamestown, which, upon a nearer approach, proved to be the Curtis OF JAJIES MOXIiOK, 10'7 Peck, a former New-York steamboat, l)ut now owned at Norfolk, winch had gone out with the mtention of meet- mg the Jajnestown. Her decks, pilot-house, guards, wheel-house, and bow were crowded so that her guards on the side nearest the Jamestown were buried in the water. She dipped her flag at half-mast and fired a salute ; and a few cheei's were given, which were duly acknowledged. Captain Parish, with a keen sense of the anxieties of all on board, hailed the pilot of the Curtis Peck and said : " Have you seen the Ericsson ?" " No ; we have seen nothing of her," was the reply ; and the question : " When did she leave New- York ?" " At one o'clock on Saturday." " When did you leave ?" " At three o'clock on Saturday," replied Captain Par- ish. The Curtis Peck dropped in the wake of the James- town, and kept her company all the way up to Norfolk. On reaching Fort Monroe, a few miles above, on Old Point Comfort, named after the illustrious Ex-President, the booming of minute-guns sent forth a salute Avhich continued until the fort was out of siQ:ht. At the li^ht- ship on Willoughby's Spit the bell was tolled as the Jamestown passed, and soon after the J. E. Cofl:ee, an- other North River boat, with excursion passengers from Norfolk, ran alongside and gave a salute. All along the ramparts of Fort Monroe crowds of people were gathered, and still another excursion steamboat, the Georgia, left the pier and started to accomi^any the Jamestown to Norfolk, and was followed by the Powhatan, another boat, which made her appearance oif the Rip Raps, a pile of crude-looking fortifications on an island op- posite Fort Monroe, which is on the right as you enter the harbor, and about fifteen miles from the line of its lOS llEMOVAL OF THE REMAINS mouth. Six miles further up the James River the Eliza- beth River pours into it from the south, Xorfolk and Portsmouth being but four .or five miles from the mouth. Here a Swedish merchantman, lying in the stream, ran up the flags of all nations except, to the astonishment of all, the American, and fired a salute. As the Portsmouth Navy Yard came in sight, the well-known ship-of-the-line, Pennsylvania, boomed forth a salute, which appropriately concluded the i:)atriotic reception which the Jamestown had met Avith up the harbor. THE BECEPTION AT NORFOLK. As the Jamestown rounded Norfolk, the town seemed alive with people flocking toward the wdiarf, and by the time that point was reached by the steamer every avail- able jjlace on the surrounding sheds and wood-piles was crowded, while a band of music from the Xavy Yard played an appropriate air, and a procession, which had been formed, was drawn up, ready to receive the guests of Virginia, witli their jirecious charge. A procession had been formed in the market square, and proceeded to the pier in the following order: Band. United States Naval Officers from Portsmouth, consisting of Commander Dornin, Capt. Tucker, Capt. Poore, Lieut. Pegram, Lieut. Murdoek, Lieut. Broome, of the Marines, and others. The Hunter Woodis Rifles, named after the lamented Mayor of K'or- folk, with the following officers and sixty-five men : Captain Lamb, Lieut. Ilayman, Lieut. Dilworth, Lieut. Gwaltney, Lieut. Dawney. ilayor Lamb and the City Council. Citizens generally. The Marshals of the procession Avere Myer Myers, Charles PI. Shields, Augustus B. Cook, Kader Briggs, OF JAMES MONROE. ] 09 William P. Stewart, N. C. King, S. T. Sawyer, E. Hardy. The Hunter Woodis Rifles are a new company, and, as stated above, are named after the lamented Mayor of Norfolk, who lost his life during the terrible ravages of the yellow fever in 1855. The dress is green frock-coat and pants, with black velvet stripes, bordered Avitli gold, and the new army regulation hat. They presented a fine appearance, and are certainly a credit to the city of Nor- folk. Among the citizens Avere the members of the Young Volunteers of Norfolk, Captain Robinson, in un- dress uniform. They are the oldest corps in Vii'ginia, having been organized in 1802. As soon as the James- town was moored, the officers of the procession came on board, and were introduced separately to the representa- tives of the various Committees, after which they were escorted to the room where the remains lay in state, when Mayor Lamb spoke as follows : "WELCOME TO NORFOLK BY MAYOK LAMB. Gentlemex: Let the foreign and domestic foes of our Union be- hold this scene and tremble. Let the false prophets of disunion be- hold this scene and forever close their mouths. A scone hallowed by the day, this natal day of the only legitimate Independence ever born on earth. Perdition to the traitor that would attempt its life. The spirit ■which at this moment animates this assemblage simulta- neously animates the hearts of all the citizens of the Empire State and the Old Dominion, and will ever cause them to beat iu perfect unison of feeling. On all subjects of vital importance to our great and happy confederacy, N"ew-York and Virginia are united to a m life to the accomplishment of that grand loG REMOVAL OF THK REMAINS purpose. He spoke liopefully of Virginia's future, and urged her sons to go on and develop the bright colors it contained and realize the olorv which was their right. After some farther remarks in the same strain, he closed with an approjDriate sentiment, which was received with loud applause : 6. Virginia. Her sons of the past. Her sons of the present can speak for themselves. Gov. Wise was called upon to respond. When he arose. Col. Duryee proposed three cheers, which Avere heartily given by the National Guard, and followed up by continued cheering for some fifteen minutes. Fellow- Citizens: I think I can call ourselves to witness that we are the most cheerful meeting that ever gathered together. [Laugh- ter.] We are told in tlie toast to which I have been called upon to respond, that it is first given to "Virginia;" next to her "sons of the past;" and as for lier sons of the present, they can speak for themselves ; and I think I can call yourselves to witness, that every one of us can speak at once. [Laughter. There was immense con- fusion in the hall.] Last night, late, I was notiiied duly that I would be called upon this day to respond to this toast ; and when I came to look at it, very little reflection taught me that it would take a whole lifetime to respond to it. Once, when the State of Massachu- setts, the older sister of Virginia, was alluded to — and alluded to with a sneer — all that that master of eloquence, no other than Dan- iel Webster himself, did say, was, " There Massachusetts stands ;" and in respect to Virginia, I would take up the sentiment of his words, and say : " Here Virginia stands." [Applause.] But are you pre- pared to listen to a library of history in speaking of herself, and a biography in speaking of her sons of the past ? It would take vol- umes to speak or to write her history and their biography. No ! you have not the time for either now, and we are not prepared for the task. But Virginia has her history of her settlement ! And there stands Jamestown, with all the romance of the history of Pocahon- tas and Capt. Smith. [Applause.] Virginia has her colonial history, and there is a volume in the first rebellion against British tj-ranny on the continent — Bacon's Rebellion. And tliere, near you, is " Bloody Run," and lieside* lliis, tliere is " Point Pleasant," and be- OF JAMES MONROE. 157 yond that is the march of George Rogers Clark to Kaskaskia and Vineennes, that beats any inarch of the ten thousand in Grecian or Persian history. [Applause.] And then, Virginia has her Revolu- tionary historj'. Go to the old magazines at VVilliamsburgh, and there you Avill find was the first ball of the revolution to Avhioh Patrick Henry's eloquence gave the impulse. [Applause.] Go to the very frontispiece of the first work of the first convention of our fathers, and there you will find the record of the first Bill of Rights, not excepting Magna Charta. [Applause.] I am, fellow-citizens, not alluding to events like those which threw the tea into the har- bor of Boston — that, and other deeds of like kind, were done by masked men — men who had to assume the costume of the red men — of Mohawks. But I speak of open and organized action. Go to the old Raleigh, in Williamsburgh, and you will there find that without putting on a mask, Virginia, through her legislators and representa- tives, the first that ever sat in the world, of a sovereign constituen- cy, was the first openly, daringly, in organized conclave to proclaim freedom and independence on the 20th of June, 1776. [Applause.] She alone proclaimed herself solely without knowing whether any sister State would back her, free, sovereign, and independent. [Ap- plause.] Go, then, into Carpenter's Hall, and see the sovereign States meet ; see them assemble there. Oh ! what a scene ! My God, if you can only picture that scene this day in an assembly like this ! Charles Cai-roll signing the risk of millions, and Stephen Hop- kins, with palsy in the hand but none in the heart, signing — signing what ? Signing the great charter, the great national Declaration, which said that the Virginia declaration of the 20th of June shall not be left alone, but that the 4th of July shall be added to the de- claration of the 20th of June, and that the whole nation shall be united in one Declaration, written by the four fingers and the thumb of one of Virginia's sires. [Tremendous applause.] Look to Vir- ginia's part in the formation of the articles of the Confederation, which led to the formation of your Federal Constitution. Listen to me now, and to what I am going to say — I wish that there was no noise, and that there was silence in all the earth, and that I had the trumpet of an archangel to sound it every where. When your fathers attempted to form this Union they did not know, before- hand, what sort of a union it was to be. They set to work and did the best they could under the circumstances. What they would ac- complish no man could tell. There was not a head upon either that had the human wisdom to foretell what it was to be ; but they went in /or union for union's sake. [Applause.] By all the gods, by all 158 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS the altars of my country, I go for union for union's sake. [Loud ap- plause, which continued for several minutes.] They set to work to make the best Union they could, and they did make the best Union and the best Government that ever was made. [Applause.] Wash- ington, Franklin, Jefferson — all combined in Congress or out of Con- gress, in Convention or out of Convention, never made that Consti- tution—God Almighty sent it down to your fathers. [Applause.] It was a work, too, of glory and a work of inspiration. [Applause.] I believe that as fully as I believe in my Bible. No man, from Ham- ilton, and Jay, and Madison — from Edmund Randolph, who had the chief hand in making it — and he was a Virginian — the writers of it, the authors of it, and you who have lived under it from 1789 down to this year of our Lord 1858— none of your fathers and none of your father's sons, has ever measured the height, or the depth, or the length, or the breadth of the wisdom of that Constitution. [Loud applause.] Virginia, Virginia speaks for herself, she gave you the father of your country. [Applause.] She gave you your revolution ; she gave you your liberty ; she gave you the author of the Declaration of In- dependence ; slie put the ball of revolution in motion and was the first that gave it impulse. [Applause.] She was the mother of your Constitution in the person of Edmund Randolph and Madison. And then she Avas the mother of your judiciary in the person of John Marshall. [Ajiplause.] Mother of the Father of the country; mother of the Constitution ; mother of the Declaration of Independ- ence ; mother of the Revolution ; mother of the Judiciary, whicli is the great bulwark of the Constitution. [Loud applause.] We may well claim that she is " mother of us all !" Is it necessary for me to give you a list of her sons ? They are more numerous than the mighty pillars of this mighty fabric ; and they are just as staunch in their historical version as these pillars in the firm basements. [Loud applause.] And now after all, they talk about A^irginia's decay : she has never decayed, she has not decayed ; she has not progressed in mechanic arts, in mining, and manufacturing, and commerce, but she has ten times the field of Pennsylvania in iron and coal, and she can have mechanics, or miners, or manufacturers, and commerce whenever she chooses ; and as I have said often before, every river has its water- fall which murmurs the music of her power for machinery. [Ap- plause.] I thank you (addressing himself to Mr. Cochrane) for the honest truth which you have told them this day. As a witness to what I OF JAMES MONROE. 159 have been preaching for twenty years to my constitnents. It is time that Virginia was turning her attention to manufactures, me- chanics, and commerce, and mining. No country, no State can live upon one only of the five cardinal powers of production. She must resort to all of the five combined, and she is doing it ; go before you leave here, my friends from Isew-York, and look at the iron facto- ries that are growing up around this noble scenery. I say that labor is not the " mud-sill" of society, and I thank God that the old colo- nial aristocracy of Virginia, which despised mechanical and manual labor, is nearly run out. I thank God that we are beginning to see miners, mechanics, and manufacturers who will help to raise what is left of that aristocracy up to the middle grade of respectability. [Laughter and applause.] Look at the iron factory here, look at the tobacco factory here — that factory which is every day stealing my life away with the very «eef, >- Potomac River, July 8, 1858— Ti A.M. ) The Regiment •will parade on the arrival of the small steamer, in full uniform, white trowsers, knapsacks, with gray trowers, fatigue- caps, and jackets packed therein, to proceed to Washington city. By order, A. DimyEE, Colonel. Smith, Acting Adjutant. As the ship was yet aground, some surprise was man- ifested ; but it was soon made known that a propeller had come alongside and taken off the Quarter-master and his assistants, for the j^urpose of going to Washington and chartering a steamer. Various efforts were made to get the ship off the rock in the mean time. couet.]m:aiit.ialik"g the pilot. Though the indignation at the incompetency of the pilot was universal, it manifested itself good naturedly, and it was determined, by Avay of vent for this feeling, as well as for the amusement of the Company, to try the delin- quent by a court-martial. The court was constituted as follows : ISi REMOVAL OF THE EEMAIXS Supreme Court — Steamer Ericsson. Befoi'e Judge Wm. Ilalsted. July 8, 1858. The people against John Doe, the pilot of the Ericsson, for running the boat ashore. Mayor Mayo, of Eichmond, for the prosecution, and Messrs. Charles Babeock and F. W. King, for the defense. The court was held on the quarter-deck, the judge being seated on the ■wheel-house, with a black coat on, turned back foremost, with Col, Duryee's eye-glasses. One of the Guard officiated as policeman, to keep the crowd in order, and Messrs. E. Jenkins and J. W. Shep- pard acted as court-clerks. The prisoner was excused from attend- ance on account of pressing duties. Some person was found tam- pering with the jury, and it was proposed to call out the Seventh Eegiment to preserve order. One of the jurors objected to serve, as he had formed an opinion, but he was pressed in the service. An- other juror was discovered taking a bribe, but the court held that the offense was too common to disqualify him. The jury were then sworn to "tell the truth, so help them Bob," but on the suggestion of the court that they were not to testify, they were sworn to hear, if they could. Mayor Mayo then opened the case for the prosecution, stating briefly the accusation, that the pilot had put the ship on a rock in- stead of Washington harbor, and that he had willfully, falsely, and fraudulently represented himself to be a pilot. He recommended the confiscation of the pilot's boat, and that he be tied to the end of a line to serve as a sounding-lead. Corporal Ware was the first witness, and swore he did not know any thing about the case ; and on cross-examination expressed his doubts as to whether he was on the Ericsson or not. Mr. Brumly was the next witness, and testified that he heard the pilot tell the captain that he knew the channel, and could take the ship up. His evidence was, however, objected to on account of his head being shaved, and also because he acknowledged having been fed on ham. Mr. King opened the case for the prosecution, and moved to dis- miss the indictment, on the ground that the ofl'ense was not a crimi- nal one, but was the subject of a civil suit; also that there was no evidence that the ship had been run on the bar, or that the pilot would not have kept the bargain if they had given him time. Sergeant Dyer and Col. Lefferts were then examined as to their knowledge of the case, but nothing material was elicited except the OF JAilES MOXROE. 185 fact that the officers, as well as the men, had been fed on ham, which was considered a strong point for the defense. Sergeant Jenkins testified that the cook was responsible for the mishap, the ship having run on a lager-bier bar while he was feeding the dog. lie had been fed on pilot biscuit, and felt capable of speak- ing as to all marine matters. Mayor Mayo and Mr. Babcock summed up respectively for the prosecution and defense, making some very strong points. After which Judge Halstead delivered a charge, which was universally applauded for the perspicuity of its legal knowledge. The jury brought in a verdict of guilty, with a recommendation to mercy, in consideration of which one of the privates was sen- tenced instead of the pilot, because he had no coat. The sentence was, that he should wait until a collection could be taken up to get him a new coat. PREPARATIONS FOR THE RECEPTION" AT "WASH- INGTON". The city was in a fever of excitemont all day yester- day in anticipation of the arrival of the popular Seventh Reo-iment of New-York. There was little else talked about at breakfast, and -we feel confident that half the city had prepared themselves for a military display far supe- rior to any thing witnessed in the metroiDolitan city. At an early hour the District Regiment of volunteers, under the command of Colonel Hickey and his staff, marched to the Arsenal — the point at which the recep- tion was to take place. As usual, they were accompanied by a regiment in variegated uniforms, flir exceeding them in numbers, and j^ossessed of an energy and perseverance, under all the untoward circumstances by which they were surrounded, Avhich assured us the expected guests would receive from them, at least, an enthusiastic recep- tion. But, alas ! at the Arsenal gate they discovered another and an unforeseen obstacle to their entrance to the Arsenal grounds besides the patched and crum- bling Penitentiary building, for the gate was closed to th9m, and the sentinel on dutv informed them that 186 EEMOVAL OF THE REMAINS his orders were to admit none but the Volunteers. But there was a remedy which some of them took ad- vantage of, for we perceived their singular dress and broken columns scattered all over the grounds so soon as we had passed the point of difficulty. We found, on inqui- ry, that this consisted simply in a scramble over a portion of the brick wall, a feat which was easily accomplished, since they were unencumbered with that essential part of the equii^ment of effective soldiers — the musket. The com- pany, however, was not a large one, and upon the whole was quite as select as the jiromenade concerts at the Cap- itol grounds. The military remained under arms but a few moments after entering the cool shade of the Arsenal grounds. Col. Hickey having considerately given orders for them to break ranks. Groups of officers and men were immedi- ately formed, and the time was spent in pleasant and amusing gossip, interrupted occasionally by an anxious gaze far down the Potomac. We ascertained, upon inquiry, that the Light Iniantry, Lieutenant Tucker in command, mustered twenty-three men ; the Highlanders, Captain Watt, twelve men ; the Union Guards, Lieutenant Donnelly in command, twenty men ; the Montgomery Guards, Lieutenant Kelcher in command, twenty-six men ; the President's Mounted Guard, Lieutenant Teel in command, sixteen men ; the German Yeagers, Lieutenant Veitze in command, twen- ty-two men ; a detachment of United States Marines, in command of Sergeant-Major Robinson and Lieutenant Wilson, numbering forty-three men, and the superb Ma- rine band. The regimental officers on the ground con- sisted of. Colonel Hickey, Lieutenant-Colonel Bacon, Ma- jor Peck, Adjutant Henry N". Ober, and others. A corps of ordnance was also in attendance, and the battery used by Colonel Duncan in the Mexican war was placed on the river-bank ready for the tiring of the salute. OF JAJEES MONROE. 187 Tills was certainly not a very formidable array, but "vvbat it lacked in numbers it made up in public spirit. It was a source of no little annoyance, not only to the offi- cers but the men, that so small a portion of the regiment had responded to the call of Colonel Hickey. As time wore on, and the hour for dinner approached, the general disappointment found vent in words, and many a sturdy fellow, who had started out strong in en- durance, acknowledged himself foint and hungry. At last the reveille beat, the men were formed in line, and refreshments were served up to them. This consisted of two biscuits, a piece of cheese, a Scotch herring, and a glass of water to each man. To the comfortable dinners in Washington this bill of fare no doubt will apjiear in- significant, but we must remind them that they were far from home on military duty, and had to put up with what could be got for them. As for ourself, we gratefully par- took of a "horse-cake " and a glass of " lager." After the arrival of the mail-boat from Aquia creek, every body felt certain that definite information would be obtained, and in a moment a hundred rumors were afloat. At last the reveille again summoned the tired men to their jiosts, the line was once more formed, and the tired sol- diers marched to their homes. "VVe then learned that Quarter-master Winchester, of the New- York Regiment, had come up in the boat, and that the gallant Seventh could not possibly arrive before a late hour to-night. It Is said that the Ericsson is aground at Kettle Bottom. The Collyer is already with her, and we understand that another steamer left last evening to join them. The Regi- ment Avill be brought to the city in these steamers, and when they arrive, will be quietly conducted, to the quar- ters prepared for them at the National Hotel. The offi- cers of the District Regiment will call upon them this morning at nine o'clock. Arraufrements have been made bv a Committee of our 188 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS citizens for meeting the Seventh Regiment at Mount Ver- non, and escorting tbeni in a f)ro2:)er manner to this city. A steamer will leave the wharf at the foot of Sixth street for this purpose at seven o'clock this morning. Upon their arrival here they will be received with military ho- nors by the military of the District, and conducted to the quarters prepared for them. After a brief rest, there will be a dress parade, and it is expected that the Presi- dent of the United States will review this finely-drilled Company. We give place to the following letter from one of the visitors, which has just been handed to us : Steamer Mount Vernon, July Y, 1858. Among the guests who accompanied the remains of President Monroe that came by the Mount Vernon to-day, and will remain at the National during their stay, we liave tlie Hon. John Cochrane, the orator of the day ; Mr. S. L. Gouverneur ; Ahlermen, Messrs. Adams, Murray, Tuomey, Lynes and Owens ; Councihnen, Messrs. Cornell, Bickford, Van Tyne, Bunco, and Frazer ; Mr. Gallagher, sergeant-at- arms, and Mr. "Wilson, undertaker. Mr. Robinson, President of the Richmond Railroad, kindly sent the steamer Thomas Collyer for the delegation to Mount Vernon, where Mi\ Washington received us with distinguished attention, giving us many interesting details con- nected with the life of Gen. Washington, and extending the kind hospitalities of the mansion to us. Captain Reynolds, of the Mount Vernon, gave a fine dinner, contributing to the pleasure of our trip, and rendering the hours passed with him one of the most agreeable incidents on the route. The steamer Ericsson will arrive at Wash- ington in the morning with the Seventh Regiment. After sojourning at Mount Vernon an hour or so, they will honor Washington with a visit, then to Baltimore and home. They have met with the distin- guished reception which they so richly deserve, being the best- drilled corps in our country. OF JAJIKS MO^KOE. 189 Disembarkation from the Ericsson— Going on board the Steam- boat Mount Vernon— Reachijag Washington— Regimental order —Review of the Regiment by the President and Cabinet— Visit to the Tomb of Washington— Description of Mount Vernon— Ceremonies at the Tomb— Address of the Rev. Dr. AVeston, the Chaplain— Memento of Mount Vernon— More Hospitality— Pur- suit of Pleasure under Difficulties— March through Baltimore- Reception in Philadelphia— En route for Home. " It is a Ions' lane that has no turnino:," and aftei* Ivino- for tweh'c hours stranded in the Kettle Bottoms of the Potomac, those on board the Ericsson were overjoyed on Thursday afternoon to descry a small steamer bearing down upon them, which proved to be the Thomas Collyer, an old Xew-York boat, commanded by Capt. Baker, and containing a l^arty of gentlemen from Washington, who, not finding the Ericsson at the appointed rendezvous, had run down to meet her. She conveyed the intelligence that Quarter-master Winchester had secured the steamer Mount Vernon to take the Regiment up ; and in order to expedite movements, Mr, Richard Wallach, the o^nier, kindly consented to take up three companies on the Collyer. These were accordingly embarked, and quar- tered at the National. The Mount Yernon reached the Ericsson, and was ready to start by twelve o'clock P.M. of the same evening, which she finally did, after making an ineffectual attempt to get the Ericsson off, landing the balance of the Regiment in Washington on Friday morn- ing, the 9th July. It was found that the Ericsson was stranded on an oyster-reef, and hanging just forward of midshij:), her bow being several feet out of water at low tide. The detention was a source of great annoyance to the citizens and military of Washington, who had made com- paratively extensive preparations for the reception — the Light Infantry, Lieutenant Tucker; Highlanders, Capt. Watt ; Union Guards, Lieutenant Donelly ; Montgomery Guard, Lieutenant Kelcher ; President's Mounted Guard, Lieutenant Teel ; German Yeagers, Lieutenant Yeitze, 190 EEllOV'AL OF THE REMAINS and a detachment of United States Marines, under Ser- geant-Major Robinson, Tlie*following were regimental officers : Colonel Hickey, Lieut.-Colonel Bacon, Major Peck, Adj. Henry N. Ober. Though the whole force numbered but one hundred and seventy men, it evinced a disposition to be hospitable, and certainly the most general disappointment Avas mani- fested at the non-appearance of the New-Yorkers, and the necessity for disbanding the forces on the receipt of the intelligence from the Ericsson. As soon as the Seventh had washed the dust from their eyes and throats, a general rush was made for the New- York i^apers, and none of the New-York guests stopping at the hotels were released until they disgorged all the newspapers in their j^ossession, being the first that had been seen by the Regiment since the 3d of July. A noti- fication was sent to President Buchanan that the Regi- ment wished to be reviewed by him, and he immediately sent verbal reply that he would be not only wilUng but happy to review the Seventh, and would consider himself honored by the visit. Arrangements were accordingly made for the parade, and the following order was issued : Head-quakters Seventh Regiment, ) Washington, July 9, 1858. \ The Regiment will parade this day for review by his Excellency the President of the United States, in full uniform, white pants, without knapsacks. Regimental line will be formed in front of tlie City Hall at eleven o'clock A.M. The companies will report to the Adjutant in front of the National Hotel, at a quarter before eleven o'clock, for equalization. This Regiment will also parade this day in fall uniform, white trowsers, without knapsacks, with the side arms only, for the purpose of visiting Mount Vernon. Regimental line will be formed in front of the National Hotel, at half-past two o'clock. By order, A. Duryee, Colonel. Lebenau, Adjutant. OF JAMES MONIIOE. 191 The members of the Seventh were thus released be- tween breakfast-time and the hour of parade, for the pur- pose of visiting the interesting points in the city, of which opportunity they availed themselves to the fullest extent. Some explored the Capitol grounds and buildings, ram- bling through the labyrinthian passages of the new exten- sions, peering into the offices, occupying the members and speaker's seats in the new House of Representatives, admiring some of the paintings in the rotunda, criticising the frescoes and ornamentation of the ncAV buildings, climbing to the top of the cupola, (to the great strain of their calves,) inspecting the massive construction of the new dome, and behaving altogether like good republicans very much at liome. A few strolled into the Patent, Treasury, Interior, State, and other departments, taking a peep at the Cabinet. Many found their way to the office of the Master of the Rolls, W. W. E. Rose, an old New-Yorker, who politely exhibited the various objects of interest in his department. Among these were the original draft of the Declaration of Independence, the en- grossed copy of the Constitution, the papers found in the possession of Andre, the proceedings of the court-mar- tial, and his touching letter praying that he might not die upon the gibbet ; the minutes of the Constitutional Con- vention, and various other objects of intense interest to the scholar and patriot, or historian. Not a few called upon Gen. Cass, and found him as pleasant and sociable as he has the universal credit of being, rendered, proba- bly, additionaUy interestmg from the favorable termina- tion of the great British outrage question. Gen. Cass looked hale and hearty enough- to give many more re- buffi^ to British aggressions. The uniforms of the Seventh could be distinguished hi all parts of the city. On foot or in carriages they Avere determined to make the most of their few hours' leisure : and they did so most effectually. To be sure they were 192 KEMOVAi OF THE REMAINS not very partial to the swarms of flics, or the clouds of dust, or the loug walks which it required to get from one point of interest to another ; but by dint of perseverance and mint-juleps, they did a great deal of exploration in a very short time. In the midst of the general enjo}iiient, a general sad- ness prevailed, when it was announced that the body of a member of the National Guard had been found floatino: in the river at Richmond ; then another dispatch was re- ceived, stating that the name of the member was Laui-ens Hamilton, of the Sixth Company ; and another stating that the remains would be taken to New-York for inter- ment, escorted by a Richmond company, Mr. Hamilton had been missed after leaA'ing Richmond, but it Avas sup- posed that in the hurry he had been left behind. He had been brought on board sick, but had so far recovered as to be able to walk about. He may have become de- ranged, and walked overboard, or been pushed off" in the bustle. He Avas a grandson of Alexander Hamilton, a second cousin of Hon. John Cochrane, and Avas a great favorite in his Company. He was a graduate of Columbia College. THE REVIEW BY THE PBESIDENT AND CABINET. The announcement that the regimental line would be formed in front of the City Hall, drew an immense con- course of spectators at that point, to witness the forma- tion of the line — a novel spectacle for the citizens of Washington. In spite of the broiling sun, the City Hall steps, the sideAvalks, and surrounding buildings Avere croAvded with spectators, Avhile the avenues thither swarmed with the citizens eager to obtain a A'icAA' of the visitors. As the companies marched to the ground from their A'arious quarters, they Avere uniA'ersally admired. Though the Washington military ditl not parade, OAving to the fatigue of the previous day, and the micertainty of OF JAilEts MONEOE. 193 the arrival of the guests, they were represented by the ou];)t;uns of the diiferent companies, and Colonel Hickey, Lieut.-Coloncl Bacon, Major Peck, and other regimental ofiicers. The line was soon formed, and after a few ex- ercises of the manual, which drew applause from the usu- ally quiet Washingtonians, the line of march was taken up for the President's mansion, via Pennsylvania avenue. The crowd was dense, and in some cases interfered with the movements of the Regiment ; hut as the curi- osity was complimentary, and the Washington police could not he ex2:)ected to have much experience in such matters, the inconvenience had to he borne patiently. It being midday, the heat Avas almost insufferable, and when the men arrived in front of the President's man- sion, they seemed ready to drop. The absence of any police arrangements rendered it necessary to mount a guard from their own number, however unpleasant might be the duty. The line was soon prej^ared for review, and after the Washington officers had taken a position in front, on the sidewalk, a general stir announced that the President was coming, and soon he was seen headinir the Cabinet and invited guests of distinction Avith stately step, making his way to the point fronting the centre of the line, assigned liim for the review. He was the picture of a democratic President, and Avas attired in a pair of thin light-blue pants, Avhite vest, black frock-coat, light cravat, and black beaver hat. As he took up his position, the order to " present arms " Avas given, and the Presi- sident AA'as received with the honors due his position, being three rolls of the drum, and flourishes of trumpets, the Colonel and other officers saluting. The Regiment was then arrayed " to the rear open order," and the Pre- sident passed down and up the line on a tour of inspec- tion, accompanied by the Secretaries of State, Treasury, War, Navy, and Interior, the Postmaster-General, and Attorney General, military officers of the State, Mayor 9 194 REMOVAL OF THE RJiAIAI^-^ Towuseud, Acting Adjutant-General, Gen. Ward B. Bur- nett, and others. The National Guard band played " Hail to the Chief" during the route, so that the Presi- dent made the circuit in quick time. His stately form, at the head of the company, as he stepped accurately to the music as a veteran soldier, could be easily distinguish- ed. He was oflered an umbrella to shield him from the sun, but, like a true soldier, he declined. The column was formed by companies, twenty-two front, on the re- turn of the inspection party, and passed in review at com- mon time, returning four abreast, and repassing by com- panies at quick time. When Colonel Duryee gave the order, " Battalion — halt !" the promptness with which the order was obeyed, elicited a general hum of astonish- ment, and, as at the order " front," the line became as straight as a die, the applause increased to the cheering point ; but, as at the order " order arms," the millets S came down with one thump, a general amazement was evinced, which, in numerous instances near the writer, manifested itself by muttered exclamations between the set teeth, often profane, but always expressive. JMuch amusement Avas created, as at the order to " right about face — march," the whole line scattered the crowd between them and the fence, and pressed many close to the rail- ings mitil the moment of the order to " halt." It was generally considered but a fair balance to the incommo- dious arrangements for the review, or the absence of any arrangements, on account of which the most ragged re- publicans flocked in large numbers to the vicinity of the President and other distinguished guests. At the con- clusion of the review, the men stacked their arms, and, accompanied by their officers, marched into the celebrated East Room of the White House, where President Bu- chanan had expressed his willingness to receive them. The officers, commissioned and non-commissioned, were first introduced by name by Colonel Duryee, after which the OF JAAIJiS MOXKOE. 195 men passed up in file, each shaking hands with the Presi- dent without introduction. The President made no spe- cial remark, but his cordial grasp and pleasant counte- nance denoted the gratification which he felt at meeting the members of the " Seventh," Avhose excellent appear- ance and drill he had repeatedly praised to their officers. He, however, did make one general remark of note, when the first privates came up. He said : " Gentlemen, I am glad to see you. I was nothing but one of the rank and file myself when I was in the service." On being hitroduced to the actmg Chaplain of the Regiment, Mr. Weston, the President said : " I did not think there was any necessity for a chaplain to keep order in this Regiment." After all had been received, the President spent some moments in social conversation with the officers, and soon retired, on the plea of ill-health. After taking a superficial view of the White House, the guests left, and the Regiment soon formed and marched to their quarters for supper. VISIT TO THE TOMB OF "WASHINGTON. Mr. Richard Wallach, of the Washington and Alexan- dria Steamship Company, kindly tendered to the Regi- ment the use of two boats, the Thomas Collyer and Mount Vernon, to convey the Regiment to Moimt Ver- non, which was gratefully accepted. Colonel Duryee, having become slightly ill by hard duty, the command, on this occasion, devolved upon Lieut.-Colonel Marshall Lefferts, who ordered the men to be ready to parade in full uniform, with the side arms only, for the occasion. The fatigue had been so great, and the weather was so extremely warm, that numbers of the Guard were unable to walk in the ranks, but went in fatigue-dress in conveyances to the boats. The Mount Vernon, Captain Reynolds, left Washington at a quarter to six P.M., and the Thomas Collyer left Alexandria 196 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS shortly after her. The kite hour of starting was a matter of general regret, but the delays were considered un- avoidable, and it was calculated that the visit would be over by daylight. The distance is about twenty miles, and in a little over an hour and a half, the company was landed on the wharf at Mount Vernon — the smaller steamer, on account of the shoal water, being obliged to take off the passengers of the other. DESCRIPTION" OF MOUNT VERNON". Mount Vernon is situated on the southern bank of the Potomac, about twenty miles below Washington, nearly opposite Fort Washington, an old fortification Avhich was blown up during the war of 1812, on the approach of the British fleet. The casual observer would hardly notice the spot in passing on the river, as the luxuriant foliage and thick forest trees nearly obscured the house from vision. The boat lauded at a dilapidated wharf, jutting about tliirty feet into the stream, and seeming ready to fall at every step when crowded. There are two paths leading to the tomb. The older one is much washed away by the rains, and is not the most direct route, being more in the path to the house. The other is a plank walk, loosened by age and frequent use, leading directly from the landing up the hill to the tomb, through thick foliage, and alongside a little ravine. The tomb is on a little hill facing the river, and but about a hundred yards from the bank, the same ridge extending some distance either way. On the left of the walk, as you approach the tomb, stands a small Avooden building, which you are hiformed is for the use of the daguerreotypist, Avho alone is allowed to take pictures here ; further up, on each side of the tomb, are marble shafts, erected to other members of the Wash- ington family, whose remains are likewise deposited in the vault. The immediate locality of the tomb presents OF JAMES MONKOK. 197 a raucli-neglected appearance — the grass and foliage be- ing much damaged by tlie many visitors. Tlie tomb itself is on the side of the hill, built of plain brick, about fifteen feet high by twenty wide. The marble sarcoplia- gus which contains the remains of Washhigton can be plainly seen through the large double-barred iron gates, and at its side, that of his wife. The ceilings and walls of the interior are soiled, by the water soaking through, and the plastering is falling off in many places. The dust covers tlie sarcoi)hagus, so that the epitaph can hardly be read, and the following inscription over the doors is all that would denote, to the casual observer, the location of the tomb of the Father of his Country : "Withia this inclosure rest the remains of General Gkorue Washington. A stone panel over the door bears the following in- scription : I am the resurrection and the life. lie that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live. This vault was erected in 1831, just thirty-two years after Washington's death, and on the spot designated in his Avill, at the " foot of what is commonly called the vineyard inclosure." The old vault near by, wliich was then abandoned, is now but bare ruined walls, into which the visitor may enter. The new vault is about twelve feet high, arched over the top, and the brick walls are faced with free stone. The sarcophagus is cut from solid Pennsylvania marble, and is eight feet long, three wide, and two high, and rests on a plinth, which projects about four inches from the base. The top is of Italian mar- ble, and bears, sculptured in bold relief, the arms and insignia of the United States, with the following insci-ii> tion near the foot : WASIIIXGTOX. 198 removaTj of the remains The body of Martha, the wife of Washington, lies in a sarcophagus of a similar form, and is on the left of the vault, as YOU face the entrance, both being ])]ain1y visible through the iron gate. At the back-wall, two iron doors are seen, which lead to the vaults hi which are deposited other members of the family. The walls of the vault are somewhat cracked. The grass in the vicinity is growing wild, and there were evidences that cows had recently pastured in the immediate vicinity, so that, Avhether from a desire to leave the place without molestation from the sacredness of its character or not, it bears a semblance of neglect which at first strikes the eye unfovorably. "Winding along a deep ravine, the same path growing apparently more dilapidated as it continues, leads up a steep hill about a hundred yards farther on, and requir- ing the visitor to step carefully, lest he fall down the steep. Ascending a flight of steps, the route leads past the old ice-house, where notices are posted, warning visitors from despoiling the grounds. Another steep ascent brings the visitor to the beautiful lawn in front of the mansion of Washington, facing the river. Its am- ple dimensions strike you at once, and you picture in your mind the home of the Virginia planter, built with an eye ever wakeful to the demands of hospitality. A row of heavy wooden Corinthian columns fronts the house, and helps to sujiport the overshadowing roof; the lawn is clean shaven, and, glistening through the tree-tops, the Potomac may be seen, either up or down the liver. As you enter the hall, the furniture which belonged to Washington maybe seen arranged at the side. There is liis venerated arm-chair, Avith a leaf upon which he wrote, and the sitting-room chairs and tables. But the crowd luirries you on hastily through the two small rooms which alone are thrown open to the public, and you have but a glimpse of the pictures which were his, the furniture which he prized. You dare not even imagine that there OF JAMES MONROE. 1 UU is an article which is not rendered sacred by tlie touch of his hand, and you woukl fain tarry to indulge in the re- verie which tliis consecrated spot must force upon every thoughtful man. But, as upon the occasion of the visit of the National Guard, you have no time to linger ; you continue the route, and pass out of the back-door, on which there is an ancient brass-knocker. From the back- stoop, the out-buildings may be seen, ranging on either side, and connected with the main building by hall-ways. They are the residences of the negro slaves employed on the plantation, and are said to be in the same state as when he left them. All the buildings seem to be in a good state of preservation. The mansion looks strong enough to last a century to come. This is Mount Vernon as it appeared to the writer in the hurried visit of but a few moments on the occasion of the visit of the Seventh Regiment, National Guard, on Friday, the 9th July. CEREMONIES AT MOUNT VERNON— THE NATIONAL GUARD AT THE TOMB OF WASHINGTON. As the Guard passed up the walk, each uncovered his head, and gazed upon the tomb in silence as he passed. Some stooped reverentially, and plucked blades of grass or wild flowers,, or little pebbles or bits of loose plastei'- ing, as mementoes of the sjjot hallowed to the citizens of America. When each had taken a passing view, the company formed in a semi-circle about the tonib, the officers and citizens being nearest, and after an imj^ressire silence the stillness was broken by the Mayor of Richmond. Mayor Mayo, in a voice husky with emotion, said he had not expected to address them. He had been born in Virginia, and yet for the first time in his life he stood before the tomb of the Father of his Country, The occa- sion was sixch that he could say nothing to them. They were now upon ground that was sacred and hallowed. It was the common ground of every American citizen. 200 REMOVAL OF THE EEMAIXS It was no lougei* property ; it could not be property ; it was national. It became all American citizens to come there as to the American Mecca. All who loved free- dom, and wished to worship at the shrine of liberty, should come there. He could not address them fuilher, but would scive wav to another, who he knew would speak in more fitting terms than he possibly could. Rev. Dr. Weston, the temporary chaplain of the Regi- ment, then came forward and spoke as follows, in a clear and sonorous vet affectinoj tone : S'atioxal Gcaeds : I have been requested by yoar respected oflB- cers to offer up a prayer here at this altar of patriotism, but, before I do so, I propose to preface it -with a very few remarks. This has been rendered unnecessary by the touching and eloquent appeal of my friend who has just preceded me. It was well said, it was touch- ingly said, by some one, that Heaven left Washington childless that a nation might call him Father. TVe from Xew-York come here to-day to offer to his memory our filial homage, and I know there is not a heart present that wUl not beat with the true accent and spirit of prayer. We shall be better for this. We shall go home better soldiers, better citizens, better Christians, for he whose ashes slumber there, was our exemplar in all these great things — a pati-iot incorruptible, nor kings nor worlds could warp his steadfast mind. A soldier, as some one has said : " Liberty alone unsheathed his sword, necessity alone stained it, and victory alone returned it." In respectful deference we stand here alone to-day, and a voice seems to come from out the sky like that which awed the trembling Hebrew when he stood before the burning bush : " Put oft' thy shoes from off thy feet, the place whereon thou standest is holy ground."' Not only do we assemble here, but centuries after we shall have gone and our ashes shall have mingled with the dust, the sons of American freemen will come from the shores of the Atlantic and the murmuring Pacific, from woody Maine and flowery Florida, as patriots to offer up their prayers upon this consecrated altar. Men who have met in anger, and in the excitement of political contests, will remember here that they are brothers, and that the groat man who sleeps there knew no Mason rOVAL OF THK REMAINS MORE HOSPITALITY. On inquiring at Brown's Hotel, at Wasliiiigton, for tlie bm against the Regiment, tlie following letter was re- ceived : Brown's Hotel, Washington, July 9, 1858. Gentlemen: We regret exceedingly that we were not informed earlier of your intentions to take quarters with us during your short sojourn here. We are happy to inform you that we have no charge or bill against you, and hope that some future day you will again visit AVashington, when we shall be better prepared to receive you. Respectfully, your obedient servants, P. & M. Brown. Col. Duryee also received the following : Wasoington City, Jul}- 9, 1858. My Dear Sir: Sudden and severe indisposition, from which I am gradually recovering, alone prevented my tendering a personal wel- come to you and your associates in arms ; and I had hoped, up to the present moment, to be able to carry out this wish ; but my phy- sician has placed me under injunctions not to leave my house. I deeply regret this circumstance on every account ; but it shall not prevent an expression of my feelings on this interesting occasion, rendered doubly interesting from the patriotic errand which brought you to this region of our Union. I am sure the citizens and soldiers of the federal metropolis will rejoice to meet you in their city ; and in their name, as well as for mj'self individually, I offer to you and to those under your command a hearty welcome to Washington. Allow me to add my best wishes for a pleasant and safe return to your homes. I am. Colonel, with high regard, yours truly, James G. Berret. Col. Abram Duryee, Commanding Seventh Regiment of New-York. BEAU HICKMAN". Of course the famous Beau Hickman, the gentleman so noted for being well dressed and never working — who is always so anxious to show you the city and borrow a half, was on hand on this occasion, and succeeded not unfrequently in doing his victim out of a " half or a quar- OF JAMKS MONROE. 20:5 ter," by the most jiersistent eucourageincnt of a desire to get rid of him, which can not easily be done. He never moA^es on nnder — " a half or a quarter.'" PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS UNDER DIFFICULTIES. Though large bodies are reputed to move slowly, the Regiment liad risen, breakflisted, and reached the depot within fifteen minutes after the appointed time, or about a quarter past five o'clock. There were eighteen cars, and but one old-fashioned engine to start them. Xow, five hundred men, with their arms and accoutrements, and one hundred other men, with the baggage and cars, require some little force to move them. But it Avas found that the engineer had overrated his power and could not budge the train an inch without getting up more steam, which kept the train back so long that, on account of their being but a single track, two hours more were lost waiting for an express train to pass. The boys, however, had become too much accustomed to delay to feel at all angry, and immediately set to Avork pitching quoits and playing duck. Perhaps some city folks don't know hoAv to play duck. It is done in this Avay : Some body must first be " It," and proA'ide a big stone, liaA'ing on it a smaller stone, Avhich is called his " duck." The others fire stones, called their " ducks," at his " duck," and if they knock it ofi", all can go home provided they are not caught by " It," after he has put his " duck " on. If " It " has his " duck " on and catches another man away from " taw " going home or to " taAV " with his " duck," he " tags " or strikes him, and the other has to be " It." It Avill be perceived that this is a scientific game, and likewise afibrds some opportunity for displaying physical energy. The two hours thus passed away almost imperceptibly, and after a dreary i-ide of tAVO hours they got into Balti- more. 204 RKJIOVAL OF THE KEMAINS MAKCn THROUGH BALTIMORE. The Seventh was expected in Baltimore at a quarter before seven, but did not arrive before a quarter past nine. The Light Artillery, Company K, Capt, French, stationed at Fort McIIenry, and commanded by Capt. French and Lieutenants Gillem and Robinson, and the Baltimore City Guard, Capt. Joshua P. Warner, number- ing fifty men, were drawn up ready to receive the New- Yorkers and escort them to the Philadelphia depot. They formed in line on Eutaw street, and the Seventh, after forming regimental line a" short distance below, marched by, being received with due honors. The Seventh then drew up in line after passing the escort, and presented arms, and the Baltimoreans repassed them and took the right of the line, en route for the depot. The Balti- more City Guard uniform was black, trimmed with gilt, and bearskin caps. The rank and file wore epaidets of gilt, mixed with black. They marched in platoons — twelve front — and made a fine appearance. The route taken was through Eutaw, Baltimore, and South-High streets, to the depot of the Philadelphia cars — a distance certainly of over two miles. The men were already jaded with the fatigues of the past week, and this march through the broihng sun was such torture that many of them were oblio-ed to fall out of the i-anks and take to the sidewalk. Some flocked around the nearest pumps, or asked at private dwellings for a draught of water, and one benev- olent groceryman at the corner of Fawn street, seeing their condition, fixed up a pail of iced lager and placed it at their disposal. Those who stuck to the ranks suf- fered terribly, and one poor fellow was sun-struck and had to be carried to the train, where, for some time, his life was despaired of The pronqjtness with which the train left after their arrival, gave them hardly an oppor- tunitv to o'ot a drink of water. They would have given OF .TAJIKS MOXROE. 205 nny price for refreshments of any kind. At tlie various stations, however, the water-jugs were replenished, and finally the whole Company had become somewhat re- cruited. Mr. William Roberts, of the Philadelphia, Bal- timore, and Washington Railroad, contributed much by his arrangements to expedite the trip and make it com- fortable. At Havre de Grace an excellent collation was spread on the boat, though there was hardly enough to satisfy all. At Wilmington the Seventh was loudly cheered, and greeted with an artillery salute. KECEPTIO]Sr AT PHILADELPHIA. The Philadelphia National Guard had made extensive preparations to receive the Seventh, and were much chagrined when they learned that they had not time to stop. In spite of the lateness of the hour they stood their ground, and as the train came up greeted the Seventh with loud cheers. Lieutenant- Colonel Wilhelm, of the First Brigade, and Captain Lyle, of the Philadelphia Na- tional Guard, waited upon Colonel Duryee in the cars, and pressed him to stay with his command and partake of a collation which had been spread at the new Armory ; but Colonel Duryee was inexorable. He said the men were too tired, and he would not take them in New- Yoi'k on Sunday, but expressed, on behalf of the Regi- ment, a grateful appreciation of the kindness intended, but impressed the necessity of proceeding at once to New-York. Captain Kyle accordingly yielded, and, upon invitation, seated his men in the forward cars for the purpose of escorting the New-Yorkers to the depot for New-York. The Pliiladelj)hia National Guard is a fine body of men, numbering one hundred and fifty mus- kets. The dress is light drab dress-coats, with brass but- tons, and epaulets with pendent acorns, symbolical of strength, white pants and bear-skin black hats. They 206 REMOVAL OF TIIK RKMAIXS are a fine body of men physically, and drilled with much precision. They courteously accompanied the Seventh on board the boat to Camden, Avhere a most social in- terchange of feeling took place for the brief period before the starting of the train, Avhicli left Camden about halt- past seven, and after sundry disagreeable stoppages, ar- rived at Amboy at halfpast eleven. The transpoilation of baggage occupied some time, and. it was uot until halfpast one before the landing at pier No. 1, North River, could be descried from the Amboy boat. PREPAKATIONS IN NEW-YORK TO RECEIVE THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. As soon as it became known that the Seventh Regi- ment were to return to New-York on Saturday night, July 10th, the members of the Seventh remaining in New- York, called a meeting for the purpose of attending at the pier near the Battery to receive them. And the following order was also issued by the respect- ive commanders of the two Battalions of the Seventy- first Regiment : AMERICAN GUARD-SEVENTY-FIRST REGIMENT. Regimeoital Order, No. 8. Head-quarters, New- York, July 8, 1858. The members of this Regiment are hereby ordered to assemble at the Armory, on Saturday afternoon, July 10th, at 5 o'clock, in full uniform, white trowsers, for parade, to receive the Seventh Regiment, National Guard, on their return from Richmond, Ya. The line will be foi-med at 5 o'clock. The band and field-music will report to the Adjutant, at the Armory, at 5 o'clock. The Field and Staff will report to Colonel, dismounted. Members who are not fully uniformed, will report to the Adjutant for special duty, in fatigue-dress. By order of Col. A. S. Yosburgh. A. G. Demarest, Adjutant. The line of the Seventy-first Regiment will be formed in Bond street, right resting on Broadway or JAMES MONROE. 207 NATIONAL GUARD BATTALION. IIeadhquarters New-York, July 9th, 1858. In accordance with the resolution passed at tlie meeting held on the 6th inst., this Battalion -will parade for the purpose of receiving our comrades of the Regiment on their return from Richnioud and Mount Vernon. The members of the different companies will assemble at their respective armories fully uniformed, armed and equipped, white pantaloons, without knapsacks, on Saturday, 10th inst., at half-past 3 o'clock P.M. Line will bo formed on Washington Square, right on Wooster street, at 4 o'clock P.M. precisely. Lieutenant Ilaight with the Troop will report to the Adjutant twenty minutes before the formation of the line. It is expected that every " National Guard," now in the city, will join in giving the Regiment a hearty " welcome home." By order of Adj. Wm. A Pond, Commanding Battalion. W. E. Vermilye, Adjutant. CITY GUAKD— FIFTY-FIFTH EEGIMENT. Armory, No. 654 Broadway, New- York, July 9, 1858. The members of this command are hereby ordered to assemble at the Armory on Saturday, 10th inst., at four o'clock P.M., in full company uniform, for the purpose of joining in the escort to the Seventh Regiment, National Guard. By order, W. 11. Hallick, Commandant. J. Edmonds, Jr., Orderly. THE SEVENTH REGIMENT AT HOME— MILITARY PA- RADE TO RECEIVE AND WELCOME THEM BACK. The military paraded in large numbers. The Seventy- first Regiment, (which was especially appointed to escort the Seventh,) Col. Vosburgh, assembled at the armory, Centre street, at five o'clock, and marched to Bond street, where the Regiment formed. They mustered two hun- dred and seventy-five muskets, and appeared in full uni- form, with Avhite pants. The National Guard battalion, composed of members of the Seventh who had remained in the city, and numbering over two hundred, formed in Washington Square at four o'clock, where they Avero 208 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS shortly after joined by a, company of the City Guard, numbering about forty-five men. They then marched down Broadway, and at Bond street formed into Hne, and proceeded to the Battery in the following order : Troop of the Xational GnarJ. Band of the Fifty-fifth Eegiment. City Guard. National Guard escort, numbering two hundred men in platoons — fourteen front. First Company — Captain Denyke. Second Company — Lieut. Harrison, Ex-Lieut. Giffing. Third Company — Lieut. Vermilyea, Ex-Lieut. Quackenbush. Fourth Company — Ex-Captain Loutrell, Ex-Lieut. Mcllvaine. The Seventy-first Regiment, Col. Vosburgh, witli Dodworth's Band, marching in platoons. The Commandant of the National Guard battalion gave the City Guard, Capt. Halleck, the right of the escort. As the regiments proceeded do^^^l Broadway the num- ber of spectators increased, and the windows, balconies, sikewalks, and every available location were quickly filled by ladies and gentlemen. The difterent regiments pre- sented a fine appearance, and elicited loud and frequent manifestations of applause as they passed. Upon filing into the Battery the line counter-marched, bringing the Seventjr-first Regiment on the right. The troop of the Xational Guard took up a position near Castle Garden ; and for some time the regiments stood at ease, the bands playing enlivening aifs. It was now about eight o'clock, and as the Amboy boat had arrived at seven o'clock with- out any tidings of the Seventh, the spectators became impatient, and several rumors of a contradictory charac- ter were quickly circulated — that an accident had hap- pened on the line — that the Seventh would not arrive imtil the following day — that they intended taking the cars from Philadelphia and come by Jersey City. The number of si)Gctators h:id greatlv increased, and the OF JAMES jrONKOE. 209 orowtls cheered the regiments repeatedly. It Avas grow- ing dark when Colonel Vosbnrgh telegraphed to Borden- town to know if the Seventh had passed, and what route they had taken. Alter a short delay he received a dis- l)atch stating that they would arrive at half-past eleven by Jersey City, and he immediately ordered the militaiy to stack their guns, and dismissed them for half an hour. The Battery jircsented a martial appearance at this time. Along the centre walk the arms were stacked, and knots of military men could be seen in all directions. The men of the Seventy-first and Seventh Regiments adjourned to the Washington Hotel and neighboring restaurants, where they cordially fraternized for some time, and im- bibed numerous kegs of lager, and countless mint-juleps, brandy-smashes, etc., etc. There was also a great de- mand for edibles and sardines. Cold meats, pies and cakes, were quickly disposed of, as the appetites of the military gentlemen were somewhat sharpened by the sea- breeze. The news that the " soldiers were encamped at the Battery" quickl}^ spread, and every moment added large numbers to the vast assemblage, among whom were hundreds of itinerant dealers in candies, nuts, segars, icecreams, who seemed to have deserted their old haunts around the Park and City Hall. All sorts of games were enacted, and the crowd seemed to enjoy themselves in all possible ways. The utmost good humor prevailed, and the police, assisted by a special company under Captain TurnbuU, that had accompanied the military, preserved excellent order. The Washington Hotel was crowded and the military continued to fraternize. Songs, toasts, and speeches were given among* the privates ad UhifAim^ while Colonel Vosburgh, with the staff, and other officers, were anxiously waiting in a ])rivate room. Shortly before eleven o'clock the drums beat, and the regiments got under arms in a creditably short time. The spectators had wonderfully increasr^il in numbers, 210 REMOVAL OF THE REMAIXS and there could not have been less than five thousand persons present. The Seventy-first Regiment then took up the right, the line formed and marched down Broad- way and Cortlandt street, to the Jersey ferry, where a large number of people were Avaiting their arrival. The regiments then counter-marched in Cortlandt street, the Seventh Regiment forming in line and the Seventy-first on Broadway. Cortlandt street and Broadway presented a most animated appearance. The diflerent hotels Avere crowded by spectators, and innumerable rockets, Roman candles, and torpedoes were fired in succession. Loud and enthusiastic cheers for the Regiment Avere called for, and heartily responded to ; but as yet no appearance of the Seventh, Colonel Vosburgh, Captain Halleck, Lieu- tenant Ilaight, and other ofticers, repaired to the Jersey House, and anxiously aAvaited the arrivals of the Jersey City boats. Numerous rockets A\^ere fired from the Jersey shore, which tended to give hope ; but as boat after boat arrived Avith no tidings of the gallant Seventh, many desi)aired of meeting their comrades that night. Dispatches wei-e handed to the Colonels of both Regi- ments, all of a diflerent character, until the bcAvildered commanders discovered that some gentleman had pro- vided himself with a number of blanks from the telegraph office, and amused himself by conveying the electrical sparks of his imagination to the expectant Regiments, and filling up each blank in a different style. After nearly an hour's suspense, Brigadier-General Hall, who was anxiously aAvaiting the arrival of the cars at the Jersey depot, arrived Avith a dispatch stating that the Seventh Avould come by boat from Amboy, and Avere not expected until after one o'clock. In vain did the Colonels endeavor to keep the news a secret — it spread rapidly through the ranks ; and as the men were tired, fatigued, and Aveary, Avaiting under arms since five o'clock — the thermometer up to 95, this communication OF JAMES MONROE. 211 tended to throw a slight damp upon the enthusiasm of the men. However, the cheers of the assemblage for the Seventh, gave fresh vigor to the Companies, and they formed in line immediately, not one man absenting him- self The Merchants' and other hotels in Cortlandt street, were filled with boarders, who gave the Regiment a hearty reception and amused them with some beautiful operatic airs whilst they waited. After twelve o'clock the line was again formed, and marched down to the Battery, still accompanied by thousands. The Seventh Regiment and Seventy-first Regiment lined Broadway from Trinity Church down to the Battery — the National Guard troop taking its posi- tion near the church. Broadway down to Pier Xo. 1 was literally jammed with pedestrians, and presented an appearance which few ever before witnessed. Tlie side- walks were covered with fatigued and sleepy bodies, lying in all directions, whilst the centre of the street was filled by the military, whose shining costumes and glisten- ing muskets lent a martial appearance to the scene. Near the Camden and Amboy dock — Pier No. 1 — the scene was one of impatience — hundreds straining their eager eyes to catch a glimpse of a light coming up the river. Many ludicrous scenes happened during the even- ing — once or twice a tug-boat would be mistaken for the expected steamer, and as she slowly steamed up the North River would receive the spontaneous cheers of those on shore. At two o'clock, however, a dim light Avas discovered slowly approaching up the bay. Cheers from all sides announced that all were confident the Seventh were on board. She silently ajiproached, until when off Castle Garden several rockets and Roman can- dles were fired from the shore. A feeble cheer Avas heard in response, and a moment after the air was filled with a deafening shout of welcome, which was repeated again and again by those up Broadway. The steamer proved 212 KEMOVAl, OF THE REMAINS to be the Transport, of the Amboy hue, and she several times acknowledged the entliusiastic cheers by blowing her steam-whistle. After the lapse of half an hour, about forty of the Seventh made their apjiearance outside the dock-gate, and were immediately seized by their friends and con- gratulated xipon their safe arrival. They looked tired and worn out, and seemed to need rest. In a short time all was fpiiet, until the gates were thrown open and the band of the Regiment emerged playing one of the regi- mental marches, accompanied by the members of the Regiment. The reception they received was deafening. Fire-works were sent i\p from the adjoining stores ; and one gentleman, more enthusiastic than the rest, accom- panied the Seventh in liis carriage, firing o& Roman can- dles in rapid succession, and lustily welcoming the gallant Company. The Seventh then proceeded up Broadway, the band playing in admirable style, and with great effect, " La Figha del Regimento " — the Seventy-first and Sev- enth Regiments being drawn up in line, and presenting arms. After marching to Trinity Church, they halted in close file. The Regiments then passed them on a quick march in the following order, each Company saluting the Seventh and welcoming them with loud cheers : Police. Troop of jS"ational Guard. Seventy-first Regiment with Drummers and Band. Seventh Regiment Escort. City Guard. The Seventh then fell in and marched up Broadway. There was a fine pyrotechnic display at the Michigan Railroad otfice, corner of Cortlandt street ; when the Sev- enth passed, hundreds of rockets and torpedoes Averc fired, and in tlie illumiiuition a large flag could be dis- OF JAMES MONEOE. 213 covered in trout of the office, with the following inscrij)- tion : WELCOME HOME, The Astor House was in a. perfect blaze of light. From every window in front, even the bed-rooms, streams of fire gushed forth, illuminating the Park and the sur- rounding buildings. All descriptions of fire-works were called into requisition, and the cheers of the occupants of the hotel were enthusiastic. Several gentlemen fired revolvers from their rooms, and welcomed the Regiment Avith continued cheering. The Park was also crowded, and Broadway, up to the guard-room in University Place, where the Regiment meet, presented similar scenes. When the line reached the guard-room the difterent Regiments were dismissed, it being after throe o'clock. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. Compliments paid to the National Guard, during their Southern Tour, in Eichmond, "Washington, etc. ; with Comments regard- ing the Favorable Results of their Visit, etc. FROM NEW-YORK AND RICHMOND PAPERS. The visit of the New-York Seventh Regiment to Rich- mond has been the occasion for numerous editorials. North and South, on the good resulting from such unions of the people of both sections. One of them, containing a great deal of truth, and well wn-itten, w£ take from the JVew- YorJc Express : The North and the South : The Real Feeling. — The reciprocal kindness between the citizens of New-York and the citizens of Vir- ginia, of which the recent removal of the ashes of the late President Monroe has been the occasion, is one of the most agreeable incidents of the times. It will do good. It will teach the people of the Nortli that Southern gratitude, Southern kindness, and Southern cliivalry. 21-4 REMOVAL OF THE KEMAINS are things ■wliieli have an existence beyond buncombe speeches in Congress, and editorial essays in nullification journals. On the other hand, it will teach onr countrymen of the Old Dominion, and of the whole South, that, outside the " scurvj- politician's" circle, the peo- ple of New-York, and the people of the North, are animated by a patriotic affection and a fraternal regard for them, which recognizes no lines of latitude or longitude. Ours is such a vast country — so wide in territorial extent — that it is no wonder so many of us are strangers to each other — no wonder that the dweller on the Hudson, or the Connecticut, or tlie Merrimae, should experience onlj' a con- ventional sympathy, and a conventional affection, for his brethren on the Chesapeake, the Alabama, or the Gulf. "We need to know more of each other. We know a good deal of each other already, it is true — ^but the bulk of that knowledge is filtered through the medium of abolition and nullification speeches in Congress, and upon the stump, or through the murky rays of a partisan newspaper press. Book or newspaper knowledge of a remote people, even when de- rived from unquestionable authorities, is, at best, but a poor substi- tute for one's own personal experience and observation. We live in an age of electric telegraphs, which transmit thought and sentiment as quick as lightning ; but lightning, if it can annihilate space, can not move the feelings like a warm grasp of the hand ; it can not stir the nobler impulses of our nature as do words ext^hanged by affection, face to face ; nor can it kindle those electric fires which light up the eye of friendship, and leave their impression long in the future, deep and indelible, superior to all the circumstances of sepa- ration and the obliterating operations of time. The real people of this countT}' — the masses, we mean — really know but very little of one another, and it is unquestionably in this want of familiarity and intercourse, that the professional demagogue finds it so easy to ex- cite the prejudices of one section against another, in order to pro- mote the sinister purpose of a selfish ambition. A stranger coming among us, and listening, say, to the declamation of the sectional agitators in the Senate, or House of Representatives, to the unkind epithets applied by the gentleman from Virginia to the gentleman from New-York, and vice versa, might be pardoned the inference that the two sovereign States thus represented were all the while at swords' points, and could entertain but one sentiment towards each other, that of cordial resentment and hate. But if that stranger had been in Richmond one day last week — a few hours' journey from the Federal Capitol — and beheld the genuine brotherly affection which distinguished every thing that took place there, he would naturally OF JAMES JUONKOE. 215 infer that the politieiansat Washington constitute a class of humanity ■wholly distinct from tlie masses of the citizens at large. He would see that we are all friends, not enemies; brothers, not strangers ; one people, not twain. He would see — and ourselves may see — that, whenever there is opportunity to reach the hearts of the people of these opposite sections — as in the case of this visit of our Seventh Regiment to Richmond — the individual beating of that heart are all for unity, and friendship, and peace, and good will, irrespective of geographical lines, or the peculiar local distinctions of different social institutions. The Union. — Such a celebration as that of the last national anni- versary in Richmond, will do more for the cause of union than a thousand Fourth-of-July orations. "What more suitable commemo- ration of the birth-day of Independence than such fraternization of the soldiers and citizens of North and South ? "Wlio would wish to see these friendly bayonets arrayed against each other ; these bro- therly embraces exchanged for the grapple of mortal liate? Let the politicians scheme as they will, the people love each other, and will take care of the Union. TuE Seventh Regiment. — The visit of this splendid regiment to Virginia has elicited one universal and enthusiastic outburst of ad- miration and applause. It was eveiy where said, that much as we had heard of the magnificent drill and discipline of this crack regi- ment of New-York, the half had not been told us. Their whole ap- pearance and bearing, both as soldiers and as gentlemen, has taken every body by storm. W^e really can not conceive of greater per- fection in drill, in uniformity and precision of movement. The Re- giment moved like one man, like an exquisite and perfect machine, the effect of the whole being heightened by the perfect simplicity and unpretending character of their uniform. Uninstructed ourselves in the military art, we had the curiosity to inquire of a veteran officer and an accomplished gentleman, one whom old " Rough and Ready" considered one of the best drill offi- cers in the army of the United States, what he thought of the Seventh Regiment, and hoAV it would compare in drill with a regi- ment in the regular army. "Sir," said the veteran, "there is not one regular regiment in a hundred that will compare in drill with the Seventh Regiment. It is impossible that it should be otherwise. You can never make regular soldiers feel the personal pride which has led the gentlemen who compose that Regiment to the perfection they have attained. I do not know their Colonel, but I know from 216 EKMOVAL OF lUE llJiMAI^S the manner in which he handles the Seventh that he is a soldier all over." If Colonel Duryee and his gallant men knew from whom that compliment proceeded, they would consider it as pretty a fea- ther as they have worn in their caps this many a day. Indeed, tlie fact that such splendid efficiency is attainaLle under the volunteer system, is a most encouraging j^roof of the capacity of this country to defend itself against a world in arms. "We hope that the late celebration will tend to strengthen the bonds of amity and love between the Empire State and the Old Dominion. The Seventh carries with it the highest admiration and respect of our community, as gentlemen not less than soldiers, and its presence on this soil, under such generous impulses, such patriotic inspirations, imder a common and glorious flag, teaches a moral of union and power, which the enemies of America abroad maj- study with interest, with benefit to themselves, and Avith advantage to the peace of the world. — A Richmond jtapcr. TuE VoLUN'TEER System. — The development of the volunteer ele- ment in the Mexican contest, and the demonstration of its wonder ful power and efficiency in actual warfare, startled alike our own countrymen and foreign nations. The militia had alwaj's been a laughing stock, both in England and America, notwithstanding its native courage and hardy habits, and the occasional splendid tri- umphs achieved, both in the Revolution and the late war, by an un- discijilined yeomanry. Bunker Hill and the battle of New-Orleans showed what can be sometimes effected by militia. In the latter battle the deadliest fire of the fight came from the raw Tennes- seeans, who composed the American centre. The British officers, who had been advised by an American deserter to direct their prin- cipal efforts against the American centre, because it was composed of militia, were convinced by the terrible reception they met, that the centre was composed of regulars, and, believing that the de- serter had willfully deceived them, they hung him to the first tree ! Notwithstanding this brilliant proof of the efficiency of militia, the country has never put much faith in their capacity for action in the open field. It remained for the .Mexican war to prove that the militia, well disciplined, is the most powerful military arm which this or any other country can possess. The volunteers of Mexico, drilled and commanded partly by graduates of West Point, of the Virginia Military Institute, and of other military schools, but prin- cipally officered by gentlemen who had received no military educa- tion, proved that, whether in the open field or in fortifications, the cilizcn-soldiei's of America are fully able to maintain the honor of OF JAMES MONUOK. 217 their country. The battle of Buena Vista was fought principally by volunteers, and the same description of force composed a great portion of General Scott's victorious and conquering column. Let it once be shown that volunteer regiments can be made equal in drill and discipline to regulars, and we may congratulate our- selves upon possessing inexhaustible military resources in the United States. The Mexican war demonstrated that important fact ; and the New- York Regiment, which lately visited this city, is certainly not surpassed, if equalled, in military perfection by any regiment in the United States Army. We have in Virginia great facilities for the establishment of this description of force. The Virginia Mili- tary Institute is a splendid school for officers, and it only needs the proper encouragement and support of the volunteer system by the Legislature, and the community, to insure to Virginia an army of citizen-soldiers, of which any country might be proud. The small volunteer force of Richmond, in its military spirit and discipline, is an honor to the State, and it ought to receive the active sympathy and cooperation of the people to make it what it ought to be in numbers as well as efficiency. Our gallant volunteers and their ac- complished officers have had to struggle against unusual discourage- ments, but we trust the late military exhibition in this city will have the effect of awakening the martial pride of the community, and stimulating them to an active and generous support of the volunteer corps. They are not mere holiday warriors, of no practical value, but soldiers, capable of doing all that regulars can do, if they re- ceive that substantial aid and comfort which they justly merit, and which the community owes to its own interests to bestow. — Rich- mond Despatch. The Seventh Regiment of New- York were escorted to the Capitol Square, yesterday morning, by detachments of companies from the First Regiment, and there, in the presence of a large number of spectators, went through the drill, to the infinite delight of all wlio saw their accuracy of movement. During the forenoon, the Regi- ment was passed in review by Governor Wise, attended by two of his staff, and Colonel August, and at the conclusion of the drill were furnished with a collation by the Grej^s, under the shade-trees in the south-west corner of the Square. The various companies in the Re- giment were then escorted to their quarters. — Richmond Despatch. Capture and Detention of a New-Yobker. — Mr. John L. Hillman, a member of Company 8, Seventh Regiment, New-York National Guard, arrived at the American Hotel, in this city, on Thursday, the 22d Jul v. 10 218 ItEilOVAL OF THE REMAINS Some of the Greys and Blues, having ascertained that Mr. Hillman was among us, immediately proceeded to his quarters and tock pos- session ef him. In the evening he was entertained at a champagne supper at Zetello's, where the hosts and their guest had a most happy time of it. Yesterday, Mr. Hillman was given in charge of a committee, with strict instructions not to lose sight of him, or per- mit him to return to New-Yoi'k in the evening as he contemplated. Mr. Hillman visited Military Hall last evening, during the Greys' drill, and after that was again sumptuously entertained at a 6up2:)er. He will return to New-York to-day, and will be under the guid- ance of his friends until the moment of his departure. Mr. Hillman was on his return from a business trip to a remote part of the State, having obtained a furlough for the purpose from his Colonel when the Regiment was here. — Richmond South, July 24. The Virginia Military. — ^The recent visit of the Seventh Regiment of New-York to our city, it is to be hoped, will have a good effect on our volunteer organization. We could but regard the simple uniform of the entire Regiment, and the neat and unostentatious dress of its officers, as presenting a wide contrast with the parti- colored line of our volunteers, and the fine decorations and pompous display which meet the eye in surveying our regimental parades. Then to think that we have but two regiments ! Two regiments of a military force much too small for one ! Two regiments out-num- bered by a little more than half a one from New-York ! The officers out of all propoi'tion to the privates ! We have not a doubt that the volunteer force of the city would be strengthened, would be increased in numbers and improved in discipline, if they would consolidate themselves into one regiment, abandon their uniforms, and adopt a new and plain dress for the whole body of soldiers. The advantages of such a revolution must be apparent to all who have any knowledge of military matters — nay, even to those who are not conversant with them, but who yet, as simple lookers-on, can readily perceive how neatness, order, and discipline would be promoted by it. Our present organization must always be subject to misunder- standings, jealousies, and miserable rivalries. The reformation would produce harmony and generous emulation instead. Let our volunteers imitate the noble example of their New-York guests, and they may come to rival them in discipline, and all the attributes of the soldier. They have as fine material as any city OF JAMKS MONKOK, 219 ran boast, and it only wants the proper organization to prove it. Can not the subject be taken seriously into consideration by the field and company officers of the regiment ? We trust they will give it their attention, and that their superiors will also confer with them, and endeavor to bring it about. Richmond is the largest city in the State, and may set the fashion in military affairs. The moral effect of a properly drilled and properly dressed regiment here would be decided throughout the State. Such an organization would be an important foundation to build upon in any exigency that may arise. — Richmond Despatch. FROM WASHINGTON PAPERS. The Sevextu in Washington. — The performance of the troops, at the review by the President, excited universal admiration, and there was not an army officer on the ground who did not envy Colonel Duryee his command. One of them, and a veteran, too, remarked that there was no Regiment equal to it in the regular army. Many of the volunteers who were on the ground, declared they would never parade again, and that the visit of the Seventh was the death- knell of the military of Washington. We hope not, but rather that, as they have witnessed the result of drill and perseverance, they will profit by it, and imitate the example of the best-drilled regi- ment in this country. After the review was over, the Regiment were escorted, by the officers of the District Volunteers, to the favorite East Room of the White House, when Colonel Duryee was introduced to the President by Colonel Hickey, and the entire Regiment had an opportunity of shaking hands with " Old Buck." It was an interesting sight to witness the graceful manner in which the President greeted them, and, from the heightened color and sparkling eyes of the gallant fellows, we fancied the pleasure was mutual. When Dr. Weston, the acting chaplain of the Regiment, and recently elected Bishop of Texas, was introduced, the President, after shaking hands with him, said it was very well for them to take a chaplain along, but he did not believe they needed the doctor's services to keep them in order. In regard to the morals of these gentlemen, the Mayor of Richmond says he has never, since he has been with them, heard an oath or witnessed any thing in their conduct which in the slightest degree could be condemned. What higher compliment could he pay them? — Union. 220 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS The District Volunteers. — Fiat justitla, mat cmlwii. — As charges of inattention to the gallant visitors from New-York have been made in our city against its volunteers, justice demanded an inquiry into the facts, and we are happy tcHind that all was done that could, in reason, have been required of them. It appears that as soon as it was intimated that the National Guard might visit Washington, their Colonel, in New-York, was telegraphed for information, and replied that they had not definitely detei-mined. After their arrival in Richmond, the Colonel and other gentlemen were again tele- graphed, and it was only on Tuesday, the 6th instant, that our vo- lunteers had reliable information that the New-York Regiment would visit "Washington, and, from the best calculation that could be made, the visitors were expected late on Tuesday evening, or very early on Wednesday morning, at our landing. Orders were accordingly given for assembling our volunteers at six o'clock on Wednesday morning, and aid was solicited from the War and Navy Departments, and generously responded to by the distinguished heads of those departments, the former granting the services of a corps of ordnance soldiers as artillerists to fire salutes, and the use of the arsenal grounds for receiving the visitors, and the latter granting the ser- vices of a fine company of Marines, under two gallant young offi- cers. Lieutenants Wilson and Schermerhorn, together with the whole of that noble band which is an object of just pride to the gallant and veteran soldier commanding that distinguished corps. All these were placed at the disjiosal of the Colonel commanding, to aid the city volunteers, in a becoming manner, to receive Colonel Duryee and his Regiment. Such acts, by these Departments, must be viewed as courteous and kind to our city volunteers, and highly compli- mentary to the Seventh Regiment, whose character for military dis- cipline and moral deportment will always be a passport to notice and favor by the Government and their fellow-citizens in all parts of the country. Owing to the shortness of the notice, but parts of six companies of our volunteers assembled, and were marched, with the regular troops, to the beautiful Arsenal grounds, where, after paying the usual compliments to the gallant commandant, Major Ramsby, they were formed in line on the green parapet facing the line of the expected approach of the steamer conveying the New- York Regiment. The Major kindly extended such liospitalities as his means at the post enabled him to bestow. (The emoluments of this post are altogether inadequate.) Tlie troops remained in these grounds the whole day and until a late hour, and not knowing at what time the visitoi-s would arrive, information having been re- ceived that their steamer had got aground a considerable distance OF JAMES MONROE. 221 down the Potomac, it was determined to march the city troops in and dismiss them, and, as the visitors would come in detachments and at unlcnown hours of the night, no orders for the reassembling of the city troops were given, it being judged most advisable, under all the circumstances, to form an escort of our officers for the Seventh Regiment in its movements in the city on Thursday, thereby leaving the visitors free from the dust that would be raised by the cavalry and artillery hoi'ses of the escort, and which would have been very annoying and oppressive to them. This accounts for the District Volunteers, etc., not being under arms when the New- York troops arrived, and not being in the column as an escort on Thursday^ which was all explained to the accomplished and gallant Colonel Duryee, and declared to be entirely satisfactory and acceptable to himself and his command, and the discretion and propriety of this course will not be questioned by any true friend of the volunteers or of the city. Had the Seventh Regiment arrived as expected, on Wednesday, they would liave been invited, on the part of our volun- teers, to a handsome entertainment at the National Hotel after their review by the President. The movement of such a body of volun- teers through the country must have a salutary effect uj^on the vo- lunteers of every locality. It establishes in their minds a standard of discipline and excellence which they will endeavor to imitate. Too much, however, ought not to be expected where equal opportu- nities, advantages, and length of experience have not been enjoyed in other places. Taking all the other towns and cities in the Union together, and perhaps but few, if any, of their military organiza- tions would come up to the standard of discipline and excellence of the Seventh Regiment of the National Guard of New-York. This fact, however, should not prevent every reasonable effort of the volun- teers in all parts of the country to imitate them. To effect this, the volunteers themselves must give their time and attention to the subject ; the non-commissioned, the subaltern, and company officers must bestow a still greater attention, and qualify themselves for their respective positions, otherwise the privates will lose confidence in them, and their companies, as has been witnessed, will fall off, and lose their spirit. In the Seventh Regiment every company has its own drills and arrangements separately, and every officer of each understands his duty, so that, when they are assembled together in battalion, it is an easy task for the commander to drill and manoeuvre them, every officer knowing how to direct his company to execute the orders given. An important point in forming a regiment is to have all the companies uniformed alike, otherwise they can not be equalized for battalion movements or drill, and therefore can not manoeuvre with aecurac}' or regularity, even should tlie company 222 REMOVAL, OF THE REMAINS officers understand their duty. Under all these disadvantages h generous feeling of indulgence or forbearance might, cimritahly, be extended towards an officer having the command of a regiment in •which every company has exercised its own fancy in adopting uni- forms, and in which, with a few creditable exceptions, neither the volunteers nor their officers have given the proper attention to their military improvement. It is to be hoped, however, that all the in- ertness and irregularity have been removed by the example so re- cently placed before them, and that the companies, one by one, com- mencing on the right, will recuperate and put " their own shoulders to the wheel," and then, by adopting the same uniform for all the companies, they may expect to have a regiment worthy of our city, to be founded on the principles of military knowledge and efficiency, retiring all officers and men who either have not, can not, or will not acquire the proper qualifications for their respective positions, repudiating insubordination, mischievous intrigues, and the machi- nations of unfounded ambition, which are the bane and evil of any military organization. The National Guard, Seventh Regiment, N.Y.S.M. : A Few Re- marks ON OUR Late Visitors. — The telegraph yesterday announced the reception at home of the Seventh Regiment. The account was read with thrilling interest by thousands ; for every where on their late route every man, woman, and child knew how richly the honors were deserved. We feel safe in asserting that this corps of citizen-soldiers are un- surpassed in this or any other country. Officers of the United States army, residing here, openly assert that they have never seen them equalled for discipline, drill, and military bearing. Although sub- jected to many grievous annoyances on their return, and a delay of three days beyond the time fixed, not a complaint was uttered ; but each member appeared to be impressed with the idea that it was a part of a soldier's duty to take every thing as it came, and make the best of it. To give an idea how this corps arrived at such a state of unity and perfection, we will relate one or two incidents which transpired here. It is customary in military organizations, to carry fatigue-caps at- tached to the belt while on a march: but this custom is utterly ig- nored by Colonel Duryee, as it gives a swinging motion to the sol- dier. Discovering one company with their caps thus attached, he dismissed them from the line, and ordered the articles to be packed in their knapsacks, and then fall in. An officer, while at the railroad depot, was dilatory in repeating an order to his command ; he was immediately placed in arrest, and OF JAMES MONROE. 223 his sword taken from him. A soldier was slow in grounding his musket, when he was arrested, and his arm placed in keeping of the sergeant. Some of the men were so unfortunate as to pack their white panta- loons in their trunks, and were left on board the Ericsson. They were relieved from parade during their stay in our city, nor were they permitted to visit Mount Vernon with the rest of the Regiment. These little circumstances indicate the vigilance necessary in the commander of such a corps ; and our own volunteers should learn a lesson from their perfection. To show the degree of forbearance practised among the men, we will relate but one incident. As the Collyer lay alongside the Mount Vernon, discharging the soldiers into the latter boat, on their return from their visit to Washington's tomb, one of the men attempted to get on board in rear of the wheel. He was accosted by some person connected with the boat in a blunt tone of command, and ordered to go back. The soldier looked at the man for a moment, and a flash of indignation spread over his countenance. It was momentary, however. He quietly got back on the Collyer; and, in reply to a friend, he said: "The man was right ; I was wrong ; but I didn't like the tone." When off duty, the Guards did not, as is customary among fa- tigued soldiers, give themselves up to excessive jollification, and make bar-rooms and the streets reverberate with swaggering vul- garity. When they indulged in stimulants, it was in a very mode- rate degree; and their every action in public marked them gen- tlemen. No wonder that New- York is proud of her Seventh Regiment ! No wonder that they were every where on their route treated with distinguished consideration. No wonder that the ladies of Richmond turned out en masse to wish them farewell ! No wonder that the army officers felt proud in greeting them as soldiers, and honored the review at the White House in their full-dress uniforms. We, as citizens of the Union, should be proud of them, too; and, more than that, endeavor to emulate them. It is not only as a peaceful establishment this Regiment is esteemed. New- York knows that Colonel Duryee and his command can be relied on in any emer- gency. The Astor Place riot shows that they never shrink from a soldier's duty ; and the late police difficulties in the Park owe their bloodless termination to their presence and firmness. Can not Washington have a corps like the " National Guard ?"— Washington States, July 13. 224 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS THE DEATH AND BURIAL OF LAURENS HAMILTON. There was but one circumstance which occurred, dur- ins: the excursion of the National Guard, to mar the pleasure enjoyed by the Regiment, and that was the melancholy death of young Laurens Hamilton, a member of Company 6. The deceased was the son of Mr, John C Hamilton, of the city of New-York, author of the life of his distin- guished father, Alexander Hamilton, of Revolutionary renown. He received his education at Columbia College, in New-York, at which he graduated in 1854, and was aged twenty-three years. His character, amiabihty, and gentlemanly deportment were testified to by the officers and members of his Regi- ment, and by all who knew him. He was named after Col. Henry Laurens, of the Amer- ican Revolution, and a native of the State of South-Caro- lina, and who was of Huguenot descent, and who served in the American war of independence with Alexander Hamilton. At the siege of Yorktown, Col. Hamilton, who had commanded a battalion of light infontry during this cam- paign, led the advanced corps of the Americans, assisted by Col. Gimat, LaFayette's aid ; while Col. Henry Lau- rens, with eighty men, turned the redoubt in order to in- tercept the retreat of the garrison. The works were soon after stormed by the Americans, and captured at the point of the bayonet, Capt. Aaron Ogden, of New- Jersey, lead- ins: the charge. Col. Laurens was also at one time Presi- dent of the Continental Congress. OF JAMES MONKOE. 225 The incidents Avliich attended the death and burial of the lamented Laurens Hamilton, we have compiled from accounts given by the public press. We understand that his health was poor Avhen he left NeAV^-York, and that at Richmond he was too feeble and ill to take any active part in the ceremonies of the occa- sion. The first tidings the National Guard had of their loss, was on their arrival at or near Washington, when a telegraph dispatch announced tbe melancholy event to the effect that one of their number had been recovered from the mouth of a small creek emptying into James River, near Richmond. On calling the roll of the Regi- ment, it was found that the only person missing was Lau- rens Hamilton, of Company G. Before this information reached Richmond by telegraph, his remains had been identified by his name on his belt. We take the follow- ing from the Mlclimond Despatch of July 13th : DEATH OF A MEMBER OF THE NEW- YORK REGI- MENT—A SAD CASUALTY. The deep sympathies and most iinafTedted sorrow of our citizens were aroused on yesterday morning, by learning tliat the body of a member of the New- York Seventli Regiment had been discovered floating in Gillie's Creek. It proved to be tliat of Laurens Hamil- ton, private of Company 6, and a grandson of Alexander Hamilton. At what time and how the distressing casualty resulting in his death, occurred, it is impossible to say. The information elicited at the coroner's inquest, threw little or no light upon the subject. The creek in which the body was found, enters James River just below the wharf where the Glen Cove was moored when the Seventh Regi- ment embarked upon that steamer on Tuesday night. The embark- ation took place at half-past eight o'clock. The watch found upon the body stopped at five minutes before nine. The steamer departed at ten o'clock. So that the casualty occurred after the embarkation. The deceased had certainly been on board, as he had divested him- self of his knapsack, cap, and arms. The noise of his fall in the water and his cries for help, if he uttered any, were drowned by the cheering and rattling drums. His body must have been floated up the creek by the tide. 10* 226 REMOVAL OP THE REMAINS The deceased was missed at roll-call, after the departure of the Glen Cove, and information of the fact was given to Lieut. Bossieux, of the Grays, by an officer of the Sixth Company, while tlie Grays were about taking a final parting with their New-Yoi-k friends, some distance down the river, whither they liad gone on board the Old Dominion, as our readers know, to await tlie arrival of the Glen Cove. This information occasioned various rumors, one of wliicli was that a member of the Grays, named Hamilton, was drowned. It seems as if the death of the deceased was foreshadowed ; for even as early as Monday last, a rumor was in circulation that one of the Guard was drowned ; and the rumor of a casualty by drowning has continued with strange pertinacity, until it terminated in the reality of the untimely death of this young volunteer from New-York. We give below a rejjort of the circumstances of the discovery of the body, the proceedings of the Coronei"'s inquest, and the prompt measures of our volunteers to pay the proper respect to the dead. The body was discovered at four o'clock yesterday morning in Gillie's Creek. A luessage was sent immediately to Coroner Peachy. A few members of the Grays hearing of the discovery, repaired to the place, and being afterwards joined by a detachment of the Blues, they removed the body to a building near by. No one could recog- nize the deceased ; but as Lieut. Bossieux had a card with the name of the missing volunteer given him by an officer of Company 6, it was concluded that it was Laurens Hamilton, and this conclusion was soon corroborated. Dr. Peachy held his inquest at nine o'clock. The body had on the uniform of the Guards. On the cross-belt was inscribed, " L. Hamilton, Co. 6," and on the waistband of his drawers were L. H., which satis- fied the jury as to the identity of the deceased. The body was with- out knapsack or body-belt, and he must have divested himself of them before falling overboard. Dr. Peachy made a careful examination of the body. No marks of violence were found u2>on it. The watch found upon it had stopped at five minutes before nine o'clock. Tlie jury rendered a verdict that "the deceased came to his death by drowning in James River, on Tuesday niglit, the 6th instant." The military now took charge of tlie corpse, detachments from each company being present. It was immediately shrouded, and placed in a metallic sarcophagus. It was then put on the hearse and escorted to the Capitol, where it was deposited in the rotundo, under a guard of volunteers. About twelve o'clock, Col. Duryee, of the Seventh Regiment, hav- ing been telegraphed to Washington that the body had been found, and that the Richmond military desired to escort it to New- York, re- OF JAMES MONROE. 227 plied, requesting that it should be taken on to New-York in the Ro- anoke, where his Regiment would receive it on Sunday. Col. August required a detail of two men from each company of the First Regiment, as a guard of honor to escort the remains to New- York, and this the commanders of each proceeded to comply with, at the same time giving their members the privilege of volunteering for the melancholy service in any number. Lieut.-Col. Gary made the necessary arrangements for the trans- portation of the body and the escort by the steamer Roanoke, which was to sail at four o'clock P. M. The news of the discovery of the body of young Hamilton created the profoundest sensation in this community, and every mark of re- gret which could be given at the moment, was displayed. The flags of the shipping were exhibited at half-mast, as were those of the Capitol, the City Hall, the State Armory, the armories of the differ- ent volunteer companies, and several hotels and stores, while several flags, draped in mourning, were suspended across the streets. Every countenance expressed the lively feeling of sorrow and regret at the event. At half-past two o'clock P. M., the First Regiment of Virginia Volunteers paraded on Capitol Square, and at three o'clock the sar- cophagus being placed on the hearse, the column commanded by Col. August, escorted it to Rocketts, to the solemn dirges of the Armory Band. Tliere the remains were placed on board the Roanoke, and the following details from each of the companies of the First and One hundred and seventy -ninth Regiments marched on board as an escort to guard the body to New-York : litchmond Grays — Sergt. A. M. Barrett, James Vaughan, E. Car- rington. Corporal M. Page, V. Bossieux, W. S. Wood, Jr., J. "W. Pe- gram. Corporal J. Seth Michaud, F. Binford, Geo. Beauchamp. R. L. I. Blues— L\e\\i. W. L. Maule, Sergt. Tompkins, Privates Jarvis, Bray, Hewett, Sanxay, S. Jacobs, Jones, E. Levy, F. Carter, and W. A. Griffin. Rocky Ridge Rifles— Vvw&iQ W. S. A. Royall, and W. S. Gregory Montgomery Guard— Cov\)Ov&\?. T. Ryan, Disney, and B. Smith. Virginia Rifles— L\e\\t. Schadd, Sergt. P. Weber, Privates A Noack F. Lehr, W. Thon, and F. Lehmkuhl. National G^warf/— Privates A. Heath and William Gibson. Young Guard Light Battalion — Maj. H. W. Fry, Jr., Lieut. James Sizer, Jr., Sergt. Miner, Corporal E. Francis, Privates James Mathews, J. Krischmann, Robinson D. Trueheart, Wm. H. Wade, Geo. Dues- berry, M. Mathews, and Wm. AUegre. 22B REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS Among the escort we noticed Private Joseph Neusteter, a member of the Fourth Company of the New-York Seventh Regiment, who was here on furlough, hut wlio, on hearing of the untimely death of his companion in arms, came to attend his remains home. Col. August appointed Lieut. Maule as commander of the escort» and Sergeant A. Barrett as Sergeant. To guard against having the ship quarantined in the port of New York, Col. August also furnished Lieut. Maule with a copy of the Coroner's inquest over the body of the deceased, and a certificate from the Secretary of the Commonwealth, showing that he did not come to his death by any contagious or infectious disease. All the arrangements being now complete, the Roanoke cast off from her moorings, and as she departed, the guns of the Artillery under the command of Lieut. Shine, fired three rounds. The mili- tary then returned to their quarters and were dismissed. The City Council met and took such measures as the occasion re. quired. They also apjjointed a committee to draft suitable resolu- tions expressing their sense of the lamentable event, to report at their meeting on Monday next. We do not know that we have ever witnessed an expression of such deep and general sympathy as this most afflictive event has called forth from the people of Riclmiond. Strong voices have be- come tremulous with emotion, and the gentle eyes of woman suffused with tears. The generous and noble conduct of tlie Seventh Regi- ment, in making this distant pilgrimage, in honor of one of Virginia's sons, and their most elevated and gallant bearing in our city, had endeared them to every heart, and all rejoiced that not one accident had occurred to mar the glorious pageant, and the loving embrace of fraternal and patriotic hearts. The last gun had fired, the last soldier of the Seventh was safe and well on board the steamer, and amid the clash of music, the glare of fireworks, and the roar of can- non, the Seventh seemed about to leave us, in a blaze of undimnicd glory. Probably at that very moment, tliis most melancholy death occurred; and upon this full-blown flower of a complete triunqih, came this sad and corrosive blight. As the melancholy intelligence spread from lip to lip, there was an expression of solemnity and grief on every face, as if a kinsman had fallen. None knew at first who the stranger was, but he wore the uniform of the Seventh Regiment, and that made him a brother to every citizen of Richmond. We need not add how great was the shock when the telegraph bore the tidings that it was a grandson of Alexander Hamilton, who had thus perished in doing honor to the remains of James Monroe ! When OF JAMES MONROE. 220 we referred, on Monday last, to the fact that the soldiers of New- Yoi'k and of Virginia would again stand side by side as in the days when Alexander Hamilton led the triumphant colors at Yorktown, little did we think that a grandson of that illustrious chief was about to die on our own shores in this mission of patriotism and of love ; and he himself borne back to his native city in the next steamer to that in which he had guarded hither the remains of Monroe ! "What a fearful emphasis is given by this sudden death to the text from which the chaplain of the Seventh, Rev. Dr. Weston, preached to the Regiment on Sunday last : " Watch, therefore, for ye know neither the day nor the hour when the Son of man cometh," Common Council of the City of Richmond to Colonel A. Dtiryee. Richmond, July 14, 1858. To Colonel A. IhinYEE : Dear Sir : It is my privilege, as President of the Council of the City of Richmond, to transmit to you the within inclosed resolutions, adopted by the Council on the 12th instant, with a request that you will communicate the same to your Regiment, and the family and friends of Mr. Hamilton. Ere this letter reaches your State, you will have received the re- mains of Mr. Hamilton, accompanied by a committee from the vo- lunteer companies of the City of Richmond, and a detachment from the One Hundred and Seventy-ninth Regiment of Virginia Militia. I convened the Council for the purpose of appointing a Committee from their body to accompany the remains, but having received the intelligence of the death of Mr. Hamilton so late in the day, we could not get ready to start with the remains, which left at four o'clock P.M., that day. I assure you that the unfortunate death of Mr. Hamilton, while a guest of this city, on the noble and patriotic duty of escorting to their last resting-place the remains of one of Virginia's illustrious sons, has cast a gloom over our whole commu- nity. Such patriotism as has been manifested by him, and your whole Regiment, in leaving home, relatives, and friends, and endur- ing the fatigue of a long journey, to accompany the remains of one of Virginia's sons, has endeared him and his comrades to the fond embrace of the citizens of Richmond ; and as he now lies silent in the tomb, we can only bow with humble submission to the divine ]>rovidence, but would mingle our sorrow with the grief of his rela- tives and friends, and deplore with the National Guard the loss of their comrade, and tender to that gallant corps, through you, our most heartfelt sympathies in this most melancholy event. I trust this first visit of your gallant corps to the metropolis of Virginia, 230 REMOVAT. OF THE REMAINS on 60 patriotic an errand, though attended with the loss of one of your comrades, -which we all with you lament, be attended, as we believe it has been, with the happy result of binding together more closely the citizens of the two States in one common bond of bro- therhood, and make us feel tliat, though we are separated by geo- graphic lines, yet the same national flag that floats over you in New- York also waves over us in Virginia. May we be so closely united to eacli other, in feeling and interest, that no discord, coming from either North or South, shall ever separate us. With the most profound respects, I remain your most obedient servant, David J. Saunders, President of the Council of the City of Richmond. Col. August to Mayor Tiemann. Richmond, Virginia, July 9th, 1858. My Dear Sir : Before this reaches you, the telegraph will have informed you that the body of Mr. L. Hamilton, a member of the Sixth Company of the Regiment of National Guard, was found drowned at Rockett's this morning, at an early hour. The Coroner of the city held an inquest over the body at half-past nine o'clock A.M., and then delivered it into my charge, to make such disposition of it as I might think proper. I immediately gave orders that a metallic coffin should be procured, and the body be properly shrouded and deposited in it, to be conveyed by the steamer Roanoke to New-York. After the body was placed in the coflSn, it was es- corted by a detachment from my Regiment to the Capitol, where it remained under a guard of honor until three o'clock this afternoon when it was escorted to the steamer by the whole Regiment. The body must have remained in the water ahont fifty six hours, and when taken from it, could not have been identified, but for the name upon the linen, and upon papers in his pocket-book. Decomposition was so rapid, before the body was put into the coffin, that under no circumstances should the coffin be opened, after it arrives in New-York. I have been induced to write you this letter, because I thought it possible the Roanoke, with the body, might reach New-York before the Seventh Regiment returns, and if so, then, that you might com- municate to the family or friends of the deceased the substance of the foregoing. I have written fully to Col. Duryee upon the subject. I have the honor to be, your obedient servant, T. P. AuousT, Colonel. First Reg't Va. Volunteers. Tlis Honor the Mayor of New-York. OF JAMES MONROE. 231 Gol. August to Col. Duryee. Richmond, Virginia, July 9th, 18.58. Col. a. Duryee : Dear Sir : As the steamer Roanoke -was about leaving the wharf this afternoon, I addressed you a hasty note, in- forming you that I had sent the remains of Mr. L. Hamilton, under an escort from my Regiment, by her to New-York. Owing to my engagement iu Court all day, I had not time to write you as fully as I desired upon the subject. I shall now give you full particulars, so far as I am able to do so. At an early hour this morning, the body was discovered floating in the creek that empties into James River at Rocketts. The general impression here seems to be, that Mr. Hamilton went on board the Glen Cove with his Regiment, and afterwards fell overboard, before she moved off, and that his body was washed into the creek by the tide. You can tell whether this impression is correct or not, by ascertaining if his musket and knap- sack were on board the steamboat. There was no knapsack on the body when it was found. I am informed that in one of his pockets was found a pocket-book containing about twenty-seven dollars, and some few papers. He had, also, ujion his person, a fine gold watch. These things were taken charge of by the authorities, and will, I presume, be forwarded to New-York on Monday next by James A. Patterson, Esq., a merchant of your city, who will be directed to deliver them to you, in order that they may be handed over to his family. After the body was taken from the water, the decomposi- tion was so rapid as to render it impossible for any one to recognize it. The coffin must not, on any account, be opened, after it gets to New- York, as a sight of the body, in its present condition, would be any thing but gratifying to the friends of the deceased. This sad affair has east a gloom over our whole community, and from every lip we hear expressions of sincere sorrow for his untimely death. As the procession passed along the streets, at various points, flags, draped in deep mourning, were suspended, and in other ways our citizens testified their respect for the memory of the deceased. The City Council held a meeting this evening, and adopted suitable reso- lutions. Be pleased to let me hear from you upon this subject. I am, yours most truly, T. P. August, Col. August to Col. Duryee. Richmond, Virginia, July 9th, 1858. Colonel : Tlie steamer Roanoke is just about to leave the wharf, and I have only time to say to you that she carries to New-York the last remains of Mr. L. Hamilton, of your Regiment, wlio was found drowned at Rockett's this morning. 232 REJIOVAI, OF THE REMAINS The body was delivered to me tins morning, by the Coroner of the city, and I immediately gave orders for a proper disposition of it. It was escorted to the Capitol by a detachment from my Regiment, where it laid in state until three o'clock this afternoon, when it was escorted to the steamer by my whole Regiment. I send a detach- ment from the different companies of my Regiment, to accompany the remains to New-York. A detachment from the One Hundred and Seventy-Ninth Regiment Virginia Militia, also accompanies the remains. I need not assure you that our whole community have been deeply touched by the intelligence of his untimely death. Be pleased to convey to your Regiment, and to the family and friends of the deceased, the assurance of the cordial s^^mpathy of our whole community in their afflicting bereavement. In great haste, yours most truly, T. P. August. Col. First Reg't Va. Vols. Lieut.-Col. Milton Gary to Col. Duryee. Richmond, July 10th, 1858. Colonel : For fear that my Colonel August has not been able to write you by this afternoon's mail, (he having been in Court, I be- lieve, all day,) I write you a line in relation to your poor Hamilton. Every thing found on him we have here, subject to the direction of Lis friends. It was not possible to send them on with his body, as we wished to have his uniform and equipments, of course, much soiled, from remaining in the water, properly cleaned and arranged. His watch, money, etc., are all in the hands of proper parties, and will be sent as may be hereafter d^-sired. Do not allow the case to be opened, as the sight would be a disagreeable recollection for his friends. I regret exceedingly that the case was closed before I could take a lock of his hair for his family, but having many things to at- tend to, I was not near the body when it was shrouded, and would not have it opened afterwards, even for that. The body was in an advanced stage of decomposition when discovered. I send you a copy of one of our morning papers, which will give you all of the particulars which we have been able to gather. It needs no words from me, Sir, to assure you, your officers and men, and the family and friends of the deceased, of the deep sympathy of our citizens, our officers and men, with you and them in this distressing calamity. Poor fellow, while his comrades were cheering and being cheered, he was drowning within a few feet of them, unseen by a single eye, un- OF JAMES MONROE. 233 assisted bj' a single arm. We cared for his dust, sir, as hrothron should, and we have sent him back to you over the billows, guardecl by brethren, that he may be laid under the sod of his native State, his bier to be followed by the gallant Seventh, and his grave to be moistened with their tears. If you should see Messrs. Schad and Maule, the lieutenants in charge of the guard from my Regiment, do not fail to send them, with their guards, by the steamer Roanoke, on Wednesday afternoon. Such are their instructions, and I know tliey will carry them out, unless over persuaded by some of your com- mand. I write in great haste, and with no less of feeling on this sad occasion. With sentiments of the highest regard, I am. Colonel, very truly and sincerely, yours, R. Miltox Gary, First Va. Vols. Capt. Will. H. Richardson to Col. Durye£. Henrico Co., Virginia, July 12th, 1858. Dear Sir : It was my pride and pleasure, one week ago, to march in the same column, and to mingle at the same festive board, with your gallant Regiment, soldiers, all of us, of the same common coun- try, and rallied (God be thanked still,) under the same glorious stars and stripes, the emblem of our Union. As an American, I feel proud of the noble specimen of citizen soldiery who had volunteered the sacred duty which brought them to the shores of the Old Do- minion. Their splendid soldiership commanded universal admira- tion, as did their personal qualities our esteem, and when j^ou left us, we parted with you as with brothers who had won our hearts. Little did wc suppose that in so short a period of time the current of our feelings should be turned into another channel. The sad, un- timely end of your comrade, Laurens Hamilton, fell like a thunder- clap upon our city and country, and I may truly say, plunged every heart in sorrow, as it placed every flag in mourning. As one who felt all that a soldier and a man could feel, in the plea- sant associations of your visit to us, I can not remain silent, when those, whom we look upon as " brothers in arms," are called upon to mourn. I speak the sentiments of mj' corps, in expressing my own, and I beg the privilege of mingling our tears and our sympathies with theirs. The private circle of the mourning family the stranger must not intrude upon ; but to my brother soldiers I may say tliis much, in token of my deep-felt sorrow. I remain, dear Sir, most truly yours, William II. Richardson. Capt., Henrico Light Dragoons. 234 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS THE ESCORT OP YOUNG HAMILTON'S REMAINS TO NEW-YORK. The escort of Virginia soldiers which attended the re- mains of young Hamilton to New- York, embarked the 10th July, by the Roanoke, to return home. The steamer was expected to arrive on Sunday evening, but was detained off Sandy Hook by a fog, so that she did not arrive until after six o'clock yesterday morning. It was intended to receive the body with military lionors, but in obedience to the express wishes of the family, the ceremonies were quietly conducted. A meeting of Company 6, National Guard, to which young Hamilton belonged, was held on Sunday, at which two brothers of the deceased were present to make this request known. It was instantly complied with, and the other companies of the Regiment were also notified, so that they might observe it. Company 6 appointed Lieut. Kent and privates Teer and King to receive the body ; and privates Kem- ble, Vose, Ebaugh, Bartlett, and Draper — young Hamilton's intimate friends — a committee to assist the family in the funeral arrangements, and Lieutenants Vermilyea and Kent a committee to secure quarters for the Virginia escort. The meeting was closed with prayer by private King. The armory of the Company has been draped taste- fully with festoons of black and white muslin, in memory of the de- ceased — his closet being distinguished by a white satin bow. At Norfolk, the military from Richmond were joined by Capt. V. D. Groner, Quartermaster Foster, Paymaster Cherry, Sergeant J. G. West, Lieut. Diff, C. Crowell, Lieut. Peter Dilworth, and Orderly D. Waters, members of the Fifty-fourth Regiment Virginia State Mili- tia, who were detailed as a guard of honor by the civil authorities of Norfolk, to escort the remains from that city to New- York. When they embarked they were saluted and welcomed in an appropriate manner by their Richmond military brethren, and from that time they entered upon their share of the duties attending the melancholy honors paid to the lamented dead. The body was placed at the stern of the vessel, on the promenade deck, near the flag-staflf, and covered with an awning of the thickest canvas, to screen the cases in which it was inclosed from the weather. Four sentries were kept on guard all the time, the deputations from Richmond and Norfolk sharing the duty equally. Tiie steamer car- ried her flags at half-mast on leaving Richmond, at Norfolk, and on entering the port of New- York. She was detained below Quarantine several hours by a dense fog and the darkness of the night. The OP JAMES MOXROE. 235 friends of the deceased and the committee were on the pier with a hearse on the arrival of the steamer, and the remains were at once delivered to them by the escort. The Virginians were somewhat surprised at first at there being no military reception ; but upon being informed of the wishes of the family, at once acquiesced in their proprietj*. The remains were taken to Trinity Church, where they were left in charge until to-day at half-past three, when the funeral ceremonies will take place without any military display, agreeably to the wishes of the family. Mr. Schuyler Hamilton, how- ever, has sent a touching letter to the Virginia escort through the acting commander, Lieut. Maule, inviting them, in view of the atten- tions of kindred which they have shown to the deceased, to attend the funeral with the family. The following letter was bi'Oiiglit by Lieut. Maule to Colonel Duryee : Richmond, Va., July 9, 1858. Colonel: The steamer Roanoke is just about to leave the wharf, and I have only time to say to you that she carries to ISTew-York the remains of Mr. L. Hamilton, of your Regiment, who was found drowned at Rocketts, this morning. The body was delivered to me this morning by the coroner of the city, and I immediately gave orders for a proper disposition of it. It was escorted to the Capitol by a detachment from my regiment, where it laid in state until three o'clock this afternoon, when it was escorted to the steamer by my whole regiment. I send a detachment from the different companies of my regiment to accompany the remains to New-York. A detach- ment from the One Hundred and Seventy-ninth Regiment Virginia Militia also accompanies the remains. I need not assure you that our whole community have been deeply touched by the intelligence of his untimely death. Be pleased to convey to your Regiment and to the family and friends of the deceased the assurance of the cordial sympathy of our whole community in their afflicting bereavement. In great haste, I am truly yours, T. P. August, Col. First Regiment Virginia Volunteers. To A. Duryee, Col. Seventh Regiment, National Guard. The Virginians were escorted to the Lafarge House, where they were quartered during their stay at the expense of the Seventh Regiment, and every effort made to meet their slightest wish. They were on tlie 12th July personally attended to by various members of the Regiment, and shown several of our city armories and other 236 KEirOVAL OF THE KEMAINS objects of interest. They arranged to return on Wednesday after- noon, the 14th July, and before tliey left, the National Guard took occasion to impress upon them their gratitude for the unbounded hospitality of Virginia towards themselves. The funeral ceremonies took place on the 13th, from Trinity Church. Dr. Muhlenberg, of "whose church Mr. Hamilton was a member, and Dr. Weston, the temporary Chaplain of the Regiment, officiated. The remains were interred in the family vault in Trinity Church-yard. Meeting of the City Authorities of Richmond, and Adoption of Resolutions expressive of sorrow and condolence for the Death of Laurens Hamilton, At a, meeting of the Council of the city of Richmond, held on Monday, the 12th day of July, in the year 1858, the following jireamble and resolutions were unanimous- ly adopted : Whereas, Laurens Hamilton, Esq., a member of the National Guard of New- York, was drowned in this city during the recent em- barkation of his Regiment on their return home — therefore, be it Resolved, by the Council of the city of Richmond, that they liave heard of the unfortunate death of Mr. Hamilton Avith profound re- gret, a regret deepened, if possible, by the reflection that he lost his life while a guest of this city, and in the act of closing the noble and ■patriotic duty of escorting to their last resting-place the remains of one whom in life Virginia delighted to honor, and whom in death she has recalled to her bosom. Resolved, That the Council claim for themselves and for their fel- low-citizens, the melancholy privilege of mingling their sorrow with the grief of Mr. Hamilton's relatives and friends, of deploring with the National Guard the loss of their comrade, and of tendering to that gallant corps the most heartfelt sympathy for the melancholy event which clouds the recollections of their visit to Richmond. Resolved, That a copy of the foregoing resolutions be transmitted to Col. Duryee, with the request that he will communicate them to his Regiment and to the relatives of deceased. OF JAMES MONROE. 237 From a New -York paper. "WHAT SHADOWS AWE ARE, AND WHAT SHADOWS WE PURSUE." The gallant Seventh Regiment left us, the other day, with all the " pomp and circumstances " of military display, to follow, to their final resting-place, the mortal remains of Ex-President Monroe. This evening they are expected to return, to follow one of their own number to the place appointed for all living. They left us thus to bury the dead — and thus they come back to bury the dead. A funeral there, and a funeral here ! We refer here to the death, by drowning, of young Laurens Hamil- ton, of Company 6 — son of John C. Hamilton, and grandson of the illus- trious Alexander Hamilton. As yet, we have but few particulars of the occurrence ; it is only certain that he was missing from the Regi- ment — that he must have fallen overboard from the steamer Glen Cove, in the James River, and that his body, some hours afterwards, was found floating in the water near Richmond. The military there, with characteristic chivalry, took charge of it, placed it on board the Roanoke, which, leaving for New- York Friday afternoon, will doubt- less be at her dock here to-day. A guard of honor from Richmond accompany the remains. Mr. Hamilton, the deceased, was twenty-three years of age — a young man of exemplary conduct, and was much esteemed by a large circle of friends in this city. He was a member of the Church of the Holy Communion, (Rev. Mr. Muhlenberg's,) and was a sincere and devoted Christian. He leaves a father, mother, and brothers, who feel deeply bereaved at the loss of a dear son and brother. The members of the Sixth Company, who did not participate in the excursion to Richmond, met at their armory Friday evening, and concluded not to take any measures for the funeral of their deceased comrade, until the arrival of the Regiment from Richmond ; they, however, very appropriately draped their armory in deep mourning. Mr. Hamilton joined the Seventh Regiment on the 23d of July 1857 ; and he entered upon his duties as a member of the corps to which he was attached, with a zeal and alacrity seldom observed in a member of a Regiment where such rigid discipline is exacted from a new member as in the National Guard. Peace to his ashes ! From the Richmond Despatch. THE HAMILTON" MONUMENT. We yesterday received no less than three communications offering to subscribe to the erection of a monument over the remains of young 238 REMOVAL OF THE KEMAIXS Hamilton, of the National Guard, New-York. Two of them are from gentlemen in the interior counties, showing how wide spread is the sorrow at the sad death of our guest. A committee appointed for the purpose, could speedily raise $1000 or $2000, for the erection of the projiosed monument, so general seems the desire to contri- bute to it. Let those having the matter in hand specify some mode of contribution, and the money will not be wanting. FUNERAL OF LAURENS HAMILTON, OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. The funeral of Laurens Hamilton, the member of the Seventh Regiment, who was drowned at Richmond dur- ing the recent obsequies of President Monroe, took place on the afternoon, 13th July, at half-past three, at Trinity Church. At an early hour the crowd began to collect, and at the time of the commencement of the services, all the seats were filled, and the aisles were crowded to ex- cess. The seats on the centre aisle were reserved for the relatives, the pall-bearers, the guard of honor from Vir- ginia, the members of the Seventh Regiment, in citizens' di-ess, and the graduating class of 1854 of Columbia Col- lege, of which the deceased was a member. Precisely at half-past three, the officiating clergymen, relatives, and pall-bearers, emerged from the ante-room on the left of the altar, and, proceeding to the vestibule, escorted the remains in procession to the front of the altar, in the following order : Officiating Clergy. Dr. Berrian, Di'- Muhlenberg, Dr. Taylor, B,e\. Mr. Weston, Eev. Mr. Lawrence, Rev. Mr. Adams. Pall-Bearers. Pall-Bearers E. C. Morris, E. Oothout, B. Cutting. The body of the deceased. Robert Wintlirop, Gouverneur Kemble, Tracy Arnold. Relatives of the deceased. Friends of the familv. OF JAMKS MOXROK. 239 The body was placed directly in front of the altar, and the officiating clergy took seats in the chancel, where Dr. Adams was also seated. The solemn burial-service of the Episcopal Church was then performed, after which the remains were conveyed to the family vault, at the south-west corner of the church-yard. Many of the audience lingered about the church-yard to view the tomb of the illustrious grandfather of the deceased — Alexander Hamilton. The Virginia Guard of Honor wore badges of their melancholy office, and after the service, proceeded to their qiiarters. The Virginians have received assiduous attentions from the members of the Seventh dui-ing their stay, and every disposition has been shown to reciprocate the hospitality so I'ecently evinced at Richmond. There was a voluntary parade of the Seventh Regiment on the 14th July, at one o'clock, in white pantaloons. The line will be formed in Washington Parade Ground. They will escort to the steamer Roanoke the delegation from Norfolk, Richmond, and Petersburg. Movements of the National Guard prior to their departure for Virginia— Pressing Invitation received by them from the Cities of Kichmond and "Washington, and from the Heads of Military Companies of the South. As soon as it became rumored that the National Guard would likely be selected by the city authoi'ities as an escort to accompany the remains of Mr. Monroe from New- York to Virginia, complimentary invitations from the South poured in npon them. To many of these kind invitations Col. Duryee had to delay giving answers, until he could ascertain whether the Mayor and Common Council of New- York would accept the services of his command, voluntarily offered by a large majority of the members of his noble Regi- ment. 240 RKSIOVAL OF TIIK ItKMAINS The services of the Ilegiment having been accepted as a guard of honor to escort the remains of Mr. Monroe to Virginia, it proceeded to charter the noble ocean-built steamship Ericsson to convey it to Virginia. So soon as the plan of proceedings was organized, this liberal-spirited and patriotic Regiment, though incurring a heavy expense in getting up their conveyance and out- fit, issued various invitations to Committees to accompany it on board of the Ericsson, among which Avere the fol- lowing : Invitation to the Mayor of the City of New- York. New-Yokk, 29tli June, 1858. Sib: The Seventh Regiment having made arrangements for pro- ceeding to Richmond, Va., as a guard of lionor to the remains of Ex-President Monroe, on Saturday next, we frhall feel very much pleased if you will accompany the Regiment as their guest. We are, sir, your obedient servants, etc., LiEUT.-CoL. Lefferts, Capt. Nevers, Lieut. Williams. Hon. D. F. TiEMANN, Mayor City New-Yorlc. The Mayor, owing to pressing business engagements, Avas forced to decline the invitation so kindly tendered him. Mayor^s Reply. New-York, 1st July, 1858. To Lieut.-Col. M. Lefferts : Dear Sir : I have received your kind invitation to accompany the Seventh Regiment of tlie City of New-York on their contemplated visit to Riclimond, as tlie guard of honor of the remains of tlie pa- triot, James Monroe, late President of the United States. I sliould I)e indeed gratified to accompany this distinguished corps on so solemn and interesting an occasion, but the exigency of public busi- ness, particularly at this time, will prevent my doing so. You will do me the favor of conveying to the officers and members of the Regiment my best wislies for their prosperity and haj)piness, and believe me to be, most sincerely, your friend, Daniel F. Tiemann. OK JAMES MONKOE. 241 Invitation to the Committee of Arrangements on the part of the Com- mon Council of the City of Neiv-York. June 29th, 1858. Sir : The Seventh Regiment have chartered the steamer Ericsson for the purpose of proceeding to Richmond as guard of honor to the remains of Ex-President Monroe, and will be most happy to have the Joint Committee of the Common Council, of which you are Chairman, to accompany the Regiment. We have extended a similar invitation to the Virginia Committee, and hope it may suit all persons interested to place the body in our charge and all proceed in one ship. We are, sir, your obedient servants, etc., LiEUT.-CoL. Lkfferts, Capt. Nevis, T. W. Adams, Chairman. Lieut. Williams. Reply of the Committee through their Secretary. New-Yokk, June 29, 1858. LiEUT.-CoL. Lefferts, Seventh Regiment : Dear Sir : Your communication, addressed to the Chairman of the Joint Committee of the Common Council, on the removal of the re- mains of Ex-President Monroe, stating that the Seventh Regiment would be most happy to have the Joint Committee accompany it to Richmond in the steamer Ericsson, was laid before that Committee at their meeting this afternoon, and in reply, they have instructed me to inform you that they would have been pleased to have ac- cepted your invitation, so kindly tendered, but for an earnest wish, conveyed to them by the Committee appointed on the part of the State of Virginia, for the Joint Committee to proceed with them to Richmond in the steamer Jamestown, as the guests of that State. The Joint Committee have also desired me to request that you will express to the officers and other members of the Seventh Regi- ment their high appreciation of the invitation extended by them, and that the invitation of the Committee from Virginia alone pre- vented their acceptance thereof. Yours, very respectfully, Richard Scott, Cor. Sec. Invitation to Lieutenant- General Winfield Scott. New- York, 29 June, 1858. Sir: The Seventh Regiment, National Guard, N. Y. S. M., have made arrangements to proceed to Richmond, Va., as a guard of 11 242 EEMOVAL OF TIIK EEIIAINS honor to the remains of Ex-President Monroe, and contemplate npon their return to pay a visit to the tomb of Washington and the City of Baltimore. The Regiment are aware of the interest you feel, as an old and familiar friend of the late President, in the ceremonies which are to place the remains within the protection of his own State, and they will feel exceedingly gratified if you will accept this invitation to accompany the Regiment, and thus give your presence and aid in the performance of tliis duty. The Regiment have chartered the large steamship Ericsson, and have pleasant and comfortable accommodations for yourself and staff. We are, sir, with great respect, your obedient sei'vants, LiEUT.-CoL. M. Lefferts, ) Capt. Nevers, > Committee. Lieut. Williams, ) Lieut.-Gen. Winfield Scott, Commander-in-Chief, U. S. A., West Point. Jiepli/. West Point, N. Y., July 6, 1858. Gentlemen : Lieutenant-General Scott desires me to acknowledge your invitation for him to proceed to Richmond in the Ericsson as the guest of your Regiment. The invitation, dated June 29, was addressed to this place and forwarded to the General in Washington. Failing to reach him there and sent back, it was only received by him here yesterday. The General begs you to express to the Regiment his appreciation of their kindness and his thanks for the compliment. His public duties, at the moment, must have prevented his accepting the invi- tation, even had he not been sick. T am, gentlemen, very respectfully, your obedient servant, George W. Lay, Lieut.-Col. A. D. C. To Lieut.-Col. M. Lefferts, and others, Seventh Regiment N. Y. S. M. The following is a copy of Lieut.-Gen. Scott's reply to a former invitation sent by it to him, i-equesting tlie honor of his comjiany in their visit to Boston, to attend the inauguration of the Bunker Hill ceremonies : Ge7i. Winfield Scott to Col. Duryee. New-York, June 11, 1858. My Dear Colonel : I find myself obliged at the last moment com- pelled to decline the many invitations to visit Boston on the ap- OF JAMKS MONllOE. 243 proiicliing occasion of the inauguration of the Bunker Hill ceremony, on account of the increased illness of my wife. With many thanks to you and your fine Regiment, inviting me to accompany you to Boston, I remain, my dear sir, yours very truly, WiNFiELD Scott. Col. A. DuRYEE, etc., etc. The officers of the National Guard, Colonel Duryee, Lieutenant-Colonel LelFerts, and Quartermaster Win- chester, also tendered, in person, invitations to the Com- mittee of Virginians, resident in New-York, appointed to accompany the Regiment on board of the Ericsson, to Virginia, which their previous acceptance from the State Committee, to go with the remains on hoard the Jamestown, obliged them to decline. The officers, on behalf of the Regiment, also extended a similar invitation to Messrs. Wise and Mumford, the Committee from the State of Virginia, which they, from previous arrangements, were unable to accept. irrVITATIONS TO THE NATIONAL GUARD FROM THE SOUTH. Mayor Mayo to Colonel Duryee. Richmond, Virginia, June 23, 1858. To Colonel Duryee, of the Seventh Regiment of New-York Militia : Dear Sir: The Council of this City, cherishing with grateful pride the patriotic devotions of the citizens of a sister State, to the memory of one of Virginia's most distinguished sons, one whom she loved to honor while living, and now reveres his memory, bids me to thank you and the Regiment under your command, for the proffered honor to the memory of Mr. Monroe, by accompanying his remains as a miUtary escort to this city, on the 5th of July, and, in their name, to tender to you a sincere and cordial welcome to the metropolis of his native State. With sentiments of high regard, I am your obedient servant, Joseph Mayo, Mayor, 244 KEMOVAL OF THE liEMAINS Colonel August, Lieutenant- Colonel Cary, Major R. M. Nimmo, of Mrst Regiment Virginian Volunteers, to Colonel Duryee. Head-quarters First Regiment Virginia Volunteers, Richmond, June 8, 1858. Colonel : It having been stated in the papers of your city that a guard of honor will accompany the remains of the late President Monroe, on their removal to our city, and that it will probably be composed of a detachment of your Regiment, a Committee to inform you, if the guard be taken from your Regiment, or if taken from any other Regiment, the officers commanding that Regiment that the detachment will be received here, and treated as the guests of our Regiment during their stay in Richmond. If the guard is to be taken from any other Regiment, please favor us by sending this note to its commanding officer. We are, sir, with great respect, your obedient servants, T. P. August, Colonel. R. Milton Cart, Lieutenant-Colonel. R. M. NiMMO, Major. Colonel DuETEE, Commanding Seventh Regiment, N. Y. S. F., National Guard, New- York. Colonel August to Colonel Duryee. Richmond, Virginia, June 30th, 1858. Colonel Duryee : Dear Sir: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of yours of the 28th, informing the Committee of which I am Chairman, of your acceptance, in behalf of your command, of the civilities ten- dered by us, in the name of the First Regiment Virginia Volunteers, provided such an acceptance does not conflict with the arrangements of our city authorities. It gives me great pleasure to assure you, sir, that no conflict can possibly occur, as our entertainment of you will be a part of the programme recognized by the city authorities. With high regard, your obedient servant, T. P. August, Colonel First Regiment Virginia Volunteers. Colonel W. Jlickey to Colonel Duryee. Washington, July 4th, 1858. Colonel Duryee, Commanding Seventh New-York Regiment, Richmond, Virginia : My Dear Sir : Your favor from New- York has been duly received, and, as it leaves us in doubt whether you will bring your Regiment OF JAMES MONROE. 245 to Washington, which you stated you could not determine until after you left New- York, I beg leave to re-quest, that you will do us the favor to cause me to be informed by telegraph, as early as convenient, whether you will come to Washington. If so, by what route, when you will leave Richmond, and expect to arrive here. This will confer a great favor upon us. We can promise but very little in the way of display, but what we can do will be offered with the highest appreciation of the excellent and efficient character of your Regiment, and a sincere respect for yourself and your com- mand individually. Expecting to hear from you soon, I have the honor to be, dear Colonel, your obedient servant, W. HiCKEY, Volunteers D. C. Washington Cmr, July 9th, 1858. Colonel Abram Duryee, Commanding Seventh Regiment of New York: My Dear Sir : Sudden and severe indisposition, from which I am gradually recovering, alone prevented ray tendering a personal wel- come to you and your associates in arms ; and I had hoped up to the present moment to be able to carry out this wish, but my physician has placed me under injunctions not to leave my house. I deeply regret this circumstance on every account, but it shall not prevent an expression of my feelings on this interesting occasion, rendered doubly interesting from the patriotic errand which brought you to this region of our Union. I am sure the citizens and soldiers of the Federal Metropolis will rejoice to meet you in their city, and in tlieir name, as well as for myself individually, I offer to you, and to those under your com- mand, a hearty welcome to Washington. Allow me to add my best wishes for a pleasant and safe return to your homes. I am. Colonel, with high regard, yours truly, James G. Bereet. 240 llEMOVAL OP THE REMAINS LETTERS OF THANKS. To Colonel T. P. Auguat, of the First Regiment Virginia Volunteers. New- York, July, 1858. Sir : Allow the Committee appointed by the Board of Officers of Seventh Regiment New-York National Guard, to express to you, and through you to your Regiment, their heartfelt thanks for the munifi- cent entertainment which greeted their arrival in your beautiful city. It was on a scale proportionate to the gigantic building in which it was served, and a fitting exponent of the large-heartedness that dic- tated it, and with the generous viands, too, there was a " feast of reason and a flow of soul, that bid a good digestion wait on appetite, and health on both." "We hail that day's intercourse as a commence- ment of a new era in the interchange of friendly sentiments and mutual kindnesses between the North and South. The occasion, of necessity, gave a national character to the imposing ceremonies wit- nessed in your city, and a whole nation participated in the cordial attentions so frankly tendered by your citizens and the noble senti- ments so happily expressed by your orators. A few such interviews will do more to dissipate the idle jealousies that still alienate many, and the petty feuds that will estrange some, than all the pamphlet- writing and legislation of the past. The sons of New-York and Virginia met with extended hands, and both are always in earnest, whether the hand is given open or shut. They joined in friendly clasp, and both instinctively felt it was the warm grasp of a brother. You gave us a welcome warm as the sky of your own sunny South, and we yearn for an oj^portunity to show that the cold in clime are not cold in affection, and to prove to you that we can ap- preciate your generosity, though we never can forget your kind offices so prodigally showered upon us, on that soil that gave birtli to the Father of his Country, and where we all felt we were sons, and where, too, a mutual feeling, we trust, animated each heart, like that wliieh warmed the souls of our forefathers when they met on the battle-fields of the Revolution. Marshall Lefferts, Lieut.-Col., H. C. Shumway, Capt., Committee B. M. Nevers, Capt., >• of J. Monroe, Capt., Board of Officers. Rev. J. n. Weston, Chaplain, OF JAMES MONROE. 247 To his Excellency, Henry A. Wise, Governor of Virginia. N"ew-York, July, 1858. Sir: The undersigned, in behalf of the National Guard of New- York, and by direction of the Board of Officers, beg most respect- fully to tender you their sincere thanks for the cordial reception extended to them, by the capital of your State, the city of Richmond, and especially for the elegant entertainment the officers enjoyed at your hospitable home. New-York had guarded well the sacred ashes intrusted to her care, and liastened to respond to the call of Virginia when she demanded the dust of her beloved son. It is an event not soon to be forgotten ; it is indeed already a part of history, and your able and eloquent address at the tomb of the great man whom we had met to honor, was worthy of the occasion, and we can pronounce no higher eulogium. The address will never be effaced from our memories. It elicited a hearty response from every heart ; it breathed no partisan sjiirit ; there was nothing nar- row or sectional in its tone ; but it was as broad and catholic as the sun that shone over our heads, and the breeze that fiinned our brows. We are confident we express the sentiments of the entire Regi- ment, when we say it added a new ligament to the bonds which hold together our vast Republic. We left your noble State better patriots, and felt after having wor- shipped together at the altars of your mighty dead, that " e'en in their ashes live their wonted fires," and that we were indeed breth- ren laboring together in the sublime cause of common humanity. "With the highest esteem, We remain your obedient servants, Marshall Lefferts, Lieut.-Col. H. C. Shumway, Capt., B. M. Nevers, Capt., J. MoxROE, Capt., Rev. J. H. Weston, Chaplain, Committee of Board of Officers. Reply. Richmond, Va., Sept. 15, 1858. Gentlemen: Within the last few days I returned to this city, after an absence of several weeks, during which yours of the day of July last was received at my office. It gives me sincere pleasure to acknowledge this token of your 248 REMOVAL OF THK REMAINS regard and esteem. The National Guard of New- York came to our Capitol on a sacred mission, to restore the ashes of a beloved son of this State who had in peace and in war served his whole country, and piously they performed the patriotic dut}-. Our Capitol, Rich- mond City, was honored by their visit, and proudly our people endeavored to acknowledge the compliment. As the Governor of the State, I should have been wanting in duty to her and false to my own feelings if I had not tendered to the Seventh Regiment of New- York the most cordial reception. And well did they deserve it, not onl}- for the object of their escort, but for their conduct as soldiers, and gentlemen, and patriots. I beg you to tliank the Board of Officers for their kind letter tlirough you, which I have had framed and hung up in the Execu- tive Mansion, to be transmitted to posterity as a memorial of the event of your visit, characterized in all respects by every sentiment of brotherly affection and of filial devotion to a common country. The Virginians and the New-Yorkers took hold of the horns of the altar together, and from the very ashes of the Revolutionary sire they reinterred, were inspired anew, with the fealty of old, to the whole United States, their glory of the past, their interest of the present, their destiny for the future, and their honor and perpetuity in a blessed union now and forever. May we always promote and cher- ish the sympathies of Brethren and remain One People. I am, gentlemen, most gratefull}'. Your obliged fellow-citizen and friend, Henry A. Wlse. To Maeshall Lefferts, Lieut.-Col. H. C. SuuMWAT, Capt., B. M. Nevers, Capt., J. Monroe, Capt., Rev. J. H. Weston, Chaplain, Committee of Board of Officers. To Hon. Joseph Mayo, Mayor of the City of Richmond. New-York, July, 1858. StR: We have been directed by resolution of the Board of Officers of the Seventh Regiment New-York National Guard, to convey to you, and through you as. the oflicial head to the City Council of Richmond, the deep sense of obligation the entire Regiment feel for the free and generous hospitality of your city upon our recent visit. The most simple expressions of satisfaction and Lasting remem OF JAMES MONROE. 249 brance of our limited stay among you, are more consonant to our real emotions of respect, gratitude, and fraternal feeling. The Regiment were fortunate in the privilege of bearing a token so precious to Virginia as the remains of James Monroe, and which enabled them to testify their admiration for his character and the virtues which made him illustrious, as well as the love and regard they entertain for the State which gave liim birth. We knew the citizens of Virginia would be sensible of the compli- ment intended, and that we could rely upon their sympathy. We knew the proverbial hospitality of her people ; but with all our knowledge we were not prepared for a kindness so diffused, for at- tentions so universal, for offerings so freely laid before us. Virginia gathered fresh laurels ; while the cordial greetings of friends from distant States were cemented by an everlasting remem- brance. We can not express by words the gratification of the Regiment with their visit ; but we can with the utmost sincerity assure you that we shall never forget the city of Richmond and tlie names of all those who acted as the representatives of her hospitality. Receive, Mr. Mayor, our personal regard, and believe us, with great respect, Your obedient servants, Marshall Lefferts, Lieut.-Col., H. C. Shumway, Capt., B. M. Nevers, Capt., J. Monroe, Capt., Rev. J. H. Weston, Chaplain, Committee of Board of Officers. To Major Wm. H. French, United States Artillery, Baltimore, Md. New- York, July, 1858. Sir : The Seventh Regiment National Guard, by resolution of their Board of Officers, have instructed us to convey to yourself and offi- cers of the corps, the thanks of the Regiment for the honor conferred in giving us a military escort through the city of Baltimore, on our return from the South. We feel the more sensible of the distinction, because we do not belong to tlie regularly constituted military arm of Government, and your courtesy was as unexpected as it was gra- tifying and appreciated. Your magnificent Battery was the admiration of all, and the promptness and celerity of its movements showed full well the hand of the soldier in its direction. 250 REMOVAL OF THE REJIAINS Of the many pleasing incidents of our journey, there was scarcely one which gave us so much real satisfaction, as the parading of your Battery for our honor. Be assured of the kind recollection in which the Regiment will hold the name of yourself and officers, and that we shall at all times be ready to give jou a soldier's welcome, upon a visit to our city. Marshall Lefferts, Lieut. -Col., H. C. SiiuMWAY, Capt., B. M. Nevers, Capt., J. Monroe, Capt., Rev. J. H. Westox, Chaplain, Committee of Board of Officers. To Capt. Peter Lyle, National Guard, City of Philadelphia, Pa. New-York, July, 1858. Sir : By resolution of the Board of Officers of the Seventh Regi- ment National Guard, we are directed to convey to yourself and command, the kind remembrance the Regiment entertain of your free and bountiful offers as we passed through your beautiful city, on our way home from Richmond. It will ever be a cause of regret that circumstances deprived us of at least a few hours' social intercourse with a corps so well known to us by reputation, drawn closer to us by having the same distinct- ive name as ourselves, and now endeared to us by that frank and cordial welcome, as unexpected by us as it was generous and noble on j'our part. It was necessary that we should arrive in New-York that evening, and we were informed that we should have no time to spare if we wished to take the train. It was this necessity which compelled us to decline your hospitality. Although we were together but a very short time, yet friendships were established, and the interchange of social greetings have made their lasting impressions. Could we combine the varied expressions of the rank and file of our Regiment, and thus convey their sentiments of esteem and regard, you would be satisfied, but it can not be expressed in words. We can prove it 'bj our intercourse and by a soldier's welcome, should you individually or collectively join hands with us in New- York. Marshall Lefferts, Lieut.-Col., H. C. Shumway, Capt., Committee B. M. Nevers, Capt., \- of J. Monroe, Capt., Board of Officers. Rev. J. IT. Weston, Chaplain, OF JAMES MONROE. "iol To Richard Wallach, Esq., Washington, D. C. New-YoKk, July, 1858. Sir : We are directed by resolution of the Board of Officers of the Seventh Regiment to convey to you their appreciation of your lib- eral and generous conduct during their stay in your city. It is not too much for us to say that your prompt and liberal offer to place at our disposal your excellent steamers for our journey to Mount Vernon had much to do with our decision in paying a visit to the Capitol of our country, and we sensibly acknowledge our indebtedness to you for much that made that visit pleasant, and happy, and agreeable. The Regiment will never forget the few mo- ments they spent at the grave of Washington, and can not well efface the part you acted, so quiet and unobtrusive, yet so generous and kind, in putting us down upon the spot without hire and without price. The mention of your name will always command attention in the ranks, and a hearty welcome on all occasions whenever we meet. Marshall Lefferts, Lieut.-Col., H. C. Shtjmwat, Capt., Committee B. M. Nevers, Capt., V of J. Monroe, Capt., I Board of Officers. Rev. J. H. Weston, Chaplain, J To Capt. Lowber, Steamer Ericsson. New- York, July, 1858. Dear Sir : The Seventh Regiment National Guard have, by their Board of Officers, directed us to convey to you the sentiments they entertain for your abilities as a commander, and your untiring efforts to perform your duties, while we were on board your vessel, with fidelity to the owners, and satisfaction to your guests. On our recent trip to Richmond and Washington, there were unfortunate circum- stances calculated to irritate and mar the pleasure of the journey, but the kind and careful consideration which you gave to every act, your unwearied efforts for our comfort and pleasure, and the uniform and gentlemanly manner which marked your intercourse, made you a host of warm and lasting friends. Notwithstanding the vexatious delays, caused by the fault of the pilot, not one word of dissatisfaction was expressed as to yourself or the beautiful vessel which vou command: on the contrary, the very 252 REMOVAL OF THE REMAINS troubles alluded to, excited our sympathy, while your frank and open intercourse secured our esteem and respect. Be assured of the truth of these declarations, for we should feel that our humble efforts in expressing, in part, the sentiments of the Regiment were indeed of little consequence, if they were to be re- ceived by you as mere formal thanks, or idle compliments. You will always receive a hearty welcome from the National Guard of New-York, and you have their united wishes for a pros- perous and happy voyage o'er life's troubled seas, and an anchorage up.iu the golden sands of eternity. Marshall Lefferts, Lieut. -Col., H. C. Shumway, Capt., B. M. Nevers, Capt. J. MoNTioE, Capt., Rev. J. H. Weston, Chaplain, Committee of Board of Officers. To Messrs. P. & M. Brown, Washington, D. C. New- York, July, 1858. Gentlemen : The undersigned, having been directed by resolution of the Board of Officers to make suitable acknowledgments on be- half of the Regiment, for the many acts of courtesy and kindness extended to us on the occasion of our late visit to Richmond and Washington, find it a most difficult duty to convey in any adequate sense the deep impressions that have been made upon our hearts by the warm and varied hospitalities extended to us at every point, and by all with whom we came in contact — each vying with the other, to treat us more like brothers than strangers from a distant State. But, among all the acts of kindness shown us, none has afforded us greater pleasure, and at the same time proved so difficult of ac- knowledgment, as your own munificent hospitality, in quartering at your splendid house, without charge, nearly one lialf of the Regi- ment, free from all restraint, and providing for all their wants with a liberality as unequalled as it was unexpected. As often as we shall recur to the pleasures of our trip and the acts of hospitality every where extended to us, none will have left deep- er impressions than your own, and each one of us will feel but too happy in an opportunity of personally testifying our appreciation of them. That the largest measure of liappiness and success may be in store OF JAMES MONROE. 253 for you, is the sincere wish of every officer and member of the Na tional Guard. Yours truly, Marshall Leffekts, Lieut.-CoL, H. C. Shumwat, Capt., B. M. Nevers, Capt., J. Monroe, Capt., Rev. J. II. Weston, Chaplain, Committee of Board of Officers. To Major Joseph P. Warner, City Guard of Baltimore. New-York, July, 1858. Sir : The Seventh Regiment National Guard desire to return you their sincere thanks for military courtesies during our passage through your city, upon a recent visit South. For this purpose the Board of Officers have by resolution directed us to convey to your- self and to your command the obligations they feel for the kind attentions shown us upon the occasion alluded to. We feel very sorry that the heat of the day, in connection with our previous fatigue, and the short time allowed us to reach the cars at the next depot, prevented us from accepting more generally of your proffered hospitality. We had hoped to be able, when leaving New-York, not only to visit your city, but to mingle with you in social intercourse. Time was not allowed us to become personally acquainted, but the soldier's welcome, which you gave us, will be retained with pleasant recollections. Marshall Lefferts, Lieut.-Col., H. C. Shumway, Capt., B. M. Nevers, Capt., J. Monroe, Capt., Rev. J. H. Weston, Chaplain, Committee of Board of Officers. CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY OF THE ^^v^nth l^cghucnt, §[ivtionaI C>wuv(l PKEPARED liY HXJJDSOISr G. -V^OLFE, 3d Co., IvT. G. ORIGIN OF ITS ORGANIZATIOlSr. 1824. — Augicst I6th. On the reception of the Mar- quis De La Fayette on his arrival in this country, the New- York Division of State Artillery paraded in honor of that illustrious patriot. As that celebrated Com- mander of the National Guard of Paris had just passed the Eleventh Regiment, a group of officers collected to- gether, and with eager eyes followed the distinguished General in his review down the line, Tlie long and pro- tracted silence Avas broken by Major John D. Wilson, one of the party, observing : " How I woiild like to command a Regiment of National Guards." (Just previous to Gen. La Fayette's reviewing the Regiment, j^ropositions w^eve made by Captains Hawley, Telfair, Curtis, and Simons, who commanded the four Infantry Comjianies of the Eleventh Regiment, and L. W. Stevens, who commanded an Artillery corps of the same Regiment, to organize a Battalion of Infantry, composed of six companies.) The remark was electric ; Capt. Stevens then proposed the organization of a Regiment, and made propositions to O. M. Lownds, Esq., an influential citizen, who at tliat mo- ment joined tlie party, that each should raise a Company HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 255 and attach tliem to the four Companies ah-cady organized, and constitute a portion of the proposed Regiment, and to give it the name of National Guard. The proposition meeting with the hearty concurrence of Captains Haw- ley, Telfair, Curtis, and Simons, and with the active coop- eration of Major John D. Wilson, one of the leading spirits in this movement, may be dated the origin of this celebrated corps. December 25th. Captain Lownds, with his company, was admitted into the battalion as the Fifth Company National Guard. December 21th. Captain Stevens was ordered to as- sume command of the Sixth Company, which was organ- ized and made up by the transfer of a portion of the ar- tillery company which he commanded in the Eleventh Regiment. The Eleventh Regiment was organized as artillei-y and infantry, and designated as the First and Second Battalions. The National Guard were known as the Second Battalion. To the above-named gentlemen must be awarded the honor and credit of having called into existence a corps which reflects upon them the enviable distinction as founders of this distinguished Regiment, which has al- ways maintained its supremacy, and attracted the atten- tion and admiration of the country for its discipline no less than for its support of law and order under many circumstances of the most trying nature. 1825. — June 21th. The order of the Commander-in- Chief, Governor De Witt Clinton, was issued for the con- sohdation of the battalion wdth the infantry companies of the Second Regiment, consisting of two companies — the La Fayette and Clinton Guard. July. Prosper M. Wetmore was elected Major — the first field officer of the Battalion of National Guard. September 25th. A Company, mider Captain Van Bu- ren, was admitted as the Seventh Company. October I8fh. Prosper M. AVetmore was promoted to 256 HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIME^TT. the rank of Lieut.-Colonel, and Captain Stevens to tho Majority. 1826. — The Commander-in-Chief ordered the battahon to be organized into a new regiment, and to be known as the Twenty Seventh Regiment N.Y.S. Artillery. March 'Id. The gray uniform was adopted by the Regiment. On this day, while on drill, Sergeant Asher Taylor, of the Fourth Company, received the thanks of the officers of the Regiment for designing a coat-of-arms and. sketching suitable designs for the colors of the Regi- ment, which were unanimously adopted. April 5th. The first By-Laws of the regiment were adopted by the Board of Officers. May. The Eighth Company was organized, and An- drew Warner elected Captain. July 23d. Lieut.-Colonel Wetmore was promoted to the rank of Colonel, and Major Stevens to Lieut.-Colonel. October. The Regiment was inspected for the first time, and 277 men appeared on parade. Total strength 437 men. 1827. — April. Lieut.-Colonel Stevens was promoted to the rank of Colonel, vice Wetmore resigned. Major Manning to Lieut.-Colonel, and Cajitain Boyd to that of Major. October. By order of the Commanding Officer, the Eighth Company was disbanded, in consequence of the paucity of its numerical force, and not meeting the re- quirements of the laws then in existence. October 27th. The Regiment inspected — 276 men. 1828. — June 1 9th. A new Eighth Company was organ- ized, under the command of Captain John H. Brower. July Sd. The Philadelphia Grays visited New- York. They were received by, and became the guests of, the National Guard. They also participated with them in celebrating Independence Day on the 4th. July. Colonel Stevens resigned, and Lieut.-Colonel Manning was |>roinotod to tlio rank of Colonel, Captain HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 257 Hart to that of Lieut. Colonel, while Boyd still retained the post of Major. Septtmher^ Colonel Manning resigned, and Lieut.-Col- onel Hart was j^romoted to the rank of Colonel. 1830. — January. Colonel Hart resigned, January Ibth. L. W. Stevens was reelected Colonel. March 2 2d George Dixey was elected Lieut.-Colonel, but declined serving, while Morgan L. Smith was elected Major, shortly afterwards promoted Lieut.-Colonel, and John M. Catlin was elected Major. 1831. — July 2d. The Regiment made an excursion to Poughkeepsie, (which was its first,) and returned July 5th. The Rendezvous was called Camp CUnton. July 1th. The Regiment paraded to attend the fune- ral obsequies of Ex-President Monroe, doing escort duty on that occasion. In the autumn the Regiment was inspected, and paraded 411 men, while the total strength was 592. 1832. — February 1th. A splendid medal was presented by the Regiment to General La Fayette. This medal was committed to the care of James Fen- imore Cooper, Esq., then American Consul at Lyons, with suitable communications, requesting that he would present it in such a manner, and at such a time, as he should deem proper. It was also accompanied by the annexed letter to the General, written by a committee in behalf of the corps : General: The National Guard of the city of New-York, a corps of citizen-soldiers, have the honor to present for your acceptance the accompanying token of the sentiments entertained by the sons of liberty in America for the dauntless champion of that sacred cause, whose distinguished services in three revolutions, and whose untiring exertions in behalf of the oppressed and enslaved of every nation, have raised for the hero, " motmmetitian cere peremiius." With a fervent prayer for your liealth and happiness, we are. General, your obedient servants, L. "W. Stevens, Colonel. M. L. Smith, Lieutenant-Colonel. To General Lafayette. J. M. Catltn, Major. 258 HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. . In reply to the annexed, the following letters were re- ceived : Paris, November, 22d, 1832. Gentlemen : I did not get the medal yon intrusted to my care, in order to be delivered to General Lafayette, until the middle of October, in consequence of a long absence from Paris. At my re- turn, General Lafayette was out of town, and no opportunity offered to acquit myself of tlie trust until quite lately. Yesterday I gave a dinner to General Lafayette at my own house, and in the evening we had a meeting of friends, chosen from among the different nations of Europe, of which this city has always an ample representation. It struck me this expedient was the best I could devise to meet your wishes. In the course of the evening I presented your letter, resolutions, etc., with the medal, and explained the object of all in a short ad- dress. I have tlie pleasure to inclose the answer of General Lafay- ette with this letter. Among the guests were Lieutenant-General Compte Tac, a distin- guished Polish patriot; Lieutenant-General Sir John Vanderleur, of the British army; Brigadier-General "Wool, Captain Finch, and se- veral other officers of our own service. All our own officers ap-" peared in uniform, in compliment to the occasion. Several distin- guished civilians, and many ladies, were witnesses of your intentions. Mr. Bernet and Mr. C. Barnet, the Consuls at Paris and Venice, had great pleasure in attending. Demonstrations of attachment, and of adherence to his principles, are, at all times, peculiarly grateful to General Lafayette, when coming from America. He considers liimself a disei2)le of our school, and justly believes that he wishes no more for France than can be accomplished by imitation, with such modifications as prudence would dictate, oa our institutions. Your own offering has been happily timed, for it reached him at a moment when his enemies are the loudest and most vindictive in their attacks. You will permit me to express the satisfaction I have had in being chosen as the organ of your feelings on this occasion. It has given me an opportunity of proving that I do not altogether misrepresent American sentiment when I affirm its attachment to Lafayette, and may by implication help to sustain me in what I say of American institutions. This expression may cause you surprise, gentlemen, but I feel persuaded, that did the American people rightly understand the doctrines that have been extensively circu- lated in Europe of late, and under the sanction of their authority. HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 259 they xroiilJ issue a rebuke that would full}' vindicate their majesty as well as tlieir principles. I have the honor to be, gentlemen, your obedient servant, J. Fenimore Cooper. To Messrs. L. W. Stevens, M. L. Smith, J. M. Catlin. Paris, November — , 1832. Gentlemen : The precious specimen of American produce and American industry, which, in the name of the National Guard of New-York, and by a unanimous vote of the Twenty-seventh Regi ment State Artillery, have been pleased to offer to an American veteran, is a new testimony of that persevering affection of which it has been, during near sixty years, the pride and delight of my life, to be the happy object. The only merit on my part which it does not exceed is to be found in the warmth of my gratitude, and the patriotic devotion that binds to the United States the loving heart of an adopted son. The honor which the gift and devices of the beautiful medal have conferred upon me is still enhanced by its connection with the hun- dredth anniversary birthday of our great and matchless Washing- ton, of whom it is the most gratifying circumstance of ray life to have been the beloved and faithful disciple, in no point more than in his fond hope of a perpetual union between the States of the Confederacy— an union which, as it has been the cherished object of his last recommendation to his fellow-citizens, and the wish of his last breath, so it shall be to the last breath of every one of us who had the happiness to fight and bleed for American independence and freedom. I beg you, gentlemen, to convey to the kind donators the expres- sion of my profound affectionate gratitude and respect, and to re- ceive for yourselves the particular acknowledgments of your most sincere and obliged friend, Lafayette. To Colonel L. W. Stevens, Lieutenant-Colonel M. L. Smith, Major J. M. Catlin. June 2%th. The Regiment, Colonel Stevens command- iug, went on an encampment excursion to New-Haven, Their place of rendezvous was called Camp Putnam. 260 HISTORY OF TUE SEVENTH REGIMENT. In the autumn tlie Regiment was inspected, when it paraded 435 men. Total strength 555 men. The Sixth Company withdrew from the Regiment, owing to some difficulty caused by Captain Postly. The Regiment inspected in the fall, and paraded 397 men. Total strength 532. 1834. — In consequence of the withdrawal of the Sixth Company, it was reorganized and admitted 1 1th February, the Fourth Company generously contributing over thirty men to make up this command, July. The Regiment went into camp at Camp Hamil- ton, on Hamilton-Square, where they remained 7 days. July. Regiment was ordered out to quell the so-called " Nigo-er Riot." Over 300 men reported themselves for (hity — were under arms two days, Col. Stevens com- manding. 1835. — January. Colonel Stevens resigned, and Lieut.- Colonel Morgan Smith was promoted to the rank of Colonel, Major Catlin to Lieut.-Colonel, and Captain Roome to the office of Major. ^837. — Ajyril. Colonel Smith and Major Roome re- signed. JSTovemher. Lieut.-Colonel Catlin was promoted to Colonel, Captain Jones to Lieut.-Colonel, and Captain Burt to Major. 1838. — March. The National Guard Troop was ad- mitted into the Regiment. 1839. — February. Major Burt resigned, March. Captain Edward T, Backhouse was elected Major, July 1st. Regiment went into garrison duty at Fort Hamilton, On the 2d, the Regiment returned to the city to parade and receive the President of the United States, Mr, Van Buren, then on a visit to this city, and returned to the Fort same day : remained there until the 6th, when they came back to the city. HISTOKV OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT, 261 September Uh. Colonel Catlin resigned. October 1st. Lieut.-Colonel Wm. Jones was promoted Colonel, vice Catlin resigned, November I4th. Major E. T, Backhouse was elected Lieut.-Colonel, vice Jones promoted, 1 840, — February. Captain W.R. Vermilye was elected Major, vice Backhouse promoted. 1841. — July. The Regiment received and entertained the Boston Hancock Light Infantry. 1843. — June 11 th. Five Companies went to Boston to unite in celebrating Bunker Hill monument under Major Vermilye. July. Major Vermilye promoted to Lieut.-Colonel vice Backhouse resigned. July. Captain Geo. G. Waters promoted to Major, vice Vermilye promoted. 1 844. — Aiyril. Lieut.-Colonel Vermilye promoted Col- onel, vice Jones resigned, and Major Waters promoted to the Lieut.-Colonelcy. July. Captain Andrew A, Bremner was elected Major, vice Waters promoted, 1845, — May. Lieut,-Colonel Waters resigned. June Sd. Major Bremner was promoted to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Lieut.-Colonel Waters. July. Regiment went into Camp Schuyler ; at Albany remained one week. August. Colonel Vermilye resigned. September 22c?, Captain Duryee was elected Major, November. Lieut,-Colonel Bremner was elected Colo- nel, vice Vermilye resigned, November 2ith. Major Duryee was elected Lieut,- Colonel, vice Bremner, promoted, July 21th. By orders from Commander-in-Chief, the regimental number was changed fi'om 27th to 1i\\ Regi- ment. 262 HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH KEGIMEMT. December. Adjutant Divver was elected Major. 1847. — 3Iay. Major Divver resigned, 1848. — February 2d. A. B. Brinckerhoff, formerly Captain of the N. G. Troop, was tendered the office of Major, in place of Major Divver, resigned, which he ac- cepted. October. Colonel Bremner resigned. 1849. — January 29th. Lieut. Col. Duryee was elected Colonel, vice Bremner resigned. January. Major Brinckerhoif promoted to the Lieut.- Colonelcy ; Capt. Morton promoted to Major same time. 3Lxy 10th. Regiment was called out, and took an active part in quelling the riot at Astor-Place. 211 men reported themselves for duty, of Avhom 141 were severely Avounded. November 15th and 16th. The Regiment was ordered out on special escort duty to the remains of General Worth on their arrival in this city from Mexico. Mdl. The Regiment inspected 436 men. On account of the inclemency of the weather it did not inspect as many as they could have done. 1850. — July 8th. Regiment went on an excursion to Newport and Boston, returning on the 10th to this city. Jidy 23d. Regiment paraded for the purpose of rendering funeral honors to the late Major-General Z. Taylor, President United States. October 8th. Regiment paraded for the purpose of re- ceiving and entertaining the National Lancers of Boston. October. Regiment inspected 501 men. November. Major Morton resigned. 1851. — Sjyring. Marshall LeiFerts elected. Major, vice Morton resigned. May 12th. A stand of colors was presented to the regiment by a delegation from Boston, in behalf of the National Lancers of that city. 317 men paraded on the occasion. UISTOJRY OF THE SKVJiNTlI KKGIMENT. 203 May 13th. Regiment paraded to receive the Presi- dent of the United States, Millard Fillmore, Avho Avas on a visit to this city to celebrate the opening of the Erie Railroad. June. Boston Lancers sent to the Colonel a lance for each company under his command. October. Regiment inspected 516 men. December IGth. Regiment paraded and attended an address delivered to the 1st Division at Castle Garden by Ex-Governor Kossuth. 1852. — January. Regiment was ordered, in compli- ance with brigade orders, to assemble, to hold themselves in readiness to assist the city authorities in quelling any attempt at riot, as it was anticipated there would be a disturbance upon the debut of Mrs. Forrest at Brougham's Lyceum, (now Wallack's Theatre.) The dilFerent Com- panies turned out very strong. February 22d. Regiment went to Governor's Island for drill purposes. Were received and reviewed by Col. Gardner and staff, U. S. Army. 3Iay. Lieut.-Col. Brinckerhoff resigned. May. Regiment went to Hoboken, N. J., for drill purposes. June — . Major Lefferts was promoted Lieutenant- Colonel, vice Brinckerhoff resigned. July 5th. Regiment went into camp at New-Haven. The place of rendezvous was called Camp Trumbull. Returned on the 11th to this city. July 20th. Regiment paraded for the purpose of rendering funeral honors to the late lamented Henry Clay. October. Regiment inspected 519 men. Same day of inspection, and while the Regiment was in line in Lafayette Place, it was announced that the resignation of the Colonel, which had been previously tendered, had been by request withdrawn, and that he would remain, which gave great satisfaction to the rank and file. 264 lllSTOltY OF THE SEVENTH KKGIMENT. November IGt/i. Regiment paraded for the purpose of rendering funeral honors to the late lamented Daniel \Yebstei-. 1853. — Jidy. Regiment paraded to participate in the reception of His Excellency Franklin Pierce, President United States, and also to participate in the ceremonies of the inauguration of the Crystal Palace. October. Regiment inspected 594 men. November. Miss Mary Divver, daughter of the late Adjutant of the Regiment, deceased, was adopted by the Regiment. 1854. — October. Regiment j^araded for drill purposes at East New- York, returning same day. October. Regiment inspected 637 men. 1855. — 3Iarch 11th. St. Patrick's, day Regiment was ordered to hold itself in readiness to put down an antici- pated riot between Irish and Americans. Nearly every man belonging to the Regiment reported himself for duty. (Time 4:th. Regiment went to East New-York for drill and parade, returning same day. J'uli/ 9th. Regiment went into camp at Kingston, N. Y. ; their place of rendezvous was called " Camp Worth." Returned to this city on the 15th. October. Regiment inspected 659 men. 185Q.— May lOfh. Edgar M. Crawford of 3d Com- pany was elected Major, vice Lefferts promoted. Mai/ I2th. Regiment went to East New- York for drill and parade, returning same day. October. Regiment inspected 663 men. October 16th. National Grays of Kingston visited this city, and became the guests of the Regiment. 1857. — tTufie IQth. Regiment proceeded to Boston to participate in the inauguration of the Warren Monument on the l7th ; returning on the 19tl). tTtcly 5th. Regiment was called out by the Major-Gen- HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 265 eral to suppress the " Dead Rabbit" riot ; 500 men re- ported themselves for duty. They remained at the City Arsenal from four o'clock P.M. to four o'clock A.M. 6th. September Id. Regiment drilled for first time in Duryee's street firing and fighting. September 14th. Regiment was detailed as a Guard of Honor to the City Authorities to celebrate the anniversary of the capture of the City of Mexico. October. Regiment inspected 853 men ; total strength, 990. October 2d. Regiment, with the 3d Brigade, went to Newark, N, J,, for drill and parade. November 2^th. Regiment paraded upon the occasion of the removal of the remains of the late lamented Major General AYorth from Greenwood Cemetry to Bi'oadway and Fifth Avenue. 1858. — March Qth. Regiment was detailed as guard of honor to the remains of the late Commodore Perry, U. S. Navy, whose funeral obsequies took place this day. Jime. Boston Light Infantry visited this city. "Was received by a detachment of the Regiment, sixteen mren from each Company being detailed for that pnrpose in conjunction with the New- York Light Guard, Brevet Colonel Henry C. Shumway commanding. 'Tidy 3d. Regiment tendered their services as Guard of Honor to the remains of late President Monroe, which were removed from New- York to Richmond, Ya. Two men from each company were detailed as guai'd to the re- mains on board the steamer Jamestown, and the Regiment then proceeded on board steamer Ericsson, chartered to convey them to Richmond. Left the dock at twelve o'clock M. 5th. Arrived at Richmond at eleven o'clock A.M. "Were received by the 1st Regiment Virginia Yolunteers. Marched to Hollywood burial ground ; from thence to "Warwick Mills, and partook of a collation given by the 12 i 266 HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMEXT. city autliorities and the military of Richmond; from thence to Capitol Square, where the Regiment was dis- jnissed. Uh. At ten o'clock A.M. the Regiment was reviewed by Governor Wise and staif on Capitol Square, before a vei-y large concourse of people. At seven o'clock P.M., Regi- ment was reviewed by Mayor Mayo and city authori- ties, after which they marched to Rockets, took steamer Glen Cove for steamer Ericsson sixty miles below Richmond, for Washington. ^th. At six o'clock P.M., 3d, 6th, and 8tli companies were taken oiF the steamer, which was aground, by the steamer Thomas Collyer, and j)roceeded to Washing- ton; arriving there at ten o'clock P.M., Avere quartered at the National Hotel. Same evening the 1st, 2d, 4th, 5th and 7th companies were take« off by the steamer Mount Vernon, and arrived at Washington at five o'clock, next morning, quartering at Brown's Hotel. July 9th. At eleven o'clock A.M., Regiment was re viewed in front of the Presidential mansion by His Ex- cellency the President of the United States, James Bu- chanan and his Cabinet, also several distinguished officers of the United States ai-my. The members of the Regi- ment were also introduced to the President and his Cabi- net in the mansion. At four o'clock P.M., Regiment went to Mount Vernon, and visited the tomb of Wash- ington. Returning to the city at nine o'clock P.M., were dismissed. 10th. Regiment took cars for Baltimore at eiccht o'clock A.M.; were received by the city authorities. City Guard, and a company of United States Artillery, commanded by Major W. 11. Frencli, United States Army ; marched through Baltimore to Philadelphia depot ; arrived at Philadelphia at four o'clock P.M. ; were received by the Philadelphia National Guard ; rode through Philadelphia to Camden and Amboy Rail- HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 2G7 road ; took cars at Camden at five o'clock for New-York ; took steamer Transport at Perth Amboy. \lth. Arrived at New- York at half-,past one o'clock A.M. ; -were received by the 71st Regiment, "American Guard," City Guard, and National Guard Battalion, a detachment of the Vth Regiment. Marched up Broad- way to Lafayette Hall, when Regiment was dismissed. \2th. The Remains of Mr. Laurens Hamilton, a mem- member of Company 6, National Guard, were brought to this city by a detachment of the 1st Regiment Vir- ginia Volunteers, and Avere received by a committee of that Company. His funeral took place next day. lith. Company 6 N. G., paraded to escort the Vir- ginia Volunteers to the steamer on their departure home. August ^\st. The Colonel detailed the 2d company N. G., Captain Shaler, to receive the Montreal Field Battery Artillery on a visit to this city, who became the guests of the Regiment, arriving in this city per steamer Francis Skiddy at one o'clock, P.M. Septemher \st. Regiment paraded in conjunction with the 1st Division N. Y. S. F., to celebrate the successful laying of the Atlantic Cable, numbering over 700 men, Cfivuiix the rig;ht of line to their Montreal visitors. After the parade, the 4th Company, Capt. Riblet, escorted them to their quarters, Stevens House. September Zd. Colonel of the Regiment detailed the 7th company N. G. to escort the Montreal company to the steamer Commodore on their wav home. This account merelj^ gives the most importont events concerning the Regiment, not the number of parades. 268 HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. THE ORIGIN OF THE UNIFORM. The origin of the imiforui is interesting, from the pecu- liar incident Avliich ushered it into notice and led to its final adoption. Mr. P. II. Holt, a private of the 4th company, was wending his way towards the Regimental Parade, fully uniformed, armed, and equipped, excepthig the coat, instead of which he wore an exceedingly well- sitting gray coat, Avhich was single-breasted, standing collar, without folds in the skirts. It Avas his intention to stop at his tailor's and get his uniform coat, and leave the one just described. Passing along Pearl street, he was encountered by Major Wilson and Brigade Major P. M. Wetmore, whose attention and admiration was at- tracted by the neat appearance of his coat. Young Holt was arrested on his way, and underwent a thorougli and mmute examination by the two officers. He was marched about, faced, turned round, and placed in almost every conceivable position, and at length the officers appeared satisfied with the inspection, when he was permitted to proceed. The officers were much pleased that this little incident had presented to them a uniform which embodied neatness, durability, and a color bearing an impress of nationality, and thus they had found a uniform which presented every desirable requisite. The discerning taste and judgment which they displayed on that occasion has been fully carried out, from the fact that there has been no disposition to change it since the organization of tlie corps up to the present time. Major Wilson ordered the first gray coat to be made, and fully armed and equipped as a private, he presented himself to eveiy company, and exhibited it for the consideration of the corps. Sergeant Asher Taylor of the 4th company, first appeared on pa- rade in the new nniform while acting as an aid to the Brigade Inspector on the inspection parade of October 4, 1824. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OFFICERS CF THE COLONEL ABRAM DURYEE. Colonel Abeam Duryee, commander of the Seventh Regiment, National Guard, was born in the city of New- York in 1815. He descended from a French Huguenot family, who came to America on the revocation of the Edict of Nantz by Louis the XIV. of France, in 1685. That cruel and arbitrary measure deprived France of great numbers of her most useful citizens, whose ser- vices became valuable to the countries which received them and tolerated their Protestant faith. Tlie west and north-west of France supphed a large number of refugees, who expatriated themselves, and sought new homes in strange lands, rather than sacrifice their conscientious religious faith at the tyrannical dicta- tion of a despotic king. A people who are willing to suffer for a principle of truth and faith, which they conscien- tiously cherish, generally possess other noble and elevat- 270 HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH KEGIME.NT. ing qualities, that, in the course of time, and under free institutions, are sure to be developed. This has been strikingly the ease with the self-exiled Huguenots, and their descendants. Some went from France to Holland, and from thence to this country. Others found a home in England ; but still a much larger number came direct to the United States. A Colony of them settled in Westchester county, New-York, and laid out a town, and called it New-Rochelle, after La Rochelle in France. Others settled in the city of Xew-York, and quite a num- ber settled in Charleston, South-Carolina. From these early Huguenot settlers have sprung many of the most distinguished men of the United States. The New-York Huguenots have supplied the De Lanceys, Bayards, Leroys, AUaires, Duryees, and others, while those of South-Carolina have supplied the lingers. Horres, Marions, Legares, etc. Their services were prominently and eminently useful ia our Revolutionary struggle, and in our subsequent history, both in the field and in the Senate, they have supplied men of distinguish- ed ability. Their history and services in the United States, if written out, would make a large and interesting volume. Col, Duryee commenced business, when of a proper ac'-e, in New-York, as a merchant, in wliich pursuit, by industry and great perseverance, he has succeeded m realizing a fortune. He commenced his military career as a private in the ranks of one of the companies of the National Guard — then Twenty-Seventh Regiment — September, 1838, and after passing through all the different grades of the non-com- missioned officers with distinction, he obtained a second- lieutenant's commission on the 21st February, 1840, and was promoted on the 4th October, 1841, to the first lieute- nancy, and on January 16th, 1844, he Avas elected to the post of Captain. And, on the 22d of September, 1845, HISTORY OF THE S£VJEXTH KEGIilKNT. 271 he was elected a field ofticer, with the rank of Major. On November 24th, in the same year, he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel, and on January 29tli, 1849, he succeeded to tlie command of the Kegiment, with the rank of Colonel. Like many eminent men, he has made his mark by his skill, perseverance, and untiring energy, and strict atten- tion to his duties, until he has ascended from the lowest to a high rank as a military commander, and the acknow- ledged chief of the first Volunteer Regiment in the coun- try. The present enviable reputation that the National Guard hold, is owing, in a great degree, to his skill and exei-tions as a commanding ofiicer. He determined on making the Regiment what it is, from the moment he arrived at his present position. While stern and exacting as a disciplinarian, he is yet personally alFable, modest, and kind-hearted in his social intercourse. At the head of his Regiment, he is always the soldier, but never forgetting the relative position and standing of the men under his command. Owing to these traits of his character, arises the attachment the members of his Regiment ever bear towards him. The proof of his decision of character, and to what extent he possesses the afiection of the men, was illustrated in that unfortu- nate and ever-to-be-remembered bloody riot at the Astor Place Opera House, on the occasion of Mr. Macready's appearance ; the result of which the public is too fami- liar with to bear repetition. When the turmoil was at its height, missiles were thrown at his command, and his men fell wounded in all directions around him; a shout was raised by the law and order party for them to fire, as it would be impossible for the military to retain their position longer without something of a determined and defensive character was done. But still the authorities held back, in the hope of being able to restore peace and 272 HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH KEGIMENT. quiet without bloodshed. The Culonel, knowing that he had no authority to act in the premises, without orders from his superiors in command, (Generals Sandtbrd and Hall,) Avas observed walking up and down in front of his Regiment, encouraging his men ; and while doing so, he was struck twice in quick succession, by stones thrown from the crowd. His men, observing the imminent dantrer he was in, shouted to him to fall in the rear of his Regiment ; but instead of this, he renewed his eflforts of encouraging his command to be patient until he was compelled to fall in the rear by the order given by the Sheriff" to fire. Such forbearance, on the part of himself and his men, was very praiseworthy, and will never be forgotten by those who witnessed the ex- citing scene on that remarkable night. He has been on duty in all the riots for the last twenty years, and was particularly instrumental in subduing the police and "Dead Rabbit" riots of July, 185V. He has also com- manded his Regiment on two expeditions to Boston, and has drilled on the Common of that city with great suc- cess, in presence of a large number of distinguished per- sons, and thousands of its inhabitants. He was also the commanding officer at Camp Trumbull, New-Haven, Camp Worth, Kingston, besides quartering his Regi- ment one week at Newport, R. I., to which is to be added the escort expedition to Richmond, Washington, Mount Vernon, and Baltimore, The Seventh Regiment bears the name, and deservedly too, of being a pattern to its associates in arms, and they have exemplified the truth, that the best citizens are the best soldiers, and that it is no mark of courage, or indica- tion of prowess, to cast aside the courtesies or amenities of Ufe. To Col. Duryee we may not invidiously ascribe the maintenance of that high discipline and gallant bearing which so distinguishes the Seventh Regiment above its HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 273 compeers, and this may be said without detracting in the slighest degree from the merits of any officer and soldier of his command. The superior iii all cases gives the gen- eral tone to his subordinates. He is the author of Rules and Regulations for the gov- ernment of the Regiment in the field or in quarters ; also several treatises on street-firing and street-fighting. The latter was adopted by the New- York State Legislature in the fixU of 1857, after a Committee of Army and Militia officers witnessed the admirable performance of the Seventh Regiment on the Fifth Avenue, in the summer of that year. Col. Duryee adopted Col. Hardee's beautiful Light In- fantry tactics in the year of 1855 — and his was the first military body that went through any of the exercises contained in that work, but owing to the laws for the government of the Army and Militia of the United States, as then in existence, prevented his adopting it until it was recognized and approved by the War Department, and in the autumn of 1857, he took it up all together, and after a thorough course of drill throughout the winter, he invited the author to witness its performance by the Seventh Regiment at a Battallion drill at the City Arsenal, Fridiiy evening, March 1 9th,l 85 8. The room was crowded with a large number of ladies and gentlemen, (benches being erected for their accommodation,) and where might have been seen the beautiful uniforms of our Army and Xavy officers, and the familiar faces of some of our most distinguished citizens. After the marching Avas over, which consisted in the " right about," flanking, filing into line, and counter-marching, the Colonel ordered his Regiment to prepare for review. Col. Hardee, accom- panied by other officers and staff of the Regiment, went through a thorough inspection of the command, after which Col. H. took up his position beside Col. D. ; the latter then w^ent through the manual with his command. 12* 274 ■ HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. The precision with which the Regiment Avent through the different movements of loading and firing, and the steadi- ness of the men, drew forth tremendous applause from the spectators present. Col, H. was mucli surprised, and expressed astonishment at the result. He turned to some officers beside Mm and remarked, that never had he wit- nessed a performance by any military body, in or out of the Army, Avhich surpassed it. At the conclusion, the Regiment was greeted with deafening applause. LIEUT.-COL. MARSHALL LEFFERTS. Col. Marshall Lefferts was born on Long Island, New- York, in 1825, beinof of German descent on his father's side, his mother beuig the daughter of Judge Cozine, of the Supreme Court, a cotemporary and personal friend of Hamilton, Burr, and others, who were distinguished in the history of their country. The Judge lived and died at the corner of Beekman and Gold streets, then the upper part of the city. Many of his family relatives con- tinue to reside in the neighborhood of his birth, where several of the name have held prominent positions as members of society. He early engaged in commercial pursuits, in which he displayed unusual tact and energy of character, having conducted an extensive and successful business. He commenced his military career in Gen. Hall's staff in 1847, and was made Brigade Quarter-Master in 1848. In 1850, he entered the Eighth Company National Guard as a private, and was elected to the post of Major in the spring of 1851. His promotion Avas rajnd, and in June, 1 852, he was elected to the Lieutenant-Colonelcy of the Regiment, and has served with skill and abiUty in that honorable rank ever shice. The foithful discharge of his duties has been such as to elicit expressions of satisfaction from his men and from HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT'. 275 his brother officers. This was manifested in the fact of his receiving the unanimous votes which elected and gave him promotion, a result by no means common in the his- tory of military affairs. The promptness and tact which he displayed in his business were brought to bear in the discharge of his military duties, and with a success freely acknowledged by the rank and file of the Regiment. Col. Leiferts' name has frequently appeared in works of public character, and especially in those plans which had for their aim the application of science and art to the practical relations of life. As a member of the Chamber of Commerce, his reports and arguments in favor of the extension of the decimal system to the weights and measures of the United States elicited much attention. This subject still engages his attention, and he is endeavoring to bring about this de- sirable result which would prove of immense benefit to the whole country. Col. Lefferts is also an active member of the Geograph- ical and Statistical Society, and likewise of the New- Yord Historical Society. He took an active and leading interest in the extension and working of the electric telegraph. In the comparative infancy of the system, when its use threatened to become an exclusive and op- pressive monopoly, to the great injury of trade and to the press, as well as to the public at large, he boldly en- tered the field as the friend and promoter of a new and valuable mode of electrical telegraphing, discovered by Mr. Bain, and known as the chemical telegraph. In 1849, he was joined by a prominent gentleman of a leading commercial firm in this city, in organizing a com- pany and in building a telegraph line between New-York and Boston. This line was so Avell built, and was so well managed, as soon to win the confidence of the public, of merchants, and of the press. It broke the incubus of 276 HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH KEGIMENT. monopoly between two leading cities, and reduced the expenses of communication so much, as to widely enlarge the benefits of the telegraph to the people. His labors at that i^eriod, when capitalists shrunk from pccuniaiy in- vestments in such works, and when experience in their management was limited, were bold and valuable. At the present time, when celebrations are being held all over the country in honor of the saccessful laying of the Atlantic cable, his services can be referred to with plea- sure. He also caused the character and nature of telegraphs to be better understood by the people, by his reports and pamphlets which he published on the subject. Many facts which they developed were subsequently drawn up by others, when writing historical sketches of the telegraph. Upon retiring from the Pi-esidency of the company referred to, which he had filled for three or four years with distinguished success, and declining all remuneration for his services, he was presented with a beautiful service of plate at a public dinner, Avith which he was honored at the City Hotel. The associated press of New-York (the only instance of the kind) joined with the company in getting up the presentation of plate to the Colonel, in testimony of their regard for his valuable services in the cause of telegraph extension. Col. Lefierts also took an active interest in bringing about the new Tompkins Market building, the upper part of which is to be used for a drill-room for the National Guard. With the ofiicers of the Regiment, he also took a lively interest in behalf of the late visit of the National Guard to Kichmond, in honor of the translation of Mr. jNIonroe's remains. The Colonel stands high in his Regiment, and has had no small share in contributing towards its advancement. He is yet comparatively young, ardent and energetic in his movements, and promises to give the public many more HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 2T7 years of active usefulness. In his manner lie is social, kind, sincere, and of a liberal, benevolent, and enterpris- ing spirit. MAJOR E. M. CRAWFORD. Seventh Begiment National Guard. The above-named gentleman was born in Westchester county, New- York, 16th February, 1821 ; is in the wholesale tobacco business in this city. Major Crawford commenced his military career as a private in the Third Company National Guard, Septem- l>er, 1845, and for his strict attention to his duties and good soldiership was promoted to the First Lieutenancy March, 1846; and on the resignation of Captain Henry R. Mount was offered the command, but declined the honor ; but acted in the capacity of Captain nearly two years, and until the installation of Captain James Price to the command. He was elected to the Majority in May, 1 856, and, in consequence, resigned his commission as Lieu- tenant in the Company ; and was, by an unanimous vote, elected an honorary member, and is still on the Company's Roll as such. He is very popular and a very valuable acquisition to the Seventh Regiment. ADJUTANT WILLIAM A. POND. Seventh Regiment National Guard. Adjutant Pond was born in Albany, New- York, 6th of October, 1824 ; is a merchant, and of the firm of Firth, Pond & Co. He came to this city when at eight years of age, and has been a resident ever since. In the autumn of 1841 he joined one of our mili- tary corps as a private, and after being promoted through all the different grades of non-commissioned and commissioned officers up to Captain, he made application 278 HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH EEGIMEXT. to the Second Company National Guard to be admitted as a private, which request was granted in the fall of 1847. During the drill season of 1848 he Avas appointed Drill Master, or instructor of that Company. And on the 5th of April, 1849, he was elected commanding officer of said Company. This post he retained for about one year, when he resigned and returned to the ranks. On the 4th of July, 1852, the Regiment went into camp at New-Haven, and being at tliat time without an Adjutant, the Colonel called upon him to act in that capacity. On the day the Regiment re- turned to New-York, the 10th of July, the Colonel handed him his commission as Adjutant, having sent to head- quarters for it during the stay of the Regiment in camp, without his solicitation or knowledge, and which he has held ever since. His military experience, and high tone of character, has made him a great favorite as well as a valuable acquisition to the Seventh Regiment. BREVET COLONEL HENRY C. SHUMWAY. Eighth Company National Guard. The above-named gentleman was born in Middletown. Connecticut, 4th of July, 1808 ; and is by profession a miniature painter, in this city. Colonel Shumway entered the National Guard, then Twenty-Seventh Regiment, as a private in the Eighth Company, July 17th, 1829; was promoted a Sergeant; and February, 19th, 1834, was commissioned Second Lieutenant ; May 30tli, same year, to the First Lieute- nancy, and was chosen Captain by an unanimous vote October 13th, 1836. The deeds of this gentleman Avould make up quite a volume. From the moment of his accession to the posi- tion he now holds, he has been bestowing benefits on the Regiment, and it owes him much. TTe occupies the first HISTORY OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 279 post of honor, which is on the right of the Regiment, from his being the oldest commissioned Captain; and has held that position for the past twenty-two years. He has participated in quelling all the riots, and commanded his Company on all the encampments and excursions of the Regiment. By a special act of the New-York Legislature, 15th June, 1857, in pursuance of the constitution and by-laws of the State, they conferred upon him the honorary title of Colonel in the militia with Brevet rank, having served twenty years as Captain in the National Guai'd. May he serve twenty years more ! CAPTAIN JAMES PRICE. Third Company TTational Guard. Captain Price was born in London, England, in 1822 ; came to this country when about ten years of age, and has been a resident of this city ever since. He is in the real estate business, and has acquired quite an independ- ence by his industry. In the year 1841 he joined one of our military com- panies, and from his constant and strict attention to his duties and by dint of hard study, Wits promoted rapidly through all the different grades of the non-commissioned officers First and Second Lieutenancies, to that of Cap- tain. There being a vacancy in the Third Company National Guard, he was invited to take command by that Company, and, on his acceptance, Avas elected by an unanimous vote 31st May, 1848. He now holds the second post of honor which is on the left of the Regiment, and, has, through great exertion and perseverance, succeeded in making his com- mand second to none in the Regiment, and stands third in regard to members. He is a thorough disciplinarian, 280 HISTORY OF THE SETEXTH REGIMENT. strict to the letter, and commands the highest respect, and is very much beloved by his command. CAPTAIN BENJAMIN M. NEVERS. Sixth Company National Guard. Captain iSTevers was born in Boston, Massachusetts, 24th of June, 1822 ; and is a broker in Wall street. He joined the Sixth Company National Guard as a private October, 1845 ; was promoted in 1846 to Cor- poral ; and to the First Lieutenancy October, 1848 ; and on the 2d of January, 1849, was chosen Captain of that Company. His commission dates him third in rank, and his Company stands first, in regard to numbers, and is by no means behhid the other companies in point of drill in the Regiment. He is very popular in the Regiment, and particularly in his command. He is a thorough soldier, and a strict disciplinarian. CAPTAIN ALEXANDER SHALER. Second Company National Guard. Captain Shaler was born at Haddam, on the banks of the Connecticut, in 1827 ; is a merchant doing business in this city. He commenced his military career April 29th, 1845, in the ranks of one of our military companies in this city ; was promoted a Coi-poral October 16th, 1845 ; to a Ser- geant September 3d, 1847; was elected First Lieutenant August 30th, 1849; and to a Captain in the National Guard March 18th, 1850. He is also Colonel of the First Regiment Hudson Brigade, New-Jersey State Militia. His Company stands second to none in point of drill and discipline in the Regiment, owing to the great exer- tions of its conimanding officer. HISTOKY OF THE SEVENTH KEGIMEMT. 281 CAPTAIN WILLIAM H. RIBLETT. Fourth Company National Guard. The above-named gentleman was born in New- York City, 17th July, 1816 ; is Secretary of " The Peter Cooper Fire Insurance Company" of this city. He commenced his military career as a private in the ranks of the Fourth Company National Guard, 19th March, 1836, After passing through all the different gi'ades of the non-commissioned officers in the Company, with the exception of Orderly Sergeant, he was promoted to a Second Lieutenant 22d January, 1838 ; and to the First Lieutenancy 21st November, 1838; was elected Captain 7th October, 1844. He resigned 25th November, 1845, on account of his removal from the city, and on his return was called upon by the Fourth Com2:)any to take command, and was reelected by unanimous vote of that Company 2d December, 1850. The old Fourth, as it is called, still retains its reputation as second to none in the Regiment in point of discipline, owing to the persever- ance of its present commander. CAPTAIN JOHN MONROE. Seventh Company National Guard. Capt. Monroe was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, June 7th, 1823. He came to this city in 1825, and has been a resident here ever since. He commenced his military career, as a guide-boy, in the Third Company National Guard, 1832, when only nine years of age. He afterwards joined the Seventh Company National Guard 1843 ; passed through aU the grades of the non-commissioned officers in the Comj^any, excepting Second Sergeant; was promoted First Lieu- tenant August 15th, 1850; and was elected Captain 18th March, 1851, the Company at that time numbering 282 HISTOKY OV THE SEVEMTH KEGlMEiST, only eighteen men, and by his energy and perseverance has made it one of the first in the Regiment, numbering nearly one hundred men. He is very popular in the Regiment, and is very much beloved by his command, CAPTAIN WILLIAM A. SPEAIGHT. Fifth Company National Guard. Captain Speaight was born in New-York City on the 21st November, 1826. He is in the blank book business. He joined the Fifth Company National Guard, as a private, June 26th, 1846; was promoted Orderly Ser- geant, and served in that capacity three years ; and on the 10th of August, 1853, was elected Captain of that Company. The Captain deserves great credit for the manner in which he has perfected his command in jioint of discipline. Being a thorough soldier himself, may be attributed the interest he takes in his command. He is very much beloved by his fellow-soldiers, and popular in the Regiment. CAPTAIN WILLIAM P. BENSEL. First Company National Guard. Captain Bensel was boi-n in New-York City, June 17th, 1818, and is in the cooperage business. He joined the Fifth Company National Guard as a private 18th November, 1849; Avas promoted to the First Lieutenancy January 14th, 1853; resigned his commission 27th August, same year; September follow- ing was elected First Lieutenant of First Company Na- tional Guard ; and chosen Commander of that Company 14th October, 1856. To this gentleman must be awarded great i:)raise for the manner in which he has perfected his command in point of drill and discipline, being merely a unit in point of numbers when he took com- mand, now numbering nearly one hundred men. ^ tr ^ Fold-out Placeholder This fold-out is being digitized, and will be ir future date. ^ 1^ ^ Fold-out Placeholder This fold-out is being digitized, and wi future date. be inserted at ROLL OF MEMBERS OF N e w- Y ork State Forces, 185 8. (The names marked thus *, are those of members who went to Uichmoiid.) FIELD AND STAFF OFFICERS. Colonel, Abram Dnryee.* Lieutenant-Colonel, Marshall Lefferts.* jjjajor, Edgar M. Crawford.* Adjutant, William A. Pond. Eno'ineer Robert E, Launitz.* Surgeon, Timothy M. Cheesman. Assistant-Surgeon, Edward M. Cameron.* Quartermaster, Lock W. Winchester.* Paymaster, Benj. F. Carpenter. Chaplain, George W. Brainerd.* Commissary, William Patten, Ordnance Officer, Henry E. Droz.* Assistant-Quartermaster, William Laimbeer, Jr.* Assistant-Paymaster, Meredith Howland. For the excursion to Richmond, the following appointments were made to fill vacancies of such of the Staff as were unable to go : Acting Ass't.-Sur., George F. Woodward.* " Adjutant, Lt. George W. Smith.* " Paymaster, George W. Brainerd.* Chaplain, Rev. J. H. Weston.* " Commissary, . . . Capt. E. T. Cragin, of the Troop.* 284 KOLL OF THE .SEVENTH KEGlilENT. NOJSr-COMMISSIONED STAFF. Sergeaut-Major, C4eorge C. Freeborn.* Quartermaster-Sergeant, Robert C. Rathbone.* Sergeaiit-of-Ordnance„ John A. Baker. Color-Bearer, Benjamin Odell. John H. HofF.* Right-General-Guide, John A. Hall.* Left-General-Guide, Charles Hall.* Sergeant-of-Guard, Robert M. Weed.* Commissary-Sergeant, L. L. S. Clearman.* Assistant-Sergeant-Major, Isaac W. Dean, Assistant-Sergeant-of-Guard, Alexander Douglass.* TKOOP. •Captain, Edwin T. Cragin. 1st Lieutenant, William H. Haight. 2d " Edward M. Parley. Cornet, John Delemater. 1st Sergeant, E. Gcnin. 2d " A. A. Fuller. 3d " — Lecler. 4:th " Walter Duncan. Privates. Privates. John Tragessor, Alexander Irwin, Charles Warren, D. A. Youngs, Henry Bunnell, C. Watts, Jr., Charles Perley, I. Audrews, P. Brock, P. Van Idestine, R. J. Law, Charles H. Delemater, J. R. Conchtin, G. H. Stone, E. M. Van Tassel, A. Jamison, A. J. Fuller, J. H. McBrido, George F. Van Brunt, Edward Delemater, H. C. Bailey, George Ladd, H. A. Craigen, Joseph A. Sterling, M, Fairweather, Lawrence Moore, Jr., B. B. Miller, Anthony Miller, Charles White, John Lewis, G. W. Wliite, John Cornish, W. J. McCIune, W. H. Davis, KOLL OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 28.5 Privates. Privates. Alexander Little, Robert Clark, William Clark, H. D. Gage, I. R. Andrews, James Gregory. Charles Watts, ENGINEER COKPS. Engineer-in-Chief, f Robert E. Launitz.* Sergeant-of-Engineers, David Drake. 2d Sergeant, George C. Farrar. 1st Corporal, E. M. Le Moyne. 9^ a Leopold Schmidt.* Private, F. T. Luqueer, Jr. « John E. Robinson.* « James S. Mott. "*"/". William IL Oakley, « Edgar Davidson.* ,c Elisha H. Cheshire. \\[,,, William Bird.* [[[,,,. Herbert II. Hall. « Chas. S. Benson, Jr. ^ -< R. F. Ilalsted.* 3d « .'. C. B. Coffin,* 294 KOLL OF THE SEVEM'II IIKGIIIEXT. 4th Sergeant, C. N. Du Boi:?, 1st Corporal, G. W. Ford. •2d " J. P. Raymond. Sd " W. B. Freeman.* 4th " C. Walke. 1st Lance-Corjioral, J. B. Young. 2d " N. W. S. Catlhi. 3d " F. G. Eldridge. Secretary C. AV. Ogden, (Hon.) Paymaster, J. J. McLaren * Privates. Privates. ?f. M. Abbott, H. D. Hull,* T. R. Ackland,* J. L. Hyde, J. B. Archer, C. W. Irving, H. Arnold, E. J. Jenkins,* L. Bailey, G. Kemble, Jr.,* C. G. Bartlett, E. Kemp, W. J. Bartow, G. Kemp, E. O. Bird,* J. E. Kent, J. Black,* E. Kiersted, G. A. Boydeu,* F. W. King,* J. H. Bradbury, A. J. Lamb,* N". G. Bradford, Jr., S. B. Lawrence, A. S. Brady,* J. Lee, G. G. Brinckerhoff, T. Mallaby, Jr., E. L. Bristol, G. S. Marcli, E. A. Brooks, T. B. Marsh, H. C. Butler, J. McLaren,* C. J. Cambreliiig,* C. J. Osborn, H. J. Campbell, G. H. Palmer,* C. M. Catlin, C. C. Parker, P. R. Cliadwick, S. H. L. Rankin, F. Clarkson,* J. W. Romeyn,* L. L. S. Clearman,* J. M. Romme,* G. S. Comstock, J. F. Ruggles, P. H. Coolidge, M. Ryder,* J. D. W. Cutting, N. D. Sampson,* L. L. Cuvillier, W. R. Smedberg, W. B. Dick, A. T. Smith, Jr., J. H. Draper,* J. S. Smith, Jr.,* . R. R. Dumont, E. Soria, J. Dnryoe,* M. B. StafTord, R01.L OF THK SEVKNTH KEGIilEilT. 295 Privates. T. O. Ebaugh, G. P. Edgar,* A. M. Elswortli, J. R Evans,* J. II. Falconer, D. W. C. Falls,=!= II. S. Fearing, J. G. W. Feldmaii, G. Ferris,* G. C. Ferris, I. N. Field,* J. W. Freeman, W. C. Frost,* S. A.' Gould, W. P. Ilalsted,* G. F. Hamilton,* L. Hamilton,* f W. E. Haws,* S. E. Iliscox, D. P. Holmes, G. W. Holmes, S. J. Hopkins, F. H. Howell, Privates. W. A. Stoutenberg, W. H. J. Stratton,* J. L. Stroub,* W. N. Sturges,=!= N. W. Stuyvesant, Jr., II. T. B. Teer,* J. W. Timpson, W. G. Ulshoeffer. G. W. Van Boskerck, W. H. Yance,* C. F. Van Duzer, J. B. Vose,* R. Vose, W. R. Vermilye, Jr., J. Ward, Jr., P. H. Ward,* B. S. Weeks, '• W. T. Whiting, J. M. Wilson,* R. Winsor,* F. M. Winston, Jr.,* J. F. Woodhouse, M. Young.* HONORARY MEMBERS. W. F. Conger, C. H. Loutrel, J. S. Johnson, B. Yomig, T. R. Mcllwaine, H. D. Van Nostrand, E. Cozzens, E. H. Ensign, E. Embree, B. H. Gibbs,* G. R. Hegeman, J. W. Jennings,* D. J. Marrenner,* C. C. Nevcrs, AY. H. Ogdeu, J. B. Holmes,* E. H. Jacquelinj^i H. W. Jennings, G. G. Nevers, C. R. Badeau, P. MaUett, J. H. Munson, F. Jacobson,* C. Rose, J. H. Ruckel, D. R. SeUeck, A. Shimmel, J. T. Smith. + Deceased. 290 liOLL OF TllK 8EVKNT11 KKGIMEXT. SEVENTH COMPANY, NATIONAL GUAKD. Captaiu. John Monroe* 1st Lieutenant, "Wm. J. Wimam.-.* 2tl " John P. Sclicrmerlioiu,* 1st Sergeant, Charles IL Winans. 2ti ' Edmund S. Henrv.* 3^1 " Hamlet M. Fairchild.* 4tli " John \Y. Ro\ve.=^= 1st Curijoral, John Pearce. 2^1 " Samuel G. Negus.* •^d '' Smith W. Anderson.* ^tli " Samuel Truesdell.* Privates. Privates. James D Pearc.',- G. W. Putnam,* ■\Vm. Wood, Richard M. Bowcrman,* Joseph Pine, AVm. Simpson,* John L. Cameron,* Thomas R. Goocli,* Andrew J. Darby, Edward Wellings. Augustus Klauberg, George W. Ely,* Thomas Dixon,* Henry S. Bidwell* William Drew,* Wra. H. Schieffelin, Wm. II. Montanye,* George G. Meacham,* John D. Moriarty, Lewis M. Brown, Benj. V. Moise,* B. R. Keefler, Jesse Delano,* Wm. A. Bailey,* William Turner, J. A. Elder,* Wm. B. C. Duryee, James M. Delano, Geo. S. Schermerhor.i, Frederick H. Pinckney,* Jeremiah L. Clark, Samuel W. Thompson.* Henry Street, Richard Dalton,* Edwin T. Putnam,* Washington Morton, James E. Mattocks,* Alexander B. Stewart,* Charles Hall, Jr.,* David IL Fowler, Geo. H. Tallman, Alex. J. Howell,* Richard D. Goodwin, F. C. Alden, Charles Ilobbs, Jr.,* Wm. IL Ransom, Allan Rutherford, ^:= Charles F. Rogers,* G^o. F. Holmes, Jr.,* Charles F. Bennett,* John B. Leverich,* Charles E. Stott,* Edwin M. Felt,* Samuel B. Clark, Thomas E. Dclauj,* Charles C. Barnes * KOLL OF THE SKVEXTH KEGIMEXT. 29: Privates. Edward S. Crane,* P. Eugene Trotter,* John H. Kemp,* Clement S. Parsons,* A. S. Edget, John J. Coger,* Wra. H. Smith,* Robert B. Smith, David W. Holdredge,* Fernando C. Pino, Asher S. Mills,* Frederick E. Hoyt,* I'rivatps. Charles H. Hawkins, Wm, E. Calleudcr,* Theo. E. Hathaway,* Samuel J. Sherman, Moses Van Bcnischoten, Horace W. Smith, Hugh' J, AV'inters, Wm. H. Gibson, James H. Bellingham, P. C. Godfrey, Edgar Kirby, Edward Murray.* HONORARY AND EXEMPT MEMBERS. Aaron Kemp, L. W. Winchester,* Wm. Patten, Edward Marrenner, John D. Negus.* Wm. I. Negus, Jesse Marvin, Thomas W. Atkinson,* William Finley, Thomas S. Shortland,* J. Cairns, Thomas Dugard, George Bishop,* n. N. Timolat. EiaHTH COMPANY, NATIONAL GUARD. Captain, Henry C. Shumway.* 1st Lieutenant, George W. Smith.* 2d •• Charles W. Sy.* 1st Sergeant Charles B. Bostwick, Jr.* 2d " Charles B. Babcock, Jr.* 3d " Gilbert L. Arrowsmith. 4th " Godfrey W. Stcinbrenncr. 1st Corporal, Wm. H. Nevins. 2d " Eugene Van Benschoten. 3d " James Dart* 4th " John W. Spicer.* Privates. Privates. J. Edward Abry, Thompson Lewis, WillLam B. Allen,* Benjamin Lowder, 2d, Alfred Baker, Theodore E. Macy, . Anson Baker, Jr.,* Charles A. Manning, Adolphus H. Barber, Stephen S. Mapes, Gabriel H. Barbey, Charles E. ^[arvine, 18* 298 lun.l. OF TH?: SEVEXTH EEGI5IEXT. Privates. Jules L. Barbey, "William F. Barry, Joseph H. Beams,* Andre v\' B. Beers, Philip E. Bo^ert, "Wm. H. Bounott, Ernest Bredt, George D. Brooks,* George F. Burdett,* Wm. L. M. Burger,* George C. Cauldwell, W. Wallace Campbell, William Caney,* Thomas R. Clark,* Thomas M. Cozzens,* Russel Dai-t, Jr., Wm. M. Dart, Albert Da\idson, Henry Day, Lyman Denison, Jr., Joseph M. Domenecli, Charles Drake, Henry C. Ellis,* William R. ParreU, Robert M. Field, Jr., William H. Field, Thomas Franklin, Edward H. Gouge, Henry D. Green,* William C. Han)iltoii, Revo C. Hance, Jr., .'^amuel W. Hastings, Dew-itt C. Hay,* Charles T. Hedenberg,* Gould B. Hedenberg,* Peter S. Henderson, AVilliam Henderson, John Hendrickson, Klixis J. Hcrrick,* John 8. Hdlman,* T. Granville Hoyt, Augastus Howe. Privates. William H. Slarvme, Dewitt C. iMather, George L. Maxwell,* John Meeks, Jr.,* William F. Mottler, Charles E. Milbank, John W. Morgan, James MorrL«on, Jr., William A. I^Iorrison,* Albert Moulton, Rdward N. Neilson, Clarence M. Neuville, Robert L. North, William E. Pearson, Henry J. Phillips, (Charles E. Prescott,* Charles W, Price,* Stephen 0. Rollinson,* Alfred V. Ryder,* Stephen 0. Ryder,* Samuel W. Sears,* Augustus Seeley, George W. Schenkberg, Nathan S. Starr, John W. A. Strickland, Sanford M. Tower, Francis L. Tifft, David Tweedie, Edward B. Underhill,* Wm. H. Van Benschoten, William L. Wallace, Edward B. Welles,* George M. Welles,* John C. Whittlesey, JoseiJh D. Wickham, Thomas G. Wddman, William P. Woodroof,* Alexander G. Wood, Wm. H. Bassett, James S. Casey, Wm. B. Eager, Jr., .Alfred H. Easton, ROLL OF THE SEVENTH REGIMENT. 299 Privates. Meredith Howland, William J. Irwiu, Ebenezer R. Johnson,* Robert !L P. Jurtson, James S. King-,* Edward C. Kittle,* Joseph Lamb,* Albert De Witt Leveridge,* Privates. Samuel W. Foster, George "W. Hertzel, John C. Jefferi.s, Frank H. McGrath, Chnrles E. Mcari, Ernest Parisot, Henry S. Wilson. HONORAKY MEMBERS. Robert E. Launitz,* Alex. II. Wallis, Charles H. Sandford, Fred. W. Herring, Albert Amerman, Charles L. Beaumont, A. B. Chardovoyne, John P. Duncan, Charles A. Easton, Thomas J. Hall, Joseph C. Hyatt, Theo. W. Todd, Marshall LeflCTts,* Wm. Hall, H. Dwight, Jr., Wm. A. Pond. H. A. Bostwick, A. W. Paradise, James G. Powers, Wm. Tooper, Win. E. Treadwoll, .John IT. Wood. THE GRAVES OF THE PRESIDENTS OF THE UNITED STATES. A general description of the tombs of deceased Ame- rican Presidents can not fail to interest the reader. Tiie list comprises the natnes of those who went throuo-h our revolutionary struggle, and who contri- huted, both in the field and in national councils, to the estahUshnient of our independence and free form of government. Their hands and hearts, lives and fortunes, Avere alike devoted to secure our liberties, and to perpetuate them under tlie guarantees of a constitutional Union. Tliougli the body of our work lias been devoted to an account of the translation of Mr. Monroe's remains, and the civil and military honors associated therewith, Ave have thought that our labors might be fitly concluded by a deGcription of tlie places where sleep the honored relics of our illustrious Presidents. Their graves are simple, and, like their lives, unosten- tatious. No kingly mausoleums, no royal escurials, or princely tombs, beneath arched ceilings of costly cathe- drals, rise to tell the Avorld of their deeds, though more glorious than the lives of the greatest kings. Their his tory is Avritten in the rise and progress of a great and free country. Their tombs are found in quiet and rural ]>laces, resting in unobtrusive silence, surrounded by the GRAVES OF THE PRESIDEXTS. 'Ml modest habiluneiits of natuve, watched by the passiiii!; stars at night, and chanted to by the wild birds, and solitary cliirping of msects by day. Such are the tonlbs of the illustrious dead, which we have described in the following pages, beginning Avith George \yasMngton and ending with Zachary Taylor, THE TOMB OF WASHINGTON. At Mount Vernon, the Mecca of Republicanism, the remains of the Father of his country repose, where, ac- cording to Ids desire, they were interred. Thongh Con- gress has expressed a desire that the remains should be interred beneath the national capital at the seat of gov- ernment, which bears his name, and the Legislature of Virginia has requested the privilege of placing his re- mains beneath a monument at the capital of that State, liis own request has been deemed sufficient to overrule such demonstrations of national and State respect, for in his will he desired that a new family vault should be built at Mount Vernon, " at the foot of what is com- monly cahed the Vineyard Enclosure." In 1831, thirty- four years after his death, this wish was complied Avith, and a new tomb was erected on the site indicated. The walls are of brick, eight feet high, arched over at top ; the front rough cast, with a strong casement of free-stone. A stone panel over the door bears the following inscription : I am the resurrection and the life. He that believeth in me, though he were dead, yet sliall he live. A brick inclosure, twelve feet high, surrounds the vault, Avith an iron gate opening in front of the vault- door, flanked Avith pilasters, surrounded Avith stone cop- ing and cornice. Over the gatcAvay is the following in- scription, on a plain slab : Within this inclosure rest the remains of General George Wash- irffton. 302 GRAVES OF THE PRESIDENTS. In the year 1837, by permission of Mr, Lawrence Lewis, the tlien only surviving execntor of Washington, Mr. John Strntliers, of Philadelphia, was, upon his re- quest, allowed the privilege of coilstrueting a marble sarcophagus, in which the remains are now deposited. The sarcophagus is of modern form, cut from solid Pennsylvania marble, eight feet long, three feet wide, and two feet high, resting on a jilinth projecting four inches from the base. The top is of Italian marble, on the face of which is sculptured, in bold relief, the arms and insignia of the United States, and in dimen- sions nearly as large as its surface. The following inscription is seen between the armorial bearings and the foot of the sarcophagus : WASHIXGTOI^. The bodv of Martha, the wife of "Washino;ton, is en- cased in a similar sarcophagus, the two occuppng the right and left sides of the entrance to the tomb, and being visible from the outer gateway through the iron gate. A project was recently set on foot to purchase Mount Vernon for the people of the United States, by a com- pany of ladies. They were assisted by the Hon. Edward Everett, who delivered a number of lectures in aid of the cause, which drew large audiences and realized large additions to the general fund. Cooperation was also afforded by the Hon. Fernando Wood and others in the Avay of lectures, etc. The collections having reached a large amount, the bargain for its purchase at |200,000 was closed by the Ladies' Mount Vernon Association, and henceforward it only remains to complete a portion of the subscriptions, to secure it forever to the people of the United States. GRAVES OF THE PRESIDENTS. HOH THE TOMB OF JOHN ADAMS. Beneath the portico of the Unitarian Church at Quincy, Massachusetts, near Boston, known as the Adams Stone Temple, in consequence of John Adams having been a Hberal benefactor, he the remains of Pre- sident John Adams, and of liis son, President Joliu Quincy Adams, and their wives, Abigail and Louisa. In 1826, after his Other's death, John Quincy Adams pro- posed that the Church, then about to erect the " tem- ple," should authorize him to construct beneath it a vault at his expense, Avherein the remains of his father and mother might be deposited. Accordingly, an in- denture was granted, conveying a space fourteen feet square under the portico, with liberty to affix to any por- tion of the walls of the temple obituary tablets. The \ault was accordingly constructed, and a marble monu- ment was erected on the east end of the edifice, at the side of the pulpit, surmounted by a bust of John Adams, from the chisel of Greenough, the tablets bearing the following inscription : LIBERTATEM AMICITIAM FIDEM RETI?JEBIS. D. O. SI. Beneath these walls Are deposited the mortal remains of JOIIX ADAMS, Son of John and Susanna (Boylston) Adams, Second President of the United States. Born 19-30 October, 1735. On the Fourth of July, 1776, He pledged his life, fortune, and sacred honor, To the independence of his country. On the Third of September, 1783, He affixed his seal to the definitive treaty With Great Britain, Which acknowledged that independence. And consummated the redemption of his pledge. On the Fourth of Jiilv, IS'26, 304 GRAVES OF THK PRESIDENTS. He was summoned Ti) the independence of immortality And to the judgment of liis God. This house will bear Avitness to his piety ; This town, his birthplace, to his muniliccnee; History to his patriotism ; Posterity to the depth and compass Of his mind. At his side sleeps, till the trump shall sound, ABIGAIL, his beloved and only wife, daughter of William and Elizabeth (Quincy) Smith, In every relation of life a pattern of filial, conjugal, maternal, and social, virtue. Born Nov. 11-22, 11 U. Deceased 28th Oct. 1818. ^t. 74. Married 25th Oct. 1*764. Daring a period of more than half a century they survived, in harmony of sentiment, principle, and affection, the tempests of civil commotion ; Meeting undaunted, and surmountin g tlie terrors and trials of that Revolution which secured the freedom of their country. Improved the condition of their times, and brightened the prospects of futurity to the race of man upon earth. PILGRIM, From lives thus spent, thy early duties learn ; From fancy's dreams, to active virtue turn ; Let Freedom, Friendship, Faith, thy soul engage. And serve like tliem thy country and thy age. GUAVKS OF THE PKESlDJiNTS. 305 THE TOMB OF JEFFERSON. The author of the Declaration of Independence sleeps his last sleep at Monticello, near Charlottesville, Albe- marle county, Virgiuia, near his former estate, now owned hj Commander IT. P. Levy, of the United States Navy, who is also the proprietor of President Monroe's estate. At the summit of the gap between Monticello and Carter's Mountain, the road to the grave is through a rustic gate, winding and stony, to the grave-yard, by the side of the woods. Near the entrance is the sacred spot, indicated by a granite monument eight feet high, sadly mutilated by visitors, whose mistaken patriotism has not hesitated to desecrate the grave of the great de- parted to secure a memento. In the southern face of the pedestal a marble tablet was placed, with the following inscription : Here lies buried THOMAS JEFFERSOX, Autlioi- of the Declaration of American Independence, Of the statute of Virginia for religious freedom, And father of the University of Virginia. The dejtredations of visitors necessitated the remoA'al of this tablet frofn the monument to the mansion, out of their reach. At each side of the monument is a o-rave with a marble slab. One is the grave of his wife, who died in 1782, ten years after their marriage. Below the usual record are two lines of the speech of Achilles over the dead body of Hector: "And though spirits in a future state be oblivious of the past, he will even there remember his loved companion." The other two graves are those of his daughters, Martha Wayles Randolph, who survived him, and Maria Eppes, who died before him. 306 GKAVES OF THK PRESIDENTS. THE TOMB OF MONROE. The recent resting-place of the remains of James Mon- roe in the Marble Cemetery in Second street, iSTew- York, has been described in the preceding- pages. The Marble 'Cemetery was got up by a Mr. Nori-is, the owner of a marble yard, on i)rivate speculation, and was laid out into lots and sold out in full to private fami- lies, on which many of them proceeded to erect expensive vaults. It was the forerunner of Greenwood, and at the ])resent time, there is a large vault kept ready where bodies of leading families are ^frequently temporarily placed before their final removal to the latter city of the dead. The vault in which Mr. Monroe's remains lately rested, M-as in one of these lots. It was large, and subdi- vided into compartments, in which Avere interred Mr. Tillotson, Ml-. Monroe, Mrs. Governeur, his wife's sister, and his daughter, Mrs. S. L. Governeur. Though con- taining the remains of several persons, a single slab over it, about a foot square, contained the following inscrip- tion : J.UIES MONROE. ROBERT TILLOTSOX. Vault 147. This was all that afforded any outside index to those who rested beneath. We have seen, that just twenty- seven years, lacking two days and a few hours, after his death, his remains were disinterred. In his last illness he was attended by Dr. Berger, the family physician of Mr, Governeur, and expired at half- past ten o'clock the 4th July, 1831, and was disinterred on the 3d July, 1858, at half-past four A.M. "When buried, a silver plate, as we have seen, was placed on his coffin, with this inscrii^tion : GKAVBS OF THE PKKSIDK-NTS. 307 JAMES MOXROE, of Virginia, Died the 4tli July, 1831. Aged 74 years. Mrs. Monroe died a sliort time before her husband, and was interred, with other members of the family, near his former private residence, at Oak Hill, Loudon county, Virginia, near the Potomac River. Mr. Monroe's remains, as all know, now rest in per- petual peace in Hollywood, at Richmond, in his native State. THE TOMB OF MADISON. At Montpelier, Orange county, Va., thirty miles from the crave of Jefferson, from 1836 to within about a year, the remains of Ex-President Madison had been peacefully resting, with naught but tradition to mark the spot, in spite of repeated efforts to raise the requisite funds to erect a monument suitable to his Avorth. At length, however, by private subscription, the sum of $700 Avas raised, and the work of raising the monument was com- menced, the grave being identified with much difficulty. The coffin was exposed to view by the excavation, and upon removing the upper lid, which was not fastened, those present beheld all that was left of the earthly re- mains of James Madison. The coffin was in an excellent state of preservation, though the body was much decayed. The bones and breast, the ribs, the lower jaw, were re- turned to their original dust, the only portions of the skeleton remaining being the skull, portions of the cheek bones, the vertebrae of the neck, spine, and large bones of the arms, so completely had twenty-one years done the work of dissolution. The foundations were built from a sufficiently secure ground around the coffin, arched over the top, and forming a vault. The form of the monument is a simple obelisk, and consists of seven mas- 308 GKAVES OF TUK PKESIDEKTS. sive pieces of stone, the whole being twenty-two feet six inches high, and Aveighing thirty-two thousand jiounds ; with tlie foundution the structure measures twenty-four feet above the burying-ground. The inscription is about nine feet from the base, and is as follows : MADISON". Born March 10, 1751 ; died June 28, 1836. The work is substantial, and its simple beauty is in ex- cellent keeping with the quiet country church-yard and the great and good man whose country-men's apprecia- tion and love the marble commemorates. No j^retensions were made for beauty or extravagant decorations, but simply to indicate the love of the j^atriotic citizens for the departed friend and statesman. The remains of Mi-s. Madison have been interred near those of her husband, whom she survived a number of years. 4 THE TOMB OF JOHN aUINCY ADAMS. In the same A-ault which the filial aifection of John Qiiincy Adams caused to be erected for his parents, at Quhicy, Mass., his remains now repose, together with those of his wife, and a mural monument similar to that Avhich he erected for his father, was erected for him by liis only surviving son, I^^ C F. Adams, in 1852, in the " Adams Stone Temple." The church gave to the son the privilege which they had not denied the father. A tablet of Avhite marble was erected at the north of the pulpit, crowned with a bust of John Quincy Adams, by Powers, finished by him after repeated sittings of Mr. Adams, in April, 1837, and said to be an excellent por- trait. It was so much regarded as a work of art, that it was purchased from Mr. Powers by Mr. Greenough, the artist of John Adams' bust, and upon John Quincy's de- cease, Avas purchased by Mr. C. F. Adams of Mr. Green- GRATES OF THE I'UESIDENTS. 309 ougli, ami placed in its present position. The design of an acorn, which is sculptnred with a leaf on the tablet, was a particular favorite of John Quincy Adams, and he was so much attached to it tliat he had it cut upon a seal which he habitually wore. The white oak leaf represents the sturdy growth of New-England. The first and last letters of the Greek alphabet, which surmount the inscrip- tions, were his favorite symbols of the Deity, referring to the well-known passage : " I am Alpha and Omega, the beginning and the ending, saith the Lord, wliich is, and which was, and which is to come, the Almighty." The following is the inscription : ALTERI SECULO. A i2 Near this place Reposes all that could die of JOHN" QUINCY ADAMS, Son of John and Abigail (Smith) Adams. Sixth President of the United States. Born 11th July, 1767. Amidst the storms of civil commotion He nursed the vigor v\-hicli nerves a statesman and a Patriot, And the faith which inspires a Cliristian. For more than half a century, Whenever his country called for his labors in either Hemisphere, or in any capacit}', He never spared them in her cause. On the twenty-fourth of December, 181-1, He signed the second treaty with Great Britain, Which restored peace within her borders. On the twenty-third of February, 1848, He closed sixteen years of eloquent defense Of the lessons of his youth, Jiy dying at his post. In her great national council. A son worthy of his father — A citizen shedding glory on his country — 310 GRAVES OF THE PKKSIDEXTS. A scholar, ambitious to advance mankind, This Cliristian souglit to walk humbly In the sight of his God. Beside him lies His partner for fifty years, LOUISA CATHERINE, Daughter of Joshua and Catherine (Nash) Johnson ; Born 12th February, 1775; Married 26th July, 1797 ; Deceased loth May, 18o2, Aged 77. Living through many vicissitudes. Under high responsibilities. As a daughter, wife, and mother. She proved equal to all. Dying, she left to her family and to her sex The blessed remembrance Of a woman that " Feareth the Lord." " Herein is that saying true : one soweth and another reapeth ; I sent you to reap that wherein ye bestowed no labor ; other men la- bored, and ye are entered into their labors."' THE TOMB OF JACKSON. At the Hennitage, delightfully situated on the hanks of the Cnmherland river, about ten ntilos from Nashville, Tenn., Avhere in life the General and President resided, his mortal remains now repose. It was his desire, in ac- cordance with the rej)uhlican plainness which character- ized his life, that his tomb should be marked by no pomp or commemorative show. He desired to be interred in a plain manner, and is known to have refused a proffered present of an antiquated marble sarcophagus, brought from the Mediteraanean, and said to have once contained the remains of ancient heroes. He was interred in the fomily tomb, beside his wife, who had died sixteen years before him. The foUowmg inscription on her tomb is peculiarly interesting from the fact of its having been written by himself: GKAYES OF THE PRESIDENTS. 311 Here lie the remains of Mrs. RACnEL JACKSON, wife of President Jackson, who died on the 22d of December, 1828, aged 61. Her face was fair, her person pleasing, her temper amiable, and her heart kind. She delighted in relieving the wants of her fellow- creatures, and to cultivate that divine pleasure by the most liberal and unpretending methods. To the poor she was a benefactress ; to the rich she was an example ; to the wretched a comforter ; to the prosperous an ornament. Her pity went hand in hand with her benevolence, and she thanked her Creator for being permitted to do good. A being so gentle and so virtuous slander might wound, but it could not dishonor. Even Death, when he tore her from the arms of her husband, could but transplant her to the bosom of her God. THE TOMB OF HARRISON. In the family tomb at North-Bend, Ohio, but a few miles from Cincinnati, on the bank of the Ohio river, the remams of President Harrison now repose. On the oc- casion of the funeral pageant at the seat of government, where lie died but one month after his inauguration, the remains were interred in the Congressional burying- o-round, and were stibsequently removed to the family vault. There is no published description of the family tomb, and it is a curious fact, that neither the biograpliies of the illustrious General and President, or the very full accounts of his obsequies, make any mention of the m- scriptions on either the coffin or the tomb. Mrs. Harri- I 312 (iRAVES OF THE TRESIDEXTS. son is still living, near Cincinnati, at North-Bend, Ohio, with her son-in-law, Hon. J. Scott Harrison, a\]io is a meinl)er of Congress. Her health recently has been so poor that she has been partly confined to her bed. On the 2'7th of Febrnary last she was waited upon by a large delegation of the Cincinnati Pioneer Association, many of the members of which were intimately acquainted with General Harrison. They presented her Avith a number of tokens of tlieir respect and esteem for her husband and herself Mrs. Harrison is now about eijihty- three vears of ao-e. Since the above was written, the late residence of General Harrison, at North-Bend, has been totally con- sumed by fire, while in charge of servants, Mrs. Harrison and the family being at lier son's in Cincinnati. "With the house, a valuable library, with a large collection of public documents, letters, etc., relating to the early his- tory of the West, were consumed. THE TOMB OF POLK. In a pleasant spot in the suburbs of Nashi-ille, the ca- pital of Tennessee, in front of the former residence of President Polk, and whore his Avidow noAV resides, a tasteful monument is erected over his remains. It is of native lime-stone, supported by four colunms, with a squai'e pillar in the centre, on which is the following inscription : On the entablature — JAME^^ KNOX POLK, Tenth President of the United States. Born Nov. 2, 1795 ; died June 15, 1849. On first side of the monument — ■ The mortal remains of JAMES KNOX POLK are resliii'jr in flic vault Ix'iiealh. GRAVES OF THE I'UKSIIIKVIN. ;3 ] 3 He was born in Mecklenburg countv, N'ortli-Carolina, And emigrated with his father, Samuel Polk, to Tennessee in 1806. The beauty of virtue was illustrated in his life. The excellence of Christianity was exemplified in liis death. On the socond side — His life was devoted to the public service. He was elevated successive!}- to the first places in the State and Federal Governments ; a member of the General Assembly- ; a member of Congress and Chairman of the most important Congressional Committees ; Speaker of the House of Representatives ; Governor of Tennessee, and President of the United States. On the third side there is no inscription ; on the fourth is the followino- : By his public policy he defined, established, and extended the boundaries of his country. He planted the laws of the American Union on the shores of the Pacific. His influence and his counsels tended to organize the IS'ational Treasury on the principles of the Constitution, and to apply the rule of Freedom to Navigation, Trade and riiilu^tr\-. n 314 GRAVES OF THE PRESIDENTS. THE TOMB OF TAYLOR. Near Louisville, Kentucky, the former residence of his father, tlie remains of President Zachary Taylor are interred, marked by a plain and simple monument. Like General Harrison, he was first interred in the Congres- sional burying-ground at Washington, where he died a short time after his inauguration. In the fall of the same year, however, they were removed and deposited in the family cemetery, as stated above, where his wife has since been placed beside him. THE LIVING EX-PRESIDENTS. Of the ex-Presidents there are now living Martin Van Buren, at Kinderhook, New- York ; John Tyler, at Sher- wood Forest, Virginia ; Franklin Pierce, at Concord, New-Hampshire, and Millard Fillmore, at Buffalo, New- York. CONCLUSION. The publisher of the foregoing vohiine is ii citizen of New- York, where he has reared a family, and has had all the ties of local associations to spring up around him. These have been of a nature to attach him to his resi- dence, while he has been delighted with the liberal spirit, commercial enterprise, and the patriotic devotion mani- fested by its citizens to our national Union. He has also been pleased with the military spirit of its citizen-soldiers, demonstrated on more than one occasion by the Seventh Regiment National Guard. Yet, while yielding to none in his devotion to the high- est interest of the city of his adoption, he is equally in- capable of forgetting that he is a native of Virginia, and that his father and relatives were the cotemjDoraries and companions of some of Virginia's noblest sons, m the persons of her Jeffersons, Madisons, and Monroes. He can not forget the brilliant part performed by his native State in our revolutionary struggle, and the services rendered by her heroes m the field, and by her statesmen in the councils of the country. Impressed with a deep love and veneration for our na- tional Union — the only hope of liberty for man over the world — he felt anxious to contribute any means in his power, however small, towards cementing and j)er]3etu- ating it for all time. The removal of ex-President Monroe's remains from New- York to Virginia, who had been known to his boy- hood as a patriarchal statesman, and who. with T\ra "s The Guard, J^° How they Slept ' The Night—" All's Well," J J|J Sickness, etc., .■"'',''' Second Day ouT.-The Fourth at Sea-Sunnse, Sea- sickness, and Hospital Accommodations— Conduct of the Men— Inspection— Divine Service— National Salute —The Orders for llichmond— Close of the Fourth- Scene on the Chesapeake— Hampton Roads— The Gen- eral Discipline— Future Movements, 120 A Barber's Harvest, ^~ General Discipline, The Baggage, ^"^^ An Incident " Independence Celebration, Chesapeake Bay, "^ The Night-Guard, ^'-^ Hampton Roads, Third Day.— A knowing Pilot— Meeting with the James- town— The Ericsson aground— The Virginia Reception Committee-On Goose Hill Flats-Speeches of Colonels Mumfort and Duryee— Progress up the River, 120 The Glen Cove bound from Richmond for the Rehef of the Ericsson, " Ceremony of Reception; " The Disembarkation, • • • * Preparations previously made in Richmond for the Recep- tion of Mr. Monroe's Remains, • ^^ Second Meeting of the Citizens of Richmond, on the 29th ^ loo June, ,' . , Disembarkation at Rocketts-Removal and Interment at Hollywood-The Military and Civic Procession, and Solemn Ceremonies on the Occasion-The Popular De- 14 * 322 INDEX. Pagb monstratiou of Respect for las Memory — Noble Ap- pearance of the Seventh Regiment of New-York Vol- unteers, 137 Programme for the Fifth July, 138 The City — Scenes in the Morning, 140 Arrival of the Jamestown, 141 The Impatient Crowd, 142 Arrival of the New-York National Guard, 142 Removal of the Remains, 143 The Procession, .... 143 Ceremonies at the Grave, 145 Governor Wise's Address, 145 Prayer by Rev. Charles H. Read, D.D., 149 Close of the Ceremonies, 151 The Dinner, 151 Dining-room, 152 The Speeches, etc., • . 153 Close of the Day, l6l At Night, 162 Scenes and Incidents, 164 Serenade to the Governor and Mayor, 164 Richmond Characteristics, 166 The Death of Councilman Judson, 166 A Fraternal Meeting, 167 Departure of the Guard, 170 The National Guard in Richmond — their Movements and Departure — Effect of the Visit of this Gallant Regi- ment to the City — Virginia Volunteers — their Admira- tion of the National Guard, 171 Attention shown the Regiment at Richmond, 175 Engagement on James River, 176 The National Guard en route for Washington — The Rea- son why Governor Wise could not accompany the Guard — The Regiment expected to have had the honor of his Company to Mount Vernon, he having received a cordial invitation to that effect, 178 Camping on a Steamboat, 178 Amusements of the Voyage, 180 A Court-Martial at Sea, 181 Aground again, 182 Court-martialing the Pilot, 183 Preparatii'U^ for the R''ci'|>tiiMi :il Wasliiniit'iii . 185 INDEX. 323 Pag It DCSEMBARKATIOX FUOM THE ErICSSON",, 189 Going on board the Steamboat Mount Vernon — Reaching Washington — Regimental Order — Review of the Regi- ment by the President and Cabinet — National Guard at the Tomb of ^Yashington — Description of Mount Ver- non — Ceremonies at tlie Tomb — Address of the Rev. Dr. Weston, the Chaplain — Memento of Mount Vernon — More Hospitality — Pursuit of Pleasure under Diffi- culties — March through Baltimore — Reception in Phi- ladelphia — En route for Home, 189 Preparations in New- York to receive the Seventh Regi- ment, 206 The Seventh Regiment at Home, 207 Military Parade to receive and welcome them back, . . . 207 Opinions of the Press, 218 Compliments paid to the National Guard, during their Southern Tour, in Richmond, Washington, etc. ; with Comments regarding the Favorable Results of thoir Visit, 213 The Death and Burial of Laurens Hamilton, 224 Meeting of the City Authorities of Richmond, and Adop- tion of Resolutions expressive of sorrow and condolence for the Death of Laurens Hamilton, 236 The Hamilton Monument, 237 Movements of the National Guard prior to their Depart- ure FOR Virginia, 239 Pressing Invitation received by them from the Cities of Richmond and Washington, and from the Heads of Military Companies of the South 239 Letter of Thanks, 246 Chronological History of the Seventh Regiment, National Guard, 254 The Origin of the Uniform, 268 Biographical Sketches of the Officers of the Seventh Regi- ment, National Guard, 269 Colonel Abram Duryee, 269 Lieutenant- Colonel Marshall Lefferts, 274 Major E. M. Crawford 277 Adjutant William A. Pond, 277 Brevet Colonel Henry C. Shumway, 278 324 IXDEX. Pagr Captain James Price, 270 Captain Benjamin M. Nevers, "281 ) Captain Alexander Shaler, 280 Captain William 11. Riblett, 281 Captain John Monroe, 281 Captain William A. Speaiglit, 282 Captain William P. Bensel, 282 Roll of Members of National Guard, Seventh Regiment,. . . . 283 Field and Staff Officers, 283 Non-Commissioned Staff, 284 Troop, 284 Engineer Corps, 285 First Company, National Guard, 285 Second Company, National Guard 287 Honorary ilembers, 288 Third Company, National Guard, 288 Honorary Members, 290 Fourth Company, National Guai'd, 290 Honorary Members, 292 Fifth Company, National Guard 292 Honorary Members, 293 Sixth Company, National Guard, 293 Honorary Members, 295 Seventh Company, National Guard 296 Honorary and Exempt Members, 297 Eighth Company, National Guard, 297 Honorary Members, 299 The Graves of the Presidents of the United S tate^, 300 The Tomb of Washington, 301 The Tomb of John Adams 303 The Tomb of Jefferson, 305 The Tomb of Monroe, 30(i The Tomb of Madison, 307 The Tomb of John Quiiicy Adams, 308 The Tomb of Jackson, 310 The Tomb of Harrison, 311 The Tomb of Polk, 312 The Tomb of Taylor, 314 TiiE Living Ex-Presidents, 314 Conclusion, 315 I i \ I ^:^^ ^^ Sw^J^ p^^^-rj >-x^. l''?'^r°^co:^ ^»:;4:; V? ^,--:B ^'^^-'^-^^ >