Annals of Cleveland

Meade, Gen. George

Abstracts: 3

2258

Cleveland Morning Leader, 6 January 1864 (ed; 18 inches) ~ See original
p.2, col.1 ~ View at ChronAm

2258 - L. Jan. 6; ed: 2/1 - "The American people have a decided weakness
for prophecy. This weakness has been alarmingly developed since the
beginning of the war. We have, so far as we know, no prominent public
man who has not indulged in vaticinations. Mr. Seward is a remarkable
example. We have styled it a 'weakness for prophecy"; certainly there
are no utterances of Mr. Seward's so weak as his sixty-day and ninety-
day prognostications of thirty months ago.
"No doubt the Confederacy has received some staggering blows in the
campaign just closed, but that there is any evidence that its strength
and vigor are exhausted, we deny.
"We are confident that the war can be ended in one more campaign, but
not by starvation, not by a degenerated currency, not by an "amnesty," -
but by the armies of Meade and Foster, Grant and Banks. We should not be
thus pointed in our strictures, did we not see danger to the Republic in
the delusive prophecies just now so common. There is no other way but to
cease prognosticating; fill the regiments and hurl them once more upon
the foe." (18)

Wars / Civil War

Index terms:

Banks, Gen.; *Civil War; Confederacy; Foster, Gen.; Grant, Gen. U. S.; Meade, Gen. George; Seward, William H.

2262

Cleveland Morning Leader, 15 February 1864 (ed; 9 inches) ~ See original
p.2, col.1 ~ View at ChronAm

2262 - L. Feb. 15; ed:2/1 - Our armies are about to enter upon a grand
campaign which promises to penetrate the very core of the Rebellion.
Grant, Thomas, Meade, and others are pushing forward their steady veter-
ans and threaten to drive this Rebellion to the limits of South Carolina.
"If the last thundering at the gates is to be done here, it will only
be a righteous retribution visited upon a fearfully guilty people." (9)

Wars / Civil War

Index terms:

Grant, Gen. U. S.; Meade, Gen. George; South Carolina; Thomas, Gen.

2457

Cleveland Morning Leader, 18 January 1864 (ed; 3 inches) ~ See original
p.2, col.3 ~ View at ChronAm

2457 - L. Jan. 18; ed: 2/3 - We have General Meade's opinion on when the
army of the Potomac will advance, and when the war will close. He says:
"We are making every effort to improve the present, and as soon as the
weather moderates and the season will allow, active operations will com-
mence in earnest. The war must be ended by the hard fighting people's
work. Peace will possibly be here next summer." (3)

Wars / Civil War / Military Engagements and Campaigns

Index terms:

Meade, Gen. George; *Military Engagements & Campaigns (Civil War); Potomac river