23 February 1861 A.D. President-Elect Lincoln Arrives in Washington Amid Secrecy and Tight Security
23 February 1861 A.D. President-Elect Lincoln Arrives in Washington Amid Secrecy and
Tight Security
Editors. “1861 – President-elect Abraham Lincoln arrives in Washington amid secrecy and
tight security.” This
Day in U.S. Military History. N.d. https://thisdayinusmilhist.wordpress.com/2014/02/23/february-23/. Accessed 21 Feb 2015.
1861 – President-elect
Abraham Lincoln arrives in Washington amid secrecy and tight security. With
seven states having already seceded from the Union since Lincoln’s election,
the threat of civil war hung in the air. Allen Pinkerton, head of a private
detective agency, had uncovered a plot to assassinate Lincoln when he passed
through Baltimore on his way to the capital. Lincoln and his advisors disagreed
about how to respond to the threat. Some, including Pinkerton, wanted Lincoln
to slip secretly into Washington, which would mean skipping an address to the
Pennsylvania legislature in Harrisburg. Lincoln did not want to appear
cowardly, but he felt the threats were serious. Lincoln agreed to the covert
arrival. With Pinkerton and Ward Hill Lamon, his former law partner, Lincoln
slipped out of the hotel in Harrisburg on the evening of February 22. He wore a
soft felt hat instead of his customary stovepipe hat, and he draped an overcoat
over his shoulders and hunched slightly to disguise his height. The group
boarded a sleeper car and arrived in Baltimore in the middle of the night. The
trio slipped undetected from the Calvert Street station to Camden station
across town. There, they boarded another train and arrived without incident in
Washington at 6:00 a.m. On the platform, the party was surprised when a voice
boomed, “Abe, you can’t play that on me.” It was Congressman Elihu B.
Washburne, a friend of Lincoln’s from Illinois. Washburne escorted Lincoln to
the Willard Hotel. A myth arose that Lincoln had dressed as a woman to avoid
detection, but this was not the case. He did draw considerable criticism in the
press for his unceremonious arrival. Northern diarist George Templeton Strong
commented that if convincing evidence of a plot did not surface, “the
surreptitious nocturnal dodging…will be used to damage his moral position and
throw ridicule on his Administration.” Lincoln later regretted the caper and
commented to a friend “I did not then, nor do I now believe I should have been
assassinated had I gone through Baltimore…” Regardless of how he had arrived,
Lincoln was safely in Washington, ready to assume the difficult task ahead.
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