<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/items?output=omeka-xml&amp;page=208&amp;sort_field=Dublin+Core%2CTitle" accessDate="2026-04-17T17:58:51+00:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>208</pageNumber>
      <perPage>20</perPage>
      <totalResults>8856</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="4113" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="10400">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/8d8edad6d2d7773830fb8d21536808c9.pdf</src>
        <authentication>78e18eaf46e10fa9527644ee4dcd35e4</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41299">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41289">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 5 Index</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41290">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41291">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 5 Index&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41292">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41293">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41294">
                <text>1864-1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41295">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41296">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41297">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41298">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105153">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107550">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="195">
        <name>1864</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="740">
        <name>1865</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1551">
        <name>1866</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4219" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4295">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/d69f964e79dd675c9a08201d39d4c363.pdf</src>
        <authentication>91059fb430169cc3e5d27ddeacf0071f</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58553">
                    <text>. -i -&#13;
March, 1S67. • t oirji.1&#13;
T ■ I reoominend George Whlttaker for Supt. of Court and Cur.tom.&#13;
I&#13;
Jt^i^Hduse here. He is a practical architect and Master builder and can&#13;
■' gat all the reconuuendations and give all the bonds required. See to&#13;
it that he is appointed. John Browne, an old copperhead, has applie&#13;
^ for the place. He is a d --d old Rebel and utterly incompetent and&#13;
*'®*;"''must not be appointed. I would like to control the Custom House mat-&#13;
, '^^^ter as far as possible,&#13;
hfv-w rt i.-y. God's sake push'the Post master matter to success: Use&#13;
'"''every means necessary. Tell the® "hat you please about, me.&#13;
r»0de C. Cole to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, April 1st. ^&#13;
' • tf,-.- George Whittaker of this city is a practical builder of&#13;
much experience anrt unquestined integrity, le is Just the man to&#13;
have the im."eaiate control and direction of the work in erecting our&#13;
new Post-office building. There is no man in the city, nor, so far&#13;
as I know, in the State, who is superior to him in practical know-&#13;
•S" ledge or rellatfl.- Integrity as a builder. _ He has been a Kasson man,&#13;
but IS reliable for us now and hereafter. Secure him the appointment&#13;
of superintendent er whatever it is called, for the P.O. if possible.&#13;
By the way, I have been shown one or more confidential&#13;
■'"''"letters by Kasson's friend to candidates for Governor, in which they&#13;
•■^pronise support, if they are assured of reciprocal support for Kasson&#13;
01 mi&#13;
Awf 4 1 mA Look wQll tfO thftt matfsr. for Congress time, xxjok woxx&#13;
CO I ff** el I / -&#13;
April, 1867. , #&#13;
^ .tttC&#13;
U. Snyder to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 3d.&#13;
SfJtJ «' -rr"&#13;
Yours of Llarch 23d received Monday last. We are just&#13;
• •&#13;
through with a two weeks snow storm, worse than any ever before known&#13;
here. If'it is not followed -by freshets that stop trains again, we&#13;
win be hnppy.., , .&#13;
Carmichael is about ready for the Black Hills. Has started&#13;
part of his men and outfit and will go himself with the balance in a&#13;
couple days. *We have also started some men and teams to finish grad&#13;
ing on 4th one hundred miles. The frost there is still more than a&#13;
foot deep and work cannot yet be pshed rapidly. • •&#13;
Business on the road is fair. We are getting all the Denver&#13;
trade at present. Government supplies not yet started to any extent.&#13;
River open a little north of St. Joseph. Bean is a good man as Master&#13;
of Transportation. My appointment would not disturb him at all. His&#13;
position is better than th.-t of Gen. Freight Agent. He is a good&#13;
worker, understands the movements of trains prefectly, and attends&#13;
closely to business. Our intercourse has always been very pleasant,&#13;
to the best of my knowledge.&#13;
For Oeneral Freight Agent, the road needs a man experienced&#13;
in that business, honest and with a long end. There Is no one-here&#13;
Whom I know of to fill the bill. ' will be easy to get some man who&#13;
has filled that position, from some other road, and I don't want them&#13;
to send me a New Torker, who knows too little or too much. The Gen.&#13;
-Freight Agent of this road will have no easy task if he does 61s duty.&#13;
. nl' ■'&#13;
•) •&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
.WI , £lfqA&#13;
-f ■■ ■ '"&#13;
Mr. Hann, the Auditor arrived today and is looking over&#13;
our accounts. All right here,&#13;
JWOilJ O.:.. Ic 1 -UTJ* t ' t" n*, ytM&#13;
•" ■111*" Telegraa to Gen.Dodge from J. N. Dewej- &amp; Palmer, Des Moines, April 2nd.'&#13;
Appoint Dyer H. Yotmg, Des Moines, Supt. of'Court House;''&#13;
. .;vi'&#13;
Partdculara by letter,&#13;
■ • r ■ ■ '-.MB 91 " 3 i*MMf&#13;
-bBWa »mr . p. Palmer to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 2nd.&#13;
•"neili irto.. ■ 'Wo recommended Dyrr H. Yorng as Superintendent of Construc&#13;
tion of the tl, S. Court House and Post office in this city over any&#13;
I" other person named for the following reasons&#13;
- y Now *0 belie ve in rewarding those who have been with us in |&#13;
itJaejTthe past, are with us at present, and will surely be ith us in the&#13;
AIR future, instead of thc^fle who have been and are still against us. Mr.&#13;
»iBrown ever has been, and is still a Copperhead; has been their candia date for an important State office. Mr, T-hittaker ever has been and&#13;
^3 is st 11 a warm partisan friend of Mr. Kasson. During the time of his&#13;
last visit (he left thta morning) he was almost constantly with him,&#13;
and it was by Kaa,son's, advice that he became a candidate. He is his&#13;
candidate - his man. If he did not cast the ticket last fall, and it&#13;
r. 18 believed hw did, he did every th ng he could to serve his friend&#13;
' and Gen. Tuttle but that. Mr. Young is, and always has been righ^fc.&#13;
. . Amni B. Young, formerly Supervising Architect of the TreasVM u, ury Department, who is livin - in Washington (near Wiilard(s) can tell&#13;
you whet er our Young is properly qualified or not.&#13;
March, 1867. ^ r '&#13;
a::&#13;
Telegram to Gen. Dodge from Geo. Tichenor, C. C.Cole &amp; Others&#13;
' Des Moines, April 2nd, 1867.&#13;
I t#** Whittaker is an Accomplished architect, carpenter and Mas-&#13;
^fer "builder. Appoint him. . .. .. n- .&#13;
-r -5 : ' v-d - ' 6S tatm '&#13;
Gen. Dodge to his wife, Washington,-Apr il 2nd.&#13;
I received tw - letter from you today and only wish I had&#13;
you instead of the'letters. I am held here looking after some R.R.&#13;
mdtters; the appointment of the Engineer of our road, who is to de-&#13;
^ cide the east base of the Mountains, and trying to break Kasson's'&#13;
slate; I think I made a move today that will bring it about. -&gt;&#13;
As such as that is done and I get the appointments, I shall&#13;
go to New York, then'home.' I suppose eight cords of hard wood will&#13;
about do for you; if it does not, buy more. I am in hopes to get ^ut&#13;
more than ever in my wood business-but cannot tell. George can go&#13;
over and look your wood matters at any time., I told him to do so.&#13;
I wrote you fully pretty much what my duties vere here and&#13;
who my associates were.' 1 see very little of Logan, Butler and this&#13;
crowd do not suit me and there will not be much danger of our running&#13;
together. I have enough to do. If you think not, wait until you get&#13;
here next winter. I receive about fifty letters a day from all parts&#13;
of the district add it takes no small part 6f my time to answer them.&#13;
^ If you wore onl- a politician puu could appreciate me. I want you to&#13;
get a gull idea of the work, see the turns &amp;o. and you will never look&#13;
i. -j. ii:- .&#13;
A . -10&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
back on my past life with anything but admiration. "l notice Gen,&#13;
■JVebster called on you. Do you know where his head quarters are? I&#13;
shoi'ld like to see him. D oes he remember the Tiskalwa widow? It&#13;
seems to me that I remember her in a very kissing or touching relation&#13;
to Webster on a ride to some place.'&#13;
btrrf ' '1 I&#13;
m Luther S. Bent to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 3d. , ,&#13;
— ' • We have been fighting snow for the last three weeks. I&#13;
hdVe just returned from a ten days campaign out west, doing all that&#13;
could be done to keep the road opdn but it was too much for me. I&#13;
never saw the like of it east or west. The quantity of snow west of&#13;
Golmbus is beyond conception. We are all right at the present&#13;
writing. They are crossing the river on the ice with teams but&#13;
it is not considered bery safe. The graders are sending their outfits&#13;
out to their work.. Boyle has 80 miles, Boy' &amp; Doc. Reed 10 and Lacy&#13;
has 10. My brother has taken an Interest with Lacey and will go on&#13;
to'the work. .They alttt their teams up today. They have a good force&#13;
and would like tb continue on the work. Anything you can do to keep&#13;
'*■ them on th»' inside for more work, will put me under renewed otltgaiions to you. itny-t T .tf \ &gt;&#13;
. eiispatch was received on the. let notifying that the&#13;
"^^mVany would take the road on that day. I think Mr. Reed is still&#13;
'under the impression that he will continue to have the general superI '''&#13;
intendence of all. A Mr. flann from Clinton reported here today to&#13;
audit accounts &amp;c. for contra ctors. A telegram just received states&#13;
' rt '*' '&#13;
April, 1867,&#13;
« -f I. .&#13;
that it is snowing and blowing as hard as ever at Grand Island. I do&#13;
not know what will become of us if we ever do have a thaw. Prominent&#13;
.. citizens of Oma^a say that they sent a Committee to New York to fight i ^ I'&#13;
the bridge question for hem and their interest, they - these promi-&#13;
' nent citizens; paying the expenses. The Committee returned with a&#13;
tie contract in their pocket, but had no report about the bridge.&#13;
They think they have sent their last reliable men to the New York&#13;
office to look up the interest of Omaha. .■:.k&#13;
Maj. Gen. D, H. Rucker to Gen. Dodge, Washington, 3d.&#13;
' I have the honor to trans .it copies of the several&#13;
Anniial Reports for the Quarter Master General for the years 1861, 1862&#13;
1863, 1864 and 1865. , Sv- I ■■ • r-:- f'luom&#13;
H. McCullough, to Gen. Dodge, April 3d.&#13;
Since our conversation this morning relative to the nomina&#13;
tion of Mr. And4rson as Assessor in your district, I find that Mr.&#13;
Koel'B r«noval la strongly protested against by prominent persons In&#13;
the State and before I take any action I deem It my duty to lay all&#13;
the facts In'the case before the President. ^&#13;
^0, Telegr«n to Oen. Dodge from P. K flthrow, Des Uolnes, 4th.&#13;
ew I , Uhlttaker ought not In any event to be appointed. «e has&#13;
.itwwn ver- bitter oi&gt; you and your frlendd. Young is altogether hi.&#13;
superior professionally.&#13;
' ^ 488 i**' • I&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
.vmt tiimA&#13;
F. W. Palmer to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 4th, (Telegram)^ «rf&gt;&#13;
We believe Whittaker voted for Tuttle last fall. We know&#13;
JdSll&#13;
he is owned by kasson. Young is far better qualified professionally.&#13;
:c . -&#13;
:'H' Telegram to Gen. Dodge from Geo. C. Tichenor, B. F Allen and&#13;
e. C. Cole, Des Moines, ..pril 5th. m&#13;
' " Whittaker did not vote for Tuttle. .1 insist on his appoint&#13;
ment, Answer. to ^ * .1- .11 aiQ.: oj; wme&#13;
* Thomas Ewing to Gen. Dodge, April 6th. ® • - 1' . t, 1 a.&#13;
fenevet. j saw Randall last evening who said that the application by&#13;
W8C Tichehdr for the Des Moines Post office was not settled yesterday but ^&#13;
would be early next week. I then got Mason to write a letter recom&#13;
mending the change? he told me a change would be for the better, I&#13;
will try to get Mason to call on Randall about it, as he- will have&#13;
,.so e influence from his locality and his knowledge of Teesdale.&#13;
nt mr - you could by telegraph to Benton get him to-telegraph applica i&#13;
XXUtoTj to Randall, it would ave an excellent effect. '&#13;
\ ' ^ ffcf'.t&#13;
^ Gen. Dodge to his wife, Washington, ^.C. 5th. . ^&#13;
• rtJJ . ; I leav. har. In Uie morning for New York, having complete&#13;
•»«! aia . m, bualn«SB here today.' I shall only stay in New York long&#13;
•' enough to finish my R.R. business, when I shall nsh west. I am&#13;
tired out and half sick. This is the slowest of all slow places.&#13;
I have been a full week doing what ought to be done in a day. .&#13;
April, 1867&#13;
Congress, I fear, will come, togeth r again in July," still I&#13;
hope not. "Andy" since the Connecticut election has been getting&#13;
stiff.&#13;
I have made arrangements with two colored boys and one girl&#13;
to go west on Monday next, or week from Monday, to live with us.&#13;
1 have given them a letter to you, and shall want the boys to go&#13;
t&#13;
on the Plains with me. The women is a good lively woman. Has lived in&#13;
..New Hampshire and has good recommendations. I think she will suit you&#13;
^ Most of the members are longing for home. Kasson stays here&#13;
to watch and block. He the inside trqck with all the Departments,&#13;
.. ' -r. • -&#13;
Andy, &amp;c. and gets pretty much iihat he wants.&#13;
nmUwup mm 11&#13;
' ■ '0. c. Cole to (Wn. bodge, Des Moines, 5th, ^ ffw.i nm"&#13;
' Young in a'reiiable, faithful architect snd superintendent.&#13;
and I recommend him as such. vad I&#13;
"' ■ ■■IdiJlil . /■ . .T. . . . . - _ r&#13;
• i A. R. Anderson to Gen. Dodge, Sidney, Iowa, 6th, JJI .&#13;
You r very kind and complimentary favor of the 18th ult,&#13;
.«s received by me yesterday. O.lng to absence at court, in Page and&#13;
Ta"Xor Counties, did not got it till this late date.&#13;
General, words cannot express my thankfulness for'the kind and&#13;
•n complimentar manner in which you have been pleased to resiember me,&#13;
«&gt;d whether your efforts in my behalf come to naught or no, will&#13;
not .hawc* or vary the degree of my gratitude. 1 take the will for&#13;
«,» dead, and accord'the measure of thanks that would be rendered&#13;
ofn '■ • vA&#13;
to gUCCOSB.&#13;
1 regret that 1 cannot at this time give you a list of our&#13;
■■'TIP-&#13;
. • • I '&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
lodge, "but will' do- so riext week. My alisence has retarded "the or&#13;
ganization; tonight it meets and .I.wUJ. take the nexessary steps&#13;
to comply with your request. . 1&#13;
Tichenor to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 7th:&#13;
tHU ri .! 1&#13;
■w I&#13;
Hoyt Sheraan starts to Washington tomorrow to '^ook after&#13;
Court House matters and will call on you for help, he bears a let&#13;
ter from me to you&#13;
01 wri&#13;
, I - ■ • -&#13;
By appearing to co-operate with him in a hearty and friendly&#13;
manner, you can control him and secuc the influence of himself and&#13;
John Siierman (U.S.Senator) in appointments and other matters; and&#13;
if the question of Post master here is not settled, I believe you&#13;
can help me through him, if you w^ll help him. You should, however,&#13;
get him fully committed to you 'before you do anything for him.&#13;
I have been at work to break up and demoralize the Kasson&#13;
"Ring" and I am in a fair way to succeed effectually. If Wlittaker&#13;
^t;i8 appointed through your influence the breach is started, as it&#13;
fiflu »ould place him and Allen firmly in my hands, and you can manage&#13;
Sherman. I had Whittaker and Allen bound tight before I would re-&#13;
*• t •&#13;
fc ajB 'commartd Whittaker.&#13;
palmer and Dewey have worked against as they are indiscreet&#13;
ttnd very party managers, and I did not care to explain matters&#13;
noJ%liem as it would not do to blow now, for the reason that Kasson&#13;
r»uet be used^^^^hile longer in some mattersL ' fhey (Palmer and&#13;
Dewey) I'COnimilHitid an old fossil neiraed Dyer H. Young, whom everyboyd&#13;
u IX m ttox : , , ,t a t 462&#13;
'' April, 1867. '5'f*rr ,!!':•"•&#13;
.execrates.on account of our "Court House swindle" years'ago. His&#13;
appointment would make you any number of enemies and no friends;&#13;
■Irtu Qyj contrary, Whittaker is very popular and controls a large&#13;
number of voters, and is a most thorough man an' reliable.Republi&#13;
can; he has been one of hhe leading Kasson leaders, but voted for&#13;
you,''and, as I said before, by getting control of him we get Allen,&#13;
Sherman, Clap and enough others to literally demoralize the Kas&#13;
son "clique." •c'-" I&#13;
"Jlrjx&#13;
-nl'■ ■ That have you done in regard to Post Master? If you have&#13;
'failed heretofore, tr and force Sherman to make a strong effort&#13;
tith you for Teesdale's removal and my appointment,&#13;
If I do not get the" Post office, I would like to have the disburse&#13;
ment of the Court House money. « v-i : f' "&#13;
•What have you done relative to the Uaval Cadetshi^ I felt&#13;
sure that my little brother-in-law (E.P.Getchell) would be nom&#13;
inated by you, and has made all his preparations to go, and if&#13;
you do not give i€ to hiia, it would prove a great disappointment to&#13;
us all. Pnlmer referred the matter to me and I thought it settled.&#13;
Clark has appointed Aleck Bowers his deputy here, instead of&#13;
GooarWi, irtileh proves to.us all his oblleations to"Kasson, and&#13;
that you were entirely deceived.&#13;
If 70U can get T.esdaie and Noel removed and Anf.rson end my&#13;
..If appointed, by tracing with the,Copperhead., you t.tter'do it.&#13;
All .0 :ld approve it end it would strengthen you ver&gt; much.&#13;
April, 1867 iC .&#13;
Col. J.'H.. Kizner to Gen.Dodge, Fort McPherson, Neb. 7th:&#13;
; . I presucie you are awarer that we were snowed up for a g-od&#13;
portdii of last month, and consequently cut off fron all mail communi-&#13;
-^cation. I made a trip to Omaha in Pebhuaryi but arrived there&#13;
just after you left for Washington, and was sorry I could nob see&#13;
■ you. I received the pass and also the p-pers you sent me from , .&#13;
-Washington and was much rleased to find that I was not_forgotten&#13;
even amidst the excitement of Washington. ' '&#13;
Allow me how to express my high appreciation of the kind in&#13;
terest you have Always manifested^in me, and to tahnk you for your&#13;
manj' kindnesses. "di.. f n C .&#13;
I am still at MCPherson, although Ool. Oarrington Is nov. oom- W&#13;
mandlng tha post, and I have been expecting to be sent farther_west.&#13;
'l understand from den. Augur that my companr will be employed on&#13;
^ the S.R. in this vicinity,.And my family will probahly remain here.&#13;
I suppose worh will soon bs rssumsd on the road. I hope you will&#13;
' " find time to pay us a visit when you come out. .&#13;
-'■ ■■ With kind regards f«m Urs. M. and myself to you ami Urs. Dodge,&#13;
lo ' tr'&#13;
An. „ Gen. Itodge to wm. Mysrs, Hew York, Sth; .Ignc-r I saw Preeident Saturday. Got Grant to write -dm! also Brown-&#13;
. ing. He said h, would send It "in today. I cannot understand his&#13;
.,1 aetion. Hodges * Sakton lay on table with you. .. „&#13;
Wm. Hale to Geni Dodge, Glenwood, Iowa, 8ti&gt;. • -&#13;
It waa the agenoy of the Pawnee Indians that Mr. Ooolidge&#13;
wanted.&#13;
April, 1867. .XiUfA&#13;
M. bobbins to Gen. Dodge, Kansas City, BthV -' -X ^rCeo&#13;
, Your letter and the draft came safely to hand, I send enclbVd'a'note for the amount of the draft, as you did not say anything&#13;
about how you wanted it fixed.&#13;
The Radicals carried our city at the charter election, elect-&#13;
" ing all the ticket for city officers by from one to three hiindred&#13;
Majority, and electing six put of eight councilman. We elected a&#13;
New England Yankee for mayor. Pretty ^-e 11 done, for Kansas City,&#13;
I think, ' ' Id r . . .. .&#13;
i-Sf-- going'to have a horse railroad from the Pacific ^.R.&#13;
depot to Westport, It will run either past my house pr within half&#13;
ft square of me.&#13;
«ftd ia-n F" Thoe. F. Withrow . to Gen. Do^ge, Des Moines, 9th:' 'I&#13;
, Yours of the third came to hand this morning. Thanks for&#13;
your attention to the bualnese of the Superlntendenoyoff the bulldlns.&#13;
. Palwr read me your letter to him of the same date. Our&#13;
'■ friends here.were very reticent In regard to you^ plane, even 1&#13;
did not.know that yoi. regarded a change In the aesessorehlp ae&#13;
among the poaelblUHee. There Is a copperhead operator at the&#13;
telegraph office', who drlnketh much whiskey and trains with' the men&#13;
«,o Fould be mawng Inquiry. The probabilities 'are that It gof&#13;
out through him. or was received from Washington.&#13;
There le eaether matter about which I want to talk with you&#13;
frankly, end that 1. the post office. Ithen we commenced the fighlS&#13;
for you last sm-cr. Brandt was^promlsed distinctly and unqqulvo-&#13;
:••;» .• i •' V. v--" &gt; ;■' ■ ■'&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
cally that if a change v.as made in the post office and your friends&#13;
. ,v coi^ld control, he should have the place. Palm r sqys they talked&#13;
with Tichenor before oommitting himself and did it with Tichenjrr's&#13;
approval. Brandt liked you and hatpd Kasson, but he has been once&#13;
"•■ ' deceived and-disappointed by Kasson and was averse to taking any&#13;
'active part in the contest. Any appointment of Tichenor uhder the&#13;
'circumstances woul'i embarrass us much, and would be even more em&#13;
barrassing to him. 1 have said this, with no feeling of unkindness&#13;
tft Tichenor. I am his friend. He has no better friend all the&#13;
•'town over than Palmer. Yet I have -v'ritten this at Palmer's suggestion&#13;
and with hie request that I would say to you that it fully express- ^&#13;
ed -is views.&#13;
We all understand that nobody is under any obligation to Uyers,&#13;
and nobody feels badly because he 'is out. Some of* ua felt that bencT, , .&#13;
tween him and Thompson there was little choice politically, that&#13;
everythlne else being equal it would be better to keep the office&#13;
in the district. Thomson's connection with the friends at the&#13;
CohTressional election last fall has made him odius, and as matters&#13;
no. Stand no capital can be made' out of his confimation. Those&#13;
,ho find fault with it curse the Senate,"and I have heard no one&#13;
complain of, you. Some of the papers in HubbaM's district have&#13;
pitched into Hubbard holding hi- r«ponsible and charge him with&#13;
a bargain. ,&#13;
. The Sen.Ur.'.lll have a good time explaining some of these&#13;
..^ppnfirmations.^ Th^ people'expected much from the Tenure of Office&#13;
ARR ' &gt;f. , ' , » -V&#13;
April, 1867. . "'"T , Ui "&#13;
bill ani they are sadl3r disappointed. I have heard many declare&#13;
that they would pefer to see everything in the hands of the Presi&#13;
dent's friends than to have the present piebald arrangement. It&#13;
(Jo Senators good to come home and visit a while with the people&#13;
2" Kasson left here saying that he would probably go to Europe&#13;
on postal business. It is understood here that he is mak ng his&#13;
arrangements to give you a fight next summer. Your friends here&#13;
do not trust Clerk. He appointed Bowers in the face of^the united&#13;
recommendations of your friends for Goodrell.&#13;
Now, General, I send this letter reluctantly, because I think&#13;
it possible I may be misunderstood'. Tichenor took offense at my&#13;
declining once before to see the interests of all our mutual friends&#13;
in his promotion. I regard him as caable and steadfast, and I&#13;
would gladly see him promoted to this position, if it did not in-&#13;
-wolve Palmer, myself and himself in an apparent breach of faith&#13;
With Brandt. I have written to you frankly, confident that if I&#13;
am not miiunderstood you will approve my purpose, if you do not&#13;
agree with me in judgment. ^ ^&#13;
f ' nvwofi , .. ^ Baltimore City, Md., March 9th, 1867&#13;
M I ;:. iL ' ' li 1 ■&#13;
Uy dear General: &gt;&#13;
' ' Tour kind ansiier has Justlreaohad me, and I must&#13;
'und.r-rat. your ability as a Member of Congress. Members&#13;
have power, and as you kindly expressed your williness to assist&#13;
Aptil, 1867. • vtjwi&#13;
me, I feel quite sure that I'shall succeed. And now allow me to&#13;
state as concisely as possible what I desire,&#13;
I have always had an ambition to study law; but as a wife and&#13;
child demand my efforts to support them, I cannot give any portion&#13;
of my time to the attainment of my object. My only chance is to&#13;
obtain a permanent situation in "S^ashington that will only require&#13;
a portion of my time,* leaving me the balance for study. I shall,&#13;
of course, be glad to receive anything you can-obtain, but as there&#13;
is one particular place which would fill the bill exactly, I shall&#13;
take the liberty of asking for it. There are certain men appointed&#13;
by the Doorkeeper of the Housei who are called permanent assistants&#13;
ho hold their places all the year round, and last as long as the&#13;
Doorkeeer's place lasts, but it will give the assistant all or&#13;
part of the time between sessions. This, you will observe, would&#13;
afford me just the thing I want. Now, as you have elected and exofficer of the army as your new doorkeeper, he will have all the&#13;
appointments to make, an'if you should represent to him that a&#13;
soldier of your command, who has once been dismissed his situation&#13;
for being 'a radical, desires one of these permanent places, I doubt&#13;
not, he would glw, it to me. But if this should not suoceed, I an&#13;
prepared to be thattkful for a ything, and I have witnessed too many&#13;
or your flank movements to entertain the belief that you will fail to&#13;
overcome an tllitiois officer, - hiob I believe your doorkeeper is.&#13;
pardon my freedom. General, and believe that I am truiy grate-&#13;
■j V*'&#13;
- '&#13;
April, 1867,&#13;
ful for your disinterested influence, I hope to hear favorably^&#13;
from you sccn._ Respectfully,&#13;
^ Chas, W, Hildreth.&#13;
, iT j r; •; T&#13;
' S.MPbriaanency is, above all things, what I desire,&#13;
.®.' -i^Ac ,. Williamsburg, Long Island, Dec, 14, 1868&#13;
a R ' , • 3 L . •&#13;
I am tied up hand and foot with disease of the&#13;
lungs which incapacitates me for working at my business, (printing)&#13;
and 1 must either look to friends for favors, or remain housed up&#13;
for some time. What I wish 'to ask is, that you will pla'oe me on&#13;
your list of remembrance, when Orant comes Into powe'r. Theh will&#13;
of course be thousands of folks ousted and thousands put into their&#13;
places, and It will matter little to the Administration who fill&#13;
bhese offices, as they will, as heretofore, go to those recommended&#13;
by Member, of Congress. Such a place as you obtained for Ensign&#13;
would bo e good thing for me, as my lungs require warmer air than&#13;
this latitude affords, and this being my first winter north for&#13;
years. It Is rouah'iu my lungs, and anything that will let me Hue&#13;
in Washington or south ef It. would be a big thing for me. l.kno.&#13;
It is over two months before Orant comes Into power, but I wished&#13;
simply to h. reme^ered when the time comes. My confidence in thus&#13;
addressing you, grow, out o^ the fact that It would be a novelty,&#13;
, + Bflk a favor of you that was not at least consider-&#13;
, Indeed, for me to ask a favor oi y&#13;
ed. and If possible, ccmHed with, though I hope I shan't ride a A&#13;
1 , I 'W;; ■ . '%&#13;
April, 1S67.&#13;
free horse to death.&#13;
I , utrnx noTt Xi#t&#13;
A word "from you would he gratefully received,'&#13;
.L*, , . . Yours respectfully,&#13;
♦ rxlB"*- I iiir^ XlB Bvou&#13;
* • * Hildr&#13;
tfof iMft&#13;
oth-,&#13;
Gen, Dodge's DfaVy Mea,, April 10th,&#13;
Left with H, C, Crane 600 shafies of'2^,' W," GonS"Co, stock as&#13;
j + t.&#13;
collateral on the company advances. qc ^ " ; f . I&#13;
See' about brick machine, i&lt;tot/lv «prruX&#13;
■ •- Jioor •: ;f- T '&#13;
„ Gen, J, A. Williamson, C,C.Cole, B, P. Allen, Geo, C, Tichenor,&#13;
to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, April 12th, 1167,&#13;
Your best friends ard everybody else protest against y ou re&#13;
commending Young instead of Whittaker,&#13;
; t&#13;
Tichenor to Gen, Dodge, Des Moines, April 14th: ,, ,&#13;
se^^la&#13;
■ one.r-faf&#13;
Benton sends a strong telegreim to Randall for me and said he&#13;
would write, I learn^ however, from Seward Smith that Kasson blocked&#13;
the' game with Randall, as he wrote Smith and Teesdale, that he had&#13;
fixed you on Noel and Teesdale effectually. He is welcme to all&#13;
he can make b- holding Teesdale then? now, as I have succeeded in&#13;
getting up sufih a row aAoagst is friends that the strongest of&#13;
them will desert him oh that very account, and they will now go&#13;
with me and against him. The disaffection ag^^inst him would have&#13;
•been still greater if you hr-d recojpoa^i^^ftf^ which I hope ? • *. t,&#13;
you Ifcriow by this time. »di ? j. ^ ^&#13;
For my part, I am tmly glad you did get Thompson confirmed&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
as against Myers, and since my last,I am satisfied it will do you&#13;
good here, especially as Thompson is to move here, Y/hen I wrote&#13;
last, I did so under impressions got from Palmer, Withrow and Dewey,&#13;
hut since talking with the masses, I find an entirely different&#13;
feeling all good Republicans say that you did just right, and you&#13;
have made hundreds of friends by it. The Register came out in a&#13;
severe article on it, but that will do no harm.&#13;
The truth is. General, you cannot be guided by a certain influsnoe here, and 1 tell you frankly that the less you consult&#13;
Withrow and Dewey, the better. Palmer is all right himself, but'&#13;
ye yield? too reaUly to Withrow. God knows i regard you and ad&#13;
vise you as a friend whose Interests I study; while others here '&#13;
are governed by their own interest and not yours, in their advice&#13;
and suggestions, and sooner or later"you will find this out and unUegs you are warned in time you will learn it to your sorrow. If&#13;
you hearken to the advice and suggestions of those men you will op-&#13;
:p0Be me f,or we differ widely. You can therefore choose for your&#13;
self. I find them disagreeing with me in almost everything. You&#13;
soug-t my wg.«»endation of a man for Supetintendent of the Court&#13;
House, and I, in gqod faith, reoommended Whlttaker, and Palmer agreed&#13;
with me in it, but Dewey and Withrow (wanting to till me off) got&#13;
Palmer to unit* with them on Young,&#13;
. ■ i HOW. 1 certainly think, that after asking me i. recommend a man&#13;
you ought to have avided by my recommendation. Your failure to do " 3 '19&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
.ffWII ,XiT A&#13;
■'ifl T,is-, " - - - « f.,- ,. .«., ,,-&#13;
so has placed me in a very emharrassing and disagreeable situation;&#13;
« . • r I- •&#13;
and I think farther, that it was certainly very disc urteous in&#13;
these men to volunteer to try to head v^e off, after you had placed&#13;
the matter in my hands, and they knew it, and let me assure you&#13;
that I V ill make them regret it if it take a life time.&#13;
The knew that Whittake'r did not vote for Tuttle , and they know&#13;
furthermore that he was the best man, but they wanted to kill me&#13;
in your influence, and to head me off from getting a pwer that I&#13;
could control here, and which they foun' I might not use "dst asi&#13;
.they might dictate. But let me assure you", that they will get theworst of the battle everytimc they cross swords with me. And if&#13;
they think they can fix up another man for Congress against you,&#13;
they ore fearfully mistaken. As God lives, I believe that their&#13;
i^game has beento kill Kasson, then you, so as to make room for rn&#13;
-q their "pe^" intending to stand by you next time, however, if&#13;
.necessary to beat Kaeson, but not otherwise.&#13;
*&#13;
I had made up my mind to move to Council Bluffs, if you did&#13;
,«&gt;t set me anything .atuaehlngton. but I have now about oonoluded&#13;
to remain here and fight it ouft, as my friends are anxious 1 should&#13;
J do, and I have thought some of making overtures to.Thompson when&#13;
« I i Wi dj i -r&#13;
he comee here.&#13;
«« a about that cadetship to Naval Academy^? '• - -t&#13;
' ' ■^'Fvri&#13;
Junction City, Kan. April, 14, 186&#13;
Dear Sister:-&#13;
I have been wanting to write to you for a long time.&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
and have been prevented by the ;^ny little troublesome circimstances&#13;
incident to a re-6penins of business in a new place, distant from&#13;
my family, and without the conveneinces we have been used to for so&#13;
long, and having to supply ever thing necessary for carrying on&#13;
the business. (Everyt-iing- was destroyed in the fire, and very many&#13;
things that I never missed until now.) , f&#13;
Was at home a week ago. today and saw Letty and her new babya fine but not very pretty (don*J» tell her I said so, though) boy&#13;
two weeks old last Monday. She was then sitting up and quite smart&#13;
bodily, but exceedingly, low-spirited. I had but a few moments time,&#13;
"and did hot succeed in eljioiting her confidence, but^ suppose that&#13;
the prime cause is her feeling of poverty, and occasionally the&#13;
idea that she is neglected, not fully appreciating, perhaps, how many&#13;
urgent calls Artless and you and I have on our time. She feels&#13;
tadly about bolBS in dabt, but I told her that was not only useless,&#13;
-but decidedly .rone: that their creditors would not disturb them,&#13;
and would like it better If she did not fret over it. 1 suppose Dootor 13 really nearly as low-spirited as she, but Is more reticent,&#13;
and I wish eh. would not give way to such feelings- for which she&#13;
in reality•Ka» dc adequate ouase. 1 . P. Brown.&#13;
Thos. H. Ben ton, Jr. to Gen. Dodge. Marshall town, Iowa, 16th.&#13;
Some day. .Inc. I telegraphed the Postmaster General recom&#13;
mending the appolnW of Col.Qeo. C. Tlohenor for the position&#13;
of Post-aeter at De. »l.l»ea in place of Mr. Teesdale. dapt. Cross&#13;
was my first choice for the place, but having failed in his oa.e.&#13;
April, 1867, . E , '&#13;
I do not hesitate to recoiaiaend Col. Tichenor, and you may so advise&#13;
Gen. Raiidall. 9n the score of merit and services to the government&#13;
I think the change should be made without delay. ^&#13;
r ■ Gen, Dodge's Private Mem. 16th: f .- , urtlv rl ,-noX&#13;
.1 IgliSfl: 'Charged up funds on my books to N.P.D. B ooks up to this&#13;
date. .. . . r ' n&#13;
"'C " ^ ®eorge M. Bailey to Mrs. Dodge, Omaha, Neb. 17th: «-&#13;
' j in a dilemma. The hotel on which I had counted so much&#13;
has been rented and I am left out in the cold; the boarding house ■&#13;
*Wepers have raised th6 price of board until how I am compelled to&#13;
■ pay my wages i.e. $75 per month for board. The cause of my boring&#13;
you with this, is that if' you do not object, I would be glad if&#13;
^ 'you wo\nd ask the General to increase my pay when he returns.&#13;
" f t,* &gt; . '&#13;
Geo. C. Tichenor to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 18th:- '&#13;
God bless you.' The dispatches of this mooning announce my&#13;
, I, - - appointment and confirmation. I have no words to express my grati&#13;
tude to you and "can only^'say that I hope you know me well enough&#13;
to + /N realize rfaaTi7.Pi how how very vBTV tlisnkful tliankful I I sm am to to you. you. ' ' 'loj jo.'&#13;
A day or two will serve to make matters all right withrall our&#13;
friendsl although'l shall continue to feel that ^ithrow. Palmer and&#13;
others have sought to do'me very great injustice without the least&#13;
cause or provocation, and while I am most anxious for peace and&#13;
friendship, I will make them no' concessions, and they must come to&#13;
me. Th&lt;^y have misrepresented me in the grossest manner, in connec-&#13;
•'■••.(jr''. w,h.&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
tion with my efforts 'for iihittaker, as well as that Post office,&#13;
God knows that I have done, mn both particulars, what I thought&#13;
right and best for both ourselves and you, and it will t.ake but&#13;
little time to prove me right. They tried to create the impression&#13;
that there was a trade between Whittaker and myself, wh.ich was a&#13;
wicked and malicious lie. I recommended Whittaker because I knew&#13;
him to be a good man, and because I knew his appointment by your&#13;
Influence would effectually demorali-ze the Kasson clique. Kasson&#13;
hastened from here to T/ashington for the. especial purpose of shut&#13;
ting you off on t' ^is'post office matter, and the day he left Wash&#13;
ington he wrote Sev/arfl Smith as follows;&#13;
"I have effectually headed off Dodge and Tiohenor, both as to&#13;
the rost office and Cole Foel,"'&amp;C.&#13;
■ '• I shall make no fight on the nwh-«llo have thns sought to In-&#13;
'jSre'me'ln your esteem, as they have been your friends, but if they&#13;
want peace and my frieBtehlp hereafter, they must come to me&#13;
and take back all they have said and done.&#13;
■ Whittaker, Allen and all of the strong Kasson men swear by&#13;
you now", and If Whittaker Is appointed, Kasson won't have ten friends&#13;
In town.' I 'know this. j.'nl -n&#13;
' Please telegraph oh write Ewlng to hurry forward my letter of&#13;
appointment.&#13;
IMiiLif^Annle. ,&#13;
Slkhorn, Nebraksas, April, 19^ 1867&#13;
. I feel as though I ought to do something for myself. If&#13;
I had a. piemo I could get plenty of music scholars.&#13;
noie ion&#13;
. ■ r&#13;
,** t j - «• •&#13;
April, 1867. ^7r'.vr&#13;
Sue says, please bring Laura with you. I have not finished the&#13;
ottaman yetj Emma has had no chance to. send the zephyr out, and I&#13;
have none. Truly,&#13;
Estelle.&#13;
• aj . A B. Mullen to Gen. Dodge, Treasury DepartiBent, 20th:&#13;
T 'f? v T I have to acknowledge the receipt of your telegrams of the&#13;
19th Mnst. ^ jr . ^&#13;
aanlGeo. C. Tichnor to Gen. Dddge, Des Moines, 21st:&#13;
#4wfn 1c Teesdale and" his friends are fearfully taken aback at my apI&#13;
*i^fntment, and as Teesdale .threatens his old dodge of starting an- jl&#13;
other paper, some of our weak~kneed folks aie frightened and I have&#13;
an intimation that they have written and telegra]phed to Harlan to&#13;
have my confirmation reconsidered, and on yesterday I had a tele&#13;
gram sent to Harlan sighed by Cole, Williamson, xillen, bourse and&#13;
others, expressing the greatest satisfaction on part of the Radical&#13;
Republicans at TeeMal's removal and my appointment.&#13;
I think P. ii. Mills and others of the Register, together with&#13;
EasSOn^s special friends, are at work with Teesdale and M . Harlan,&#13;
and I am informed that I api represented as a Conservative, an that&#13;
my appointment was secured by Conservative influence, &amp;c. &amp;c.&#13;
^ If the Sena+e continues in session, and you think it necessary&#13;
; would like you to telegraph Harian not to let these infernal&#13;
scoundrels deceive him'. I have feared that your own'and other&#13;
'.mwea miOit be forged to telegrams, as I believe Teesdale and one&#13;
or two of his advisors would not scruple at anything. Mills would&#13;
not stoop to anything of the kind,^but others here would.&#13;
■ \ y ' *■ '.'• ^ ■&gt;; ' ^ &gt;■■&#13;
" "'i' ' ■ .&#13;
April, 1867. . -""-of&#13;
yy, ■ ■ The fact is that the Republicans, he re as a mass are rejoiced&#13;
at my appointment and propose to give me a complimentary aupper. '&#13;
,I have almost dislocated my right hand receiving congrautlations&#13;
from all sources except cops and a few of Kasson's puppies and two&#13;
or three weak-kneed Register men.&#13;
Whittaker and TJilliavason are both appointed and are happy and&#13;
everybody is well pleased that amounts to anything. Your final&#13;
recommendation of TThittaker has -^one'you great ood. - -saxe&#13;
Hoyt Sherman has got home with the plans'fdr the Court House,&#13;
If anything can be done,to remove Cole Noel and appoint Ander-&#13;
■feon, for God's sake, do it. We intend to get up a record of Noel's&#13;
conduct that we think will remove him. Kasscn^a friends say that-he&#13;
will have to account to them for keeping Noel after he (Noel) had^&#13;
boltfed the ticket and did the other Copperhead work that he has,^ ^&#13;
Teneyck Beekman was appointed Post master at Lewis and sent&#13;
on his bond, after wRich a Mr. Chappell was strongly recommended for&#13;
^he place ond the'?. M. General hesitates about issuing commission&#13;
to Beekman. Both Beekman and Chappell I learn are Copperheads and&#13;
politically there seems no choice between them, but I know Beekman&#13;
is a No, 1 young man and often votes for Republicans. He has a&#13;
store at Leels, enU he .eke »e to say that he aould like you to ^&#13;
,Ptte St. John B. L. Skinner, Asst, P. M. Oenl., sayine he is a wor&#13;
thy capatli »o«hg man,, eminently qualified and well eateemed.-&#13;
.8 he eertalnly le. Lyman oan tell you all about It, I suppose,&#13;
of course, that no Republican could get the office, and moraovar&#13;
■ ."^'' ^ Tr./ r^V'..:; -j&#13;
" ■ , . i'"/- 1. , y 'lA'" 1&#13;
t« ' , ■ ,■ 'L '&#13;
. I .7* .." 'i-&gt; • -&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
it only pays $350 per year. Beekman wants it because it would draw&#13;
trade to his store. J, iti.i.h I -&#13;
Judge Cole has returned home and is sorry he'did not see you.&#13;
Gen. Dodge's Private Mem., 22nd:&#13;
-.0 E.r-OiU.if'&#13;
Missouri River at extra height and is higher than ever known.&#13;
•^rte '&#13;
At Lower Landing it is even with bank; at Omaha covers all ground&#13;
except sand ridge, shops, out, &amp;c. Covers Lane and ground to depot&#13;
grounds of N.T'.R.R. also covers side track at that point.&#13;
J. L. Williams to Gen. Dodge, Fort Wayne, 22nd:&#13;
As to the Transportation Company, I told Mr. Creighton in New&#13;
^'york that I left very little.interest withyou and him, and that&#13;
if you concluded to sell out or cloee up, I wanted my stock to go&#13;
with yours. He remarked that as my stock had not been issued, it .&#13;
need not now issue, till you see how it turns.&#13;
I was gratified to learn b y letter from Mr. ^Carter that the&#13;
friends in New YoPk'fta^ arranged for a million^ of dollars for the&#13;
work,&#13;
" ' l/ t go iflih' you to Salt Lake, as I hope to do, it is rather&#13;
important not being so light aS yourself, that I have a good&#13;
horse. Mr. Creighton thought that among so many army horses, and&#13;
' others, that would'be at Omaha, one might be obtained. Will you have&#13;
some friend who is a good Judrre of horses, look out for .:e, The^&#13;
' ifft".-&#13;
work.&#13;
♦ ^ 1 UtTY f i&#13;
qualifications are:&#13;
J®. -&#13;
' * - i i ... 1. Ji.. 9 r.i'f&#13;
a."» MdJ to&#13;
April, 1867, —&#13;
•• . &lt; t!.&#13;
,ri; ,&#13;
1st. Sure footedness, that |ie_iiay not stumble as did "Cling&#13;
IVater, t f,nn. i ^ ^ i. (tMH .1 ^&#13;
2nd. A fast ^Ik for common gait. , . ^ Tei;sr. •:&#13;
•II' 3rd. An easy lope for occasional speedy, movement, r&#13;
aiJi ^ For a man weighing 200, much of comfort and health depends up&#13;
on' the horse. • , . ' '&#13;
After completing the expedition about Salt Lake and Wahsatch&#13;
Range, I presume I shall find it necessary to hurry back to the&#13;
stage, leaving the horse there, or turning him over to others.&#13;
I am just starting to Pa. with my family to attend the marri&#13;
age of my second son. Back soon. Shall be glad to hear from you.&#13;
KiVid regards to Mrs. Dodge. , - V. • a a tt&#13;
F. "C. Hills t Gen. Dodge, Denison, 22nd: -rgi, : if9 X&#13;
Your telegram of the 10th inst was received, ai^ the people&#13;
arrived here the some afternoon. I have paid them as follows:&#13;
28 Meals at Denison at 50 cts, ^ . |14.00&#13;
Paid fare to C. Bluffs, Private&#13;
Conveyance 36.00&#13;
^0.00&#13;
I do not think trains will run through in a week or two, and&#13;
* «&#13;
'their board hare for a week would amount to more than fare paid.&#13;
Oeo E. Ford to Gen. Dodlge, Philadelphia, 22nd. . :&#13;
You know,wheneyou were here, you spoke about a captaincy being&#13;
vacant in the U, S. Cavalry, which you thought I could get., I have&#13;
April, 1867. ,VdCl , r.i&#13;
1 concluded to enter^*the service, if i b'btain even'a Ist Lieutenancy&#13;
So, if you can do anything in furtherance of my object, you will&#13;
confer a great favor. •1. O i TjI*' J;&#13;
If*, however, you think I am t,oo late, and the popition filled,&#13;
"' ''what kind of a berth can you give me, (if any) on your road? I am&#13;
determined to leave this city, and my choice is, first, the Army,&#13;
and failing in that, next, the T^est. I have not the capital myself&#13;
to enter into business for myself in the west or any other place,&#13;
and «o not wish to obtain It from my father. I wish to go to, work&#13;
- and push myself up by my own Individual exertions and no thanks to&#13;
ahybody. TmiB. .i Dijf' J 07&#13;
I am a good bookkeeper, and am n.ot afraid of work, and think&#13;
I ought to be able to make my own way through the world, and not&#13;
'depend, aa I am forced to do here, to be bolstered up by my fath&#13;
er's good name. I only want the slightest pretext for coming West&#13;
(If I do no't succeed In getting a commission) and wlU quickly ac&#13;
cept any positioner situation that will insure me my expenses the&#13;
first year.&#13;
T. L. Tullock to Hon." a.' Dodge, Washington, D.C. 22nd!&#13;
■' '* The receipt of the mohe-y will W&gt; promptly acknowledged.&#13;
p. *. Palmer to Gen. Dodge,. Dea koines, 23rd:&#13;
Vlted , Bswa arrived here last week of Tlchenor's confirmation by the&#13;
"MiI i «nG * suHpose you learned of It as soon as we did. Brandt&#13;
April, 1867. .r&gt;6 f .&#13;
came ov.er to see me, and felt considerably worked up on the subject,&#13;
(&#13;
particularly as certain Kasson men who had known of his P. Li. Aspi&#13;
rations, had reminded him that they had told h m he would be cheated&#13;
by George, &amp;c. He desired me to write you, and ask if there was to&#13;
be no change in his behalf after next Presidential election, in ..&#13;
case cur ticket should be successful. Of course, I have used my&#13;
ihfluence to keep peace betv/een George and Brandt, and have urged&#13;
George to go over and have a frank talk with Isaac. I'urdged him&#13;
to do this the moment I received your letter notifying me"that you&#13;
had recommended hi... . If he had done this, then all trbuble would&#13;
have been avoide-'. I fear he has not done it yet. By t^e neglect «&#13;
he has caused embarrassment to you and to many of your friends ^&#13;
here. If you can think of any encouraging thing for the future ^ ^&#13;
that you can write me, .to be shown to Brandt, please do I&#13;
not ask it on my own account, but that we may have harnomy among&#13;
our friends. . o'! «*-■ n f &gt;i--' . i ;&#13;
i wc r 1 '■&#13;
Whittaker ^nd . «lllia.ison were appointed before you could have&#13;
reached Lewis, t i , ,^1^&#13;
' Please remember .me kindly to Urs. Dodge and to Hub.&#13;
, u. L. Morgan to Gen. Doflge, Ft. Leavenworth. 24th:&#13;
. ,• i : ... It 1. a quarter to three o'olock, and iM hod not etopped&#13;
•to i« « qu.Btlon I would have" been ..rltlng to you when- we had Juet&#13;
no. t*o aietlnot earthquake shocks. The house' In which I have ,y&#13;
off lew, »y own;hW. "hook as if the, were rolling all the stones . t lO of&#13;
April, 1867. ,£Y^&#13;
up stairs at once from orie end of the building to the other";' "&#13;
- '.T" . 1 have just got back from an inspection tour which lasted a&#13;
little beyond a month. I did not find it very pleasant, but I hope&#13;
i earned my mileage. THien I got back I found my commission as&#13;
Brevet Brigadier General and papers from you. Tho brevet suited&#13;
me in every particular. You know that I thank you for this, and ' o&#13;
these and other things. I judge from the Globe that you have been;&#13;
at work on our' sutler business. When you have it completed, it&#13;
will be a good thing for the army. You are very kind,&#13;
I was very much pleased to see that life. Myer's name was finally&#13;
sent in for confirmation. It is humiliating to an honest and able&#13;
man to be passed over, while a man like one of our acquaintance is&#13;
promoted apparently without question. ®&#13;
I was very sori^ for poor old Abadio. • His case is the first&#13;
within my experience of that kind. He entered the Army in 1836,&#13;
and is now thrown out in his old age for no faxolt of hi.s own. The&#13;
Army is beccming too much of a political machine, and the sooner&#13;
it is stopped the better it will be for the Amy and .the country. .&#13;
I suppose you see the reports of Hancock's doings in the Mis&#13;
souri pemocrat. The Indians are hostile, but will not again, in&#13;
my opinion, meet him In any numbers. If he had gone out to fight,&#13;
that is to chastise, he had a chance to do it. He met mo Cheyennes&#13;
and Sioux who pretended t^ friendly, uhtii hight came, when they&#13;
stole off, leaving their standing. Ouster is after.them,&#13;
April, 186&#13;
but he Tfcill not catch the..v.. They will scatter and carry on depre-&#13;
'dations on bodies of men who are unprepared for them.y rv I&#13;
a Remember Remember me to Lirs. Dodge. '&#13;
Note: J.- 7?. Paddock to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 24th (3rd Assessment&#13;
W.T.Co.) ' • ' « '&#13;
Philip Henson to Gen. Dodge, Corinth, i-iss., 2 5th;~'; n^Iwa!!&#13;
After my best respects, I would infor you that I am located&#13;
at this place, still in the Government service, publishing a paper,&#13;
the Union. It is emphatically what its name imports, the Union.&#13;
I send you a copy in the hope you will so far interest yourself as&#13;
to aid me in procuring a good list of subscribers in yovir locality&#13;
and forward to me. ;&#13;
• Be sure to write to me, and I wish to procure our. signature&#13;
to some papers in publishing a book. Wi^en I hear from you, will&#13;
write more fully on the subject. Please do all you can for me, and&#13;
write to me at your earliest convenience. , ^&#13;
Gen. Dodge's private Llem. 26th, , ^ ^ ^ ^ , ^&#13;
' Oliver Ames and Carter arrived to^ay. I River.&#13;
j nnff nnion Train and others Mr. Carter crossed* Lynn, Duff, Dino&#13;
arrived at night. , yy^. ^ ' -fMHl&#13;
Note:- J. t. Brown to Oon. Dodge, Saint Louis, ^Sth.&#13;
'Oeo. 0. TlBhenor to Gen. Dodge, Des Uolnes, 27th.&#13;
"* •' I have your favor of the aiet. Ton are rljht in jour view of&#13;
Wie crse, jet I regret to fee) that you are not clearlj advised of&#13;
■' the true condition of matter, here.&#13;
certain gentlemen here dld^not talk to jou as they have to&#13;
,■ 'a:-' .&#13;
April, 1867. . &gt;0 t &lt; I J Tt&#13;
others, and h^ve not acted as their pofessions to you woiird. indi&#13;
cate, I was .confirmed by the Senate on the 17th; on the 18th tele&#13;
grams were sent from here of such a nature and over such names as&#13;
to cause Harlan to have .my case.d called up for re-consideration.&#13;
Oi;i the 20th, I had Cole, Allen, Williamson, and Godfrey telegraph&#13;
Harlan tti my favor, and Harlan .now w&gt; Ites them that my case was&#13;
pending in the Senate when he received the telegram, and on the&#13;
strength of their endorsement he had me confirmed."&#13;
Now I have it pretty well figured down who signed these pro&#13;
tests to Harlan, and Iti a few days I shall have all the facts, t&#13;
name s, dates, &amp;c. &amp;c., and we shall then see who is right and who&#13;
is wrong.&#13;
Now, God knows, I have sought no split with anybody and I have&#13;
given no cause for any. I did not object to palmer and Withrow .&#13;
recommending Brandt; they did right in so doing, and I told them&#13;
so at the time, and I prdmlsed that in case of my appointment, I&#13;
would make it all right with firandt, as I intend to do. The truth&#13;
is, the difficulty between them and myself had nothing whatever to&#13;
do with the Post- ffice; it all" sprang from the Court House Super&#13;
intendence, and I will give you its hist ry, which is simply as&#13;
, ./ .\i Sill. , ^ho'. ♦ re# oj&#13;
follows; . . -&#13;
On receipt of yo'ur letter telling me to ^recommend a man, I&#13;
took the letter to Palmer add asked him to recommend. After keep&#13;
ing the letter three days, he failed to recommend anybody, and&#13;
when I called on him I told him i thought I would recommend Whittaker&#13;
April, 1867. .7-.S. -it&#13;
:m:-&#13;
to which he agreed, and after I reccciiaended Wleittaker, I told&#13;
him I had done so, and he said, "All right." Well, in a day or so, I&#13;
found he and others had recoininended Young, and were telling you in&#13;
telegraius that I had recommended a Tuttle man. Not only had they.,&#13;
done this, hut they talked publicly about my fellows hip with the&#13;
Kasson men and said that they would fix me with Dodge and all .&#13;
that kind of thing. :-i. . . L&#13;
Now, in recommending "hittaker, I recommended an old and warm&#13;
personal friend and tha best man that could be found, and I knew&#13;
that in doing so, I could do more to kill Kasson, than Palmer&#13;
Wit^-row could do in a thousand years, and as'to toadying with Kasson's friends, god knows that the m^^n who intimates such a thing&#13;
is an infernal liar. No man here has fought Kasson more bitterly&#13;
and will not, than myself. , . ' , ,j)&#13;
' For your sake, I am determined not to do anything to make^&#13;
trouble amongst thOBe here *0 pretend to be your friends,^d .ill&#13;
do all I can to bring about peace and good feeling (and there ia&#13;
the best of feeling existing between myself and all your friends,&#13;
except the three or four parties in question) but if they persist^&#13;
in a fig-t on me, I .m make them sick of it. You ought to knm&#13;
ho. dear-your interests and .'iehes - re to me, and that I would not&#13;
go counter to your wishes, unless fenced to in order to preserve my&#13;
own rigjits and self respect. • rX Je-i"&#13;
I enclose your letter to Tluompson. I wlH ="&#13;
and agree upon some tody for Twmtiswfc'e clerkship.&#13;
... ;&#13;
■ * 1)&#13;
' • . . ■ ■' i&#13;
April, 1867. I i( -i&#13;
Since iTeesdale failed to kill my confirinaiion, he has gone to&#13;
t work with the Copperheads and has got them to send on a remonstrance&#13;
id Randall and the President asking that my commission be withheld,&#13;
and I learn that it was signed by most of the leading Copperheads.&#13;
I have not received my official notice of my appointment, and am in&#13;
clined i'o believe I will not soon, unless somebody there looks af&#13;
ter it. Do you think I better go to Washington,, or can you tele--&#13;
graph down there an^' have it attended toj Harlan has left.&#13;
1 think ;^ou better recommend liiajor A. Anderson to Thompson;&#13;
he could go into partnership with Thompson in the practice of law,&#13;
and also share the Penslnn Agency. This would be better than to.&#13;
recommend anybody hdre. Let me know whether you do this.&#13;
Capt. David Patee, late of this place, has removed to Al&#13;
ton, Dallas County, Iowa, and is engaged.in:selling goods, and he&#13;
wants the Post officer there and says fche people there want him to&#13;
have it,'and that the present incumbent don't want it an^' longer as&#13;
it don't pay anything. I hope you will recommend Patee as ho is&#13;
al'excellent young man. wee a gooH soldier, and Is a sound.Radloal&#13;
Republioan. He .ants to know If It IS, psoassary to get other recommendat ions.&#13;
. I .&#13;
"' Note:- '^ol Q«n; Circular, No..13, Li.O.L.L. U.S.29th.&#13;
0«n. Dodge's privat«^imoranda|, twiibc v,&#13;
CoMienced laying t*ack today. I'oa ■ ;&#13;
' (kiol Tlchenor to 0.n. Dodge, D.s Uoines, 89th:&#13;
Since writing y&lt;M ye'atsrday I have seen Palmer and he heartily&#13;
April, 1867. ^ ^ .&#13;
concurs in the opinion that the best thing you can do is to get&#13;
Anderson in v/ith Thompson. Anderson is a promising young lawyer,&#13;
and could go in partnership with Thompson, and as the Pension Agency&#13;
pays about $5,000 a year, Thompson ought to give him at least $2000&#13;
If in future you could get hold of the Assessorship, you could give&#13;
it to him and he would be here where the Assessor's office should&#13;
1&#13;
be, Anderson is well worthy your assistance.&#13;
*&#13;
I had a long, free and candid talk with Palmer and arranged&#13;
our little difference mutually satisfactorily, I will see'Brandt&#13;
and Withrow today ^nd tomorrow and hope to tell you that all is'^ '&#13;
right, I have no hope (and not much desire) of coming to terms '&#13;
irith Dewey, You can be assured that Palmer and myself are all&#13;
right as heretofore, and hope our late misunderstanding may be^speed-&#13;
♦ '■ A&#13;
ily fofgotten. \&#13;
My brother-in-law, Ed Getchell, had been examined by a physi&#13;
cian who thinks he will not pass at the N'-val Academy, and in con-\&#13;
sequence we feel that we will have to abaondon the thought of sond-|&#13;
.ing him, which we greatly regret, I will see if Brandt wants the&#13;
. 'u -&#13;
place for his son,&#13;
• t.&#13;
J, L, Vlilliams to Gen, Dodge, Cincinnati, 29thj "-rfn-n -&#13;
I am convinced that a broad and strong combination'is being&#13;
formed between the St, Louis, Cairo &amp; Ohio Valley R.R. interest on&#13;
one l^nd, and the Chicago &amp; North western and Lake Shore intereat on the other, for passing throu^ the next session a bill i|iving sufficient Government aid to both the Northern Southern Pa&#13;
cific Railroads, At the meeting of the Pt. W, &amp; Chicago Road in&#13;
€&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
,vmt&#13;
N. Y. on the 22nd, Gcv.Smith being on hand, Mr. Ogden urged with&#13;
' all his persuasive force and influence, which you know is not small,&#13;
that inasmuch as the Northern line was sure to be built, our Board&#13;
had better favor it with a view to a shore in the traffic which&#13;
would reach Chicago through the Minnesota connection, and I regret&#13;
to say that he uucceeded in getting the Board to lend its sanction,&#13;
• •&#13;
though against the judgment of our soundest men, such as Lanier and&#13;
Tilden. iir, Harbergh did all he could to resist it, as I should,&#13;
had I been present. J. Edgar Thompson, also a member of our board,&#13;
was, of course, influential in the same direction. Of course tether&#13;
leading East and West lines north of the Fort Wayne, as well as^&#13;
ghe Baltimore and Ohio will favor the combination. And when the&#13;
Southern members get fairly in their seats, I see not how this Log&#13;
• ' 't f.&#13;
rolling combination is to be defeated. 1 i ' ' " '&#13;
Mr, Ogden, whom.I met at Pittsburgh a few days ago, informed&#13;
-ime that kr. Thompson told him,the Kansas line would diverge towards&#13;
Santa fo, not going even to Denver. If this is so, Colorado and&#13;
the min ng interest can look only to our line, and it wili be well&#13;
to arrange for a pharter and for funds to build the branch.&#13;
• . : Prom what is rumored of Indian difficulties, I appehend that&#13;
parties will be hindered in their surveys and that&#13;
'' Vo" Hill pi'o'laWT defer your reoonnolsanoe to Salt Lake. If you can&#13;
■ upSn'^ome oentral point «f intersection for the line over Rat&#13;
■ tlesnake Pass, and the line or lines north of llediolne Bow, S. Pass,&#13;
'&#13;
MV at or east of Brldgers Pass, could you not nake throBgh surveys « ' ■ J1 ; :■&#13;
Epril, 1867.&#13;
( f» &gt;■.• •■ ' ; . ( ■ . ■ ■ .&#13;
to that point, so as to fix the location this summer for 100 or 150&#13;
T&#13;
miles west of La-amie River? Then if enginering operations must&#13;
' '&gt;&#13;
be suspendeii further west and the location to Salt Lake deferred&#13;
to another year, no ^^elay of the work would result. But it may be&#13;
that the ^ndian depredations &lt;?ill quiet down. The survey and campaigns of various routes, if made under apprehension of Indian&#13;
raids, will not be thoroughly made. - .&#13;
•»-" Shall be glad to hear from you at Fort Wayne. 'erf&#13;
j, L. Williams, to Gen. Dddge, London, Ohio, 29th.&#13;
^ What I said in my letter of this morning, so far as it speaks&#13;
of the action of the P. Ft. W. &amp; C. Board, you will please consider&#13;
confidential. T ose who pushed it through may take their own way&#13;
Of publishing it. I ought not to do It. It was not the deliberate &lt; eti'&#13;
judgment of the Board when all are present, and will amount to&#13;
nothing. 1 named It to you that you might be forewarned. Br. Lanter&#13;
has since said it was wrong, and so will others.&#13;
One main Pacific R.R. and branch should be the policy until&#13;
the amount of through business is tested. This log rolling syatern may hazard all and break down our principal system.&#13;
. Gen. Dodge to Hon. S. St. John Skinner, Counoll Bluffs, 29th&#13;
I .^apeotfUlly request that Hugh H. Burke of Council Bluffs,&#13;
lowa, be appoint^l Route or Mall Agent on the N.W.R.R. between&#13;
Clinton and eouncll Bluff. Iowa. I understand that two or more&#13;
new agents ere, to be appointed, and recommend Mr. Burke fram^A perii«kr tiiowiedge Of his fitness for the positlm, is Integrity, and&#13;
... . army, and ask the appointment solely on these&#13;
; « I&#13;
April, 1807.&#13;
, IfJf* ■- ■ ' ■ .ii&#13;
grounds. He entered the amy in 1861; took part in all the cam-&#13;
. ; ' ■■ ■ ''k:\ paigns and battles of the Army of the Tennessee under Generals • ]&#13;
'!&#13;
Sherman, MoPherson and Howard; and was honorably discharged at the&#13;
termination of the war. He was a brave, active, faithful soldier,&#13;
and I trust you will see proper to reward hiva. J&#13;
J. i.:. Brown to Gen. Dodge, Saint Louis, 29th. (Note)&#13;
J, Teesdale to Gen. Dodge, Des aloines, 29th: '&#13;
An acquaintanceship extending back ten years (at least.four&#13;
years before you knew that there was such a person as Geo. Tiohenor&#13;
In existence, and s.ix years before'he-became a member of tbe Repub&#13;
lican party) Justifies me in addressing- you. It is all the more&#13;
fitting, because of the fact that I have'been charged with abandon&#13;
ing my political party and voting against you. This charge has&#13;
been made at Washington, as I have the authority o-f Senator Harlan&#13;
for stating. By whom tlia charge was made, it n eods not that I should&#13;
state. I presume that if you made it and sought to Justify, my re&#13;
moval on that ground, you did so believing it. There can be no&#13;
mistake as to your informant, and truth requires that I should&#13;
state that he is a liar and slanderer, who cannot ever plead igno&#13;
rance for his assassin-like traduction. A soldier ought to know&#13;
.bow "to appreciate a men who thus stealthily stabs a neighbor.&#13;
I am a member of your own political organisation, and have not&#13;
swerved a moment in my allegiance. I was infoimed that if I sup-&#13;
.,,.rted Gen. Tuttie I should have d, office guaranteed to me. J.fte- ^&#13;
cloned the overture. I was told that if I did not. my decapitation&#13;
WM inevitable. 1 replied that I was prepare d to abide the conse- j&#13;
AQ0&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
quences. My reaoval was detemined upon and the place pledged tq&#13;
• J L 0 X&#13;
another before election. Gen. Tuttle visited Washington to make&#13;
the pledge good. He failed. I had been apointed for a second&#13;
term, by the recommendation of nearly all the leading Republicans&#13;
and business i^.en of Des koines. I have served but 15 ..onths since,&#13;
my confirmation. The Tenure of Office bill had been passed. I had&#13;
faithfully performed the duties of my office, and supposed that&#13;
there would be no inclination to disturb me during my term, as no ^&#13;
cause for such disturbance would be alleged. It is true that, with&#13;
three-fourths of the Republicans here, I had fqvored the re-nomina&#13;
tion of Mr. Kasson, even before your name was connected with the&#13;
canvass as well as after. But it was a choice between friends, which&#13;
is not considered a political crime. My opposition ended with your&#13;
nomination. I supported you in good faith. I did not suppose it&#13;
necessary to fawn like a sypophant and tel^ of my services; I con&#13;
fided in our old time friendship for due consideration and justice&#13;
at your hands. While thus confiding, I am thrust from the office&#13;
I hold, at your instigation, without the slighfest warning, withouy&#13;
a hearing, without a petition ft«om a single soul in favor of my&#13;
successor, without consultation of the community doing business at&#13;
th9 office, and against the advice of' your own intimate friends. ,&#13;
^ NOW I ask', sir.'with all-earnestness and plainness, is this&#13;
night. t.'this just.- IB this What I had a right to expect from&#13;
nr.t&lt;nir .horn I "tts threatened with and expect&#13;
an old friend, for eupportlne&#13;
4 4. A +vioi Tilftin. unvarnished facts; I subm&#13;
,a o«t.racl«f I have recited the plain, unva&#13;
hatter sense of what 18 due between honorable, them to your own oetx-er seri»o&#13;
-%-V&#13;
'.V&#13;
April, 1867 ."^C «U««A&#13;
fair-dealing men, associated in the same cause, t-" -S?»D'*or^&#13;
Had my term been at a close, had thefe been complaint against&#13;
my officia] action, had there been an open expression from my own&#13;
party against me and for my competitor, the case would have been&#13;
different. But none of these events -transpired. The blow was&#13;
struck at the close of the session, when there was no opportunity&#13;
or time for counter action, and a man is selected for my place whom&#13;
I kept iri my office as a clerk (when I first took possession)&#13;
until I was ?/aited upon "by Republicans with a formal remonstrance ^ y&#13;
against keeping him in the office, on the ground that they no&#13;
confidence in his honesty. , •&gt;,. ■ v&#13;
That I feel keenly such a blow you need not be surprised^ 4S&#13;
it such troatmentas I had a right to"expect?&#13;
Mrs, Dodge to the* General, March 5, 1867. J&#13;
foi : T. '•&#13;
— i&#13;
Today your letter from N.Y. Came, written soon after your arrival.&#13;
. f f'J&#13;
••ll'mW, Reynolds to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 30th:&#13;
^ Hr. A. T. Hall has been appointed Asbt. General&#13;
Su|). of this road, vice G. h. Beardsley, and some changes may be 1&#13;
made in subordinate positions along the line, to suit the wishes- ^&#13;
of'the new incumbent. I do not know that I will be interfered with&#13;
As I think Mr. Tracy, Gen], ^pt, Mr. Cook, Secy, and Mr. Viele,&#13;
Gen. Ft. Agt, are friends to be depended upn. Mb, Hall.may, how-&#13;
"^Vv'eri make changes without the knowledge of Mr. Tracy.'&#13;
SlJsOif T informed by a Mr. Brown (Fatty they call litm) has"&#13;
X ha&#13;
'istf Mr#&#13;
Aril, 1867.&#13;
and is now Travelling Agant for the N.Y'.R.R. that Mr, Hall ex&#13;
pressed a desire to have him (Brown) come out to take charge of&#13;
our affairs here. I presume it was done through Brown's pcrsisten&#13;
cy, as he, I understand, will probably be dispensed with on the&#13;
N. P. R. soon, and he wants this point badly. I resigned my position in Washington City to accept thi?, on aondition that when the&#13;
road got here I was to have charge of this point, if I wished it,&#13;
at a reasonable salary. This Brown, considering his ignorance,&#13;
• •&#13;
will need more salary than I, and he ma get the appointment, but&#13;
as I have stood the brunt of the battle so far, I should like the&#13;
*&#13;
control of matters here under more favorable circumstances. In&#13;
ydars gone by I have worked hard for this company (from 1856 to&#13;
1861) and flatter mycelf that I understand the duties which pertain&#13;
to an agency or station as well as any one they might put here, and my&#13;
acquaintance has been extended considerably since my return here,&#13;
-r:? I would now, in view of these facts, respectfully ask your&#13;
kind aid and powerflkl influence by giving me a letter to Mr. John T.&#13;
Tracy, President and Genl. Supt., and if possible laying the matter&#13;
before him personally, and referring to the question of salary,&#13;
which is little enough at $135 per month; Brown wants $180. I have&#13;
let-ters of recommendation lying in Mr. Tracy''s office : rom Hon. fiPrice, J. W. primes. J. B.. r^rinnel, W. B. Allison, S. J. Kirkwood,&#13;
S C Pomeroy, Jos. S. Wilson, Genls. ^ *. Rice, Belknap, Hedrick,&#13;
Chip®an, Ac,&#13;
In regard to this, Mr. Price will also aid me, as also Mr. B. F.&#13;
its&#13;
1&#13;
V. ' . !r ,&#13;
, " ■ ■ ' ■ . I&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
I •-.&#13;
Allen. For th'is favor," General, I will be under great obligations&#13;
and if all can be arranged right, I hope to be able to reciprocate&#13;
on some future occasion.&#13;
Geo. T^hittaker is well pleased at receiving the appointment&#13;
hi&#13;
as Superintendent o'f the building to be erected here. Hnyt' Sherman&#13;
made special trip to Washington in his behalf, so I am told,&#13;
I presume that Ur. Brown will not be the only applicant for&#13;
this position. Mr. Webstter started for Lewis this morning with a;'&#13;
party to make further examinations and' to run line from that point&#13;
to the Bluffs, ^&#13;
A, L. Chetlain to Gen. Dodge, Salt Lake City, U.T. May 2nd.&#13;
Your favor of the 5th of March enclosing note to Mr. Snyder; for&#13;
passes was received yesterday. Accept my sincere thanks for the&#13;
favor. I think I wrote you that through Mr. House I obtained of '&#13;
Genl, Supt. Stevens passes for self and wife.&#13;
'1&#13;
We have been here six weeks. We had a long and tedious trio . ^&#13;
• • ■'■mI&#13;
of it coming through. We rode 400 miles in an open sleigh after i&#13;
leaving Denver. My wife stood thfe'hardships of the journey fetter&#13;
I than I supposed she would. Everybody has treated us with considera&#13;
tion since we arrived. We have a pleasant home at Capt. Hooper s,&#13;
,^8l.g8U to Oongreas, who Is'an old frlsnd, fomerly of Galena.&#13;
, W« have made the acquaintance of several firrft class Gentile fami&#13;
lies, and will therefore not want for congenial society during our&#13;
stay here. I called of Ura Dodge on my way here, "as glad to see&#13;
494</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42581">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42570">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - April 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42571">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42572">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
April 1867&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42573">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42574">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42575">
                <text>April 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42576">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42577">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42578">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42579">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42580">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4211" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="10420">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/b4f7ff47a78bdd542a90e5e159117745.pdf</src>
        <authentication>104eda12ec827e045cc4e8e4b3dc8d50</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42476">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42465">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - August 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42466">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42467">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
August 1866&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42468">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42469">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42470">
                <text>August 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42471">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42472">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42473">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42474">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42475">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107554">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1551">
        <name>1866</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4223" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4299">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/96d5b6f2d18cd1b15392cd24ad96fe33.pdf</src>
        <authentication>2627c7744fb7f4a92a59c64ff906030b</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58549">
                    <text>July, 1867.&#13;
but the accoamodations are so poor at Julesburg that I may not do so.&#13;
'4, " ■ ■ . . TOliver Ames to Gen. Dodge, New York, 1 (Telegram)&#13;
Let the line be located and under bontract immediately.&#13;
Oliver Ames t Gen. Dodge, New York, 1:&#13;
■' . I t , '&#13;
' 4 V, • 1» ,&#13;
I wrote you yesterday in answer to your letters of July 20th&#13;
from Cro" Creek, ^e are in receipt today of one of July 11th from&#13;
some place in which you express a fear that Biickensderfer may take all&#13;
♦&#13;
summer to mak© his decision. This will be unfortunate for us, as I&#13;
hoped he would have felt the importance of an early decision of this&#13;
question that we might have the liberty to issue our bonds in advance&#13;
of the mountains regions. I hope you will suggest to him that the&#13;
road is in actual need &lt;if an early decision of this question if it is&#13;
to be pushed with the speed that the people of the country require.&#13;
I said to j'ou yesterday that we wanted to comlete the road as&#13;
far west as possible this season, and that any grade or curve within&#13;
the limits of our charter might be adopte"! to hasten the work. I do&#13;
not, of course, mean by this that you should put in a heavy grade or&#13;
short curve aeroly tp save a little money, but to save time so that&#13;
the Eradlng may at all times, if possible, be haead &lt;k thS track-laylng-&#13;
■ and we shall not merely for a eood alignment run into heavy outs that&#13;
will iWp th. progress of the track for months.' Our reputation today&#13;
eepsnds upen rapid coBStructlon. When ihS road Is co»»st»d *o can&#13;
Improve ths grades and eurves though It will be" k heavy additional&#13;
• ■■ ■ ^t1&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
cost.&#13;
. ►-V&amp;er&#13;
■. .rfr-c:?.''' • iJS&#13;
Your call for, engiu'^ers will be answered as soon as we can secure&#13;
- I ^ *&#13;
the ri-^t men. A Llr. Mansfield (a son of the gentleman whw got up our&#13;
pamphlets advertising our bonds) wh has had considerable experience in&#13;
\ i •&#13;
the Rocky Mountains we have applied to, and who has an application for&#13;
a place on the. road, but h-^ve not yet got his answer. We will be able&#13;
'if, ,in a few days I think to get the right sort of men; of young and in-&#13;
^experienced men we have any nuantity of applications, and I have been&#13;
working over the large file of apJ)lications here for places as engi&#13;
neers on our road, but they all seem to be too old now to answer. I&#13;
have in view a very good locating engineer and have written him but&#13;
• he has not yet answered. , , , V&#13;
In,,your urgent need of men why not take House and some of the&#13;
«-ia«n fr?«fthe office until you get supplied with competent engineers,&#13;
.i. %:do axKU locaJ;^ the, heavy work of the mountains and to look after the&#13;
construction, you war&gt;t, men of experience and not the diass that ftlfijit&#13;
have looked. after the work on the Platte Valley.&#13;
^ ' '.ff ' - . • , t&#13;
.rdt . Mrs. Dodge to the General, Council Bluffs, l':-' * »&#13;
, I, have at last reoelvad three lettere from ybu, began to&#13;
-dleooerwd! U .as three weeks before I he'd'a letter, miKkise yon&#13;
r not to Ta..' f nave not written very' lately, ddd not kn.-.here&#13;
to dlre.t »nd anppos.d you h-d left Sannders long before your telegram&#13;
ttwULKe you had Just arrlv?«.&#13;
- ■ • ■ ".j "o»&#13;
y • ■ set along&#13;
,,&#13;
at yow&#13;
" ''ilk , ^&#13;
iT •&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
• «&#13;
rate of travel you wont get back till winter. How strange that you&#13;
will do every other man's work; not much advantage in being "Chief&#13;
Engineer," when you have to take all the work of those under you.&#13;
I send you nearly all the papers. You send a singular name • . *&#13;
to send your mail to, I cant m'~ke it out, and have no Idea where the&#13;
North Fortk Platte line stage station can be, and no one seems to knowl&#13;
All matters about home are in first rate or'^er; horses fine, garden&#13;
first rate, shade trees nearly all living- every one in front.&#13;
They are harvesting out to Elkhorn; crops good, but corn will be late.&#13;
Bailey is slow about his fence, had luiuber all ready though and guess&#13;
they will have., it up this month. Cattle all first rate. Your brick&#13;
blpok drags , . .&#13;
Little Annie^ better; she calls "papa" and does not forget the&#13;
t .1 •»' •' ,&#13;
Indian,&#13;
J. L- Trillioms to Qen.Dodge, Fort Wayne, S;&#13;
1 wrote you a few days ago to Fort Drldger, In answer to&#13;
yours froB rheyepne. Of course, I will not"be misunderstood in regard&#13;
to lowering the BWimum grade on the Black Hills. I an in favor of it&#13;
if a careful re-»*aB*natlon on correct engineering principles shall&#13;
indicate it as proper. Col. Seymour has large experience In close&#13;
IflMwfcHatlons of thia kind-more than I have-and it is well that he&#13;
h., undertaken a thorough re-exmnination-,' for which he-is wery compe&#13;
tent. I meant to sug^Bt_^a caution, which 1 presume is uiinwOeosary,&#13;
against top much In «nd out curvature to" ovoid rook cutting tad flUa&#13;
(- .»)• t V . ,.&#13;
, •■' . ■ •: fr-&#13;
, . ^ ; &gt; ■&#13;
August, 1867,&#13;
*-,► r r t I . ^ ^ . . .. , ... .. ,, ^. .. .. I - . 1 ,&#13;
Of only moderate cost*. We'must expect to encouJiter some work In the&#13;
mountain section and with a mountain subsidy. The Col. no doubt will&#13;
present his maps and profiles to the'Board and tfien I shall be better&#13;
fitted to advise. I am against an undue idcrease of distance. Figures&#13;
and estimates ought to sh'ow just how much to increase distsnce and&#13;
curvature for lO ft. lower grade.&#13;
I start on the 51jh to New York. Board meets on the lEth.- What&#13;
Will ypu do for experienced locating engineers in place'of those valu&#13;
able men killed by thn Indians? I fear I shall become'an Indian hater.&#13;
. Haa npt^the race fulfilled its mission on the earth?&#13;
I have never been more laboriously employed in engineering in- ^&#13;
vestlgatlons than ,,lnoe 1 parted with you at Julasburg. Staged a week&#13;
at Oaaha, then two days at Kaneae ony-extreu.ely hot weattferi then at&#13;
St. Loule and St. Charles four days, then a day at Quinoy, -and n&lt;Jw for&#13;
two and a in the railroad of floe here; All this time on the&#13;
bridge investigations. Som,,one,should go again to Kansas City and dulnoy&#13;
,t.. oetober, after the rjv.r.shall'have fallen;and some Bf the fotodatlcns&#13;
tvio full benefit of all "their etperionce ftto lt will ' f in. We can get the luii oeneiAi- HofOoever. hy helng a year;behind these brldfths .0: could&#13;
bU, their outfit of pile drivers, dredge maohAes'. anchor cables,&#13;
boats. AO. at half price. Ur. Ohanute has expended -frb»:tt.±nty to&#13;
. . ,ort, thousand doH.V.&gt; -tiit °i fls kind, Including ten thousand&#13;
• - ^dbiur.; fe. a eteamboat. At' cp^lnoy cost of outfit la -u6h larger.&#13;
Mr. Ohanute aounde the river every week o^two. It deepened V&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
by the floods from February to July from, 5 to 18 feet and in one place&#13;
30 feet. This la^st was owing to washing around a protected point&#13;
above where the Santa Fe contractors used to land. At St. Louis the&#13;
whole bod of the river was, scoured put 18 feet, Dont you think it must&#13;
deenen in the spring and summer at Omaha in places and „then fill up&#13;
before winter where you took your soundings? Te ought to have had a&#13;
system of soundings to ascertain these changes,&#13;
I presume no definite action will be taken upon, bridge location&#13;
until you return. The season will .be jtop. short after the meeting of&#13;
^hfe board in August to put in foiindation this fall, though the bridge&#13;
is much needed and should be commenced somewhere soon, yet if you will&#13;
notice the operation ait i(^saa City and ^uincy you will see that it&#13;
must .rfct "be too anoh-hurried, iiy concern is chiefly to find a perfect- ' " « I .&#13;
ly secure plan of foundation in the sad , and .ona which is practicable&#13;
to be put in, and at such roaeonable exp nse as will not tfefeat the&#13;
object. Of course, pitas and rip rap will accomplish it, but it must&#13;
be deep and tide and pt in just right. The company, and not th^&#13;
crnlracto mist put In th» foundations.&#13;
perhaps you *111 have obtained some good, general views on loca&#13;
tion from Ur.' feliokenVlefer. Get ail the light you can from aU&#13;
sources for the benefit of our great natiwl work. Write me about&#13;
Rattlesnake Pass and Bear River^. - , ^ ,, . ^ ^ ,&#13;
OeA, Oodgi to his wife,TI&lt;»i^ R.R^^rosaing, 3:.^^.; ^ ,&#13;
I '1 ♦ • '&#13;
' •• . i*.h * '&#13;
•- ,■ , ■&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
I telegraphed you from the Medicine Bow River and have sent&#13;
dispatch today to stage station; when messenger returns I expect to&#13;
hear from you. Mo'nday I shall push west from here and shall telegraph&#13;
you from some point dn road, v/henever I strikd it say 100 miles o r&#13;
more west. 150 miles more takes me out of Indian country.&#13;
There has been more interest in this country to me t"han ever; it&#13;
1^ mountain piled on*mounta4n, immense canyons, upland hills and per&#13;
pendicular walls of stone; something new daily to attract the attention,&#13;
eomething to develop, and as I travel over it I often think what&#13;
scenerhtthere will be from the cars- I can take you through and show&#13;
you all the prominent points. Yesterday I named the three prominent ^&#13;
peaks of the west Rattleshkae Range, ri^t where we crossed through&#13;
there, Ella, Lettie, Little Annie. The centre peak is highest, the&#13;
left next and th right amallest; all are joined together like three&#13;
little girls should be and they will always he prominent points on&#13;
the route,"1 hadbtrtr artist take sketch of them with a part of the&#13;
party'on^^llha'^lfeheSt, which I-ehoUld judge was 7500 feet above the sea.&#13;
The North Platte River is ^ bold mountain 2100 feet wide, skirted&#13;
with small groves o^* cottonwood* C.lear^ cold water flows in it, all&#13;
coming from the snow or the gi^nite peaks. After travelling two days&#13;
without running VUter," the whole earth impregnated with alkali, in&#13;
places some of it a foot thick, it.is .a great relief to strke such a&#13;
country aft tAlS. oditotry otherw^sa is barren, rocky, alkali, ^&#13;
of sage brush, grease wood and cactus. It can be of no earthly use,&#13;
August, 1867. «&#13;
and so I think far a long time w3,ir s^« nothing grow or live here&#13;
except it be the mountain inhabitants who" get .us wood, lumber, &amp;c.&#13;
The monhtains to .our south are full of 'fine timber, pine, nnd down the&#13;
mountain streams, it will'come by the. millions of feet to our line,&#13;
thence to go east or west. Coal aboun'^s I .think all along the line,&#13;
and it will furnis^- us plenty of fuel, . I can hardly describe this&#13;
country by letter, -but I can show« it to you next year and'point out all&#13;
its inviting features. Elk lio^^ntain is the great land mark through&#13;
here; at its foot lies Rattlesnake- Pass, Fort Halleck &amp;c.&#13;
In going Vest I stri'l^ into a^ entirely noW covuitry only developed&#13;
partial ly by my own parties; from-here I can see 60 iailes west, it&#13;
looks smooth and good for railroad purposes. From Fort Saunders I&#13;
hear I have got a good line and the parties are to work locating it,&#13;
changing, making new explorations. Sec. In ten days I expect to be at&#13;
Green River or near there; thence to Fort Bridger, It is 60 miles; to&#13;
Srlt Lak e 200, I wish I was there,&#13;
I suppose you are having hot weather while out here it is cool,&#13;
ccmfortablsi have had no very hot daysj now and then the AttftTsums but&#13;
I have worn thick olothee, woolen shirts and sleep under-iti or three&#13;
blankets every night. Our only trouble yom here west will be wate-r;&#13;
j,t is scarce, but I have good guldee and'think I shall have-no trouble.&#13;
I hope to get a long letter from you tonglth or Ih the morning; will&#13;
' i " 1 I ^ r, 0i4lW&#13;
finiah this after uiefiUMin^ors get in.&#13;
I- . r, a«W./&#13;
rr&#13;
i-' •' ' , ■&#13;
■y,.&#13;
August, 1867, . f*&#13;
Messengers have just got in, "but b'o letters. Send all mail here&#13;
aCter to Fort £ridger. Got lots of papers.&#13;
Mr. Appleton of Brown's party arrived today. They are in a&#13;
cotuntry out of water and halted. I shall have to take them through,&#13;
I- also hear today that Mr. Evans was called to Omaha on accoTint of&#13;
severe illness of his family. .&#13;
I leave here today, Llondiay, pushing -West. It may be ten days or&#13;
two weeks before you can hear from me, ,^Loye to all and kisses for all.&#13;
I look anxiously, fisr yojur letters. _ ,r • &gt; '-&#13;
■ S. Seymour to Gen. Dodge, North Platte River, D. T. , 4;&#13;
,3. v^iiaving somewhat hastily expressed my views to you this morn&#13;
ing in welatVon to the objectionable features of thfe route^between&#13;
■Fort Saunders and .this place over which we have just passed, as well&#13;
ss the by which I thought .they mi^t be avoided, I embrace a&#13;
* ' t '&#13;
f^w raqppjfcents leisure ,8t*t9 little more explicitly and in writing&#13;
the reasons why I have allked you to extend your surveys considerably m&#13;
ta .northwar(3^ of any route heretofore examined. My objection to&#13;
ii 'th preaent route Mje,briefly these:&#13;
'Tav ■ r * nl3t. Although considerably cheaper than the route surveyed by&#13;
Evans through the Rattlesnake Pass, yet it is very expensve.&#13;
2nd. Alt ough Brown's Pass is several hundred feet lowfer-than&#13;
Rettlesnal^e Pass, yet ^he undulations of grade over thfe divides between streams flowing into the Laraaie and Medicine Bow RlverS makes&#13;
a large aggregate of rise and fall, with, in several cases, heavy&#13;
August, 1867»&#13;
• 'tr&gt;'&#13;
maxinium grades, which should'be avoided If possible, or i&#13;
3d, The great scarcity if not absolute absence of running water&#13;
over some portions of the route doming the greatest portions of the&#13;
year will cause serious inconvenience and considerable rdditional&#13;
expense in building the road, and, very much fear, render it compara&#13;
tively useless for business purposes when completed.&#13;
There is no permanent living water on the woute betv/een the&#13;
Medicine Bow and North Platte Rivers, a distance of nearly fifty miles,&#13;
and I judge from the formation of the comtry that an adequate supply&#13;
for operating the road cannot b-obtained by the ordinary process of&#13;
sinking wells, if at all. ' '&#13;
A road with the traffic ^i'dh we claim must pass over the Union&#13;
Pacific Railroad, with subh grades as necessarily ihtervene over&#13;
this portion of the route, shduld have ample supply of water at inter&#13;
vals of not leas than ten miles in order to operate it with safety and&#13;
success. "During the meftihg of the snow, say from 1st of April to 1st&#13;
July, water tanks may be adequately supplied from the surface draingge,&#13;
during the balance or three-fourths of the year I do not believe&#13;
that a sufficient supply can be obtained to keep the trains moving&#13;
upon the road. This tO my mind is therefore the most fatal objection&#13;
of the three named.&#13;
I belive as a general rule that the road shall follpw, as near&#13;
as may be the principal water cdureee of the ocuntry through which it&#13;
passea, partlcul-rly whan they lead in the general direction of the&#13;
1 .&#13;
»- •.'^1&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
route which it^ is proposed to travers-although this theory pf •location&#13;
would in :uany cases increase the distance materially, yet the saving&#13;
per ®ile in first post in rise and fall of heavy grades, in facilities&#13;
for abundant supplies of water, in avoiding a succession of cuts where&#13;
snow 'would obsitruct the trains, in genera lly developing a better coun&#13;
try, and the greatly diminished cost as veil as additional certainty of&#13;
operating the road successfully* in my opinion, very far counterbal&#13;
ances any. obj ection that may be urged ta the elongation of the line&#13;
within reasonable limits. . , ,&#13;
j-t was upn this general principle that I recommen^^ed a change&#13;
of location insnediately west of Omaha, and for the saiue reason I have ^&#13;
always urge# ft c?»»eful Stirvey of routes up the North Platte and through&#13;
-the Laramle Cahert* It 1« rimit sett^^d that thd road is to come over&#13;
the Black Hill Range of the Rocky idountaina at Evans Pass, • nd there&#13;
fore I duty *8 .ponaultlng engineer to urge the adop&#13;
tion of the proper"?principles in the location of the line^from that&#13;
point westward* ' ' i ■ ■ .j,- '&#13;
* My knowledge of the topography_of the country is, of course, to-^'&#13;
limited *t the tlM to. enable me to state with much particular&#13;
ity the preoie* points or details of the location which I would recom&#13;
mend but eenerelly I would follow down the westerly slope of the&#13;
" Black Hills, with the leant pmotloab^r grade to the ^rmle Piains,&#13;
end thence along tW north-e-berly aide of the river until by crossing&#13;
11-1 i»6«!d *%old all the streema that flow into It from the_eouth and&#13;
August, 1867. .7X1 WWnr&#13;
west, as well as the divides betwe^^jthem, and-at the same time enable&#13;
me to cross the Rattle.snalje Hills either throu^ the pass made by the&#13;
Medicine Bow ^^iver or some more favorable depression north of it and&#13;
thus reach the valley of the North Plat^e at same point near the mouth&#13;
of the Sweet TJater which flows into it from the region of the South&#13;
Pass. If the valley of the Sweet T^ater is well supplied with water&#13;
and also practicable few* ft rv^ad, and if^the countrj' southof it is&#13;
barren of Water, I noul'd follow up this valley to the most eligible&#13;
point for crossing the •divWt® Continent.&#13;
' "•*'11: have become so thoroughly impressed with the importance of this&#13;
general houte and its great advantages as .compared with the routes al -&#13;
• ready survftyftd that I must a»k you to have it caref^&gt;lly surveyed and • * ' r f y ■ reported xipon'in oonneptton routes to ^4ch you may submit&#13;
to the Board of Directors,&#13;
(Mem, penciled on margin of above letter by Gen. Dodge)&#13;
- August 5th. Col. Sey»&lt;^.'8 stated he did not consider a railroad woul^&#13;
be built and j-un ovar, the route we .had travelled, but that we must&#13;
work into the Nqrth I^ork of Platte and run up the Sweet VTftter. Vie also&#13;
stated this to Gen. Rawlina denouncing the whole route as wrong and that&#13;
r*ilf*ol«l would never be built over :t.&#13;
■ i Afi#® to Gen. Dodge, K. Easton, 5; '&#13;
j tf'.*! am tn ^^^eip of your favor of Wly 21st, and also letters&#13;
'from Seymour in rafftTftlHj^ t© locPtion of line to avoid high britlge over&#13;
Dale Creek and take other changes that he thinks will lessen the grade&#13;
and not increase the aost. ti if, oc rouse, -desirable to do this but it&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
is not the desire of the Construction Gominittee to attempt to ,le63en a&#13;
grade when It is going to delay- the -work. If "by putting in-practicahle curves that will throw us out of heavy work and the cost .and time&#13;
of conistruction be reduced, such a change will meet the approval of&#13;
the Committee. .t o*&#13;
Vfe hoped that Carter #oHild have been able to go over the line&#13;
with W end that yoursel'f. Carter and Seymour, after looking careful&#13;
ly over Evan's line, tould have been able to suggest such alterations&#13;
as would hasten the'construbtiori and save hundreds of thousands of&#13;
dollars. As the road progresses the public become more impatient for&#13;
its comi&gt;letion and will be satisfied with nothing but most rigorous ^&#13;
prosecution of ^ e work. To '^o this we mu-t get the best line and&#13;
^ill have io slcrifice a perfect 'aiighment to rapidity of construction&#13;
and to bring the cost within the paying benefits.. If we make the road&#13;
^ cost trvTmu^h it' will'neUr pay dividends. All-tha»e .things are to&#13;
jbe taken into consideration, and to get the best -line the. best engiiltarir)^ talent will be required that can be procured. • '&#13;
Mrs Dodge to the Generalf Cound'll Bluffs, 5: * ■&#13;
I have felt bo ill for a week past-have-not wrlttenj aont&#13;
think 1 .hall got much heller till 1^ 1= cooler. ' .e have hot, .ukty,&#13;
St..-•&#13;
. thinks w^l be a great deal of sfl^h«bs during this and next&#13;
month, there is oon.lderahle among children no. and ..veral have died.&#13;
do '.,in&#13;
August, 1867. .■r"" "'" ,&#13;
Anni^ wes ^tfafeeh quite ^ick last evening and w&amp;s bTuining with&#13;
fever all night; cant tell yet whether it is from her teeth or chills&#13;
aad fever. She i&amp; mucir better this evening but has no/appetite and is&#13;
very fretful. I have had to hold her nearly all day&#13;
The papers in your district pblish a letter on your going west;&#13;
cant Imagine who you could write it tp, whic'h. says the sole cause of&#13;
your going was for your health,-as though ij.,was ^or pleasure instead&#13;
of business. I." . «''a/'I'i''- , ■&#13;
I guess you'have plenty of phpbi'S.. Hoxip says hr., Snyder sen'is&#13;
you h'good many. I have had no letters later than July 20th.&#13;
Omaha^ August 5th.&#13;
Dear Annie;&#13;
I did not IteJlerfctand yolxr letter until yesterday when&#13;
Mother told me trhftrt you had said» Mr. House said, "'hen he told the&#13;
General that I ims In the habit of neglecting my-duty and going shop&#13;
ping with my wife, he knew he was telling a base falsehood and telling&#13;
it without the least fourt^fatHiom' .&#13;
Ifte pay fixed t)y th^ Gs»e*»sj for was $75 per month. Mr.&#13;
House has reduced that to $65* - r ^ Geo. U. Bailey. Geo. U. Bailey.&#13;
Di(i^^"3istsr:&#13;
Monday, August 5h» 1867. ;.i ' ii.'fj&#13;
Poor.Mr» Brwwn, it is too bad. miat luck they are having!&#13;
and Mrs. Evan^ died Saturday. George and Emma came rut Saturday&#13;
night and wont tack yesterday. Minerva*&#13;
j.. 'i;.&#13;
•' ' *. »&#13;
August, 18P7.&#13;
r^Y^' r!J"..' it . James F. "Wilsdn to Gen., Do'^ge, .Falrifield, Iowa,!. 5«*.&#13;
tc ' I leam 'that It is in contemjbation to have an excursion&#13;
over -the U.P.R.R* next month*. If. this is so, I want yoix. to have ,&#13;
invitations extended to'the several members of the jujSioiary committee.&#13;
They are all anxious to make the trip and see the country. The members&#13;
are Geol.S. Bout1»ell, Groton, Liass; E. Woodbridge, V^rgines, Vt.&#13;
Cuhchill, Ofe'wego, N.Y.;.Thos. 7/illi:ims, Allegheny City, Fa; Frank&#13;
Thomas, Cvimberland, Maryland; 7?m. Lawrence, Bell fountain, Ohio; Sam.&#13;
Marshall,. Illinois, C. E..Eldridge, Fon du Lack, Wis. and myself,&#13;
Most of these gentlemen, want to., take their, wives or daughters.&#13;
Marshall unfortunately ha,s neither. I wish you would manage it so as ^&#13;
to have this excursion go off. . ,?&#13;
1 did not-e^hd ths. preemption claim to. the recorder as you dire-&#13;
' cted', for I did not know blit place In a position which&#13;
wbulff require explanation ih the evteht of an investigation being&#13;
. ordered to ascertain irWat ioombohs of Congress are interested in lands.&#13;
&amp;c. onnthe line of the U.P.R.R. If It is not too late I can send the&#13;
claim in the name t&gt;f another I would like to have the interest,&#13;
and see dcRhrn^ ifPbrt^ % it, but than®?h%» ^|i^about&#13;
publSc men being Interbsto'd in property along the line of the road&#13;
thdkt I do not want to do anything that would place me. in a fa^^^&#13;
position or ^e require-explnn^ tlon. ^ ,*i&#13;
■ ' Let'me hear ^ 'M WVb'hn as yt,n jffet this.&#13;
. •'-» - j&#13;
August, 18C7.&#13;
L. Pe?Lt)Ody,,to-Oen. Dodge, Lynnfield Centre, Llass. 6:&#13;
In looking over a late number of Harper I see yo^^^ name as&#13;
engineer on the Pacific H.R. now so- raidly being constructed, and th&#13;
thought, occurs ■^to,:rae that you are in just the position to enable- -you&#13;
to. give me some desired information.&#13;
My business at Savannah, Ga* owing to rebel influence proved a&#13;
losing game, and I am now out of business and desire to get it again.&#13;
My preference is for the law,^ and I think a new coimta?y very desirable&#13;
where a business 'Will grow up and I can grow with it. If I can hit&#13;
upon the ri^bflocality on your road, I have no dowbt I can, by industry&#13;
and hard work, atone for the failure down in Dixie.&#13;
Now, do you-know of the desirable locality? pne which I will not&#13;
probiibly stand still hut on b^e qontry take a 2:40 stride In growth?&#13;
My ci-rcumstanus^^ not edmlt of expensive prospecting and hence is&#13;
a heoerslty with me'to icnow about where I am going before I start.&#13;
' _ . ..&#13;
'^ile my preference Is to go back to my jirofession, becaus'e I&#13;
the capital for that and have no money for land urchases, y^till&#13;
f am willing towork at anything honorable Which will liiake me a living&#13;
and In the end give me a home for my f^ily. So, if you have.in mind&#13;
anything in connection with the'road which I can do 1 shall paeased&#13;
to have you mention it, 1 do not Intend to take my faiuily (wife and&#13;
one child) with me, but wait till'I can make a home for&#13;
, » - i&#13;
Dean and Matilda are In Lynn, and as well as usur.l. feuelnesffimf all&#13;
August, 1867. ' * ' ^&#13;
kinds Is verV dull and we can Yiot see* much prospect of a* change.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to his wife, In camp 30 miles west of North Platte 6:&#13;
I have an opportTinity to sent^ to the Stage Poad hy Gen,&#13;
Biggon who returns in morhl'ng. I am here on the last water, and mean&#13;
to try the 60 miles or more we«t without it after one days rest. We&#13;
have no grass to speak of aii'^ this ds truly a'barren, univiting coun&#13;
try. - .1 -I&#13;
Brown's party have been here two weeks unable to get.west for&#13;
want of w^ter*. I shall try to get them through" to water to the west&#13;
with'me'. Since I left North Platte have improved in health.&#13;
Seymoxir *and Buckens derfer leave me to go Ea,st tomorrow. Soymoi^&#13;
has been nothing" W a &lt;»rawback to me ever since he haa be n with me, ^&#13;
and even to" the cbinpany, and in my opinion is doing 'all he can to give&#13;
the company trouble. I hope hereafter they will drop him. If you see&#13;
Dillon you can sdy to him privately what 1 write. T suppose, however,&#13;
they wnd^arstand ^ thing-when he^ is gone it a&#13;
to J^e., &lt; - . j , .&#13;
I hopeffheii I reach Stage road again to get letters fromall of&#13;
you. Got non. at Sortn FotiJ of Platto, tut left word If any came to&#13;
send theffl forward to Oreen River. Thlo Is the hardest and I believe&#13;
th..«»8t responfsible trip I ever took. The country does not meet my&#13;
expeotmtions. The kllUne of my engineers, the demoralization that&#13;
cam from It and the dlffioultlea to surmount' are iftOUEh to set any&#13;
August, 1867. .&#13;
t&#13;
one but me back., I believe I am master of the situation nov; and will&#13;
make it win. As long as I can keep well I have no fears, and, I, must&#13;
say. Gen. Rawlins has be^n of great help to me. He enters into the&#13;
spirit of the matter; takes as much interest in our road as I dol&#13;
'• t • ' '&#13;
^ ^ ,^8 soon as I get through this cotxntry and strike Bitter Creek I&#13;
shall telegraph and, wpite. tell ing you all about it. Am plunging into # . ■ * • I&#13;
a country that very few have ever travelled.an^ I hope to develop&#13;
something that will be of benefit to us. Water is our ,great trouble.&#13;
I ^^CradeSj work ,a,i3d everything else is favorable. Coal exists in great&#13;
quantity but timber is scarce. n r SI r 'r &gt;&#13;
&lt;7-, I must close as it is gettipg^ l-te. Kiss t^e ,girls and baby and&#13;
Move to all. lOif, * it ' -noJ&#13;
J. H* Brpfn. jtQ lirs. Dodge, Saint^Anthon-", 7:- ^&#13;
At last I am domicilled in this health and strength renewing&#13;
place and this radically Hygienic Instituion, You have doubtless&#13;
; . "had enough descrllJions of the piace and the country so I will say&#13;
. hcxthlng on thai,, subject^ ojccept, that it is beautiful and delightful.&#13;
The air is pure, cool and bracing. The Falls are grand, and if we had&#13;
no Niagara, would be sublime, ^ ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
The diot is not very attractive to an epicure, but with the baths&#13;
, ftc. it lis oure to cure any ailing that human ingenuity is&#13;
''-M, able to cure, and no mistaAa..^ There are patSAAts here who in one, two&#13;
I and thr#e'»i»%hP trt*tJB«nts have gained 20 and 30 pounds and one man&#13;
told me he had gained 60 in less than two months.&#13;
t-v&#13;
r-rt M.&#13;
Aggust, 1867. * . «&#13;
Tell Ocean I have just finished reading first volume of Julius&#13;
f- ■* ..&#13;
Caesar "by Nap. 3d,'and if he wishes it will send it to him by mail.&#13;
1 shall be pleased* to hear from you or him. * *&#13;
-I • " -i ♦ ?"f i: -1 E. E. Edv/ards to Gen. Dodge, Chariton, lov/a, 7:&#13;
An effort is bein made by some Democrats in this place to&#13;
have our Post*master, James H, Weaver, removed.&#13;
Mrs. Dodge to the General, Council Bluffs, 8:-&#13;
I&#13;
If it is not bf muc I use to write you for I much doubt if yo&#13;
ever get the letters. I expect the Indians will make a bonfire of all&#13;
mail that go«r or comes on the TJ.P.R^R. and if they topthdre we are&#13;
fortunate; but I shall nbt wonder to hear of all work being stoppp'd&#13;
now, since they have commenced tearing up tracks and stopping trains&#13;
as you will see b^ the papers. How foolish you were to persist in&#13;
going out there this sun.ier. I pray you may get through all right but&#13;
I have very many misgivings. -- -&#13;
■ r * f ■ "V ^ . r 4 t -&#13;
Lettie and Ella are away to a picnic and I wish fh»y were homo; am&#13;
afraid they will make themselves sick. Little Annie ha« beeh'Guito&#13;
sick for several days'. Dr. l^r s* giv'i^n'her medicine today. * t orf?&#13;
Jas. A. Evns to Gen. Dodge, 'Omaha, '6 (TelegramJ mwI.-. r,i.&#13;
: d .t »{ ■ • .&#13;
! thinlc It is advisable that you should Vettii^ to Saunders,&#13;
do watch change in location. This: is important ^o .preyaat.Jl^ft^dr.&#13;
Jas, A. Evans to Gen. Dodge, •Omaha, 8!*- ' ' '• ,eni c&#13;
* So far as outward appearances ahe concemad tor the preser; i^&#13;
'V&#13;
August, 1867. . r ^&#13;
, fiRy great agony is over, through the great kindness of ay friends hero,&#13;
I was pennitted to follow the^remains of my beloved wife to the grave&#13;
yesterday* - She died oij Satusday while I was at Denver on my way. The&#13;
weather being very warm, it was only b2( great exertions that the sad&#13;
event could be postponed till I arrived on the evening of the 6ththrough the kindness of being furbished with a special train.&#13;
My dear sir, I am in great affliction, and I much fear that God&#13;
visitations are not yet eneded. The shock to..my oldest boy, a very&#13;
sensitive nervous subject, makes me tremble for his safety. H.e^.is&#13;
verj' low, and I cannot le^ve him. 7&lt;liat my .course may be&#13;
hereafter I know not. I feel that at present my duty is at the side&#13;
of my sick ohll(^. I know how badly I am wanted at Fort Sanders and&#13;
west'of' there, "l5ut the ways of Providence are not our ways, and at&#13;
present T canned . At Denver in much agony of miijd I wrote you as&#13;
much, with regard to this matter, as I was anxious you should make&#13;
some proviS-onfl for what 1 coneiderOd.a very prpbable q^ergency and&#13;
the let thing that I would require would be that business and friends&#13;
• ■&#13;
should suffer On account of my troubles,, 'J-' r&#13;
* ' ' ■ O'Neill will, 1 presiime, take up the profiles an^ maps from&#13;
Laramie over weist and do the! best we can with them. I have so written&#13;
"i&#13;
him. He is quite reluctant to proceed without my help, chiefly for&#13;
the reason of friendship-to me, but I have talked to him about the&#13;
^ «itter and'If you ©an so manage matters aa to give color to the idea&#13;
that t'fiave not 1i«4n»ill treated, he wll] remain and make a useful&#13;
-J-f ,. ,&#13;
August, 1867. • « '•&#13;
servant, f desire^^r ia^s" iake that this impressi'on should prevail&#13;
and that he should be with you. Mr. Laxwell I am sorry to say I am&#13;
not so confident will take up what you want should be done for the&#13;
want of proper instruction, seeing that ha is unacquainted with the&#13;
country, and unless you have received telegrams of mine sent to North&#13;
Platte, I so fear that he will be delayed in knowing what to do. As&#13;
you v/ere going over the line I thought it was best that you should fur&#13;
nish him with instructions as if I attempted to do it without going&#13;
with him over the ground I might be wrong. I shall telegraph and&#13;
write to both of them today or tomorrow. u, .&#13;
After you left m-e eft Sanders I commencerd platting the original&#13;
locattlon. I t'-oughl/'Hhfs was necessary as it rwould enable us to pt&#13;
on the*changes arid show the whole matter. I have the maps here with&#13;
so far as conibleted and have 'arranged it so that the changes will&#13;
speedily. " " « ' . ,&#13;
going Dillon requested me to write him about&#13;
matters in the Bladt^Htlls, and I do so today, enclosing jou with&#13;
this a copy of my letter,.for the reason as you are my superior it is&#13;
rlBht that yoli DhotiW fcniiT'lilX t&amp;a), .1 aa.j ahout business,mr tters. I&#13;
regret that Voh Ini noi h«K» to saa it bef«ro it is sent as you&#13;
might wish 'to modify it. Ui Jr.. - . v • " . :&#13;
" And now, sir. I wie'^ to say thie. .-Lei no consideration of frlen&#13;
ahip for me lead you in any way to compomise yourself; do and act in&#13;
reapeot ta think the case demands, looking solely to business,&#13;
, ' : '0&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
only, I fear much that there is a disposition to injure you if&#13;
possible. How sad it is that people for private ends will forget that&#13;
glorirus golden rule. _ .&#13;
Please give my kind regards to GeVi'.Rawlins and the rest of the&#13;
party and be assured that whatever may happen, I shall always con&#13;
tinue to" be y-'ur sincere friend. ' ' " ' l-'i - ■&#13;
Jas. A Evans to Sidney Dillon, Omahfe, 8: / ' t&#13;
Sometime in Jxme when you Iras at Omaha, yo.u asked me (as it&#13;
was then evident that I should soon go" West ,to resume labors In Black&#13;
Hills) to write you upon my reaching there, I was delajred Qn the^ way&#13;
there, chiefly in completing the work that Mr , Hills was so tanfortunately prevented from doing. A great, affliction has now brought me to&#13;
ObtaHli, tfhich will I trust explalU'Jitfiy I write you from, here.&#13;
To tome to matters at once pertinent, and of interest to you, I&#13;
find that there is a disposition to change and question the location&#13;
ovdr the Black Hi11a Which it was my fortune, in the pursuit of my duty,&#13;
to make. The means t«kOn to effect this are briefly as follows: where&#13;
grades of 90 foot are t»ed arguments will be pressed in favor of SO ft,&#13;
per miie Wider the asfliiilptiati tkat^for so desirable an end additional&#13;
expenditures are warrahlSd#' ' i'l-f-r: -&#13;
The first 90 foot grade we have on the original location of&#13;
Crow tJreek, occurs where We leave the valley of a crest to get up&#13;
'"*'oh the divide. It by Col. Seyswjur to throw the foot&#13;
of the grade sufficiently further east to get up with an 80 instead&#13;
August, 1867. . ; , ■&#13;
of 90 foot grade, hanging to the side hill,for a greater distance.&#13;
This matter can be accomlished by additional expen^^iture for&#13;
excavation and embankment. Here it is simply a question of cost and&#13;
if the coni?hy will incur additional expense, I know^..an;d have always&#13;
known since I became familiar with the locality that the court&lt;ry was&#13;
there for either^grade the company felt disposed to pay for.&#13;
I have in my location acted up to my instructions and all the&#13;
light I had. That a line of Sv ft. grade will in this valley require&#13;
additional expenditure, the profiles when they ooiae in will shpw un-&#13;
'■ mistakeably. It is ^ purely a financial question, that I am not called&#13;
upon to deterfaine the. uattef aftd I dismiss it with the simple and selfevident remark that the lowest'.grade is, of. course,-, the best, every (&#13;
thing being equal, and if ndt obtained by sharp curvatures. After&#13;
surjif^ting the divide rwith .either grade as wi-sdom may deteraine-the&#13;
grades can fbr a distance be made below either maximum. On the qrlginal locatiO^ they are ed with a single exception wbich, while in com&#13;
pany with^Oen.'^dge Eoldg b^r'tbe line I recommended and felt ^e-&#13;
^ r T ■ ■ ■ ■ sirous to chsnge. ■'&#13;
'' ' This explanation brings u4 to Sta. 870. ifcere on the orisinal&#13;
location a grade of 90 feel occur, again and continues to Sta. 973.&#13;
mil^s oui oVi,r the g«md hy using oonsldorable curratuns I so ohangcd&#13;
the profile as to rMucs *«Hr-.rltho«t ehanging the grade. If an&#13;
eighty foot gradi irf the profile ,.111 he. quite&#13;
August, 1867. «&#13;
heavy an&lt;^ work will be increased largely. The fact is'that here one&#13;
line occupied the summit of the divide and drops away from even a grade&#13;
of 90 ft. and there is no argument in favor of an 80 ft. grade that is&#13;
not equally applicable to a 70 ft. ^rade, namely the willingness of&#13;
those who furnish the money to use it for such purpose and I am very&#13;
sure that had a lighter grade been used than the one given, similar&#13;
argianents with-the same incentive would have been brought to bear in&#13;
favor of a change. ' • ,&#13;
'' ■ Tracing the line still westwarjii.:brings us to Lone Tree Crossing,&#13;
the change here is definitely adopted,.the chief-engineer having&#13;
honestly but unwisely I think, sanctioned the change under what&#13;
seemed to him a sort ^ necessity and-causqd chiefly I apprehend by&#13;
the fact that In opening.the cuttin«ffcji|o^good building stone was&#13;
found for pier and abutments. • . , • -&#13;
I Want to be.quite understood with regard to this change of line&#13;
and sttail he io'ffcP'txpllCit ei to make known what governed me in&#13;
seiectlng the craAslng-of the canon'over the line now substituted for&#13;
it. It couia not have blen.th'-ir ignorance as preliminary lines of&#13;
mine 'ky be found cfoaslng the ground covered by the new line.^ The&#13;
depth of the canon if bridged I was disposed to consider of small&#13;
importance; it is -uite narrow not measuring so much as the grade line&#13;
as fills that "Will b% found occur on either lines.&#13;
1 desired in every inatwnoe possible to place the line when&#13;
, -tn-o r - •&#13;
• 'i&#13;
August, 1867. .; )&#13;
it could 'be done without sacrificing profile too much in a position&#13;
giving freedom from snow obstructions. The original location running&#13;
as it does on the south side of'canon and valley would always have&#13;
been free from it, whereas I fear, in fact I know, that the change&#13;
now being made will in winter be subject to continual annoyances from&#13;
snow accumulations and is only a&lt;iaisso.ble by availing itself of most&#13;
of the excavations already done on the original line, 'The change is&#13;
further allov;able by excessive curvatures and the use of a large&#13;
amount of temporary superstructure such as trestle work &amp;c short&#13;
lived and of doubtful safety., -tu « ;&#13;
The above is the only diVergenqe" from-my locati on up 1^ the tim^^&#13;
^ was coMfJailod to leave; it cdmes into -feha original line several&#13;
miles west avoiding a short piece of 90 ft. grade using instead 80. ft.&#13;
at the expense of a cut; this is a little summit 24 feet deep in the&#13;
hi^est place and'^000 feet fro A grade to grade. It would be easier&#13;
to get an 80 ft, gHtila ower the old line than ower this change as where&#13;
the lines approach, the grade line of thA Change is below the original&#13;
line causing this cut above referrsft tC. There are other points where&#13;
90 ft, grades occur fdr short distahues. ■At these places the line&#13;
curve will be put on prot'ila of changesi. get it will show at&#13;
irtiat cort. i M ; - &gt;&#13;
With re^rd' to the line as located by me l have th;.s tp say and&#13;
I W confl(J«it the future *1.11 warrant the a3euuy.tilen that&#13;
taken all In all In point of pofile, alignment and freedom from snow&#13;
h'i.iii &gt;»&#13;
'c' ■ ■ -&#13;
Augus t, 1867 . ' ' I&#13;
it is on the right groimd. I do not say but there may be points where&#13;
engineers and athers might differ in minor matters, as for instance&#13;
the policy of increasing curvatureto reduce profile and vica versa,&#13;
but in general terms the resiilt will show that the selection of ground&#13;
for line over Black Hills has been judiciously and wisely made.&#13;
On the western slope as near as, I can learn an entirely new line&#13;
will be attempted. You .will then s^e what skill your consulting en&#13;
gineer possesses in selecting ground of his own; a different thing&#13;
1 take it from passing" over the result of others labor and criticis&#13;
ing. • .&#13;
One word as to cxirvature that some, gentlemen on the road are So&#13;
flippantly nlspoaeld to Ignoro. Tha, opinion that I have is that shnrpcurves are obJ^etlonahle and whan t'loy- are used for the purpose of&#13;
lightning gradis'lt freqiwntly happens-that what ,ic gained in the&#13;
one respect is lost in another. So important is this_matter consid&#13;
ered that on BngUsh road, they are restricted to curves of.1-2 mile&#13;
radius (about 2°) by aot of the legislature! based upon the opinion of&#13;
men of sbility, man whoso work and rentation will live after theu,&#13;
long after that of thwHHOMwnt consulting engineer of the U.P.-.RWill have dbnk inth meritad oblivion.&#13;
I rear that the only result will be delay: as fast as the changes&#13;
come in you will De notified of th.m, I regret much that my sore&#13;
trouble comelled me to le.T. the Laramie Plains before all the data&#13;
Vas obtained. ' ^ &gt; uSit. . - j J ,/j&#13;
670&#13;
August, 18C7. . , 'r&#13;
I haVe wirtten this letter first because I promised, to do so,&#13;
anrl in the setond 1&gt;14ce it WllL. perhaps lead to sQ»e way by which I&#13;
can vindicate my labor frob." the aspersion of those whom I cannot&#13;
believe are honest, or working as they should do, for the success and&#13;
speedy comietion 6f this enterprise, ' *c , . vo "v 11 -&#13;
I send a copy to Gen. Podge. ■ " ; 0&#13;
I ' Oliver Ames to" Gen .Podge, N. Easton, lO"; , :■ ' r■ -r&#13;
V ' ' Your favor of 26th is received. I entirely concur with you&#13;
in opinion of Seymour as an indolent man with a strong desire to crit&#13;
icise other's work and do nothing hijnself. He has been from the beginnlng a supporter o/all the Dr. p'rojeets and has *ieen kept more for th^&#13;
purpose of wrltlW the Dr's reports .an " doing hie oorrespondepae that&#13;
meets the public'eye,'and whitewashing his (the Dr's) rascalities than&#13;
for any real engineer service he has done or will do the company.&#13;
Jlr, Jesse t: ffllilame thtnka Seymour has a-very good idea of&#13;
location and his opinione'nlj W of some service. We do nqt, want to&#13;
put ourselves in any poeltlon'where Sejmour or "ura t.may,charge us&#13;
'with not giving all proper attention to their suggestions.for improvement of our line and t hove telegrhphad Seymour to make a survey of&#13;
this proposed changes and report thf rfbmparatlve gain. If he. has found&#13;
a better llne' u' 'U our duty to adopt It. If a 8 or 3 curve will&#13;
throw U8 out of Mai^'ork and hasten completion-of the road I should&#13;
do it.&#13;
We ouot bake the beat possible road in the shortest time. You&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
understand our views; and for the present act up to them. After Qctoloer we shall stand heater. Duff is sick with a fever.- I will write&#13;
you tomo^r^DW.&#13;
Oliver Ames to Gen. Dodge, II. Easton, 12; « /&#13;
, I wrote, you Saturday in regard to Seymour. ".Tiat I wish now&#13;
to say is that however much we may feel that Seymour is a lazy, inef&#13;
ficient man prone to criticiJie others and.do nothing himself, we must&#13;
acknowledge he ie an extremely plausible manj, with excellent ability as&#13;
a writer land if 'h§ has anythingiOfia show for a decent line he will be&#13;
able ■ to'make* the most of It. " »&#13;
Now it will not do for us to.adhere to any line that we think can&#13;
be amended by adoptiSi;^ his suggestl-ns. ite have a reputation to sus&#13;
tain and ho line of any engineer of ours should be approved merely&#13;
because' It la Our line. Seymour If he han make a point agajnst us and&#13;
in the intera-st of Durant, vlll do It. As our consulting engineer and&#13;
as long aa he retains this position, it 1. our-duty to. In all doubtful&#13;
oases advlso with hlo and If he has any practical notions to get the,..&#13;
He has herAtoftfre sal up In his offlos and done, us very little good.&#13;
If wo can'no. make him work and see how other people earn their money&#13;
though hi'-ay be of no aervice to ur wa can feel that wa got a little&#13;
wJrk'oui"'of him for the money he gets. , ,,&#13;
■ '' "Uur fdellng a» t have heretofore written P"®" thework&#13;
' with'the higUtt'-prMtiirtiBle speed, and we want mep„enough put on the&#13;
■? i '&#13;
i?.jf "jv:&#13;
August, 1867 7' J' -It&#13;
vork to put it through so -that the tracklaying may not be delaybd'i If&#13;
we can get this-winter throbgh the Black. Hills doing the light work&#13;
before vinter and the heavy cuts in the winter so that we can run&#13;
over the Laramie Plains'to Bridgera Pass next year we shall fully&#13;
answer the hihgest expectations of the country. But all these expecta&#13;
tions.will fail if Government does not give us more efficient protec&#13;
tion against the Indians. The idea of a Goverment like ours perc^itting these roving bands of Indians to take possession of the country&#13;
is a perfect outrage upon its citizens who have settled in this coun&#13;
try with full assurance thn.t they should be protected. I wrote to&#13;
Government on receipt of telegrams of.the disaster at Plum Creek ask&#13;
ing iimftedlate and efficient, protection. I suppose they will sajr as&#13;
they^did'once'beftrlltfcdd. the matter is fiaced in the.hahds of Gen^&#13;
Sheman and their dont know of any better way to protect us. I think&#13;
if you would write a dtrong ^Letter to Gen. Sherman and the Government&#13;
settit^g forth the difficulties of" our .situation that it would be of&#13;
great ae UB.&#13;
I feel bout the engineering question that in running over throu:"&#13;
a broken mountainous country, w© want to run a great many lines&#13;
to fully develop the country and show us the best routes, and to do&#13;
this we want active, enterprttia- and competent engineers. It is&#13;
utterly Impossible to gat the'best line withopt fully perambulating&#13;
the country and whenever a favprahle opening presents have it surv:ayed&#13;
up and whenerar ypacticable running curves, will throw us out of ho-&#13;
August, 18G7. ■ . j ' t&#13;
work I should put them -in. One or two years use of the road will pay&#13;
all the amendment that may he necessary to make it a perfect line.&#13;
I hope your health will improve so as to be able to continue your&#13;
work. Drff is now Gi«k with typhoid fever of a low -type; is so tht&#13;
* • he' is confined to his bed. . . -1- ,&#13;
' We have one of Grant's special meetings this week-to .see if he&#13;
cant get soiJle contract that will enabla him to again take direction&#13;
of the road- I think that "he will be disappointed. His injunction does&#13;
not work to stui him. He will sobn find that he is not general manager.&#13;
irbte;- Gen. t)'od£^e to Gen. Simpson, Aug.^ 13; (21DR280) ■&#13;
Gen. Dodge to his wife, Pqint of Rocks, 13. - . . . j. ^ .&#13;
'«.&#13;
Just arrived here, all well. Answer to Green River. ^&#13;
JameS Maxwell tb Gen. Dodge, Fort Sanders, 13:&#13;
'' First dHattee of (80) eighty foot grade causes.heavy work and&#13;
poor aliyiment. Secorta'one; impracticable. Last change gives high&#13;
" crossing^'ot^r Crow Cveek hat no heavy cuts or fills; all other changes ^&#13;
save work. Qvene9 Stations (70) seventy and (1100) eleven&#13;
hundred. Cannot^t me^n fof .secort. Stevenson wont. let detachment&#13;
pass here. ■ .&#13;
■ To "oien; iWJtf K" Wother, Couno:i Bluffs, 14i- ^&#13;
• ■ fnw.Ilo|.th Platt.o orosslng, 25 "lies north&#13;
' of'stagiroh; is' received. 1 *,v. not .rltten ^ou for'Reason&#13;
that l.ttire .hlch'^t. vr^e Wh during first part of, your Journey&#13;
.ere not received by her, and I did not bellove thooe sent from here&#13;
August, 1867. . ■ ,&#13;
would reac&gt;- you this side of Salt Lake Ci^ty. I telegraphed you the&#13;
mibstance of some matters which I thought of interest to you, sending&#13;
dispatch to Fort Sanders before your arrival. It seems you did not&#13;
receive it so I will write in. this more fully.&#13;
First, the Nonpareil. Ur. S. P. W.alUer of Bellefountaine, 0.,&#13;
purchased^. N. Uaynards interest for'$2500- including good will and new&#13;
outfit but not the accounts. Your claim in good shape, vi&gt;i:-cash _&#13;
$1000, Maynard's-note (secured by Walker's n-te of $500j for $300-&#13;
dated about Ist January lext- and Walker 4 Chapman's note for $800 due&#13;
1st January next. fn'sHort, you .have $11Q0 against Walker 4 Chapman&#13;
due 1st of January, both good men, s^fe and prompt. I think you can&#13;
safely say the fire w«s'a benefit to.you, for our anticipations in 1&#13;
placing Uayriard at the head were not realized. He took but little&#13;
interest ih the paper, exhibited far less energy and-ability than in&#13;
former times. Chapman was the live ma,! ewhen li. reinstated Burke Chap&#13;
man became greatly dissatisfied and nothing west harmoniously. He sold&#13;
out to Wa ker but Kaynard would not consent; after a time Walker bought&#13;
Uaynard. They are collecting Assa. Accounts, have paid. $350 of the&#13;
Uaynard 4 Chapman note $500. Walker comes highly recommended by Ohio&#13;
State Pf ficnrs as a succia'stul publisher and editor; appears very&#13;
gontl««a\ly, quiet ,„d'inda»trious-clos.-in financial matters.&#13;
Ur John T. Baldwin IflfOirne m.imi' Officer 4 Pusey do not con&#13;
sent to close'- up With him at thih Ume. h..«e^ his arrangement with&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
you is indefinitely postponed.&#13;
rv ' ► ' f . - - - - , . . . .. .&#13;
■While engaged upon t&gt;acific . R. T "believe VCiu* can do better with&#13;
' f .&#13;
money in operating in Real Estate and loaning than by engagin in&#13;
business to which you cannot give personal attention. What has paid&#13;
better than your investments in this town? T-^ke the investment I made&#13;
in 1863 and 4, pincipal paid up and nearly $5000 real estate on hand.&#13;
. \&#13;
I&#13;
Your block goes slow. Wisconsin firm broke up soon after you&#13;
I'^ft, and scattered; work re-let to Lir. Bond (friend of -Judge Baldwin)&#13;
from Pairfield, at $3 per ct. for laying stone and $6.50 -for laying&#13;
brick. Mr, Bond commences today; it a good and reliablejbu-il^ der and&#13;
will push forward the work fast and do it well. • : f&#13;
The fever for building rages high; new foundations laid every&#13;
day; I could not begin to enumerate- Court House looms up, Sem nary&#13;
progressing well, everything in and about the town looks promising.&#13;
Strangers who come here take a different view of things and concede&#13;
C . .&#13;
our future to be promising. '&#13;
Cdllectlons have' come fitl^'w^ll and" I have over $10,000 lying idle,&#13;
waiting for use; dare not let It 6ut, not knowing wljat your plan may&#13;
be, now that the mill arrangement does not go off. I could make some r&#13;
good loans, small amounts, improved real estate security, one years&#13;
time; could buy some schooY orders at 75 or 80 cts- dmw 10 per ct.&#13;
int., can get $1500 of them. "We hoid'now in the office $3500 of this&#13;
paper and receive installments upon theb twice .each year. It is the&#13;
7 ^ m&#13;
• vr.;&#13;
August, 1867. : .M-'tI"!,, ,: ,i&#13;
opinion of Mr, B. and myself that w.e. "better separate at expiration of • 4&#13;
our partnership ter^i - Sebember 1st, 1868, after that I can handle y ur&#13;
.funds to better advantage. Judge will give his attention to law.&#13;
Anderson nominated for State Senator; Ross wanted it but found&#13;
chances againr t him and would not permit his n^^e to go before convention. John C Ballard's son, Elias, young man of 10, is here seeking&#13;
• clerkship, no opening offers yet. There is a good opening here for a&#13;
surveyor. Davenp ort is about, c/osing up to give his entire attention&#13;
to an Express Co. I need a yojing^ man In my office who understands&#13;
surveying i f •/&#13;
■ Father and Jim heve been hauling hay together- have filled yoiir^&#13;
stable. I ■ ,&#13;
. ■ Wilson »ant» H&gt;«|loiary (Jp-lttee invited on next exourslon they&#13;
want td to r-iv v iiif - - • , .&#13;
Oliver Ames to Gen. l^odge, Kew YonH .15:&#13;
, 3ii»ve no recent letters from you and have nothing to fix . Lj '&#13;
your locality, so to Omaha \o be forwarded to you.&#13;
Duff Is now siok with typhoid fever of a laild type, but every&#13;
B^dt-Of.tnis fever is bad. He feels anx ous r bout John and wknts to&#13;
•■h.en from Mm end low,. Sl..whereabcuta.' The last letter we had from&#13;
' yon wee from Fort th®n said that the Indians hbld the&#13;
country west of you, mnd I Inferred that you would not proce'ed Uhtil&#13;
you were satisfied the country was clear. |&#13;
August, 1867, .v'snr ,.»r&#13;
I would like to have you make a report that I can present to the&#13;
annual ra eting of the stockltolderg on the 2d day of Qctober; say, -&#13;
report what amount of road haa-haen surveye^d and definitely located,&#13;
and say generally what you think may be of interest to stockholders.&#13;
The report may-be up to September 1st,&#13;
: SBfBiQB Maxwell to Geo, Dodge, Fort Sanders,. .15, *By teles^®-?^)&#13;
Change between eight (8), sixty (60) and ine(9) forty (40)&#13;
per eighty (90) foot grade impracticable. Change between three (3)&#13;
eighty (80) and seven(7) thirty (30) causes heavy work and poor&#13;
alignajeWt'but no Fock cuttii^. , ,,&#13;
I think t at Hurd will adopt the Evans line from eight (8) sixty&#13;
(60) to three (3^ fifty (50); below that he took my changes; he chang&#13;
ed the Evafti"line from eight (8) sixty.(60) to nine(9) forty (40)&#13;
and his workUinnot be • Iwprove % b • ut it wfjl not suit an eighty (80)&#13;
foot grade and is the eontrolling point on that divide-save work on all&#13;
changes between eleven (11) and fifteen(15) hundred-from there across&#13;
crow Creek length-ning line eighteen hundred (1800) feet, get an&#13;
eighty ^ftO) foot grade-«n,d do not think that the work is increased,&#13;
T^ill send maps and profiles as soon as possible and write in full,&#13;
Oan. Dodge to JaaSS" A. Evans, F^jrt. Bridge r, l5i ^&#13;
•' rfWatweltf "80 ft, grade impracticable, O'Neil reports&#13;
80 ft.'grade and improvement on both old lines.&#13;
*11U»»8' ori«lilllg 18 Md. What line 18 Hurd bulldinc I get righi&#13;
jt- ■ ■■ '•&#13;
August, 1867. r&#13;
# * . «&#13;
ides the lUld' to build on is your line as improved on east'side, and&#13;
the new 80 ft, line on west side. See Reed, and'answer. ' . rrt&#13;
« ■ Gen. Dodge to Lir. F. Hiird, Port B'ridger, 15: ' » ■&#13;
* - 'What line are you building on? llaxwell reports 80 ft grade&#13;
on east side is impracticable, but change made in Evans line a's help-&#13;
? . .&#13;
ing it. 0*Nell says new line on west side with 80 ft. grade is best&#13;
line. How is it? Answer here. " '&#13;
Note:- To LIrs, Dodge from'her Sister'Minerva, ^Iklioi^nplS: '■ ' •Q&#13;
S. B. Reed to Gen. Dodge, Sanders, 16? ^&#13;
Have you decided on line-over Bladfc Hills? .1 think 80 ft,&#13;
grade impracticable. -(jo.- . i *&#13;
James Evans to Geni Dodge (JdUk&gt;ia, 16 fr.)&#13;
If ei/^ty (80) is impracticable on east side, better take&#13;
old line all way through improvingiit all we ban; this will be better&#13;
for company. Reed is on way to Black Hills) will telegraph 0 Neil&#13;
to see him; if'he'cant, telegra^^ UiiJ at Sanderwj re-send it to&#13;
Carmiohae\. ( t: ■&#13;
' 1 start for Ponnsylvanl on" Monday,'will return^ here assoon as&#13;
* •&#13;
possibl . Do you want Me to go to "NbW-York? o(e..&#13;
Gen. Dodge to S. B. RweKt 3ridger, 17: (-Peleia^)&#13;
line from whai I can leam as bost is Evans* line as&#13;
'ohanged'to save work by Mzxwell and Hurd. They report 80 ft.grade&#13;
impractliable on east aide of Black Hills; on west side the new.line&#13;
Atlgust, 1867.&#13;
of 0'Neil's they report "best, get one there anri can (Jivlde. better than&#13;
I can.. .&#13;
■; j i&#13;
Oliver Ames to Oen. Dadge, N. Easton, 18:&#13;
. K Your favor dated North Fork Platte, Aug. 4th is received,&#13;
^e ha4, been-without advice from you since Jujly 27th from. Fort Sanders&#13;
and begun to feel anxious about you. ^e are new very glad to hear&#13;
. . that you are all rights Your letter from Fort Sanders said the&#13;
Indians held the country west of you and we naturally felt anxious&#13;
• .. .&#13;
for your safety. . , . , ^&#13;
have beer^ a jlittle stirred up here about our matters and from&#13;
the cause, af Burant, ,who can never be relied upon. iVe have felt a&#13;
little anxioutS that things should run smoothly until the annual election, the 2nd ^f October, when we calculated to put enough reliable men&#13;
in the Board of Directors to have things in the future run on correct&#13;
ly , We had a special, meeting last week and gaveout a contract to my&#13;
brother, Ur, Oakes to construct the road 667 miles beyond the y&#13;
MOO meridianj this takes the road on 914 ailes beyond Omaha and accord- i&#13;
ing to jmr last report within 110 miles of Salt Lrke: This dontract&#13;
has ho proTision to favor Durant or any other Individual and, will be&#13;
managed ver much as the rped construction is now being managed, only&#13;
we hope -tp^^very year have additional economies carried into the&#13;
- 0ori8tirtistion »od by better line and better management make'the road&#13;
instiv^^ton. t&#13;
We want, now that w« are In the mountains wfain) the besfShginee'&#13;
ing talent le regulred, to bar* an abundance of the beat men to aid&#13;
Aucust, 1867. * ♦ '&#13;
you in finding the best line shtat can be procured, and then the best&#13;
men to see that the construction is properly done and honestly meas&#13;
ured. • • « •&#13;
I have not h^rd anything from Seinuour since I received your&#13;
'-" J' ;&#13;
letter of Ju"'y 2 th. I suppose he is looking over the line at his&#13;
leisure, and if he can make impVovements enough on it to help pay his&#13;
salary it will be the first useful thing he has done since my connGCtion with the road.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to his wife. Fort Bridger, 18: ' ' ■ -fl&#13;
I got twolttterz today, one aboUt little Annie's sickness&#13;
and one enclosing' last sheet of George Bailey's. I feel very anxious ^&#13;
•ft '&#13;
about little Annie, and have telegraphed you twice but got no answer.&#13;
You write short and very complaining; if you knew the amoxint of&#13;
anxieSy ^ have and the desire to get back I think you would not com&#13;
plain so much. I dont understand you you mean by strange stories&#13;
' ' I&#13;
since you left. I suppose there are plenty who will do all they can&#13;
to injure me, but no manVo holds my position is free from attacks&#13;
op who is not,free from Jealousy, especially those wh^ fear my power,&#13;
and who are mad because I am in the U.P.R.R. The Durant crowd will&#13;
do all they can to injure me, but 1 care not. v&#13;
Kow abput George. I think he is certainly aimisSfa irtxsrtlt m&#13;
treatment of him. I left ail my private mattter^ With him; he Wmfi gone&#13;
When,! laft, but Left a slip for him I had n&lt;3 one in Omaha to attond ... .1.- ^ ^ If rV*&#13;
' lo to," ". A, it M&#13;
68l ^ ni i&#13;
'nipilpWip^pp^riiPT&#13;
August, 1867. . , ,&#13;
• I&#13;
t the lumber. I went to see Snyder about it myself. He agreed to&#13;
melte a voucher and give Ur. House and Llr. House was there and&#13;
agreed to attend to it. &gt; ., r&#13;
If Mr. House dees not attend properly to his duties there.is a&#13;
0&#13;
sure and quiet remedy and I shall apply it. He never said ne word&#13;
to me m&#13;
about George except in his presence and desired me to raise hi&#13;
wages. I censured him for leeting George.overdraw his account so much&#13;
and House said he could not live on his salary; however, when the&#13;
master is away no one cal tell what is going on. . ..&#13;
You write very short letters to.my very Ing ones and think I am&#13;
loafing away my time; while here all are fighting me because I work&#13;
day apd night gnd take no rest; so it goes; if you only all keep well I&#13;
can s^apd it. . ►rr . &gt; •&#13;
If I get home in time I shall go to Kansas City to look st the ■j&#13;
bridge building there, perhaps, to St..Charles and you will go also.&#13;
As long as the cholera is prevalent down there I hope you will not go,&#13;
but as soon as weather is cool and there is no danger you oan go; you&#13;
are best judge of that# , .&#13;
I am just leaving for a two days trip to St. Louis Gap trhough&#13;
river and .the basin to look at my lines run there. Shall then push&#13;
on to Salt Lake and then start East.&#13;
Wrote «na and Lettie two days sgo. Oot Jules letter and yours&#13;
up to August Mki *ts» the.girls and keep good heart and spirits.&#13;
- '&#13;
August, 186V. ■&#13;
S. Seymour to Gen. Godge, Port Sanders, 19:&#13;
5e Arrived here on Saturday*and found no serious difficulty&#13;
in passing through the country vfliich had neVer he fore." been crossed&#13;
with v/agbns. r&gt;t "I ■ijo ' G»of-&#13;
•* • • I* , - r - _ Hy observations satisfied me thrt there is a route still north&#13;
of Brown's line that is worth at least a careful examination. I do&#13;
not think there is a good route north of the MedicIHS-Bow through the&#13;
Rattlesnkae Hills, and think perhaps that the Medicine Bow Valley&#13;
f • . k&#13;
itself may be too expensive, although its grades must be far superior&#13;
to any other. You will f nd a route, however, between the'Medicine&#13;
Bow Canon and Brown's line' which to me looks very favorable, and the&#13;
summit of the Rattlesnake Hills see' lober than Brown's Pass.&#13;
If the valley in which we camped on our return-tripi After leaving the divide between the Platte and M'ddiclhe Bow valleys runs down&#13;
to the Platte, so as to"" strike a wide, open plain'or Valley lahding&#13;
from the Platte towards the Sweetwater'Mountains, ^ ' Semoho Gap -(in&#13;
wich we also campod) I shaD.l think if'fe^v^y faVbl^Um route,-for&#13;
the reason that I can see no serious diffiw'ltife&amp; between that point&#13;
and this place if the line is carried north df Coopei^s Lake and possi&#13;
bly around the north bend of Rock C^ek'above its mouth. And I under&#13;
stand there is no difficulty lb goiftg'westwrard fraa- Semino Gap to the&#13;
:.t:t • 0&#13;
Southward, of titter Mountains. '* ^&#13;
1 would not heatiate to make all the northing necessary to seciue&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
a cheap line and low grades, also plenty? of water, evdn at the sacri&#13;
fice of several miles in distance, as I take it forgranted that our&#13;
company wish to build a road not onl:/ as cheaply as possible but one&#13;
that can be operated as successfu.lly and economincally as the country&#13;
will admit of.&#13;
I trust that on your return trip you will explore this country&#13;
through which we have just passed, and I have no doubt'that" yPTi will&#13;
arrSrve at the same conclusions that I have.&#13;
J. Blickensderfer, Jr. to Gen.- Bodge, Port Sanders, 19:&#13;
TTe arrived here agSiin on Saturday afternoon, from the west.&#13;
after a trip marked by no imusual occurrence, and without ertcountering any difficulty in passing through the country. Our.first.day's&#13;
march from Camp Separation was down the valley to the spring we found&#13;
on descending from Mount ftawllns. The next diay* we moved northward&#13;
on the Pla ts road about 7 or 8 miles^and'th«n diverged eastward over .1&#13;
, 1 . -&#13;
aaplain across two ridges into a wide, smooth valley running southeastwardly, apparently to the Platte . Xn this valley are niaaerous&#13;
lakes, mostly of ,good water, but'some impregnated witH alkali.&#13;
TJe encamped just east of the Ga^p, at an excellent spring with&#13;
plenty of grass and remained there over Saunday not knowing how far&#13;
eadt df us the. river was. On Monday we marched over an easy &lt;mufttry&#13;
inclining toward the river and struck the stream at 8 or 9 miles at&#13;
thelmoathof Medicine Bow, found a good forda bout two miles above the&#13;
mouth of Medicine Bow, passed over and moved along^the valley to near&#13;
\&#13;
¥&#13;
I . ..i.&#13;
August, 186V, ^ - r&#13;
the mouth af Modicine Bow .and encamped,spending ^ •&#13;
.the -l : balance i of .J C- the•&#13;
day in exj^loring. On Tuesday I directed the train to follow the&#13;
divide between Platte and tiedicine Bow, while I took one company and&#13;
rode over Medidine Bow northward about five miles to examine the&#13;
country. Found north of .Medicine Bow broken and rough, and ascer&#13;
tained the Platte did not deflect •&#13;
to eastward . as . . . fannis supposed,&#13;
tut flows almost due north from mouth Medicine Bow into the canon by&#13;
which It,paasaa Black Hills, md that Kelloegs Creek which rises on&#13;
south aide.of Black Hills flows south-westwardly, not into the Platte,&#13;
- bat into Medicine BOW.about two miles above where the latter enters ■ ■&#13;
the-Platte. Pas,ina back again crcsalng Uediclne Bow acme 8 or 9 milei(||&#13;
■ above its mouth .w.-nide the trail on the divide and found the train&#13;
far ahe«i of «a having an excellent road. We overtook the train a&#13;
little bsdtore SiWiSiovn, they having descended into the valley of a small&#13;
stream (dry) westward into the Platte where they foudd an excellent sring- .md some grass. Our march this day is estimated at ^&#13;
sr, Qd 86 miles hut without water. The latitude of this" eamp Is 41° 52"&#13;
mom. -three or four miles north of Brown's Pass.&#13;
tednaaday w, started due saat up the valley over the sumr,.lt and&#13;
down a ravine toward.,„lIEdioine Bo i whioh ended in two laked of good&#13;
water. Between this st-mlt and th.se lakes we found wagon trails and&#13;
a stake Showing that your enginesr. had been continued on&#13;
nearly due oast over country, h"avln8 a valley on Our left whicl^&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
• ' «&#13;
can be followed to Lledic "ne Bow. After getting well away from the&#13;
hills we bore off to f^ur right rather more than I designed and struck&#13;
our-westward trail about 5 ot 6 miles fro;.-i our old camp on Medicine&#13;
rP' Bow. This we followed for some time and then bore off to the left and&#13;
encainped, oti Medicine- Bow a few miles below our camp when going west.&#13;
The next day w'e bore" off more to the northward and made Rock Creek o"ver&#13;
' a good road with several lakes of fresh water. Friday we marched from&#13;
Rock Creek north of Cooper's Lake over an excellent country to Laraiuie&#13;
• " 'about ohe tftll'e lidthaw-'function'of Little Laramie, and Saturday arrived «&#13;
here, '^'s stated beforo'.&#13;
^ The entire trip-iras very satisfactory to me and has given me,&#13;
1 think, a good view of.the country within the limits of which you&#13;
' will locate your road.- ¥y impressions are first that you will not&#13;
find a go6d route north of Medicine Bow. and.-probably not by" following&#13;
that stream to Its m-«&gt;itth»&#13;
Second, that ycu will find « goOB p3 p.^SlnZ north of Cooper's&#13;
Lake, following In or near lha wallay of. Hook Creek to^ Its mouth, down&#13;
liedlcine Bow 6 or 8 -lies north, and then up the valley we descended fr&#13;
from the silmmlt piWiife the lakes befove desorihed, crossing Rattlesnak&#13;
Hills 3 o 4»iles north of Brown's Pass, down,the Ta}.ley on which we&#13;
encamped (Uarthats Creek) to the Platte and thenca westward by the&#13;
wide valley and like. W p*»k»«&#13;
of cont*l.ri©n• S ji '» *1 iSfufoi iinKro i T&#13;
inttttt 1,0 'l^ilj-rwoesS •&#13;
i V&#13;
August, 1867.&#13;
The most difficult part of this line will be in getting from&#13;
Medicine Bow to su;.imit of Rattlesnake Hills, but I think careful&#13;
examination will result favorably. By this line I think you will&#13;
reach the North Plntte without encoiintering southerly branch of Rattle&#13;
snake Hills and thus probably avoid canons and heavy wofck, and I tnink&#13;
the summit of the northerly branch of these hills will not have an&#13;
elevation exceeding YoOO ft. and probably less, some lOOtbo 150 ft. lowO&#13;
er than Brown's Pass,&#13;
I have thus, as you desired when we parted, given you a pretty&#13;
full account iDf the country through which .we i»»sed.. 'If , you will&#13;
' permit, I suggest that you should have' surveys made to fully develop 0&#13;
the country as'fir north as Medicine Bow valley,and-espeoially along&#13;
the route last Indicated ShBve, throuih the.divide of the continent.&#13;
This line will'he a little longer than your present one, but I thinh&#13;
' will be so'mich mOre easily wbK^wJ when pompleted. as to be commercial-&#13;
' ■ ly much more valuable. 1 wish, for Uie. e^e of your professional&#13;
' 'reputation, that you should know you have occupied the best ground&#13;
the country afior*d8, ' ;c • • » ..&#13;
moith of Medlcin; -katUHdv^?" 3'. -uth Rock Creek&#13;
about M'. I will send yuu ai my dateminatl,n^of latitude and&#13;
longitude When worked ^t at&#13;
'" ■ " Morth anii «ou1».-*.f Mwdlttlne Bow there is an abundance of coal.&#13;
I found a good vein Just befors we d.econded f™m the divide into the^&#13;
valley of Martha'. Creek we.t of .r»ait on Prleday evening, which wa.&#13;
August, 18G7. . , f . .&#13;
7 feet thick of godd bituminous coal, ef which I have specimens» .&#13;
We start eastward tomorrov.- raornin^, and I expect to finish up and&#13;
reach Omaha by the 31st. I find that ^ambert is at Cheyenne without&#13;
a party, and ^axwell is here with a party but without an escort. He&#13;
has agreed to^accompany me to make.surveys between Evans Pass and&#13;
Cheyenne. VJH saw some Buffalo, plenty of Elk and any quantity of&#13;
Anteldpe, My health is good and the-command apparently in good spir&#13;
its, • ■' :&#13;
■ - Oliver Ames to Gen. Dodge, New york,t81; - lo hiMtor&#13;
. I" f- . ' . .&#13;
Wo have a telegram from Seyrmour today saying th'atithe grade&#13;
on eastern aloe has so much work dohe on it that he does not think&#13;
that any change is practicdble'to redudo it. t have telegraphed him&#13;
today that he may examine*thd western slope and leave his report at&#13;
Port Sanders for your examination when you return.&#13;
I hope amongst you all that scsnetiiing first rate will be adored.&#13;
Dillon is sick out at Morristown and I shall' go out there this evening&#13;
to see hhu, Bushnell has had an intermittent tever sin^e his return&#13;
and la now confined to his bed but will be out shortly. Duff still&#13;
confined to his bed.&#13;
S'eward Q. Payne to Gen. Dodge, Grinnell, IbWa, Sis&#13;
- . . report of the' 4th Iowa&#13;
Infantry, after the battle of Pea Ridge 1 was wotmded at that battle&#13;
in the head, was afterwards transferred to the Invalid Corps and in&#13;
1864 promoted tC Lieutenant In V, V.C, and in 1865 was mustered&#13;
August., 1867 •&#13;
out,&#13;
T ■ ■if'- !• ,- r0tr ' trrt luf'i 7 .&#13;
.K ^"Oliver Ames^tb Gen. Dodge, New York 22: (Telegram)&#13;
.T' , t' - Seymdur favors your eestern slope*' • Will examine western&#13;
and report to you and iDoard* * ,«&#13;
""Jesse L. Will lam S'&gt;to Gen. Dodge, West Chester, Pa, 23:&#13;
to ! TGiile resting at a frieijds house 1-2 a day I will write you,&#13;
-• 'Havb been in!New York 10.bays. Saw kr* Huntihgton yesterday. In his&#13;
mind their general route from the west seems to be settled. They.will&#13;
run north of Salt Lake,^not crossing tbe^narrow point hut.Keeping&#13;
entirely on north aide and. thence to the mouth of the Weber. He has&#13;
no i^ea of going up Bear River. His engineers have run up Weber Canon|&#13;
and ho thiwks it not very difficult, probably requiring no grade over&#13;
90 ft. I wish I could be there with you. ^&#13;
Saturday your dispatch from Fort Bridger was received by kr.&#13;
Ames. I am glad you are getting along so well, hope your helath is&#13;
improving. Ool. Seymour was, ab- ^ort Sanders on the 20th but we do&#13;
"•*: ixfrti; hear frow»k.r.. Dlckensderfer,&#13;
• ' .I cou^. not vote in the new board for the new contract. Price&#13;
very hi^h, #80 to 196,000 per mile west of Crow Creek, not including&#13;
the Wahsatch Range» but etopplng just east of it. fhls heavy work&#13;
ghould with the light or'else the first contract stopped at&#13;
wXJtMMiw Kiver. There are other objectionable provisions but I preAlMM# COpffwy will at, the proper time build thrbugh the itahsatch ^&#13;
i.v^ J#I3W rr, , .v.&#13;
. «i. i . %ufi oJ "htj&#13;
1867&#13;
Range.&#13;
&gt; , . .. . -v. ...&#13;
On your way back I think it would be well to note particularly&#13;
r ■ -&#13;
which of the bridge foundations should go in this fall, so that the&#13;
t • • - -&#13;
work may not be hindrered by higti water, particularly at Lararaie,&#13;
Medicine Bow, &amp;c.&#13;
, I think it ma not,banecessary to lay the track over any of the&#13;
t -&#13;
heavy cuts or fills at the Black Hil 1 Range with temporary track.&#13;
Examine and see if by putting on force in time you cannot take out&#13;
the cuts so as pot to delay the track materially. This runnmgg over&#13;
the cuts so as not to delay the track materially. This running over&#13;
work with a promi'-e to cut down^in a year or two is a great cheat on&#13;
many rofids. The cutting down is often not done for many years and&#13;
the norjt is xliscretiable to all concerned.&#13;
The bridge crossing remains unsettled and no doubt will until you&#13;
return. I read to the hoard a preliminary report,*giving estimates of&#13;
the three crossings with iron bridge at each. If I had a clerk here&#13;
I k.&#13;
I would send you a copy of results. I may say the difference between&#13;
all thB e crossings is leas than I had supposed. I embrace the idea »&#13;
of cutting down and filling up to 30 ft. grade in all the lines.. I&#13;
made a suggestion in regard to starting point A. I think it ought to&#13;
bQ pieced about a mile farther north bringing it in line of the&#13;
bridge 'if South Oa&amp;ha is adopted) avoiding the cnwe On the high&#13;
tMStle and shortening the connection with the North-western one mile&#13;
and with the Rock Island ft St. Joe slightly. I do not think the&#13;
August, 1867,&#13;
company would make any great sum out of their quarter section in&#13;
section 2. As tn section 3, it has no value in either case except for&#13;
cut lots. But I will talk wit-"! you -bout this, LIr, Dillon, who was&#13;
there though the company's ground ought not to be much regarded.&#13;
The board desire me to continue my investigations. I hope to go&#13;
out in October and examine at low w'e^ter, taking Kansas City and Quincy&#13;
4 . . •• fin my wqy. I go to Havre de Grace tomorrow to examine bridge. •&#13;
There is one fact about the l^iosourl soundings that had not oc-&#13;
■ " f-,-&#13;
curred to me. The channel deepens in high water and fills up in low&#13;
water, so that soundings taken on the ice are not conclusive as to the&#13;
. .. X ' '&#13;
depths in high water. Llr. Chanutes' soundings at KansasCity show&#13;
a difference of 5 to 18 ft. between February and May. At St. Louis&#13;
t^ie river deepens 18 ft. Wien we get our pier in it will scour quite&#13;
r. •) . '-a.. ■ .•, *#» I.., - .j-r ^ •"&#13;
djeepbetween them. ^ ^&#13;
« '£oo: ■ tf . ' " &gt; tae-t I . .&#13;
^ . I expect to be at home in 10 deys.&#13;
(fwi Mrs. Dodge io the General, Council Bluffs, 25:&#13;
I received a telegram Monday from Fort Bridger. You'did not&#13;
.ay whwe to, satid I'ettara after le-ving there. You *111 Wv^ry slow&#13;
If you f'Jay there a week in getting to Salt Lake.&#13;
you wont have much time if you dont return here till October. Congress&#13;
meetfi In November and I suppose you want to go to New York first.&#13;
. . We.are suffering here from dry weather and unless it reins soon&#13;
eota.and potatoes are gone up, we shall lose bur crop with the reCt&#13;
* ■ » ' ■ "-r-J rttJtm t.&#13;
Auf^ust, 1867. .. . ...&#13;
»&#13;
iinless ifc^rains. Minerva is in from Flkhorn; returns tomorrow. House&#13;
.&#13;
sen' nut and got the mules just as they commenced harvestinn;, so that&#13;
horses have, to do all the work.&#13;
T want to go down to Kansas City in about a weekj if the weather&#13;
is not too warm. Am- not well, but hope to be soon. Hope you will&#13;
*&#13;
hurry back,&#13;
I fear your stores will not be finished this fall; they proceed&#13;
very slowly. Dont put your money in the mill. Have no,t had a letter&#13;
of date later than August 6th. How shall you return? Have you plenty&#13;
43f escort? . ►&#13;
Gen. Dodge to Oliver Ames, Fort Bridger, 27;&#13;
Tha- ^0 ft. grade on Black Hills reported impracticable by&#13;
the engineers aijd by Mr, Reed. I have instructed llr. Reed to build&#13;
'6n Fvans line as changed by me to run west. ^&#13;
1 see no necessity of an- further surveys in the Black Hills.&#13;
Seymour hAs taken back Maxwell's party that was on way west to com&#13;
mence location, i need th't pa-ty badly west of us. Wish you would&#13;
teleeraph that .ork cannot be delayed for any more enrveys.&#13;
' ' 01lv&lt;Bv ktaim t^o Gon. Dodge, New York, 28:&#13;
' 1 haae n telegra. from Ur. Seymour today sayi - that he&#13;
add Blickensderfer have Texaainad eastern slope of Black Hills and find&#13;
that it will cost by a slight variation of line $120,000 less on an&#13;
80 ft. maximum grade than it will co-t on present line, and I have&#13;
. - • ' ■■&#13;
August, 1067.&#13;
advised him that the chartge would be'iccepte'^' ir - as a favorable as re&#13;
ported.' He also thinks the western slope may be improved and we have&#13;
authorized him to make these examinations and report. *** .&#13;
If he shall be able to present to us a ver^" much more favorable&#13;
line, then our duty to our stockhblders and the-public aJfld -to bur&#13;
reputation as engineers will force us to accept it, I hope your&#13;
labors at Salt Lake will not be'^long, and that you will take good care&#13;
of yourself and not overdo and break down your health - ' ■&#13;
Geo. C.Tichndr to Gen. Bod^e, ^es Uolnes, SB:— '-t&#13;
It has been a very long time since I heard froBLfyo^. I pre&#13;
sume you have a thousand thlngS to eneage your time" and attent on, K&#13;
more Inportant than ;.ere letters of friendship, and while I would not&#13;
seek to engage your attention to your annoyance, 1 beg te assure you&#13;
J,hat an occasional letter from you, to who.r, I am so gre»t,ly indebted&#13;
'and to whom I am so durably aUcohea, would be most agreeable to methough more .0 Since so msr.y nueitione are askad m, dally regarding&#13;
your health, whereabouts, *o. «.c.' "ou hava vSry.many warm friends all&#13;
about here who feel a very great merest W you and-whose solicitude&#13;
has heen awakened in behalf of youf"health.' 1 trust you will not&#13;
forget those good friends amongst whbm -1 ^leg yen' flo class me.&#13;
The late gwrrilla raid of the rreelhent afsn loyalty, in the&#13;
remowl of stanton, Sheridan ani Sickiee, 1. generally regarded as&#13;
tba "UBt hair whlbh ia to break the CWtlW »«ek", the general (&#13;
August, 1867&#13;
feeling now being that he must be impeached. Ll^^ny who have hitherto tT;, ; :&#13;
• • -f,&#13;
opposed it now favor it, and I am now clearly of the opinion thftt&#13;
the sentiment of the next session will be much strengthened in that&#13;
direction;indeed, I doubt not the pressure of public sentiment will&#13;
necessitate his arraignment as amongst the first acts of the next&#13;
I ■ *&#13;
Session. Oen. Grant^s late action has removed all doubts in the&#13;
minds of Republicans and has rendered his nomination for President a&#13;
fixed and irrevocable fact. All that he lias to do Is to remairi' fixed&#13;
• •&#13;
and fim in the line of conduct his late action indicates, and the&#13;
great voice of the loyalists of the l^d," radical or moderate, will&#13;
proclaim him Presi'ent, while history will declare him the second&#13;
Washington; yea! a greater than he.&#13;
You were doubtless astonished to hear that. Kasson is nominated&#13;
in this County as one of our candidates fo^ the'Legislature. When I&#13;
see you 1 will give you an account of the mhnner in which it was done&#13;
ana the'reasons for doing it. You can rest assured, however, that to ' . i I&#13;
him it is no vi'^tory; it will prove the lost stroke of final and&#13;
etemsl defeat suid political ruin to him and his friends. His envies&#13;
nominated him, that is, they duped his friends into doing it.&#13;
I have just arranged a list t&gt;f'appointments fbr Frank PaLner to&#13;
speak in nearly every county in the district. Withrow will also make&#13;
a number pf speeches, and efforts are being made to haveCrimes, Jim&#13;
Wilson and Harlan makes speeches at the Bluffs ant Other good points&#13;
• , Jin j . , • ' ■ '&#13;
f* j . f ^&#13;
t \ i:/"*&#13;
August &gt; 1867.&#13;
•- •' ■ • ,* " , -f ♦ • ■ "■"■; :&#13;
in the district. T'* had a bloody fi^t in our county convent ion j as a&#13;
• ♦ t ■ ' ' , ■&#13;
delegate myself I never fought so hard. Although Goodrell was beaten&#13;
for treasurer ve nominated "'^odge men" for every office as vrell as&#13;
■ ' ■ ' ' •&#13;
(Capt. Rapry Griffith) chairman of the County Committee.&#13;
Severanl gentlemen here, of capital, are anxious to learn some-&#13;
* «&#13;
thing bbout that aabrpo City-Cheyenno, at the base of the mountains. If&#13;
you can give me, hourself, or through some one else reliable information&#13;
regarding its present.status and future prospects, please do so.&#13;
The C. R. I A: P. P. R. is completed within four miles of our plac&#13;
and the trains will run here regularly by the 5th of next month, which&#13;
' - M&#13;
you are aware is a consummation we have long prayed for. ^&#13;
You haye doubtless heard of the death of Llrs. Spencer, as occur-&#13;
' * ' ♦ ' , *4 . '&#13;
ring at Tuscaloosa, Ala, a few weeks since. I get letters from Spencer&#13;
regularj-y. He seems much cut down and grieved. He tells me that hi-s&#13;
office (^g^ster of Bankruptcy) will pay $20,000 this year.&#13;
,, ; Barns'8 lroo,;|.en factory investment has proven a failure. He writes&#13;
mi that he has lost every dollar Is had, and is now penniless and&#13;
out of employment. He wanted me to say to you that he would like a&#13;
' • situation on t»i« r.P.R.R. Jf you can give him a conductor situation&#13;
or something of■ the kind, please do so.&#13;
• • , I am getting along very well, and all haAds seem pleased with my&#13;
admin-tratlon of the Post office. Frank'Palmer wants to&#13;
k'ow Whether that o.detshlp Is still vaeant. We have an eicallent &lt;&#13;
'' ; ' J., .»r&gt;iv%.i&#13;
f :&#13;
v Ir&lt; '. ' * '•'&#13;
August, 18G7. . i-, \ ,&#13;
. 1 •'" 'v'"i&#13;
condidute for it now.. Please, write me about it at qnce^ r&#13;
LI. F. Hurd to Gen. Dodge, Fort Sanders, 29: (Telegram)&#13;
.Cant get any grades he,re from suamit west; parties are -^t&#13;
Dale Cfeek waiting for work.&#13;
* ' ' *&#13;
, Gen. DO'^ge to. his wife, Salt Lake City, 30:-&#13;
.) i a..;.&#13;
. , I arrived here Tv&gt;es.dpy, Am refitting trains and stock which&#13;
I hope will be finished tomorrow so that I can start back Uondgy. I&#13;
expect to reach Fort Sanders in 30 or 40 days; am going over rou^&#13;
« .&#13;
country and shall not be, able. to communicate with you until I arrive&#13;
there, , i . . ^ •• .&#13;
I got your•telegram that you were going to Kansas City; hope&#13;
weather is getting cooler ao you y.ill. have a pleasant trip. THien one&#13;
strk^s this valley and city after being two months in a wilderness,&#13;
* *&#13;
it strikes him forcibly. Its wheat and oat fields that cover every&#13;
available corner of land; its gardens and orchards, its fine fruits and&#13;
wines are all very »lcej.,bui when o^rco?ues in contact with its people&#13;
and realizes how much oimre &lt;the same labor would bring in any country,&#13;
he cannot see anything that would induce him to settle here. As I&#13;
look at the systswm here I cannort see how any intelligent, upright&#13;
prsdn cEwi for one mtator* ogee any^thing but vhat is disgusting and abhorent&#13;
I hiave seen Brlgham, hl« wives and children, and all the dignita- • •&#13;
rles, but as yet I have not seen a woman suited but all appear to desire&#13;
and wish that polygamy was a relic of tha. .past, an^ it must soon fall.&#13;
August, 1807. ' * "■&#13;
.1 . .&#13;
I stay camped 'at Camp Douglas three mil'es from the city. The&#13;
gentiles mostly call on" us, though the momons give' us 'great attention.&#13;
Brighaia Young was r t" the head and was very talkative. His wife,&#13;
Amelia Folsom, of the Bluffs, that was,* was with him. She has how a&#13;
fival, I "beDieve, or Is to have. "The'temple, tabemacl,'e Brigham's&#13;
houses and gardens, the City Hall, State House, &amp;c. are all fine build&#13;
ings. The theatre is the best I have seen west of Chicago, better&#13;
than Debars at St, Louis and about the size of W ailacks, New York.&#13;
It has the finest scenery, appointments, &amp;c.that I have seen; equals&#13;
any New York. Couldock and his daughter are starring it now and&#13;
the stock company of native talen is excellent. I have been twice;&#13;
seen him'as lago and as thb Advocate in the Lost Cause* Everybody&#13;
goes to theatre, men, women and children* All trade here i^ barter,&#13;
swap, no money* Saw whole settlements with*not a hundred dollArs in&#13;
i"'.* They'go'to \he theatre and pay in wheat; to church and pay iTi&#13;
onions, &amp;c. The numbeT of children is a^tondshing; it beats All I ever&#13;
' saw. I stood on corntr of one block and counted 72, all belonging to tha&#13;
block. ' ' ' .&#13;
tlrrf, chotlain, Lirs. fr^cy and sevei41 of the gentile ladies have&#13;
been very attentive; send us fruit, get up parties nightly, andmlrs.&#13;
Chetlain and Oerf, C. desire eepeclftlly to be remembered to you. Mrs.&#13;
C. goes East this faff they Will never get her back hero; is&#13;
very bitter on the&#13;
I hope to see you before long; the days and nights begin to grag.&#13;
\ 'M. ' ■ ■ '&#13;
August, 1867. ^ .&#13;
Time goes fast as-Jt'ha-''e so much to do. I got a long letter fromNate ,a bout matters. JEverything goes jright except my lumber. House&#13;
says that' Snyder would not receive it as it was badly sawed and rotten.&#13;
I have written him. iiatters East in my department goes from bad to&#13;
worse and keep me In hot water all .the time. Evans being gone, Hill&#13;
and Brown killed, it p\its me to my trumps to keep things moving.&#13;
I am glad you get along so well at home., garden and trees. iVe&#13;
will have to leave for Wg^shington about November 15th as Congress sets&#13;
' Stovember 21st, and 3rou want to prepare; make up your mind what shall&#13;
- Jbe done with house, horses, carriages, &amp;;c.&#13;
I think I shall sell off most of the stock this fall. I wrote&#13;
«&#13;
you that Bailey could sell to build barn with. If he has good luck&#13;
he oufi^t to mak some money this season, Nate says he has $10,000 in&#13;
'bank now of adne and there must be 8 more in Omaha, St. Louis and New&#13;
Yor, or coming in. , ^&#13;
I am glad Bal^iin did not take me in on my proposition, as the&#13;
wheat and flour trade will be precarious this season. Shall put&#13;
money into sdme^hing that will pay when I return. I am certain now&#13;
that Dr. Robttlns can do well with us if he is not doing well at Kansas I&#13;
City and while we are at Washington he can have oxir house, if he&#13;
w&amp;rts it", however, they know beat wh-1 to do.&#13;
shall hava •&lt;&gt; short a time at home before we leave for Washing&#13;
ton tWat I want to gilt mgr things in, shape. Kim 1 would like to keep,&#13;
to look after our houaa, horses and f^rden and haul wood, &amp;c.and I&#13;
AiJgust, 1867. , . /'&#13;
suppose you ' ill take one of. the girls on to Washington. George is&#13;
the best, neatest and quickest boy I ever ha^i. -I meant to set out&#13;
some small fuirt trees iftiis fall and will do it yet if n©t too late&#13;
rhen i return. •••&#13;
■ ^ Write me to -Fort- Sanders. Kiss the girls', the baby and let me&#13;
kncrw how you get along. ' Do you' get rll my letteT^ now? Remember me&#13;
to* the folks at Kansas City- Dr. Lettie and^'children.. n T&#13;
■ S. SeymcAir*^ th Gen. Dodge, Cheyenne, "M; *. '&#13;
Have received orders from President Ames ,tb. adopt 80- foot&#13;
maximum grade on eastern'slope of mrcktf ills, and to examina and j:&gt;eport ori western slope. I desire your co-operation in thi's matter |and&#13;
as haste is important* mxist have maps and profiles of preaent line to&#13;
work'from on both slopes, also Uaxweil's party during time necessary,&#13;
so that work wi'll not'lse delayed and facilitate maps and profiles for&#13;
Blickensderfer. Please telegraph necessar- authority and instruct ons&#13;
"immeiiately. Blickensderfer makes 22 feet dffference in levels from&#13;
summit to Crow Creek.&#13;
jess.-^ L. Williams to Gen.'-ffSdge, Fort I'ayde, 3lt&#13;
iVrote you whild East two istt'-rs-to Salt I^ke and to Fort&#13;
, .'O-* ;,'C r&lt;ff ■ „ ,, .&#13;
Bridger.&#13;
The everlastlnfe briige qfieitKn U ■still m-eltled. The report&#13;
"«.lch 1 read to the board «a« uflfcVetood t'- be preliminary, awaiting&#13;
further look at river Vt low and hl,o the euo(W»f at Rnnoas&#13;
Argiist, 1867,&#13;
City, Llr, Chanute writes iliie that they hope to get all foundations in&#13;
this fall. He has a boat and fixtures/ and sounds tbe depth of the&#13;
water aJTtSr every little rise, and finds deep s-curing which is rather&#13;
unfavorable, especially for* the Omaha site. The July flood washed&#13;
away the aahd bar just wM^e one of his piers vidre to stand, 30 ft. deep&#13;
" This freqrent sounding in the summer we have rather neglected. Kr.&#13;
Rouse has sounded once at the Omaha side at the Li. &amp; LI. Crossing, and&#13;
found some changes from last winter but nbt Very great. I wish we&#13;
had SOuh'dlft'^ in liAy after the^bi^ flood.&#13;
Llr* Ames says he will go out with me In October. 1 will then&#13;
ask you to put oh a party for two or three weeks or so to make&#13;
r '&#13;
additional and aoareful surveys at certain points, fhe exact location&#13;
of the li. crossing should be made, sites of lines exactly fixed,&#13;
».' • - I f* '-&#13;
^0, The exact location should be made through South Omaha so as to"&#13;
get the rif^t of way and the feasibility and codt af cutting -^town&#13;
1&#13;
the summit hereafter^ with the grades I propose (different from Evans)&#13;
tested. Then at Child's crossing, I should like to have the curves&#13;
run through *the ridge and the cost of an ^00 ft. tunnel estimated. I&#13;
made this deep cut from the profile much more favorable than you&#13;
T *&#13;
did, but I m8^ be in error. I mention these surveys now knowing&#13;
»&#13;
that you may be scarce of engineers. Perhaps lir. House or Evans could&#13;
7 do it or some new man the board may be sending out. ' There iS another&#13;
reason far surveys- it ^ill help get the rlglit of i^dy. Eor this&#13;
August, 1867. . ;■■ ■' , ' • A&#13;
purpose too, everyth;ng should be kept indefinite until the right of&#13;
way is obtained on both lines, , ' . ' ; '&#13;
To enable you to make proper fiqal locations from Black Hills to&#13;
Salt Lake, you must have two or three additional engineers more expereinced^ in hilly location and construct ann than- those you havej&#13;
'^i^^hout^ th-tS, no chief engineer coi^ld be expected to take the responsi&#13;
bility-seeing the line as he can, but once or twice a year. You ought&#13;
to have two $5000 engineers. I have stated to the committee earnestly&#13;
that they should be willin- to spend $20,000 in additional salaries&#13;
for the purpose. They seen »illing but dont know where to find them.&#13;
I esteem Evans very highly for the work he has been dging for&#13;
three years past. He is a man of good alignments, but probat-ly has&#13;
not ' ne mijch at definite location and construction; however, I may be&#13;
• - - « . ,&#13;
mistaken. Evans in the future might answer very well for one. The&#13;
selection is wit^ you. Advise me ,at what time you will return.&#13;
Grant's lettei^ to Johnson and other issues will make him the&#13;
Union nominae-and. aXoct him.&#13;
T t j'.'i: sso • . Gen. Dodge to Col. S, Seymour , Salt Lake, Sept. 1.&#13;
f&#13;
4&#13;
1 have no maps or profiles with me of Black Hills; they&#13;
' ' • L, .&#13;
must be at Sanders or Omaha, Maxwell's party must move west. Lam- '&#13;
' ■ ^ " .-'A . : ■ . ' .&#13;
bart's iaPty can.Jae used for Black Hills surveys.&#13;
Judge *,.-A. Carter to Gen. Dodge, Fort Bridger, Sept. 1;&#13;
■ - !&gt;«||, ■ ,&#13;
Your favor enctosing pass 6ver the TT.P.R.R.for myself and&#13;
• &lt; &gt; 1</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42633">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42622">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - August 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42623">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42624">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
August 1867&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42625">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42626">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42627">
                <text>August 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42628">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42629">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42630">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42631">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42632">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4215" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="10424">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/4d262465be835c967ace6edeca351b2d.pdf</src>
        <authentication>5d6f2c39f8648ed61f409e35b0403ccc</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42527">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42516">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - December 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42517">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42518">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
December 1866&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42519">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42520">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42521">
                <text>December 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42522">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42523">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42524">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42525">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42526">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107558">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1551">
        <name>1866</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4227" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4303">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/8fb81312804b9c567e3a3655656fd4d0.pdf</src>
        <authentication>4347b2eda677e02ba123b2e9db015f98</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58545">
                    <text>December, 18G7. . ,&#13;
could geti I have never in estimating any work takeji more pains,&#13;
though' there may yet be . contingencids. and changes iprelative cost;&#13;
yet it is as near right as .fcaot be.JbacU In estimating the cost, I add&#13;
at lower Omaha and also for 4 piers at Child's Mill. I&#13;
have conferred with both Chanute and McAlpinv At Child s mill some&#13;
of the 4 piers may possibly be fotmded in some different way but I&#13;
think the'dost will be a;bout the same. As a matter of course I did&#13;
work better at moddrate-depth much easier and^much cheaper, and so&#13;
the estimate shows. i ^ ^ ,&#13;
... - Col. J.. 0. ' Hudnutt » came f over #and staid a day with me this week&#13;
• •&#13;
'A# left with me for you a copy of his report, estimates and profiles.^&#13;
•hiesd I will send you 08,11 tod£^. ^ ^&#13;
«&#13;
. Oi 1, Clark to Oen. Dddgo, Des joiner , 1;&#13;
' ' If you have not already made the acquaintance of Josiah&#13;
MoUioa;'fldq.,-you will allow me to introduce him to you as an old&#13;
comrade end very parti«»laf Jrl.»d o;C^mlne. He la ono of your oon.otltuents and has been for ametlme a clerk In the 2nd Auditor's office.&#13;
Jas. A. Evans to Oen.^ Dodge , Port^Sanders, 1-&#13;
yoU« leVt9ra.of the nth, 17th ai^d 23d of Hoveubor arc here&#13;
• g, last letter fro. Oaati. oonaldor.d aVeply to oil exoeol the&#13;
latter.- I4.e-n your l.tt.r .f ^.tructions'reaohed me the In&#13;
charge of Morgan had pa.a.d hep. on their way to'Omaha. Mr. U. has as&#13;
December, 1367, . ' •' j i-",'&#13;
you know left the road, Appleton.and two of his party are here now&#13;
doing office work. !,&#13;
'■ Bates has gone East; his party has gone to Salt Lake City, He&#13;
' • (Bates) wasted several weeks §f good weather here, and now the weather&#13;
*'is such as to make outside work impossibl at present, I have watched&#13;
"the movements of this party and coae to this conslusion- that aside&#13;
from the man Smith they re as a party nearly useless. The present&#13;
head of the party is certainly not^the man you require in the emergen&#13;
cies of next season* W ,, -&#13;
Maxwell's axvA O'Neill's parties are here now, weather-bound.&#13;
Location finished by O'Neill to Updicine Bow- and thence by Maxwell&#13;
line to North Platte and from Medicine Bow to siumnit of BrowN's Pass,&#13;
I am keeping the parties here th.inking that perliaps the weather may&#13;
yet enable us to finish work east of North Platte. Winter commenced&#13;
here in earnest one *«k since; it has been stormy since and is snow&#13;
ing now. The mncationa are ralther unpromising, still v.e may have&#13;
after this'stormy time some'godd weather yet and by taking hay with us&#13;
may be able to" finish, T am particularly desirous to'mkke connection&#13;
from Maxwell''s ll«e to Brown's. ,&#13;
The changws spoken of in one of your letters east of Medicine&#13;
: BOW are made andt the line now is final. VliUe this bad weather continkel the'parties «Mt:do office wofk, and as soon as it improves will&#13;
^ke'e'^er* available man out there and settle the question. It may&#13;
• "&#13;
December, 1867. . J&#13;
if result in the loss of our animals. What you .say about lines over&#13;
Black Hills cannot be otherwise than gratifying to me, and now to f,&#13;
crdwn the Whole absurdity I am told that in consequence of some mistake&#13;
in their levels they have a 90 fobt grade after all. As soon as this&#13;
pressure is oter I itend making a elose cas&amp;i5arison between the lines,&#13;
which, in the shape 'of a report to you, will, I hope, sometime be per&#13;
mitted to see'daylight.&#13;
If you can, where you are, make some arrangements by vhich our new&#13;
town here can be made --eoure so that we will haye no trouble with&#13;
"outsiders. Ithal I would eug(?S8t la thkt'it be oonsidered a military&#13;
reservation as at present and so far ba" outsiders are concerned |in the&#13;
future. You will un«erstand by 'what 1 say that whaUcLs required U_&#13;
that we have emclualve right there-perhaps If would be well for you&#13;
to write to Augur about it#&#13;
With reference to next seMoiis wdrk I have this much to say that&#13;
aside from your.elh I am 'fa'dt losing respect for all in hlyh position&#13;
on the r.P.R.B. the last dsvelppmsnt Is- thaf beoauas I was honestly&#13;
and isgltlmatsly making a little In my tie orntract-they must need&#13;
go back and curtail It one half. glYlng It to two parties whom 1 verily&#13;
relieve eteal more from them annually thwi-lcshall make In a proper&#13;
" from my little eontraot. tt kioms to me now that this country Is&#13;
to be m,"fut»rs 'home fo^ all tl4llHMtA». oohneotsd with the R.R. or&#13;
otherw'lse. and for the' next .Wson lf ation can be made to^ ^&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
warrant my devoting my whole time to engineering., I will take charge&#13;
iinder you cf the work to Green River or to Salt. Lake, if you wish it.&#13;
When in Omaha and in connection with the curtailment of the tic&#13;
contract Dillon t'ld me that they wante-^.me to continue in the engieering. I told him that I cared nothing about it, that there was nothing&#13;
to be made pecuniarily, and that if, a desire were shown to make a&#13;
li,ttle reputation srme one woiild bo furnished an opportunity to steal&#13;
it away. The fact is I suppose that I am disappointed in men, and, I&#13;
am very sure that had it not been for my. promi^-e ,to you to see to this&#13;
work here I should have dropped it then.&#13;
A. J. Poppleton to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, Nov. 30:&#13;
Yours of Nov. 21st enclosing letters to Oliver Ames, Pres.&#13;
from,Charles W. .Hamilton, in relation .to the preemption of lirs. Augus&#13;
ta D.sreenle® is received. •&#13;
. I,d0 not feol satisfied with the Coimlssionor's decision and&#13;
I have had this deoieion reversed so often by the Secretary of the int&#13;
erior, that in myraatter of my own nt clearly hopeless, i should always&#13;
appeal. If, however, the dompan, t^lnk Itbest to withdraw the appeal,&#13;
1 Will take ploasdhe In followins any diro-tlon to that effect. l!ere&#13;
n my own matter t would press it to the tribunal of last resort unless&#13;
at least h's hslesdmid tb the Compan, sufficient ground for tation&#13;
and depot purf^os^. ^ ,&#13;
I Knew t:rs. Creenl.si during the whole time ehe was In the country&#13;
/&#13;
itJ •-&#13;
fe'&#13;
December, 1867. * ' t ^ • •&#13;
T . . - • , ,&#13;
In my opinion she *was in no sense a bona fide settler. She was simply&#13;
a paramour of'Oeor^e Bridge, who used her, among other purpose s, to&#13;
make the pi''eemption for his benefit. She lived on it just long enough&#13;
to t"' e the oath and then left T-Tebraska and has not been here for 8&#13;
years,&#13;
rK'-J&#13;
Ifotc:- 11.' P.. Morgan's lots, -blieyennej* - -&#13;
Note;- Checks- drawn in favor of G. m. Dodge in check book, not&#13;
included in vouchers. '&#13;
Note:- List o "checlcS drawn on the 1st National Bank, that."do not&#13;
appear on the stubs of checfk book. ' i * ' ; s..&#13;
^ Seymour to r?en.Dodge, Nev/'York,&#13;
I have received this morning by mail from"Port Sanders a&#13;
dispatch of which'the following is a copy^ "Omaha, .Oct* 'SSth, 1867.&#13;
Col.S . Seymour;- Suspend all further survey^ in Blfick Hills* ^r,&#13;
Lambert's party Is needed for other work; (Signed) G. U. Dodge Chf. Eng.&#13;
V.'ill you be good ertotigh to inform me at whose instance or by whose&#13;
authority tfte afeove 'ISpHtOh was sent and oblige. _ .. ^&#13;
W, SnydT to'Oei^. fco,3.'^e, Ottah*-* « ' ,**» , ■ ^&#13;
• J. thlnW'Hyira tiers Is flgmrlrrR for promotion and will probab&#13;
ly ask you ti assist film. I dofiH know how he expected to work It, bu&#13;
It has always'appeared to me that ho triad to black us In accounts&#13;
instead of aaslatlng. It may be that ho wanto.to hol,J the rod over&#13;
U3. If ho has any favors to' ask I th»ali:U no more than fair that he ^&#13;
!»■ .■'ill' i")&#13;
Deceraber, IS 67.&#13;
i&#13;
should first audit some of our qld accounts, at least put through his&#13;
office claims that we are justly entitled to and which ought to have&#13;
I&#13;
been paid months since.&#13;
We want nothing but what is just, "e stand no show with speculators; have to bog hard for everything we get and furnish passes for&#13;
all his relatives, friends apd acq^iaintances,&#13;
J. F, House to Gca. Dodge, Omaha, 2:-&#13;
I sent tills day by Merchants Union Express map of 6th hun- t ■ ^ . ..&#13;
dred miles. I hope it will prove correct; have endeavred to make it&#13;
so. -The discresancy in stations is unavoidable; there are so many&#13;
breaks that it is almost impossible to get the correct distances. I&#13;
have looked it over crofully, added and subtracted differences and&#13;
am. oonfldont tha (Sth tandred'miles ).lll end about «here It is placed.&#13;
The Commissioners.EO out tonigh tto examine frcM the 490 mile&#13;
post fo the 610th. Track la laid beyond the 526th and Is measured to&#13;
thot point. 1 have ordered L-mbert In rnd am non engsrsed In settlnE&#13;
up- his aooounts for the qettleBent.' I shaU let him go,- we can do&#13;
♦ noch TDetter than retain hln.&#13;
t am surprlswd J"" '&#13;
.-•e have been kept so ouch at other business It is hardly more than&#13;
oo-e«.d. 1 will Pbt as many men at work n It as ban- be employed&#13;
«.ct will eet It off as soon as possible. Ur. Lamhecl* will probably&#13;
not b. called off to do other work till it is finished. He thinks it&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
will take to the last 'next week. I smi sorry that it couad not have&#13;
been done before; one map of the 6th h" ndr^ed miles and work done for&#13;
LIr. ^lickensderfer took up so much time that It was impossible to do&#13;
more.&#13;
What action was taken in regard to the bridge location at the&#13;
last meetin.':; of the board? I received this morning the profile of Ifr,&#13;
ITudnutt's line through town,'and the telegraph crossing, •bu'' no expla&#13;
nations. The river is still open and" the weather quite pleasant, but&#13;
little snow on the ground.&#13;
Baldwin was here yesterday; all well and prosperous at the-Bluff:&#13;
He will finish.''is grading this week. I hear nothing further regard&#13;
ing the clahm to yur lot on Jackson oi».&#13;
. Llr. Poppleton is now absent and will be awa'Jr o bout 20 days. When&#13;
he. ceturns wl^l find, out whether there was any action taken at this&#13;
tena of court.&#13;
J. E. House to Gen, Dodge, Omaha, 3:&#13;
t ,&#13;
Enclosed please find L,r. Henry's estimate of th-e Ist hun&#13;
.red .illes. I did not.find the original j'ou spoke of, In fact did not&#13;
&gt;ake a thorough look over the prpers in your desk but this.is an&#13;
,«ei- «py of the basis we u'ssd-as copied In the bisk and is what was&#13;
Ussft a bMto for estimates to oontraotors after tlie' line was ohsnged&#13;
down Mud Creek, I oannot make a basis for new estimate till after 1&#13;
get the quantities; am now busy mkktng out estimates from the 100th&#13;
vr-■&#13;
December, 18G7. ,•« .v. r,*&gt; ■&#13;
meridian'to Cheyenne; will finish it as soon.as I. can-; ' . U&#13;
Ur; Van Lennep has coiae in and is engaged nt the present for&#13;
me on plans, maps, ^-.c. He works at )is.report during spare time, also&#13;
is getting,up plan for case to hold speciments 5^0. I propose closing&#13;
.j. , 'the upper part with sliding glass windosw. ""hat do you think of it?&#13;
Note:- Admission fee, received, Military Ord;er of the Loyal Legion.&#13;
Ren. Dddge to J. E; House, Washington 3:&#13;
* ■ I enclose the Wilson contracts, whic'. cancel and change.&#13;
Set out aJtount of 1st payment so that they will not stand on books&#13;
aga'insl me.' Make .out Quit Claim Dee a for .them to (blank) and send&#13;
\ them^tome, Ho Cr.Jwill be given at present to let accounts for Mmt.&#13;
but iota wtll be macked-n^HH as other lots, where ^Qnit Claim Deed is&#13;
sent out* "• * h j.&#13;
* ' Gen* Dodge to Jr House jr Washington 3.-&#13;
I haTS mo profile I.- her^ .&#13;
trpm Fort Sanders , -T&#13;
to Sta. 4727 located&#13;
line, t got today profile fro^ 4727 to 5280 and to 358 (7th hundred.&#13;
Send M a# ebWn possible profile,from Fort Sanders to 4727.&#13;
note:- Idat, Of Washington correspondents. * . ■ ■ ■ a&#13;
Note:- Bruftk 1867* .&#13;
" ■ '-o.j-l i- . j[#T a 1 f»&#13;
J". ,E. House to Oeji. Docjgo.^&#13;
. I send yau this dwy by Merchants Union Express tracing of&#13;
map OfCheyenne. 1^have not^put on the Denver Branch as y u requested,&#13;
not knowing where it will come in or in what part of the town I left a '&#13;
December, 1867. . ' . r ,&#13;
it off. You can mark it on with pencil for'the lithorgraphers, or if&#13;
you ^111 wait 8 or 10 daj'S tlie line will be run and then it can be&#13;
located v/ith some certainty. . , ■&#13;
I an at work upn a. fire proof building for paints, oils and.&#13;
varnish for Kr.. Snyder. iTie Size is 20 x 32, 15 ft. story in the Clear&#13;
with flat roof; outside wallstto be.16 ft, high^ '&#13;
The wor' still goes on slowly briding the riverj unless they&#13;
get to driving piles soon they will have but little ure for it, for&#13;
the winter will be half gone before the bridge is flnlalied^- '&#13;
Our bank account to date is overdrawn $803.32, I,®^jpect a small&#13;
remittance from Talpey today or tomorrow which I .hope wiil carry us j&#13;
along till you authorize *me to draw or forward me a draft. I have&#13;
three blank drafts signed by you as Chief Engineer and by ordering&#13;
me to draw by telegraph'1 could make it to meet the present wants.&#13;
Mr, Snyder went Yest with Commissioners last riight to look after&#13;
yho west end of the road. It requires a great deal of work to make it&#13;
suitable fo winter; tanks and houses are in bad condition, in fact&#13;
there are no tank hou sea west of Potter; pums are oUt. of order and&#13;
it is almost impssible to keep a euppry of water on hfwid.&#13;
The weather here is still m'ild and the river' d^an'; water has&#13;
fallen greatly since oold weather c&lt;?mmenced, '-^e elefation of surface&#13;
of waur today is minlaium 1.15, the lowest watSr we have ever had.&#13;
The Ferry has difficult work crossing.&#13;
BV/&#13;
h'ta&#13;
1. H&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
f .1 have vouchers on hand to date, viz:&#13;
■ • ■ . I-L. L. Hills, $4086.51.&#13;
Vv. f- "• Hodges.&#13;
♦ ji I ,, Van Lennep&#13;
".'liy-'f:&#13;
■' I I 'f,&#13;
'i&#13;
Jas. A. Evans.&#13;
Thos. H. Bates&#13;
%&#13;
P. T. Brown&#13;
J. E. House , .&#13;
Thos. H. Bates&#13;
y&amp;n. Lambert&#13;
I&#13;
Thos. H. Bates&#13;
J, E. House&#13;
i ,r.-&#13;
7099.67.&#13;
605.25.&#13;
5040.47&#13;
6254.54.&#13;
3498.69&#13;
4851.63&#13;
2817.06.&#13;
3428.81&#13;
3320.46.&#13;
I 'Oil&#13;
f;- Vf&#13;
2 .11, .&#13;
* f&#13;
a-'-i/c n IZ^-hn&#13;
..,' 1&#13;
897.96 Town lot. - ^&#13;
' Shall I forward them to yoti at Washington, or to. New York or&#13;
hold them till yo^i arrive here?" Appleton's and Maxwell's have not&#13;
arrived. When ^as here there were some of his vouchers incomrlete and he took them west to correct. _&#13;
Jas. A. Wvans to "Gen. Dodge, Fort Sanders, 4: . ^&#13;
"^Maatwell anrf O'Neill left for the Rattlesnake Hills yesterday&#13;
f follow Vhis^evening "and ovetn-ake them rt Rock Cre~k. We shall take&#13;
forage*and hay *lth u8 and settle;i.he queation east of Platte River.&#13;
The winter has fairly Set in and there will be but little more work&#13;
done; ne heavy snow close, up everything. The last decision&#13;
* * *■&#13;
with reference to Dale Creekie to trestle it. ^ ^&#13;
December, 1867"' * '&#13;
• • T&#13;
I wis'-^ you could make? such arrangements with regard to the new&#13;
town as would Jbace us ab'ove* the caprice of'anybodj'- he-re. It seemo to&#13;
me that an intimation from'Gen. Grant or Gen. Sher*man' to subordinates&#13;
o n the ground ^c-Ud be 'sufficient. If I have anything to dowith it&#13;
it would suit me best to piace the milit a*ry and everybody on equal&#13;
footing as nearly as pos'sible; of course, parties'here would have the&#13;
advantage of being on the ground and it would be impossible t-^ neither&#13;
is it desirable, tp proevent it. When the time cctoeS to lay it off, I&#13;
propose with your consent doing it in this way. ffrst, taking a much&#13;
smaller area than at Cheyenne and second, making tho lots smeller in&#13;
the business part of the town.&#13;
A8 tot the oodo Of'selling-I reoomiend thafa iMmlmuin price be&#13;
fixed and that tM afeent be paid a:peroentage upon all sales, resefving risldiy tW alternate lota until-the lots on either side of.the&#13;
reserv^e'ite dlspneed of, then increase tho ^Initauni price ^ certain per&#13;
cent.&#13;
Thines hero on We V^ad ,8o far aa gradinB la concerned are movinc&#13;
along Verj- nicely but at great expenso»-.Wis work must be costing in the&#13;
Black 'Hills'fully 50 tier cent more than if it was done by contract,&#13;
' moat of It being done by the c&lt;aap4ny under Superintendents. I&#13;
estimate there will be conelderable delay at the Sale Creek,crossinc&#13;
'•The folks aVo after S.mH. wry -aharp and it Beams to me with&#13;
out much cause. He sMst have tho paUence of a m-rtyr to stand it.&#13;
December, 18G7 . &lt;&#13;
sufficient tp.j justify an attempt to return; I am therefore anxious&#13;
to have,my salary increased so that my early return may be facilitated.&#13;
:in your efforts to promote me last spring you succeeded&#13;
admirably and no doubt you would meet with lilce success now.&#13;
J.' E. House to Oert. Dodge, Omaha, 6;- ilr;&#13;
' Yoiiro of the 30.th ult. 'jdst received. I have forwarded no&#13;
matter whatever to New York except to your address and that ohly for&#13;
a short tima. All-maps, .profiles, &amp;c. have been sent direct to Wash&#13;
ington.&#13;
* Hhen Lir. ^urant was here he too k away with him a tracing of the '' •&#13;
twwn of'^heyenne with the Idts..colored up that contracts were issued&#13;
for, also those that were reserved noted. I can think of nothing more&#13;
that has gone to'the New York office. He demanded that and took it ^&#13;
direct from this oi'fice, Mr.-.Hedge's profiles an'i maps were sent ^&#13;
ilov. 50th; Dec. 3d, map of .6th hundred.miles was sent. I sent to your ^&#13;
address New York about Nov.* 12th pr'files of Black Hills line to&#13;
Laram e Hlver. All coaiiurUcatiOns^ and information received at this&#13;
office has'bee^ forwarded to you proojittLy and to n- one else.&#13;
Mr. Snyder has just returned from the West, saw him about estimateHe says he sent it to yotS-soiiieitime agoj^irected to the New York office.&#13;
He has given me the original, am having-a oopy^^ad® and will send as ,&#13;
Boon as completed." • f, , &lt;&#13;
784&#13;
•&#13;
■ »&#13;
, ^ |&#13;
■&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
A part of Maxwell's party came in this morning; will settle with&#13;
them'tpday. Mast have some funds as soon as it can be sent. The&#13;
remittance from Talpey was consumed before reaching here, bding mostly&#13;
orders drawn by chiefs of parties and vouchers for himself.&#13;
Mr, Evans ^.eft Sanders on the 3d with Maxwell anri O'.Neill to make&#13;
the connection between Maxwell's, line west of the divide and Brown's&#13;
line dpwn Pass Crebk. It seems from what I can gather that&#13;
Maxwell gets a good line over .the jaoutains, but connects with Bates&#13;
at mouth of Medicine Bww. Brown gets a godd line on west side^t&#13;
North Platte, Bvaas wants to make the eastern part of Maxwell s line&#13;
available and the western part of Brvwn's to North piatte. He thinks&#13;
it can be done and has gone out for that puriM&gt;se. -The party started&#13;
sometime ago, got atorm-bound at Little Laramie and were obliged to&#13;
return. There is about 10 Inches 6f snow at Sanders, none to speak&#13;
of in the Bla'ok Hlllo. The track la t»elTe ulles west of.Cheyenne.&#13;
The meesurecl dletance from the Initikl'point .to Sta. 0 oT lir. Evan's&#13;
Black Hills line is 518 miles and 256 ft, •&#13;
• I am Esttlng alone nicely with the Oregon mapj pushing It with&#13;
all the force tha't can work on it. The lot. mr-tters ore pretty&#13;
well worked up, and our abstract books are Just the thine When I&#13;
,.a at Cheyenne'Talpey told me that t^ie d.linquenoiee emong the officers&#13;
would be adjusted as soon ae the paymaster oas,e._&#13;
Capt. Lltohfleld eaid h»-.»buld take thoee Uorgan lots, and that (&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
* ,&#13;
is the last of it; has not been to see ae since nor paid any money.&#13;
It seems to me those men are presuming too much on your generosity.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to J. E. House, Washington, 7:&#13;
You send me estimate of cost on 1st hundred miles but do&#13;
not send me the memorandum that the proport:onate cost was dividdd on&#13;
for $50,000 per mile. Henry added a certain proportion for each to&#13;
bring cost up to contract price so that intere"st could be calculated,&#13;
Board have had no meeting yet,' will have'none until latter pert&#13;
of this month. Bridge question will* not be decided for present.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to a. E. House, Washington, 9:- ' •&#13;
Do you know whether Lr. Davis is at work on the land to make&#13;
' u . .&#13;
the report? I ordered him to write to me and have yoU get land nap&#13;
under ray so I can sutait it with repo'rt. They are preesing-me in&#13;
New York for these matters. Will send draft iii a dyy or two.&#13;
I herewith.enclose draft for'five hundred dollars which place on&#13;
books. Send me the vouchers to go to New York 'with kbstracts made up. • ■ T -&#13;
I will examine and forward. , .&#13;
P. E. Appleton to Gen. Dodge, Fort Sanders, 9:- •&#13;
I write to ask you concerning Liajor Chesbro^s salary for the&#13;
l„t e.aeon. 1 do not feel'justif i'ed In iJaying him bill 4V5 per month,&#13;
. the ralary that he had last year, nor scarcely authoriaed in paying&#13;
him .ore, ae no arrangeiaent"for an advance has ever been made. The&#13;
■K'i:&#13;
December, 18C7.&#13;
i - T&#13;
• % - u&#13;
only thin.r^ in reference to the matter was Llr, Brown's verbal promise&#13;
that he shon]d have ^100 per mnitth given before starting out last&#13;
t • • •&#13;
spring. I think he has been worth it and would recommend the advance.&#13;
I am sorry to have troubled you with writing, but have done so&#13;
for- fear that I shoul" not see you before I accompanied the body of&#13;
*&#13;
my friend. Brown, home. .&#13;
J. B. House to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 9:&#13;
Enclosed please find Q.C.Deed s for those lots in Cheyenne&#13;
embraced in the Wilso^i. contracts. I hove charged town lot act. with&#13;
'*■ ' # . . * j , ■&#13;
the amount of 1st payment and have canceled them on contract book.&#13;
' ' ' • 'V . ^ -&#13;
I have had t-wo deeds made .out for each lot, one calling for the orig-ina-^&#13;
purchase money, the other left blank. Please return those you do&#13;
not use. I could not tell by your letter whether you wanted the original&#13;
• 1 ' 2 c Jprice inserted or not, therefore had two copies made.&#13;
-r. WiU send you profile tomorrow from the Big Laramie to Sta. 4700&#13;
,1 supposad.,^ou did not care for those profjms as they were already at&#13;
the office before you left. I have discharged l^r. Lambert and placed&#13;
Ferguson in charge of ^^.is party with instructions to inish the'towns&#13;
' ' ' ' ^ 'I »&#13;
this side of Cheyenne as sonn as possible. ^&#13;
J. E. 5puso to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 10;- ,&#13;
: l toaay by mall prefilea from Sta 3&lt;fo8-io 47S5 of&#13;
6th hun6r.d miles. The Oreson. map'ls ommplet.a and tracing *■ commenced&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
will send it in a few days.&#13;
The driving of pile in the Llissouri River was co-jnenced yesterday^&#13;
in the P. LI, There will be tw steam drivers at work in a few days.&#13;
The grading on the west side is completed. Today will have the&#13;
foundation staked out for a fire proof building for pdint, stores, S;c.&#13;
and it will be out up immediately.&#13;
Kr, Cleburne is kept constantly on the road west, staking out&#13;
« • '4 .&#13;
sida tracks, tanks, wells, coal sheds and looking after all the work&#13;
that is being done. I never saw such delightful feather as we are&#13;
T&#13;
now having, it Is almost eq.ual to those pleasant days in early Oct er.&#13;
1 have hoard nothing fro;v, the west since the 1st of the month;&#13;
H. U. Hoxie to Oen. Dodge, Omaha, 10:-&#13;
I Your lettors to Lir. Snyder came this P. M. ahd find him on&#13;
his way to Cheyenne. He will return the last 6f the week and will&#13;
•anewer then giving statement you require. « .. .* i * ,&#13;
When Pongreea»en know how much it cefets to build this road thoy&#13;
will hardly meddle with tarriff I think. The fact the fuel fbr the&#13;
entire road hea to be brou#t from Missouri and Iowa and dont cost&#13;
less than $30 to ,|35 per ton on an average and much more west of&#13;
juloaburg, seems to ms .111 r.fute all their arguments-- but Hr. S. will&#13;
answer artd-not I.&#13;
I sm'sMtVtnC &gt;«»Poraily at the offtoee-. Should like the Asst.&#13;
sup.rlnt.nd.nt pUoe and hope my friends will get if for .ae. Road is&#13;
. , r.'&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
done about 15 miles west of Cheyenne. 1 think Reed wont reach the&#13;
summit. He is slow; makes an excuse he has not had thcirm which&#13;
is his own fault. No^water is the trouble and he is the one at&#13;
fault. I trust you will' take care of LIr. Snyder anrl myself at meeting&#13;
on 20th. Regards to your wife.&#13;
Gen. Dodge t' his wife, T-'ashington, 11:-&#13;
I arrived here this A. M. and have been'to work all day.&#13;
Have an appointment with See. of Interlo'r for tbmorroW and hope to&#13;
get throuBh. though I may run against a stump&#13;
I met Oen. Grant "and all his military familyV they». ere all gla&#13;
to see me, thot«h Grant pitohed into me for runn'.ns for Congress.&#13;
I was on Floor (»f House today "and they howed me consi-derable atten&#13;
tion-cLuatered'round me and all congratulated me on taking Kasson's&#13;
place.&#13;
.Gotir. Sanders of nibraska is here, also Gen. Rice and Col.G.G.&#13;
carpenter who.uaed to"be my chief Commissary. The Mexican Minister,&#13;
Remoro, called tonight but l' did not sse him, do not know what ho&#13;
wantedJ Kasson was In House, saw me'there hut did not come near me.&#13;
Jao. Evans to Gen. edge. Fort Sanders, 11;&#13;
I find your letter of "Rov. 26th on my return from the&#13;
Rattleenake hijle. The maps and profiles will be sent as soon as thoy&#13;
can &gt;e made, wbi.; will he in the courae of a week, and aucb other&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
&lt; I&#13;
infomation as may be pertinent. _ .&#13;
• #ii:' .&#13;
There is no possible way of connecting the two lines of Llaxwell&#13;
• • ^ p&#13;
and Brown on the western slope without such. an i;mdulation as would&#13;
increase the total elevation at the same time in creasing distance very&#13;
• - ^ • t - - X *" - •* ^ S&#13;
much.&#13;
It seems-to me now that east of the. Platte there is no question&#13;
but that Brown's line is the one for us to take. The notes are in&#13;
such a state of forwardness that^ii^ a day_or so it will be possible&#13;
for me to make such a comparisoneand submit to you as will enable you&#13;
ii-' fair understaodii^S Qf matter. This I will dQ in advance&#13;
6f sending you the map, &amp;c.&#13;
The track lo. now within 5 miles of Caraichaels. It may be that&#13;
tlle^ Mil-succeed in getting 20 miles of mountain work,&#13;
.' J0S, Ai. Evan»*fto Gen. Dodge, Fort Sanders, 12:&#13;
A x»0|»«i*«on of lines into th valley of ^itter Creek, start&#13;
ing from- our crossing of Kedicine B»w River will show the following&#13;
charaotoi-istlcs:- Tn,e'X'may be considered as three distinct lines,&#13;
1st:- Valley, crossing Platte near mouth of that&#13;
stream*&#13;
■ - . 2nd. By Maxwell's Plntte at noarly oamepoint&#13;
U'.-- Jpa., By r-r,wn's sttimlt, croaainc Platte about 5 miles bel«w&#13;
A'/- ' mouth wf Kas Cfeak. We will suppose teat Ko. 1 &amp; 2 o^e Into the&#13;
Brnwri '4(nd AppflOtOf^&#13;
W r;&#13;
December, 18G7.&#13;
:.T L ■&#13;
Distance No, 1 154.5 miles.&#13;
No* 2 159,75 miles,&#13;
'No. 3 ---139,8 "&#13;
j •*» o • )&#13;
V&#13;
•r Mftrn' itiv ;.'vJ&#13;
Elevation No, 1 1532 ft. Depression 1290 ft.&#13;
" 2 -—1880 " 1644#&#13;
---2060 " " - "" • 1824,&#13;
j" ■■ ii&#13;
Maximum Grade 1 85 ft. i ■ K-Jt '.o . ...&#13;
■ ~ 2 86 ft,- '■* •'-oxtf/'unr'icl He -uz&#13;
' 3 --- 65 ft, " d-.M-n •&#13;
It will be seen that'the shortest'line has the'lowest maximuiu&#13;
grades and the greatest amount of elevation and depres.sion. The line&#13;
by way of Medicine Bow Valley has the least amoPnt .of undulation, is&#13;
nearly 15 miles longer'and much the worst profile as well as the&#13;
greatest difficulty of "construbtion and the worst alig];iment. The&#13;
Shortest line shows the best all things considered.&#13;
We are getting up a map now nearly co..*pleted showing all the&#13;
lines; will send a Upy as eboh as completbd, ' Am furnishing Heed with&#13;
profiles OS feat as made," re'tainlns a copy iVdre and -.endins one to&#13;
Omaha&#13;
1 expect"to be in Phileadiphla abiut the lOtb gf January- will&#13;
mi you what day- If you do not donie to 0.iah«before. .pehhaps you will&#13;
need relocation, by" that time and It uay be that the Information you&#13;
wish will reach you In that way as qulclc as any other; h«f« we can&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
• «&#13;
meet there. I would not suggest this but my stay East will be very&#13;
sljort, and I would like to talk with you about arrangements for the&#13;
coming year. .&#13;
• • M&#13;
J. E, House to 6en. Dodge, Omaha, 12:- ^ ^&#13;
Our account at Bank is overdrawn to date about ten thousand&#13;
(5:10,009) and should drafts come in as rapidly for the rest of the&#13;
month we will be behind $20,000. I must now hold vouchers to the&#13;
amount of $500^00. - •&#13;
The Oregon map will be sent tomorrow, it is nearly completed. I&#13;
then let Llr., I«abach. go hpi^ie to remain during the holidays. He takes&#13;
the notes and rough map of the 6th hundred miles along witfi him to&#13;
work up The tracing ;ent you was made from a map on Pos^ office&#13;
paper an^' ver^ roughly at that. kr. Cleburne is at work on the land&#13;
map colbring up land; will have a tracing mVde 6f land map and send&#13;
to you when the coloring is cmmpleted. ^ . . . , . ^&#13;
Yeatax^y was very disagreeable, rain and snow alf day.^&#13;
, - 14. 'Jelun Warford to Oen. Dodge, Adel, Iowa, 12.&#13;
, ; I am,satisfied that his hoart'is nearer right (politcally)&#13;
' toah'Ifoel»s; however, that is not saying much for I4r. Smith. Ur. S.&#13;
has been a Democrat for many years and I think is still a Democrat,&#13;
put my motto is, let any one have the office in prefewenos to a&#13;
ranegade Reublicaiit r- ,v ■ ;&#13;
s;.&#13;
t.&#13;
!■ ft 'M'..&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
^ ■ :■ ,4 ■/ X . . '■ . £it&#13;
H. C. Crane to Gen. Dodce, New York, 13:&#13;
Below is copy of resoliition passed by 'f'rustees iStli irist.&#13;
"Resolved that the Secretary be instructed to telegraph Gen.&#13;
Dodge to come to New York an'-T lay'before * the Trustees the'profile of&#13;
the work to be done the coming suuuaer on the road as far as located."&#13;
Will you please furnish as desired'soon as possible, &lt;&#13;
J. E. House to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 13:- •&#13;
I have today paid Evans' draft of $2500» and have&#13;
? ' ' r . 4 •&#13;
|3500, reported th-^ t is still out. The January Bank statement must&#13;
be made, and they want to call in all their discounts,.and as we ,&#13;
' ' r . now stand, will need {17000 to balance accounts.' Voxichers will be ^&#13;
sent today amounting in aggregate {48,974.80. Those returned in&#13;
December are not ready.&#13;
I have again made an'unsucoassful search after the Henry estimate&#13;
I sen.-' yon additional data, Vhlch I hope will he "e-'ough to make the&#13;
matter Cleer to you. They"are the only figures we used'in making&#13;
estimate to contractors. I also'send estimate of 3d hundred rn ldes,&#13;
..commepcing at 100th meridian; that is as far^s I have it completed.&#13;
: I send-summaiy of Evanls. eatlmate of laet'wlnter whidh'mny he of help&#13;
to yen in the absence of all figuroaj also Some memortod* of yours&#13;
made in New York last winter. " ^&#13;
The land map Is heing colored up and cannot he pushe^^any faator&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
• t '&#13;
at the present. 7'ili get off the tracing as soon as I can.&#13;
Llr. Hodges arrived this morning. He will get up his Bear Hiver&#13;
« . . ..&#13;
mpp, &amp;c, then wants to go home; wants t do his work here.&#13;
Snyder to Gen. Dodge, Cheyenne, 13:-&#13;
Your favors 1st and 7th inst. reached me here this morning.&#13;
*&#13;
I propose to remain until everything is in shape.&#13;
Track to Col. Carlin quarters. Fort D.A.Russell is completed.&#13;
We are delivering them now about forty cars daily. Every pound (some&#13;
4,500,000) of their freight has been moved from Julesburg besides 7&#13;
large v.arehouses and we are shipping for them now from 100 to 150 tons&#13;
daily from Omaha. We can close up their entire shipments in one week.&#13;
Thora was.aoao delay a couple »eeks since In the movement of aU froioht&#13;
and construction material, owin- to the scarcity of water and freezine o&#13;
pumps whan tai&gt;ka «9r« not encloaed, but weather is fine now; have had&#13;
wells depened and anticipate no more delays.&#13;
I am h; ving 6 large snow plows constructed and 24 smr Her ones.&#13;
Will « n have them, distributed at each engine house ready' for work.&#13;
As soon as 1 osn get depots, tank houses, section houses and coal&#13;
sheds completed I will put up some snow fences" H this end of the road.&#13;
Am working how every can&gt;enter I can got to enclose our buildings.&#13;
. Rssd dent keep up with his work; tanks not sncloscd, cuts and embank&#13;
ment. not in .hsp. to run trains safely; nit a bridge between Sidney&#13;
and Chsyenn. that ought pass muster. 1 have to gO over every foot of the&#13;
i • • . .." -&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
u :' ■ * 1 j '&#13;
work but "dont like to write New York about it fearing 'they' will consid-&#13;
• v'' - _* . , » li-A&#13;
er me a hnbitual gr wler.&#13;
I think track will be laid, if weather pemits, to point 20 mile&#13;
* &lt; . . t «&#13;
west of Crow Creek. Then I am informed it must stop as grading can-&#13;
" • r&#13;
not be got out of the way. Track is now about 12 miles west of Crow&#13;
Creek.&#13;
, -L.&#13;
Gen, Casement has started for Washington. We had several closet&#13;
inte.rviews with Dean before leaving. As I made him' pay us some $30000&#13;
for freight that he expected to get free, the Generals is ndt'orfd of&#13;
my warmest friends. Next year the party laying tack and all other&#13;
contractors&#13;
this,would prevent&#13;
ought to&#13;
a repetition&#13;
be obliged&#13;
of&#13;
to&#13;
this&#13;
pay tariff&#13;
years&#13;
rafes&#13;
swindlingon their&#13;
-there&#13;
freight; |&#13;
has been&#13;
'' ■ ■ ■ - • - .1&#13;
plenty of it I assure you.&#13;
'-al '■ *&#13;
Wells Fargo &amp; Co., who li-d"the dontract for transportation of&#13;
freig'^t west of road, got an increasing'Stale-of pricaa .«ohthly after&#13;
August, and their freight was not crowdSH upoii them. ■ Bad'they taken&#13;
from Julesburg or Hills Dale as'fast aS thef could thei*e would have&#13;
been no difficulty, ''^hey wanted Decetnber prices, ahd Uyers and. his&#13;
j^jents have always been easy with thfern .With'the fe *oe|rt.lron -of abott&#13;
10 days, ^en.we could not get a watei^'artd immediately after&#13;
Qpening to this place, iiiere"has'never been any^deley In salving U.7.&#13;
frei^t. We urged Uyers to let us Ship When they were i^9ving forward&#13;
very little. Pike i» the ma'ster of c^rteonl^s- bUt haa.baori absent&#13;
several days Track is not as far west as it ou^t , he and fair&#13;
■m:&#13;
Deceober, 18G7, 'wV/y f &lt;&#13;
i&#13;
weather cant ho collated on much long,er, ■ 1 '&#13;
I enf"! ose statement of facts for the DGpart,r.ent if any&#13;
complaints are made abotit delay hero, Frieght is not go.ing forwa^ d to&#13;
other posts as fast as we arp deliver'ng here,&#13;
Vi^eather fair today an" Caf.euent's force at^work laying track. YIe&#13;
are. in much better shape for winter than ve were tivooweeks since, and&#13;
I keep praying,for a little more fair weather-. ■ , ^&#13;
Tiie :now bridge near Loup fvr'k is completed and trains crossing&#13;
it. Te hope to have the Ills sour 1 bridged in two weeks. Business first&#13;
rate, think we will do well during the winter. I dont want to work&#13;
the road west •f' here this wintor, as tpaffic will b^ oi^l^.tho supplies&#13;
for contractors, and that freight 6an be carried by -teams cheaper&#13;
than by mil If we have- any showl . 'o — '&#13;
tr6 are delivetihg freight at Fort; Aj Russell faster than&#13;
they can takfe «er«Pof it. hJ-vo. given them 2,000,000 IbB. aidgs. alone&#13;
this past »eek besides large fluantitiSs of Imiber and hay. They have&#13;
received everything that »«» »t Julesburg, InoJudlng buildings, So.&#13;
and we are unloading for them the «. U. freight that left Omaha evening&#13;
of 12th. At Omaha we are giving them all the cars they want and bring&#13;
ing through prwptly. tare not no^ a loaded car slde-traoked between&#13;
hare end Omaha.&#13;
ITlll give &lt;1. !i. Department preference over all othor shippers.&#13;
■rMd":&#13;
December, 18G7. ' . ,&#13;
till their freight is throiigh, an^ If' quantities are'not larger than&#13;
stated by Gen, Llyers. I will ship everything from Omaha this week.&#13;
Gen, Dodge to J. E, House, 'Vashington, 16: ' •&#13;
T send you profile to Sta. 358, 7th hundred miles; also&#13;
Hodge's profiles, &amp;c. I nolice grades on profile of location do not&#13;
aV id shallow cuts as much as'they might and do not know as yoCL or&#13;
Evans laid them. I will sfend the data and^oii can both of you ISok&#13;
at it. I looked ovef* them hastily; and'the new grade may not fit as&#13;
well as study may find one that will, T?hat I want is to avoid the&#13;
cuts. I have tried to. ' ' ' •' «&#13;
M. R. Morgan tc Gen, Dodge, Fort Leavenworth, 17:- , ,&#13;
-fours of the 10th is at hand. So f as I understand, ^&#13;
your brevet bill is a good one. 5 send you a copy of another&#13;
■ letter'ofm ne on the subject of an increase of the Subsistence Depart&#13;
ment*. We nbodan Increase very much. I hear from Small that Gen,&#13;
G. H. Th'omas has written to Gen. Garfleld. advocating greater increaaS&#13;
* thah any of us have thoijght to as-k for.&#13;
It would Ve the ,goo.d of the service to have an act passed&#13;
llaiuins the iet^th of eenrtee- of Department officers tn Wash^neton to&#13;
5 conaequtive years." and that they Shall not_servo^there again *ien&#13;
once rallevod until they have served elsewhere for at least two years,&#13;
This -.ould give the officers in the bureau some better kMwledge than&#13;
they now poseess aivl en-ble them to administer the affairs of thetr&#13;
December, 18C7 , ^ .&#13;
Department more Intelligently. YJhen. your, bill passes Augur must give&#13;
up his co:.iancl, - r&#13;
Snyder to Gen.. Dodge, Omaha, 17:&#13;
■ ■ ■ C - . * ■ I ■&#13;
The above is svfficiept equipment for our business, until&#13;
track laying commences next spring. I anticipate a very large traffic&#13;
next year; am adding daily to equipment turned out by our shops here,&#13;
and think I could almost make all that will be needed next season.&#13;
We make better coaches, freight cars, &amp;c. than any that have been&#13;
purchased.. , ^ ■ ' a c&#13;
♦ •• 0,» F. Davis to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, .ly*- ^ ^&#13;
■ , I hnve hod 'nother list of the lands prepnred. Tie now have&#13;
fkrae I'ists; one for entry at Land Office,, one to retain here, and ono&#13;
to transmit «.» (Wpy.of land map of let 100 miles, and are now app-&#13;
-■ raisins the lands In aocordands^wlth your sugcestion. The greatdr&#13;
partof these lands must. In my.opinion, be appraised -t $2.50 -&#13;
per acre though },h,y.«ill. soon be.worto more as the Gsvernment has so&#13;
«ch' lend ad!!&lt;.l«li« ®&#13;
less by using land waj-rants. The list of land with appraised value&#13;
b. .».ddy to transmit in a very few days when the traolns of the&#13;
land map is ccmpleted with the lands of the Cmapany shaded, &amp;c. :&#13;
I visitednthe Land Oepartmnnt of the Ills. Cent. JL and of&#13;
cedar Kaplds i-, Uor R.R. presented your letters,''w;s very kindly re&#13;
ceived end every attention shown me. The sysWm or-the b.R. t Bo. R.R.&#13;
December, 1867, ,&#13;
is not yet perfected as they have not yet obtained a title I think to&#13;
all their lands, besides have recently been burned oVt, losing bldnks,&#13;
maps, Sue, but in so far as they havfe gone 1 Mnk their system is an&#13;
improvement to that of the ill. Cent; many of the'details being much&#13;
more simple. I presume we might", as experience or judgment TO uld ■&#13;
dictate, improve on either of the above .rentioned systems.&#13;
Our township plats, prepared at the Surveyor General* s office&#13;
are superior to any I saw", an'd I having them mounted on cloth-much&#13;
needed as I saw from the condition of those used by 111.. Cent,- then&#13;
tiney can be bound. I s'an'd herewith sampl*e of blank used by the 111.&#13;
Cent, as a tract book, being bound with the township plat, a sufficient&#13;
number of them to contain all the lands in the township this with&#13;
the plat i^akes a complete record", cOrrespnding to the plat and tract&#13;
books of a Government land office. I would reeomtwend something simi&#13;
lar for our use, and in getting up the blankb would almost wish to&#13;
consult th/c.C. &amp;MO. R.R.R. Land office again, as thfy have similar&#13;
blanks to prepare and have use^ so much good judgment and skill in&#13;
pij^pvAng their blanks thus far. Thi^^ tract book witlv the plats are&#13;
in wy ojbalon tbe most importanl records to bo prepared and I should • -ij ' t .. .&#13;
like to have them as complete as possible,&#13;
. You .nontion the copying of the floW notes ffo. -the Surveyor&#13;
. 0ener«l*8 office." • prosuae' you refer to the deBcriptlvo lists yhloh&#13;
Deceraber, 1867.&#13;
• «&#13;
are found in the Lnd offices., To transcribe the field, notes in full&#13;
would be.a tedious and expensive job, but a copy of the descriptive&#13;
lists would take but a short tine and would probably be all that we&#13;
would require, fhe plat;^ show the streams, bluffa, . timber, marsh or&#13;
swamp land, 5:C. The descriptive lists give the soil, its quality, on&#13;
every line, also whether rolling or lev^l and describe the whether&#13;
past in mSund or'stone, &amp;Cs Copies,6f thd descriptlv' lists could be&#13;
bound with the plats and tract books and would make it.all very com&#13;
plete, lucre so than anything I saw at Chicago,&#13;
As the lands iepe ftot to be entered before oprip.g, I am anxious&#13;
to hrve the necessary proceedings-had to cancel all homesteads on the&#13;
R.R. lands^ before that time so'that all the lands claimed by.the Cmmpany can be'entered at once. It will take some little time and.vA,rouble&#13;
to look up these homesteads and cancel them. - -&#13;
Gen. Dodge to J. E. House, Washingtorr, 18:- " " -&#13;
Yrura* of Dec. 12th is before me, also letter Jemclosing&#13;
03ttaat,s'. »:o. I do not nnderstand .iactly youf statonont aW over&#13;
draft. I save j/ou » check coverlne you notes before I left; and If&#13;
,ou look s.t the books you vrlU see ft charged up and that whan I left&#13;
. halane. -a. In bank (after yJur note w s taken Up) of some 2 or t3000&#13;
and whatever the drafts have been given on you In excess of- Peeeips for&#13;
lot. and drafts remlttsd you, would he tfie overdraft. If hank etlll&#13;
holds that note It fa wronc, or if atlil ehargsd up to me it is wrong.&#13;
"'.ri&#13;
'^fCj&#13;
Lr-f.',&#13;
December, 18C7. * '&#13;
I shall not go to Omaha iintll Febrti^ry or Liar oh, but shall be&#13;
in New York fbr a couple of*weeks. I go there tonight to lay before&#13;
Board profiles of line, &amp;c. ' ' '&#13;
Note:-(M. H. Adams to GenC Dodge, Harlan, 18: '&#13;
^ tPetitiori for a mail roUte from'Dunlap .to ^arlan.&#13;
J . W-. Note:'- Waahington, D. C . 18J- ^&#13;
; ,r&gt;rj.N|- Jbseph s, WllsoO, Comlssioner, encloses the Register&#13;
arid Receiver at Omaha, copy of the;decislpn of the Secretary of&#13;
T^ecember 5th, 1862, an-^-instruct ions in relation-thereto ,&#13;
f&#13;
Jas, 'A« Evans to Gen, Dodge, Omaha, .19&#13;
Your of the 16th is received. With reference to coming ^&#13;
seasons work, the arrangement shadowed forth in your letter seems to&#13;
qle to be very good. As to present., chiefs of parties, so far as 08&#13;
Niel and Llaxwell are^ concerned, my opinion coincides very neary with&#13;
yours. 0*NeiL in his place is quite valuable, if a portion of line&#13;
be riven him with full instructions what to do. I know of no one that&#13;
Would suit me- better. Col. Hudnutt I dont know at all, but his repui ' tatiion IQ' ▼ery good, and I have no doubt he will prove a very good&#13;
V- man. Mh»»ell ia altogether too slow for the rush of next *yeTar.&#13;
If these pa^V^wa in the field between end of location&#13;
and ..Green River, there is no reason why we could not keep out of the&#13;
way of everyt ing an'^ combete the location by middle of Jul3', then&#13;
BOme of the parties could be disbanded.&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
There is a coimtry to examine between Dodge' s. siiqjmit and Bitter&#13;
Creek that will take a little time, and it world therefore be prudent&#13;
to.have an additional party to make it so as not to delay location.&#13;
Escorts should be ready by 1st of April or better still, raiddle of&#13;
March, from Sanders. We must establish a supply post at North piatte&#13;
and another aboHt I,a Clede or a little below on Bitter Creek. The&#13;
escortiJhnuld be .art Infantry, .part Cavalry, numbering, all told, abo\it&#13;
75 fotfr*#aeh party. . . _&#13;
■ ■1'have been so shaping everything as to close up my engineering&#13;
with the close of the year. The coming year will be a busy.one and&#13;
I am; vbiry certain that there are opportunities outside that pecunia&#13;
rily* are much better than^the profe-^sionj still, in cutting loose from »&#13;
it thers is much that i-s diaagreeahle, the . greatest among them perhaps&#13;
is the' breaking up ojf associations-snd again the utter abandonmentof that desire that we all have of seein a t'-&gt;ing through with that&#13;
we ar^^once embarked in. Suauaing it all up^ I hove come to the conclu&#13;
sion that if the Compcyiy are disposed to pay me $6,000 they can have&#13;
my services for tou can consult with them ^about this if you see&#13;
fit. • .vC&#13;
Whatever the result may be.t want to make the comparison of line&#13;
In the ftlack fl llls. This can be done whether 1 am in company employ&#13;
ovno±:^mnA like to meet you in New York about^Sth or 6th of January.&#13;
t&#13;
i ■ •• ' &gt;&#13;
7 • I&#13;
. J.J*" *&#13;
' ,■ - J""&#13;
December, 1867.&#13;
J. F. fious-^ to Gen, Dodge, Omalia, 19 ' •&#13;
I received your letter of* the 16th last night. The grades&#13;
you speak of" on prof' To were left as they were returned to me. I do&#13;
not knowwhether Ur. Evans laid them or not. I will look over profile&#13;
and correct 8 3 you suggest. - - • • «&#13;
I send you this day by lierchants Express profiies" from Lathum to&#13;
'Denver, b' "Browh" add from'opposite Lathui to a connectibn with LIr.&#13;
Evans Black Hills line at Sta. 640 and by Mf. Hills. I take it you&#13;
do not care for profile dov.Ti Crow-f"reek by Evans or of the different lines run by lir. Hills. • " • ' T&#13;
" 77111 also send you tracing of our mr-p on fe '^Cafte of 4 miles to&#13;
the inch, with Ihi lines marked that were run. this toeing the. only ^&#13;
map we have showing the whole countryV The profiles have not arrived&#13;
from Sanders; 'ere nearly completed When Mr, Evans left- I suppose they&#13;
will be here in a few days,&#13;
H) need |20,000 very badly. The n-iver closed Tuesday night, nnd&#13;
people were crossing on the ice yesterday* . . .&#13;
H. L. LlcComb, Chairafl^ of Committee to Gen. Dodge, 20:-&#13;
Resolved:- That the Chief Engineer be instructed .to ascerttln smd report to thlr, committee a» earlj as praotloable the coot to t&#13;
the oompan-."of the rlcht of way to conheftt with the present road of the&#13;
company, together with cuch 'amdhnf -if' lamd a. in hi. judgment may be&#13;
required for the use of the company In connection therewith upon the&#13;
December, 18C7. .&#13;
following lines as laid.dowtt upon the maps in the Engineer's office.&#13;
Lin© No» 1 on Child Mill crossingj Line No. 2 on old 11, &amp; LI.&#13;
crossing. r. -&lt; f&#13;
I certify the fordgoing td be a tMe .c6py of a resolution adopted&#13;
by the Bridge Committee Dec". 20th, 1867.&#13;
J. E. House to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 21:-&#13;
Llr, Talpey telegraphs me that parties holding valuable&#13;
propei^'ty' in Cheyenne wiSh to make full payments on their lots, payninterest to.the date of O.uit Claim Deeds. I send you blank deeds&#13;
for signdtrre. As.there are but 12 -r 15 of the old lot .on hancb that&#13;
are signed, I suppose' you have no' objection to their paying In full&#13;
and giving Q. C.deeds. I will make no transfers till I hear from you.&#13;
T received .profile and map of 7th hundr ed miles t'^ the crossing&#13;
of MediOine Bow RiVer. I ma having them coj)ied and will send them&#13;
this P. ll.j will take no time to modify th® grades as I suppose you&#13;
are in a g»eat hurry for thei§. ►&#13;
i received "Qur telegram with reference to the Childs ilill and&#13;
k. A K. bridge lines. I do not exactly understand what you want, but&#13;
will star® l^drty to locating'from Train *s table to the intersection&#13;
wlth'nur preeent track, leaving BJPO ft, level grade froa brow of bluff&#13;
for depot groundsi will loc ate line on 30 ft, grade. I hope you will&#13;
write me- fully what you want done. -r. .&#13;
December, 1867. . « ■&#13;
Sen, Dodge to J. E. House, New York, 21:-&#13;
I have been instructed to obtain right of way on the LI. A- Li.&#13;
bridge line from transfer grounds Bluffs to intersection of our.&#13;
track oil Mr. Willi-m'zs line. To do this I want the line immediatel laid&#13;
accurately on the map in cQnnect4on with sections and lots, showing&#13;
exactly wh?t it nms through' and lyho the .owners are; also .the side&#13;
line running from Train's table into our old line to shops.&#13;
I also want ten acrets "of ground laid off on the Train's table,&#13;
shcrJm on map, taking in the level grade as shown In Mr. William's profile&#13;
so that Mr. Poppleton and the citizens of Omaha 'can gee exactly what&#13;
we want. Lay this ten acres s.o that it will be available for side&#13;
tracks, station and freight house, &amp;c. I'think the side line going ^&#13;
to dapot can turn off near the side of the bluff,&#13;
* ' Second, iocate ^e Child's Mill lirie on the Government surveys and&#13;
throni^i Council Bluffs from ti'ansfer grdtfnds In soo. 2 to. our Inter&#13;
section on the main Uno In Uud Creek. Oive the map -ahewlns the&#13;
locations on loia "side to my brother at Sfaffs, on&lt;1 put quietly some&#13;
good man to work to sea what ft'ght of #*y will cost from river,&#13;
to Bud'creek on Bebraski side. ' 1 want thW all done Immadlately.and&#13;
the parties put to work so that PopplaWn and Davis can work It.upon&#13;
11. d 11. line for Omaha, and B. 4 D. can work It up on Chllds lilll&#13;
line in 1 wa, and get It all haok here within three weeks. All the&#13;
reports ere to come to me.&#13;
Deceinber, 3 867.&#13;
The upper . Oniahfi line has been viptually abandoned, all the engi&#13;
neers and Gonipanies connecting with, us deciding virtuallj^ against us,&#13;
but nothing need be saLd on this. Omaha will have to act decidedly in&#13;
this matter-no proraises will effect anything; the business men must guar&#13;
antee what eyer conclusion they come to in the matter. The first thing&#13;
is to fix the'mattep correctly in connection with Government and&#13;
Cit:' 'surveys. The U. 14. line Jn Iowa as laid by LIr. Williams was&#13;
verywhearly on the &amp; Ll.surveys to river, and curves into sec. 2,&#13;
"after'it reaches point north bf that 1-4 sec. ^&#13;
• J. E. House to Gen. DoflgS, Omaha, 22: (Telegram)f&#13;
' Do you want new lo^ation'made or right of way determined&#13;
over the linea last' fall? How much level grade at Ll.^ A M. crossing&#13;
■for diSht grouhds? • .-.tpi&#13;
.T. E. House t Gen. Dodge , Oinhha, 22:- |&#13;
You will see by .the above statement that there ^s a credit&#13;
of $40 fb00 Octobc 2rrd which was the note I gave .at that tAme. In the&#13;
checks reWrrtcd to ifMe there Is none eharged to you or $4,000 nor have&#13;
1 drawn ouch a check durtng the wUhln time. I send SQU a lodger balance&#13;
to data. I have vouchers which have not been returned to balance my&#13;
accounts.' 1 am oatlsfled »he acocunte ere kept correct since the Captain&#13;
left. 1 have devoted considerable time in corroctinc errors in postinc;&#13;
found man-Ohargee not prfsted at all, aome in your favor and some asalnrt&#13;
806&#13;
ilDecember, 18C".&#13;
The. charge that appears sgainst Jas, A, Brown was caused by mis&#13;
take in his accounts, that is, charges on hhe journal''Were not posted&#13;
on tiie- ledger'. There has been no vouchers returned by hlra 'for services&#13;
in the engineering party last Mnter, LIrl Evans thinks'there will bo&#13;
enough to nearly settle bis account- he worked 38 days, and the&#13;
greatest part of the time with his man ahd team. Capt. Bailey drew&#13;
the last balance due Brown of fS20.77 fefefore the ml-Stake was discovered.&#13;
Tn looking over the accounts I discoveMl4l. th« error and telegraphed&#13;
him not to pay Brown, which was codiplied with,' but he used the money&#13;
and promised to pay it back, the 20,th Instj it has not• come -yet.&#13;
Bhould T receive that amount, BroWn account will stand Dr. $152 instea^i|&#13;
of fST-S.??.- I hcfl» all te Satisfactorily explained.&#13;
Your telegram of the 23d received. The line -at the Li. &amp; 11.&#13;
crossing from the Train table to t^he intersection will have to be&#13;
located over'if there irf- to be .2000 ft. level grade; in fact the whole&#13;
lino "should'be re-run ad there was no looat .on made on the east side&#13;
of the fiver as I under«%a«d It, also at Childs Hill from the east&#13;
bank of the river toHlift transfer grounds. Ferguson run two lihes part&#13;
Of the way, one (iirect from the oroeeing of transfer srounds, the&#13;
other kept farther etst In order ts-koep on.toble longer.^ :nilch one&#13;
do you wl's^ located? - r&#13;
I do not eitpecf f. «0 »UOh th e week ae the party ha. Just arrived '.&#13;
A..&#13;
December, 1867&#13;
and want to get fixed up a.little before going to work; also the&#13;
holidays are upon us and they need a Mttlc recreation. I will put&#13;
Llaxwell in charge and will look over the location of lines myself from&#13;
the LI. &amp; I»i. erossing to the intersection of built line.&#13;
In your telegreca you mention that right of way shall be obtained&#13;
over Hudnutt^s lire. I sxipose that has reference to the telegraph&#13;
• t ' ' &gt;" .&#13;
crossing.or do you.mean all the crossings, and if you do, shall I&#13;
pre seed to assess damages where p-rties are not willing to give right&#13;
I .&#13;
of wayj or only take agreements from those who are willing to give? • .&#13;
I will put parties to sounding, and will, sound 50 ft. on each side&#13;
of oentar line, and will ctt it up in cross sections of 10 ft. square&#13;
which 1. suppose will be all you require.&#13;
. The piles are nearly driven for the temporary bridge and the&#13;
superstructure' on; trains will be crossing in two or three d'ays. t&#13;
Gen. Dodge to J. E. House, TTew York 23:&#13;
I telegrahh'ed you today to put parties to work ort rfv^r sounding&#13;
the Childa *111 and U, fr. k. crossing. I want a party'at each place&#13;
all winter under one of • 1,he V ,assistants; , Uaxwell , ■ will'fclo for one and&#13;
aeme other for the othpr. » u .&#13;
The main centre line over river should he used for the base lino,&#13;
and the ,river sounded on every square of 100 ft. 1-2 mile north and&#13;
1-2 mile south or more if time allose. The eoundIng lines must ex&#13;
tend to eeoh bank of.rlv^r and be reliably anchored-on S.oh Side, .so&#13;
December, 1S67, . • , - .&#13;
that we wlli have no difficulty in^finding them in spring of summer.&#13;
ilaps and profiles of soTuidings can be kept up as the work progresses&#13;
/&#13;
by working on them stormy daj's&#13;
I notice on the LI. &amp; M. crossing where William's-line-strikes&#13;
the table he is in 8 ft. cutting, whereas-for good location he should&#13;
be at grade. It may raise the bridge, or place west portion of it on :&#13;
grade. I' want a li-e run at ii. &amp; LI. crossing giving 1500 to 2000&#13;
ft. level on Trsi n table and then ascending 40 ft, to part rhere it&#13;
»&#13;
intersects present track. " '&#13;
You will have to get 'enough of the old parties together by apply&#13;
ing to Evans for what assistants and you want, t The' work on river ^&#13;
must all be finished by March 1st and we cannot get tti Work* oh it too&#13;
eaily, those survej^s heretofore we have been too careless, and&#13;
1 now want the work done carefully, accurately and thorou-hly. Mfeke&#13;
the map of the section wunded on large -scale,so as to-show the lines 1 • ' if * .&#13;
* ^ , rw . -&#13;
of sounding, deth of water and of sand.&#13;
I want a.prpfile of line from Fort Sdnders to North Platte for&#13;
N«&gt;w "^ork office-send it to me at Washington.&#13;
.. a,nd Be to -raehlngton copy of need profile froa »•««. pf .Bitter&#13;
creek, to mouth, of Peins F»rk-al.out 41 ....lies; It 1865; alao&#13;
.. cof of Bate-'k paoflle of Webor tianyon, some S or 4 latleB, r«n to an&#13;
ft* gradee&#13;
J, F. House to Gen. Oodge, Omaha, ^^4.&#13;
fa.&#13;
December, 186". ,&#13;
I received yonrs of the IPth coritaining draft for $20,000 which&#13;
• ♦&#13;
I pXafed to your credit in the Omaha.Natlonal Banh. I also had your • - I&#13;
account closed at the First National and. gave them a check for&#13;
$21,466.30 on^the Omaha Na tional. . ^ ■ x&#13;
I sent you yesterday a statemept of your account at the First&#13;
National, also the amount due you on-bookacco nt and vouchers on hand.&#13;
I did. not Intend it to be a ciese statement, but very near. The dif&#13;
ference In the 8unount reported to yuu and that for whi&lt;£h I ~ave a&#13;
check can be. accountjpd for in checks drawn after statement was sent,&#13;
and inie'J!|»at oh..hot® and overdraft that w,as.,not included.&#13;
- I shall commence^ location of-ii.. &amp; m. line on day after tomorrow,&#13;
and wtll ^ork up all the maps, &amp;c. as fast as possible. I have not&#13;
got'Un. William's profiles of U. &amp; M. line to t-e intersection nor&#13;
the notes, but you stated in,your telegram ithat 2000 ft. was needed for&#13;
■ depot grounds, therefore a new location will have to be made. The&#13;
intersection nlth tb. built line .111 not vary far fro., .here the&#13;
• Dey line stert. out, or at f,{;the3t Juat beyond the Bellvue road&#13;
erooBlne. *h, not uoa the pre.eut line to the shop and depot croimde?&#13;
YOU are ».ire that'.* o«in.t.get to th, Train table at the Bridge&#13;
'• eroBBln's • r •ith-anythine le»8 - than.® ol.o 1 ft. Brad Ke byturning off at the&#13;
also that the curvatures will edge of the hluff as you euggjeatedf ^&#13;
" b,' very .bar, not lees than ^ 18° ■,&#13;
"&#13;
I cent toda:- by r. B. Bipreee. Washington, liax.ell s prol-ne.&#13;
December, 1867. • •&#13;
to North Platte, also B^-own's original. I send theru'just as they&#13;
were received from Sanders, 'ot even opening them. 1 am very busy in&#13;
the office getting up profile and alignment of siack Hills loc?^tion.&#13;
(The profile I had at this office'and taken off by LIr. Carter was&#13;
never returned. I wish you would"send the copy you have that I may&#13;
compare them to the usuimuit) . Lend map, estimate of built portion of&#13;
road froia 100th mi^^ridiah west, y'^'ur lot matters to look after, work&#13;
on the line of road, &amp;c. take it ali in-all&gt;- there is enough to&#13;
do. I will get through with it if en"aigh time i&amp; given.&#13;
I have already spent time enough trying to join together the&#13;
detached portions of the*Black Hills chenges to make them intelligible&#13;
I&#13;
and vinderstood-to make'twice the number of miles of location, and yet ^&#13;
I am as far from the end as ever. •! can make nothing from the notes&#13;
neither alignment nor level; have sent to Cheyenne to ge^t them from&#13;
Lir. Hurd, but his are ho better. Are there any note^ at the New York&#13;
office that will throw any "light on the subject?&#13;
I h-ve the copy of Alignment sent you for file in "Wasbington,&#13;
but as 1 undsrstond It that does not show the 11 ^e as it Is on the&#13;
ground: also the profile is Incorrect, for notwithetanding the olalu&#13;
»f reducing gradas to BO ft. the.-e is a: eo ft. grads pn the east&#13;
side of siMniit a-out 1500 ff. lnng. I had an intiiaation of it »hen 1 was&#13;
at Cheyenne and when lir. Evans was last her, he told me it was a fact.&#13;
Deceraber, 1867.&#13;
« ' I .' '&#13;
Poppleton tells me t -^ay that the Page claim to lots was decided&#13;
against hi thereforo the title to your Jackson St. lot is good.&#13;
Will you still soli for $1200?&#13;
A. J. Poppleton to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 25:&#13;
Yours of the 21st inst. in relation to right of way fro&#13;
o&#13;
bridge crossing was received a day or two since, enclosing also a copy&#13;
of resolutions in relation thereto, ii , House is now engaged on the&#13;
map and location of the lihe, and as soon as completed, I will lose no&#13;
time in bringing the matter to a conclusion and hope a satisf actory&#13;
i ' . ,&#13;
one.&#13;
If you are in a position to do so I wish you would advise me just&#13;
how far.I may go in giving any assurances of the location at the point&#13;
indicated. If the reqtiired deed is secured I do not regard your letter&#13;
as giving me any power in that respect, yet if I could even say that&#13;
the deed indicated in your letter woiild probably secure the location f •- *&#13;
r would.be of material service.&#13;
EnclPe«d I send you a decision of the Secretary of the Interior&#13;
received at the Omaha Lend offioe yesterday, which seems to me to he&#13;
o6.ereat Interest to the Company. I presiie you have already seen it.&#13;
1_ aont think it correct,but it is beyond remedy as .the Secretary la&#13;
the ultLate power in the matter. Its practical effect will .he to&#13;
greatly retard ..ttl.m,nt along the Ine of the road and to prevent&#13;
. tne acquisition of th.'title to the town cites 'MTe laid out unSil&#13;
■ ■ r' .&#13;
December, 1867. . , w.&#13;
the surveys here have been made and your lands entered. In view of&#13;
# " • • ' " ' , • • •&#13;
• 's. ,&#13;
this I would suggest that ufiless a change can be effected in this&#13;
ruling it wm^ld be the policy of th- Company to enter the first SOD&#13;
" r» • .&#13;
% t • ♦ ^&#13;
miles of it s land, so as to open the new sections to settlern§nt and&#13;
«&#13;
thus enhance the value ftf their own land. Hitherto settlements by&#13;
pre-emption and homestead have been going on rapidly at $2,50 per&#13;
acre. ^\is ruling, of course, puts a stop to all entries by settlers.&#13;
J enclose these letters thinking the decision may not have been&#13;
made pblic in Washington -nd you therefore not seen it,&#13;
.J, Blickensderfer, Jr. to Gen, Dodge, Tuscarawaus, 27:-&#13;
In looking about for engineers, I find it not improbable th^^&#13;
I can secure the services of Co.. H. C. Lioore, recently the Cen. Super&#13;
intendent of the Terre Haute &amp; Alton R.R. wMch has passed'into the&#13;
* t&#13;
hjuids of Pennsylvania men and thrown Col. Moore ort Of employment. He&#13;
. 1 _ . ..&#13;
is an old engineer and an excellent man, but now'getting to be some&#13;
what advance^ in life, say 65 years old or thereabouts. I think he&#13;
has much energy left and would head an exoloring party well, but I did&#13;
not like to mcko hjoa em offer until I had BUbmitted the propriety of&#13;
doing »o to you, as he may be an older man than Vou would" like to&#13;
0ngii&lt;», nop ao I, know thnt ho wouia go for liiat I car. offer, hut If&#13;
you• tftlThk'ht would suit 1,7m least try hi;..&#13;
# . . I MV. J.t .^.sed no u-^n, tut em looking" iMui, for tB* .mo.t&#13;
available material. 9&#13;
December, 1367. .T.&#13;
Shyder to (leVi. Dodge, Omaha 26*- , t* •; vo&#13;
close out toda- ever y pour\d o.f U. S. freij^ht that Myers&#13;
has to ship; could have done it yesterday had his men bpen ready.&#13;
Trains on -time aind everything going aipng sra'oljjily.-&#13;
J. E. House to Gen. Dodge,. Omaha, 27;-&#13;
... . I received your letter of. the 2 3d in reference to the so^md-&#13;
•fng the -river. I havte done, nothing .yet. towards it; have been at&#13;
work locating the lYiilliKirer line on the &amp; U. crossing, v;ill finish&#13;
this week.. You speak af .William's line being in cutting at the edge&#13;
of table lio ifonfier, there was a mistake of 6 or 8 ft. in his levels&#13;
which I discovered'yesterday.&#13;
I-have flniahed laying off the towns of Cheyenne and Hills Dale.&#13;
The track is measured as far as laid. I have telegrahed for that&#13;
partj t,0 caiil&lt;l«to Omaha; it. is in charge of rerE-ason and will put him&#13;
in charge of the Chllds liilj soundlnj.,., Will put Maxwell in charge&#13;
here.* I shall endeavor get .this work done by March let if I have&#13;
to employ 50 men at Mh 4)olnt to dc it. and. can supply the.i. with&#13;
rods. The ich, with the exception of one or two days, has not been&#13;
strong enough to work on. The weather looks throatenln.i now and I&#13;
prsiiiae will be vAry cold. ^ ,&#13;
I ahs 1 haveHo go to ,|n«,-;will try and leave here on ttnday and&#13;
Will be absent all the week. I' shall get matters all working on the&#13;
' river before I go, so that no delay may airise from my not being here.&#13;
December, 18G7. , , . .&#13;
I will turn over tracing of- land map 4^1 Davis's hands this J?. M,&#13;
0 n. Dodge to J. E. House, New Yo^k, 27:-&#13;
E wrote you f^lly about lines. The only lines I want to&#13;
obtain right of way over is M-. &amp; ii. crossing and Childs Llill. Did&#13;
not Williams leave a copy of map of his ILnea? * .&#13;
The 1;, &amp; M. liine on Iowa side -ruhs direct east, up old 1.1, M.&#13;
right of way tftltil it reaches point north of. center, of N.V?. 1-4 sec. 2&#13;
then curves "and rund^ direct; into Childs Llill;. wants to be obtained on&#13;
the direct llne-from bridge to cent'sr of N.'". 1-4 of Sec,.2. I wrote&#13;
Poppleton to have the citizens fix the rlgtPttw© wayJ you to turn&#13;
over the map showing what ground v;e ne«d6# on.M»«: M. orossing; y^Q-i,,to ^&#13;
obtain It on Ch fds Lllll line west of Hlsioiirl RlYec ai^d B. &amp; Dodge&#13;
on Iowa side on C'ilds Mill line. ■•• • •. .&#13;
Note:- Jas. LI. BloSSom^ to Jesse L. Williams, Bdise City, ,Id^o, 1&#13;
,i i-.t^&#13;
0» F. Davis io Oen. DoAgO# Omaha, &lt;-8;-&#13;
1 send you-tnday by D.S.EJopress a tracing of our land&#13;
map Vlth the lan-'a of the Oraapany colored. The ten and twenty mile&#13;
ll-mlta are also shoan by a ' Ight ahadlns of India IrA; tha.,traolnf5 is&#13;
not joined together, as U could be foruarded more easily before joinIn.-. The map Is for the first one hundred,miles, .ahlch goes nearly&#13;
or quite to the west boundarr of l«n|e ona. west.&#13;
I send with the tracing a llbt pf .tha rallroa^ lands aa selected&#13;
5#—&#13;
&gt; \/ *&#13;
December, . 1867. • « '''&#13;
for*entry, with the appraised .falue of each tract as nearlj' or cdirrectly as I .could make it without? a careftJl •examination of the lands. • The&#13;
appraisement of tho lands near the railroad is based upn actual sales.&#13;
0--the more distant-lands where the appraised value^ls $2.50 per acre,&#13;
• r&#13;
m^y of the lands are worth more and would"drt a very short time com&#13;
mand a riicher price, but so long' as Government lands adjoining can&#13;
be had for that price I do not see as "we can appraise them higher.&#13;
The figures in pencil on the list are the Land office fees as we&#13;
estimate them, and are probably not far f' o&gt; the actual amount. We&#13;
have two complete lldts of the Wllroad -lands here;one for entry at&#13;
the Land Office and one to retain here. We are preparing lists of&#13;
homesteads on the railroad lands; oill prdeed very, soon to contest-.&#13;
them as" instructed in your letter of 23d inst. . .. - I will also'attend Imediately to the gettin- up of the tract&#13;
books, also of the copying of the-descriptve lists, &amp;c, and all ^ .&#13;
steps necessar- to bring the land into market in the spring.&#13;
Gen. Dodge t" J. fri ftotiee, Nelr York, 28: ^ Referring to ycmr letter of Dec. 23d, I only, want agreement&#13;
taken for right of way and ascertain the cost as line hap not yet&#13;
boe,n adopted. 5h.n Cltr ascertains cost w. .xpect to oaks some&#13;
revision for payment of.it or some propoalklon looklns towards It.&#13;
B.e n.-.R.'.. C. &gt; R.n. and B. » t.R.R. and aU the engineers&#13;
h.vs gl«n an opinion agailSst all 0ro..»«g« except Childs Uill and&#13;
December, ]867.&#13;
sustaining fully my report. Tills sts^geried our bo^rd. ' Johnson, of&#13;
C.,&amp; R. I* was strong. Dunlap and Slaon and Sykers, of N.?'., all&#13;
went in strong for Childs Llill; so you see Omaha must be prompt to&#13;
overcome any opposition to right of way. LI, &amp; L. corssing also costs&#13;
twice as much as Childs Mill. Let B. &amp; Dodge, have both linos from&#13;
transfer grounds to Childs Mi;^l to obtain right of way over, and&#13;
we can select the one we v/ant.&#13;
I ;had_the President order Seymour, and Williams to send you mapc&#13;
of lines» prdfile^s, plan and of his surveys so yo . could make a more&#13;
tWormigh sounding .at LI. &amp; Li. and Childs-Mill night whe.re the piers&#13;
come;' You better sent a man ^to Kansas City and gst a plan or bring&#13;
their boring appartus so we can go down to bottom and ascertain&#13;
accnrately what we hayo got to contend with. This work cannot be&#13;
done t-o thol»su^ly and we ought to be ready now. Our shops may be&#13;
able to bet np'berlng apparatuses. , j.-o&#13;
President Ames ordered Seymour-to send out to you the notes of all&#13;
these surveys in the Blank Hllla-i , You better get your grade notes and&#13;
profile notes f roim Burd.; • s»i*j sp^iie. ope HP io copy his profile; he&#13;
Will hkve that corrPtt. irh««» U&gt;hat 90 ft. grade and how came It&#13;
in? Whosa faiilt is ^ ,&#13;
■ ■ ' '-"tfo Oen. MJ*ri for &gt;» on receipt of thia ana ask him If U can&#13;
lel'm. ha*. l«''wall tenta .at Tort Brldgor or Omp Eouolas. I "ant'&#13;
them about Waroh' 1-t and .1X1 receipt for them or buy t-.e .. TelX him&#13;
e can&#13;
T^ecember, 18'"".&#13;
• t&#13;
I must have them lo get my parties under way. Send me his answer&#13;
immediately upn receipt of this.&#13;
I go to New York tonight where you can hereafter address me.&#13;
Will send you another draft after I get to Washington.&#13;
How about the Cheyenne lots? are the parties paying up? I will&#13;
sign deeds and send them back for Davis to acknowledge. I notice&#13;
Snyder puts ^heyenne down as bein" 515 miles from Omaha while you&#13;
place it 518. He counts I suppose from depot while you from initial&#13;
..point; see him abo^ t it and see if it is so.&#13;
IS anyyi^ng be^^ng done to Korth Platte bridge? I havo a"de the&#13;
estimate fo.r 100th meridian to Carmlohaels under the Ames contract,&#13;
will send you a oopy to base your monthly estimate on hereafter. It&#13;
will be dlffloult as we can only estimate the contractors property.&#13;
1 will also sand you copy of what.was turned over to the Company by&#13;
contractors In the settlemcSit up to tbo 100th meridian.&#13;
Re.« sends,, profile to New York office of located line up to&#13;
Uettlolne Bow. but h a old srades and no changes. Evans will soon be&#13;
here and I will .see him about it. The grades on last proflie sent me&#13;
ar. objectionable on account of the numerous light cuts. I wrote&#13;
Rvans to come t- taahln^ton as soon as ha got hla maps ..-d profll-s&#13;
of all lines west finlshaS and to .bring them. on. Tell him. heusay&#13;
mlBS my letter.&#13;
r/Qcember, 1867.&#13;
n'-&#13;
Gen. Dodi:e to J. E. Hous*^, New York,' 28:-&#13;
I "rote **'llliains today to send'you laap and profiles of" "&#13;
. . '. I .. . I ' ,&#13;
bridge line, and also had Scymonr ordered to send such as he had.&#13;
Copy them and return them to the parties you receive them from so that&#13;
* • ' . I .&#13;
the Poard can have them here when they diisouss the question.&#13;
We will need from 1000 to 1500 f ft level on thain's table and can&#13;
use dd track to run to shops on temporarily but In our right of way&#13;
must secure the best direct connection we can.&#13;
I got your amount, see my ledger, &amp;c. showing a balance against&#13;
me of over $6000. When l'get to Wash ngton T irill look -up my last&#13;
atatcuent, which shored lihen I left that I W ahont even, "ith-a $0001 {&#13;
balance egair.ct me with the'coa'pany I W'-in.fl be about $8000 loaer in&#13;
past year? work, so there uust be soisethifiis' rottsn in It for I should&#13;
have credits on Cisco instead of debtor. I enoloae draft of Bates.&#13;
I drew on Cisoo for JEOO ii pay It; charge it to Bates and oredlt&#13;
Cisco. Did I svor receive pay for icy instruments, or how. do thoy&#13;
stand? -ach party lust take' cars oT its own under.my .old orders.&#13;
You con do-' lots Ii" fast is they want the i. 1 -raUisr have cahse&#13;
than any body's paper. I closed yestdrdky an arrangement with the&#13;
Cdorado people, the Denver . Pacific ".P., to hoild road from Denver&#13;
to Cheyenne neat y^-^.lses. Colorado gives $500,000 In cash and memh,rs or stockholders of C.P.B.P. to furnish balsnce. pf money; to be&#13;
-'vw{.v&#13;
Doceui"ber', 1867.&#13;
• «&#13;
built uncier my supp.rviaion, This will rid ^heyenne and hr.ve ths Press&#13;
blow it as a great help to Cheyenne, ilachine shops, if branch will be&#13;
at Cheyenne, as we shall use, our there, , . , • ,&#13;
*&#13;
You can sell my Omaha, lot for .';-120G,if you can get no more-got&#13;
all you can. . . . . .&#13;
There nef)4 be on^y 1500 ft. level on Train table. You can lay 800&#13;
• • »l. '&#13;
ft. and make a slight rise say 15 to mile on 800 and then start 30 ft.&#13;
grade, also 50 ft. grade. I believe we will have to use 40. We have&#13;
got 40 all way Town Uud Creek, however, profile will show best.&#13;
The line must be carefully la,id as it will be about the best and is » , t» . j '&#13;
one yon will have to get right of way on. I supposed Hudnutt run&#13;
and ]ocated that LI. &amp; M. line on both sides of the river.&#13;
If you cannot proper notes of Black Hills line and loc.-^ting&#13;
havo it re-rtm by some of party at Fort Sanders. Best way is for yov&#13;
. to talte..your mftp and profile out to Cheyenne, meet Hurd there and&#13;
settle-the treublc. I must h^ve a correct alignment, profile, grade * w « ' -&#13;
to. for nla in onr offlca on or abonl sonlo aa tfiafmap of the&#13;
7th hnn&lt;lr.d that was sant ne,. Do you *.ep Baker? " hat kind If a na is '*' } I '&#13;
he ? •&#13;
All parties want to ha at Omaha by Feb. 15th to start out. Salt&#13;
lake parties each must meet Blloken.darfer "at Omaha by 1st of Februa 7&#13;
to ..dompany hla West to ntah.' If you know whore chiefs Bates and&#13;
Hod».. ore notify thou. Havo your otatiinory on hand-oirly .0-as t&#13;
have full aupply to all; better give order to Kites, Forllo A Co.&#13;
December, 1867. • « - ''*■ "&#13;
T shall be out in Febriiary dr liar^ch to stay until I ^et my part&#13;
ies started, Ife are to build ^00 miles of road next year v?hich takes&#13;
us to the summit of the TTahdatch, and I sha^ 1 put 7 fie'ld parties in.&#13;
How many teams ai*e "out to the Elkhorn" How manj' at Sanders?&#13;
J, A. Prown is still to work for Durant, and if he owes* us we can&#13;
take it out. Has he credit for t"he $152 or about that that I gave hiti&#13;
check for? It was for proviiions that he bought, &amp;c. I broiJght 'boucher&#13;
in for it.&#13;
I hav'^ gotten y ur letters up'to December 24th . ' .&#13;
Charles Bender to Gen, Dddge, Brooklyn, '30: ^ ■ ~&#13;
I take the liberty of addressing you for the purpose of "&#13;
bringing to your attention ra y new system of suspension bridges, which&#13;
I consider as a profitable design for bridging the liissourf at Omaha.&#13;
Having had several Interviews wlthifr. Durant, lie has very kindly&#13;
referred ae to you as'being the proper person to consult in this matter.&#13;
J. 0. Hudnutt to Gen. Dodge, Chicago University, 30:-&#13;
I have deferred answering your last letter until I pould&#13;
ascertain for a certainty that I coul'd get away from my engagement&#13;
here witeoul too muc'i friction I am now at perfect liberty to make&#13;
an yc. I can report -t Omaha the first of Febrimry&#13;
have only one request to aak. and that la to take with me ,y eon.&#13;
a -lad of 17» who has a strong constitut on anfl Is quite a naturall&#13;
C' ... ' fA.&#13;
December, 18G7.&#13;
He can work in any capacity as lineman, rodmaji, S^c. Be^rond hii&#13;
I have no favorites or to, introduce.&#13;
I haveihad long experience in construction both of canals and&#13;
railway's, ' " • ^ -&#13;
Gen. Dodge, to, J. House, Washington, 31:-&#13;
I send in separate packa^es_ of deeds sighed; get Davi s to&#13;
acknowledge thorn.If he cannot,, send tfie.-i over to Nate, they both I&#13;
believe kno? ' my signature and I acknowledged the bundles. Write&#13;
un^'er my'si^a-tur''-, Agent &amp; Trustee . »&#13;
L. Williaiiis to. gen. Dodge, Fort 7/ayne, Jan. 1:-&#13;
'' 'I Very unexpectedly I received dispatches, one that I munt&#13;
attend meeting of board in Ngw-York onr2nd inst. I leave in 2 hours.&#13;
Ames and Durant had informed me that the contract would be pt off till&#13;
the 22d January; but:the?f have proba ly changed their views.&#13;
If 1 understand the bridge question, the high bridge route in • T&#13;
lot crossing at Ch'^lds ItiXl and cutting thrpu^ ridge at 30 ft. maxfiaum erad.,'taking out: «b little aa .ill answer now but aiding hereafter to fill trestle wQrk on east side of river.&#13;
2nd. nrsslng at lower part of Omaha, old Day site or near it&#13;
using present 66 ft. gKade fpw,a;.hlle and then either cutting down&#13;
praeent grade to SO ft. uklng earth to yil trestii ? east of&#13;
river' r ourVinff short to left, and followtap Uissourl slope with 50 ft.&#13;
X r 'i •«. .. . • ,,4.</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42685">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42674">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - December 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42675">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42676">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
December 1867&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42677">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42678">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42679">
                <text>December 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42680">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42681">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42682">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42683">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42684">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107565">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4217" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4292">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/7f50ca7d913223557f8e3428e5fb7026.pdf</src>
        <authentication>e08a32f83adfc6ad6497ad191364a72b</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58555">
                    <text>January 1867,&#13;
• «'' ■&#13;
Geo. E. Wilson to Ge . Dodge, Kearney Station 5d.&#13;
t • , • •&#13;
I enclose yu the deed for mining property in Gilpin County&#13;
Colorado Ty. I sent the deed to Central City in September last and&#13;
have just received it back again.&#13;
&gt; . . , ' . -a&#13;
Jos. C. Audneried to Gen. Docige, Philadelphia, 7th. • -■&#13;
TThen with'hr." Sherman in Cpxmcfl Bluffs in-August, last I&#13;
requested you to purchase for me two lots, you directed your brother&#13;
to attend to the matter, indicating the vicinity of the depot grounds&#13;
• - • « • .&#13;
on the south side of the tovm as being good points for selection.&#13;
Since then T have waited in vain for letters from you and a demand&#13;
for payment. Please give me some information on the subject and also&#13;
any particulars in regard to investments in that section. Direct me&#13;
to St. Louis. . . ..&#13;
J.L. Williams to Gen. Dodge, Fort Wayne, Feb. 1st.&#13;
liy sta^' 'in New York was much prolonged. Having returned,&#13;
with ore time to consider matters of private business, I have conclud&#13;
ed to take $5000 stock in'yotar Transportation Company. Enclosed you&#13;
have sight draft on Winslow, .Lanier and Company for fTOQO as payment&#13;
of 20 per cent.&#13;
I saw. Mr. Creighton in New York some three months ago and&#13;
informed him of my probable, conclusion. I think lir. Har baugh will&#13;
tate some atock. He is an active man and can be of service.&#13;
Februarjr, ] 867.&#13;
J. E." House to Gen. Dodge, 1st Omaha.&#13;
The area equal to fifteen and seven tenths (15 7/l0) square&#13;
inshces and is capable of sustaining a w6ight eqaul to five (5) tons&#13;
per square inch, or 157,000 pounds.' Some deduction should be made where&#13;
length ie increased to 12 feet.&#13;
Evans has not arrived. I heard he stas ih Cheyenne -on his&#13;
way here. Will send military map.&#13;
■ . . . . , ^&#13;
N. B. Baker to Gen. Dodge, Clinton, 2hd.&#13;
I wished to co mmunicate with you and therefore wrote first&#13;
to find your whereabouts before I wrote on the subject hereof. I may j&#13;
be a candidate for Governor and I want you r aid, help, support and&#13;
comfort if I run. At any rate I ^-ant you to write me confidentially&#13;
how you think I would stand in your section of the State, and-particulary (which is about.the same thing) in your district.&#13;
I hatie heard that Ross of Council- Bluffs, and Willia.ison of&#13;
Des Moines are to be candidates. Williamson I know is one who may em&#13;
barrass you in your support of myself if I should conclude to try the&#13;
state convention, ^rlte to me pro..ptly^ and your letter shall be kept&#13;
as confidential as you desire.&#13;
Frank Street to Gen. Dodge, Council TBiliuffs, 7th.&#13;
Owing to being so severely indisposed as to be confined to&#13;
my bed for the last six days, I must be deprived of the pleasure it&#13;
would give me to accept your kind Invitation to take dinner with you&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
today and of neeting Judge Day and other menbors of the bar.&#13;
G. •B. Bailey to Gen. Dodge, Elkhorn, 7th.&#13;
Yours received last evening, and in reply would say that Llr.&#13;
Carter said to me after I sent to you for the ^150 that iir, Stoner&#13;
would make a turn of $100.&#13;
J. L. T^illiams ,to Gen. Dodge, Fort Wayne, '9th.&#13;
You may have noticed that Gen, Sherman in his correspondence&#13;
from the Plains, indicated the eastern base of the mountains where our&#13;
•line strikes it as the natural point for. a peraianent center for mil&#13;
itary supplies fi:c. for Indian oprations.&#13;
*&#13;
•Now ifi that shall be the programme, and it looks very sensible, could&#13;
you not prevail ilpon the military authorities to commence the erection&#13;
of a post there early in the spring, under an assurance that their&#13;
trains shall run there in the fall? The advantage is that with a&#13;
regiment or part of a regiment at Grow Creek, or near there, another&#13;
at the end of the track to be moved forward as you progress, and exr,&#13;
Qorts passing between to protect the military transportation, our&#13;
Railroad operations would also be protected, incidentally and con&#13;
fidence inspired everywhere of the entire safety of laborers on the&#13;
• — ' iIxjdgo Pole. Without some very decidefd assurance of perfect safety,&#13;
which only the Government can give, I fear you will not get laborers&#13;
alon-- that much dreaded Lodge Pole, heretofore So often annoyed by&#13;
Indians, thieving and scalping.&#13;
'349&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
• ■ ^ *&#13;
I congratulate you upon the adoption of your policy by&#13;
Congress of transferring the Indian business to the Army. ^&#13;
P. S. I may not be ahle to attend the next meeting, hav ng been ab&#13;
sent so much. Perhaps I may see you on your way East, flind regar'^s&#13;
to Mrs. Dodge.&#13;
J. LI. 'Brown to Gen. Dodge, St - Loxiis, 10th.&#13;
All kinds of busiHess is suffering here and has&#13;
suffered. Nearly all the merchants have lost money during the past&#13;
twelve months. Fortunately for me, my arrangements with Messrs. C.B.&#13;
&amp; B. are such that t am free from any contingency of loss, for they ^&#13;
have lost considerably. I have made and am making nearly expenses.&#13;
1 would pefer not to pay your money till after the -i.iiddle&#13;
of May, whe^ my present contaact exjiires, but will pa- it at any time&#13;
you wish. ^iH you not stop here on your way to Washington?&#13;
W. S. M. Abbott to Gen. Dodge, Adel, 11th, * *&#13;
. V . . Engaged to some extent In land surveying, the question often&#13;
oocur» to me as to the proper method of deteminlng the center of the&#13;
seotion. I have understood the correct method to be to run a straight&#13;
line from the east 1-4 stake, to the west 1-4 stake, and mak ng the&#13;
middle of this line (or the bl-sectlng po.nt) the center of the seelion. The propriety of this method being doubted, and Instead there&#13;
of the suggestion that the point of crossing of the 1-4 lines (run&#13;
straight) is the true centre, prompts me to appeal to oldbh surveyors&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
Fill you please, indicate to me the result of yoiir investi&#13;
gations in this behalf,, and advise me if a copy of the instructions&#13;
L •- -&#13;
from the Surveyor General's office to the Deputy Sxirveyors can be&#13;
obtained? It is quite important to me that the question be settled, • •&#13;
and for that reason I a.i troubling you, . ■&#13;
• '&#13;
L. D. Ingersoll to Gen. Dodge, Journal Office, Muscatine, 11th. • • • • ,&#13;
You will find at _V/ashington a gentleman by the name of&#13;
Briggs ( J. Briggs, Jr) with whom I *4sh you would become acquain&#13;
ted. He holds a clerkship under the clerk of the House. McPherson,&#13;
Mr. Grinnell, Filson, Allison, or Price can introduce you. Mr Briggs&#13;
v;as formerly on the "KSokuk Gate City" and is now a correspondent of&#13;
the "Burlington Hawke Eye", and my paper here. He is the best writer&#13;
in Fashington ,from Iowa, and one of the best anywhere.&#13;
*&#13;
I do not know that Briggs will want to retain his present&#13;
9&#13;
position, but if he does, please help him all you can. He is our very&#13;
best man at Fashlngton. « .&#13;
J, C. Anderson to Gen. Dodge, St. Louis, 11th.&#13;
•#&#13;
I wrote you about three weeks ago in regard to tfte pajrment&#13;
of those lota. I have not heard from you and therefore do not know&#13;
What to do. If you do not care to sell me, it will make no difference&#13;
as I find other use for my money ;however, I stand up to my instruc&#13;
tions to you and shall settle as soon as you notify me. Please ^&#13;
write me as to what you wish me to do, as it will be satisfactory in&#13;
Sither case. 3&#13;
Kii&#13;
February, 1867. .&#13;
P. H. Smith to Gen. Dodge, Chicago, loth.&#13;
The question of Council Bluffs being left out in the ad&#13;
vertisements &amp;c. was mere inad vertence and all the posters, bills,&#13;
f&#13;
advertisements, &amp;c. will be changed and are being changed now. Please&#13;
'remember us kindly to Ilrs. Dodge and Annie, Shall be happy to see&#13;
them at our house, with yoxirself, on your way East,&#13;
» G. B. Bailey to Gen. Dodge, Elkhorn, 14th.&#13;
In regard to wood hauling- the great thawes have caused so&#13;
many big ponds of water to become frozen over, that it is very danger-&#13;
* ous driving for a day or two, I will sell some of the saddle-ponies&#13;
to the company if I can, if I can no£, I can trade thd pair I had&#13;
over to your place for a pair of draft horses. If you watny any&#13;
for farming, you can have what you want'in the spring.&#13;
Jenks'will start his mill the 1st of Uarch, I have about&#13;
75 logs.&#13;
Martha P. Ooodell to Gen, Dodge, Davners, 17th,&#13;
I wish you could spend this evening with us in our pleasant&#13;
house. It would give me great pleasure to make you acquainted with my&#13;
husb-nd,besides I have an important matter which I an desirous of&#13;
making know to you. You may remember a letter which'I addrSdied to&#13;
you some two years ago,'in which I asked yru to intercede in behalf&#13;
of an old eohoolmater of yours who was then suffering the torments of (&#13;
one of those terrible southern piaons, I speak of Johnathan (fam-&#13;
February, 18G7.&#13;
iliarly knov.-n as John) T7. Hanson, who was your school-fellow in Dist,&#13;
No. 6. He has a great desire to enter the regular army and thought&#13;
your influence exerted in his behalf might be of great assistance,&#13;
Knov;ing that I interceded in his behalf while in prison, he has asked&#13;
me to state his case and inquire if you would assist him in obtaining&#13;
I. " •&#13;
an officer's commission. He volunteered in the commencement of the&#13;
war, was mustered into service as a private in July, and the Sept.&#13;
following received the commission of a 2nd Lieutenant. Just previ-&#13;
-ouB to his imprisonment, he was promoted to a Captaincy, but did not&#13;
'receive the commission, untl'l his release from prison nine jaonths&#13;
after. He.endeavored to escape but was traced by blood-hounds. He&#13;
has a decided.tafete for military■life and would have applied for the&#13;
situation which he now seeks at once after leaving the prison, but&#13;
confinement rnd starvation had so weakened him that he was not able,&#13;
but plenty of out"door exercise has restored health, and he is now as&#13;
strong and robust as ever.&#13;
A commission in the regular army seems.no more than his pa&#13;
triotism and sufferings have entitled him to receive. He has recom&#13;
mendations from the officers of his'regiment and also from-some of our&#13;
best any? most reliable men in Danvors. I am acquainted with LIr.&#13;
Hanson and so far as I km able to 3"dge, should say, without hasitatlon that he is on industrious and worthy man. From accounts given of&#13;
him While in the service of his country, I know him to have done great&#13;
credit to himself as a soldier while in the field.&#13;
t&#13;
vrjr-.V&#13;
February, 1867. '' » ' ' :&#13;
I shall look with great interest for a reply to this letter,&#13;
hoping my efforts will be successful. I regret that so great*a aistance separated our families at the time of my marriage. Ze should&#13;
have been delighted and highly honored to have seen yru among our&#13;
wedding gugects. 7Je hope at some "day, not far distant, to welcome you&#13;
♦ I .&#13;
and yours again in Danvers.&#13;
Nathan informs me of the great events that take place among&#13;
our friends at Council Bluffs, llrs. Dodge must feel quite lonely in&#13;
your absence, but her loss is our gain, for,we need just such honor&#13;
able, experienced and sensible men (as her husband-has proved himself&#13;
to he j at Washington settling the affairs of the nation. Wii^h such&#13;
men were not so hard to find in this quarrelsome land. I presume the&#13;
care 6f three children will keep any mother t oo bUsy to find time for&#13;
'many lonely hours. She knows that her hushed is in good health and&#13;
doing the work frhich seems to few given by God to do. An unseen&#13;
hand seems to guide us.&#13;
Uy husband, mother and Lizzie join with me in love to you.&#13;
j. R, Reed to Gen. Dodge, Adel, 18th.&#13;
I have been trying for the last six months to get the disoharge of a soldier from the Pension office, or 2nd Audltor*8 office.&#13;
The name of the soldier is Thomas J. Wright, Jr. of Co. C. Dth Iowa.&#13;
He has a clabu in both offices, and 1 am not certain in which the dis- f&#13;
«&#13;
Charge is* Have written to both, but can get no satisfAction, If you&#13;
7^&#13;
February!:, 1867.&#13;
can have it returned to him at this lace you w"11 coifer a great&#13;
» ' - . V*'&#13;
fav r . I shall be pleased to hear from you occasionally,&#13;
' . t&#13;
A. J. Bell to Gen. Dodge, %andotte, 19th.^&#13;
l.:ay I not enlist your aid in a-matter-of great importance&#13;
to me as well ae -friends at home, to_whom I am honestly^ indebted? The&#13;
lasyt week inOctpber or first week in.November, Col. Taylor,. Supt.&#13;
-.-— of Indian affairs in Nebraska gave me written authority to pu^bhase&#13;
two hundred horses fpr use of.Winnebago Indians. Heiwanted ponies.or&#13;
~ small horses-such as come from Texas and the Indian Territory, worth&#13;
^ at Omaha about eight to ninety dollars each.&#13;
In obedience to his instructions I hurried to Southern&#13;
Llissouri, where I knew of some droves and bought 235 head, thinking&#13;
some migh*t die or get "ost on the way, or be thrown out by Inspectors.&#13;
I paid a man 3:500 cash to take them up as far as Nebraska City. J. I.&#13;
Cam of that pla^e had e flnajiclal interest in the horses and was to&#13;
advance necessary funds there. « . - •&#13;
The horses came to near ieavenworth, arriving in December,&#13;
They had much difflciilty in crossing -&lt;*ne of the streams; winter ca:iie&#13;
on severely, and hearing of the removal of Col. Taylor and the man of&#13;
whom the purchase had been made, they refused to go any further north&#13;
with the stock, and sd wont Into winter quarters, whore I learn the&#13;
\ horses are still held waiting to see what wb will do»&#13;
1 would have Ws^ied through with the horses myself but&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
thought the arrangements rere perfect and would not fail, besides, ar.&#13;
*&#13;
you doubtless learned, I bought an interest in the Beef Packery on&#13;
Red River, Texas, and was Required, to be there as early as possible,&#13;
lly connection with those Louisian and Texas men was raost&#13;
unfortiinate. After I bought l-o interest in the Packery and 800 acres&#13;
of land with it and*made my payment "in good faith, the scoundrels shot a&#13;
me, attempted to kill my family with poison, coming very near succeed&#13;
ing in my wife's and little daughter's case, ily scai suffered also,&#13;
but nbt as much. They then, being driven off in a dark night by des&#13;
peradoes, threatened vengeance on all Yankees who had the audacity ^&#13;
to attempt to live and do business on Texas soil.&#13;
Trying to-get as far towards home as possible Before cold&#13;
weather, my wife and child were taken sick at Kansas City, and being&#13;
•out *Df money, I was driven to-.accempt the position of Superintendent of&#13;
a flouring mill at this place, where I am making Qmothing more than&#13;
expenses. My family are still sick, ^yet w© think out of danger. Can&#13;
ydu aid me by gett ng tbe Seoreta ry of Interior or Coim-iissioners of&#13;
Indian affairs to instruct the new Supt. of Nebraska to take those&#13;
fOO horses from me ad sodn ss grass grows so as to take them up to&#13;
agency oh grass, say about the 1st to the 15th of June, as that will&#13;
be time enough for the Indians. It will only be an act of justice on&#13;
the part of novomment. I acted in good faith in the purchase. What I&#13;
have In them is all 1 have left to pay what I owe at home. If the&#13;
horses cannot be accepted, it will probably bankrupt me and injure&#13;
February, 1867,&#13;
my friends. I world go to T^ashington myself, but it is absolutely&#13;
ncccr-pary for me to remain here in order to provide for my family.&#13;
I hope to get my people to my Iowa home soon, yet will have to stay&#13;
here myself, until I know what is to he done about the stock. Hoping&#13;
•to hear from you soon, I am as ever your friend.,,&#13;
P. S. I wrote Mr. Kasson on the same subject but have had no&#13;
reply. I think he would confer with you and aid in the mrtter,. I&#13;
sincerely hope the horses may be accepted and men authorized to de&#13;
liver in the spring. I feel as if you would do your best to carry&#13;
the point before the Commissiners.&#13;
t '' ' *"&#13;
14. R. Morgan to Gen. Dodge, Fort Leavonworth, 21st.&#13;
IVe are all preparing for an ^arly campaign against the&#13;
Indians. It seems that the Indians on'the Smoky and Arkansas threaten&#13;
us. We are collocting supplies at Lamed, Hooker (this is the old&#13;
Ellsworth) and Hays antl Fletcher. Hancock takes all his staff except&#13;
Easton. Our Dept. io so small that'I have not a commissary to sen^&#13;
and must go myself.&#13;
Stanle-y will, I suppose, 'Coinaan&lt;l the infantry and A. J. Smith&#13;
the Gavalyy. It Is a bad' time now for me to go off, as we are&#13;
preparing to do the Sutler's work in addition to our own. I think&#13;
the plPrt of'thft Army doing its onw suttling a good one. There is no&#13;
reason why we should not do it.andiwj.th some addition to our corps,&#13;
we would do it wel X. I shall do my best to have it succeed. In old&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
times the Sutl'-r got transportation for his goods and I think now it&#13;
is ungenerous and illiberal to charge the Officers and men the cost&#13;
of this transportation as is the present intention as decided by thv; .&#13;
Inspector General of the Amy. ' ,&#13;
We have not a sufficient number of officers in the Sub. Dept.&#13;
and why they have not asked for an increas? I amvinable to comprehend.&#13;
I send you- a' list of the articles which we are required to furnish. I&#13;
had those lists printed and sent to each post with a letter directing&#13;
the Commissary to consult with the Sutler and tben^send in his requi&#13;
sition for sutlei- goods. Before you get through your term of office&#13;
I hope you will be instrumental in getting the S. Department, as well&#13;
as the Army, in better shape than it is at present.&#13;
• I have heard nothing from any one on the Sbbject of Beevet,&#13;
and hope you will see to it for me when you go on. I want it from&#13;
the 16th;Uarch 1865, Mke the others.. I do not much expect to see&#13;
you and Mrs. Dodge at -ur party, but should you come, we have a place&#13;
for you.&#13;
• J , . . .&#13;
Warren L. Dungan to Gen. Oodge, Chariton, 21st. _ I HaVo learned from a friend that Capt. William Hornep of&#13;
Burlington Iowa will be an applicant for the position of Post master&#13;
of the House of Representatives of the 40th Congress. Capt. Hornor is&#13;
'a native of Washington County, Penn., and has been a citizen of Iowa&#13;
for the last twelve years, the greater portiop^of that time at Knox-&#13;
Februarys 18C7. , : ,&#13;
ville, Llarion County, -ngagod in the.practice of "law and in editing&#13;
the County Republican paper. He entered the Army in 1862 as Cajjtain&#13;
of a company in t e 17th Iowa, and served until the close of the war,&#13;
participating in the ever memorable campaign of Sherman from Atlanta&#13;
t&#13;
to the sea, ■ ' ' ' ■ " * . .&#13;
DTiring the siege of Vickeburg, he was.severely wounded in&#13;
the left hip by a hand greande while in our trenches and close to the&#13;
• &lt; t&#13;
enemy*s works, Capt. Horner is a gentleman of honor and integrity as&#13;
a citizen: honorable and energetic as a politicianj brave and ptriot- ,&#13;
ic as a soldier, and a gentleman, -in every way worthy of the position&#13;
he solicits.&#13;
Iff have.been intimately acquainted with him from boyhood, he&#13;
and I hoveine heen schoolmates in early youth and I most earnestly urge&#13;
you to carefully consider hiB claims and give him your influence and&#13;
vote unless you are already committed.&#13;
We hereby cordially concur in the foregoing letter;' James&#13;
D. Wrii^ti E, B. Woodward; H. r. Say; E. E. Edwards; T. H. Stuart;&#13;
W. W. Waynick; Robert McCorraick. Edward Edginton; T. A. Marston.&#13;
Thomas Seeley to Gen. Dodge, Guthrie Center, 21st.&#13;
By request of our Republican friends at Daie City in this&#13;
County, I write relating to their post office. One or two years ago&#13;
the offioe.at that place was re.-.oved from Mdrrisburgh, a little town&#13;
about one mile east, to the said Dale City, upon thd representations&#13;
■. ..&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
that the latter location accomodated the patronage of the coinmunity&#13;
arbund about, better thnn the Uorris" urgh location, which I h;ve no&#13;
* doubt is the fact. Now there is a petition in circulation to move it&#13;
back and asking for the appointment of a rank Copperhead as P. li. in&#13;
the place of Mr, John Lousdale 'the present P; ii.) who is an active&#13;
and earnest Union man.&#13;
Saiauel Gushing to Gen. Dodge, Omah' , 22nd,&#13;
In conjxmction with our conversation concerning my future&#13;
station, I send you enclosed copies of various letters upn the sub&#13;
ject, Gen. Auger tells me that I'will go to Fort Phil Kearney firstly^&#13;
and th.at upon my return to Fort Laramie he will then be able to decide&#13;
X&#13;
where I will next go, I do not now much care where I ara sent, but&#13;
feel somewhat annoyed to think that I should be offered a choice and&#13;
be overruled unless I choose the point intended. Had I chosen Fort&#13;
Laramie, I dp not imagine I would be overruled at all, but as I did&#13;
not, I must expect to be ordered there "nilly-nilly."&#13;
* ' ■ • • ■ . . _ i •&#13;
Myers has not as yet returned btit is expected back almost&#13;
■ ' • !»£•-: . .&#13;
every day now,&#13;
* t w&#13;
Sidney Dillon to Gen. Dodge, New Yor-k, 24th.&#13;
Your letters have been duly received and am happy to hear&#13;
from you at all times. You say you are coming East soon. 'Do not fail&#13;
to call on me, I Intend to go out to t e Black Hills this summer, (&#13;
that is, if I can have you along. Let me hear from you often and&#13;
February, 1867, ,&#13;
oblige. I think we have arranged fpr what money we want to push our&#13;
work ahead-this sununer.&#13;
D. C. Bloomer to Gen. Dodge, Coiincil Bluffs, 26th.&#13;
Dr. Burdy, who held the office of Examining Surgeon in this&#13;
city has removed from the State, and we now have no physician here&#13;
who is authorized to make official examination of persons applying for&#13;
pensions and the payment of pensions* T)iis is frequently very incon&#13;
venient and makes it necessary to visit Omaha for that purpose.&#13;
I would therefore suggest that Dr. Emanuel Honn be ajppointed&#13;
Examining Surgeon* in* the place of Dr. Burdy. .o&#13;
C. 0. Cole to Gen. Dodge, Des Lloines, 2Gth.&#13;
^ rat'AT. L. Dilley, Esq., formerly of Indinola, and a member of&#13;
• - t •&#13;
the Bar, was in the service for a considerable time, but for the last&#13;
year or two has been in the Interior Department at Washington. He is&#13;
a radical and prefers a position as an officer or employee of the&#13;
House, such as Asst. Liprarian, or Asst. Postmaster or the like,&#13;
ao that he c^n both think and speak freely his sentiments. If you can&#13;
assist him I shall be glad. Hand I am quite sure he will faithfully and&#13;
efficiently discharge his duties in any position you can secure for&#13;
him. Please help him all you can.&#13;
I see the appropriation'hill in Congi?^»B was passed with&#13;
$85,00,000 foi- our ?; 0. Building. If6w I want to be on the committee&#13;
or commission here to look after and see to the building etc. if there&#13;
February, 18G7, • t '&#13;
is'td be such a Coimnittee or Gommission. Is there to be? o-r what&#13;
course does the Government pursue in such cases? Will you please look&#13;
after that matter for me and gfieatly oblige me? To be entirely frank&#13;
with you, my salary as Ju''/"e of Supreme Court does not siipport me and&#13;
( *&#13;
my fami?y, and I would like something like the above mentioned to help&#13;
me out. I have written ilr. Harlan about the same matter.&#13;
C. C. Dodge to Gen. Dodge, New York, 27th.&#13;
After an absence of some, time in Washington, I find on my&#13;
return, the Nonpareil jof Council, Bluffs, with your most admirable&#13;
speech on the occasion, of the. Opeing O.K. &amp;'L1. 0. R. R. It would have&#13;
been difficult to have condensed more stirring truths in language&#13;
more direct or terse, and from the rapid development of your city and&#13;
• • r • •&#13;
the importance of Its location, its future does Indeed seem grand.&#13;
t&#13;
^It is almost frightful soiiietimes to consider in hoV short a&#13;
time your western places spring from infancy to strong manhood and&#13;
Bfln one follows it closely, he finds himself far behind hand in the&#13;
glorious ..arch of progress.&#13;
We watch y^ur course with much interest and shall hope soon&#13;
to welcome you and Mrs. Dodge again to New York. Kindest regards&#13;
to your family circle from llrs. Dodge and myself.&#13;
*" ' " . ■ r&#13;
Jbhn DuUflOmWi# t.e Gen. Dodge, Fort Dodge, 28th.&#13;
As to the yointa SLtide by Mr, Siaith, they are ^.ot&#13;
February, 18G7.&#13;
«&#13;
unreasonable. As to the contract being made in his nar.;e, of course&#13;
this does not matter with the parties in interest. All we want is,&#13;
, to got the ideas which y u gave me, viz:- that we are to have trans&#13;
portation at a reasonable coal rate, that we are to have the necessary&#13;
funds advanced to get the work in paying order, that we are to have&#13;
a market for pur coal at good paying rates. As to the turning over&#13;
of the stock", of course we just as soon have it turned over in the&#13;
" way you suggest as any other way. Tie would prefer to have the con&#13;
tract "ma-^e with trie Qompany rathdr than with individulas, at least ■;&#13;
as to the K.V'.C^. , '* ■ t!"&#13;
* « '&#13;
Go on with your arrangement. Get up your contract to suit&#13;
♦ ' k . . ...&#13;
you. Every man here has perfect confidence that you will do with us&#13;
what is right. "When the contract is drawn up, send it here for execu&#13;
tion. I suggest- tri^i't limit of the time should be a go6d long&#13;
one if the contract is made directly with the N.^.Co. for we give&#13;
away one-half of the entire interest, and if our arrangement is so&#13;
made that it will be for the interest of the Company to take coal of&#13;
ua, of course the time is not very material to them,'although it is to&#13;
Will you be sure and leave enough money in the hands of ^ K.&#13;
Went to meet your prt of the-Hititon purchase and for the estimate&#13;
\he ISth'of the month of Marc^? This is all important. Telegraph me&#13;
care of A. K. Tells, Boone, as*soon as you receive this^letter and&#13;
write also.&#13;
February, 18G7. * *&#13;
We'all want the work to go on and want no delay, and all we&#13;
'ask is to have fair play, as I know yoxx will see that we- get it. If&#13;
the contract is not consut.ii,iated-fully by the tirae this money is due,&#13;
ycu see that ymr friends have it on hand, and we will then, if all&#13;
is n-t made perectly satisfactory, pay them back the'aioney. As to&#13;
the rtock, you can send-it back if you want any chang in it, and I&#13;
will see it fixed out and returned according to your di rections.&#13;
I will send to Anderson tonigjdt and find out what the next&#13;
estimate will "be, ^hd a's'soon as T receive itj will write youl. , .&#13;
John Buncombe to Gen.Dodge, Fort Do'dge, Ilafch 1st,&#13;
Your dispatch from New York was received this morning. Ho&#13;
dispatch fro Chicago has ever come. Your letter from Chicago*I an&#13;
swered, sending it to you in New York and sending a Aote to Washington&#13;
stating that fact. In the letter I explianed fully. Go ahead! Get • • •&#13;
up contract, such as will be satisfactory and send here for execution.&#13;
Be sure and have the, money re'ady with Wells to pay your part of the&#13;
Hinton matter, and the estimate for month ending 15th inst. If all&#13;
is not finally consummated, we will pay back the money. We are very&#13;
anxious to close all up satisfactorily.&#13;
Private Diary Mem, Feb. 17th,&#13;
• Claim of City of Omaha Capital Scrip $60,000, Com..iittee&#13;
on claims, Clinton And Sapp,' Atty's. Ju^'ge Welker, Kirkwood 5-- Dclnno&#13;
February, 18G67.&#13;
Entered into contract today with McCord Co, for 1-2 lands&#13;
of Coal Co, -nd agreed to furnish transportation and market at curfent rates for coal, provided Durant and Smith agree to it.&#13;
George C. Tichnor to Gen. Doage, Des lijpines, 1st, iiarch.&#13;
1 telegraphed you yesterday in regard to U,S.Marshall, The&#13;
etppolfitment of Stewart Goodrell would gratify all. He is justhome&#13;
He is a good from Dixie where he lost everything and Is now poor,&#13;
Private Diary Mem, 27th. / ' ' •&#13;
Chas.parsor.s wriies me March Sth that 7-30 are of thi^ee&#13;
series, due July 1868 and must be exchanged for 5-20 before that time&#13;
or can soil nov/ and bxiy Governments at market rates, but must not let&#13;
7-30 past time due, for if I do, cann9t exchange.&#13;
the charge for.gathering Government horses.&#13;
friend of youra and would prove a vaj-uable one as he is one of the&#13;
beet party wohkfera in^ the State.&#13;
Tf there ia any chance- whatever to get Pete Mye#s out of the&#13;
Pension Agency here, you ought to do it,&#13;
about |l5O0O a year and aome .nas pec table man ought to h'^ve it.&#13;
It is an outrage pn offwiQa^deaenby and a,disgrace to the Government&#13;
The office pays&#13;
Feb. W.&#13;
365</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
      <file fileId="10425">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/28108b739acfde098b0fd2e2967ddfb9.pdf</src>
        <authentication>08c3845dd6756567b797c0b870254f99</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42555">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42544">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - February 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42545">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42546">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
February 1867&#13;
&#13;
Includes miscellaneous correspondence from February 1867 found at the end of Book 6 (pps 846-859).&#13;
&#13;
For additional February 1867 correspondence, please refer to "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - May 1867," pps 549-559.&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42547">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42548">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42549">
                <text>February 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42550">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42551">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42552">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42553">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42554">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107560">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4216" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4290">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/fe5bed0fb2913afae5a518de33ff4236.pdf</src>
        <authentication>8dccdcbb8e1024d821ffdec9268e9ad5</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58557">
                    <text>January 1867.&#13;
• I '&#13;
Geo. E. Wilson to Ge . Dodge, Kearney Station 3d.&#13;
I enclose yu the deed for mining property in Gilpin County,&#13;
Colorado Ty. I sent the deed to Central City in September last and&#13;
have just received it back again.&#13;
« ' - - t&#13;
Jos. C. Audneried to Gen. Docige, ■ Philadelphia, 7th. •&#13;
' ■ When with llr.- Sherman in Council Bluffs in-August last I&#13;
requested you to purchase for me t,wo lots, you directed your brother&#13;
to attend to the matter, indicating the vicinity of the depot grounds&#13;
on the south side of the tovm as being good points for selection.&#13;
Sflince then T have waited in va'in for letters from you and a demand&#13;
for payment. Please jgive me some information on the subject and also&#13;
%&#13;
any particulars in regard to investments in that section. Direct me&#13;
to St. Louis. . . .&#13;
J.L. Williams to Gen. Dodge, Fort Wayne, Feb. 1st.&#13;
My sta-'-in New York was much prolonged. Having returned,&#13;
with ore time to consider matters of private business, I have conclud&#13;
ed to take $5000 stock In your Transportation Company, Enclosed you&#13;
have Gi[^t draft on Winslow,Xanier and Company for $IOOQ as payment&#13;
of 20 per cent.&#13;
I saw Mr. Creighton in New York some three months ago and&#13;
informed him of my probable conclusion. I think Llr. Har baugh will&#13;
take acme «tock. He is an active ms,n and can be of service.</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
      <file fileId="4291">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/5253e44c94f7cd9ba1c305d7b0d05714.pdf</src>
        <authentication>5d7e89310b64865735654a0f301f4d27</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58558">
                    <text>December, 18C7. . , '&#13;
He can work in any capacity as lineman, rclman, &amp;c. ^c. Beyond him&#13;
I have no favorites or to introduce,&#13;
I have-had long experience in construction both of canals and&#13;
railway's, r' ^ ,&#13;
' ' Sen. Dodge, to J. House, Washington, 31:-&#13;
I send in'isaparate packages_ of deeds sighed; get Davi s to&#13;
acknowledge thorn.If hV%annot,. sendr*t]iem over to Nate, they both I&#13;
believe kn&lt;w ' my signature an'd .I acknowledged, the bundles. Write&#13;
un-^er my'signattir'"-, Agent &amp; Trustee. ^ .&#13;
.r. L. Wlllianis to, gen. Dodge, Fort Wayne, Jan. 1:-&#13;
- Very unexpectecily I received dispatches, one that I must&#13;
attend meeting of board in New York on ^nd inst. I leave in 2 hours.&#13;
Ames and Durant hfad Infomed me that the contract would be pt off till&#13;
the 22d January; butlthejf Jiave proba ly changed their views.&#13;
If I underrtAnd the bridge question, the high bridge route in&#13;
I'st, crossing at Ch"ld8 Hill and cutting thrpu^ ridge at 30 ft. maxiiaum grade, taking out.-as little as will answer now but aiding here&#13;
after to fill trestla wqrk on east side of river.&#13;
2nd. wr-seing at lower part of Omaha , old Dey site or near it&#13;
ualne present 66 ft.' gfcae fyp, e^.hile and then'either cuttlns dean present grade to SO ft. ueins earth to rill trest»» 1 east of&#13;
river' r ourflnff short to left-and followtap Ulsscuri slope with SO ft&#13;
JiJf*&#13;
Wv' ?"' ■ '&#13;
Dece'iuber, 867, • &lt; •• " ■ ■&#13;
aacending grade, and surmounting the ridge ^ith a moderate cut 4&#13;
miles below. If these are the plans I should siippose the board would&#13;
like to hove an estimate of cost on cut. Thou^ the Missouri slope&#13;
may be ever so rough, yet the saving in the deep cut might balance it.&#13;
however, the " ? « hill may be tf.o high. have, never been&#13;
on the ground down the river. You know it well. ' .&#13;
J, A. Williemson to Gen. Dodge,, Des Moines,' .3:&#13;
' 'Yours of the 29th is at hiand. liarvy thanks to you for y ur&#13;
efforts to get the appointment o-f Cont.iissloner for me; it is exa ctiy&#13;
the thins I would ll-ke. I wrote -you conoerhing the appointment as&#13;
scon as I knew t"h.t Oen. Curtis was dead. I eculd not accept a posi- ^&#13;
'tlon in the regular'aray if 1 could get it. Uy fa.lly is largo and&#13;
nre of the age to need'me at home'/'l am very grateful to you for&#13;
your kindness in trying to procure ide the appointment.&#13;
I can h. nominaieS roh Cowmor if Rloe and too many other mlll-&#13;
■ tary Ion do not run. arinnell hae no show.and I can heat Uerrill,.hut&#13;
' „ay not h.^ able to heat .very hody if thfey-all run for the office.&#13;
B. F.Bunker to Oen. Dodge,-dtew fork, 4:- .&#13;
' Oongdon and Ames reached herd last ni^ht. I .have heon&#13;
f^d out .nat Ames is after, and hav,-.or. than half feared&#13;
that he was aftit'the" Supt. of lii division.a, he asked me two or three&#13;
* ■ a 1 ^ wav- \ w tryihg for Hub. and hope 1 may questions that led that way. i «* j &amp;&#13;
succeed, hut Boston may rule, and things look |&#13;
Decemb-^r, 1067 ^ • ^ --4^31,&gt;,&#13;
shakey. ^ - 'c r ^ ' - -• '■ •]/&#13;
We have had a meeting of the board -on hand slnoe last Wednesday&#13;
and considerable ohoss-firin'^, but nothing-done yet of any cpnsequence.&#13;
- " t • • •&#13;
. . . ^ f. *&#13;
'* ' H. 11. Hoxie to flen.Dodge, Des Uoine-s,' 5:&#13;
Got your letter written after yon arrived at home. Thanks&#13;
for your attention to all'my requests, I have not much hopes of-the&#13;
R.R. giving me any position that will justify my moving te the west;&#13;
nevertheless I shall fight it out on" this line during this rmonth" and&#13;
the coming one. I woTild cheerfully *take the Land Com is si oners place&#13;
if I could have it at |4006 per annum and really prefer it to the&#13;
other. If you think best write Lr.Dillon and Duff to'that effect.&#13;
Things here terrible dull, business about played out. The C.R.&#13;
I. &amp; pacific at work west of this place. They have dnly located line&#13;
about 25 miles west, cross Coon River 12-miles #dst and go up what is&#13;
known" as Quaker divide, Johns n, C.E. told me that he had not a&#13;
profile or a map made by either you or tey and cohld n4&gt;t-find them;&#13;
was running new line altogether. They VtBH thV ngh Nawton and sout^&#13;
of ijltcheltown. * '&#13;
' Politics dull. New State officers here to take their seats and&#13;
wont f 'nd theu very wana. The Orwlg Stohe (olvU suit) Is now under&#13;
way. Th.y can'daaaBe Stoiie if they want' to. Gen. Baker Ir here mak-&#13;
'.SI • i.'VM TV.&#13;
January, 1868, «&#13;
making arrangements to "build Arsenal and office.&#13;
I s^all go io Ifevr York when ordered.&#13;
Gen. T^odge to J. E. House, Washington '6:- - r .&#13;
I enclose copy of that portion of the contract of U.P.R.F.&#13;
n. t - * *&#13;
that relates to my duties under it, .and desire you in "the estimates&#13;
Sr.c. to "b® governed sy it. It is private-,must not "be shown.&#13;
Mr. Tilliams writes u.e that C"l. Seymour sent the Ric - surveys&#13;
and maps, profiles,•&amp;c. to you from New York, that he also cent his&#13;
to you. Youiwi^l not need both, therefore return one copy to me here.&#13;
I wrote you to make me a copy but I can use one of those until uou&#13;
get mine made. -The map and p ofile of,soundings I want as soon as 4&#13;
possible ^® enable me to make . an .est imeto .&#13;
I hope, the river surveys-are progressing. As soon as Hudnutt&#13;
arrives at OBiaHa* PWt him in charge of Jt all and keep fully posted on&#13;
what is dbn« b-- that when he ^oes west yop can continue them or give&#13;
hecesaary ihfomhtion to ai^ ope else whp has charge of them.&#13;
The »^kOf lanAO' sent me has no co\inties on it on south side;&#13;
fails t-. put on the towns, ftc. except our depots. Our maps compare&#13;
very rnfavroabiy with- oil oUiera on file here or In He. York, tlnless&#13;
can do better I eh.ll bo obUgod to obtain new draughtaaen. From&#13;
our &lt;rta'tt«mtl.n th«y"h.ve beoomo oareles. and slack. Ur. FlUlamia&#13;
an-oth.r. .ho h.ve ba.n at Omaha noticed that fact very .aork« -J and&#13;
have mentioned It. I hope you will rectify It or eleo I shall diacharco&#13;
January, 1867. j"&#13;
Cieo, C. Tichenor-to Gen. Dddge, Des lioinesj, 9:&#13;
I received your kind letter of a recent date. I-a^ much&#13;
encouraged and greati-l' pljliged for your kind assurances of continued&#13;
regard and assistance.&#13;
I derire t ^ you with you to Washington if you go to tr^ke ynur seat&#13;
in Congress the first Of ^arch. f feel assured ihat with your help I&#13;
could get an appointment that will suit me. I am dis'nclined to invest&#13;
sapital with th« future doubtful state of trade and money mattersunless the opening was exdeedingly favorable.. . .. . .&#13;
I think the present mixed state o^ matters at Washington is such&#13;
as to engage Serious c ncern-added to the antagonistic attitude of the&#13;
Executive, We are mot with an open enemy, from the Supremera Judiciary&#13;
which threatens to^annihilate all that loyal leg slation had done to&#13;
circumvent rebel power and check disaster from executive apostacy.&#13;
It demands the moat able statesmanship and courgge to meet the issue,&#13;
and it seams to-mo ,lhat the work to be left to the next Congress,&#13;
as the present one divided, hesitating, bewildered and cowardly.&#13;
I think the impeachment question should be dropped, at least »&#13;
mtli the reconstruction is qettled, and other and important&#13;
measures placed on foot (if possible)&#13;
to purge the Judiciary branch of the Government.&#13;
Kesson'a conduct tewards you was In perfect keeping with the man.&#13;
You know I have the- requisite qualifications of the&#13;
January, 1867. ^ ,r.&#13;
present regime, having been'a'wah-denocrat and a soldier. •&#13;
Palmer sends regards-fend wants to hear from you. Spen-er v;rites&#13;
me from ^an Francisco, California, that his wifefts new book "Tried&#13;
and True or Love and Loyalty" is out and quite popular.&#13;
Note:- J. H. Lyon to Gen. Dodge, Leon, Iowa, 10: '&#13;
i ■&#13;
J. B. Crrinnell to Gen. I)odge, Hd.Rep. 11:-&#13;
Today I saw the Secretary of War and he"said he did not&#13;
know what supplies were called for in that Department. He said he qhould&#13;
be glad to please us jointly but must refer fche request to the Q ilih.,&#13;
'which he did, vith r desire that that request be grarited.&#13;
Kasson plays the radical role strongly of late. I think here ^&#13;
*• I . , 1 •&#13;
is 4n understanding with A J. . .&#13;
f • . .&#13;
I get numerous letters from various military men aayng that I&#13;
am the chiice for Governor in their sections.&#13;
( V V .&#13;
H. L. Hoxie to Gen. Dodge, DeS Koines, 13 ' * »&gt; f&#13;
Your two letters ceune this morning. Thanks for writing to&#13;
iTjr •• • • I . .&#13;
Dillon and others. I wculd be "bettdr pleased to have Snyder. appointed&#13;
than to have the place myself. He flrdt itisntioned the toritter to me&#13;
and put me on the track. I aa #oi* him Itest and all the timo,&#13;
and shall so write to Ne York and tel] them when I go^J.&#13;
. .. ,J wn thlnkl^'ofthe ooal aginiSy, my Impreaslons'ar. now thot&#13;
1 will take It unles. the Oispany give me tfie lAnd Comtilaeloners place,&#13;
and dont know hut I would rather "have it than even ^hat.&#13;
'W- .&#13;
T'--'/■&#13;
January, 18C7, . .&#13;
• 4 -&#13;
I cam raise a little capital and. with the coal agency ?nd other busi&#13;
ness I can connbine, I could make a living. Please keep the matter in&#13;
your hands til"&gt; .the thing,is settled. I much prefer goipg to west&#13;
side of State if I can do it and make money. The U.P.R.R. Company&#13;
t t&#13;
will probably vant^me to take charge of transfer this year if they&#13;
doht give me one of the other places, and that till bridge is built&#13;
and transfer done with coal agency, would.give me a living.&#13;
I am truly sorry that Durnat is out with Browning as B. can make&#13;
us more trouble than any one ejLse. The base of the mountains is Sf&#13;
great consequence to,the ro^id and Intrust^all will yet work^to good&#13;
end. ' . ■ " . . ■ ■ r ' ■ '&#13;
I will see Carpenter tomorrow and will.also look a'ter coal on&#13;
-C.R.&gt;. I. Johnson is now in Washington about Rock Islan' bridge.&#13;
I will post Ainsworth wh" is at Newton about right of way. They only&#13;
cross Coon once, that 12 miles from here. The line only located obout&#13;
20 miles West. I will firv^ out more ^bout it soon and write you.&#13;
The gubernatorial flg-t.wlll be I think now between Ucrrill of&#13;
Clayton, nrlnnell Nho oent get It). WllUaoaon ana Cattail with host&#13;
show for Uerrlll. t « kawpiag my hnda out and shall unless I oan^&#13;
do you some good h.reaft»r whtoh 1 dont now see.&#13;
uy Wir. ..nd. h.r..lflvs to Ura. 5.. JuUa and the children, and&#13;
I bbg to be remembered.&#13;
I know not whethar Hwed is for me or not. He said he was.&#13;
January, 1867.&#13;
■ . -I ' ■ ■ . ■ . .&#13;
How jnuch faith I have in him you and Snyder know.&#13;
t i l&#13;
ti&#13;
:■ 'Jir" rvpa T&#13;
Jno. G. Stone to Gen.Dodge, Glenwood, lov/aj IS:-*"''&#13;
Liay I intrude upon your time for a few monets? T have been '&#13;
thinking of gAing to 'Gyoiiiing Territory, say to Laraaie, and starting a&#13;
printing office to be ready for future operations.&#13;
Yotir knowledge 6f that country and its probable gro -th will enable&#13;
you to advise me. Will you please do so?*- Also write me if you have&#13;
time about the" organ izat! on of that territory, and abr.ut the probabili&#13;
ty oiJ chances for an appointment fca sound Republican. •&#13;
v.. Conner to Gen, Ddge, St ctort, Utah, 16'- i- . yy&#13;
I am in receipt of your letter 6f Dec. 21st. I moved my 4&#13;
r I ■ .&#13;
family to this place 39 miles west of Sdlt Lake' a couple Qf weeks since&#13;
and'am engaged in mining with only partial success; my capipal-is exhausted and every obetalce is thrown ih ra y way by the Church anthorities and people of Utah. I'have experimented enough, to know-that I&#13;
I \&#13;
could make mining here a great success, had I in addition to present&#13;
machinery, furnaces, ftc. about $15,609.&#13;
Brigham Young and his 'sat?elitea in the pulput apd trhrough th''&#13;
press have been grossly abusin^ me since my retvtrn .fram the East,&#13;
indeed, so much eo that my friends feired that-aome of his fanatical&#13;
followers would assassinate'me: 1 K^ve ndt dwfrwt go on the streets&#13;
of Salt Lake after dark sine© the assasslno tiOH'of Dr* Robinson,&#13;
•xcept when accompanied by a number-of frl'Mide*&#13;
January, 18C7.&#13;
BrigHaia's hatred o f me is intense, caused by my making? him behave&#13;
.himself wh le I c^iaaanded here, and unless the Government or Goncress&#13;
does somethlnc for us I and most of the Gentries will be compelled to&#13;
leave in the spring. Many hundreds of Gentiles have already been&#13;
frightened away and every effort is being made by Brigham to drive&#13;
the balance fr; m the territory.&#13;
If your company should cccmience buildlns the road at Salt Lake&#13;
next aa-amer It v,ould make a chanee for the better, and would result&#13;
in .retainine here many Gont:les who now propose leavins. As Tor myself ,&#13;
unless some chanse takes place 1 shall leave my property, $31,000&#13;
worthi and start for California In the sprlnc. The normons loudly ■&#13;
boaat that .Andrew_Johnson Is their freldn and they do not fear any&#13;
punishment for their crimes and perseuctlon ofnontlles.&#13;
1 have made dlUsent search and Inqulr; for coaliand Iron and&#13;
oouwnet find any coa] that would coke nearer than San Pete, 150&#13;
miles south Of Salt Lake. I am, however, assured that there Is coal&#13;
that will coke tc-eth,r with hiaatlle Iron on Bitter Oreek. It has&#13;
already been taken up, but the rl,ht of the parties can be purchased&#13;
chepp. If I remain hore , and y-n wish it, I will'examine it in the&#13;
eprlnc or before. The next besi cbance' 1 think IS ...ro. Some parties&#13;
arcu plopectlns oa , coal vein, ^ thus far the vein V, 4+ Is 4&lt;? wide, nrcaslonally bu.t of ^&#13;
found&#13;
,aperur ..polity of coal, and running through It la&#13;
^ ' amall veins of a splenHd quality of coal containing a erect&#13;
January, 1867.&#13;
\ ^ . ff.&#13;
tar. The parties are sanguine that when they sink further down they&#13;
will strike a solid vein of the same material. There is also in this&#13;
district any amount of v/hat a German metallurgist and iron smelter&#13;
living here calls a superior quality of iron ore. If successful in&#13;
finding the coal as anticipated here this will be a snlendj'' place&#13;
for your works on account of its convenience and splend d facilities.&#13;
Wood is also pcbenty here and charcoal iron could be made-if it would&#13;
answer.&#13;
r . -&#13;
- , I hope you will write to me on receipt of this; perhaps 'youi*&#13;
letter may decide lay future course. If there is a probability of&#13;
your ooatiny rt olri- aiiythlng hero nsxt suomer. In either building the&#13;
road or oaklng^lron, I may remain In the country. 1 congratulate you&#13;
on balng elected to ffongress. I suppose you'v.Ul take your seat on&#13;
the-4,th'o# Uarch. ,I trust you will use your influence to hove some&#13;
thing' done for ue out here. Brigham has suooeeded (thrbugh his hired&#13;
satelltoa in Waehlngton) I _am told,' In prejudlclny the President'&#13;
against ma.I-care no&gt;, tor. that., I ask notlv'.ng of him but protection&#13;
for myielf and. other Xoykl American citlzend Inthls territory.^&#13;
»iy.fa»4iya« wsil, and join me in kindest regards tp youreelf&#13;
an"d Mrs, T). •&#13;
E. D. to Dodge, Washington 16:&#13;
■ ' j a hawa-th, honor to infor... #ou that y&lt;hlr-Bppllortlon of ^&#13;
January 1807. . .&#13;
Dec. 12th, frr. pennicaioru, to obtain supplies for your epnineerin^ party&#13;
and repairs for your trhftfeportation frou the Government Posts, has&#13;
received the attention of the Secretary of .&#13;
Ih acoordahc® wi.th the pecgimiondation of the Coiii.;iissary General&#13;
of Subsistence, instructions have been given to Gen. Hancock to&#13;
fvirnish the supplies. :&#13;
^e subject of repairs t transportation will be considered as&#13;
soon as a repo. f shall have been received from the (iur rtemaster&#13;
General. J .'i I&#13;
- Note:- G. D. Brov(n to Gen. Dodge, St, Louis, 17:-&#13;
hti'Qeo. C. Tlchenor to Gen. Dodge, Des Uo nes, 17:-&#13;
I think Tfilllarason is not satisfle that you are favorable&#13;
■ toward him for Governor.,- If you can do anyt'^ing t--^ assure your friend&#13;
ship for him in thd. premises:S0 as to sf^tlsfy him you better do so.&#13;
• He shall doubtless give him this county if he is on the track in&#13;
Garnest. He feels thpt you ought to help him, and I think you ought&#13;
when you can* consctwntlously. •&#13;
' • .1 am no* out of business and am waiting for something to turn&#13;
• • V, -V.O+ 1c an it will nay a decent livelihood ' up and dent care much what it is, so ix- wij-j. p-j&#13;
% ^&#13;
for the present. ' ' : &gt;&#13;
S. I. Kirlewood to Gen. "Dodge, Washington, City, AC. 18:-&#13;
t 'thank you very heartily for your letter of the 7th inst,&#13;
11"'&#13;
Jonuary, 1807.&#13;
on account of the frien.ily interest therein manifested. I am' well&#13;
anare that sor.ie of our new-papers are-'at this time much exercised in&#13;
relation to my opinion of the propriety of striking the. word white&#13;
out of the constitution of our state, or profess .to, he so and they&#13;
base their '''eutrt'TS on the point on a debate'betwren li^. Sumner and&#13;
myself on the bill for the edaissicn of ^ebrasj^e^ as a State. • I have&#13;
not had an opportvinity of reading what I said on that occasion since&#13;
the ..orning after T said it, but my recollection is that I did not&#13;
express any opinion whatever on the point named. I certainly did not&#13;
intend to express my opinion bn that point, becuase. I ..thought it was&#13;
not in issue and "I" think I did not. • The only point I ii^tended to malce ^&#13;
was "this - that it was improper on the part of iir. .^vuanor to charactoriae as odious 1 disgraceful and infamous a provision in the constitu&#13;
tion of Nebraska that was identical with provisions on the same sub&#13;
ject in the constitution of Iowa and some 9 of 10 other loyal states.&#13;
This is a matter of Uste and propriety, ilr. Suner thought it proper&#13;
and in gyod taste to say what he said-, and he said it. X thought It&#13;
iiaproparvanrt not in good taste for him to say -mat he aaid-, and I said&#13;
ao, and when he asked me' what I thonght of that provision In the conetltntlon of our State. 1 told him what I thougni to be true beyond all ^&#13;
peradWUtur;.that that was thd business of the peo»e of Iowa and not&#13;
his bu-lness. I dont think there can be any doubt on this subjeet.&#13;
The constitution of Iowa Is certainly the busineaa of the people, of ^&#13;
January, 18G7 . ; • , -I,&#13;
Iowa, and not the "business of any other person or people. If Mr, Stun&#13;
ner had asked me what I thoug'it of the provision in the const it ^ition&#13;
of Nebraska then under .disqussion I would very freely and .frankly have&#13;
given him that opinion, as that was then hts and my business. Whether&#13;
"I did on that oocasion say anything ab^ut the particulars in the con&#13;
st ition bf Nebraksa, I do not now remember and I have not a copy of&#13;
what I said to refer to, ' h '-' ' 1 , i&#13;
tr any man in Iowa has -or has had for sqme years past any desire&#13;
to know my oplnlSn on the proprioty of.striking the word white&#13;
from'bur State constitution, he can and could very easily have had..&#13;
that desire gratlrled by asking me. I thlnk'I as not-ln the habit.of&#13;
witholdlng Ay oplnfons on any public question on all proper occasions.&#13;
I am and have been fbr So-*' years decidedly In favor of striking that&#13;
word out of our constitutions and when that question shall be before&#13;
"our people, as I trust It will ba nest year, I shall, If my health&#13;
and strength will pemlt, use whatever power of argument, 1 nny have&#13;
to persuade them' to do that f Ing. But I am in the habit pf ascending&#13;
for the time being to the work on hand, and I can usually find enough&#13;
♦ sirtne in ths breSQut &gt;without anticipating what is work requiring to done in bne pre^«fio&#13;
bo he done hereafter. • *&#13;
Ths wbolte thing grows out of my course of argument on the stump 1&#13;
in the fall of 1B65, In relation to the .,ord "-hl.ler ^ou will remember&#13;
January, 1867. " ' , ' ' '■&#13;
that the Republican converition of that year laid down as part of the&#13;
party platform a plank coimnitting the party t'o the doctrine of strik&#13;
ing the word "white" out of the constitution. If your attention was&#13;
called'to the matter at that tine you will rqmember that this caused&#13;
much dissatisfaction with many members of the party. Some were dis&#13;
satisfied becaxise they were opposed to the thing itself-others because&#13;
thev were oppsed to the way in which it had.been done. The election&#13;
was an Important-one. It was vary desirable 'te. general assembly because&#13;
there was a Senator of'the U.S. to elect. The go called "soldier&#13;
party" had organized'and it was uncertain wh, \ • it&lt;^would effect. I&#13;
Insisted that the practical question before the people at that election&#13;
was not whether the word "white" should be sttickon out, because one ^&#13;
could hoi at that election do thtat thing, but whether we would send&#13;
men to the general assembly who would take the first step to bring&#13;
this question before the people in the way provided by the constitu&#13;
tion, and T argued that none who pere opposed to striking the word&#13;
"white" from the constitution co\]Xd or should,^ if they agreed upon the&#13;
great question of reCcmstruotion with men who were in favor f strikging out that word, stand together and vote together for members of the&#13;
General Assembly who would vote to submit the question to the pepple,&#13;
even if they should finally vote against striking out the word "white"&#13;
S ae papers particlarly the Davenport Gazette insisted that the&#13;
direct issue was in striking out the word "white" and the editor of&#13;
-mMm&#13;
Jj^nuary, 1867. ^ « '&#13;
that paper has I thinic-never forgiven me f-r disagreeing with him,&#13;
Tn that-canvass t argued the question of negro suffrage incident&#13;
ally in connection with the question of reconstruction and in favor'&#13;
of negro suffrage. Of course, it .does not become me to say whether I&#13;
argued the question ably or otherwise, but many of our friends at ■&#13;
different places where I spoke complimented me quite as highly as I&#13;
thought 1 deserved. If ¥ go upon the stump next fall(I think! shall&#13;
not do s) and find men who acted with the Union party*during-the war&#13;
but are opposed to striking out the word white, I shall again argue&#13;
to them the'propriety of still act ng with that party in electing men&#13;
who will take the ^irSt step towards submitting the queStion to the&#13;
pdople in 1868, and in 1868, I shall still urge them to remain with the&#13;
Union party even if they'should feel compelled to vote against&#13;
* •&#13;
striking fut the word white. In short in my Judgment the paramount,&#13;
the controlling, the all im'portafit question of the day is the recon&#13;
struction of the lately rebellious states in such way as to place&#13;
those 'states in the hands of loyal men, and tc sodure the rights, ^&#13;
protection and safety of those'"' have been the friends.of our Union&#13;
and as long as that''question remains unsettled I advise all men I&#13;
- .&#13;
who agree on that question to stand togethe however much they may&#13;
disagree on other questions; and until that qtr stibn shall be settled&#13;
I shall not try to drive off'from our pahty on other questions men&#13;
who agree with us on this question, u&#13;
Januari^, 1867, ^ ^ •&#13;
For instance there are nuvn who agree with our party on this&#13;
great question who disagree with us on the question of striking out&#13;
the word white. There are other men ^ho agree-with us on the great&#13;
question who disagree with us on the liquor and temperance ^&#13;
question, -Shall we.if possible stand together, or shall we divide? I&#13;
think we ought to stand together, I shall vote and labor to strike&#13;
the word white^out of the constitution of Iwwa, but I wil]. not strike&#13;
down a man who, disagreeing with me on.that question, agrees ond is&#13;
willing to work with me in the work of reconstruction.&#13;
Such as my opinions somewhat carefully considered, and I shall&#13;
act on them ttntil X shall become,^convinced they are wrong, and I certaiply shall not .frightened into th^t^belief. ^&#13;
You ©ust excuse me for making ^^speech here^for the purpose of&#13;
fpeqSwS myself from the.unfounded charges made against me in Iowa,&#13;
A14ho«gh I am not supposed to he so, I in fact a proud man. If the&#13;
ne,apapers ohKnse me .Ith petit larceny, 1 wil! not defend nyoelf against&#13;
the, ehnrge uBleso I am taken Into a court of Ju aioe to do so. 1&#13;
think my past life le » sufficient ansmer to such a ohrrge. If the&#13;
neuspapsrs doubt ay r«iitR;tS„the Republican Union party I shall not&#13;
defend myself by.protestations of fealth. If my past political action&#13;
does not an...r Ahe ohargd, those who make It must wait for the answer&#13;
until they-dhall a-e my future actions. Ond thing Is very sure, thes,&#13;
newspaper mmn cannot prevent me from acting In my way, steadily and ^&#13;
January, 1867. • « ' •&#13;
earnestly with ay party:. If .1 cant wdar 'shoulder straps I can carry '&#13;
aausket.' ^ 'i, ' '!. . .&#13;
You see now what a Scrape you have got into hy writing to me on&#13;
this subject. You have had to read a very long letter very poorly&#13;
written. I have written hasitly an:^ have not probably on all points&#13;
expressed myself accurately or fully, but I think I have said enough&#13;
to indicate where I stands&#13;
You may-'show this to any of'your or my friends that you think&#13;
fit, but it is not for public&amp;tlon. Again I thank yon for thp friend&#13;
ly interest you show by writing me on this subject, &lt;■&#13;
There is no man in towa would suit me better fpr Governor of Iowa&#13;
than Baldwin, but I must remain quiet. Baker, Williamson and others&#13;
that 1 cant go'against are-in-the« field-probably as., the. time comes&#13;
nearer tWre wlll'be ib%er candidated,y - - Note:- J. U. Brown to Gen. Dodge, St. Louis, 18:&#13;
Note:- G. B. Bailey tc'^'Serf. T&gt;6dge, Elkhom, 19:&#13;
Note;- J. LI. Brwwn to Gen. Dodge, St. Louis, 19: . ^&#13;
H, L. Hoaiie to Gen. Dod e, Chicaro, 20:- . ,&#13;
■ • - ■ Want oH*r8-Be to Inepeet care, 4^1 i«red ^.y Detr It works&#13;
here and to moke arrangements for Sli»WWg Iron; then^to go to Be. York I • ^&#13;
I shall start Thursday.&#13;
I froB Oskaloosa with Loughrldtf, the successor of Grinnell&#13;
He was going to Washington for session 6f 4thUaroh. He says rolfax&#13;
•' 'x .&lt;&#13;
' jj* I&#13;
Januarjf, 1867.&#13;
will be next Cpeaker, and that, the policy will be to impeach the Prewident. He is very desirous of making a favorable acquaintance with&#13;
you and regrets he, could not abna. ndon Stiles for Withrow when you&#13;
wanted it done last State r onvention. He is evidently pleased that&#13;
he is a il. C. He is a straight and goc^ Republican and a gQod fel&#13;
low ,&#13;
The gubernatorial contest will be a bitter one. The Northahould&#13;
haveit to ke4p- them iStlll. Williamson and Gottell both candidates&#13;
at Des Molnes and'neither Can be.ncsEBioated* _ We h- ve a great many.big&#13;
men at Des Moines. unfortunately.&#13;
I met liaynard here a minute, expected to see him again but mi8se(&#13;
him."&#13;
« • • M&#13;
1&#13;
'' ■ •- - . - -m T ♦ -&#13;
lilsftsr to Ft. icPhereion, 20:- ^&#13;
I am very much obJLiged for, the of^er ypur pass, which will&#13;
be very acceptable# . i ,&#13;
We are expd&amp;ting that the Indian trovibles will take us further&#13;
west, and hope that we-lay ^ we r visit frop^ pr^u before we leave. J&#13;
il. R. Morgan "to Oeu. Dodge^ Ft., Laa\'anworth» Kansas, 22: • •&#13;
■ Uy clerk; Mr. toller, is tip-top. I believe Mrs. Most is his&#13;
widowed sister and he aup^orts I&#13;
other relatives. And now for the other page for a little scandal&#13;
at the ^jtpense fcf old -&#13;
You must- WiOW.thatiliOrtlMI^^ private, ambulance which he bought ^&#13;
January, 1867. ^ ^&#13;
from Col. Hodges and he had a pair of horses v;hich&lt;he could sell for • r .. ♦ * m&#13;
$1000, and which he did not- claim hut, which were the private property&#13;
of Urs, Potter. Poor woman] she thought it was all right I suppose. t •&#13;
Flantgan had one fixed up ahout the time you had yours fixed, this was&#13;
known as the Flanigan Ambulance. V/hen Flanigan went away he gave this&#13;
to Potter\. Potter told Gen.„ Stanely that kajor Dryer at Ft. Randall&#13;
had offered him- for. this ?lahigan ambulance, and he wished&#13;
Stantlay would take it up to hiiH in the spring. He would sell all the&#13;
furniture purchased from Hodges for $700. .&#13;
When Easton came great was the change my countrmeni ^ The garri&#13;
son was rsft^her- down on Potte -Easton remembered the private ambulance&#13;
and I -Understand'^threatened a board of officers to examine into th^&#13;
whole affair,-^^&gt;it»pon Potter turned in the- ambulance -nd horses as&#13;
rubllo. The seto» t'-ilns 1 dnrtereland from _the same source. _ I. "as In&#13;
St. Loula when the bnble broke; was threatened .on the Flanigan&#13;
aabulanco This-a^hula^e was also turned In and Potter&#13;
sill aell all the furniture he owns.ln,hin_houoe for JlEO. dreat was&#13;
the fall »y countnajiaen: Baston is an honest man, I believe.&#13;
?:e hear that fred Uyen is ging to Chicago. . .. Oen. Dodge to Perry V. ault , Oounoll Bluffs . 24; _&#13;
•&#13;
Several of our oltlzene have requested me to write you re&#13;
garding your road. They — td think th-t the lntei:eBta and aots&#13;
of your oaspeny tend to Ignore your temlnus ^d Injure w.et.n. Iowa,&#13;
January, 1867. • « • ' {v&#13;
while the C.R, &amp; Pac. R.R. people cHalia to be worm friends,* &amp;c, ^&#13;
Ychi are probPbly aware that this is the only point (as etated&#13;
^ * • f --&#13;
lay Llr. iT elker) that has fulfilled the agreement with- this Tompany, and&#13;
our business rtien called on- :ne today, to call my attention to your&#13;
running advertisements when you advertise to rim your trains to Omaha,&#13;
end do not even'menti n the point at yoiU' western terminus^ and whfn&#13;
all your southern tcavel over theC.B. &amp; St. Jo. R.R. must take your&#13;
road, and the trade and travel bver this road is already very large for&#13;
its length. • \•&#13;
I, -of course, ^understand the ne'^e^gity of advertising, to connect,&#13;
rerads have to excuse these mattera and explain them away. I am vefcy ^&#13;
anxious that from such om'cH things there should not grow up in&#13;
western Iowa an il^ feeling towards -you in future. Legislation and&#13;
competition might do harn, whild a good feeling towards ycu will, always&#13;
be r strong support in any such matterap .&#13;
To avoid this let me attggest thaf in.your advertisements in your&#13;
business an^'"ln all ways, give thie-placo the same prominence that&#13;
vou do 'any other* knd western ^dwm-whon.practicable. I enclose a slip&#13;
cut from the Chicago papers, in"whichtyou.se^ np f^-son would know thrt&#13;
y^ur train touched ahy ^fctrtt'in lowa or connected with any .other road&#13;
at this point. *&#13;
I write you upon this and athdr SMll matters, as I know you&#13;
d.«lre, as •eil as 1, nSfto te'WSntlfi,, or «,ix In any small matter&#13;
Janunry, 1867.&#13;
• t&#13;
as a railroad, and it is easy to now avoid them by taking a little care.&#13;
Such matters are grabbed at by the press to puff their own town or&#13;
invite some rival, and I aiii certain you make a mistake in doing it;&#13;
for I know that in the future for western Iowa you are to build up zn&#13;
immense trade and traffic, and it is to ycur interest to give it all&#13;
&lt; - . . . . .. . ■&#13;
possible prominence. ^ ^&#13;
Frank Palmer t Gen.Dodge, Des Moines, 25:-&#13;
I believe there is enough which can be proved against John t .&#13;
son to impeach him, and that the axample of his impeachment world do&#13;
the coimtry grpd; but the law has such an eternity of quirks in it&#13;
that the trial would ' J pj-obab^y outlast his term of offic • * . If a private&#13;
cltizencomuits an indictable crime the question is not one of policy&#13;
as to his arraingment; it is a matter of duty." Why should the Pres&#13;
ident of tho TT.S. be an e xception among criminals, especially when&#13;
his crime is really the highest known ^in the land? If I were a member&#13;
of the 4th Con-ress I woul-' help indict hdm if it could be done, and&#13;
lot the Congresamen take care of the ..selves.&#13;
like your notions'relative to the bogus Gtate Governments. They&#13;
ought to be wiped out of existence and 1-yal men, white and black,&#13;
clothed with authority to make new constitutions.&#13;
The Dubuque ner^^ldhas brought out Kasson as the Republican nom&#13;
inee for Governor. The suggestions comes from an appropriate source,&#13;
rtan learn nothing of Kasson^s future intentions. It is no longer to&#13;
January, 18G".&#13;
be feared whr-tever he nay conclude to do or not to do,' His endoraements and recomaendations still pass current at the TOiite Houo.&#13;
■ ■ ' ■ • ' ' ' , . ,, ' * ' * ' -• ■ •&#13;
There has been but one re...oval in this district, a?id t^at niafi was&#13;
rcnovod because he voted you, the Pepublican nonir.c^&#13;
Gen. U. 3. ^rant to (ion. V;. F. Sheniani'^ash njton, D.C. 26:-&#13;
I have crefully read the enclosed letter fhon Gen. Dodgo,&#13;
ajid in accordance with your request ^et^^^n* it. Now that the Govcrn-&#13;
.aent has assui -e-* the obligation to guarantee the b6nds of the Pacific&#13;
Railroad, it becomes a matter of great pecuniary' interest to nee it&#13;
completed as soon as possible. Every"protection practicahle rhould be ^&#13;
given by the military, bothto secure the rapidcompletion of the ^&#13;
road, and, to avoid pretexts on the part of the builders-to get further&#13;
assistance fro... the Government.&#13;
I do not see my way clear row to furnish you further reinforce&#13;
ments boy^nd one regiment of Infantry. As soon as ono regiment of the&#13;
Invalid Corps is organized I can hove the C.anada frontier garrisoned&#13;
py it, with a few companieo of artillery, and rend you the 4th Infan&#13;
try "ow on duty there.&#13;
' It, mleht be' further practicable to ebnfl you b i..gl»ert of Invanllds&#13;
to oooupjr «uc:- depots as are n oeaeiry to bo kept up, and' thereby .&#13;
, a,ops active -en frou. duty in the front. 1 .111 not send the,..,&#13;
■nawvor, wlthoui,,an Intlmtlon from yotf-tliat they oan b., made avallabl., Tcu might be relnforoed to some extent by lnoroasln,g the stan&gt; ^&#13;
dard of comanl.B to the loaxlmun number allowed by law, ^&#13;
January 1867. • « - ' • .&#13;
H. ii. Hoxie to Gen. Dodge, New York. 20:- * ■ ■&#13;
Got here on Friday, "brought Llrs". Hoxie this time and am&#13;
prepared to-stay if they want me to. Board adjourned Gaturdo.yj a^ithor&#13;
ized "Dillon, Durant and Duff to close a contract with J, M. ""illiams,&#13;
he to assign to" codipany the Contract to go to base of mountains.&#13;
Lloney is ver- tight and they wont move. I "think until they see a way&#13;
to raise the same nothing done yet about bridge; left to a committee&#13;
and they lo report to next meeting, as I understand it.&#13;
Stocks down and"it is hurting Traoy and the Durants; hnd too&#13;
much N.'^. whic^ fell fr6m"83 to 61,'a report saysl'it is hurting&#13;
terribly. Boston rbout controls'^I think. AaeS-has a prviate&#13;
secretar'*' ftero wlio is* td be auditor- flr.c» ^ ~ .&#13;
Nothing dond yet about'Superintendent or Land Commissioner. The&#13;
same committee "controls it and are- not ready to acp. No orders given&#13;
about moving iron or othOr yet; "the^- ought to be in the&#13;
road.&#13;
Ur, Reed sTlll here. He does not know as much naw as ho did&#13;
when he erne here. CaSdtoent-s bof^ hera. Will write more at length&#13;
soon. Mrs. Hoxlo sends regards, "H.L. H.&#13;
N. R. Morgan to Gen. Dodge,' Ft^ Ldavenworth, Kansas, 2P:-&#13;
- - ■ - Thanks for the paper with your article d»n&#13;
Indians in U. It expfeased af sentiments, and having read it I hand&#13;
ed it over to Hancock, Who was pleased to get it. He proposed sending&#13;
January, 1867.&#13;
it to Sherman, but I suggested that you had sent She man'a coy of it.&#13;
I believe it is the intention to send the sti^res to the end of&#13;
the railroad and there turn the.*, over to the contractors. A goOd deal&#13;
will depend on th^ "smartness" of the successful coniractoss,&#13;
T. r, H. Smith to Gen. Dodge, ..arietta, 30:-&#13;
Yours ofl6th is received, and I greatly thank you for&#13;
y ur kind attent on. While I was in Chicago last week we received&#13;
the news of the completion of the road to Council Bluffs, connecting • • ■ f&#13;
with your line. Certainly a great event is this completion of 810&#13;
milOfi of R.R. from Chicago west, I congratulate yop on the brilliant&#13;
and wonder&#13;
Gen.&#13;
fill&#13;
Pope&#13;
.success&#13;
left Poro«roy&#13;
in the building&#13;
15th with&#13;
of&#13;
Llr,&#13;
your&#13;
Horton&#13;
road,&#13;
(hiw father-in-law)&#13;
|&#13;
to spend a month at th« East. I had several letters.from him before&#13;
he left* Mrs, Pope was confined the last of December and h"S another&#13;
fine boyj mother anfl child well. The General very happy in his in&#13;
crease of family,&#13;
I had a letter from Bell last Monday (our old Adjt. Gen,). He i£&#13;
in commission btialws at Milwauke-fim, Mower &amp; Boll, Ueline is&#13;
in New York writing the letters in the&#13;
' 1 as operating in oil lands, coal lands and western'lands and&#13;
have thus far been euooe.sful. With elncero rospoot eAd enod will.&#13;
H. M. Hox'le to ^'6-. Dodge, New York, 30:-&#13;
Nff new thlnE tu ns up except that they are advertleins for&#13;
January, 1867. # ,&#13;
plans and proposals for .building bridge across Missouri at Omaha.&#13;
Pl,"arifl«jdind proposals to be received by S. Seymour mtil 15th of Feb.&#13;
■ ■" Money very tight; stocks doVn. Nothing determined y§t about&#13;
summer's work. Reed here. Casements gone Ijome. They made a bid for&#13;
track-laying and for the transfer across the river. They bid $150 per&#13;
ton on freight across river, they to load it o^l cars on Oma'a side.&#13;
No action on the proposition yet. Tlie committee on^work have not yot&#13;
had a meeting. it"'&#13;
H.-M. Koxle to-den. Dodge, New York, 51:-&#13;
, I think Reed has opposed.me all the time because I w^s a&#13;
Republican. An Antimo.tion ofeme to »e that I., was too much of a.politi&#13;
cian for man, and I am Incliaed to think he is jealous of&#13;
all Republicans*. I am saislfi®dnany how.&#13;
Money li' tie* oMier to-^ay^ but the Doctor and his corener are&#13;
badly ^iirt and are scratching' to keep up. He is attending to that&#13;
now, and dont do anything about H.k. matters except to badger his man.&#13;
Not ft word hps been said to me about such busviQss since -I come here.&#13;
I m keeping my irtouth closed. If you were here either Cnyder or myslef&#13;
would be appointed, but }ou are not, and it cant be helped.-Regards&#13;
te Mrs. D.&#13;
Oeo. C. f^en. Dod-e, Des Moines, Feb. 3:-&#13;
TRtfso aJy^Jblhtiaents -will doubtless be made on&#13;
exaalnatlons mafl. by th» of -far, henoe the choice of Gon.</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42541">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42530">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - January 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42531">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42532">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
January 1867&#13;
&#13;
Includes miscellaneous correspondence from January 1867 found at the end of Book 6 (pps 822-846).&#13;
&#13;
For additional January 1867 correspondence, please refer to "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - May 1867," pps 538-548.&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42533">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42534">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42535">
                <text>January 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42536">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42537">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42538">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42539">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42540">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107559">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4210" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="10419">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/4a4ba52c23b9e8b49b09377df36d9e21.pdf</src>
        <authentication>a7f700e569c52ab80cc795201012302e</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42463">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42453">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - July 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42454">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42455">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
July 1866&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42456">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42457">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42458">
                <text>July 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42459">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42460">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42461">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42462">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105268">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107553">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1551">
        <name>1866</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4222" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4298">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/3033a41d6a974ebbafacaa5d546e8f16.pdf</src>
        <authentication>a104d4bd969beee8b24d0d5e22c58697</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58550">
                    <text>June, 1867, . f , h-Lrl.&#13;
.'busy in tjie corn and so many weeks I have not had time to d.o ajiy-,&#13;
thing else. I shall haul part of our ^Lumber before harvest, will&#13;
itJ ; have to wait till after for the balance. f , i&#13;
•sr , The horses and pattle arp looking fine, '-j&#13;
^ - ol Note: G,.B. Bailey to Gen, Dodge Cost Cf barn.T&#13;
oj : ■ \ Snyder to Gen, Dodge, Omaha_, ilarch 8th, 1867.&#13;
- I am very much obliged for your dispatch and letter of Feby,&#13;
28th, and for the interest you have manifested in my welfare and&#13;
promotion. If this division of the road is given to me, I will try&#13;
and.fill the bill, .&#13;
' I can tell hut little of the N.Y. movement, yet have an idea&#13;
of th« larties who have been opposed to me, T.c.D. has certainly&#13;
no reason to find fault as I have worked harder for him than ever&#13;
for any other aan. There have been a great many men here who have&#13;
manifested a disposition to get more than was due them from the&#13;
road and as far as has been in my powe I have tried to prevent it.&#13;
They don't want me here. , , .&#13;
. IWed has gone to Chicago, Hoxle is here working hard to get &lt;&#13;
materisG. enroute. I fear we will not be able to do as much this&#13;
year as was accomplished last, - ,&#13;
t •&#13;
eakes Ames to (;^n» Dodge, Washington, July 8th, 1867.&#13;
Yours df tht-25th of June in relation to the putting of Myers&#13;
In the 4. U. Dept. Instead of having Uonre sent in by the tresident is&#13;
P.O. I-have se»n,ltlBon and &gt;» h|j^heen to the Secretary oi- War about • ♦ '&#13;
.•5 ' V&#13;
•it y&#13;
fV&#13;
Jima, 1867, *••• ■-&#13;
it, and he swiye "that we canho"t prevent Moore, or rather, we-cannot .&#13;
get'the promotion of Myer s. ; ::m ■&#13;
Bankers has been here a'long time trying t6 get those accounts&#13;
brought here by ^urant last March, settled, and has not as yet suc&#13;
ceeded. I-don't exactly know where the block is,.but intend to&#13;
find out about it this week. This^matter-of freight is getting to&#13;
*be a very imprtant item with the Government, and we must get Stanton to appoint some one to attend to this matter exclusively,or&#13;
have a bureau expressly for it, 'iivir, £.1 ♦ . If:.-/"/&#13;
We got the bonds for the second forty miles on Saturday which&#13;
will be very usbful in their finances. I feel rather uneasy about ^&#13;
the Indian difficulties and am afrird that you will be interrupted&#13;
in your work,bu&lt;i hope you will not. I want to see the road to&#13;
ahead to the mountains, and a piece up, this year,m'and if you have&#13;
no Indian troubles, I sxippose you Will do so.&#13;
I see by the papers you have had another overfl of the Missouri&#13;
River since I was there, and it has washed away the Iowa' R.R. bank&#13;
still more, which will sbow the difficulty in a low bridge.&#13;
Has the Government Commission el*' foxmd the Rocky Mountain base.&#13;
and if so, where does it lay? - t. -v n'-&#13;
We are having'awful hot wdather heM eifd "liwsre a pretty full&#13;
house, Everyone here nants to get away and ww MofJe fl o do so this&#13;
' ■ 1 4 i. ■ ' W M f U I ^ J T* ' I t t week. ■ * • • '■i&#13;
J. F. Conway to Gen. Dodge, Iowa&gt; July&#13;
% k&#13;
Jun p, 1867. . ^&#13;
I .would respectfully ask what cljance there is for me to obtain&#13;
^ commission in the regular army at the present time, providing&#13;
I can successfully pass the required examination? - j: .&#13;
I was a 1st Lieutenant in the 2nd Regiment Iowa Vol. Infty.&#13;
and was until mustej-ed out A.A.I.G. in the 1st and 3rd brigades&#13;
of the 8nd Div. 16th A.C. * 'i • •&#13;
I can get a strong recommendation f om Hon. N. B. Baker, Adju&#13;
tant General of lowai and from other well known arties, including,&#13;
I'believe, our representative, ^Hon. H. Price^ . ^&#13;
I prefer requesting this of you, General, as your long command&#13;
over us makes you seeii like one from whom we have a rigut to ask&#13;
favors, . 0&#13;
Notii Val King ;to Gen. Dodge, Plattsville, Iowa, July 10th:&#13;
(Desires to know about.reliability of J. O'lleil.)&#13;
S. Seymeur to Gen. Dodge, Black Hills, July 11th:&#13;
I comj&gt;l.e'WWl lay explorations, as I came up today, of the coun&#13;
try dividing the valley, up which the line runs and the tributaries&#13;
of crow Creek lyihg to the northward of it.&#13;
The first depression is o^pposite *&#13;
Sta, 500, through which a&#13;
line may be run by .a aimt^ reverse around the interlocking points ■ ...'U v..wjvr!&#13;
involving pretty Ijeavy work. " .. . *&#13;
The 06 occurs further up, opposite stations 580 to 570,&#13;
and I think will afford a feasible line into the valley up which&#13;
we explored the other day in company with Gen. Augur and staff.&#13;
July, 18G7.&#13;
On looking down the valley, I think I saw the White Bluff on the&#13;
north side or bank of Crow Creek where we crossed it on that day,&#13;
but I may be misliaken, as to the point where the valley enters Crow&#13;
•creek. ' At all events, I am satisfied that it will be worth examin&#13;
ing in case 2/0U desire to carry your -line east cif Crow Creek valley&#13;
as far up as the point to which you called jny attention when I was&#13;
oui with you*thd other day. u' 'I&#13;
If ^ou are entirely satisfied with the line that enters the&#13;
valley some miles below your cam,p,-the valley up which^the present&#13;
line runs is, of ftourse, all you could ask.&#13;
My escort Of twent' Pawnee warriors left me rather uncermoniously about six miles east of here, and I have not seen them since,&#13;
i send a fuli'rfeport of-the affairs.by this opportunity to Gen.&#13;
Augur to which I referryou for i^rticulars. -&#13;
I leaVe here at 12 for Dale Creek, beyond the sumiait and will&#13;
be back heVSs Monday P. M. to reHtain over nif^t aia# ffturn to your&#13;
camp on Txjesday. • -&#13;
1 have run some" lines about here over which tho levels will&#13;
he taken during my sb'senoo, and 1 woiuld like to meet you-and Mr. '&#13;
Evans here on Monday evening too look at them, s&#13;
Gen, Dodge to Col. S. Seymour; Cheyenne, July 17. /.f-v.:&#13;
'' I am in receipt of yobr letter of July 17th, recommending changes&#13;
on the located line over Black Hills. My experience tells f», that _&#13;
■ itryi'- ■ ■ , ill ,&#13;
a&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
mere observatiorl on a Iln4 eoiild not determine' changes you recom&#13;
mend* I therefore prefer that the changes be macie on the ground.&#13;
.. ,0 Mr. Maxwell's party will be through here within one week, and&#13;
I place them at your disposal to run such lines as .you consider&#13;
best. A few days' running will determine the question. Qr, £f&#13;
you desire, I will turn over to Mr. Maxwell suKh instructions as you&#13;
deem best to gu'ida' him. As soon as I finish my work here, I will&#13;
accom^ny you over the line,, and we can take with us Lir. I^vans who&#13;
located the line, and iarj. Maxwell, who is to make the changes, and you&#13;
can explain to him, on the ground, your idea of the matter.&#13;
' . Gen.Dodge to Sidney Dillon, Cheyenne, July 15 (21DR274);&#13;
» ; The loss of Hills put me back three^ weeks.. "When I got here I&#13;
the line for miles east wae npt located, so I took .the&#13;
parties and iran^t „4i»to, It night and day. and got it in. The last&#13;
30 miles of tj&gt;e fifth hxandred is very light, but the 18 miles in&#13;
the sixth hundred east of there is heavy, and you want to put on&#13;
that noi'M. three hundred men immediately. I say that you now require&#13;
five himdred 'additional men if you want to keep out of the way of&#13;
the trtfok th^B year,, next put forth all your energy and get the&#13;
light work go|ng ^ winter the heavy cuts&#13;
taken out* • f'.&#13;
The line 1 talked to you about, west of Lara-iie River, is work&#13;
ing out all right. Shall throw out the heavy work'and grades over&#13;
Rattlesnake Pass. ' tin&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
• The country I put the parties in is meeting my expectations,&#13;
.rand-.tf I have my health I will give you a good short line with--&#13;
,nothing over 80 or 90 ft. grades. I am'sorry'Williams-did not con&#13;
nect with me. Se3^our does nothing but comjiain of work done,&#13;
lines, &amp;c.; takes his ease and wants to be waited on. I have no&#13;
faith in his judgaent. He does not kno^ enough about, the country&#13;
to give a good opinion. He is first rate to criticize the work of&#13;
others, but so- far as any help to me^, he is none. Llr. Williams&#13;
would have been. I wanted Sejanour to accompany Mr.Blickensderfer&#13;
to Denver and over the mountains by the Cache le Poudre route and&#13;
by Cheyenne Pass, but he said it was none of his business to&#13;
"^^ow him that country. I had to send Van Truiap with him; was too ^&#13;
bUtfy'id go myself. T was out of patiehoe and probably too hard, but&#13;
it seems td me engineers ai^ hired to wot^, not to take a grand&#13;
jheasure trip j and rfo far as t met concerned tWey will so understand&#13;
I expect he will 'pitch *into me 'oh hie return, but I don't care;&#13;
every body along noticed it and mitlCes him a standing joke.&#13;
I shall push west frVito heW-^ihis ifeek.' Am laying out our town&#13;
called Cheyenne. Cover ment is putting in a depot, ahd I have&#13;
agreed to buiM to the post above us, about two miles of track.&#13;
We can use the track for material. They wanted to put the post&#13;
west of here, but I fastened them here. Peofje are flocking in&#13;
here to settle. I shall send the comfiny an advertisement Whidll&#13;
I want them to publish on neat cars and send to all the National&#13;
July, 18G7 .vnrc&#13;
banks who are selling their bonds. We ,mu^t get $200,00© put^pf Qur&#13;
-town, and it can be done by work. - ^&#13;
•gee Mr. Aaes and telesnaph Sn:d er to contract for 10,000 cords&#13;
of wood.delivered east of Carmichael's cut; also for all the wood&#13;
Oo 'le can get at Pine Bluffs. We haye got to depend upon these two&#13;
points for our winter supply, and it must be gotten out before winter,&#13;
■'as the snow last winter was so deep that we could not get to the&#13;
timber. We will get no coal less than 30 miles and I do not pt&#13;
much faith in Denver BrExnch xmless you are willing to furnish the&#13;
money.&#13;
I want to hear how you are getting along financially* .Write&#13;
me at Port Bridger and keep me posted.&#13;
liie Work liore is ready for opening*-,r&gt;I gave all the notes to&#13;
Kurd and he is'taking off theiWtrk. Bet masons to work,on the two&#13;
bridges in Black Hills. It will.be October before you get any de&#13;
cision from Blicke^Hiaerfer. I think it will be all right.&#13;
Oen. Dodge" ti&gt; Jesse L. William^ Carmichael's Caiup, July 17:&#13;
1 can obtain a line from sunvnit of Black Hills to Laramie&#13;
Plains With niety feet, maxiaiam grade; can obtain same maximima&#13;
fron crow Creek to Bumalt, at cost not to exceed two hundred thou-&#13;
.and dollars. -1 r88B*«a that it be done. Telegraph answer to&#13;
Fort Saundera.&#13;
S. Seymour to Gea. Dodge, Chayii©n«, July 17:&#13;
I have the honor to iafon» you that on Wednesday, the 10th&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
instant, that, after a careful examination of the line from this&#13;
place to Sta. 1200 (westerly over the Black Hills rang®) I had be&#13;
come satisfied that a maximum grade of 80 ft. er mile could be&#13;
adopted to the ground at abo^it the same expense as 90 ft., the '&#13;
present ruling grade; also that, in my opinion, the line at sta. 990&#13;
(where the high bridge occurs which grosses a branch of Lone Tree)&#13;
could be so changed as to avoid the bridge, without material addi&#13;
tional expense; also that the force of from 60 to 100 men and&#13;
a large rimber of teams now employed by the company in that viciAity&#13;
had been, an^^ were no' , doing work that, in my opinion, would be of&#13;
no value upon the line, if changed in accordance with my suggestions;&#13;
also that I would be happy to accompany you over the line as soon&#13;
as you could makS'^lt'conyflAlent to do so, and point out such changes&#13;
as 1 had to suggest, b6th-''»!th-refepencento the ruling grades and&#13;
the avoidance of the bigh bridge .St: '•&#13;
Ln the acting the 11th, finding that you were not prepared&#13;
to examine the iUVe* tflth me&gt; I' reiurned to the Carmichael s Ranch,&#13;
and have since followed the line to the summit at Evans Pass, an-^&#13;
am happy to inform yotf that,' in my opinion, no serious obstacle .pccurs to a reduction of the maximum grade from 90 to 80 ft. per&#13;
mile on the western dlope 6^ th'e Black Hill range, ^&#13;
I trust that it will be useless to argue with, you the great&#13;
advantage of making this change in case.tt shall be ^uiid practi&#13;
cable. We engine will hare two more cars over an 80 ft.&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
than it will over a 90 ft. grade, s o that we nn y calculfite an ad&#13;
vantage of, s'iy, 100 passengers and twenty tons of freight to every&#13;
train that passes over it. The additional, va]ue to the company-,of&#13;
the 80 ft. grade cannot, in my opinion, be less than a nuarter of&#13;
a million dollars. I would therefore urge upon you the importance&#13;
of running immediately a carefully located line with a laaximum&#13;
grade of 80 ft. per mile (or 1.5 ft. per 100) for the purpose of&#13;
instituting a comparative estimate of its cost as comared with a&#13;
90 ft. maximu,. t would also sugg s t that while this is being&#13;
done, the force employed by kr. Carmichael should be employed only&#13;
upon r'uch porti ns of the line as would not be affected by the&#13;
' '* . ■ &gt; . • -&#13;
change.&#13;
■ • Through the aeslstanoe of Ur. Hurd, Dlv. Engr. on Construction&#13;
With hie small part, of two, an4 a 60 ft. tape measure, 1 have run&#13;
an experimental line froms ta. 975 westward _(wn,Voh avoids the high&#13;
bridge) and"the 18v&lt;l and transit notes of whio I now hand you&#13;
in order to enable you to make a comparative estimate of the cost&#13;
of the two lines. 1 would reoormiendlth, ado^on of my line (with&#13;
euoh improvemente as it la Bueoeptible of) at an additional present&#13;
cost of from »75,000 tb »100,000. ' 1 think that even a better line&#13;
than tha one 1 ran cm be ohtaKwaJ dry further careful engineering,&#13;
but my facilities were too limited to allow of any further expermente of a eatisfaotory nature, ttaeltee which 1 hand you brings&#13;
Inw" use moro of the work already done any other that I could&#13;
July, 1867&#13;
suggest. 'r&#13;
"&gt;sr.&#13;
On following the line from, the crossing of Crow Creek to a&#13;
' point some two miles west of the crossj.ng of Dale Creek, I was im&#13;
pressed with the idea that the"engineer in making the location had&#13;
sacrificed too much (jwf grades and cost to alignment, and that by&#13;
the introdrction of more freqvent curves of easy radius, the cost&#13;
may be materially reduced. iThe adoption of this principle, within&#13;
reasonable limits, is most certainly justified in a co ntry where&#13;
the surface in every direction is generally rock of the hardest&#13;
' Character. Some weeks-before levying New York, I wrote to you re- &lt;&#13;
questing that I might be furnished, upon the present trip, with a&#13;
detailed map showing aligrjnent and topography of the line up the&#13;
Lodge Pole^d over the Blade Hills. Such; a. map would have facili&#13;
tated mV'extoiriations* very much, and might possible have led my&#13;
mind, in some cases, to difTereVit .conclusions.&#13;
Gten. Dodge to Oliver Ames, Carmichadl's Camp, July 20;&#13;
1 have obtained an eiabty foot grade from summit of Black&#13;
^ills io Laramie Plains. 1 can obtain same maximum from Crow Creek&#13;
to summit on eqst side, not to exceed two hundred thousand dollars&#13;
additional cost. I r»co«.ehd It done. AnHwer to Fort Saunders.&#13;
S. Seymour to tWn. Dodge, Cheyenne, July 20:- ^&#13;
Tour note Of th#'ITth. instant 1 n reply to mine of the "same&#13;
date. With Pefe'^renee'f^/ohal!ging the maximum grade from 90 to 80 ft&#13;
per mile over tifcft Blt«i 1il*i ***«• fountains, was duly&#13;
July, 1867, •.f r .fT&#13;
C 4 V '4&#13;
from whicti, and subsequent conversations with you, I infer&#13;
that ypu do not favor any change in the present location, and that&#13;
you think that a maximum grade of 90 ft.per mile is the best, u -&#13;
der the circumstances, that can be adopted; also that you would not&#13;
roconciend the Company to incur any additional expense in reducing&#13;
*&#13;
the maxtmuip from 90 to 80 ft, per mile.&#13;
You have, however, very kindly placedLIr. Maxwell, Asst. Engr,&#13;
and party tinder my direction, for the purpose of making such exam&#13;
inations in the field, between this point and Fort Saunders, as I&#13;
ypy think proper, with reference to a change of line. Although the&#13;
personal superintendence^of these surveys does not, in my opinio ,&#13;
.come within the legitimate sphere of my ^duties as Consulting Engi-&#13;
, neer of i-he Company, and will interfere somewhat with my proposed&#13;
plap of accompanying you over the line to Salt Lake, yet I consider&#13;
the matter of the- -rades of immediate an^ primary importance to the&#13;
company; and on the-deolelon of which will admit of no delay inas&#13;
much as contractors ape xlow at work upon some portions of the line&#13;
involved in tl^e change .of grade, ^aijd others will soon be upon the&#13;
ground, , ' . . » ^&#13;
'r)t.. I h*.» ooncludea to avail myself to the services of&#13;
Ur. Haxwell and party as soon as he can be placed at my disposal,&#13;
and will iw-aistely prepare the necessary insyuotlons to guKle&#13;
hU»^ during lay abaonoe to Bridgera, Pass, and back to this place, with&#13;
ilt', Blicken«d«vfer,&#13;
617&#13;
1 ■ I .&#13;
July, 1867,&#13;
In the mekntime, I will endeavor to commiinicate with the Pres&#13;
ident of the Company in N3w York, and obtain his views and those&#13;
of the directors, with reference to the amount of present additional&#13;
expenditure that the Company would he willing to incur in order to&#13;
affect the proposed change in maximum grades. And I would like'&#13;
very much to have you lay your views of the question before the&#13;
President; at the same time, so that he mhy have all the information&#13;
possible Before him while considering'the question.&#13;
'i understand that you have ordered the change of line, sug&#13;
gested in my letter of the 17th, so as to avoid the high bridge over&#13;
hhe branch of Lone Tree Creek at sta. 990, and have ordered the con&#13;
struction force under LIr. Camichael to commence work upon the new&#13;
line, all of which I have no doubt will be approved by the company,&#13;
r ' ^&#13;
I have so much confidence that the company will decide to change:&#13;
the location from the present line to oile Whlbh I will recomaend,:&#13;
involving a maximum of only 80 ft. per mile, that' I will ask you -&#13;
to notify the engineers in charge of construction to abstain frca^&#13;
doing any work, for the present upon suchpprtions of the line as&#13;
I shall notify them may be changed by the new location# and I will&#13;
see that no delay in the prosecution of the work iS occasioned by&#13;
♦ ■ f '&#13;
such orders,&#13;
, Oen. Dodge to Sidney'Dillon, Fort SitKlifcrfi# July 22d, 1867&#13;
il.'M&#13;
Trouble never comes' singlyT Have btA Hill work&#13;
straightened out# and now poor Brown—the best artU most promising&#13;
July 1867.&#13;
;0f all, and my reliance for work west, is killed, and I must push&#13;
out to his party. , IJ-v M . .1&#13;
I am suffering everjd,hing but death from my rides. How long&#13;
I can stand it, God only knows. Add to this, the f^ct that I have&#13;
got nothing but grief along with me, and you can imagine my humor.&#13;
Your mill man will have to go on to branches of Crow Creek&#13;
and-near the summit for timber; they will find plenty there for&#13;
their mill until next year. ,&#13;
Indians on the Plains have been very bad •&#13;
for two weeks; , they&#13;
have been attacking everything and everybody.&#13;
Raslirts has been of great aid to me. I believe he takes&#13;
more interest in the road than^Seymour does, who seems not to care&#13;
a damn whether the Indian a get the road or not so long as he can&#13;
play gentleman and have a big company to foot the bills. He will&#13;
be my everlasting bitter enemey, for I have taken occasion to give&#13;
him soiiie pretty, strong Ucks at. his actions. He cares about as&#13;
much for our as we do for Japan, and will sell any or all&#13;
of us if he can bSiUr- aeyw&gt;i«'. He has some good ideas about engi&#13;
neering, but the devil of it is, no one knows when to trust him.&#13;
He intends to come bock with Blickenaderfer and stay around the&#13;
Black Hills; will do wfiHt he can to change lines, and cause delay,&#13;
■ 'iind y6u must all be careful abgut what you allow him to do; better&#13;
hear Ao on changes before you make any, as he would not hesi&#13;
tate to delay you if it suited his purpose. .&#13;
■ ' Ji"&#13;
''■ -^jI&#13;
rr,. .-&#13;
I only oautiw y6u*because I never knew the man before^ and&#13;
if you know him, all right, it will not be necessary for me to cau&#13;
tion you, . w . I&#13;
Sick as I am, I believe I •shall g'6 through 'to'Salt Lake'if In&#13;
diana do not kill off all my party. It takes the nerve out of them,&#13;
losing so many. ' /&#13;
i want two good engineers^to replace Brown and Hill—men of&#13;
experience and ability. The whole thing is now on the' Shoulders of&#13;
Evans and myself, ""eymour would not take a party, if the road had&#13;
to stop. Told me yesterday that he did not think it policy to push&#13;
parties out during the Indian troublesJ said there wQuldbe plenty of&#13;
time next year; wheft the fact is, every cut must be worked this win&#13;
ter, and the light work'ail deile'fbr forty miles west of here this&#13;
fall. * ^ ^ ^&#13;
telegraphed you and Ames abovit Black Hillsj but got no reply&#13;
•« George E, Gen. Dodg®f ^ecatur, Ala. 1;-&#13;
' When I firwt arrived from California in April I wrote you&#13;
but have not heard t supposd you have fe9ej;i too busy to&#13;
■ n VOf-jT S ; a ' . ' • write lette s. ■ • * , .&#13;
I have been appointed register in bankruptcy for the 4th Con&#13;
gressional district, but have not yet qualified owing to the absence&#13;
of Judge Busteed"il?bm the"««ate. Allow »• to thank you for this ap&#13;
pointment, for lUlidttt interest in the matter I should have been&#13;
forgotten. * " oj edi»^.- ^&#13;
July, 1867. .?r r&#13;
I sincerely finite''that you will, make the "Reconstruction Act" so&#13;
plain that a way faring man though a fool can understand it. Under&#13;
Pope's order., enclosed, wl\ich I sjsnd you w© can carry Alabama dna&#13;
secure it permanently to the Republican party, and without it we will&#13;
''have to give everything over to the rebels. An effort will be made to&#13;
remove the di-sability fro some ex-rebels who are now acting temporarily&#13;
wi'th us, t hope you will oppose any such project as it will injure us v&#13;
very materially. It is better that the-disability should remain as it&#13;
is, for ,the moment wie place any of these men where they have power they&#13;
will use it to the injury of loyal men. Vie have them now where we&#13;
can control them, and th,ey are powerless to injure us,&#13;
I dont believe th'^ country will suffer on account of not being&#13;
" to place these inen tniofficial positions. . We have seen the&#13;
many pardons and I am bold to say that there is not&#13;
' a single man in Alabama that at the present time ought to have his&#13;
disability removed. A little probation will do the... all good and be&#13;
f&#13;
a great laenefit to the cause and party, '&#13;
The prospedts for crops are good and everybody feels encouraged,&#13;
and if Congress'will take a flm stand we will reconstruct this State&#13;
and place It permanently in'loyal hands, and place men at the head of&#13;
affairs that will do to trust. •&#13;
Mas. Spencer is with me knd hm^'hBr regards. My regards to&#13;
"'ii, your wife.&#13;
J, M. Brown to Mrs. Uddge, St. Louis, 2;-&#13;
July, 1B67. , f , itijt&#13;
.. . . 1 have bedn lookihg for you or a letter from you some time,&#13;
r ' . - Has Ocean gone to the plains? ." •s. ■ :&#13;
George E. Spencer to Gen, Dodge, Decatur, Ala., 2;- •'&#13;
In Our Legislature meets on the 13th of this month. Cannot&#13;
0,^ 8»f: you come to Montgomery, about the 15th and remain a few days? You could&#13;
ti 1*14!'T help me a great deal and I" think secure my election, llo man is more&#13;
'endorsed or has greater influence with the Alabamians than you. If&#13;
you will come I will pay your expenses and will also show you some&#13;
good speculations that will pay you ten fold. Of course, you ^knpw&#13;
that if I am successful and that you can rely upn me to do anything for&#13;
either yourself, your Interests or your friends that you may desire.&#13;
t think my chances are good, but with your presence would regarcf&#13;
it as a certainty, • If possible do come. You shall never have cause&#13;
regret ■it\""lf I have letters from Wilson, Logan and other prominent&#13;
men, it would help nb greatly, A letter from Gen. Grant be in&#13;
valuable, Could you get ae such a letter?&#13;
What I want most ig to show the members that I would have more&#13;
^ influence if eiewl«4 ttoan the othep candidate^&#13;
1 + Mrs, Dodge MtUwi General, Council Bluffs, 4:- ^ .&#13;
Ic U.ytjf went,out to Park's mills to a picnic today,&#13;
had a wery pleasant time. The rockets are,going off up town and the&#13;
childi'^lMi wild with excitement. . I am very glad the 4th only&#13;
622&#13;
t .&#13;
' f-T. .&#13;
July, ]867.&#13;
comes once a year. I would like to know what you are doing today,&#13;
and where you are and how you are, ' I received your telegram from&#13;
Lodge Pole; am very anxious to hear now as I suppose you are going&#13;
through the most dangerous part, but I think you will be careful you&#13;
have had so many lessons in Indian matte s,&#13;
• •&#13;
There has been a report that Gen. Ouster was killed, but thought&#13;
* • # •&#13;
not true. Joe Blake's brother Charles was in one of the coaches on&#13;
the Sknoky Hill route that was attacked; had an eye shot out and badly&#13;
1 T ■ ' .i.&#13;
woimded. He was taken to St. Louis, is better now,&#13;
• 'J&#13;
I received a fine imperial photo of Gen. Sheramn today; a&#13;
Splendid picture.&#13;
i I.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to his wife. Grow Creek Crossing, 4:&#13;
v'T-' ' . ■ - , . ■ '&#13;
1 have been in the saddle all day looking at line. Not a&#13;
days work has been done since Hill was killed until I got here. I&#13;
shall stay here and at Sanders for a week or more until I get my line&#13;
^p,ln to this point, then push west to North Platte. Gen. Gibbon will be&#13;
along with the military force, several companies for the new post at&#13;
that point.&#13;
Gen. Augur and staff are hero. Their party with mine had a fourth&#13;
• f t&#13;
of July celebration while I was out on line. Speeches, made toasts,&#13;
drank ftc, X learn it was quite a time. T ey named the new town at&#13;
the oast base of the moiintains Cheyenne. The new military Post to&#13;
bo built near here will ' e located r bout sixteen miles west of this&#13;
place near wood and water, and close to the lihe. ' ' We no&#13;
I&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
'doubt will build upi here a large town and it will rival Denver,&#13;
Nearly all the party go to Denver tomorrow, while I am to work here,&#13;
Ur, Blickensderfer goes down to look at the mountains and the rest go&#13;
only to see the sights. We have camped here now 300 troops; will have 000&#13;
to go west with us.&#13;
Note: M, A, Bailey to Mrs, Dodge, (Domestic matters)&#13;
Gen.Dodge to his children. Crow Creek Crossing, 7:-&#13;
' . " ■ ' / 1&#13;
I am resting today, it bein-;- Sunday, and will write you a&#13;
" f ■&#13;
short letter about our trip.&#13;
The 3d day of July we reached Pine Bluffs, a noted hill on our&#13;
line, an-' in the morn ng all climbed to its top o't obtain the first&#13;
View of the Rocky Mountains, and a glorious sight it was. Away sixty&#13;
miles dus west and 150 south-west stretched along the entire horizon&#13;
the snow capped aio\antain8 towering away into the clouds. The snow&#13;
reached thousands of f4et below their tops and the dark timber line&#13;
was brought prominently forth marking the point where vegetation ceas&#13;
es to exist or grow and where pei?petual snow exists.&#13;
From that point over to Crow Creek we had to travel without water,&#13;
and I am resting here try ng to get in our line over that country.&#13;
The weattier is so cold up here that nights I sleep under two blankets&#13;
and ywsterday I wore an overcoat all day; a camp fire felt good. Every&#13;
day.«ore or gane is killed. Here now camped rl^t with me are&#13;
200 Pawnee Indian, 300 white aoldiers. Gen, Augur and his staff&#13;
are going west with us; will be at least 300 soldiers, so you see we-' ^&#13;
-?•" j. ^&#13;
July, 1867. .vrar «T.C];&#13;
have plenty of protection. I saw 20 Indians the other day and the&#13;
Pawnee scout killed a SiouxJ an Arrapahoe and his squaw scaped them&#13;
and for a week, past nightly had a grand pow wow, scalp dance, ^'C. It&#13;
would interest you, but has got to be an old story with me. -&#13;
1 iiop when I return to meet you all here, if the track is here.&#13;
I want to-have you come out to.the new town that is to be.^ It is&#13;
called Cheyenne, after Cheyenne Pass through the mountains. This&#13;
• creek is called Crow Creek, because several years ago the Sioux and&#13;
■ the crow Indians had a great fight on it in which the Crows got badly&#13;
whipped. The new fort to be erected here is called Russell, after&#13;
Gen.Russell *ho was killed in the wab. .&#13;
Mrs, Dodge tb the General, Cotmcil Bluffs, 7;-,,^&#13;
• This ie the thitd or fourth, letter; as yet I have recieved&#13;
none, ahd most two weeks siflbe jou left. - I should think you would have&#13;
been near some mail. Anrfte is not very well but good care keeps her up.&#13;
I shall send Laura to St. Louis in a few days; have a good chance and&#13;
' she wAhts to go. I.Aiall.wait till September before I go down. It&#13;
is a bad time W Aiwie away frcm home at least into a wamer&#13;
climate •&#13;
• Baldwin 1 euass foiled jou on th, mill. Hate went to see him and&#13;
M'Waid Officer and Puee- would not slve up their claim, but Nate aays&#13;
he thinks they e«.ted to keep It In their own hands or wouldn't let&#13;
Baldwin ehengs. Tou better let him alone and not let him gel any&#13;
chance to hold your money.&#13;
July, 1867. ,^,£x/L&#13;
Gen. Dod^^'to his wlfej Grow Creek.Crossing, ll:-..?a'.r ,&#13;
' ' ' On my arrival here.I foimcl that not a day's work had been&#13;
done by my engineering parties since Hi'11 was killed, and I have had&#13;
to stop here and get In"31 miled of line between.Pine Bluffs and this&#13;
• place sb-'workman could get to grading, and shall be here a week longer&#13;
at least.- T have been out on line every day hard to work. People&#13;
are daily crowding to this new town that is to be; have not yet laid&#13;
it off. The Government engineer has. gone south then will-retiirn here.&#13;
I got one letter from you tongght written on your arrival ..home.&#13;
Am sorhy to learn llltle Annie is sick, but hope she is better. I&#13;
expect to h'^ar from you often% I have written and telegraphed you-, ^&#13;
every oppcrtunity tout do notknow whether they all reached the mail.&#13;
Got papers up to the 27th tonight, but hear jaothing from Congress or&#13;
anything else and t wi-h I hbHe. 1 suppose the pleasure seekers&#13;
are having a pleasant time','btat' I h.-ve nothing ,but,.gard work and no one&#13;
to help me.&#13;
Gen. Rawlins I think is improving. -Col. TSeymour takes his ease&#13;
and finds flaws in other*s Works, K® la now pitching into the Black&#13;
Hills line. Mr. Blickensderfer is out examining the mountains; has&#13;
gone to Berthoud fas&amp;,'to Cabhe la Poudh® and to Ckeyerme Pass.&#13;
I hop® yo^ matters straight at home. Mr, Reed, Mr.&#13;
ca«,nent Coleman, U,.rs;&amp;t. left «veral toys aeo, anfl era&#13;
'I.. c. ..&#13;
'U'y- f&#13;
july» 1867.&#13;
• • » : *&#13;
this are at Omaha. Casement said he would 50 over and see you; hope&#13;
he will. He can talk and tell you more than I can write. My health&#13;
is pretty goor^, not first rate, hut improving. The horses stand it&#13;
first rate. V/e have cold nights very, and need overcoats, blankets &amp;c. . t* e .&#13;
I saw Crster's dispatch to Gen. Augxir tonight, in whic'- he says&#13;
in two fights two of his companies had whipped the Indiens. Caf&gt;t.&#13;
Sa.u. Rohbins commanded one of the companies and. he speaks highly of ^&#13;
him.&#13;
Kiss the girls, take one for yourself and write often. I want&#13;
to hear from you-it is .lonely and I miss you more than ever.&#13;
Krs. Dodge to the Goners^l^ Greenfield, 15, 1864.&#13;
Ypur laafc dated the 8th came through in good time. I fear&#13;
you will have a terrible hot tme of it now and almost feel discouraged,&#13;
■ afraid yotx will have an all euxiuwer campaign; was so much in hopes of&#13;
your coming up next nOOrtto eaad resting-do hope Johnston will evacuate&#13;
as ho has been doing.' ■ i . '&#13;
It Is pretty hot but nothing to atiat' It Is In St.. Louis, and I&#13;
glad 1 did not stay there *ith the. qhildrap .during the hot&#13;
weather♦&#13;
'it think you every tfine 1 alt down Minerva's good meals,&#13;
you don't kn6w hdW much. It is too bad y9U cant get fruit and other&#13;
good things so plentiful at this time of year. - , .y ^&#13;
going over to Indlana|&gt;»lio tomorrawx^a willsen4,,#o?^f,bQ?t,of fruit,&#13;
but i da'Wj not send btittef %ithoiit'ffsi are pure J.t, keep. Can I&#13;
.1". .lA .&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
send things so the raiders will not get them?&#13;
■&gt; 3n 0 1'" rAf^C&#13;
Nate writes me often. He was about selling one of tlhe'stores or&#13;
buildings in Phoenix block.&#13;
Joseph did well at Pulaski, and if you get Atlanta and 'Sherifian&#13;
stops I hope you'wlll try and gSt him a'^ance there.' It would be a&#13;
fortxine. If you draw pay or get any money send it to me. I gave&#13;
Joseph a check for most in bank for buying bonds, and may want to.use&#13;
some.&#13;
I'wrbte you about Pegham wanting me to buy-paht of hid place.&#13;
He has refused $17,000; woixld let me have It i'or .that. i&#13;
Gen. DoSge to".Is*wife, Che^eiuie* 15; ' ~ ^&#13;
Igot yours of 6th and Ella's of 4th of July, also dispatch&#13;
in answer to mine in which you express a desire for letters&lt; This is&#13;
the 7th I have written and mailed. I have got but one batch of papers.&#13;
You know youau'-t put '{)a|^4'r4 in an tn-rslap® latter or&#13;
they will not go through. After reeetving this,, mail letters to m©&#13;
care of Thos.'Pedrup," North Platte River Stag•^Statio^.&#13;
You speake of warm weatheid here. W© are 6100 feet above the sea&#13;
aag it is unco fortably cold; have not suffered a second from heat; in&#13;
*a/d^le of dsy buree, momttig «tid ftight I wear my overcoat. At night&#13;
1 sleep under §t4Mrlet, .tft# ibjtaaket and my overcoat, ,&#13;
I feel vary anx-ksim abouJi:little Annie, and am very glad you do&#13;
not go south with lieb. tfeae 1 Ai€A well aod I did not think ^&#13;
the ti'i p would hurt her, t aappoaaHi^tiAomes from teething, and I know&#13;
• ■'&#13;
July, 1867. . , ; ■&#13;
your good care will bring her out all right. I am sorry about the.&#13;
liason breaking up on my brick building, I suppose Nate is taking&#13;
charge of it. V.ho sent the picture of Gen. Sherman?,&#13;
Now about Cheyenne. The people are already flocking here and,&#13;
like Julesburg, at first it will be a second h^ll. I have got Gen.&#13;
Augur to throw his protecting arm over it to keep .them from owning&#13;
town and all. They are coming from all quarters and all expect to&#13;
make a fortim;e some no doubt will, others lose it. From the town&#13;
sight which is a high table land bounding Crow Creek you can see the&#13;
snow capped RocKy Mountains for a distance of 100 miles north end&#13;
south.fonning a semi-cibcle with the black hills for a foreground.&#13;
.The view is a beautiful one, the location excellent, and here will&#13;
aenter a large population.&#13;
Govorraaent alon. will build up here a l^rge town, as It is to&#13;
ba the depot for all posts north -nd south and also the distributing&#13;
point, for.all pon nta In Oploorado. During this winter our traine will&#13;
stop here and the travel west, will here leave; can take stage and other&#13;
transportation. We ahrtl. aj-e bu.jlld a. large work-shop, machine shops,&#13;
round houses, &amp;o. and fl»*ry 1 hops here to meet you on my return&#13;
from the mountain.. 1 .«.t you to see this country before you go to&#13;
Washington. I shall leave here thie week and push rapidly west.&#13;
Uy pfirWea hs,w«*ot a goed line ,thrcuB to North Platte throwing&#13;
.-.nt the heavy wort't„ the •••Ulne Bow Ucmtains that I used to worry&#13;
about. The last 18 mllea from the east has been a very difficult&#13;
July, 1867. "'T* w r ' t&#13;
n r- .w 7 j . » * r »&#13;
line and we havfe 'worked'hard at it until I think"We have got a good&#13;
line. I hear from New York that matters are prosperous and that they&#13;
are urging us to push forward. Durant I hear is anxiotis to gefback,&#13;
but our people are not willing. They will be fools if they allow him&#13;
to take hold again. SeymoTor is tip in'Black Hills trying to pick a&#13;
flaw in some of the lines. His escort left him six miles from camp&#13;
and put after a lot of Sioux who had stolen stock; recap tured the&#13;
stock but got no scalps. The sa&amp;e band killed a man near our camp.&#13;
They attacked the train, the man was out hunting for it and fell in&#13;
the fight. I never go out without full escort. Have seen brie band of&#13;
Indians only and the'few in h^r^ arb in small bands steadling. The&#13;
first iburial 'in*Cheyehne has marked on the stone "Killed by Indians." ^&#13;
Kiss the girlsj give my love to all the folks; tell Jule tor write&#13;
»&#13;
me Ihe' news'and gobsip; and write often. I will write the children&#13;
next*&#13;
. :w&#13;
*» Jyu ■&#13;
Note: Gideoh Wells to Gen, J^Wttehihgtonj B.C. It:&#13;
firs, Dodgb to the General: ' ;&#13;
T?ie wfeather has be on-almost intolerable for the last week.&#13;
and 1 have beenn arly sick arid had not the streng.th to write for a&#13;
week; little Annie too h«» not ^een wall .wm6 It .took strength I&#13;
had' to take care of'&#13;
X * - ^ . .. ^ -&#13;
I received a long letter-frett N^th Platte, was glad enough to&#13;
get it; part of the tthe Ifra-vW'Ve^n'entirely ignorant of. your doings,&#13;
July, 1867 • J t '.&#13;
though your telegrams came quite promptly to let me know where you v.ere,&#13;
still I was anxious to get letters, to hear more particulars* I hope&#13;
you can opiQe back without any detenti n. n 1 .&#13;
If thei ^aby is well enough, I shall go to Kansas City the first&#13;
of September, think I may leave her at home, but shall viot go or take&#13;
her if,she is not well, I often think evenings I wonld;giV0 a good&#13;
deal to look in upon y-u an(J see what you are at. ^&#13;
' The girls are engaged practicing for a concert. I send a pro&#13;
gramme. Little Annie says: "Papa, coma home," She does npt forget&#13;
you, is'very cute and pretty, Hppe soon to hear Jour face is turned&#13;
eastward. I want to know how much escort you have returning. Be&#13;
very careful. - .&#13;
ir Hon. J. W. hriJieS to Cen. Do^ge, Burlington, 19; ^&#13;
Yours of 26th inst, is at han'^, I suspect that there will&#13;
be a session in July. Such seems to be the general impression. I do&#13;
not believe that much good will come of it.&#13;
* ■ . not a*a*ie of tjpo change in the Pacific Co. I h?ve h ard&#13;
' nothing of It si.m% home, and have not heard any news in fact.&#13;
I would not attempt to go near Washington If I feared that my health&#13;
wouird suffer, *"11&#13;
J. 1 . Brolirn tt) Oen, Dodge» St. Louis, 20;-&#13;
;t&gt;ou sea by the enclosed card that my expectations in regard&#13;
t« V Ibreign (JonstilatS mre not very bright, though I shoul'^ not refuse&#13;
to tsipva my country here at home if called upn to do . X -i..&#13;
'f!.. • * ;r-f i S'" 'i u. t&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
I have entered into co-partnership with Mr. P. Beardslee for nearl&#13;
' i'..&#13;
' three years, each investing $12,500 cash, though I had to give my note&#13;
for near $3000 in consequence of being short of each. I used your&#13;
money and consequently I '^ont to pay you now. I would like to borrow&#13;
three to five thousand more. .. «&#13;
Note: Copy of instructions to Messrs, Olenn &amp; Talpey, Cheyenne, 20&#13;
Gen. Dodge to his wife, Cheyenne, 20:- - - _&#13;
■ Todajr t got yours of July 17th in which you say no letters&#13;
j^t, 1 do not understand it for*I have written twice and sometimes&#13;
*&#13;
three times a week and sent them by reliable conveyance as I supposed,&#13;
• I shall leave here Monday and will write a few line§ now, some&#13;
tomorrow and balance when I get to Saunders to the mail, I have been&#13;
so busy all the time that I guess no one has ftny time-to.throw any bad&#13;
Influence over me. * • '' ' ♦&#13;
f ■, * X ■ About twenty families arrived here today to settle in Cheynene,&#13;
My tep.t is pitched opposite Gen. Rawlins and Mr, Evans and Mr» Van&#13;
Lennep are mjr ohnme. We, while in camp, are poring over maps, profiles,&#13;
' discussing lines and all wound up in R. R. matters, but we all feel&#13;
like gibing home. " '&#13;
Today When I read your letter and Ella's—God bless her-- made me&#13;
homesick. Lettie wrot^ a fine- letter and she is Improvingr The chirography&#13;
. of both indicate their character; Ella- oareful, quiet; Lettie bold,&#13;
dashing-«ll buSinSWA, It does me so much good to get letters from them&#13;
Littls Annie, doei sir# me? ^&#13;
J see Congress Is not doing any general business. You s»y&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
nothing about it. It is better for me to be here than in Washington.&#13;
Yon wrote nothing about the Brick Block except contracts are busted,&#13;
nor nothing about Ebpire Block. Look carefully to our trees; dont let&#13;
thorn died; have them watered if necessary.&#13;
How doeB the Bluffs get along? You must have been Casement or&#13;
some of the parties who left us here. I expect they had a gay time&#13;
at Denver. 7^e get plenty of antelope and I have made arrangements for&#13;
our cedar trees'this winter-live pretty comfortably^ No India troub-&#13;
■ lea lately. I wrote you all about what little there was.&#13;
George and William do first rate. They take good oare of the&#13;
horses an^^ me. I have fallen in love with the pony- ad tell Lettie&#13;
I cannot ever agree to her selling'it. I hear nothing from Jule or&#13;
Nate. I wrdfti you before to hereafter send mail,to mo care of Morris&#13;
Redrup, statidn agent, North Platte River Stage Station.&#13;
Sunday July 21st. We are all quiet today and o bserving the Sabbath;&#13;
washing up and getting ready for our trip west tomorrow» I wish it .was&#13;
'east. I do hot enjoy it much. Rawlins, Dunn, Duff and Evans are -r&#13;
congenial, but Seymour is here for mischief,and trouble-only finds&#13;
fault. I hop© to get rid'of him at Bridger Pass. He says he is going&#13;
back with Mr.Blickensderfer. Mr. B. is a fine gdntlemana attends&#13;
closely to his duties and bothers no one.&#13;
I wish Nate would write me how mattertt are getting along. Has he&#13;
secured the money regular? 1 wroAe him bo see Bnyder and have the&#13;
'"lovj'i .'aa . . - i0 ^ ^ ^&#13;
633 .''fr'j'iww&#13;
y . •&#13;
. ■&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
,money for my lumber- and I want to know if the wood.at the farm has&#13;
^een hauled over to the road yet. When you get back, hope you will'&#13;
write about farm raatterws. Have they.commenced the barn yet?&#13;
I hope the Nonpareil will get on its legs again, so that I can&#13;
get it. I got a batch of papers from you up to the 5th July, and it&#13;
was welcome news. We get nothing here, nothing except rumor. I do&#13;
not even know.where track is, suppose it must at at L 30 miles&#13;
beyong Sedgwdck, Wiioh will give it 100 to get here. I ho© it will&#13;
be here on rjy return; it will help me four or five, days in getting in.&#13;
Gen. Augur starts East tomorrow,^ and I will finish this so as&#13;
to send it in. Col. Stevenson arrived heretoday with throe companies&#13;
of Infantry to garrison this Post, called Fort Davy. Russell nnd sev- {&#13;
eral of our graders, ti« men, &amp;c# also came in, so that business is&#13;
looking up in the new town, I am now in hopes to get back here the&#13;
« «&#13;
last of September or first of October, Do not think I shall,be delayed&#13;
as long ahead as I. have been here. I shal], get rid of some of the&#13;
drawbacks Id k week or,few© a;id there will be left only my own people.&#13;
Today-te very hot, the warmest I hrve experienced and with snow&#13;
'■ t&#13;
in full view, the water in creek very cool; it is an aggravation.&#13;
Wheft I ««t over to Laramle Plains it will be two weeks before I can&#13;
reach another post office, so you mut not be surprised if you do not&#13;
hear- from m© frOm Caunders. Three days from now t will write again.&#13;
1 e^e so many trains, military !c.c, arrive it looks like old army&#13;
times# but there are none of the horrors surrounding it that there&#13;
was then. , .&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
pen. Augur and all his staff have been very kind, done everything&#13;
they could for us, and he is a perfect gentleman; says he will bring&#13;
his faraily to suamer here next summer. If the cars were here when I&#13;
return I want to have you meet me here if you are at the Bluffs;&#13;
vant you to See this country before you go East,&#13;
Note:- To Mrs. Dodge from her sister, Minerva. 21;&#13;
: Gen. Dodge to his wife. Dale Creek, 23;&#13;
Yours written from Elkhorn July 15th, came to me today. I&#13;
canno.t see where my letters to you are. Not a week has passed but what&#13;
I havxs written you two sometimes three, in last week have written&#13;
three, .sending a long .one back by Gen. Augur.&#13;
I think Baile*y should sell all the cattle fit for beef that will&#13;
bring a good price. I told him so before I left. Beef or work cattle ♦ . .&#13;
ought to bring a good price. I do not want to sell at a loss but the&#13;
oldest steers 1 want to sell. He can use what of the funds is necess&#13;
ary to'build the barn. I will sell my farm now for |25 per cares,&#13;
for prairie and fSO per acre for timber provided it is both taken&#13;
together. To sell-Off any of t mber separate I would want $100 per&#13;
acre. I hbpe Bailey is doing well this summer and will have good&#13;
crops. He deiieH%fe t^, foh I believe he tries to do his best. How&#13;
are the fruit trees, shade,, trees, «5c? ^&#13;
I am very anxious abbut little Annie, and as soon as I reach&#13;
Saunders shall telegraph to -hear. You are wrong about the wt-itihg. I&#13;
nsver telegraphed Nutt or Snyder nor any one in Omaha. Have only&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
.v^:: ,vr,;r.&#13;
telegraphed 6nyder once, then'on business, btit have sent at least a&#13;
dozen to you. I have rhi4,"&gt;et struck a mall or telegrah route but- •&#13;
shall tomorro*,'and all my letters and telegrams have been sent by&#13;
messenger.&#13;
Wo are now cataped at the celebrated Dale Creek where our parties&#13;
united, a beautiful spbt. The boys are all o'ut fishing for "trout and&#13;
have brought in several, and ve will have a mess for supper. It has been&#13;
two days since we left Cheyenne and I shall be two or three days at&#13;
Saundersj then I start for North Platte, then for Fort Bridger, then for&#13;
Salt Lake. This country thro'ugh here has given me great grief. It is th&#13;
the hardest country I was ever» in to get a satisfactory line. , I think ^&#13;
I have saved over two hundred thousand dollars to the company in change&#13;
• Ir.f ou mi!* •'lot " , •&#13;
of line.&#13;
Port Saundera, July 28th. ' - • • ..&#13;
i arrived here Taet ni^ ft hear had ne»s from the Weet. On&#13;
the 23d Mr. Brown, chief «f the party weet of.North Platte, was out In&#13;
the advance of his party some forty miles with ten mounted men as escort,&#13;
and near Bitter Oreelc was ttaoked by 76 Ind i ans. He fought them two&#13;
hours succeeding In'keeping them at bay until near night; he was mortally&#13;
wounded in side. The escort t1M)k. him Into t',e stage road on Bitter Creek&#13;
near Laolede, where he died and wea burled. , . ,&#13;
I shall leave hrfre on Monday with eame three hupdred soldiers as&#13;
'an eaoorti part gofe " " ®'"8ar Pass and part all the way&#13;
♦ * ,&#13;
i to V ri j- ,&#13;
' V»V ■&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
•' t&#13;
through, so that we are well protected. From Bridger Pass Mr. Blickensderfer and Col. Seymour leave me to return. The latter is a good&#13;
riddance and I hope I may never have him with me on any trip again.&#13;
He is the worst sneak I think I ever met; means mischief to our com&#13;
pany, professionally dishonest and corrupt, and the quickdr the company&#13;
get rid of him the better.&#13;
At this place we have a fine two-story log building ere cted to&#13;
winter our men in and keep our stock. Gen. Gibbons commands here and&#13;
has his family with him. He will go west with us to select a Post&#13;
cn North Plfette River. This killing of my chiefs of parties put me&#13;
back. I have to stop to set them going again, often to run lines to&#13;
make the connection.&#13;
I do not see how the ranchmen stand it along this route with&#13;
Indians in small squads prowling aroxind. Many of then live alone and&#13;
many miles away from ai^y aid. At this point they have a good garden, * r •&#13;
the Walter is tsJieh to it in a ditch and everything looks well; vegeta&#13;
bles, potatoes, &amp;c. The only thing that prevents raising crops is want&#13;
of water or the early cold weather. Vegetables oats and wheat can ' » I •&#13;
be raise* by qare; for corn, season is too short.&#13;
I ««e that the Nonpareil is again on its legs, has anew editor.&#13;
T. M, Wallwr, wo is he? I hope it will do Iowa good. Do you know how&#13;
they fixed up what the coneem owed me? Now some $2500 with interest.&#13;
Congress 1 see hange on. -I am anxious to know what date it adjourns to.&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
so that I may know what to depend on.&#13;
i: j -Va. t'l If ■&#13;
• ■ ' &gt;1- . &gt;1 •&#13;
I hope I may never have to travel this country back again or any&#13;
• * . . . f *&#13;
way except in cars. From here to North Platte we will be in an&#13;
alkali coiyitry, bad for men and stock. From the west we will strike&#13;
a buffalo country and I hope we may get some.&#13;
■ : I '&#13;
I shall telegraph you when I leave, and before this you will have&#13;
learned whe^e to direct my letters. Kiss the girls and baby. I look&#13;
• '■r&#13;
for a dispatch from you:today.&#13;
: 'i . . ■ : ■ • Gen, Dodge to Sidney Dillon, Fort Saunder , 24:&#13;
■ *■" r ( ;. : : ■&#13;
I want answer to my dispatcli to company aooht change Of line&#13;
w . t, 1- ' -J ' ^ " ■ * ' * ' ' it ^&#13;
and grade over Black Hills. I must push west. The Indians hold&#13;
country from here to Green Rivor and unless I get out there we will&#13;
fail in all our plans for 1868. Brown, chief of party west of&#13;
I . . . .&#13;
h ere, killed yesterday after fighting two hour^ and loslrtg his stock.&#13;
Oliver Ames to Gen. Dodge,"^Boston, 2Cf (telegram)&#13;
►.aJcr;:v . ... r - . Grade one hurfdred and si*teen(116) feet. Answer. Nothing&#13;
■■ I oq v • .&#13;
must delay progress.&#13;
unr ' .&#13;
Oliver Ames • -elAW i, to Gen. Dodgft, N. ftaston, 265 i/,:&#13;
We received Ifour'telbgi^affi sAylrtg'youJWMAd.Wake an 80-ifeet&#13;
grade at $200,000 extra cost, and" telegraphed you ttlAt &gt; liie^ grade of&#13;
the charter (116) feet would answer. Wfe did not have. feWfticient. data&#13;
to be able to decide the question.&#13;
, 'jl fc . ' k. ■ ■» »v» '&#13;
!ftje great 49fitre of the country is la rdpld conpletlon o.. this&#13;
July, 1867,&#13;
road, and we do not wish to delay the work.by any very heavy outs,&#13;
■&#13;
when we can do this work after the road gets in operation, TTheri "'s&#13;
are r unn:ng the road we can reduce grades but to get it running we&#13;
I . •&#13;
will make th^ ,grades 4n all places, if it will more rapidly comJbete&#13;
the work, at the maximuia grades allowed by the charter,&#13;
Durant and his friends are endeavoring to injure your and our&#13;
t • .&#13;
standing before the country by calling us slow, I dont wish to be&#13;
liable to that charge by attembing to reduce grades to delay the&#13;
work. Let everything be pushed ahead as fast as possible.&#13;
Ur. Banker to Gen, Dodge, Washington, D. c, 26 :&#13;
I received a letter from you some time since "bout monogram&#13;
and forks. Am pretty much all my time down here looking after our&#13;
Government accounts. Col. Bli~s has bee relieved and Col. Crilly&#13;
is in his place, and a much more efficient officer he makes, I assure&#13;
youl Gen. Meigs absent on leave and Gen, Rucker in charge. Succeeded&#13;
• - f •&#13;
in closing upthit lot of accounts you left them some time ago, just&#13;
ten days ago, and now have to stay here almost all the time to put&#13;
things ^ .&#13;
. • It is mighty hot hpre and was all during the short session of&#13;
Congreso; members were all very glad to get away. It is parfcularly&#13;
dull her^ now, no excitement of any kind.&#13;
Kh'Sn you selecte location for town at base of mountains where&#13;
branch road f^oo Denver comes in, I want yov to advise me, as I have&#13;
an i««a that a small investment will pay there and want to buy some&#13;
July, 1867. '&#13;
land in an elislble place; think thR t will be the best spot*. That is&#13;
my opinion; if yours iS different advise me, as I am totally in the&#13;
dark here and yet no office news at all hardly. My investments in&#13;
that way wont injure the company any an'^ may benefit me. You can give&#13;
*&#13;
me some information as to eligible spots aiid probable cost of land.&#13;
Left N. Y. last Tuesday. Doctor, Crane and all hands wel . There&#13;
was to be a meeting of the Board on VJednesday; havoheard nothing from&#13;
there as to results. Hope things will pan out all right and that the&#13;
work will go bravely on.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to"his wife, P6rt Saunders, 28: •&#13;
I got two dispatches from y u and answered. 1 write toda:,^^&#13;
It may be the last opportunity t shall have"until 1 refech North Platte&#13;
100 miles west of this place. By this'time Jrou must have the letter&#13;
I sent in by Gen. Augur. I also sent letters by'Ur. Garter to Denver&#13;
by Lt. Peale to Latham," «fcc,, none of which as yet you have got. The&#13;
mails are very irregular. I find whole coac''^ IbAds of mail laying at&#13;
mail stations out here, sane of it having been therfe two years; but it&#13;
seems to me mail from here to Denver and east should ^jo straight. I&#13;
have had lots of papers and several letters from you and have done lay&#13;
• •&#13;
best to get mine back to you. « '''&#13;
My escort got in last night from a long scout but struck no Ind-&#13;
' . 1 . , , -&#13;
i^ans. My dispatch to the Nonpareil will wake up some of them. I got&#13;
telegrams from Denver and Chicago requesting permiasion for them to&#13;
take it off for Associated Press. All the North Indiarisi^t^e at war-&#13;
July, 1867. _&#13;
with us now ami are doing great mischief, I hope our big commancl&#13;
• f .&#13;
• • f - t&#13;
400 strong may run into some of them.&#13;
Poor Brown,' so yoxing, so able, to fall right as he had whipped&#13;
-..e • ■ ■ , • - • * . . ■&#13;
the devils, and theonly one of our men hurt. It is a great loss to&#13;
me and I see no way to replace him, Evans stops here and put the&#13;
parties on location west. His wife is very side at Omaha and he no&#13;
doubt would like to go back, I begin to think th'at engineering, * ■ r .&#13;
with the load I am carrying, is no sinecure, but if I shoul'f stop now&#13;
I&#13;
a line would not be struck west of here this year. All say give it up&#13;
I say no, and get new troops to ray parties. They are now working with&#13;
70 men as escort.&#13;
The other day I climbed the high peak at head of Lone Tree Creek&#13;
in Black Bills to get a view of the surrounding country and from it&#13;
I could see Larsunie Pea^ 100 miles north; Pine Bluffs 60 ..liles e'ast;&#13;
♦&#13;
Pikes Peak 150 miles south and the liedicine Bear 100 miles west with&#13;
one half of the so- thern circle fringed with the ragged, snow capped,&#13;
Ropky Range whUe the country east looked like a great sea. From the&#13;
top I picked sevi^ral florwers, pressed them nut in my diary and enclose&#13;
one. No matter ho* sterile or ragged this country is it is dotted&#13;
all ©far with roses, leaves and grasses, with singular stohes and&#13;
For three days the wind has blown a perfect hurricane&#13;
I., I and eft hi* and dust has filled every corner.&#13;
Sinee we have been here the ladies of the Post' have 'given nightly&#13;
fj;",&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
a party, get up rides, &amp;c. that the young men no doubt eijjoyed. I&#13;
attended the one at Capt. Wards and Gen. Gibbons but the others did&#13;
- * •&#13;
not go. They are about moving this post, or were doing it and I en&#13;
deavored to get it stopped until early in the spring. We need the&#13;
troops on the line.&#13;
Who is Mr, Walker, the editor of Nonpareil? It is strange I get&#13;
*■ .&#13;
no letters from Nate about business matters; how the block gets on and&#13;
what was done with my intere't in the Nonpareil, how the Bluffs is&#13;
^ , prospering, &lt;^c. Are they going to rebuild the Empire Block tliis year?&#13;
How are the trees in tMe garden? I want to hear all aboiA it. After&#13;
. you get this letter sen'^ your letters and papers 'to Fort Bridger, Utah^&#13;
.1 expect to reach there by September 1st, perhaps by August 25th,&#13;
kftev .passing Green River we are out of the Indian country and shall&#13;
have a let up to our vlgilence. The dash they have just m-de in here&#13;
- • ' ' " ■ ' ' - ■■ ■ ■ : «&#13;
, will put all on their guard,&#13;
"Phe pony and mare are doing well and my health is only fair; do&#13;
0 .L' .' . ,&#13;
y,;, ttot improve so much as I expected. I hove too much on my mind. I&#13;
fjjope after I reach Green River, wheKe I carl get vegetables and fruit&#13;
plenty, that I shall do better. My itching difficulty is nearly gone.&#13;
Gen. Rawlins improves wonderfully. I like him very touch but I&#13;
cant say that all are like him; Mr. Duff . Mr. Bldcensderfer, Maj*&#13;
Dunn and Mr. Corwith are all fine gentelmen and take more interest in&#13;
cuf road than many Who are paid for taking it, ^ "&#13;
Note:- To Mrs. Dodge from her niece Stelle, Elkhorn 28:&#13;
July, 1867. .V39r&#13;
Oliver Ames, to Gen. Dodpe, New York, 30:- ; - ^&#13;
Your letters are received. In the present position of our&#13;
matters, 1 do not wish to undertake any. work that wll7 delay construotlon and wherever we can hasten the work h- grades being made 116 ft.&#13;
and curves of one or two deSreesi I ehouldmake theai even if we had to&#13;
reduce them after we get in operation..&#13;
The nr. is infusing the minds, of (^vernment Directors with the&#13;
idea that we are not pressing fo.rward the work as rapidly as we should,&#13;
and that if it was let out to contractors and he had the management of&#13;
it "lie could get 160 miles' into the mountains this season. . 1 do not&#13;
iish the Dr. to make any capital out of this, and the feeling of our&#13;
committee is to pueh the road along with the greatest rapidty even if&#13;
„ have to rut the Jargest grades and.curves that our charter allows.&#13;
'' • Tou know very well what our feelings are about the road-to make&#13;
it as perfect as possible consistent with the repidyty of construction&#13;
demartled V,y the oouhtry.- *e cannot, of course, in the office say what&#13;
is beet about toe line, ft in your Judgment and Col. Carter's the&#13;
oh;.«e of high bridge was ■„,eeesary, our confidence in your looking&#13;
",ut for toe nest Interest of the road leads us to unhesitatingly ap-&#13;
'prove'of your work. It is of the- greatest importance to have this&#13;
lit line looat.d earl» and have men put on all heavy work at once,&#13;
"i'vear In cT deep cuts is soon wasted an- we ought to have&#13;
the men working IBO and 800 milee ahead of tracklayers.&#13;
Tour favor in regard to Seymour, Bliokensderfer and others is&#13;
at hand and approved.&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
J. L. TfilliaiaS to Gen. t)6dge",'Fort Fayne , - 51:&#13;
^ Youfs of 2ist inst. came today and by same mail one from&#13;
^Col. Seymour, 15th of Julj'. J " ^ -iij'&#13;
Your telegram about 80 ft. grade never came. I was not aware&#13;
that a revision of the line over Black'Hills was ifi the progracme or&#13;
I should have been still more anxious to go out. It is all right,if&#13;
the line can be improved but, as I have said to Col. Seymour in a note&#13;
by this mail, we BhouM look also, as no doubt both of you will, to&#13;
alignment and directness and not too mich add to distance and curvature.&#13;
A judicious mediimi should be observed. You suggest that 80 ft. grade&#13;
on west slope could be had with increase of 2 1-2 miles distance.&#13;
' That increase I thlilk'WlVyulxi be-qulte too great for a saving of one&#13;
ninth in the rate of asdent. "eM;; ,&#13;
I hAve never advised an undue shortening of the line, at expense&#13;
of gi^de or cost, for the purpose of lessening the Governaent subsidy&#13;
'to the injury of the workihg pf-the. road Yet with $48,000 per mile&#13;
' Vhe^Oovomiaeht might find ground to sub-lease a y marked or injudicious&#13;
elongation of the 'line to avc^4»«^ ,JL.^at is only mofierately expenaive. THd work should be locai.e&lt;i..«|)«i ^ound principles. Of course,&#13;
if the general slope of'-bite mountain is indicated to 80 ft. grade it&#13;
* should be adopted, btlt I desira to guard against a forced reduction&#13;
at too gi^ •^'•acrifibe in alignment and distance,^You and Col.&#13;
Seymour «W this. • ^&#13;
' l.i. a; ji-h'u- cm'-&#13;
• be«ir9fls|«|e hne&#13;
July, 18C7.&#13;
The -avoidance of a long and high bridge span at Lone Tree is&#13;
well if feasible. Such a bridge on the mountain is a bad feature. I&#13;
wrote jrou a week ago, care of LIr. House, in regard to your employing&#13;
Mr. Webster or some other experienced engineer on the finished road.&#13;
I told tir, Dillon that such an engieer was needed.^&#13;
I expect to be East from 10th to 20th of August; letters here wil&#13;
I^Q forwarded; write often. I mij^t have added the consideration th t&#13;
• •&#13;
if you raust adopt 90 ft. or over at Rattlesnake Pass the reduction at&#13;
Black Hills is somewhat less important. The case is not exactly as&#13;
the one at Omaha.- I am very much gratified that you have nothing over&#13;
35 ft. east of Crow Creek. - o-u • uc -l&#13;
.. I Can it be true that Mr. Brown has been killed by the Indians? • .&#13;
I tought him a valuable yung man. ■&#13;
Mrs. J. V, Reed to Mrs. Dodge, Jollet, 31: t&#13;
I think it is indeed unpardonable to leave your house as a&#13;
guest, wJLth the pleasant remembrances of your kind hospitality ever&#13;
- fresh, rna not up to present date have Informed you of my safe arrival&#13;
■ home. The only Sxcuae I can offer is, my cousin eas my amanuensis for&#13;
a f.. of my moat urgrot letters at that time and I fully intended her to&#13;
■' include you aMons tWet number., I wM quite worn out with my warm,&#13;
* duatry travel home together with my detention In Chicago with Idr,&#13;
SchiminMly and aubsequent return#&#13;
We have had quite a number of vlslta from our frlenda and not the&#13;
least welcome or aurpBlalng was my husband's visit soon after his&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
' ■ . ; ' ' ■■ - . -.r- i&#13;
return from the Black Hills. I hope he was able (on account of time)&#13;
to cal"" and see you as he proposed doing. He left your husband well&#13;
t • t&#13;
and in good spirits. I am distriessed to hear of lir. Brown's death.&#13;
I trust you will not allow yourself if possible any increased anxiety&#13;
for the General's safety, since he is much more amply protected.&#13;
It is a great trial to hear the long separations, the anxious&#13;
days and sleepless nights that the great Pacific R.R. places between&#13;
loving hearts and otherwise united homes. 'You have my ten'ier sympathy&#13;
during these desponding days- I have drank of the bitter waters and&#13;
can well afford now to bid you "Be of goo cheer."- You will be so&#13;
happy in your husband's safe return-you will rejoice to forg® the ^&#13;
remembrance of yohr sorrow'i* Shorten-the sU&gt;nm§lf' as'much as possible&#13;
by making your firneds those promised visits. ; • ■&#13;
I am Just reminded of our pleasant journey.to. that desolate&#13;
Julesburg, anri of the many laughable inci4ents that occurred to give&#13;
tone and zeSt to the hours that"passed all too swiftly by. I may add&#13;
that after parting company with D^r. 'White at Cotuicil Bluffs and bid&#13;
ding you and Miss Julia goodbye, the "spik-it of the sport" had depart&#13;
ed an-' onr journey was a quiet, coffloonplace affair. The &gt;eat and dust&#13;
almost overpowering us; hoi##Vd¥'» f must (in Justice to the gantleaen) that they were truly polite and ngree^hle as occasion required,&#13;
I may go out to Nebraska In September or Octover, yet do not feel&#13;
at all certain. My husband is anxious for me to take the children.&#13;
July, 1867.&#13;
t I&#13;
but the accoamodations are so poor at Julesburg that I may not do so,&#13;
Oliver Ames to Gen. Dodge, New York, 1 (Telegram)&#13;
,ii f. ■ ■ • , '. . ■&#13;
Let the line be located and under bontract immediately.&#13;
T'-.&#13;
Oliver Ames t Gen. Dodge, New York, 1:&#13;
I wrote you yesterday in answer to your letters of July 20th&#13;
from Grc- Creek, ^e are in receipt today of one of July 11th from&#13;
some place in which you express a fear that Biickensderfer may take all&#13;
summer to make his decision. This will be unfortunate for us, as I&#13;
hoped he would have felt the importance of an early decision of this&#13;
question that we might have the liberty to issue our bonds in advance&#13;
of the mountains regions, I hope you will suggest to him that the&#13;
Boad is in actual need 'f an early decision of this question if it is&#13;
to be pushed with the speed that the people of the country require.&#13;
I said to you yesterday that we wanted to comiete the road as&#13;
far west as possible this season, and that any grade or curve within&#13;
the limits of our charter might be adopted to hasten the work. I do&#13;
not, of course, mean by this that you should put in a hervy grade or&#13;
Bhort curve merely tp save a little money, but to save time so that&#13;
the grading i»ay at all times, if possible, be haead Bf th* traok-laylngl&#13;
' and «e .ahall not merely for a good allgtvr.ent run Into heavy cuts that&#13;
will aWp the progreee of the track for months." Our reputation today&#13;
eepend. upen rapid caastructlon. When thd road is competed ve can&#13;
taprove the grades and curves though It vlll be" a heavy tdttttional</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42620">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42609">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - July 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42610">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42611">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
July 1867&#13;
&#13;
For additional July 1867 correspondence, please refer to "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - March to November 1867 (miscellaneous)," pps 864-866.&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42612">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42613">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42614">
                <text>July 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42615">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42616">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42617">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42618">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42619">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4144" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="10418">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/bea45c2dec106cb199f215acc8599934.pdf</src>
        <authentication>209a527d942afce458fbfeb851c75010</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41708">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41698">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - June 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41699">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41700">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
June 1866&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41701">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41702">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41703">
                <text>June 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41704">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41705">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41706">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41707">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105267">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107552">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1551">
        <name>1866</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4221" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4297">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/10fa444808c22cb1eca0f065b81f2ebf.pdf</src>
        <authentication>b41d3e9d33e64b628b44a24efc001494</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58551">
                    <text>get the credit. Snyder is endeavoring to make a change to help it.&#13;
• «&#13;
. I shall send in a full report of repairs needed this week,&#13;
t '&#13;
itating the extraordinarjr ones. The minor repairs are going stead&#13;
ily forward. ^ ,&#13;
Dodge to S. D. Reed, Omaha, June 5th, 1867 (21DR269{&#13;
• &lt; I siibmit herewith profile and notes for 50 miles of 5th hun&#13;
dred. You will see that in the light cuts I have noted "take out&#13;
ICQ feet wide" the material is intended for banks. Have eneavored&#13;
to balance work at such places; at a few others have marked fence&#13;
cuts. I think it will be. well, at the light cuts where material has&#13;
I&#13;
to go into bank, to take out 75 feet on north side of cut and 25&#13;
feet on sout'i side of cut; but to pay extra for it when material is&#13;
not needed, it will be cheaper to fence.&#13;
On making quantity j'ou can determine, or if work is let at&#13;
.30 to 35 cants, cut and fill can be Ifet to balance, say, fill 14,&#13;
cut 16. would leave it optional with sub-contractors to bor&#13;
row and waftte, or haul if wasted. You can put, as you have hereto&#13;
fore done, in ridges «wd side of wide cuts.&#13;
I also request that Llr, Casement be instructed to watch carefully&#13;
the alignment to th»t It le all right; it"la very broken, and&#13;
• I di not wish to have any bad alignment, if it can be cvoided.&#13;
They will be on tbe ground and could notify us of any changes that&#13;
they thihk would the line. The. line up where bad alignment&#13;
is was changed by engineer in charge, at west end of cutting, and&#13;
' JuneV 186 • . ifieff' of-f&#13;
ti4 did not swing the tangent coming from 7'est', which ^ould have&#13;
been done at east end of cutting whfere'large hand is. I have not&#13;
had time to re-run line to see cause of that. There is* a large&#13;
amount of water way on 5th hundred. Kr, Hills is very positive&#13;
that it will all be required. It will be well enough to see if&#13;
some of it cannot be reduced a little or"avoided by side ditches.&#13;
Gen. Dodg'e to L. L. Hills, Omaha, June 5th, (21D'^270) -&#13;
I do not like alignment from 3314 to 3420 or thereabouts,&#13;
lirrd '&#13;
You run "E" line near Brown's, and '"P" line makes strong curvature&#13;
to the north- a bad alignment in a broad valley.&#13;
If you could strike" off about 3314 of "E" line hug creek to&#13;
south, 8ind get on south side oppo'ite ^365, and ffvold 'crossing the&#13;
dry creek, intersecting "F" line about 2490, it looks as though&#13;
you could get as good a profile, and certainly a better alignment,&#13;
"F" line, as you return it from Sta, 3435 tc^Sta, 3580, is .best; but&#13;
at this point Brown's tangent would 1^f^''backed unon intersection&#13;
at his lir.e is evidently best from here west; especially avoids .&#13;
rought work at 3690. *&#13;
Brown's tangent ftwaa 3610 - $8 E. C. west Should be backed up&#13;
ujsiUl it intersects"p'^ lVne near 3540. 'Hiis imuld accomplish it.&#13;
All of the lines' intersection must be made S careful study.&#13;
The 5th hundred is being put under contract and we will soon&#13;
be at work up there.&#13;
I'jf ' {&#13;
I expect to leave here from the 2 5th of June to the&#13;
J iins j lSSV# ^1^&#13;
• ^ t j&#13;
. 1st of July, and shall want you to meet me at en^i of 4th Hundred&#13;
'' t • ■ t&#13;
and go over yoiir location.with me. Before,that time, however, I&#13;
, ' ' '&#13;
shell telegraph you --only mention it nov.', so you can be arranging&#13;
for it and laying out work for your party, . ■ , ,&#13;
Oliver Ames to Gen, Dodge, New York, June 6th, 1867,&#13;
Your favor of Kay 31st with Omaha papers of, same date is re-&#13;
• ■ f&#13;
ceived,&#13;
The thing is now all right, and the peopl® of Omaha must xanderstand.that T.c.D,, V.p. and Genl. Manager, has not the entire&#13;
«&#13;
control of the U, P, R, R. and in the new organization I think&#13;
t • ' ^&#13;
we shall see a more vigorous prosecution of the work and with more&#13;
ayetem and»economy, I, and all in connection with the road here,&#13;
havp never been ao awjgui^e of the success and great merit of this&#13;
road as we are sinae Durant has been put out of its management,&#13;
■We are now selling from 15 to 20,000 $ of our bonds Gaily, and&#13;
are getting our mont^. at muc'^' better, rates than formerl , The ^&#13;
&lt; •&#13;
moneyed intereata here^have now much more conffence in us and&#13;
will, I have no doubt^ soon be applicants for our paper.&#13;
We are going to have our iron punched and put down the 56 lb,&#13;
irorv Vrith fish- joints. ^&#13;
U&gt; Hoyt SbHaman to Gen, Dodge, De^ Kpines, June 7, 1867,&#13;
I had up auitable opportunity while at your house last Sunday&#13;
to speak Hd T0» lij reference to ^ plan I have in hand for making a&#13;
little money., &gt; » ir „ ,&#13;
EEIT&#13;
June, 18G7. ."'Of&#13;
Congress, at its last session, passed a resolution, which I&#13;
believe originate r^iwth you, oh at least v/as supported by you, au&#13;
thorizing post coinmandSrs to appoint military traders at the'posts&#13;
west of the IttOth meridian. ■'t t: 'iri&#13;
* I"am*anxious, If possible to sedure the appoi' tment of trader&#13;
at the post, (not yet located) near the foot of the Black Hills.&#13;
The resolution provides for the appointment of persons living at&#13;
or near the post, but as in this case there are no resir^ents there-&#13;
«&#13;
abouts, my appointment'could not on that ground"bh more objection-&#13;
■ - . ■ ' . . .&#13;
able than that of s'omei one at Omaha or'Ledvehwof th. I am already,&#13;
as you are probably aware, in the mercantile business here, and my&#13;
business acquaintances would glVe me many'advantages in keeping up&#13;
such a stock of merchandise as would be needed at that point, I&#13;
should also be able to spend much of my time there.&#13;
- I* -&#13;
If I can secure tfiis appointment, the arrangement will be for&#13;
Col. Denman, now Superintendent of Indian Affairs at Omaha, to re&#13;
sign that office, and go in jointly with me in this operation,&#13;
spending*his entire time and attention at the pst and taking up&#13;
his residence there. This would entirely obviate any objection&#13;
that could be made on the score of non-res-ldence at the pst,&#13;
I write frankly to you on this- subject in the Jippe that I mfy&#13;
interest you somewhat in my behalf, knowing that yoUr pld posit on&#13;
in the army and acquaintance withthe bfficars, as well as your&#13;
px*ssont one as Chief Engineer of the Pacific road, .give you ^reat&#13;
Juno, 1867. . •&#13;
InfluenQe with the officers who make the appointment.&#13;
Anything you can do for me will be gratefully appreciated and&#13;
acknowledged and even if you do not feel at liberty to use your&#13;
influence for me, I would like very much to hear from you-on the&#13;
subject. * '■ "&#13;
' " P. V:. Palmer to deh. TDodge , 'Des Moines, June Vth, 1867.&#13;
" From the data you send me (I have no other) I have made an&#13;
article for the benefit of the Judge, and will say anything more&#13;
thall either you or he may deem necessarj?^. I know there is no purer&#13;
man in Iowa than our godd friend, and" shall be glad to say so when&#13;
ever it will do him any good.&#13;
Col. Thompson 'Pension Agent) has arrived, and seems inclined&#13;
to train wit the right sort of folks. The First National Bank,&#13;
of which I have been'elect'ed Preslderit, wants his deposits. 'The&#13;
present Cashier',, Ur, Mosher, and the former President, J. B; Stweart&#13;
were your devoted friends in the figh^ last year. If you will&#13;
drop Thompson a line'confidentially, asking as a favor to you, that&#13;
he deposit with llosher, I think it would settle.the&#13;
"ihus do me personally and the bank a favor. I have no fight to&#13;
make agaiimst Frank lllen in the matter and do.ttot want you compro&#13;
mised in it, but if you can make a confidential request, I think&#13;
Thompon 'would so r;gard il. and fee con4tna*d fey it. Whatever is&#13;
done should fe e done immediately. • t / . . I .&#13;
June, 1867.&#13;
■ 1,''^ v ■ ■&#13;
hir ft#J;.::Deap AnnieP- ■ .j a:-&#13;
Kansas City, Jiine 8th, 1867.&#13;
Annie has been ver -bad with who oping cough, but is bet&#13;
ter now, Winne'is coughing and whooping; the others nearly wail.&#13;
They will be through before you get here. Lettie,&#13;
^y Geq, C. Tiohenor to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, June 8, 1867,&#13;
CT J5 ' . My friend Frank JJ. Chaffee wants to be appointed Route Agent&#13;
oh. ^he Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific R.R. and I want you to&#13;
.)&#13;
give him such recormnendations at Wasliington as will secure it,&#13;
which I feel sure you can do.&#13;
C&#13;
lir. Chaffee was employed as a clerk in the Post-office here&#13;
for over three years,, and, indeed, controlled and managed the of&#13;
fice and is thoroughly informed in all matters pertaining to the&#13;
*&#13;
Postal service. He is moral, temperate, and, indeed, a gentleman&#13;
' « ■ .&#13;
of rare integrity sjad worth. He is a brother of Hon. J. B, Chaffee&#13;
Of Colorddo who, you know, is onw of your best friends. He is a&#13;
thorough Radical Republican, activo and true, and can be relied&#13;
upftn all the time. ^ '&#13;
I trust you will do ase the personal favor to do all in your * . f&#13;
cower in hie behalf, and that you will advise mo of what you had&#13;
j h: : i .&#13;
done.&#13;
£ t'Oaiib&#13;
• strong reoiewiW*4/W go from here for him, e » ■ Williamson for Gov. gets a full delegation ^'^om this county.&#13;
Jiine, 1867, f &lt;- u/".&#13;
lo ; ' ' ' T, L, Diirey to Gen. Dodge, Dept. of the Interior, Jiine 9th:&#13;
Being very fond of flowers'and having but a poor' opportunity&#13;
of getting them, my wife desires me to write you and ask if you&#13;
will not give heo? an or^er on the Botanical Gardenef at V.ashington&#13;
for one flower basket', together with a part, or if you Jjease, all&#13;
of such othet' flowers as you may be entitled to by virtue of being&#13;
- q Member of Congress, If you do not call in person and get them&#13;
or give an order to some one for them, they will rempin in the,&#13;
garden and blush, blbm and perish unseen,. V - V : :&#13;
Through the"Press I learn you have been quite ill, I trust&#13;
this wnil find you fuly restored.&#13;
Order in naaa of Mrs. Carrie H, Dilley.~-»&#13;
^■^ ' 1. B, Reed to Mrs, Dodge, North Platte&gt; Nebraska, June 11th;&#13;
1 hoped to toftvb the pleasure of replying to your welcome let-&#13;
"yer 6f March^ 24.th laa"person. First, by pajj'ing you a little visit&#13;
in*Counc'l Hiruffs, ahdh again, by receiving a visit from you here.&#13;
I hoped 'tb ytfu wftl* the excursionists that were enroute yes&#13;
terday' a hn that il*e party returned from Columbus, I shall&#13;
rem«Lln he^ url+11 Wr, .Reed goes .west on business and then shall re&#13;
turn Heeie;' if 1 oi««.'«pend a day with you, without lo-ing my com -&#13;
pany i aif'Chionee to have, I shall certainly do so, unless&#13;
should be otherwise engaged. . . ,&#13;
* ■ &gt; L' • If&#13;
' HiUi i». a ♦iB&gt;lp«is plaoe. Please read "J. Ross Brown'a deScriiytion df Waahiw," mA you North Platte as it is.&#13;
June, 1867. , • iW&#13;
present the hos.tile Indians are the all absorbing topic of&#13;
conversation. They are committing constcuit" depredation^, and not&#13;
unfrequently killing people. Gen. Shervaan is west ofus, indeed,&#13;
was expected here to meet the party from Chicago, and must see the&#13;
necessity of activeomeasures against those pruel savages, I do&#13;
■inot fear at present for our personal safety here, but after the&#13;
ntftlfS of the people go up to Ogallalla or Julesburg there may be de&#13;
cided danger. Sundy morning over sixty persons left for Salt Lake&#13;
and intermediate points., after being*detained here over a week.&#13;
Bishop Ti.ittle(recently consecrated Bishop of Utah, Montana and&#13;
Idaho) and clergymen with two ladies were among the number. The&#13;
Bishop held service- in our rooms before leaving. The occasion was&#13;
a solemn one, and ail present feU that .the voyage was a perilous&#13;
one. ' It was unfortunate that there should have been so many women&#13;
and chiidren--between twenty oirtd thirvty in number. I will ntt dis-&#13;
'tress yoh with a fu; ther description of our Indian experience.&#13;
I presume' you have learidWr^at ot^r Cousin Adda was married&#13;
in March,'and if "'so, will infer that we are quite heartbroken in&#13;
having to give her up to another's keeping. . Perhaps not so much&#13;
' that, as that we suffef loss in being deprived of her society. You&#13;
•ill know how'we fee 1 possibly, if you ifWiuM lose your sister&#13;
Julia in the same manner,&#13;
e'/l*.; HOW is the'Nearest baby, sweet little Aafmiot" I: l»pe those&#13;
little blue shoes were not too large for her ."iree tiny foot.&#13;
Jione, 1867 ■'"".r .©ruj'&#13;
; ' I regret to learn that the General is in poor'health I hope&#13;
he is'better ere this. y.'lrrz r. '&#13;
. I left' ohr ch'-ldren at* home, no.t intending to be from home but&#13;
a Short time. If the Indians were qtuiet, I shall return here" in&#13;
August again. I am glad to find my husband in apparently good a&#13;
" health. Please give my love to Miss Julia. Mr. Reed joins me. in ,.&#13;
• love to you and yours. ■ ' a-v; I , : I-nC&#13;
Gen. Dodge's sister to' his wife, Council Bluffs, Jun.e 11.:-&#13;
-&gt;."(00 'j received your letter last Friday, I did I'lot know what had&#13;
bebome of you, as we had not heard a jsrord from you or Ocean for a&#13;
long time. Several reports reached us of Ocean,'s resigning, being&#13;
superceded, &amp;c. but could hear nothing definite of the whereabouts&#13;
of either of you. Col. Dubois, who was here over a week ago, said&#13;
you came up with him as far as St. Joe. He spent several days with&#13;
Nate, I did rfot meet him, Nate promised to bring him here to&#13;
call one evening; I stayed at home to meet him, but he forgot it.&#13;
so I missed him. I was real provoked. «&#13;
You miist have hdd a delifihtful time in Pt". Leavenworth. I have&#13;
always heard a great deal Of the beauty of the placeJ . We are hav&#13;
ing dull limes'here. I donH knO* as I dver.was in the Bluffs when&#13;
I had such n lonely,'desolate tl^e as this.spring, nothing going on&#13;
and very little energy in trying to start anyiJcing. Sae has been&#13;
gone and Nate ha!il' now, shut his house up;, they will be back&#13;
in a couple Mr. LookWiood died week ago yesterday. I sup-&#13;
June, 1867, ■ ,r:,—&#13;
pose sou haveheard of it before this. • Vfe have'heard no particu&#13;
lars, Sue is going to bring a young lady home with her, Mary , jSample, to spend the summer, Lottie *.s school was out on; Friday,&#13;
She is going to start bo ^rs. Arnold next week. One day last week&#13;
sho came screamtng holiie from school with a dreadful p.ain in her&#13;
side, I put her to. bed add put mustard on it, She did not get re&#13;
lief for some time, I was afraid she was going to have lung fever.&#13;
Dr. Mc, cam© and gave her a, little medicine and fthe next morning&#13;
she was all right, and no^'ia as well as ever. The Dr. said con&#13;
gestion had just taken place. She said she had an attack in St,&#13;
Louis «just like it'» &gt; tu - .v i - '&#13;
Are you going ito give us the slip this, summer? You do not say&#13;
'eaiything about coming up here and we have^ been looking for you ever&#13;
since the fdrat of the month, , ^&#13;
' 'If Ocean goes to* housekeeping in Leavenworth, nothing would&#13;
pleh^tlis better keep it for i&gt;im, I an\. initiated into the&#13;
mysteries of housekeeping, for we have had no girl for three weeks&#13;
and'my shoulder h«ff had to go to the wheel. We are trying to get&#13;
One, Mother!«i;h&lt;i«11h 'is miserable. Our havir^g boarders has made&#13;
it very haf»d for her. Miss liocka has»goi3ie,and Mrs. Fifield leaves&#13;
next week^ I, for one, Shall h^ge a jubilee,t • ' T&#13;
Mr, Morse told me the other evening that he saw.a dispatch goifig thrhufeh to (Teh. Tully that Ocean was going out. to the Black&#13;
Hlllirf, ^ In: it eot I hope he will come this way, I want to see him.&#13;
June, 1867. , fiji.&#13;
You will have a pleasant trip if ^ou ^9 up to Minnesota. - It is ;&#13;
such a pleasant country.&#13;
I should think you would have liked to go .to the fair at Chicago n I was crazy to go bi't knew it would do no good to wish.&#13;
I think you have missed a great deal by not going, perhaps y.ou got&#13;
enou^ at the St. Louis fair. Nate telegraphed here yesterday that&#13;
he and Sherman were tliere and Grant was expected soon.&#13;
Do come t up ^ this summer for I want to t see you, '&#13;
I am tired to&#13;
'death qf this place and would like a new face for a change^. Tell&#13;
Ocean tq write. , , ,&#13;
A. p. Wood to Gen. Dodge, Dubuque, June 12th;&#13;
; w.&#13;
I was in no danger of making Sigel the hero&#13;
of that fight. I should be much ^gratified to have access to your&#13;
military correspondence, &amp;c. during the whole per od of the war,&#13;
if it were considered advisable. While their relations are more to&#13;
general history than to the movements and services of Iowa troops,&#13;
■yet I should expect to gle^ many facts of interest and value as&#13;
'regards our State. Possibly you may be able to give the subject&#13;
ari evening*3 attention soon, and bring out points that are now&#13;
dark, or iiuorrectly stated, where Iowa is concerned. Should you&#13;
do this, the time Is near at hand when it will be neces ary for me&#13;
to hliv% the result. 1 am" now beginning to trace Grant's campaigns&#13;
' in Ac. 1 do n&lt;^ recollect of knowing before that you&#13;
manigeSf his ^reau, though I have some memoranda&#13;
June, 1867,&#13;
(what, I'do not at this moment,' clearly recollect) th4t shows you&#13;
to have had something to &gt;^0 with that sort of thing, J ' '&#13;
Horace l?hite to Gen. Dodge, Chicago, June 13;-'&#13;
Llrs, Thite wishes me to repeat her invitation to'Mrs.. Dodge to&#13;
visit her next "weekj understanding that she proposes to come to&#13;
Chicago on business. Lly wife fears that she did -not make her in&#13;
vitation silfficiently emphatic, and she desires it to be understood&#13;
\hat she was,' and is, severely in earnest about it, and is not pre&#13;
pared *to be disappointed, live at No. 114 Wabach Ave., very con&#13;
venient to all the places where ladies transact business, • If Jfou&#13;
would be so kind as to tfelegraph-v/hat train Mrs. Dodg-e would take,&#13;
we would be happy to meet her at the depot,&#13;
Oliver Ames to Gen.Dodgs, New Yorli, June 13th, ^ ■ i 'r&#13;
Your favor of June 7th in referenae to road over Black Hills&#13;
ia received, and we are greatly ple^a^s^d trith the very favorable as-&#13;
• pact that it bdafsi' t iffli only fearful, if the thing looks sp _&#13;
very fine, that iH may influence the jud^^nent of our llr. Blickenadorfer, in fixing the base of the Rocky Mountains, I do not see,&#13;
however, how he can materially change it. It would hardly be proper&#13;
""to fix a point in the Black ftiUs as. the base of the Rocky Moun&#13;
tains, that will carry us fail- beyond the suuunit and down their west&#13;
ern Slope'. 1 agree ifith &gt;ou' entirely in the importance of pressing&#13;
forward the work, M if ^ road 50 or 150 miles up ^&#13;
the slope of the Black lllllrf..tre can get the base fixed where we&#13;
June, 1867.&#13;
♦ ' • f&#13;
will be justified in pushing thev/ork. If lir. Buckensderfer should&#13;
t -&#13;
take the view of this matter that is taken by the Governi^ient directors, and strongly feel that the necessities of the Government and&#13;
country demand the early comiietion of the road, he will not fail,&#13;
I think, to fix the point where you and Mr. Vi'miams have supposed&#13;
it should be. It would be well for you to press these points upon&#13;
Mr. B., and the agitated state of the country there will do much to&#13;
satisfy hinj that Government aid should be most liberally extended&#13;
to this, great national work. ..&#13;
t ' * ♦&#13;
Mr. Duff and myself have been carefully reading over your let&#13;
ters, and we most heartily concur with you in the idea of pressing&#13;
forward the construction of the road with the utmost vigor.&#13;
In regard to urging upon the Govern..ent the sending of a V&#13;
.larger force to.protect us in the construction of the road, wo&#13;
think it is the clear duty of Government to do it, and suppose that&#13;
♦ «&#13;
any requisition made by Gen. Sherman or Gen. Augur upon the War&#13;
Department would be promptly^an swered. Whether the Secretary of&#13;
Kfiir would feel any national obligation on a request of ours to&#13;
•j5Wfcnt aid in this matter, is questionable.&#13;
Wo hope, wlj^n Mr, Cuckensdefer gets out to Omaha you will give&#13;
him til reasonable dispatch, and have him feel that he is havng' I&#13;
til the consideration due him as a Government Commissioner.&#13;
Oliver Ames to Gen. Dodge, New ^ork, June 13th; *&#13;
The following is the opinion of Chas. Tracy&#13;
If ■&#13;
June, 1867.&#13;
"The mortgage* mu~t he* recorded in every county in, or through&#13;
■"iihich the railroad runs. Wherever the line is not within any coun&#13;
ty, the recording in an adjacent county is of no use, unless there&#13;
fee a territorial statue there authorizing the recording in adja&#13;
cent counties or nearest registry office. I know of no shch stat&#13;
ute .&#13;
I should advise that the mortgage be recorded with every coun&#13;
ty clerk, or register, through whose county the line runs, but no&#13;
others; and that if the line, anywhere, is whollly outside of the&#13;
t*&#13;
bounds of counties, then the mortgage be recorded at the Capital&#13;
. , 1' ^ ■ : ' . • ■ of the Territory with the Secretary or other officer of records.&#13;
♦ * ' ^ • - • • '&#13;
This Mortgage, Gov. Morgan is very tineasy about, and It must&#13;
be entrusted only to the most reliable parties and recorded and&#13;
• I •.&#13;
returned here to the Trustees with the least possible delay, for we&#13;
shall have trouble with Gov. Morgan.&#13;
1 c Y .&#13;
# ^ ■ ' I '&#13;
C. C.C arpenter to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, June' 18th:&#13;
Mr. Hoxle addressed me a little note this morning saying "Jrou&#13;
' " ' ' ' 1. ') 'if 4 • • 4^ ■ would like to hear from me in relation to coal lands on the N. ■&#13;
Railway. I suppose you refer to lands oVrned by Richards, Pomeroy&#13;
and Duncombe, as they told me they hoped to seikl an interest in&#13;
their Stands to the Union Pacif c Railroad company, I am iKTl&#13;
cially posted in regard to these particular tracts, -difinW. b:t tHie&#13;
company, but I know other^lands'in the* immediate vicinity are now&#13;
being worted by the N.W. Railroad company an-^ proilfee to be excel-&#13;
June, :S67. « . ^ C *. I .&#13;
lent coal minfes* The mines-b^longinG to- thege .men .have not yet&#13;
been fully developed, but the impression is that,they have a good&#13;
thing, and I have no doubt that tlje same .view continues along the&#13;
river ftfr Several miles, in fact, there is every indication of it.&#13;
&lt; The railroad- runs through these lands nearly a mile in one&#13;
place and a half a mile in another, which makes them convenient for&#13;
mining-purposes, A portion of their land ts covered with very good&#13;
timber, I think 'abisiit 200 acres, , .&#13;
- Well, I suppose you will go to Washington n the 4th of Llarch&#13;
and take your deat as an li.C, Tbu will have to do something to&#13;
diirjiose o'f this Jniaerable "upreme Court. I think that idea that one&#13;
man, just because he Is clothed with the robes of an associate jus&#13;
tice, who,perhaps before his^appointment was a second rate lawyer f&#13;
•holding wordy discweeions in bar-rooms, upon mooted points of law,&#13;
as a judge 'becomes ,8'Ui^enly so great and wise that he can set aside&#13;
by his single will the deliberate judgment of the peojbe and the&#13;
best considered lawB of Congre3s--ti simply preposterous.&#13;
Our friends in Congress are exhibiting considerable back-bone&#13;
and 1 h'^ve "fto doubt the 40th Congress will have as atrong a spinal&#13;
colta&amp;n ae Its predecessor,- ,&#13;
^ I got throi*h with s^lj»y business at Washington and came out&#13;
All ritnt. 1 grateful to you for your kindness to me and&#13;
the many fawore you riepdered me. ^enever I can, 1 shall always&#13;
try to recipocate. h;: '■' ■r.i&#13;
June, 1867. , '.wTi&#13;
* Note: U.P.R.R. Papefs TI6. 20, Chief Engineer's'Report&#13;
for 1866, "^une 19, 1867 '21DR274) ^ 'J ,' vofS UXu': (Kkf'&#13;
'' Oliver mes to Gen. Dodge, New York,- June 20th; T * .&#13;
, I Your favoi?. of 14th inst. iq receive&lt;5l, I should hardly want&#13;
to jeopardize the hridg© by leeting It remain as low as it is now,&#13;
when raising it two feet would probably put it out of the v/ay of&#13;
any ice'gorge' and bn-much cheaper than to put in a ,new pier. When&#13;
we were over the road with Recjd we .thou^it the better way would be&#13;
to raise the bridge two on three feet, and the approacl^es to meet&#13;
which, could be done at a very trifling .expense- compared with a -new&#13;
pier and truss. j hope you will look at this matter again, " nd if&#13;
the bridge will be* as safe with the additional raising of it three&#13;
feet, as with a rieW dpenlng of 200 ft. I should raise it, or ^f it&#13;
requires both, they should be done, as ihe bridge should be made safe&#13;
at all events, te, ofdburSe ,'must rely on ^ou, who are on the&#13;
groiind to look over th^'matter, and be guided by your judgment, ,&#13;
trusting that the best and most econominoal plan will always be&#13;
adopted.&#13;
* - i * 4. Uioo ■ fiJ ' t:'*'.&#13;
You wii?,®of*^'6otirbe, see thnt all the proper repairs to the&#13;
accepted road are made, and will press Reed ttf) to the,:.p9st active,&#13;
.exertions in his department. We must push the road to the Rocky&#13;
Mountains this fall, and as far in theh -aS possible this season, ^&#13;
and push the grad'ng during the wfnter btt all the out# where, work&#13;
can be done withOPt interference by frost. .&#13;
June, 1867. , , . ' Iffillai&#13;
. 3&#13;
John TVarford to Gen. Dodge, Adel,_ Iowa, June 22nd:&#13;
■ I - ■ ■&#13;
Received yours of the 13th a few days since and am not much&#13;
surprised to hear that Noel had recommended a rebel for an offic3,&#13;
• ■ p '&#13;
as there is nothing too small or too degrading for hi^ to do'in&#13;
. I. ' • w&#13;
order to carry his points.&#13;
Will you favor me with the name and particulars of the recommentation for Revenue Inspector referred to in yoursj and also&#13;
state whether you would have any objection to having the matter&#13;
published, I do not mean to have your letter published, but we&#13;
" J ' ■ ; ^"&#13;
Wish to charge him with the act, and if called upon for the proof,&#13;
* * &lt; • *&#13;
have the matter in- such, a shape ' as to completely defeat him in any&#13;
thing he may claim as come off. He is now trying to carry the load&#13;
of the Republican party in Dallas County, and sane of us have de-&#13;
• •• ■ ■ • * • . .'- v. J ■ •&#13;
termined to submit to it no longer.&#13;
: - -rfon ■ towMrs. Dodge to the General Coioncil Bluffs, June 30th.&#13;
0 ^&#13;
We arrived hop^e Friday evening all ri^t. Foxind the baby&#13;
pretty well, but ahP 'lot been so well, yesterday and today,&#13;
''^^00. p.* F. Connor to Gen. Dodge, .Stockton, Cal. June 30th&#13;
^bder the circumstances that surrounded me in Utah and the&#13;
state 6f my affair® here, I concluded to change my residence for&#13;
ft time and aa, as y&lt;^«'wilt perceive by the reading, back again in&#13;
my home. I intend to go to Utah again as soon as your railrftftd geift'within a day or two's j-ide of Salt Lake, , .&#13;
fit* T ,V 'D."'&#13;
'u ■ ■&#13;
V '&#13;
Jiine, 1867.&#13;
If God spares me, f propose to fight it out on that line with&#13;
Brigham. If there is anything I can do in Utah to facilitate the&#13;
Wilding of your road, I will go back next stuamer. The mines of&#13;
f- . '&#13;
Utah are good, but cannot be worked profitable until your road is&#13;
built.&#13;
Our old friends. The Indians, are playing IH'e devil again. I&#13;
t ■ '&#13;
fear Sherman can fight Georgia Crackers better than he can Indians,&#13;
If they want to subdue the Indians, they must go after their til-"&#13;
lagesj can't be done any other way^/ ' '&#13;
* ■ G. B. Bailey to' Gen. Dodge,' Eilchorn, Netraska, June 36th. "&#13;
It will be impossible 'to get the walnut logs to the mill as&#13;
you reciuested. The bottom is still so full of sloughs and water&#13;
that there is no gettlgg through, even on horsebac. Mr. Jinks is&#13;
not going to saw any after he commences harvefeting, which will be&#13;
in about two weeks.&#13;
A * I * ' •&#13;
"Tie have had so many heavy rains that it is only within three&#13;
days that I o®uld get a"horse through some parts of the corn fields.&#13;
1 haVd "been'busy ♦planting, .re-planting, cultivating, i^-c. ever sinoe&#13;
you w^fe out wWe. A part of the fields have been under water three&#13;
or fourt times. The corn that stodd from the first planting is&#13;
good; that I rfe-plahted in the mud di not much of it come to any&#13;
thing. Our"whe*t on tfteaew ground is wery heavy and clean; that&#13;
on the old g otihr'li not'sA g%iUI, mhd e 9^ many • ; oats very&#13;
heavy, I will try anod clean your wheat this week. I have been so&#13;
■ S' - ■ ■ ! i''"&#13;
June, 1867, ." "f ,h-ruV&#13;
/busy in t|ie corn and so many weeks I have not had time to do apy-.&#13;
thing else. I shall haul part of our l.umber before harvest, will&#13;
v." have to wait till after, for the balance. ,[ - 1 '&#13;
^ -&#13;
"Cif . The horses and pattle arp looking fine. - jr toK y'ffjtioftd&#13;
' ' oJ Note: G..B. Bailey to Gen. Dodge Cost 6f barn.T ,f&gt;ei'0eo&#13;
'}J W; Snyder to Gen. Dodge, Omaha^ March 8th, 1867, , .&#13;
- »'♦. I am very much obliged for your dispatch and letter of Feby.&#13;
28th, and for the interest you have manifested in my welfare and&#13;
promotion. If this division of the road is given to me, I will try&#13;
and.fill the bill. „• •"&#13;
' I can tell hut little of the N.Y. movement, yet have an idea&#13;
of the parties who ftiave been opposed to me. T.c.D. has certainly&#13;
no r«a»wn to find fault as I have worked harder for him than ever&#13;
* f&#13;
for any other man. There have * been&#13;
■ a great&#13;
, many men here who have&#13;
manifested a disposition to get more than was due them from the ♦&#13;
road and as far as has been in my powe I have tried to prevent it.&#13;
They don't want me here. . .. .&#13;
' ' ' • ^ \r&#13;
.adadi 'has gone to Chicago. Hoxie is here working hard to get&#13;
&lt;&#13;
material enroute. I fear we will not be able to do as much this&#13;
year as was accomplished last.&#13;
c&#13;
Oalces Aaos to Gen. Dodge, Washington, July 8th, 1867.&#13;
i sti. -fours &lt;ff thf26th of June in relation to the putting of Myers&#13;
in the G. M. Dept. instead of having Moore sent in by the President is&#13;
rec. I-have sefen,lllson and he ^been to the Secretary of War about</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42607">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42596">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - June 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42597">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42598">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
June 1867&#13;
&#13;
For additional June 1867 correspondence, please refer to "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - March to November 1867 (miscellaneous)," pp 864.&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42599">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42600">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42601">
                <text>June 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42602">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42603">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42604">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42605">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42606">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4218" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4294">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/143908673c6bbc11d71048e540511eb9.pdf</src>
        <authentication>dbda350d7607e91528814a7d2f43b1e9</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58554">
                    <text>la'iliKf&#13;
,1:., .til&#13;
1&#13;
■'irrt%... H.r.&#13;
February, 18C67.&#13;
Private Diary Liem. Feb. 20th.&#13;
Entered into contract today with McCord Co. for 1-2 lands&#13;
of Coal Co. -nd agreed to furnish transportation and market at curfent rates for coal, provided Dtirant and Smith agree to it.&#13;
■T&#13;
f •&#13;
Private Diary heu. 21st. Feb. ■&#13;
fm. Callepder, 4th Iowa, Dcs Moines, a paper eelating to&#13;
the charge for.gathering GoV'^rnment horses.&#13;
Private Diary ilem. 27th. / ' * ■&#13;
C'las.i-ersoiis writes me Uarch Sth that 7-30. are of three&#13;
scries, due July 1868 and must be exchanged for 5-20 before that time&#13;
or can soil now and buy Governments at market rates, but must not let&#13;
7-30 past time due, for if I do, cannot exchange,&#13;
George C. Tichnor to Gen. I^6S Liipines, 1st, Larch.&#13;
1 telegraphed you yesterday in regard to IT,S.Marshall. The&#13;
jtppolfitmont of Stewart Goodrell would gratify all. He is justhome&#13;
from Dixie where h,e lost everything and^ is now poor. He is a good&#13;
friend of youra and would prove a vaj-uable one as he is one of the&#13;
beet party wohkars ii\ the State, , .&#13;
If there la any chance whatever to get Pete Myeis out of the&#13;
Pension Agency here, you ought to do it. The office pays&#13;
about fSOQO a year and aooe .i^apectable mm ought to h-ve it.&#13;
It is an outrage on ommqA-Jwrxhy 51 disgrace to the Government&#13;
. '"f*' t&#13;
% ■ d ■&#13;
■' ' ■ 'I'', a&#13;
February, 18C7.&#13;
• • •&#13;
that such creatures should hold federal offices of trust and consequence. It is a fact of common remarl: and general animadversion that&#13;
all the fed-ral offices or nearly so, in this district are filled by&#13;
men of like ilk. The Assesaorship, the Post office here; in fact all&#13;
the paying federal offices in-the District are held by men 'v;ho have&#13;
always been public pensioners, while disabled, gallant, efficient&#13;
and poor officers and soldiers are out of employment. I think you&#13;
ought to look after these m atters and get changes made if possible&#13;
before that "Tenure of office bill" becomes a lav/. The peo|)e want ' l&#13;
these men ousted and decent men put in their places, and I believe&#13;
the President would remove them if the matter was properly brought to ^&#13;
his attention. You could do no better service for your district and&#13;
none that the people en masse would applaud more than to get those&#13;
changes made and'the President would make more friends by such action&#13;
than by anything else he could do.&#13;
I tell you the man who shows his friei'.dship for the soldiers&#13;
and eschews the' old party leeches of the country, will earn more pop&#13;
ularity than he thinks possible. The soldiers are uniting to aid&#13;
and assist each other, regardless o^ palitics, and I tell you their&#13;
organization will be the most powerful one that ever existed in this&#13;
country.&#13;
If you see any opening where 1 can do anything for you or&#13;
for myself, by visiting Washington, telegraph me. I think I could got (|&#13;
the ear of the president if necessary. I am out of business now and&#13;
open for anything honorable and profitable. Regards, to Kirkwood.&#13;
366&#13;
March, 1867. .. ,&#13;
«&#13;
J. A. '"illiamson .to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 2nd.&#13;
H. LI. Hoxie returned here a few days a^o and said that he&#13;
had reliable information that Hon. JOhn A. Kasson was coming here to&#13;
be a candidate for Governor. Do you Jcnow whether this is true or not?&#13;
Col. A. R. Anderson who is a good friend of yours wants your&#13;
assistance to procure him the appointment of collector in this Dis&#13;
trict, provided the President and Congress comes to any understanding&#13;
whereby a decent man can get an appointment. Anderson is a rising&#13;
man and it will be to your interest to assist him if an opportunity «&#13;
offers for so doing.&#13;
George C. Simsi a soldier of the 4th, sent Mr.Kasson an&#13;
i '&#13;
^ application for appointment as Lieut, in the regular army. I suppose,&#13;
of course, that there are no vacancies, but if you would make some in&#13;
quiry and write to Sims it would satisfy him. 'The question as to who&#13;
will be nominated for Governor looks mixed.&#13;
'^Gen. Rice writes me from Washington that he has not yet de&#13;
cided to l&gt;e a candidate for Govomor. Gen. Baker is working for the&#13;
place and I aa told that Senator Kirkwood is favoring him but. do not&#13;
quite believe this.&#13;
J. 1.. Brc^wn to Gon. Dodge., St» Louis, 2nd.&#13;
I want you to do me a special favor• I was in&#13;
hopes you would come through' here so I could talk with you about it. I&#13;
WAnt to go to Inro^ and I want an appointment as Consul tc some Eurot&#13;
.' . I&#13;
March, 10G7.&#13;
pean port.* Can you get it for me?* Of course, I rant'it'to pay enough&#13;
to support me there rith reasonably moderate expenses. I can send yoii.&#13;
reconmendati ns from respectable persons of high staiidlng here if nec&#13;
essary. I hope you will interest youi^self in giy behalf. I have never&#13;
asked for a rrovernment appointment before, nor for any-favors from any&#13;
body. I have had so many heavy loads to carry and so many donations&#13;
to make, that nearly all the money I have had since '61 (about&#13;
$36,000) has vanished; I have not enough to commence a respectable&#13;
bus iness.&#13;
VI J. E. Reed to Mrs. Dodge, Joliet, 3d.&#13;
I aij doing nov; What I have often resolved to do since we&#13;
parted in New York, but many cares for busy hands have precluded the&#13;
pleasure until now.&#13;
I have often thought of you and wondered if you accompanied&#13;
ypur husband to Washington, or if you are enduring his absence as I&#13;
am that of mine. Did you •&#13;
find «&#13;
your children well? ^Do you kn-v if&#13;
Mrs. Hoxie is well end-has she returned from New York yet? How quick&#13;
ly tho weeks passed in that "Babel" city. I truly enjoyed the time,&#13;
and meeting the few flamiliar faces greatly added to my pleasure&#13;
There has been quite a fa.ll of snow today, chajigins&#13;
appearance of the season (from the few Spring days We have had) to&#13;
winter again.&#13;
DO you aometlBe. see Col. ond Urs. Nutt? Please reiaeraber mo&#13;
mm&#13;
March, 186v. , ^&#13;
to therfi. Do you visit Omaha occasionally? !7hat is tranpiring in&#13;
that busy city aiv.ong our mutual acquaintances? Remember me kindly to&#13;
all, ERtend best regards to Miss Julia, the General aed the children.&#13;
Mrs. Dcdge to Gen. Dodge, Council Bluffs, 3d. •&#13;
I was some disappointed at not receiving"a letter from you&#13;
todqy from New York. Have 9nly received the one you wrote in Chicago&#13;
but suppose the others will come during the week.&#13;
We had odr first eastern mail yesterday that wS have had for&#13;
ten days, and it has been dull enoiigh without the eastern papers. I&#13;
an disguest^d with the expiring 39th Congress and think Mrs. Stanton&#13;
hbout right. Shb'says "let Congress impeach the President and the peop&#13;
pie Scourge Congress." The h o y , ^ ,&#13;
A. ff. and I begin to think it was a terrible dsnnfall- your beihg elec&#13;
ted. ^eep your head firm and knees stiff and eyes right this term,&#13;
for you are not going any more! Mark that! Not if forty Kasson's are&#13;
elected. Letters have come for you to get situations for young women&#13;
in the Department. One could teach school but hears they are giving&#13;
$900 per year In Washington and she thinks she would like to go there.&#13;
Shall I send such letters on? You told me to send the important ones.&#13;
Mrs. John Ross had a party last night, but I folt too ill to&#13;
go. Have hkd the worst cold for weeks and can not speak plain yet.&#13;
The Catholics had a very successful fair; cleared nearly a thousand&#13;
dollars. T&gt;iq Hutchinson's sajig one eve for their benefit. EStelle&#13;
was here a few days ago b\it co'ild not stay as the ice v/as not very&#13;
safe. She looks very well and seeus cheerful. I do not think she&#13;
will break h'-r heart over the llajor. I want to go out as soon as the&#13;
ferry is running. i , . . '&#13;
We had an alarm the other night. Some me caaie and knocked&#13;
on the front door three times very laud, but when ^Jiin reached there&#13;
rio one was to be seen, I do not allow myself to get nervous, but&#13;
dislike being alone. Tell me what prospect there is for an early&#13;
adjournment and all other items of interest. Your letter,from&#13;
Chicago was qtxite brief. I hope those that follow will be longer.&#13;
The children are well. Little Annie grows more cunning every day. She&#13;
is very quick to learn cute little way-. Wish you could, see her; you&#13;
would thinkher very sweet. ' ,&#13;
Cincinnati, March, 3, ISC'".&#13;
^ ! *&#13;
Dear General:-. Two months ago when I first came blind and almost penniless to Cincinnati for treatment, my wife wrote to Hon. J.B.&#13;
Grinnell telling him of my situation and asking him. If he pleased,&#13;
to see some of my political friends at Washington and lay before them&#13;
my case and its necessities. I, of course, expected some sort of a&#13;
response to this letter, but it never came, until, having despaired of&#13;
411 hope from that quarter, my wife wrote again to Mr, Grinnell, ask&#13;
ing him to return the letter which she had before addressed to him.&#13;
Finally a response came from Mr. Grinnell enclosing a draft for thirty&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
• I •&#13;
dollars which was nade up by Senator Kirkwood and Representatives&#13;
Allison, Jr'rice, Wilson and Grinnell.&#13;
You may di^aw your onw inferences. Why was Mr, Gi*lnne:i.l&#13;
f&#13;
silent for two months, and why after that shameless silence, did he&#13;
write at all? Ho probably wants to be Oovernor of Iowa., but the individula whom Rosseau caned with impunity will hardly be known in • ,&#13;
history as the Chief Executive of a great and chivalrous statei&#13;
I write to you thus freely because I am a citizen of your&#13;
own district and because the best possible feeling ought to exist&#13;
between Major General Doilge and the blind Local of the Iowa State&#13;
Register. For a number of weeks after I came here, my eyes constantly&#13;
improved, but I am ijow suffering from a terrible relapse caused by&#13;
cold. I am rteAfly as blind as when I came to the city and if I ever&#13;
get well again it &lt;will require much time and great medical skill to&#13;
accomfiiah a cure. If you write to me, direct to 236 Vine St., Cinnati (Written by his wife) Yours truly, J. M. Dixon». J&#13;
Gen. Dodge to Gen. J. B; Lippeneott, Washington, 5d.&#13;
I respectfully reqiiest the appointment of Edgar T. Ensign&#13;
to some position-under-you. Mr. Ensign entered the Army as a private&#13;
in the 2nd Iowa Tnft., and by his ability and soldierly qualities won&#13;
his way to U. S. Majorit".&#13;
Ho serWd iwi4er ^me for three years and I can heartily en&#13;
dorse hl:u ffe Is a yOHjOg man of strict Integrity and good morals and&#13;
March, 1867,&#13;
wil] fill any position you see fit to appoint him to, with credit.&#13;
• ' ' *■ t&#13;
J. K. "^ing to Gen. Dodge, North Blooinfield, 4th.&#13;
« . • - - -&#13;
I enclose to you Gov. Cox's note that you may know the&#13;
t&#13;
- course your recommendation has taken. Please accept my thanks for&#13;
the great appreciation you gave my services while in your command.&#13;
•Presume Gen. Ga;rfield has also given it all the attention necessary&#13;
and in due tiiae will be acted upon.&#13;
I have just recoivod a good letter from friend Tichenor of&#13;
our military family giving me informaf on of the other members. Am&#13;
glad to know of their prosperity. |&#13;
J. D. Cox to Capt., J. K. ring, Columbus, Dec.&#13;
I have been happy to endorse and forward to rashiijgton Gen.&#13;
Dodse's reooar-cndallon for your brevet, which certainly ought to have&#13;
been Blven you long ego. 1 sent It to ften. Gerfield with a request&#13;
that he would personally Interest himself in it. Remember me kindly&#13;
to all lay old friends ip Bloomfield. _ ^ _&#13;
^ Gen. Dodge to his wife, March 5th, rashington.&#13;
I received your letter in New York, It -as racy and cheered and did me lots of good. I have had the blues ever since I left&#13;
home and this J&gt;ao« infernal! is loaded down with applications and&#13;
importunities and 1 » sick to dSktS of it. Testsrday the 39th Con&#13;
gress adjourned and the 40th commehdSd operations. 1 send you&#13;
papers containing Colfax's speeohss which were In good taste.&#13;
Uarch, 1867.&#13;
Brooks filibustered but did no good. The House was crowded.ladies&#13;
being on the floor, sa d to be the most imosing scene ever witnessed in&#13;
the House. TThen John Uorrissey's name .was called there was a flurry&#13;
all over the House. He always created a sensation. That'-*Stevens, v/ho&#13;
sat next to me» turned and said, "He creates as much fuss as though&#13;
it was expected to mill the whole house." "&#13;
There is nothing to keep us here over two weeks. All impor^&#13;
- tant bills have passed, but there is a party here led by Butler, Ste&#13;
vens' &amp;c. who want to stay all summer, but I think we- can vote them down&#13;
A Caucus wii'l be held tomorrow night to determine the question&#13;
will write you. Kaswoh goes home to lay hiu plans for Ce-vern r tn ^&#13;
the 41st Congress. He' has played some very sharp tricks; has appoint&#13;
ed Lamp Shermari Collector'- a* renegade Republican who voted foj? .&#13;
Tuttle. John Sherman, his brother, has got bim coniirraed.. Judge .&#13;
Baldwin is here with me. I have had but one letter from you. Am now&#13;
settled and will write of^en; could not get a room qnt11 tonight.&#13;
Send all the papers coming to me through the district here.&#13;
Either put them in new packages or-redirect them. Love to all. Kiss&#13;
the girls and tfelk Indian to the baby. I would give much to seq.her.^&#13;
Ryi FoPrey tOrCen. Dodge, Leon, 5th.&#13;
Yours at han'^. Among other things you ask'about our Railroad. It seams as If It. wo\ild be strangled In Its birth'as certain&#13;
Oountl.se in Uissouri do, not come up to time. I have ifetohed events&#13;
r. ,&#13;
March, 1867. . ■ ■ - • t -&#13;
at Washington during the Inst session with gr-at interest. The Reconstniction Bill pleases me much. I think the people of the North&#13;
t&#13;
will sustain it and if the South does n(bt honestly carry *it out, the&#13;
people v/ill require more of the.:.. If a Bounty Bill passes, send me a&#13;
copy. Could you send me a copy of 'the Bankrupt Bill? Are there any&#13;
Judges to be appointed unde'r the bill? Will radicals stand any show&#13;
of such appointment?&#13;
To frsn. Dodge from his brother, Coxincil Bluffs, 6th.&#13;
■I enclose letter from Fay offering only ^3.50 per acre for&#13;
the 40 acres of lan^^ which he squatted -upon. I wrote him I wanted&#13;
ten dollars per acre for it. I have sold it today to another man, ^&#13;
L. N, Rogers for $6.25 per acre, $250.00, half cash, half in six and&#13;
12 mo's., with interest, and gave him bond in your name.&#13;
. I learned through several uninterested parties that that was&#13;
its full value, or rather, five dollars per acre was what they con&#13;
sidered it wot'th.' It is very rough; little or no land fit fob cul&#13;
tivation, a 'feW acres of timber, and it is all the time trespassed&#13;
upon. Baldwin has rather set me back about selling Farnam's lands&#13;
by telling ne that B. P. &amp; D. hold a bond against them and that it is&#13;
upon record. ThAt it would not be safe to sell without first fore&#13;
closing it. I do not want to get Fafnam'into any trouble, present or&#13;
prospective, still I would like to make sales to settlers as he has ^&#13;
given me penr.isBion. Have your several applications on hand. What had ^&#13;
liarch, li67f&#13;
I better do? If Farnam gives a warrantee deed eonsid.erfition, four&#13;
dollars' per acre, and upwards, would there be anj'- trouble hereafter?&#13;
Such bodies of land are-a barrier to settlement and ought to be open&#13;
ed up to settlers^ ... . .&#13;
■ You V,'ill, notice by papers that Deming would not accept the&#13;
nomination for^LIayor and that Frank Street has been put in his place.&#13;
Some of the party are fearful Babbitt will beat him. I think not. A&#13;
good man in.his place would, however. am surprised at the progress&#13;
Ross is making in his canvass for Gubneratorial nomination. The&#13;
endorsements he is receiving from unexpected sources are flattering.&#13;
Rixssell of Davenport Times is press ng his claims; also&#13;
Rush Clark of Iowa City, and many others in the eastern part of the&#13;
State, They all rite Ross that he stands first of any one spoken of,&#13;
*&#13;
not excepting Grinnell. The Slope will be unanimous for hi . as far&#13;
as reports come in. I was somewhat taken aback when he showed me&#13;
letters he had received from the different counties; many of them vol&#13;
untary endorsements and urging him to come out; especially those from&#13;
t' e eastern part of the State. I had no idea he was well enough known&#13;
out-side of our district to be put forward as a candidate. I&#13;
I suppose one reason of his showing irfe these evidences of&#13;
his popularity In other parts of the Stattf was to learn if I knew the&#13;
reason of the Nonpareil*s silence, when Dav. Gazette and other papers&#13;
had endorsed him so unqualifiedly. Maynard, he tells me, has refused&#13;
to do anything for him at present, and sO said to Bloomer. This led&#13;
March, 1867. . t '- t&#13;
some tr) stispect that Maynard was influenced to this silence by you.&#13;
'Tiile Mnynard's silence was unaccountable, Ross does hot believe that&#13;
you had any hand in it-. If he had any suspicions, I cleared his mind&#13;
of them. I told him you appreciated his efforts to secure your'"n'omination in Congress, and never went baclc on friends. I told him to&#13;
write you and let you know of his being on the track, and that- he&#13;
might count on your active cooperation, and so far as you had inflaie&#13;
ence with Maynard, I felt sure-y u would use it for him. I presume&#13;
Maynard la holding back for developments, but do not know.^&#13;
ft ' • •» .&#13;
John Dunqombe to Gen. Dodge, Fort Dodge, 7th.&#13;
I have Just forwarded .a dispatch to you at New York and • . f&#13;
» • - *&#13;
Washington, The anount of cney required for the month Just ended&#13;
will be about $1200. It is all important that this be sent oh. If it&#13;
has hot been sent when you get this, t wish you woul'^ send a tele&#13;
graphic dispatch to A. K, Tells at Boone, or have your friends do so,&#13;
authorizing him to draw for the amount. The same must be d©ne in ha&#13;
lation to tho Hinton,payment, by the 20th. I have not heard, a word&#13;
from you pr^ any other gentelman since I received your dispatch from&#13;
Hew York City. Besdies, we are now working at a very great disadvan&#13;
tage. want coaL cars. We want our for our engine and&#13;
horse power, &gt; It is impossible to go on vmless these things are fixed,&#13;
Go far as tho contracts are concerned, it is all right anyway. 1 know&#13;
they Will be satisfactory. We are willing to ^^o what is right, and&#13;
March, 1667.&#13;
yonr loen jloubtless arc. The coal cars ?:ill cost, I think, about $P.50&#13;
per set for the iron. I will go down and.look up just what is re&#13;
quired as soon as the present matters are so fixed that I can tell&#13;
?;hat is best to do. V^e are all ready to take out coal if we had the&#13;
hoisting apparatus, and we nov; have good coal in our drift ready to&#13;
work out. . , ,&#13;
t • « &lt; • . .&#13;
L. E. Ross to Gen. Dodge, Council Bluffs, 7th.&#13;
I now write to say that I am a candidate for Governor, sui&#13;
Ject to the decision of the Rep. Convention. I have taken pains to&#13;
inforc myself and aa now prepaned to say that my nomination is more&#13;
than poohlble. The indications arc decidedly in favor of a union of&#13;
the wostem votes for me, and «e! 1-infonced men in the eastern and&#13;
central portions of the State say, that I have considerahle strength&#13;
the re.&#13;
Th.e Nonpareil remains silent, and refuses to endorso me.&#13;
This action on the part of ilaynard excites uoh wonder here and&#13;
elsewhere. I do not know your relations to him, hu! I feel like ask&#13;
ing you to smoke him out if possible. Ihave not time tonight to&#13;
tell you al my grounde for a hope of suoooss. I have proceeded cau&#13;
tiously and think 1 cannot be. deceived.. Ed Russell of Pavenport&#13;
Oasotts, n a private letter and upon a review of all the oahdldatee&#13;
in the field ««y«- that my chances are eq-al to those of any other,&#13;
have the ftame testimony from Rush Clark and others.&#13;
: -Iv- •&#13;
Uarch, 1867. • ■&#13;
The report in that Grinnell is failing in strength, I can&#13;
not think that either Williamson or Cottell have an^'' well groiinded&#13;
hone. This is the opinion of Capt. Reed of Adel and Dave Brandt of&#13;
Des laoines. Please write Maynard. I do not want him to know that I&#13;
request it.&#13;
• ..&#13;
M. L. LlcPherson to Gen. Dodge, Winterset, 7th.&#13;
I&#13;
You are^now S. sST^ant of the people of the 5th, C'ongresslonal&#13;
District of Iowa and as I live in that District I shall take the lib&#13;
erty of writin/T you a short letter hot on the Reconsi-ruction of the&#13;
States lately in rebellion" but on business, so here is at you. ^&#13;
I never use a circumlocution when T can get at, a matter direct&#13;
ly and hence I say to you plainly that I .want a Superintendency of&#13;
Indian affairs, I know myself to be as honest at least as any man&#13;
in the Indian bueinose, and believe I am capable of discharging the&#13;
duties of the office. I will say to you now what I never said to any&#13;
one else," and which I desire you to keep within your own breast.&#13;
T&#13;
Willie Senator Harlon was Secretary of the Interior, I applied for a&#13;
Superintendency through Llr. K&amp;sscn. Uy claim was presented to the&#13;
President and my appointment ordered to be mhd»-by the Ist of July&#13;
1860 , in case Mr, Kasaon d'esired it. Mr. Ke.ason tried to get ae into&#13;
his support for Congress and offered to secure me the Superintendency&#13;
of Indian Affairs of Arizona if I would give this county to him for ^&#13;
renomination to Congress. I declined his pBopositlon and the result&#13;
March, 1867. "' t5l *. ■&#13;
is you are -now where I-could hove placed hi-r., • '&#13;
T received a letter fron Secretary Harlan informing me that&#13;
my appointment as Superintendent of the Indian affairs in Arizona had&#13;
been filed in the Department^of the Interior, subject to the wish of&#13;
Mr, Kasson. I will further state to you that B. F. Roberts of Des&#13;
Moines last June-during the Convention which■nominated you, said&#13;
that he was authorized to say to me that if I would give Madison Go,&#13;
to Kasson for Congress, I could receivea a large sum of money, Mr.&#13;
Roberts can tell you my reply to that proposition.&#13;
I state these things in full confidence that they will br&#13;
kept, I think you know that if It had not been for me your nomination&#13;
was, to say the least, doubtful, I have t^Id you the inducements held&#13;
out to me' to give my influence to Mr, Kasson, I had no confidence in the&#13;
man's political integrity and believed he was the friend of Mr,&#13;
Johnson. You are now his successof and if you can aid me in getting&#13;
the position I desire, I shall fell under obligations to you, I am&#13;
intimately acquainted with all the members from Iowa with the excep&#13;
tion of Mr, Allison and I believe they will all aid you, I shall&#13;
write to Senator Harlan and ask his aid' in the matter,&#13;
I do not know that there is ahy opening just now but some&#13;
of those who are acting as Superintendents are not as loyal as they&#13;
ought to be and Couimissioner Bozy is an infernal rebel. Will you be&#13;
' good enough to see the Iowa delegation and mention my desires to them?&#13;
I am quite well acquAinted with Representative Hubbard of&#13;
March, 1867. • ' ^ •&#13;
the 6th Cnngressional' District of lov.'a rnd l" think he will do all he&#13;
T&#13;
can for me.&#13;
When you get the hang of your new position, v.'rite to Ae and&#13;
tell me what my chances are. The U.S.Senate ought not to confirm any&#13;
more who-are not sound republicans and if our Senators aid in placing&#13;
conservative men, or democrats they will learn that there is a here&#13;
after. ^&#13;
F. W. Palmer to Gen, Dodge, Des Moines, 7th,&#13;
»&#13;
Letters received from Kasscn by his friends here and Hlkhorn&#13;
leave no doubt in my mind but that-he will try to make himself a can&#13;
didate for Governor. On his return here his friends who were most in- ^&#13;
fluential in his Congressional fight will attempt to dissuade him from&#13;
entering the ring, but no mtm can tell whether or not he will heed&#13;
their advice. Of course he could not be nominated with or without&#13;
support at home, but I -v-.-rite this to warn you that he will bend all&#13;
e&#13;
his energies to suplant you in the counties, for Congress next year.&#13;
His. appropriations for a Post office site and building here&#13;
0&#13;
were preljmipary to a big fight anew for himself at home. As you live&#13;
at the txther end of the District I want you to strengthen yourself,&#13;
here by any and every appropriate oportunity which may offer, Kasson&#13;
never did anything for us here until he got this post office crumb,&#13;
but we shall not hear the last of that as long as he shall be hero.&#13;
If Congress should not be in session long, I want you to 4&#13;
March, 1867 . . . , .&#13;
i&#13;
come to Des Lloines on your return, for by that tirae Kasson's plans&#13;
will be 30 far developed that we can talk v/ith some data for action • • •&#13;
for the_^future.&#13;
• ■ %&#13;
A . -&#13;
Private Diary Mem.* March 8th.&#13;
Telegraphed Reed on the 7th to put men in cuts on 4th.hun&#13;
dred on the 11th to work up td the end of 4th hundred miles anc^ to&#13;
have it done by May 1st .1. ' •&#13;
Gen. Dodge to his wife, Washington, 8th.&#13;
• • • #&#13;
Last night we had a Cauchs that lasted until 2 this morning&#13;
on the Impeachment^case and on adjournment. Butler and Logan led the&#13;
hot heads and immediate impeachment men with a desire to adjourn until&#13;
May 8th, then to retdrn here, while *ilson, Elaine, Binghman and&#13;
others led the party who wanted to take hold of the matter deliberately .nd"'h.en they edjeurr,, do-so until next fall, hut the adjournment&#13;
on Monday next until Uay Sth was carried. 1 do not believe the Senate&#13;
will agree, and in that case Andy may Oome In and prorogue us. Th«.&#13;
Senate is more careful than the House and In their Caucus today&#13;
I think thoy proposed to adjourn-next week until sometime In the fall.&#13;
in drawing for seats, I am right behind Mlaon, Stevens,&#13;
Butler, Shollaberger, Oarfleld, Williams, Kelly and all the groat&#13;
lights sit near me, so I am well fixed and can tell what Is going on.&#13;
Mr. Elliott oame to see me today. His brother, the Doctor,.Is In&#13;
"(lew Orlenae, and T.d. eaya he is afraid Congreds le going too g«»t.&#13;
LInrch, 1867. • ^&#13;
Kasson is here watching the proceedings. He will, do all&#13;
he can to keep us fro.ii doing anj'thing. Judge B. left today, I am&#13;
in hop s to get avfay next week, but it is a very uncertain thing.&#13;
This work mry be fun to some but not to me, I sent you a Isirge pack&#13;
age of flower seeds to distribute among your friends, I sent Linerva&#13;
some and Bailey a lot of garden seeds. One is busy here all the time,&#13;
Not a moment to spare, I shall call on Grant tomorrow and see what m&#13;
can be done in array matters, Maj, Lyman has been appointed 1st&#13;
• I , ^ ^ '&#13;
Lieut, in the Army,&#13;
^ Mrs, Dodge to the ^General, Cotincil Bluffs, 8th,&#13;
There is no great news. The town is filled with&#13;
new comers, many looking for houses to live in, one or two rooms. Your I&#13;
%&#13;
mother has a family ^Cousin of Mr, Phelps staying with her for a&#13;
few days until thail^ fufcniture arrives. The hotels are full. It is&#13;
shame there is not a decent hotel in town, I believe it is fated&#13;
that this place shall increase, but if some were out of it there would&#13;
bo more chance than now. I have a presentiment thfet Omaha is going to&#13;
get the lion*8 share. They work nfight and day and leave no stone unturr^Sd -that c.an add to their interest,&#13;
t&#13;
The Herald professes to have late news from New York and&#13;
. yheir bridge is all right, I think they will get it when they want&#13;
it, Mr,.Blair and Judge * Walker called * to see me today. , I had a&#13;
• plesant chat with the,... They are coming again soon to stay longer. I&#13;
■&#13;
Llorch, 1867.&#13;
• f&#13;
also received a call from ay olf? friend Gen. Chetlain whom I was much&#13;
pleased to meet. He was on his way to Utah. His wife was with him,&#13;
and Hr, Hooper. The ice still holds in the river but is dangerous,&#13;
""e have cold weather yet and s«iie snow. I do not understand the elec&#13;
tion in Omaha. It went democratic, and the Herald crows lu'st'ly.&#13;
Little Annie has not been well; has had earache and gathering&#13;
in her head. Her teeth are so slow about coming that it keeps her • f - .&#13;
back, but she is just as good as ever.&#13;
George Ford to Gen.'Uodge,- Philadelj^hia, 8th. *&#13;
' I have written you twice since I last heard from you but '&#13;
as your whereab'^uts are decidedly uncertain, I suppose my productions&#13;
have brought up in the sacred precincts of the dead letter :office.&#13;
I write now merdly to inform you that I expect you to visit&#13;
Olney on your way to Iowa after Congress adjourns. Now do not say&#13;
^'ou cannot. There is no such thing as ^impossibilities. If Mrs. Dodge&#13;
is v/ith you, 80 much the better. Let qhs know whe- you leave Washington&#13;
and I will meet you at tho Baltimore depot iij this city. Do not fail&#13;
to cnme , as 1 shall be Very much disappointed if you do.&#13;
The southern papers are making a great hullabulloo over the&#13;
Reconstruction bill. It is amsuing to, see how they prate about the&#13;
destruction of the Union and the Consttlution. They did not seem to&#13;
• I&#13;
think so much about the untimely decease of that aged and venerable&#13;
A&#13;
' k' dociiiaent in 1861.&#13;
March, 1867. , . '&#13;
Note:- i:. J. Burgess to J. L. rilliams, Pa., March 8th.&#13;
t '&#13;
W. LI. ^hite to Gen. Dodge, Treasury Departmen"^, 8th. .&#13;
1 Please my name oh your list of those to whom you ■&#13;
seijd public documents. -&#13;
* TTashington, D.C. March 8th.&#13;
Hon. Hugh McCullough, Secy of the Treasury.&#13;
Dear Sir:- I respectfully requdst the appointment ,of Col&#13;
A. P. Anderson of Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa, to the position of&#13;
Assessor of IntQJfnal Revenue for the 5th District of Iowa. The pres&#13;
ent incumbent has held the office for a long time and I desire that&#13;
ha now give way to-a soldier. Col. Anderson is a young lawyer of fine&#13;
ability, strict integrity and correct habits. He entered the service&#13;
in 1861 as a privqte in the 4th Iowa Infantry and through his own&#13;
(rtTorts as a.brdvd^ reliable, able bodied soldier he won his way to&#13;
the rank of Major and Colonal of the 4th Iowa Infantry and was mustert&#13;
ed out as of that rani, with his regiment in 186 . He served in my&#13;
com.;iand for-several years and I speak of him from personal knowledge.&#13;
I believe the appointment due him and I know it will give general&#13;
satisfaction to the district. G. M. Dodge&#13;
9 .. 4 ■ ^ ^&#13;
Gen. Dodge to his wife, Washington, March 6th.&#13;
I received your letter of the 24th, I think you had better&#13;
let Jim go, 1 rather trust the Geman, as 1 shall be home In b month&#13;
or expect to.&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
I won] d 2® much to see you all tonight- the girls and&#13;
the baby. Although I seem to think so little of them when I am home,&#13;
still when away they are seldom cut of my thoughts. Chicadee Wakapala has not her equal any^'here. I hope she will not forget me. I rec'd&#13;
Ella's letter with yours, and will write her and Lettie in a day or&#13;
two. How ereOlive, Father, Mother and the rest? How does the stock&#13;
get along? Are they getting up v;ood? We have had snow here for two&#13;
I&#13;
or three days i^nd the sun has not shone since I came here. I get no&#13;
papers from oiir District, not one J I have only seen one copy of the&#13;
%&#13;
Nonpareil and but one of the Register,&#13;
. I see by your letter- that the parties are going off gaily.&#13;
I have not been out since I came here; have not made an acquaintance&#13;
among the ladies-, and so far have had no importunities from them,&#13;
though I notice the lobbys are crowded with them asking favors of&#13;
Representatives and Senators from all places, I would not want a&#13;
friend of mine to come to Washington to seek a living,&#13;
Rjaqwmber me to all. Kiss the children and imagine how I&#13;
would.greet you if I could.&#13;
' Mrs. Dodge to the General. Council Bluffs, 9th.&#13;
Your letter from Washington mailed the 5th came yesterday,&#13;
the only one I have received from there. The papers say there will be&#13;
an early adjournment. I sent the German out to the Hornt&#13;
but have been sorry. Shall not keep Jim much longer and I would not&#13;
tftke any extra pains to get him a place. Let him find "his own.&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
There are many hard working men out of' emplojnnent vrtio deserve the&#13;
place and are not afraid to work, and'the most he does is to hunt up&#13;
excuses when I tell him to do anything.&#13;
• ' ' haye had snow again but the air is mild and will soon.&#13;
melt it unless it changes, I am uneasy about your wood business.&#13;
George Bailey says the men are much more anxious for pay than they&#13;
are to do the work, and I hope you will be here before there is any&#13;
danger of "its being carried off. There is not much news- a good manj&#13;
strangers in town, angood many from" Chicago-, but think they will leave&#13;
if some one does not build houbes.&#13;
'• ' Uatha-': showed me Judge Baldwin's letters from New York. The&#13;
Judge seems to think the squabbles in the'Nonpareil do not help the&#13;
place much in the opinion of people abroad, andf so -I think Maynard&#13;
ought to be sent East to get some new ideas^ and" then he' will do first&#13;
rat 0. ' '&#13;
: U Ross to Gen. Dodge, Council Bluffs, 9th.&#13;
I find some additional complaint today on account of the&#13;
ootirse piirsnad ty the Nonpareil. Our people now reoember that&#13;
quite lately'lt published approvlnfijly a notice of Gen. N. B. Baher s&#13;
candidacy, taken from the Marshall Times.&#13;
Major Lyman has just'returned from Fremont'and informs me&#13;
that Kosson's friends down there oppose me for* the action I took in&#13;
your hohalf. 1 am not surprised at this. l' she'll no dotlht meet It&#13;
■ ""&#13;
■ I&#13;
, I&#13;
■ ft .&#13;
Llarch, 1867.&#13;
» *&#13;
in other localities. You no doubt can do soiaet^-'ing to co\interact this&#13;
&lt; " •&#13;
opposition. I do not fear for the result in Frevnont. I. am knov?n&#13;
f *&#13;
there and can get the support of the Coiinty if I deserve it.&#13;
I want you to see Llr. V/ilson of the Int district and if&#13;
possible interest him in my behalf. If he has no candidate in his own&#13;
district, he may be disposed to hlep me just to favcr his friend&#13;
• f -&#13;
Kasson. I think if Kasson and his friends make a fight against me in&#13;
your district, it may help me out of his district.&#13;
It may be v;ell also for you, if possible, to interest Llr,&#13;
• •&#13;
Hubbard. Saj'' to him that in the region of Sioux City I have friends&#13;
who sav that my name is well received. Let me hear the result as soon&#13;
f&#13;
as practicable.&#13;
4 - •&#13;
J. T7. Duncombe to Gen. Dodge, Boone, 9th.&#13;
The estimate for work this month will be $1200.00, Please&#13;
have the money sent to A. K. Fells, Boone, Iowa before the 15th inst.&#13;
A telegram to Wells, authorizing him to draw on New York for the&#13;
amount will do. Don't neglect the other payment before the20feh.&#13;
Geo. Tichenor to Gen. Dodge, Des Lioines, 10th.&#13;
I enclose a statdinent relative to the inan-er of loss of my&#13;
bay horse. If your memory of the matter is suxh that you can do so,&#13;
please sign, the certificate that I have fillod out for ybu and return&#13;
it to me. The facts- are as I state thorn, and I have some hopes of the&#13;
Government allowing the claim.&#13;
March, 1S67. " -n&#13;
Why have j'ou not written me. I have, for a long time been&#13;
hoping and expecting to hear from yon, I, of course, cannot clalme youi&#13;
time and ^ittention if you have been too busily occupied and absorbed&#13;
in official rhities, nor could I ask you to write me when you had noth&#13;
ing of v/hich to vn-ite; still I would be glad to have you tell me that&#13;
yourself and family are well, if nothing more.&#13;
Kasson has returned to Washington, having, revious' to start&#13;
ing, given his v;ife a divorce and she has gone to ft. Louis to live&#13;
with her brother. Dr. Elliott. The affair and its causes, whys and&#13;
wheref' res, have created great e:citement here and pUbli'c opinion is&#13;
widely divided and quite vinsettled, although I think it clear that thG^&#13;
weight of opinion and sympathy is settling down decidedly in favor of&#13;
Kasson, notwithstanding Withrow, Palmer and Hoxie tire with Mrs.&#13;
Kdasdn. You have probably heard all the particulars of the matter.&#13;
Kasson took tea with me the night bqfore last and told me he was not&#13;
at all afraid of the popular verdict, and I^inferred from his tone&#13;
that he int^hded to remain "in the district'and run for Congress again&#13;
this falll&#13;
Our ppople are becoming impatient for you to leave the&#13;
service and take hold of the U. 4 u. or Central n. R. We all feel that&#13;
something oust be done that we do rot underetand ho* to go about to&#13;
aooomplleh, and .that if yon had hold of the matter it would be done.&#13;
•*. • '.j;&#13;
/fTo Ella and Lettie from the General, .TTasbington 10th.&#13;
" This is Sunday and rainy and dreary, and all the days since&#13;
I have been here have been of the same sort. The sun has hardly peep&#13;
ed from the clouds, let alone coming out in all its brightness as it&#13;
does in our clear west. The air is dani'^ foggy and disagreeable..&#13;
I wish for my sake, I had my two little girls here and ma,&#13;
but there 4s nothing comfortable or inviting; crowded hotels- shabby&#13;
■sT&#13;
rooms, and steamboat fare - miserable coffee, and saucy waiters. If&#13;
you know of any boy who wants to enter the Naval school I can get him&#13;
*&#13;
a place.. The Sec. of Navy has notified me of a vacancy in my district.&#13;
' \/ The President, Mr. Johnson, sent me a polite note yesterday&#13;
inviting me to dine with him. He also invited Mrs. Dodge. suppose&#13;
that means mama, and if she desires to go, she better be fixing up&#13;
hwr clothes for a sensation. ^Gen. Grant was here wit i his little boy&#13;
to see me and inquired after my boysTj I told him they were all little&#13;
girls. He said I must bring them on'and let them get-acquainted with&#13;
Master Fred.&#13;
The little girls at the houste romp up end down the halls and&#13;
have a gay time. I often stop them and have a chat. Two or three&#13;
have takc^ quite a fancy to me 'and are little ladies. You must en-&#13;
*&#13;
doavor to learn good manne'rs, become good v.-riter's and fine students,&#13;
for intelligence always attracts, even r.ore than good looks. Ella&#13;
feels so proud in her new dresses that I fear they have more charms&#13;
than her lessons and music.&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
■f have hart two Ifetters frosi Ella and one frora Lettie. Tell&#13;
mama when she writes me'not to tise my frankert envelopes; use them&#13;
whe she writes others*. Letters to me are free without a frank.&#13;
I want to see Annie. It seems as though. I could not wait.&#13;
Kiss mama and haby.&#13;
f •&#13;
Note:-. .Estelle to Auntie, Horn, March 10th.&#13;
' ,I.v T&#13;
Frank Streamer to Gen. Dodge, Council Bluffs, 10th.&#13;
I write to you in behalf of the Young Men's Library Associa&#13;
tion of this city of w&gt;^ic you are a member requesting, if within&#13;
your power, you aid us in the procurement of all such public documents&#13;
as would pnhance the interests of an association of this kind. I?e arc&#13;
now in prosperous circumstances; have a membership of 133; over 600&#13;
volumtes and 31 papers and periodicals.&#13;
I would.like to see in the Library Room the report of the&#13;
pacific R^R.Surveys complete. We have volumtes 3 &amp; 12, but not the&#13;
others. Keokuk has the best library in the State; her Con&#13;
gressmen made it so. Gen&lt;^ral, we have the best city in the Sate, and&#13;
we want the h/est Library.&#13;
, As yan ere doubtless swore, I am now doing the local for the&#13;
Honpereil. You throw a favor to the Y.U.L.A. and 1 will throw sever&#13;
al through the Honpaerlal for you. Kasson sent us a mall-sack full of&#13;
coast surveys and other minor docvMents. hut all valuable. He promroed to do more, and will when he gets home. KlrUwood promised but ^&#13;
'kill—- .'iil'&#13;
, , &gt;v &gt;. fc r&#13;
Uarch, 1867. . ■ .&#13;
never did anything. He forgets too easy. Senator Grimes has sent&#13;
us several favors. . ' . ^&#13;
General Dodge to his wife, Washington 10th. . '&#13;
I have not received any letter since I wrote you, but am&#13;
looking for one. You should send me everything that helaties to my&#13;
duties here. Ilorgan says he wrote me letters to the Bluffs, that-I&#13;
'ougbt to get, but they w8re not forwarded. Yoii better send me letters&#13;
until I telegraph you when I leave;'send all that come for me.&#13;
It is now very uncertain whep we get away. The House and&#13;
Senate do not agree as to adjournment. The House wants to adjourn&#13;
to May 8th, and the Senate wants to go until October or November. I&#13;
want to adjourn over till fall; do not want to come back here In Uay,&#13;
and prefer to stay now a week or two longer than to be obliged to stay&#13;
here In the summer. Some of the old meibers have their ladles here,&#13;
but none, or very few, of the new ones. It has rainea all the time&#13;
I have been here and I have been as busy as a bee. 1 get cords of&#13;
letters; wants, wants, wants and not muoh else. If you were here and&#13;
would do It, you could help me some. haj. Ensign of Des Koines does&#13;
some vriting for me. H 1= a school for.any one who has a taste that&#13;
way. You always said I would do more for anyone else than for myself.&#13;
Wilson is at the head of the Judiciary Committee and has in&#13;
charge the Tmpoachment questibh. 1 iike him. He will go out on the&#13;
Plains witb me next summer, or wants" to.&#13;
Llarch, 18^7. . "&#13;
I have not as yet become acquainted with .any ladles, though&#13;
there are plenty all around me. It is hard to see so many petticoats&#13;
and to think how far off the one I am entitled to is.&#13;
Kasson is here yet, I suppose he is watching to see thrt&#13;
T do not get any oet his pets out of office. I am going to call on&#13;
Chief Justice Chase tomorrow with LIr. T7ilson to see if I can obtain the&#13;
Register under Bankrupt Law in ray district. I do not know whether&#13;
Kasson has gobbled that or not.&#13;
I have a great many callers from all parts of the country&#13;
*&#13;
0],d rebs. who knew me south, and Union men who were with me down there.&#13;
A Capt. Thompson called, who said his family boarded with you in St.&#13;
Louis near the Lindell hotel when I was in Rolla.&#13;
JoseJjh has written me that he wants a Consulate or some&#13;
place in a foreign bountry. He waixts to get away from his present&#13;
surroundings. I am going to see what I can do. Kiss the girls.&#13;
I have been trying to negotiate for a dary woman^ and now there is&#13;
one here who wants to go out, but I fear she may desert us when she&#13;
gets there. * '&#13;
W. presoctt Smith, Baltimore, 11th.,&#13;
' *&#13;
I acknowledge your letter of the 6th inst., received this&#13;
morning only, written from Washington, and enclosing check on-behalf&#13;
of the Union Pacific.R.R. for |850., being the amount of my account&#13;
as a Coramiae oner of the U.S. for the two trips made to your road on&#13;
inspection last summer.&#13;
March, 1067. . ^ .&#13;
I am verjr much obliged to you and your company for" this etfelement, which has been delayed until this time by the want of atten&#13;
tion on the part of Mr. Durant, its Vice .President. I regret that&#13;
circumstances have prevented ra y visiting your road and the hospitable&#13;
and promising coinmnity of Omaha, since August last. I cherish the&#13;
most lively recollections of the two occasions of my visits, and hope&#13;
some day to renew the pleasure. r ^ , j- '&#13;
J.' L. TJilliams to Oen.' Dodge, Fort Wayne, 11th.&#13;
i will thank you to take the trouble to read the enclosed&#13;
letter from my nephdw, of whom I spoke.. From this you can judge of&#13;
I&#13;
his character and whether you can make him useful in your corps as&#13;
rodman or chainman. T will say that I am sure he las good ab lity&#13;
and is reliable. His letter (which of course was not written for&#13;
others than myself) indicates his modesty, with no disposition to push&#13;
himself forward beyond his qualifications; The fact that he broke&#13;
away from the far.a in Indiana procured a tolerable education and&#13;
then set out for the oil region, fehows some vim.&#13;
W. Snyder to Oen. Dodge, Omaha, 11th.&#13;
Yours of the 5th inst. reached me Saturday last. Be-assured&#13;
that I a. very graH.eful for the kind words you have spoken in my be&#13;
half in New Torv end elsewhere. I have always worked hard here to&#13;
save money for the roa-^ and to secure business for it; have paid no&#13;
attention to my own popularity; have received no money but my salary;&#13;
. .'flK- ,.,.&#13;
' :i&#13;
&gt; i; .''&#13;
Llar'^h, 1867. .&#13;
have had but one object In view, and that has been the intGre."'t of&#13;
my employers. You know about how many departments I have had to carry&#13;
I have been thoroughly d--d for errors of others, and have not had&#13;
credit for the little work I actually performed. I don't want glory;&#13;
am not anxious for authority, and only ask that- they will put me&#13;
where I can work for the..i faithfully, and pay me salary enough to sup- '&#13;
port my femly, or let me go. If they make me Supt., I will do all&#13;
that is possible to satisfy them and fulfil the pr.oaises of my friends-&#13;
• • • - • ,&#13;
or I will work uhder any man, excepting Reed, wherever they may&#13;
place me, in any position they see fit to give.&#13;
Will take a position with , Bornw, but wont do the Supt's&#13;
work any longer unless I get paid for it. Reed has not treated me&#13;
decently; has tried to stab me here and in New York, while I have&#13;
sacrificed everyt irlg for a year to make him a reputation. This year&#13;
he can have a chance to try it with somebody else.&#13;
So much for self ^ now business, -The owners of the road must&#13;
have some one here-ttiey can trust to manage the freight and passenger&#13;
business and not do it in New York. It is useless to insist on raising&#13;
our tariff- already too high, an-d-a^aking wagon rates less over which&#13;
the road has no control. Outside of Government business we would make&#13;
more money by reducing freight and passenger rates forty per cent. ♦ * ' ■ f&#13;
Three month's trial would prove this.&#13;
We will do about all the mountain business this season.&#13;
Denver merchants are shipping this mj although they don't like it.&#13;
March, 1867. • «&#13;
It is too early yet ,for Salt Lake .business,, but we have a certainty&#13;
of it. The territDhj.es ^ire fjosted on our route; they know its ad&#13;
vantages and will ship by us..&#13;
. " The earnings for February v:ere small for the reason that we&#13;
had no' eaetern connection. The Chicago and N.'.. , although nominally&#13;
open has no-t run half a dozen freight trains through to date. There is&#13;
freight for us at St, Joseph, Atci\ison, Kansas City and St, Louis, wait -&#13;
Ing for navigation. Through bills of lading to Denver can be produred&#13;
in New York and Boston, of Agents, Chicago and N.T., and of the Mer&#13;
chants Dispatch ("'. ,Co) also in New York of Woolworth and Baton and Nye&#13;
CO, I am thoroughly aware of the importance of earning money&#13;
and have been worltlne for trade from the beglnnlnc- The E.D. reports&#13;
earnlnce on .shl«ents of ties and Iron at tariff rates. Their fieures&#13;
are bogus. The Vf.T.Oo. Is making money and is a paying institution.&#13;
I am doing.all I can for them without working against other connec&#13;
tions.' 11 fear; however, that Crelghton's experience in manipulating&#13;
telegraph stocks will Indupe him to sell us out at the first opportunltv. He needs watching, like many other Nebraskians, all the time.&#13;
C. Ippears to be the only man who, can tell what they Intend doing,&#13;
t have urged upon th&lt;m the importance of taking slow freights and&#13;
giving me their rate., .o thi 1 can contract, hut no action ha. yet&#13;
bee n t6iken.&#13;
Excuse lensihi " l"&#13;
• Whole story. Ho.le, Reed To®'' Chicago. North western is&#13;
Plookaded with snow. Ties plenty, but money scarce. Evans is at North&#13;
Plntta, Ullla &amp; Party enroute todcy.&#13;
March, 1867. . '&#13;
C'pied from my scrap book. Please read, make use of, and&#13;
return to me at Toledo. August 30th, 1888. vr.T.S. . ,&#13;
Th:^ Pacific Railroad.&#13;
T/Tashington, January 17, 1859.&#13;
Gentlemen:-. • I- enclose you a paper, written by Gen. Shennan, late&#13;
of Cal'ifornia, upon the subject of the Pacific Railroad. Although&#13;
'/ intended" only for my information, yet -it presents so clear a statement&#13;
of the difficuleites of the proposed enterprise that I conclude its&#13;
publication woiifd "be of interest to your readers. The writer is fam&#13;
iliar with the su ject, and his statements maji be relied upon as&#13;
entirely accurate. Very truly yours, John Sherman. - .&#13;
■ ■ • For the National Intelligencer. . - i&#13;
Notes on the Pacific Railroad*&#13;
A Railroad to connect the Atlantic aijd Pacific Oceans is a work&#13;
of so much importance, and So captivating in its nature, that for.the&#13;
past ten years it constructibn has been a favorite theme with all&#13;
cl asses, and everybody has his project.&#13;
In the general appropriation bill of March, 1853, Congress&#13;
pDOvlded for the exploration of the country between the Uicsissippi&#13;
River and Pacific Ocean, for the express purpose of collectlns rella&#13;
ble and authentic Information on this very subject. The explorations&#13;
„re conducted under the direction of Hon. Jefferson PaVs, then&#13;
secretary of War. by several parilee. all of which were commended by&#13;
officers of the am,. except on one route, the mopt northerly one. by&#13;
Uarch, 1867.&#13;
Governor Stevenc, who had h(^en an officer of the Engineer Corps. Each&#13;
party was accompanied by Civil En'gineers, geologists, mineralogists,&#13;
botanists, and other scientific men,, and the vast amount of valuable&#13;
inforinatuion thus acquired is given to Congress and the country in&#13;
eight large volumes. The same general j)lan was pursued-by each&#13;
party distances were measured by odometer^ heights by barometer, and&#13;
a description of the .country, its mountains, valleys, water, grass,&#13;
atone, timber &amp;c. are given as far as seen to the right and left.&#13;
For the thorotigh uh'^erstandi.ng of so important, these volixnes should&#13;
be critically examined, thoug"^ the substance ^of them, bearing directly&#13;
on the feasibility of construction of the road itself, is contained in&#13;
the Secretary's.report of February 27, 185.5, ^with the preliminary&#13;
report of the several heads of parties in the first part of Vol. I.&#13;
Hany events have transpired since that date bearing materially on this suhjaot, such as the Increased auiounts of land reduced&#13;
to cultivation In Kansas, Ptah and New Uexloo; the discoveries of new&#13;
„,ineral wealth near the Colorado of the west;" and the exanlnatlon as&#13;
to the navicahiUty bf that river itself; and, inore taportant still,&#13;
^he discoveries of new a«d rich gold fields near the source of thei I&#13;
*0dOEOter Road Measurer - A machine attached to the spokes&#13;
of a wheel, coutins and reBl.terlnG the number of Ite revolutionsmultlplylns circumference of. wheel by number of revolutl ns, measurei&#13;
the exact surface distance.&#13;
Harch, 1867.&#13;
"Arkansas, Kansas and Platte Rivers; yet, for the purpose of argucient,&#13;
&lt;it is better to: confine ourselves to the facts contained in the offi&#13;
cial reports before' referred to&#13;
Five principal lines were examined. •&#13;
o °&#13;
^ j^Xong parrallels cfT latitude 47 ^ and 49 north, from St.&#13;
Paul on the Mississipi, lib Seattle, on Puget's -Sound , with a branch&#13;
to Vancouver, Oregon- by Governor Stevens, Vol. i.&#13;
• 2. Near parallels 41*^ and 42° north fr.onr Council Bluffs,&#13;
'on the Uissourl. to Benlola/ Rallfornia. Report by Ll-eut (Mow Oapt)&#13;
Beckwith, 3d Artill^rr. Vol. 2.&#13;
3. Near parallels 38° "and 39° from Westport, Missouri, to&#13;
San Francisco, by Capt.'Gunnison, assisted by Lieut. Beckwith, who&#13;
after Capt. G's death prosecuted the exploration and made the report&#13;
in Vol. 2,&#13;
4. Near parallel rtoHh, froir. Fort-Salth-, Arkansas to&#13;
San Pedrok California. byLleut; Fhlpple. Iopo,raphlcal engineers.&#13;
Report in Vol. 8&#13;
5. Near parallel 32° from Fulton to San Pedro; with other&#13;
surveys oonneotlng It wlf^ Can mere and San Franolsoo. Reports by&#13;
uajor a&gt;ery, Capt. Pope,'lieuts: Nllllamson and Parke of the Topographical Engineers In Vol.'. 5, 6 and 7. . 0,&#13;
It le manifest that Secretary Cavls became-convinced at an&#13;
early 'erlod of these exploratlors, that the last na,.«d most southerly&#13;
March, 1867. '&#13;
romto possessed more natural advantages and facilities 'foR-t^e ^cpin-&#13;
,t^fliplat-,«((J n8.tii;^gj-lvrr&lt;^l]^a&lt;^, tvfpr ..fully and&#13;
of February 1855, he gives it his decided preference. t&#13;
, *$6 ,alillii«««tlwaefta UhttqEHmt JW|k ^t]|^ ijie^Ut^) coiiiiaejig^Q and pop-&#13;
'nfcIdti&lt;)PjfoiteWi«^r#i^tecJ ■St^&gt;j^^l^^^fqu^J^tI;^^,,;;:f Fulton, Euad long lines&#13;
f»;'^aT*ldaT*^3r»qtl3ra^ already in&#13;
.» ■' ' ' itlij[ iT&#13;
'lUmp^ve^^im t«^;'»^e.4t.lan^y^^];^t^,-^th^,llls_^si^ this extreme&#13;
•••tte!Mrpnw«ute?ra(? that, ,it can poM^ly be.av^ded, it can hardly&#13;
■' " -J • ' ' j ■joor&lt; ' &gt;oo oithr y««r&#13;
»Be ^3fcp®cted that ®dngreaf;,Tfi;i.l,_.l(^^^ Jaj V'® national&#13;
• ^ '^rro 1. j 4ft ft&#13;
^ *?» iwu «iaMtf^i«oO t0O to trf .Nii®ea ?b&#13;
^ ') &gt;-11* extreme&#13;
A6rth^nt^^ti«rriterA«s, is too far north to make any connections east-&#13;
' •- • r&#13;
''%araa and south-east. It also terminates in the Pacific Ocean at&#13;
, ' the unimportaIl^^ha^horv of, Seattle, or, more objectionable still, at&#13;
^^tlincouver, wltMfi the Columbia iver, whose bar is almost impassable&#13;
^*\0 the great sailing ship^s bjr, which the trade of the world is carried&#13;
• •o^. „ ^Mnrr&#13;
' f&#13;
In -. G, &lt;riYe route purwued by Capt. Gunnison up the Kansas tc5 the'&#13;
^'^"ifkaneas, to the Huerfmg and Saugre-de-Christo Pass, appears so far&#13;
favorable; but from that point westwards the Coochetop Pass, the&#13;
' ' chaams of B ue, Grand and Green Rivers, are on pages 85, 86 and 87&#13;
Of Vol.- 2, described by Capt, Beckwith as utterly impracticable for a&#13;
0 railway, and in all subsequent official reports, this route is treated&#13;
■* ' '1'■ no:.r,T&#13;
March, 1867. • t ' - v&#13;
as impossible.&#13;
, This reduces the subject to the cons ideration of two lines,&#13;
either of which may be called central, viz. by parallel 41° and 42° or&#13;
that of 35°- •&#13;
Assming New York as the great sea-port of the Atlantic, St.&#13;
Louis as the point aroimd which as a centre will continue to gather&#13;
the most populous States of our Confederacy, and San Francisco as the&#13;
great commercial city of the Pacific Ocean, that general line of rail&#13;
way v/hich connects these three points will best fulfil the purposes&#13;
of a national highway. But nature has interposed barriers which we&#13;
cannot disregard, ^he very apex of our Continent, out of which flow&#13;
the sources of the great rivers of North America, lays in that direct ^&#13;
line, forcing us to seek a location for a roadway either to the north&#13;
or south. It so happens that the Mountains of California compel us&#13;
to' a similar alternative. Of that country I can spealc of my own&#13;
knowledge, but the general maps are sufficiently accurate for you to&#13;
follow me in my description. The City of Ban Francisco is now a fixed&#13;
fact, with its wharves, docks, foundries, machine shops, warehouses,&#13;
and all the requirements of a commercial city. She has a harbor of&#13;
unlimited oapeclty, the approach to which in ealllne or steam vesslea&#13;
.IS remarkably easy end safe. The entrance is In process of being&#13;
strongly fortified, and, eVen in the present condition of defenses, I&#13;
doubt if «iy foreign fleet would-a'are attempt an entrance. It has&#13;
conneotlom with the farming country by bays of easy navigations: and,||&#13;
March, 1867. . ,&#13;
with the interior, two great rivers, the Sacramento anci San Joaquin,&#13;
nevor obstructed by ice or snags, afford cheap communiqation. These&#13;
^,two great rivers lie in an almost level basin, near five hundred miles&#13;
^long in a direct line, bounded on the east by the Sierra Nevada, and&#13;
the west by the Coast Range, the two ranges of mountain tinlting at&#13;
each extremity of the basin before described and enclosing it.&#13;
It so happens that for the past ten years the Sierra Nevada&#13;
♦ ji' -has been crossed at every possible point by miners in search of gold,&#13;
-by emigrants going and coming, and by skillful and scientific men. ^&#13;
-I, myself, have been along a great part of that range, and have no&#13;
hesitation in saying that there are no passes by which a railway, to&#13;
® - be travelled by the most powerful looomotion now In use, can be oartled through the Sierra Nevada, unless at the extreme head of the&#13;
Sacramento, near the town of Shasta or Port Reading, or at the extreme&#13;
head of the San Joaquin, near the Teflon. (Fort Tejon).&#13;
:'-,l . I cannot find that any of those have been surveyed with eufflcient aoouraoy, via, by chain and spirit level, but all have been&#13;
reported upon, and measured approximately by barometer. The passes&#13;
- through the Sierra Nevada at the head of the Sacramento by Capt. ^&#13;
■■ Bsckwlth in 1854, for whose description I refer you to his repr€ -on&#13;
the 41° parallel. Vol. 2, eecond prt, pages 36, 37, 38, 47, 48 and 4 9,&#13;
viz., from Fort Reading, following the main river, there called iitt,&#13;
throuflt4 long and rugged canons to the mouth of Fall River, end thenoe&#13;
# eastMM myrnm «•&gt;" «adeline Pass. Either of these are pronounced « ' IJ. ^ j&#13;
March, 1867. .fWf&#13;
tpracticable, and estimates of cost of construction have been made.&#13;
'Lieut. Williamson also in the summer of 1855, passed along -"'&#13;
"'•^■"a porti n of this same route, viz., from Fort Reading to the mouth of&#13;
'^Fall River, and though not so fav^ rably impressed as Caj&gt;t. Beckwith,&#13;
still he admits the pass practicable, and therefore we may conclude&#13;
that it is within the range of possibility.&#13;
The passes at the head of the San Joaquin were examined with&#13;
* considerable care instrumentally in 1854, and the result is communica&#13;
ted at some length in Vol. 5 by Lieut. Williamson. He gives prefer- ^&#13;
ence to that known as Tay-eechah-pat, near the Tejon; and, from con-&#13;
^versations with him and many others who have been there, and my own ^&#13;
"knowledge of the general character of these mountins, I am constrain9d to say that my belief' Is firm f at the best route for leaving CalIfornla by railway will be at some point near Fort Tejon, at the head&#13;
of the San Joaquin. I have therefore arrived at the oonoluslon that&#13;
the contemplated railroad mu.t follow one of two general routes, which&#13;
I will proceed to describe in order.&#13;
„ piuffs follows substantially&#13;
The first starting f&gt;om Council B1&#13;
Forts Kearney and Larathm Valley of the Platto with easy grades, to&#13;
+Ho Flack Hills to sweetwater&#13;
, , mle, thence along the North Fork through, the&#13;
.and South Pans of Termont; thence to Brldgere Fort, and through e&#13;
Wahsatch Bange. by Weber Creek, or tbe Tinpangoe. to Salt&#13;
, morose It eout of the Lake to the rumboldt Lountalns across them&#13;
1. • 4+ +« ffreat bend; thence by the A&#13;
the river of the MM name, down It to Its greai os w&#13;
March, 1867. .▼9GI .fl|pt«se&#13;
^♦• .I'Mud Lakes to Madelin or Nobel's Pass, across the high table lands of&#13;
the Sierra Nevada; down the fearful chasms of Pitt River to Fort&#13;
ir Reading, and thence bY the level plain of the Sacramento to Beneicia,&#13;
or navigable waters of San Francisco Bay,, ^(yol, 2) jjUUB&#13;
Air line, l,4l0 miles. tfiAllMnMM#&#13;
■&gt; Distance by rgute proposed, 2032 miles, CfMNOT) ilifr&#13;
.noiiac Sums of ascents and decents, 29, 120 feet. „&#13;
-""•il m Length of level line of equal working expense, 2,583 miles,&#13;
gll ' Estimated cost,&#13;
^ The advantages of this route are:- ,j| ,,&#13;
. ,'*.1 1. It makes easy connections with the many railroads East^altready finished or is process of construction. ^ ^ ^ ^&#13;
2, Its sum of ascents and decents is less than that of any&#13;
other line examined, except the extreme northern one. , 3 Utah, with its population, timber, coal and provisions, is&#13;
» in route. . .'.t wirU ri'i "itc* r&#13;
. . ■ 4. It 1« eu60t,»ntlally the old ealsrant road, alth which all&#13;
familiar," ■ • ,-nofwr - ntm ti , .rr^, -• ^.r o ■&#13;
tomr-J 6. U enters California by the Sacramento Valley, t^ PPP"&#13;
and valuable of the otate., ^&#13;
Mti IMt- The objections objections are:- - f.*..&#13;
- .1. Ih. cold .ssther and snows, frod ^r^^to Salt Lake, and&#13;
in the passes pf the Sierra Nevada. ^&#13;
' 'U umAmd frntm^ mi ,&#13;
'U.f »4t M0t mm m» mm m If&#13;
U-' ^r.&gt;&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
.rtoX&#13;
It ^^f^ 2, The conviction expressed to me personally by Capt. Van Vliet&#13;
and others, in whom I have confidence, that in their judgment founded&#13;
, on actual observation, a railroad cannot be built from Laramie to Salt&#13;
Lake, and my own similar opinion of the passes at the head of the&#13;
Sacramento. . ,&#13;
The surveys of-Capt, Stansbury and Capt» Beckwith, though&#13;
sufficient for exploration, are not conclusive in a railroad location.&#13;
*■ ' Capt. Beckwith, with whom I am well acquainted, was here a few&#13;
days ago, and is of the o^jnion that further examinations should he&#13;
made before a road be located; he thinks it possible a route may be&#13;
found from the neighborhood of Pike's and Long's Peaks, into Salt Lake&#13;
Valley, that may obviate the very many serious objections to the one&#13;
by South Pass and Bridger. i .t&#13;
4, There is a wide desert between Salt Lake and Californiaj&#13;
wKich cannot be off any use in the future. ■ &lt;&#13;
The other route should start from this vicinity, Leavenworth,&#13;
to the Valley of the Kansas, to Fort Riley; up Smoky Hill ?^ork, and&#13;
across to the Arkansas, near Ben't Fort; then6®» by Port Union to Santa&#13;
m&#13;
Fe^ across the valley of the Del Norte to Campbell's Pass and thence&#13;
following Whipple's route, via Zuni", San Francisco fountains, Aztec Pass&#13;
Bill William's Fork, cross the Colorado at the Needles; across the I&#13;
Desert to the iiohave, up it t abreast of the Tojon; entering California&#13;
^y one of these passes, whence Into San Francisco City, several good&#13;
routes present themselves, the best in my judgment being that W&#13;
described by Lieut. Psrke In Vol, 7 from the Tejon Pass into the Valley&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
of the Salinas or Monterey River, above the old mission of San Miguel;&#13;
follows Ihe Salinas near the Ocean, turn round the spur of the Gavilan r&#13;
range into the Pajaro Valley, follow it to near Gilroy's ranch, and&#13;
thence W the Coyte to San Jose, and so on into the City of San FranThis route differs materially in location from Lieut. ^ ^ a o £&#13;
4Whipple's» yet the elements for cost, &amp;c. will not vary materially from&#13;
his, which are t erefore given "by way of reference.&#13;
••wiMw* Fort Sjiith to San Francisco, air line, 1,550 miles. n&#13;
T iff DlstEince by proposed route, 2,094 miles.&#13;
"1IMI 8JI ©Bum of ascents and decents 48, 521 feet. trr.&#13;
m ^ i^-ength of level line of equal working expense, 3,105 miles.&#13;
Fstimated cost f106,000,000.&#13;
, 1 '&gt;oe tn&#13;
im •Mtftut «r&#13;
The advantages of this route are;- '»&#13;
It - t—3- connection with all the great roads building from&#13;
6ho EaS^*&#13;
, 311&#13;
t. . 2. The greater amount of fertile land in its whole extent, es-&#13;
• pecialiy re&amp;Gh from the Rio Grande to the Great Colorado.&#13;
mi 3. The greater amount and better distribution of timber for&#13;
ionstroctlon, aspeoially In the eeaoh befcr. refei-red to. ■&#13;
o r..,.. 4. The greater amount of points Of delivery for iron ana ~a- ' v.io; i etilt r&lt;'&#13;
,.rials on the western and most costly part.&#13;
, The batter and more uniform supply of water along Ita whole ..-rii , jorf-ior v.I ....j.w,-&#13;
March, 1867,&#13;
6. The absence cf heavy drift snow in the winter (Lieut.&#13;
It to&#13;
I&#13;
Whipple spent the winter in the highest points.)&#13;
^ The objections are:-&#13;
illOl&#13;
1, A greater amount of ascents and decents than by 41° and 42°,&#13;
2, The road enters California by the Va]ley of the San Joaquin,&#13;
less valuable than the Sacramento Country.&#13;
/ 3, The surveys are not sufficiently accurate to justify the&#13;
. .'ia-j Id / 'J lyu- ■&#13;
estimate. t&#13;
As between these two routes, therefore, on the best evidence&#13;
at hand, I am forced to give decided preference to the latter. Yet I&#13;
assert that none of the explorations were designed to be anyth ng more ^&#13;
than a reconnoisance; none of them contain the elements for an esti&#13;
mate of cost. Neither Lieuts. Beckwith or VHiipple lay down their&#13;
routes by the tracks actually passed over by them, butt, indicate cut&#13;
offs, and valleys seen by them from mountain tops at a distance - a&#13;
^ most deceptive rule. And the great length of IJne and extent of coun&#13;
try to be examined in a limited time, forced these gentelmen to rely&#13;
«.for alitutdes exclusively on the barometer, an instrment unreliable&#13;
and unsuited for railroad Surveys. Two points may have relative&#13;
heights and distances, admitting of easy theoretical conetion , which&#13;
in fact may have intervals utterly impassable by railway.- Neverthe&#13;
•lu. 'less I have no doubt that the conclusions at which they arrived®&#13;
•ubftantially correct, and that they have laid down the best routes&#13;
within the reach of their observations. .rtJ- ii:&#13;
■■ ':J&#13;
V...-J11/V .J,&#13;
March, 1867 .VlitX&#13;
t^rro Jrt ',' To illustrate how little reliance could be placed on esti&#13;
mates without proper elements and data , I will instance the fact that&#13;
Lieut. Whipple, whilstt. the details of his journey were fresh in his&#13;
memory, at page 31, Vol. 3, in his repliminrry report, estimates the&#13;
cost of the railroad from Fort Smith to San Pedro in California at $161&#13;
821,265. ■^Vhereas Albert H. Campbell, Civil Engineer, who accompanied&#13;
Lisut ♦ "Whipple, gives in the same Vol. 3, part 2, pp. 67 to 74 detailed&#13;
v estimates for the whole route to San Francisco, some two hundred miles&#13;
flurther than San Pedro, and only makes $93,853,605,&#13;
And it also appears by the table compiled on the last page&#13;
of Vol. 7, ^hat Lieut. Whipple himself reduced his own estimate in&#13;
1^ the office at Washington City to the figure before given, viz $106,000,&#13;
000, f . ■&#13;
. (T ".r- All the estimates are premature. I think Lieut. Whipple's&#13;
l-M^st estimate nearer the truth; but all are mere guesses; but the&#13;
lofflcers who saw the country are better able to guess than we, who&#13;
lean only judge from their official reports.&#13;
It is best to regard the work as one of stupendous magnitude&#13;
"t'and 'therefore of extreme cost. But, admitting it to amount to two&#13;
&lt; • hundred millions of dollars, the money will be a better investment&#13;
than in the purchase of Cuba, the acquisition of any more worthless&#13;
llsxican territory, or in foreign war. I would attempt a fuller des-&#13;
* 'cription of th« aeuntry traversed by the proposed routes, but I could&#13;
m . I J #WlA# 1M/| fc wwfj-lff 90 - ,&#13;
March, 1867. r^3l ,110-^-&#13;
not possibly condense them better than yon will find in the first part&#13;
Jwii 4f Volume 1, and last of Vol. 7., to which I refer you and then pass&#13;
to the answers of the questions you make.&#13;
' The General Government of the United States must build the&#13;
road if built a t all, because&#13;
yon* ft''' 'I&#13;
1st. She is proprietor of the lands' "through which the road&#13;
passes&#13;
2nd. Politically it would unite the West, Centre and East by bond&#13;
of intercourse.&#13;
3d, In time of war with a strong the danger to ships fol&#13;
lowing the long line by sea to California would force communication ^&#13;
overland, and then a railroad would be a necessity.&#13;
4th. The General Government is the only party interested, so to&#13;
speak, with'cash and credit'enough to undertake so grefct a scheme.&#13;
4th. The pblic lands along more than 1500 miles of any road,&#13;
are not of enough value to rais money by sale or hypothecation, and&#13;
any company relying on such a source would surely fail, leaving the&#13;
TOad in chaos and confusion.&#13;
6th. So long as there is so wide a difference of opinion of cost&#13;
^^6 location, the subject should remain untrammelled by legislation;&#13;
' for a emitting grants of money or land to a company between certain&#13;
" 1 natn-iirte vou muS"t give time fo^ work, at prescribed parallels of latitude, yo&#13;
^ which t;im^ there woul^^ be no forfeiture of least ten years, during which time&#13;
contract. «nc th. road night th.rety b, blocked for that time. f&#13;
7&#13;
March, 1867. »V99i[&#13;
7th. The General Govenment can build the road cheaper than a&#13;
private conpany, because she has an army to keep, engines under pay,&#13;
and ships to aid in delivering of material. Again, a road of this&#13;
vast importance must be constructed in the strongest, safest manner,&#13;
• obviating all possible necessity of repairs. Now, it i.s know that&#13;
contract work, unless over-paid, is always bad; and to economise in&#13;
* culverts, bridges, cuttings, and other like railroad work wohld hej&#13;
ruinous and fatnl. ■ ; ^ ■" n8th. The best way to build the road would he to combine the&#13;
'contract system and the pay system, iron and timber could be safetly&#13;
p contracted for, to be paid for in cash on delivery* inspection end ac&#13;
ceptance by the supervising engineers at the points to be contracted&#13;
for. All culverts, bridges, tunnels, and side cuttings should he done&#13;
udder the control of engineers in the pay of the Government; the work&#13;
men to be paid weekly or monthly, according to convenience, the object&#13;
fbeing to get the most labor for the least money. . , „&#13;
&amp;th. All the road as far west as Bent's Fork, might be contracted&#13;
for, and paid for in proportion to the progress; and also the part of&#13;
the road from San Francisco to the Tejon; but between these two points,&#13;
Tejon in California and Bent's Pork in Kansas, the whole should remain&#13;
^ Absolutely under the control of Congress till the certainty of comple&#13;
tion be established beyond a doubti r10th. I attach considerable laportanoe to this point. If 5&#13;
part with the fran®lM, on eaoimlt harself to private partl,es.&#13;
March, 1867. .?'Wir ,d«y.&#13;
'matter will become a mere object of speculatio and stook-jobbing; and&#13;
t 'laf.terwards, if the roa^^ become an absolute necessity from war or the&#13;
impatience of the people, then the Government would be forced to buy&#13;
t out the contractors, and pay dearly for it, as a matter of course,&#13;
'' 11th, No particular danger need be apprehended from Indians.&#13;
'They will no doubt pilfer and rob, and may occasionally attack and kill&#13;
stragglers; but the grading of the road will require strong parties,&#13;
capable of defending themselves; and the supplies for the road and&#13;
'maintenance of the workmen will be carried in large trains of wagons,&#13;
such as went last year to Salt Lake, none of which were molested by&#13;
indins. So largo a numher of workmen distributed along the lin© ^&#13;
^ *will inti'oduce enough whiskey to kill off all the Indians within 300&#13;
miles of the road, ^ ^&#13;
I assert my belief now that the great railroad will not re-&#13;
■^leive enough net profits to pay interest on its cost. Yet I will not&#13;
attempt an estimate of either the cost of the road or its income. I&#13;
believe the cost Wili not fall much, if any, short of $200,000,000&#13;
thb interest of which (Government bonds, say five per cent per annum)&#13;
would be $10,000,000,&#13;
Assuming that no rails M used except of the very best quality, at least ninety pounds to the yard, they shouaid last 20 years,&#13;
though the average durability Qf the rail, from 60 to 70 pounds to&#13;
the yard, is less than ten years, .o; uuj&gt;r i , ,&#13;
" •" The Chief eoet of tunnelling e»i grudlng will be the sub- (&#13;
March, 1867. .ifirrc.:&#13;
ggg^vf sistence and maintenance of so many men at points remote, from all the&#13;
' rjjaecessaries of life. . ' .■•'.j,&#13;
The cross-ties used will doubtless be of cedar (nothing&#13;
better) pine and oak; but for some reached cotton-wood, the most wor&#13;
thless of all timber, will have to be used till it can be replaced&#13;
by better. The decay, wear and tear of this par6 of the strucutres&#13;
- will far exceed any estimate heretofore submitted.&#13;
. ^ Water and fuel, absolutely necessary to be distributed along&#13;
the road, rill be chief items of expense after the road is completed.'&#13;
- ! In California all along the road, and even in Kansas, fuel is scarce&#13;
k and oonparatlvely dear. Coal used by steaiera and steamboats In&#13;
California la all brought from the Atlantic, and ranges from twenty&#13;
to thirty dollars a ton! will average not far from one dollar a bush-&#13;
- el. Tfood is also costly. The coals of the Pacific and of Kansas are&#13;
inferior, are teritary, with much slate and clay. You will be met by&#13;
contrary assertions, but I repeat it, the coals of the Pacific are&#13;
very poor, thin seams, costly tomine and of poor quality when mined.&#13;
■' You may rest assured when coal is worth about a dollar a bushel, every&#13;
bank and seam containing anything like stone coal has been tested.&#13;
" The Bellin^em Bay Company has had every advantage, and is a failure.&#13;
' • in California there oan be no coal proper; in Oregon a^little&#13;
*' ugnite; in Hashington territory and Vancouver's Island poor qualities of tertiary coal. The quality imp.rovee going northwards and it&#13;
b. in the Russian possessions it is good enough for oommerical&#13;
^ 'J'f&#13;
■r^ .. .&#13;
March, 1867,&#13;
•dt purposes. In like manner the coals diminish in value and"quality from&#13;
the Mississippi River westwards. The coals of Kansas cost here 25 to&#13;
. j • I r .&#13;
30 cents a bushel and are very poor,&#13;
-T3.. locomotives will have to be supplied with wood drawn^'i&#13;
from the nearest points of supply, at whatever cost,&#13;
Capt. McClellan, in Vol, 1, Railroad reports, pp-115 to 130,&#13;
gives a great many most useful data illustrative of the cost of con21i* *&#13;
"struction and working of rialroads, &lt; '&lt;" •&#13;
♦ think that any person, from known data, can now&#13;
make anything more than a guess at the working expenses of this con&#13;
templated i?oadj but they will far exceed the proportion of receij)ts ^&#13;
' laid down for' other roads lying wholly within a settled country,&#13;
' The road will command all the passenger travel, at almost&#13;
any price. All the mails, treasure, exress fright, parts of Govemment frei^ts, and in some' instances, where time is material, bulk&#13;
^ freights, as well as all the- business of the country lying within&#13;
' reach of the road iieelf, which, regarding Utah and New Mexico, even&#13;
'''''' In their present condition, and the Pike's Peak country, as now it bids&#13;
f (&#13;
fair to become, will be considerable. ' -Ru ■&#13;
^ ^ „ 4b this, that in time of peace&#13;
Yet th6 point I wftbh to make is&#13;
the great trade of the&#13;
San Francisco&#13;
only in exceptional cases&#13;
« ♦ T Pacific Parts, and even of te of the East Indies, Ghin»»&#13;
Itself cannot afford t. W heights across this road,&#13;
iional cases. In proof of 'hlch 1 here, copy an extract&#13;
from New Yokk Senate document. No. 60 of 1854: ^&#13;
March, 1867,&#13;
Cost of transport.&#13;
Ocean, lon^ voyage&#13;
Lake, long voyage&#13;
per ton per mile,&#13;
■&gt;^*1 fmf* •&#13;
1 mill short 2 to 4 mills,&#13;
2 mills " 3 to 4 "&#13;
k. •&#13;
6 to 10 "&#13;
Ui f&#13;
Railroad transporting coal . 6 to 10 "&#13;
^ ai«t.&#13;
Sane, not for coal, favorable lines 12 1-2 mills.&#13;
Same, steep grades 20 to 25 mills.&#13;
Also see page 130, Vol, 1, Railroad Reports, in that of Capt,&#13;
McClellan, before referred to.&#13;
Average freights from Calcutta to Boston $15 a ton,&#13;
" " " Canton to U. S. * ' $10 to $18.'&#13;
..cn. ^ „ Shanghai to U. s/ $10 to $20,&#13;
Freights from Boston to San Francisco, average since lo^y,&#13;
':rf&gt; . . .. . .&#13;
$22 a ton. At present $12 a ton. ' i ^&#13;
Average freights from East -Indies and CliAha to San Francisco,&#13;
$13. ■a ?: a -i&#13;
Silks usually pay $15 a ton more than teas. - - tfo'il&#13;
Now assuming the average time to the Uniterm States from&#13;
China and California by sea in sailing ships to be 130 days, and from&#13;
China to San Francisco 60 days, and that freight can be brought from&#13;
San Francisco to New York in 15 days on a railroad, 3,500 miles in&#13;
length, •&#13;
A cargo from China to Net York by railroad would save in&#13;
time 130-60-16-65' dayat for which'saying of time she would pay 1370-20&#13;
$63 a ton. Ci :.■&gt; to #&lt;1 ad'&#13;
Nw »M«M W Mm&#13;
' V&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
.ftmt&#13;
% % . A.mm,''&#13;
I assume $70 to be the least price at which freights can&#13;
go on such a road that distance.&#13;
From and to San Francisco, the crse would stand thus:-&#13;
fime 120-15 or 105 days saved.&#13;
.•XXluFreight 70 - 20 or 50 dollars added to pay for that time.&#13;
r r • ^4 •-&gt; J.* u U1. Ar &gt;» '&#13;
Of course, merchants there and here can look far enough ahead to obviate&#13;
the necessity of such a difference of cost.&#13;
As long as the wind and sea are free there is no competition&#13;
wit,h aailing vessels.&#13;
I (3o not instance these things to deter you from assisting&#13;
t&lt;hff-great road,, b ut that it should be undertaken rightfully, with a ^&#13;
full knowledge of the truth, and when begun that it should be with a&#13;
«' full knowledge of its magnitude. , eittj" l -Jh'&#13;
It is a work of giants, and Uncle Sam ia the only giant&#13;
know who can or .should grapple the subject.&#13;
Congress must select the initial points It is wrong to&#13;
lhro» th»t maponelbillty on the President or any other person. If it&#13;
*""be a political or commerical line, in the halls of Congress Is the&#13;
%l3.c» for contest, ana battle; but if it be as I conceive a work of&#13;
geography, then these explorations should be continued, especially at&#13;
the points of doubt, k great number of parties should be In the field,&#13;
tihe barometer left at home, and the chain and spirit level alone used.&#13;
The p olnts of supply of timber, provisions, iron and everything ^&#13;
needed should be noted and located on the maps of survey, so that&#13;
March, 1867. ^&#13;
something like estimates of cost could he made; or more important still&#13;
that Congress may act knowingly and wisely before one step is made in&#13;
-the wrong direction. Should these explorations cost even half a .&#13;
million of dollars, it will be wen spent, for the saving in distance&#13;
of four or five miles will make that up. .&#13;
Were I dn your stead, I v/ouid favor generally a Pacific Rail&#13;
road, but would oppose prematurp Legislation upon the grotind that it&#13;
^in fact retards and delays the future construction of the work. I&#13;
would vote for reasonable approrpriations to prosecute the minute sur&#13;
veys of. the route or routes, and announce myself as ready to consider&#13;
the subject in its strongest form as soon as the Executive submits a&#13;
plan sustained by estimates and descriptions of country to warrant so&#13;
vast and important a scheme.&#13;
If forced to a premature vote, I would stick as close to the&#13;
route I have named as possible, because it affords in my mind the best • _&#13;
chances of success in constiructlon and working.&#13;
X enclose herewith a map compiled by Major Emery, on which&#13;
I lay down my two proposed central routes, between which I think you&#13;
are forced sooner or later to choose,&#13;
I would not wish to be construed as criticising the railroad&#13;
oxploratlons. 1 am personally acquainted with all or nearly all the&#13;
heeds of parties; know their ahility, zeel end honestly and think the&#13;
vast amount of Infomatlon thus obtained of reglone hitherto unknown&#13;
more than repays the country for the oo.t of the work; but I regard&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
them all as preliminary, begun and conducted on general principles,&#13;
'■ "to be follov/ed by more careful surveys as the truth became developed&#13;
The time for these minutes surveys is now, and phould precede any attemp&#13;
by Congress to locate or favor the locationf of any one general route&#13;
in preference to others#&#13;
•flirfl .'""Hi'" . . - ws&#13;
•r I ' #1 1 -&#13;
i X ^&lt;7 i&#13;
•fov*! '-'.nnT ? y^.- 'T. Sherman^, j&#13;
it tLeavVworth fe ity TKansas) Jan. 6th, 1869. , tmtn&#13;
Note:- As you may want to speak on this question, a correct pronun&#13;
elation of the naioes Ir, of Interest. Uost of these are In Spanish,&#13;
in which all the vowels have the French and Latin pronunciation. Every vowel and letter is sounded. Thus Uohave is prohouribbd&#13;
Mo-ha-vy. J. is like H. Thus Tejon is Tay-hone. .&#13;
The following names are pronounced:- ,&#13;
Albuquerque AT i;,i vftr-kv ^ iWWt 'tl - Al-bu-ker-.cy#&#13;
Tulare Tu-la-ry#&#13;
, ■ Idt&#13;
San Joaquln San Walk-iir'"'*"'''^&#13;
' Saugre-de-Christo ' San-gry-de-Christo*iOX I&#13;
•et 1 .. o.l MX I&#13;
, pel Horte Del Nor-t,'." *• *Mlrt mm&#13;
•WMMi •*&gt; •Sante Pe San-ta-Fay. ^ &gt;«• Mm* t u, rtmm - ,&#13;
^ ^ - rmrtm&#13;
M. MM X... .rtlXM. MM* ««« M&#13;
I*mtm irpallM amlsM M rnmimtm mm MlMNmlMia M mmom fm&#13;
,MM «| M #M# •» „, mt&#13;
Rio Grande - Reeo - Gran^#&#13;
tXA TttMi&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
vff George to Annie, Omaha, 12th. --i ifa.1 inLrtll»T3»f! - "''•mi&#13;
x' We arrived all right. No news from, the-General. Jim has&#13;
been over here and got a pass from Mr. House to^^o out and join Mr.&#13;
Hill's party. He told Me. House that you had hired a man in his&#13;
place.. 1 , ,, -&gt;■)« wrt#&#13;
Gen. Dodge to. S.P. Chase, Washington, 12th.&#13;
'(tcvf)'. ' I respectfully request the appointment of M. L. McPherson&#13;
Atty. at Law of Winterset, Madison County, Iowa, as Register for the&#13;
5th District of Iowa, xznder Sec. 3 of the Bankrupt Law.&#13;
Mr. McPherson is in every way .competent to fill the position&#13;
and I am confident will give entire satisfaction to the district.&#13;
♦ * OA&#13;
"O' ■ John c, Biitler to Gen. Dodge. Boston, 12th , Bj nslns your influence to retain A. 0. Bradstreet, Aeet.&#13;
Door-k eeper, you will do a great favor to a good man. He le Intelli&#13;
gent and stands high as to character in the town of Danvers and any&#13;
thing you can do for hln. will Be appreciated By the citizens_of that&#13;
place. ' • '•1 Uj I . r. ini&#13;
Dexter yoxuoi- Bloomer Dxwvww. to ;— General Dodge, Cedar Rapids, 12th. -&#13;
I""®®®"""®&#13;
. Ilire'ohase for : rttllTt « appointment ■ of Regloter In Bankruptcy, under the&#13;
I * '.o mtii&#13;
late law. Xr&#13;
I held the office of -Cc^lsslo'ner .Y¥a55S^iptcy 25 fMm •&#13;
•S'l, i&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
/ nri&#13;
ago under the Bankrupt Law of •1841, having been appointed to tt by&#13;
Hon. Jonas Conkling, then District- Judge of the U.S. District Court&#13;
rfor Northern New York. The present office of Register is somewhat&#13;
analogous to the one I then held, but the-appointment ds now made! by&#13;
the District Court, upon the nomination of the Chief Justice.. , :.Iq&#13;
Telegram to Gen. Dodge from A". K. Wells, Boone, 12th. -&#13;
' 'Letter of instruction and contract received and Duncombe, at&#13;
Fort Dddge, notified. ^ •&#13;
rxalJi ;&#13;
Geo. Tichenor to Gen. ^odge, Des Moines, 12th.&#13;
*&#13;
If there should be any hitch or Eelindy and Goodrell is&#13;
not the choice of the delegation, I would like the place myself. After&#13;
considerable consultation here, I find some object to Goodrell for sever&#13;
al reasons, and large nu bers urge me to apply.&#13;
jhe soldiers especially object to civilians and all of the--,&#13;
want m'e to have a Jiace of prominence that would call me over the _&#13;
State, so that I could perfect organization and work more efficiently&#13;
in behalf of the soldiers, I know that Johnson will promptly nominate m&#13;
for any office tha^. you or the delegation will recommend me to. I t •&#13;
Will not tell you now why I know this, but I know it. I can only -^ay&#13;
n,.. to you that I am more radical than ever, but Johnson has been made to&#13;
him or get the delegation to do so on the ground of my fitness and as&#13;
a WMmrd for my services as a soldier, fie will nomate mer for any&#13;
' ■ si M. &gt;d ;&#13;
'' V liiA V '&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
decided that one-half, was to be paid in cash; that the rates were to&#13;
he the same as charged individuals and the pajouents were to be made&#13;
as of the 15th of the mpnth in order to equalize the interest.&#13;
Please ascertain how this is, and if we require other&#13;
; vouchers,&#13;
f J. HI fj)&#13;
:■ *• A .&gt; '■ j i. I - ' Ort.. htm J&#13;
OT|PO&#13;
,, ""7 Gen. Doage to hV/'.lfe, V^aohin^ton'. isih.-&#13;
'im0d ir¥»- . . ^ X * &lt;ni&gt; ^ ' I took dinner with the President yesterday." The leading&#13;
persons there were - Senators Morgan of Indiana, Drake of Missouri,&#13;
Ferr- of Michigan, and some twenty others, all but two radicalsf ■ ^ Many had their ladies. It was a state Urtner with 20 courses and as&#13;
many diffeJ"©nt kinds of wine. Johson was dull, looked heavy and casually said to me:- "^en. Dodge, you knew me in Tennessee, it ,s©ems&#13;
to me we should not be so far apart now." I answered:- "x have no r r&#13;
ill feeling towards 'you, but I cannot sustain in any way your past&#13;
\ A course. It seems to me that you should handle Government in accordance with the wishes of the people. You now have an opportunity to&#13;
carry out their wishes in this new measure." lerfThe ladies, Mrs. Patterson, Mrs. Stevens and daughter, en ter-&#13;
^ained. They are very pleasant. The Miss gave me a,bouquet which&#13;
adorned my table. The service was magnificant. The table was loaded&#13;
|i With flowers and everything was chaming-, but the pall of death^^poy litioW death,. appe«^red to haj^. Pver the crowd.^&#13;
&gt; , ^&#13;
1 ( ' ■ . '.X&#13;
I,&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
^ President Johnson's appointments lately have been radical. His&#13;
appoint.aents of Military Commanders for the new Districts are all any&#13;
one co^ld ask for: Thomas, Sheridan, Sickles, Ord and Sc'iofield.&#13;
We are dragging along ptting in order the machinery to&#13;
reconstruct and nothing else. 7/hen we adjourn it will be until fall;&#13;
that is now pretty certain, and I am very glad. Some think we shall&#13;
t *&#13;
get off first of next week, but I am afraid not, and since I have been&#13;
here I have worked from morning until midnight. I received your&#13;
letter in answer to mine.&#13;
My devotion to business, I have no doubt, has at times&#13;
"Caused me to neglect my own comfort and withgo my desires and pleas- ^&#13;
urea, but .you must remember that mine has been a terrible struggle&#13;
and while you have had the cares of home, have I had none" No one&#13;
knows, nor ever will, what I have borne quietly, how I have struggled&#13;
"With -the world, finding no fault, burying every disappointment with&#13;
a detenrtaatlon to win or dl®. and ay family have received the benefit&#13;
or what means I have achieved, financially or socially; and when&#13;
'*i See the efforts here of the wives , mothers and sisters to put for&#13;
ward their own, I often thlnh what you have so often said to keep me&#13;
back. Ton deceive yourself "hen you think you have not the same&#13;
influence you uwid to have,.^. m-xmatX&#13;
J. J. Blair to Oan. Dodge, Cedar Rapids, 12th» -♦-©f |&#13;
If you desire an interest in a coal estate on the Des Molnes, yov.&#13;
*s- .''V '■ ' ■'» -* " _'j. .' 'M' , ,v' ■&#13;
Mairch, 1867.&#13;
can.hs^ve it. We have the coal land for five miles on each side thetrack. Will put you down to the tine. - (The as I&#13;
understand it, is of no account; got up as a speculation. Texas and&#13;
Rosecrans lots, bottom lands and with little coal and not near the&#13;
roads. btttyi:. brui , iiwf tU Of1» bar .liof&#13;
r Williamson to"^Genf^Dorige, Des Moines, isth'J'"^ .rw-n'o-a&#13;
Yours of the 8th is*at hand. Thanks for your kindness. I&#13;
have no fears that Kasson will be a candidate for Govenno, but I am&#13;
sure that he is (if not on his own motion by the action of his&#13;
freidns) a candidate for Congress ' (the 41st Congres) from this dis&#13;
trict .&#13;
1 i.Lf ' .o«&#13;
The appropriation for building-the Post-office and Court&#13;
House will help him some here and he *111 make the most of it by keep&#13;
ing it in the hands of his friends. If matters so remain that he can&#13;
control all the patronage of th^ district, it will be hard to overcome&#13;
the infliaenco of it. - f,, ^&#13;
■) .Of course, I do not expect or want you to do anything to get&#13;
' favor with the President that you cannot do and do your duty to your&#13;
conotltutents, but you can. by watching and working with the Senate&#13;
prevent his men from being confirmed when they are unworthy. Please&#13;
write to etU Anderson and say to him that you would like to do some&#13;
thing for hlu, sm*. that you will If there Is ever an opportunity.^&#13;
' •' 1 think It will be well to show to all the live, active m^&#13;
of the dl.trlet who want appointments that you cannot get them with-&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
out a sacrfice of honor and principle while Johnson is President, but&#13;
that when a change takes place they will be remember'ed» I would not,&#13;
of course, make these suggestions if I did not think them for your&#13;
best interest. The fact is. General, those of us who have been for&#13;
you, and who are still with you, and intend to be, are anxious for your&#13;
success. The desire may be more or less selfish, as our own success&#13;
ig more or less connected with yours.&#13;
"y General Baker is working hard in the race for Governor. One&#13;
of the jjapers in his own county is out against him I am told. Some&#13;
time ago a friend wrote me that my name was on the Senate file for&#13;
some little office. I think it was for Coimnissioner to settle Quarter&#13;
Master and Commissary Accounts, you know anything about this.&#13;
yhu find out anything that I can use to my advantage in the canvass^&#13;
^ for GJovemor, lot me hear from you.&#13;
lewnevo&#13;
; V George Tichenor to Gen. DodgQ, 14th, Des Moines. . . ..&#13;
There Is sreat Interest felt here as to who is to control&#13;
tee erection of the Oovemsient Post office and Custom House. We all&#13;
think that you should control the matter, hut your friends are afraid&#13;
Kasson is at work to pet It into his own hands and Into those of his&#13;
. .friends'. As th. question of additional approrprlations must rest with&#13;
you, you should look up the matter and see that It goes Into the hand&#13;
of your friwls. Th. people all fear that Kasson will work the funds&#13;
'■into the hands of B. R Allen. You should see to It that It is not&#13;
424&#13;
• ■ ^ -i '&#13;
■ ♦- -U . - ■« ■ ■ ' '&#13;
March, 1867 r ^rtn*9itiL&#13;
done tod that the Government is not swindled by any of Kasson's / ♦&#13;
thieves. You should go right to work and get the entire delegation to&#13;
unite with you in getting the matter under your control. . I am constant&#13;
ly importuned on the subject by your friends, many of whom want me to&#13;
have a hand in the matter. • . ^&#13;
You should demand of Grimes &amp; Rarlan and Of the Heads of.&#13;
Departments, that Kasson's recommendations be stopped. All recommen&#13;
dations for appointments in this District belong to you, and it is&#13;
indecent intermeddling for Kasson to seek anything to do with them.&#13;
He is a regular sneak,&#13;
B. F. Allen, Hoyt Sherman, Pet® Myers, Tusdale, and such&#13;
copperhea4s as Tuttle and Cassady, boast that he will beat all your&#13;
plans and kill your influence. If you can control the Custom House&#13;
and Posts office matter, and get Pete Myers, Tusdale and Col, Noel out&#13;
of office, you would have more friends than any man who ever lived in&#13;
the district. • Pe^o Myers could be readily impeached for indecent be&#13;
havior and bad eonduct. They are uni^rsally despised; more ^&#13;
especially MyerSi&#13;
Tyeie facts-can be proven and I feel confident that if you&#13;
would*present them td the President, he would remove them. They preten4id last fall to be Johnson men, but now as they feel safe, they&#13;
are garrulous for his impeachment; and Tuesdale took Fred Douglass to&#13;
his housi whsn h« «• I"" a f®" " 5'°" ''"■® ^^aposed to&#13;
M&#13;
March, 1867. vl»f&#13;
take hold of this matter you can tell Johnson that I made thes*&#13;
statements, and T am sure he will then he will ng to act fayorably in&#13;
.the matter. . : .&#13;
J jjiKyers, Tuesdale and Co" . Jloel, all voted against you and helong to the Kasson, Allen, Sherman &amp; Co. clique. They organized to&#13;
fight you and I tell you that you must make vigorous war upon them.&#13;
' "I' '&#13;
i-rivate Diary Mem. March 14th.&#13;
44 it&#13;
Holliday's Rosselt Mill, Batavia 111., U.S.-Wine Engine Co.&#13;
.•wii h .. I .,,.: foii rj"'"&#13;
f700 put up tank 24 feet in diameter.&#13;
mm mm «i immt t '&#13;
M. H. Morgan to Gen. Dodge, Fort, j^eavenwortn, xtun. - •&#13;
Thanks for the Railroad reports and for the contents of&#13;
your le'tter. I want to'get out to the Denver Branch Junction t,his fall.&#13;
I think that will he a good lace to own lots in. I should he sorry&#13;
to See /y/-&gt;mmH nf onft ftf* the districts. He has not&#13;
the right&#13;
Schofield and Sickles; the latter assigned on his torevet rank,&#13;
not feel sure of Schofield hut think he would do. I do not think thd&#13;
of all the District CcHnmanders will he required long.&#13;
Good *an, with common sense« who are honestly determined to&#13;
carry out the law in the case too much fear of treading on&#13;
p«ople»B toes, wh«i people will $ui their toes, in the way, will do&#13;
pretty well.&#13;
426&#13;
servies&#13;
Hancock put in command of one of the districts.&#13;
sort of tact for it. I would put in Terry, McDowell, Thomas&#13;
I do&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
. ■ ■ ! feel very grateful ta you about that vrevet business. You&#13;
may have to stir i t up in the War. Department yet. Their carelessness&#13;
at Head Quarters was not unexpected by me. Rawlins is good on grind&#13;
ing work as it comes along but ioes hate to originate anything in his&#13;
cwn office. t#;, -i&#13;
Beckwith and Clark of my .Department have just been brevetted&#13;
Major Generals, and I felt and feel that I, as brevet Col. would be&#13;
but a email potato in the brevet line.&#13;
rf '"tiraT&#13;
F. V.'. Palmer to Gen. Dodge,- Des Uoined, 15th.&#13;
I am afraid Clark has been playing a double-faced game. The&#13;
Copperheads say that when he wa lere he professed to be conservative&#13;
against negro suffrage and"all measures which radicals regard as vital.&#13;
They say they are entirely satisfied with him. I fear, also he must&#13;
have put himself into Kasson's hands, -ecatise of Kasson's tencious&#13;
adherence to him. But if you have assurances that he will appoint&#13;
Radicals in your district, you can easily put him to the test by ask&#13;
ing him toappoint Goodrell as Deputy for this point. I have talked&#13;
with Goodrell, and am Inclined to think that in consideration of. the&#13;
passage of the Bankrupt law he would accept if the appointment should&#13;
be tendered him. The relations of^the tio men to each other ought to&#13;
be reverftd, v^- Goodrell ought to be the principal and Clark the.&#13;
MNMMinkte^ but^^t ^odrell should be Deputy, that Would dB bntil we&#13;
could do better fejp ^lim.&#13;
• 1 mt (twu,! :»#&#13;
^ :' '.v' ■&#13;
-y ■;.■ V",&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
.VMI&#13;
'I am looking arotmd on the question of Cadet at Naval Acad&#13;
emy, and if we can find the right sort of a candidate, will send his&#13;
name soon. If you can block Kasson's game in controll ng the expen&#13;
diture of appropriation for dst office here, there win be some pub&#13;
lic good realized. He has had full swing a good while and it is time&#13;
now that a curb should be put on him. .1. ''&#13;
/a' '• » ' &lt;"■ o " _ /&#13;
' M. R. Morgan to Dodge, Fort Leavenworth, 16th.&#13;
Yours of the llsth'inst. just received. I see you can do&#13;
nothing for that .Sutler's bill now. 1 hoped, you would have had a&#13;
•'^yegular session. -c - ■« nii&lt; *&#13;
mfivr;Th9 Sutler's la. makes the Inspector General of the Army ^ W&#13;
• ■ decide .hat articles the Subsistence Dept. shall furnish in place of&#13;
the sutler.. .Their list is not sufficiently full. Tlhat interest have&#13;
they in it? We, the young officers of the Departoent. want this a suc&#13;
cess. The secretary decides that all expenses, storage, clerk hire, ftc.&#13;
■ -ahall be added to the prices of the articles. The ^cretary is too&#13;
lust to have so ordered if the matter had been properly explained to&#13;
him. Officers should have those articles at contract price like '&#13;
bia^ther aubaistende stores., ^ n&#13;
O. r Hancock has lust told me that I must go down to ArKanSas t,x ; &lt;&#13;
leok'after the Indian Territory dust added to his Department. .1 «.all&#13;
not b. absent longer than necessary. I gc on Hcnday. This a.4.*«-day.&#13;
I will try to ae. Penton about tha auita on Uonday. If J d» hot. will 0&#13;
..e that he is acquainted with what you want to know. &lt;ed&#13;
#^ March,n 1867. j.od/'. t&#13;
■ t.4W i. ■ S. As officers were being selected, Wm. Myers should have been&#13;
among the number. .. ► ^ .oj.-o&#13;
Gen. Dodge to his wife, l^Tashington, 17th, **®&#13;
It is over a week since I received a letter from you. I&#13;
suppose the roads are blocked up, as I see that you have had storms&#13;
and cold weather. Yesterday we had a heavy snow storm here. It was&#13;
cold «.nd dreary. The Senate passed the Reconstruction Bill yesterday&#13;
and it will come up in the House tomorrow. As soon as settled I hope&#13;
we will go home,&#13;
. • Mr, Durant has been here a day or two settling with Q. M,&#13;
Department our Government business. He leaves tonight, I do not&#13;
k nov/ as I have anything new to write, or that there is anything&#13;
strange h&lt;^re. The President says now that he will not appoint any&#13;
Imt Democrats to office, but I got a good radical for U.S. Marhhall.&#13;
If I could make a clean sweep I'Woul^ ,.a6 they are. all Kasspn men in&#13;
office in my district. • r. fynn&#13;
You 8|l$f I shall not come back here again, but that is too&#13;
far ahead foP-you or I to^ decide now. I have no disposition now, to&#13;
coma here again. I am very anx ous to see the girls and the baby. I&#13;
miss you all. vw.much hut it will be so much the sweeter when we&#13;
get Do vou KO out much? How is the weather? Hheri I home again. Do you go out mucn.' now oxi.&#13;
leave here, I shall go to New York to attend the March meeting of the&#13;
loard, then push West and stay, a day in Chicago also one or two at&#13;
• " ^ I&#13;
429&#13;
0 r&#13;
March, 1867 .tbsj: . •&#13;
Boone. That I believe- will clese up my business east. • If- you want&#13;
anything bought in New York or in Chicago, let me -know so that I can&#13;
take it with me.&#13;
Bi'j'T-i ;&#13;
'''C&#13;
T, Hartshorn to"Gen. Dodge, Corydon, 18th.-&#13;
After friend Kasson he'ard the nev/s of &gt;ur"CongrQSsiohal&#13;
onvention, he ceased to send me public documents until quite lately when&#13;
^ received two or three from him. A few Coperhead-Johnson Post masters&#13;
' have lately got into office in our County; how is it? Do you control&#13;
the appointments in the future or not? The P. m. i-n town deserted the&#13;
ranks last fall in the hopes of being elected Clerk by the Cops. Can we&#13;
hoist him?&#13;
■ -TO oJ «#« &lt;mti1 •' n.rr "v.&#13;
private Diary I7th.,„ r&#13;
• rum^io.. . . Hamilton got logs of .Beatty. Ohavls, Irwin &amp; Johnson got&#13;
tm SI Elkhorn. Kinnlcott. Boyer, Fields &amp; Irwln sold 200 fence pets&#13;
and 300 to Boyer. ^ tti&#13;
M. L. Mcpherson to Gen. Dodge, Winterset, l&amp;th.&#13;
~ Your letter of the 12th inst. is received. Accept my thanks&#13;
for your Interest In my behalf. I have read the Bankrupt act, though&#13;
not carefully and find the compensation of Register not fully defined,&#13;
but left to s»e extent .1th the Supreme Court of the United States,&#13;
,*nd as there Is no salary affixed to the office, but the pay depending&#13;
on fees. I «&gt;lnk It not a very desirable office, as It deprives me of&#13;
430&#13;
■, . '■ ■■ -y .&#13;
■ v^';.&#13;
• v , '■ ■v '3i&gt;y. ' ^&#13;
March, 1867. ,"fri.'?f ,rif!K«U&#13;
taking aijy cases arising under the act in court. I algo find that the&#13;
District Judge of the United States can remove the Register and de&#13;
clare that tjie office is not necessarj' in any judicial district in his&#13;
, district. Judge Lowe is a Copperhead and may at any time remove me.&#13;
However, when the Supreme court makes its rules and regula&#13;
tions, and I see them, I can speak more intelligently on this matter.&#13;
What I want is a position where I shall have something to do, with&#13;
reasonahly good pay; a mere clerkship or sinercure is not to my taste.&#13;
' • The position I mentioned in my fonaer letter is the one I&#13;
desire aho ve all others add partly for the reason that it was refused&#13;
^ me hecuase I would not support Mr. Kasson. Senator Harlan can tell&#13;
yeu about this thing, as he wrotem® that the nomination had been made&#13;
■'^to the President oS Superintendent of Indian Affairs in Arizona, sub&#13;
ject to Kasson'a approval. . :» I ' '&#13;
I • y«nr» fi fforts in mv behalf and also&#13;
• ' • I am grateful to you for your ellorLS in my&#13;
-mhhe d.lesatlcn In Conere.. rron this Stats. I h^ve great oonfiasnce&#13;
'• in Wilson and Hnhhard .apecially, and I hope you will not considar .a&#13;
Kolk*j&#13;
sition you may see&#13;
officious if I suggaat that you confer with them freely aa to any po&#13;
sition you may see fit to ask for. and in the matter tff Indian Supt.&#13;
1 have written to Senator Harlan and asked him to unite hie efforts&#13;
siih you. I wish it understood boca^^se I regard you as the Wheele&#13;
horse in thi tottir sn^ »hall correspond directly,and confidentially&#13;
with you. t do not think..uoh he done before the adjournment of&#13;
Congress, ' Jaaa— M . „&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
C&#13;
&lt;•&gt; J" fti' Mrs. Dodge to the General, Council Bluffs, 18th," L&#13;
'•» Alt' I have not written to yoti lately as we have had no chance&#13;
•1 -i'td send an eastern mail direct. It is over a week since we have had&#13;
mail from the east and no papers, I have "been out of reading matter.&#13;
at least the best, and find it dull enough at times, but have so much&#13;
to attend to In doors that I do not miss them as much as I.otherwise&#13;
should. ' ■ "^v ' ncin: o ; t i",&#13;
• j would "-ive a great deal if you had some business that&#13;
fKj }} " t i-ffK&#13;
Would allow you to be at home more, but i suppose it cannot be, I&#13;
think in years to come you will regret it. The Bluffs is petty dull.&#13;
Trains from Bartlett come loaded, but travellers are very much put ^ out "at being obliged to wait here so long, 0 would like to ask you a&#13;
^ew Questions ebout a woman who v/ent East when we did, but will wait&#13;
till I see you.l « &lt;sv&#13;
Wednesday 20th. We have at last got a mail after two weeks with-&#13;
' out any, and ever so many letters from you which were very welcome.&#13;
You can imagine how I have felt., knowing you must have written and not&#13;
receiving a word. I hoped that you would hear that we were blockaded&#13;
With snow and send me a telegram, but I had nothing but the uncertain&#13;
news in the paper., I wish you could be here soon. Wood matters and&#13;
stock need attention, though they are doing well as possible. I have&#13;
a Dane in Jim's place. I think he does pretty well. Price has a bad&#13;
■''' '■ fki'. ' . . .A S- T nV.oi'l rr1aH t.r» Vinvfi VOU foot: * to kmw imat it is. I shall be glad to have you&#13;
return, but cannot tndure to think of your goins on the plains this&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
summer. It is too bad, and I think if you go j^ou ought to take us.&#13;
Little Annie is full of cute ways, so go d and pretty. She does not&#13;
forget you by all menas. Her eyes brighten and she sings Indian when&#13;
« ^&#13;
we say "Chickadee," - . - . -•&#13;
I gave a party for Jule to the young folks last night; had&#13;
•a beautiful supper, dancing and cards. I never'saw any one enjoy&#13;
•themselves better, I did not send your letters as they came right after&#13;
the snow blockade and every one expected Congress to adjourn, but will&#13;
send them now,- ^ ,e-r . - . . .1&#13;
, - ■' •&gt;# '&#13;
M Ensign Conklin to Qen. Dodge, Binghamton, 19th, ^&#13;
xi© tit ^ hoped to visit Washington during the session of Congress,&#13;
. imt ciromstances prevent. I therefore take this opportunity to give&#13;
you a eorldal Invitation to stop at this place and pay us a visit,&#13;
should you happen to be travelling over the R.R. I assure you it&#13;
b would afford me a great d.^al of pleasure to see you, and if it is con&#13;
j T n+ ipast like to have you call. B^^yenient for you to do so, I would at leasL iixe&#13;
, I came to this place immediately after I left the Army and&#13;
have made my penaanent redidence here. Am glad you were elected to&#13;
Congress and have often thought of the expression you made down near&#13;
the large trustle work above Athens, Alabama, rhich was:- "If I ever&#13;
get into Congress I will go in for dividing up the Southern plantations&#13;
and giving each north,m soldier a fam." 1 hope the south will be&#13;
properly reconstruct,?, and Johnson receive Sls^iiist deserts, and while&#13;
tn&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
,T%#I&#13;
k ' r ■ r- + r ^&#13;
the South are begging for food, let them acknowledge themselves whip&#13;
ped, and not only beg for food but their repentance to the time of&#13;
negro suffrage, and everything else the North may choose to ask.&#13;
'r.n-: ow&#13;
Should be pleased to hear from you.&#13;
aw&#13;
^o^ar Note;- Gen. Dodge to Hon. 0. H. Browning, Sec. of Interior,&#13;
Washington, March 12th, 1867. Requesting the appointment of Geo. C.&#13;
v-fif-J* Tichenor as Pension Agent at Des Moines, Iowa.&#13;
F. W. Palmer to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 19th.^&#13;
George Tichenor was ready to start last eve as I telegraphed&#13;
you, he would do, but just before time to start he was taken sick and&#13;
* is sick yet. His idea in going to Washington was this: Through Col. ^&#13;
^ Chipmana and the Private Secretary of Andy Johnson he had been encour&#13;
aged to think he could get a nomination for pension Agent in place of&#13;
Myers, and could of course secure the confirmation. If you know of&#13;
any.strings to pull for George in this matter, you will, of course, do&#13;
all possible. The office is one of the best in the State, and Myers&#13;
„has proved himself least entitled to it of any man. He worked openly&#13;
.,.,^d voted for Tuttle, after pledging himself unqualifiedly to you.&#13;
set George appointed, I see no present gain to be accom&#13;
plished by confirming Thompson, however, you are on the ground and Are&#13;
the best judge. If George cannot get the Pension Agency and can get&#13;
ar; a Receivership, he would take that for the present.-^^^ i ^&#13;
I will see Wright and Cole about acting as eXBialnerinitWi» . I&#13;
Cadet appointments.&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
7!m, Hale to Gen. Dodge, Glenwood, 21st, j,&#13;
. May I trouble you a few moments on behalf of my friend H.P.&#13;
Coolidge, Esq.,-now temporarily at Genoa, the pawnee agency in Nebras&#13;
ka? You know his father, Jas, Coolidge who supported Kasson last *&#13;
Convention but let that go, you beat him. But Mr, Henry P. Coolidge&#13;
who was a soldier in the 8th Iowa Cavalry has been in charge of the&#13;
Government tin shop at the said Agencjr for a year or more and has&#13;
really for six months and more been actually doing all the business,&#13;
•hT* ■ He would like the Agency, and General I can assure you he&#13;
is well qualified, loyal and true. Do what you cana nd it will be&#13;
remembered by us. Mr, Becker was appointed by Andy Vice H,&#13;
Vfheeler removed, Becker has been rejected and there is no one yet&#13;
appointed. See to it. e «« to . . ....&#13;
^ la ^&#13;
i I I » _&#13;
D. C. Bloomer to Gen, Dodge, Council Bluffs, 21st.&#13;
^ Dr. Hann refuses to accept the appointment of Examining&#13;
SurglL"and has written to Che Commissioner of Pensions recommending&#13;
Dr. Henry Osborne,. ^&#13;
Dr. Osborne has recently taken up his residence here.^ He&#13;
has purchased property r-nd intends to be a permanent resident. He&#13;
served several years as a Surgeon in the Army and is a good Republican&#13;
I hope you will recomiaend his appointment. I have had to send several&#13;
persons lately to Omaha to be exaa.ined which is a great inconvenience.&#13;
Dr. Osborne will accept thb place. .oo&#13;
D. C. Bloomer to Gen, Dodge, Council Bluffs, 21st.&#13;
n+Tn»an+. r\T&#13;
March, 1867,.&#13;
M. W. Robbins io Gen' Godge, Kansas City, 21st;"&#13;
\s soon after the receipt of your lettera s I could obtain&#13;
"""an"Interview with Mr. Chenute (The engineer of the bridge) I gave&#13;
him your letter which he promised to answer immediately, **&#13;
Scarcely any real Estate was sold here during the winter •&#13;
and the few sales that have been made this spring have been at very&#13;
low figures, but there is an increas ng demand and prices are improv-&#13;
' ing, and I think I shaU be able to sell before long. If I could sell&#13;
I think I should leave here, as I am barely making a living without&#13;
paying any rent, still hope to '^o* better this summer.&#13;
It has been impossib e for me to be ablu to pay you the interest on the money borrowed, but think I shall be able to sell this&#13;
spring er in the early part of the summer, as I think tha property is&#13;
well worth what.I ask for it. Business has been very dull hdre this&#13;
Winter, but there is a prospeot of a very large e..&gt;igration here this&#13;
"■ spring and summer. The, seem to be pushing the work on the RR.&#13;
Bridge as fast as possible; a large number of workmen being em^oyed&#13;
. ' ■"."i* ' . "jfil. "rt f *&#13;
onit. ' LJ&#13;
' • 'to the Junction City to do business this sum&#13;
""'me?: ■ i think the bum« of his store was a great loss to him and he&#13;
^'" ■cannot'get the ineurano. except by going to law for it. If I camot&#13;
•""• get my wote in bank'r«.*«d Lawrence will have it to pay, aM ^on t&#13;
think he can very well spare the money.., mnrnfO&#13;
March, 1867. ■ .TJifll&#13;
the smny South we find in Tenpessee. . oM&#13;
hope; you are getting along finely at home.I want to hadly&#13;
•to get home to see you; to plague mama, tease the girls and sing -&#13;
Indian to the "baby, but I must wait until the powers that be release&#13;
me and give me leave, which I hope will be this week.&#13;
In April I shall have lots of plants, shrubs, trees &amp;c. sent&#13;
from Uncle Sam's gardens to set out in ours, if we are so fortunate&#13;
as to have one. I only hear fran you once a v/eek; hardly that. The&#13;
letters come all in a bunch. I received one from Ellayesterday which&#13;
was very, very acceptable. I read it in my seat in the House, and as&#13;
I went back in my thoughts I imagined I eould see quiet Ella sliding&#13;
around, while romping"Lettie was after something at my desk, and both,&#13;
if I had been there would have received a severe teasing. Does Mother&#13;
scold a^y, or is she all smiles? . las?.&#13;
Is Aunt Julia with you, or is Bhe_running after a beau?&#13;
Does Chickadee 1?akapou4a look for me? Can she walk and does she fcemember the Bong that beings, "Hi Yi V?hiskey oh" &amp;c? Well, I hope&#13;
you are all learning yopr jausic, go to school, and are improving this&#13;
long 'Winter. I see by the papers that ma had tho socialbe; whe wrote&#13;
nothing about it, but I et*!! expect .a letter in the morning.&#13;
Kiss maia, Jule, aWfebJL ^® Grandpa and&#13;
Grandma, Uncle and Aunt•&#13;
■ ner oi •ijgtm .J. .11&#13;
f (|*Ctri. o4&#13;
"Tiw 1&#13;
, -1.&#13;
PWIPHiP&#13;
March, 1867. 'ORr&#13;
Private Diary Meji. March 23dw-" -* '"^1 hnll •« utU'iS c&#13;
'{(had qS J' ciscb to Truckee distance of 35 miles* Cisco to Stmimit, work&#13;
is light, Nitro glycerine was applied instead of powder, 1 1-2 drills&#13;
used instead of two. Hendy's one. ■'"■Lff- ' " tX ' i '-r ':&#13;
; ■ I m |lM«&#13;
I'rivato Diary Mem, 24th.&#13;
•inaa .l;/- , r„,&#13;
Advanced 15 feet a week with nitro glycerine, while with&#13;
0.? rn-Jtrt-r-"^&#13;
jpowder only 9 feet a week was made from Sumiuitt for two miles running&#13;
along a steep side hill with six tunnels. John R Gillis, care C, P.R.R.&#13;
■■■ "&#13;
Sacremento.&#13;
I , l aey , ./lov aaw&#13;
3|0:'i.:Xu Private Di ary Mem. 25th.• ... .jji j . , . ^&#13;
brm 4 In 1866 the snow was 6 feet deep, in 1865 5 1-2 feet deep&#13;
^•rf,*'and in Noy. 1867 17 feet at Simunitt and 19.5 feet seven miles east of&#13;
Summitt. For 25 milesthe road will be curved on top and at the sides.&#13;
^ r t'&#13;
J, H. Smith to Gen. Dodge, Magnolia, 24th.&#13;
*** Harvey sHOUld he removed. We sftoured the Harrison Co.&#13;
delegates for your honor.^ How as a matter of right, we only ask that&#13;
Mr. A, L. Harve;/ be Vemoved and that Dr. J. H. Rl®® (foniaerly Surgeon&#13;
f ft&gt; 4&#13;
Of 29th Iowa Vol. Infantry) be apiTointed in his stead. ^ .&#13;
Harvey holdd his connnission by appointment at Washington&#13;
not from Cole Noel, the District Aeeeseor. ^ .,X„r. , jhb asm&#13;
' 1 ' "M&#13;
H. M. Hoxio to Gen. Dodge, Boome, 24th.&#13;
I very much fear you directed your letter to Boone, lowa;&#13;
It has gone to Boone, 13 miles west of Des Moines, and I won't get&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
it. This Post-office is Montana, Boone County.&#13;
I dp not think that the engine that the N.7,'. Ry. Company&#13;
y ,&#13;
have at the tank will he ahle to run the coal and the pump. I think&#13;
we should have an engine, say 18 horse power. I have ordered the&#13;
or&#13;
r lumber cut for the platform about 7000 feet. I shall go to Chicago Xwtr: .&#13;
tomorrow and shall order trucks for the small cars to run in the mine.&#13;
'• ' i) ,&#13;
. I am completely in the dark about your wishes and cannot&#13;
• tell what to do. I wrote Dr. Durant on Friday and gave him the es&#13;
timate of what I thought was wanted. This road is again snowed up and&#13;
will not be open until Wednesday. Everything else 0. K. • — 1 „ V .... J 9iX&#13;
^ Postmaster General: TJa t , trm&#13;
Delegation from the State, of lowaj in&#13;
Congress, respectfu'ly request that Col. George C.Tjchenor of Des&#13;
Moines, Iowa, be appointed Postmaster at Des Moines, in place ofj&#13;
John Teesdale.&#13;
h; .sk this'ch.lge'on the ground that Col. Tlchenor entered&#13;
the service early in the war as a Lieutenant and eerved until its&#13;
""" close. For his bravery, his untiring devotion to his country, and the&#13;
Signal ability he displayed While in tha Mrviee, we ask this reward&#13;
and recognition of his services'. ""H-' t-na t&#13;
nr. Teesdale has held the offlse f4#-nearly, or quite six M i 1 j j&#13;
„fy nnd,« no. con.ider that he shouirgiv. way to ,,^aj.ldier.&#13;
' '' -.1 'f-iJ I't-twiaJ' v n astlls&#13;
•J ^Mivnfi MNflP .iwviiaosA&#13;
'I&#13;
j&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
._ A V Ah . h _ h.Mr I* ^ ^ Jj|&#13;
Gen. Dodge £o his wife, WgLshingtoh, March 26th.&#13;
I today received your letter of March 18th and was very&#13;
Jfj;. . .&#13;
glad to hear from you, although you are very brief. I am very anxious&#13;
f '&#13;
* •&#13;
6o hear from home and get a little vexed when I am put off with one&#13;
cr '&#13;
for my half dozen. I wish you weee here to take care of the infernal&#13;
«Sri -.&#13;
(if I may so express it) persistency of the ladies in pessing their&#13;
plaims and that of their relatives from grandfather down. It is a&#13;
system pursued here that we have to submit to, but which i^ very&#13;
annoying.&#13;
Let me give you an account of my day's work. As soon as up&#13;
and breakfasted, I took my bundle of letters and started at the west ^&#13;
end of Avenue, Gen. Grant's office, and obtained for a sixk soldier a&#13;
30 days leave. I then crpssed over to War Depart, ent and got two&#13;
Brevets for a-Capt. Gilpin of my district; then went over to Q.M.&#13;
Department and endeavored to get a lot of suspended accounts taken up&#13;
for a man in Warren County. From there I went with a Mrs. Davis of&#13;
w&#13;
Clarke County to the 2nd Auditor to get her claim for additional&#13;
^ allowed on account of loss of husband and two sons in the war&#13;
'"•and to her grsat relief procured it. Then 1 passed down to the&#13;
Treasury Department and worked uktll elenen in five of the different&#13;
offices getting attention to different matters sent me: some important&#13;
some triirllng. Frew, there I went to P. M. General and got a Post&#13;
Offics flxsd in my district; then tc the Interlcr Department trying ^&#13;
to got Stewart Ooodrell appointed Haoeiver. Then to the House to stay&#13;
March, 1867, ■' n r- ft&#13;
t - •■ ' ' -&#13;
until five. After this, all the evening, probably until 12 o'clock,&#13;
I listen to the applications and persistent importunities of Iowa&#13;
oSS#X1 This is just one day's work that I must do, and I get to bed&#13;
^n&lt;«a.t about 2 A. M. and get up at 8 and keep two clerks at&#13;
E. H. Sears to Gen. Dodge, Sidney, 26th.&#13;
As I have been absent from home for nearly two years I fear&#13;
"T'iiay not be on your list. I therefore write to say that I hope you&#13;
will not forgtt me in your distribution of documents and garden seeds.&#13;
* Froia my sojourn of a year and a half among the unr e cons true ted, I am fully "satisfied that the Military Reconstruction Bill is the&#13;
very thing required and should have been passed two years ago.&#13;
Andrew Johnson is now in a tight place. Let him execute "«&#13;
this law faithfully and .in its true spirit, or let him. be impeached&#13;
and give |jace to a better man. ,7 1' ■ , ^no^l&#13;
H, HalneW to Gen. Dodge, St. Lo^iis, 27th, , . . D&#13;
{eiiTCji.'.' • j."' 1 have received the reports of Gens. Ingalls and Babcock&#13;
' Which you wire so kind ae to send me. .1 shall be very much obliged if&#13;
you can procure and send ms copies of the reports of the Qr. Master&#13;
'2^. ^6eneral for 1864, 6 &amp; «. These contain much information which may be&#13;
valuable at some future time.&#13;
I that the Hou::e has oalled for Oeneral Simpson's report .&#13;
Hhen it is pabllshed I should very much like a copy. I hope soon to&#13;
March, 1867. . HOC&#13;
« visit Omaha, If you go home soon, will try to be there 'after&#13;
arrive so as to meet you. ■'1 Tisr .'f'i •"» :&#13;
C. R. Johnson to Gen, Dodge, Dept, of Interior, Pension Office&#13;
I send enclosed and ask your favorable dndorseinent. Please&#13;
make such use of it as will in your judgment be mos-t likely to effect&#13;
the desired object. You may truthfully say of my son that he is a -&#13;
young man of good ability, a good scholar and of exemplary morals, a&#13;
c 'Church member and a good temfilar, I should be happy to call on you,&#13;
• ft f fbut am at present imable to leave my room, I am very desirous that&#13;
- you shoulfl call on the Commissioner of Pensions and secure for me as&#13;
( good a position as possible upon the permanent roll. I had hoped to&#13;
see you at n^y room, south-east Corner of I. and 4th Streets, but&#13;
suppose it was a»skin^ much, _ , . , . , ^&#13;
Note:- 8am i^orrey and others to Gen, Dodge in regard to Post&#13;
Master, Leon, March 27th, 1867, jJ MKl QVXZ&#13;
A. C. Cameron to Gen. Dodge, Washington, 28th, ; •&gt;"&#13;
If"&#13;
If agreeable, please send me the following public documents;&#13;
^Mineral Resources df t'-e West; it has been customary for the clerks from&#13;
od •/&#13;
Iowa to assist their members ill mailing their documents. Any time you&#13;
desire help, and will let me know, I will b« happy to do all,I can.&#13;
•Aili enw-tii&#13;
m rrm^m'G wwl 8sr W MI wrfl Jiadid X&#13;
1 wm* t .vm m MIf&#13;
March, 1867. .''Sfll&#13;
Martha.P. Goodell to Gen. Dodge, Danvors, 28th,ft«-t&#13;
.. (. ». . .. Your letters dated March 6th and March 12th reached me in&#13;
Safety and.I am greatly indebted to you for the interest which you ex&#13;
press in the matter contained in my letter.&#13;
My husband has just forwarded to the Secretary of War, Capt.&#13;
J. B. Hanson's application for a commission of 2nd Lieutenant in the&#13;
Regular Amy, with a letter and credentials. He has also written to&#13;
■ "Gen. Butler and in'both letters has talcen the liberty to refer to&#13;
you as one who would supprt the application, either on the strength&#13;
of your knowledge of Mr, Hanson's merit or of the value of my rec&#13;
ommendation.&#13;
I ajn sorry to give you any trouble in this matter anfld should&#13;
' ♦ ■. ^ ,&#13;
not have done so if I had not taken a deep interest in Mr. Hanson a&#13;
success whiie he was a prisoner of War, and have ever since known of&#13;
»&#13;
Ms excellent character and his strong desire to serve his country&#13;
in the army-. -5 .. -&#13;
•v.i' j thank ybti for the book which I hav e received containing&#13;
®an account of your Western excursion last September. I have read it&#13;
^ With deeninterest. Every item I find in the newspaper relating to&#13;
the union Pacific Railroad ie read and remembered by me, I imagine my&#13;
" delight When through your kindness I can read and in imagination steam&#13;
along ^oute with «ase» &gt; n i ,&#13;
• shall be mMVl happ to see yaisi in Dan"vers again, and it&#13;
ma, not b. Impo.albl. that wo aU^« at Council Bluffs during tho next&#13;
five years.&#13;
March, 1867, .?5ex ^thnmu&#13;
Isaae Brandt to Geni Dod^ei Des Moines, 28th.&#13;
X&#13;
fl ' Enclosed please find list of names of Republicans of Polk&#13;
County that it v;o"ld be advisable to send doci.mients to.&#13;
Mrs. Dodge to the General. March 29th.&#13;
Lettie has been quite unwell for several days and the Doctor&#13;
aays .1 must keep her in and be careful of her. From all I can learn&#13;
Congress does not intend to adjourn very soon. I am getting used to&#13;
- anything that will tak6 you away from home, but not much that will&#13;
..bring you towards it. I send a list of articles I wanted if you&#13;
can bring than. ^&#13;
•«iiO -fl&#13;
We have had no mail for nearly two weeks, so have had no&#13;
r . •&#13;
'^♦letters from you very lately. Am not very well some of the time. Wish&#13;
lo the river would open. I want to go down or somewhere. The baby is we&#13;
and good} tries to step and walks a little.&#13;
M. L. McPherson to Gen. Dodge, W nterset, 29th.. ,&#13;
j have carefully examined the Bankrup Account and have conSl ' rwi wvftd I. .&#13;
eluded not to the office of Register under the act. In this&#13;
'CA "k&#13;
tMei&#13;
Distritt I think there will be but little businpss under the act, un&#13;
less it is at Des Moines or at the Bluffs, and it is more than probable&#13;
that I should be ordered to one or both Jhaces, and that would break&#13;
into my business here which I do not care to do lualess I can get a&#13;
position which will justify me in abandoning this practice. ^&#13;
I am very mUdh obliged to you for your effort^ my behalf&#13;
March, 1867,&#13;
-n'.'&#13;
and hope to he able at sone future ^time to fully reciprocate your&#13;
efforts.&#13;
I have heretofore expressed what I wished to get if possible.&#13;
' ♦ ' 'n&#13;
Senator Harlan has promised to do all he can for me. If a Superintendency is out of the question, it is possible that the act relating&#13;
to Inspectors fif Indian Affairs may become a law, and if so there will&#13;
be some offices to fill tinder it.&#13;
• Gen. Dodge to his wife, Washington, March, 30th. ^&#13;
'We adjourned today to meet July 6th, provided the country&#13;
demands it. The Senate was called in Executive session and I shall&#13;
be here about a week looking-after the appointments in my district and&#13;
other matters, I am in hopes to start home inside, of ten days.&#13;
* For two days the weather has been fine and spring like but&#13;
before that it has been rainy, dreary.and cold. Last night I called&#13;
to see Gen. Porter and Gen. Babcock and families of Gen. Grant's .&#13;
staff. They are Anxious te see you and think you will like here.&#13;
Allison and myself havebeen house hunting for several evenings. We&#13;
now talk of purchasing one and holding it instead of hiring, but I^&#13;
believe we better wait until fall; say September. X think better ^&#13;
bargains ean be had then. - - a- . ,&#13;
I hope spring Is opening with and that the oold winter&#13;
ha. " gone, gone .&#13;
if it has b..n as -VftAdrear,-aS her. ,ou will he glad to sea&#13;
Since I have hesn here », side and head trouble M.&#13;
•» i oil&#13;
•i - k f:&#13;
March 1867.&#13;
Mu/K. " - •&#13;
#■&#13;
• r -rr&gt; I&#13;
, • ■ ■ ■ , w ■■ .- ^ . , . . . ^&#13;
do not sleep late; am up by 8 o'clock, although I never go to bed&#13;
before 12^ SenatorHarlan was here last night until 11 and I take&#13;
dinner thasre today with the rest of our delegation. Miss Harlan is&#13;
a very accomplished young lady. Mrs. Harlan is smart and lets no&#13;
opportunity pass to help along the Senator. Senator Harlan I like very&#13;
much. He is much more accommodating than Senator Grimes. While Grimes&#13;
has great strength and good standing, he is very hard to get acqauinted&#13;
with, Wilson of Iowa, is -one of the moat able men in the. House. I&#13;
think perhaps the ablest. THien you take him, all in all, in Con&#13;
gress, he never fails to carry a bill he supports. Butler, I .think&#13;
will p^l^ out; he ia too impracticable. Logan makes the finest appear&#13;
ance -on the floor. His manner is good, and his speech excellent, and&#13;
graceful. Bingham of Ohio is the sharpest and ablest debater.&#13;
Boutwell the closest.reasoner, Schofield of Pennsylvania watches t&#13;
all points and never falls tb detect a j9b. Schenck is bitter, able&#13;
and unyielding; They take extreme views, . Butler, Schenck and Logan&#13;
are ready to iiifetbtl. Old Thad Stevens says that he would impeach on&#13;
common humor. ITS it getting so old thiat his voice has failed and&#13;
his days are short-. ' 1 would not be surprised if wo never saw him&#13;
here again, but his eye-sight is as good as mine. They do not follow&#13;
him" as well as they did, -but his old age, Ms long service and his&#13;
r ^&#13;
good work make all respeot hto* &lt;&#13;
On'"in» l5il"OoHlW.i •id, 9t Brooks Is the leader.&#13;
He is fron Hew 7ork and is an able and fine debater and is alwaja lie-&#13;
V \ "&#13;
: 1&#13;
March, 1867, .V-'-' :&#13;
tened to. Members listen to a man when they know, he is acquainted&#13;
with the matter about which he is talking. They never listen when they&#13;
thin he is not posted on his subject. If an army, an Indian or a&#13;
Railroad matter comes up, they always come to me, and if I rise to&#13;
speak or ask a question on these matters, they always listen, because&#13;
they know I am posted.&#13;
Yesterday I carried a bill through*relating to travel and&#13;
trade on the plains, although Schenck, Stevens and Clark were against&#13;
me. They all know that I am posted and that the others are not,&#13;
Grant pays me great attention and generally sends to me when he wants&#13;
to have members posted on his views. The f act that I am Chief Engi-V^&#13;
near of the Union Pacific gives me good standing, and i am probably&#13;
better acquainted in the House than any new member, except Logan and&#13;
Butler.&#13;
The Lobbv* here - that you have heard so much about are a lot&#13;
of unscrupulous thluves, ready Ao do anything. The members, a s a gen&#13;
eral thing, keep clear of them. Pretty women with flashing diamonds&#13;
and attractive are an adjuribtj not that they are not virtuous but&#13;
their ability to handle and Influence men give then the position. 1&#13;
' have not met any of theml but have had them pointed out to me as&#13;
" breaikers to ateer Clear of. Stopping with TUeon, Alllecn and Orlmes&#13;
has given m. an opportunity to get posted that others do not have.&#13;
I find most of the m»ber's wives U.ke Washington. The ex&#13;
citement suits them and 1 am disposed to think you will also like It.&#13;
March, 1867,&#13;
The sights, the debates and the opportunity to see the great men" of&#13;
the covntry, seem to have a charm for the„ J .'''t&#13;
Kiss the baby and thfe girls and remember me to all.&#13;
rt/A&#13;
Mrs, Dodge to the General, Council Bluffs, April 1st,&#13;
I suppose I must remain in ignorance a.s to your wherea' outs&#13;
or when to look for you, I a.a very anxious to have you come home,&#13;
.. What in the world is the House about. There are many things that should&#13;
be attended to. There is some sickness lately in town. Test's oldest&#13;
B jr... * child . died last week. Lettie was sibk two or three days; is about now,&#13;
but it is ver hard to keep her from taking cold. The children ^&#13;
...have been on their high horse today playing April Fool, They are very&#13;
anxious for a chance to fool their pa; especially Ella,&#13;
There is very little news. Sue starts East tomorrow for Fort&#13;
Madison and down to St, Louis#&#13;
c t &gt; , Tichenor to Gen. Mge, Des Moines, March 30th.&#13;
'•I lo&#13;
Bhaommi*' J must express my disappointment and regret at the&#13;
'shape matters have taken in the matter of Pension Agent. The confir-&#13;
* mation of Thompscm displeases your friends as well as enemies, as it&#13;
takes the office away from here. All wanted Myers removed, but they&#13;
wanted him supplanted by a man who lived here Your letter to Brandt&#13;
'(written by Ensign) oPeates the lelief that you secured Thompson's&#13;
" oonfirmation as it refer®• tb Tht^aon as y ur friend and intimates&#13;
♦ #&#13;
- JiwrnJio&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
promises of " clerkship" &amp;c. Brandt (the d -d fool) has shown the&#13;
letter - a fault of indiscretion rather than malice, and here let m&lt;a-&#13;
:.4 c.:;, say that you had better be very careful about writing this Brandt.&#13;
• ' . Since I "am out in the cold" on both Pension Agent and&#13;
.'Receiver, I shall hop that you-will_move Heaven and Earth to get me&#13;
in for Post Master, and think you ought to succeed in this since you&#13;
. have helped conservative confirmation. If you can trade even you&#13;
INMI l^ill be good service for the party. I cannot see why Johnson would&#13;
not.want Teesdale removed as he (Teesdale) is in favor of impeachment and the fiercest of Radicals; although he voted against you&#13;
last fail. He entertained Wendell Phillips and Fred Douglass when&#13;
'&#13;
k IW' .&#13;
they were here recently. I think Col. Johnson, the President's&#13;
Secretary, would help you ih my behalf.&#13;
O "J. - Palmer wrote you in reference to Brandt for Post Master&#13;
before ne knew you had recommended me- and when he supposed I would&#13;
get Pensioh Agency. It don't make any difference about his promises&#13;
r letfci I&#13;
to Brandt last fall, 'he knows he had no right to promise anything.&#13;
It will not do any how to buy such a man as Brandt, as he is so fear&#13;
fully uripopulrr that his support would d--m any man. It would ruin&#13;
you here to get him an office; yet if you s^e proper to follew&#13;
It&#13;
Palmer's advice dd So, but I protest. I know, however, that Palmier&#13;
wants me appointed and was glad to know yau had recommended me.&#13;
He simply carried out this promise to Brapdt*^, Brandt is now Depty&#13;
Ife. treasurer of State and is well off besides.&#13;
March, 1867. .Tic: .fto'&#13;
I recomniehd George Whittaker for Supt. of Court and Cur.toni&#13;
i&#13;
House here. He is a practical architect and Master builder and can&#13;
/ •"•^' "'get all the recommendations and give all the bonds required. See to&#13;
it that he is appointed. John Browne, an old copperhead, has applie ■&#13;
for the place. He is a d --d old Rebel and utterly incompetent and&#13;
must not be appointed. I would like to control the Custom House mat-&#13;
'"ter as far as possible. * ^&#13;
Pqj, God's sake push" the Post master matter to success! Use&#13;
every means necessary. Tell them what you please about me.&#13;
, ' . ■ . ' : i..&#13;
n«&lt;l* C. 0. Cole to Gen. Dodge, Des koines, April 1st.&#13;
* " George Whittaker of this city is a practical builder of (&#13;
much experience and unquestlned integrity. Pe Is Just the man to&#13;
have the Immediate control and direction of the work In erecting our&#13;
new Post-office building. There is no man in the city, nor, so far&#13;
as I know, In the State, who is superior to him In practical knowledge or reliable Integrity as a builder. He has been a Kasson man,&#13;
but 18 reliable for us now and hereafter. Secure him the appointment&#13;
of superintendent or whatever it Is called, for the P.O. If possible.&#13;
By the way, I have been shown one or more confidential&#13;
'"^''letters by Kaseon's friend to candidates for Governor., In which they&#13;
•"promise support. If they are assured of reciprocal support for Kasson&#13;
for congress newt time. Look well to that matter: ^ ^</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42568">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42557">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - March 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42558">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42559">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
March 1867&#13;
&#13;
For additional March 1867 correspondence, please refer to "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - May 1867," pps 559-572 and "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - March to November 1867 (miscellaneous)," pp 859.&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42560">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42561">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42562">
                <text>March 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42563">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42564">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42565">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42566">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42567">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107561">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="8835" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="10426">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/efabd2967e7296bf37e91ce52737188d.pdf</src>
        <authentication>36bead797b4f17e5827589c604faa38c</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="105281">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105270">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - March to November 1867 (miscellaneous)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105271">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105272">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
March to November 1867 (miscellaneous)&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105273">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105274">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105275">
                <text>March-November 1867 (miscellaneous)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105276">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105277">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105278">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105279">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105280">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107566">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4143" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="10417">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/a7339656ad54f15e5e347a3d1ce2aeae.pdf</src>
        <authentication>ade9ec50009395ff02f29b257e66531c</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41696">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41686">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - May 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41687">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41688">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
May 1866 (partial, please refer to "General Dodge Papers - Book 5 - April to May 1866" for the remainder)&#13;
&#13;
Missing title page of Book 6.&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41689">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41690">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41691">
                <text>May 1866 (partial)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41692">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41693">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41694">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="41695">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105266">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107551">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1551">
        <name>1866</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4220" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4296">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/ee0999e5722ff49a32b639ad0d1d7e80.pdf</src>
        <authentication>580958469a452216eba6246486c77d94</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58552">
                    <text>. I.&#13;
t '"XT&#13;
!'*.&#13;
•'1,&#13;
April, T867.&#13;
.r?kAjr&#13;
Allen. For th'is favor," Gerier*al, I will bO under great obligations&#13;
and if all can be arranged right, I hope to be able to reciprocatd&#13;
on some future occasion.&#13;
Geo. Whittaker is well pleased at receiving the appointment&#13;
I&#13;
as Superintendent o'f the building to be erected here. Hoyt' Sherman&#13;
made special trip to Washington in his behalf, so I am told,&#13;
I presume that Ur. Brown will not be the only applicant for&#13;
this position. Mr. Webstter started for LeWis this morning with a"&#13;
party to make further examinations and* to run line from that point&#13;
to the Bluffs.&#13;
A. L. Chetlain to Gen. Dodge, Salt Lake City, U.T. May 2nd.&#13;
Your favor of the 5th of March enclosing note to Mr. Snyder for&#13;
passes was received yesterday. Accept my sincere thanks for the&#13;
favor. I think I wrote you that through Mr. House I obtained of&#13;
Gcnl. Supt. Stevens passes for self and wife. «&#13;
We have been here six weeks. We had a long and tedious tri'&gt;&#13;
of it coming through. We rode 400 miles in an open sleigh after&#13;
leaving Denver. My wife stood th^'hardships of the journey better&#13;
than I supposed she would. Everybody has treated us with considera&#13;
tion since we arrived. We have a pleasant home at Capt. Hooper s,&#13;
-delegate to Congress, who is* an old friend, fomerly of Galena.&#13;
We have made the acquaintance of several firtft class Gentile fami&#13;
lies, and will therefore not'want for congenial society during our&#13;
-4MV Ai-re. . I called on Mrs Dodge on my way here. Was gla " to see&#13;
, -y; &gt; ^ ■ .&#13;
• iS'-v" :&#13;
April, 1867. ^ .r&#13;
her, as well as j'our sister Julia and the little girls. . Ella had&#13;
retained a perfect recollection of me. Shall I hope to see them ^&#13;
all again on my return to tha States? My wife joins me in kind&#13;
regards to yourself, to Mrs, D, to Julia, to the little girls. We ,&#13;
shall hope to see you here during the coming summer. Wishing you&#13;
health and success. Remember me to Mr, House and Capt, Bailey,&#13;
Geo. C Tichenor .to Gen, Dodge, Des Moines, 3rd:- .&#13;
I called on Mr. Smith (nurseryman) today and gave him your let- « «&#13;
•ter. He felt highly complimented by your expressions of confidence&#13;
in his judgment, and'said he woul-^ send you just the things at&#13;
once and would write you full instruction. He is a great friends&#13;
and adiAirere of yours and you can rely on what he says and does,&#13;
John Brown, Esq., is ver anxious to have his son appointed to&#13;
the Naval Cadetship, and befeged Palmer and myself to write you in ^&#13;
his behalf. His son would pass a good examination and is a.splen-^^^&#13;
did boy. As Brown is a Democrat we did not feel like giving him&#13;
much encouragement. Yet he is a" very decent Democrat and often&#13;
votes for our candidates. We have been unable to find a soldler(s&#13;
son or a Republican's son that fills the bill and that wants it.&#13;
Please write me what you conclude to do in the matter, as Brown is&#13;
very anxious to know soon, , ,&#13;
i have received my appointment an(} sent on my bond. Palmer&#13;
and Geo, W. Jones are my bondSiawi, so you see I have placed myself&#13;
in the hands of two of ycur best fnier^s in the matter and have&#13;
thus ut a stop t6 farther cause for suspicion or jealousy or ill&#13;
Apri 1, 1867 . . T &gt;51 . ; I .&#13;
feeling. Everybody seems satisfied and nearly all delighted with&#13;
my appointment anf^ I trust you may never regret giving it to me, "&#13;
It seems the Presi'^ent has gone back on Kasson. Wiat d© you&#13;
think "of it? I hope it is so, for when-he is killed off at Wash&#13;
ington, he is essentially dead everywhere.&#13;
The fight is growing warm here between Williaiason and Baker;&#13;
Williamson is" gaining ground. Regards-to all.&#13;
'■ Geo. B. Ruby to Gen. Dodge, Mr* Ayr, Iowa, 4thr- **&#13;
I am making an effort to secure my appointment as Post' Master&#13;
at this place and if you would use ^'our influence in my behalf&#13;
with the Department, I would esteem it a great favor that I would&#13;
gladly reciprocate should opportunity offer.&#13;
Our present P. 1i. is notoriously inefficient and is voted a&#13;
perfect boor by all who have to receive their m^il matter through .&#13;
his office, ' He has been acting P. M. here for the past two years&#13;
and has never received any postage stamps from the department in&#13;
411 that time. The ]p»ople are very anxious to have him removed,&#13;
I have reluctantly consented to discharge the duties of the office&#13;
in case i am appointed, ' C'*,LciU' ft i.-&#13;
'■ Gen. Dodge's Private Memoranda, May 4th; , Ames, Dillon, Duff, Carter and Durant turned the road over to&#13;
the ^'cOTipany and- placed lir, ^yder in charge as Superindent, also&#13;
went instructldns to liKI as Chief Engineer. ^&#13;
• Instrueilons^4 tAe fihldf Ei&gt;ij«eer, U.P.R.R ,&#13;
j ,'0 Tt. ahhll be&#13;
r, U.P.R.S t,&#13;
It aMhll be the a1&#13;
^1. Sltnl.. ' l i&#13;
'.i'-&#13;
^ . -1 . I ' ■&#13;
April, 1867. .&#13;
» e T&#13;
duty of the Chief Engineer of the Union Pacific Railroad to take&#13;
• • • »&#13;
charge of all matters pertaining to the construction of the road&#13;
completed an oper^^ted under direction of the Company, the erection&#13;
of all buildings, bridges, docks, and all extraordinary repairs.&#13;
He shall submit to the President and Board of Directors in writing&#13;
all plans for anticipated new work or for extraordinary repairs&#13;
with reasons therefor with an estimate of the cost of the same.&#13;
and no such work shall be commenced without the sanction of the&#13;
Board of Directors or Executive Committee,&#13;
ifj. *&#13;
i- k&#13;
X Oliver Ames, Prest. Pro Tern,&#13;
li" J.-iOTvl'. ; f c'VOiO'. li /&#13;
\ Thomas C. Durant, '■&#13;
fit ■&gt; * f f*" - -» *« r * ♦ /&#13;
~ W ^ ' A . I'UJ! , ( t ■ '-'t ta&#13;
Committee ) Jotin Duff, *&#13;
■ • 11Jee ' &gt;:■ .D CliW ft;' ( • • r ' ' ■ ■ '&#13;
) Sidney Dillon, os .a f&#13;
J flfyJ ♦ f w r rX&#13;
■ ) T. J, Carter, Govt, Director,&#13;
Omaha, May 4th, 1867, j&#13;
Gen, G. M. Dodge, • ^ t iittl: '&#13;
CMef Engineer U,PR.R, TO** ■rjnri&#13;
I&#13;
Dear Sir;- You ?re requested as Chief Engineer of the Union&#13;
Pacific Railroad to give your attention to such erections and work&#13;
on the comlpleted portion of the road as the enclosed instructions&#13;
require.&#13;
sf&#13;
Very respectfully yours,&#13;
, 1I ... - ,.&#13;
. / '4&#13;
'ju,;. ■ -ij.&#13;
&gt;.1 , ■ ,&#13;
Committee&#13;
■k 9&#13;
' ,) Oliver Ames, Pres, Pro. Tern,&#13;
(&#13;
y Thos, C Durant, V.P.&#13;
v- - j John Duff, . — -&#13;
^&#13;
* ) Sidney Dillon,&#13;
) T,J, Carter, Govt, Director,&#13;
•1&#13;
y^-&#13;
"■ . '•■ -.•i,.&#13;
April, 1867.&#13;
J, Duff to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 4th:&#13;
IftirT f'-U lio L&#13;
I left the land mortgage at the Recorder's office in Omaha,&#13;
with the copies, subject to your order, I should like to have it&#13;
* ■ » «&#13;
recorded as soon as pssible as it is desirable to issue the bonds&#13;
Irkmediately for the urposes of the company.&#13;
Will you iease make up a statement of the present condition&#13;
r -&#13;
of the land donated to the Company and what in your opinion is the&#13;
proper plan to adopt to perfect the title in the Company and the&#13;
best plan for selling them, whit officers should be appointed to&#13;
• • r -&#13;
manage them, and I will get the Directors to adopt it. We have&#13;
t&#13;
appointed Lir. Snyder Superintendent and given him all the power *7&#13;
that he asked, and. I trust htat he will come up to expectations of&#13;
His friends in the responsible position in which he is placed.&#13;
The CommittG© have adojjted some instructions for the Chief Engineer&#13;
which I trust will be acceptable.&#13;
The Committee all leave for home today and I should be pleased&#13;
to hear from you at your earliest convenience about the lands. I&#13;
suppose the Und Mortgage will have to be returned to the New York&#13;
office and any of the blanks not used c^ be kept for future use.&#13;
( ' Kind regards to your family.&#13;
« ' ■ ■&lt; Gen. Dodge's Private Mem.5th;&#13;
* •' Amea, Duff, Dillon, Carter, Snyder and Gen. Hunter called to&#13;
see ae on their way home^ Jp&#13;
Chaa.•Parsons, Cash, to Gen, Dodge, St. Louis, 8th.&#13;
The 5/20's selling at 107 v/s are of the&#13;
1867, ■' . j.&#13;
« ■ . -&#13;
issus of 1862 and coramand increased rate frora the fact that they .&#13;
wei*e the first introduced in Europe a d sell best there. Why the&#13;
two next sorts differ In rate, 5 l/4 to, 6, I don't know,. The next&#13;
sort 107 3/4 have interest from J?nuary to know, which is the reason&#13;
of their price? interest on them accrued is over 2% on gold. You&#13;
must not let your 7/30's run beyond time due, as if you do, you can&#13;
not exchange them but will'have to take pay in cash. But you haver?&#13;
a year to go on. : . ov&#13;
G. W, Clark to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 8th. . t. '&#13;
•I desire 'to assure you. General, ,that my appointment&#13;
of Bowers was prompted by no disrespect to you or your friends;&#13;
neither was it done on the application of Mr, Kasson or his friends,&#13;
but because he was the most competent, offered the best terms to me,&#13;
and is the most uncomprosmising Radieal. He voted for you last fall,&#13;
and o'f this I was convinced before I appointed him. I never scratched&#13;
the Republican ticket in my life and Ixave no excuse for those who do.&#13;
I will be pleased to talk more fully about this matter when I see you.&#13;
I yesterday arrested and brought to this place, S. B. Hempstead,&#13;
P. M. at Adel, charged with robbing the mail. He is guilty and, .&#13;
will be convicted. Before I left there yesterday, the citizens were vig&#13;
orously agitating the question as to who his successor should be.&#13;
Of course the Republicans there depend on you to secure the appt.&#13;
of their choise. I only.»eiitlon this subject for the purpose of&#13;
- fl f&#13;
' llOoJ[ i/.t » , ; n tn,,...&#13;
' v.. ■&#13;
April, 1867. . .&#13;
suggesting to you that, unless the promtest attention is given to&#13;
i' , I fear the Democrats will get their man in, ~ --&#13;
A, P.. Anderson to Gen. Dodge, Sidney, 9th: ' i»&#13;
Some of my friends here are talking of taking my name before&#13;
the Senatorial Convention" of this district this fall. Wiat do you&#13;
think of-my chances in your cotinty? Can I get a delegation from&#13;
Polk in case you don't have a candidate of your ovm? My friends :&#13;
here tell me that I will hage no opposition in securing a delega&#13;
tion of this county to.the Convention, but I do not wish to do any&#13;
thing -bout it unless *1 can feel pretty sure of winning. I want&#13;
to know something about;prospects in your county, and how you stand&#13;
' on the question. ' . . -&#13;
♦ Don't wish it geheraly. known yet that I will be a candidate--&#13;
• might conclude didn't want It— but then you can learn what would&#13;
^ be the prospects- in such an event. Let me hear from you soon,&#13;
j. L. Williams to Gen. Dodge, Fort Wayne, 8th-&#13;
,iiOT hoime aj^in, and have yours of the 3rd instant.&#13;
Snyder is Supt. If consistent with your views of&#13;
right and policy, t hope you will explain to him the propriety of&#13;
considering Whether he cannot place Mr. GUman in some subordinate&#13;
position in connection with the running of the trains or manage&#13;
ment of the office, if, after inquiring, he finds him competent. He&#13;
is a cousin of Mrs. Secretary McCulloch's, who takes much interest&#13;
in him. She haa requested me to look after themaAter. She sayd&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
I . • ■&#13;
he is of an excellent family, and a disabled soldier. I feel per- ,&#13;
Sonally anxious to meet her wishes, while the general interest of^ ,&#13;
our great work, which you have so much at heart, may be pornoted--&#13;
at least not impaired—by influential friends in high places. This&#13;
you understand, though it cannot be explained on paper.^&#13;
I take it for granted that Mr. S, is entirely trust worthy, and&#13;
has had experience in railway express business, and in other posi- &lt;&#13;
tions on the trains.&#13;
After reading my letter to Mr.. Snyder, please hand it to him,&#13;
or the person controlling appointments. ■ . •«!"". 'u' aA tA, Saunders -to Gen. Dodge, Omaha,. 9thi:- 3 !I .&#13;
'&#13;
You are right -in -the g-eneral un'erstanding of the stock mat&#13;
ter. True, Mr. "ollsy did not say in so many .words that you and I .&#13;
should have the first payment of our stock receipted,, but I told&#13;
him that you and I could, in all probability do enough in the way&#13;
of introducing him-to others, and in otherwise aiding the corpora&#13;
tion, to allow him to grant us that favor, and thought he assented,&#13;
and,'indeed, now he does not take back anything, but says that&#13;
whatever our services may be worth to the company, that he shall&#13;
recommend to be allowed. I«h ve taken hold.in good earnest and&#13;
hope to yet do enough for them to make Mr. W. feel willing to credit&#13;
my account with it - 10^- and 1 beMleve that.if you will do the same&#13;
thing that we can both yet comer out acoording to what I intimated&#13;
to you. Of course ■neither^ of us want anything unless we do some-&#13;
May, 1867. '&#13;
thing for them.* The prospect now is ffrst rate to get a large suh-_&#13;
S *&#13;
scription list to the stock at oiir town,&#13;
A. Saunders fo Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 9th. " « ' ^&#13;
•Since my return I have used a fair proportion of ra y time in #&#13;
assisting mr,* VJoolsy to further the interests of our .Insurance Coni- '&#13;
patny," The prospect is good .and- I now think that Omaha will take&#13;
hei? full share of the stock.&#13;
Mr, V/oolsy cssures me that your labros and mine will be fully&#13;
«appreicatod and thRt ha feels nilling to make such allowances to&#13;
us as our services will justify, I hope Council Bluffs will do as&#13;
much as OmahR. If she-dOes„ I will be satisfied. The seed has ^&#13;
been sown, and 1 think, in good ground. Mr. W, can report the par- —&#13;
ticulars of the matter.&#13;
/&#13;
Col, E. Merrill to Gen. Dodge, St. Louis, lOth;&#13;
I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of the following&#13;
documents from you, for which you have my thanks, viz : . ^&#13;
tJ. P, R/ H, Report of Gen« Dodge on line crossing the Rocky Mts, ^&#13;
' V Chf, Engr. on briding the Missouri River,&#13;
» h " I , * Consulting Engr. on bridge across Missouri River&#13;
W i I J •• t J.rj T. C. Durant Vice, President for 1864.&#13;
1865,&#13;
''^'The Great TI.P.R.P. Excursion to the_h\indredt'-. meridian,&#13;
^ j, L. rilliaiae to Oan. Dddge, Fort Rayne, 10th:&#13;
In further response to yours of 3#d inst, I say that&#13;
''7* l/tcf&#13;
i'-'-&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
i,»^ your six blisters have fully relieved you.&#13;
Our Eastern Committee were fortunate in being out just in&#13;
' ■ j . • . ' ■ : - • . ' '&#13;
time to witness the Missouri in its strength. They have seen the&#13;
elephant, and I suppose are satisfied that the Missouri is not to&#13;
I&#13;
be fooled with, or bridged in 6 months. I wish I could have been&#13;
there to see. Am glad to learn that no great damage was done to&#13;
the road, and that you lost no bridges. ' '&#13;
^ • t, r&#13;
• 1 hear nothing of Mr, Buckensderfer, whether he has got out&#13;
or not. It is quite time that point was settled. I saw none of&#13;
the Coramittee on their return, and am in ignorance respecting the •&#13;
rpad. I suppose the Maj'^ monthl^- meeting will be neld in N.Y. on&#13;
22nd. If it is, I will endeavor to attend. On the 25th, I must&#13;
atten^meeting of P, Ft. W, &amp; C. road at Pittsburg, We prefer in&#13;
creasing our capital one and one half millions to be applied to&#13;
' * • • r:iirolling stock and permanent improvements.&#13;
I have 4u8t retiJrned from nearly 3 weeks vacation from busine80--vislting relatives, who are getting old. And now, in looking&#13;
" forward three months, over mtuerous business engagements', pri&#13;
ll vat# .(nd pblle, it begins to be a little doubtful whether I can&#13;
^ spare 2 wonths or more to accompany you; yet I don't give it up.&#13;
Arrange for the horse, and if I should fail, others of your party&#13;
can take him. If your surveys of various comparative routes had&#13;
A &gt; p^'Ogresr.ed farther, so as to present the important question in a&#13;
for a comparative view, as was the case last fall bet-^veen&#13;
I If&#13;
'&lt; I&#13;
May, 1867. . , ■ . . ^&#13;
and Fort Saunder,s ihen it would be more important and ^&#13;
take less time. But I suppose your reconnoissance now will be in ' '&#13;
great part to direct what lines shall be surveyed. Any light you&#13;
can give me as to the state of the questions at isstie, and the time&#13;
it will probably require to go through to Salt Lake and return to&#13;
Omaha, will enable me tc decided more understandingly. 'if you have&#13;
ascertained, please say who and hov? many will form your party. I&#13;
know it will be very peasant, and I shall never have so good an&#13;
opportunity to see the country and the line. Is it probable you&#13;
will go again in September and October?&#13;
Ity friend, Mr. Oilman, writes me that Mr. Bean has given hliff* a&#13;
baggage car, for which he seems very thankful and pledges his best&#13;
• ' . . . .&#13;
efforts to deserve something better after a while. But you may&#13;
still send my letter to Mr. Snyder. It may serve to keep Mr. Giiaan&#13;
in view.&#13;
Have just sent to Mr. Kountze $250, the late assessment on&#13;
T. Stock.&#13;
Chas. W. Davis to Gen. Dodge, Springfield, 111, 10th:&#13;
The telegraph annouces this morning that ^ 0. Coleman has&#13;
brought suit for $1'.'0,000 demages against you, myself and half a&#13;
V&#13;
e&#13;
dozen others.&#13;
This is the first that I've heard and all that -I khow. If&#13;
you can, will you please tell me anything more about it; also if&#13;
anything has been done, or if there is anything to do.&#13;
May, 1867. . '&#13;
' It seems to me that the miserable scoundrel ought to -be satis&#13;
fied with the little punishment that he got. , -ilii/;. T I&#13;
This is my home for the present. . ^ n&lt;rtX a-i nl&#13;
Sam. E Mackey to Gen. DoBge, St. Joseph, Mo. 10th; ^&#13;
-di'il left home two weeks ago in search of emplosnnent. I expected&#13;
« . -&#13;
to get a.situation on the Hannibal and St, Joe R. having, indeed,&#13;
been partly promised one, but it turns out tnat I have come at a&#13;
most unfortunate time, as I am informed that there not only exists&#13;
no vacancies but that the Company is reducing its force in all ^&#13;
departments. • '&#13;
I have, however, the promise of the President and Superintend&#13;
ent of the road that I shall have the first vacancy# This is encouraging ais far as it goes. , . _ ni ' —&#13;
I had intended, in case I failed in my object here, prosecuting my search to Omaha, but so many disparaging reports have reacaed me concerning affairs there (so many there out of work, living&#13;
so high &amp;c. ) I have concluded to let a letter serve my purpose&#13;
and save the expense of a journey.&#13;
General, I do not know to whom I could apply to there who I '&#13;
feel «.ulrt try to -)o more to secure my object than you. And though&#13;
^ have already received far more favors from you than I have deoervod (for which I assure you 1 feel deeply grateful) my neoee&#13;
sity me to .alt again, if you regard me worthy, your assistance.&#13;
•l ad all particular what I do, providing I can make an&#13;
iM 17555&#13;
• May, 1867. ."' V -&#13;
'honest livlihood. If you can get me a situation on your railroad,&#13;
I think I could make myself useful, as I am not without experience '&#13;
in railroading, hnving served-3 years in the general office of the&#13;
Marietta &amp; Gin. R; R. a position which I-gave up to enter.the&#13;
army. If you can give me a place, I promise in return that faith&#13;
fulness and fidelity shall-characterize my Efforts to serve. Your&#13;
opinion formed from our past connection I hope will attest this;. ,&#13;
for while I was with you, though I grant I could not serve you in&#13;
the capacitj' I was then in as effeciently as I would have liked, . ^&#13;
you can hut admit that I worked for you in good faith. ^ -itI am now anxious to get employment, for the reason that since&#13;
my exit from the army I have been married. ' '&#13;
There is nothing doing in Ohio, business of all kinds is a&#13;
drag Besides, I have, through my connection with the amy, become&#13;
80 thoroughly westernized that I would like to make some part of ,&#13;
it my future home, ■ .&#13;
I feel mortified that I have not written to you before to tell&#13;
you that your kindness to me]^ alsd my father and sister, who feel&#13;
most grateful towards you and Mrs, Dodge for your kind treat..,ent of&#13;
them,&#13;
My sister and Col,'Le Fever were married last December, and are&#13;
living in Clyde, Ohio,&#13;
I would day that I am better acquainted with the pasenger&#13;
department than any other, but would fil&lt;«kfully accept any position&#13;
Llay, 1867.&#13;
you may proffer. ^ &gt;i . .,t f^rro't ,&#13;
. Greo. E. Ford to Gen. Dodge, Philadelphia, 11th:&#13;
Your favor enclosing letters to Gens. Gjo^nt and Rawlins and&#13;
Secy. Stanton, came duly to hand, and I at once proceeded with them&#13;
to Washington and presented them. On my return, I found your&#13;
telegaam; but'then it was too late to rectify my mistake . I am '&#13;
sorry it was so; but as I have not yet heard from the War Department,&#13;
they will doubtless not pay any attention to my application.^&#13;
Lyman has signified nis non-acceptance. . , . ^&#13;
Gen. Rawlins came to see me at the .hotel before I left, and&#13;
^said he would push the matter along for me. ^&#13;
Many thanks for your kindness.in the matter. Should I be suc&#13;
cessful, I know it will be entirely owing to your generous endorse&#13;
ment of my character. Rawlins was very much pleased, and said he ' i&#13;
felt certain ♦hat ^ would Jje successful in obtaining an appointment. However, the examination is yet to go through with and I may&#13;
stick on that, but hope to the contrary„ r ^&#13;
To Mr^s.Dodge from her brother, J. k. ~rown, St. Louis, 11th.&#13;
i had heard by Lawrence of Lillie's second son.&#13;
prom my heart wis' ' her joy and happiness. I wish liinerva could&#13;
manage so as to escape some portion of i.er excessive labor, though&#13;
I suppose that of the two evils, too muc'i labor or too much ennui,&#13;
the latter is the worse, so tha she gains as much as she loses.&#13;
If we go to St, Pavil, we will probably start by the 20th of&#13;
Af\&#13;
May, 1867. .7de(&#13;
June, t'lough to siiit your convenience, we would postpone as late as "&#13;
the first of July, though we would rather go a ^ew days .earlier.&#13;
We have not yet fully determined to go. ' u "&#13;
Dr. Elliot is still holding forth at the Cor, 9th and Olive.&#13;
He made a six weeks visit to New Orleans this spring. We met Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. B. R. Pegram at the opera about two months ago. They told .&#13;
rte where they lived, but I have forgotten I think they are&#13;
T)oarding,-or were. We, that is Carrie and I, went up to "^uincy&#13;
la t week and called on Gen. &amp;.Iillrs. Bane ; He is quite well and ^ ^&#13;
hearty,"but she is very poorly. She has been in very poor health&#13;
several months. Quincy is-a beautiful place.&#13;
Ed' and P. Getchell to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 11th:&#13;
" I enclose herewith my declination of the appointment of cadet ^&#13;
to the U. S. Naval Academy. As stated herein, I induced to do .&#13;
so from the advice of our family physician, whose decision, after&#13;
a critical examination, discourages me relative to my physical qual&#13;
ifications, a fact which causes me the keenest regret, as I was&#13;
most anxious to* avail myse-lf of ,so fortunate a privilege.&#13;
* I beg to assure you that I shall ever remember with the mo f^t&#13;
sincere gratitude this generaous mark of your distinguished favor&#13;
and kindness, and 1 pledge to you the hope that the future may pre&#13;
sent an opportunity for me to prove Ift A practical manner my appre-,&#13;
elation of your kindness. ' • , '. iuw i&#13;
. &lt; oi OA Mr 11&#13;
508&#13;
May, 1867. ,v-.&#13;
Gen. Dodge's Private Mem. 12th: ' " ♦iiofni ^rtirt#iiir ,«;♦ *&#13;
Two miles track laid today.'&#13;
Same, 12th.&#13;
."•Wrote Dillon.&#13;
r' nefl 'wif'&#13;
.•■'XeR '3W^ . ■ .'&#13;
C.C. dJourse to Gen. Dodge, Des Moines, 13th:&#13;
■-)" ' The name of the young man I desire to recommend for appoint&#13;
ment to the Naval school is V/illiam T. Crosthwait, a son of Mr.&#13;
Enoch Crosthwait, lately of Indianola and now a resident of this&#13;
city, . '1.. -i w ir/&#13;
«r&#13;
. ' . trot r:**" '"r|3 mJ frtw Elkhorn, May 13, 1867. ^ , ^&#13;
_ Dear Aiontie.&#13;
Father just received a letter from the General that nearly&#13;
broke my poor mother's heart. Papa did not blame the General for being&#13;
angfy, but he thought he ought to have waited until he found it was his&#13;
fault, Pa did riot, think Mr, Hunger would have the face.to ask for any&#13;
thing when he wAf us. I - .&#13;
r&gt;r ol ;i r In haste • .&#13;
Estelle.&#13;
-Idl .M) .&#13;
. ■ nm^&#13;
noffhtO.-B. Bailey to Gens:Dodge, Elkhorn, 13th:&#13;
el ^ I by yolir. letter just received that Mr. Hunger charged you&#13;
H'^ente apeice for' the trees they took in to you. I was perfect&#13;
ly eurprised to learn that fact, and more surprised to think you&#13;
would pay such a price, for tress o.fjf your own land and your fath-&#13;
^ ' "I '* , mdSL&#13;
. .&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
'&#13;
er's, without knowing whether I agre.ed to pay it, * hof* .rr»'^ til . I&#13;
J. R. Reed to Gen. Dodge, Adel, 14th: c r- ' ' ■&#13;
The Republicans here have not agreed upon a ,man fro&#13;
P. M. Two Reps, and one Cop. are trying to get the place.&#13;
M, R. Morgan to Gen, Dodge, Ft. Leavenworth, 16th:.&#13;
f ' ■ ■ I was very sorry to leam froa a letter received froa Col.&#13;
Chambers that you-were suffering from an old wotind." I do hope it .&#13;
will not continue long. . , V&#13;
Should you wish to come down here to see about your suit, you&#13;
know that Mrs. Morgan- and myself will be glad to see you and Mrs.&#13;
Dodge or either of you. . '' • -&#13;
Hancock's expedition is over,' and you know the result from&#13;
the papers, A. J. Smith and Custer are out with the troops, and.»,,i&#13;
it is supposed they will have enough to do when the grass is up.,&#13;
' Indian agents are disgusted; there is no money to be made by&#13;
them this season. Gen. Hoffman was offered a command of the In- .&#13;
dian territory, but he, preferring to remain here, declined. Gen.&#13;
Davidson gives'up his staff position and takes the command declined&#13;
by Hoffman, Capt. RoblnSon is here an-^ is doing very well.&#13;
I thank you for those reprts. Gen. Sackett's report is the&#13;
only one of much interest. The others were evidently off on a tour&#13;
for their own amusement,&#13;
Capt. James P, F. Ne'ili to Gen, Do'^'ge, Ft, Sedgwick,&#13;
the heavy press of duty at this post just now must bo my ex-&#13;
'■ -,»&lt; \n " -A" ■&#13;
■ ■ ■• ' .&#13;
;■ -v&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
CUB© for not thanking you before this for the many kindnesses Mrs.&#13;
Neill and daughter received from you while on their journey to this •&#13;
place. I hope I may at some fu.ture perio.^ be ajDle to reciprocate ,&#13;
your kindness, , They are both very well and send their kindest re- -f&#13;
gards to you. Allow me to say that when yor pome to this post that[;&#13;
my quarters must be your home. d lil . i .txi .&#13;
Snyder to' Gen. Dodge., Omaha, 16th,&#13;
- Have given Mr.Oilman a position as Train Baggage Master and&#13;
will look out for him. He takes hold well, and is apparently sat- _ * ' »■&#13;
isfied with his position.' , , " i ,&#13;
Will write Mr. liaqkey tonight to come up.and will give him a^ '&#13;
start, •&#13;
• ^ I • I ' ' O&#13;
It will take us three woeks yet to get the road all right at&#13;
Elkhom.' Hppe you will be well enough to get over next week, as I&#13;
think you Wdll have some bridging done at foot of El: horn grade to&#13;
■ *4fl&#13;
save us next year.&#13;
Am having all the business we can do. Earnings this week, 1&#13;
rcfA«'&#13;
think will bo over $20,000 cash and $40,000 Government.&#13;
Oliver Ames to Gen. Dodgp,. N. Easton, 20th:&#13;
t . •&#13;
Tour telegram of the 16th is received in reference to let Mtg.&#13;
It la already recorded^ in Nebraska. If you are going out the 1st&#13;
of JWve-wr threreabouta, I think your suggestion to take it out then&#13;
and tMfW it reaordmdr.would answer all urposos and save expenses.&#13;
1 ilMlLl be in Ifsii ®5rH|,thi9 week at monthly meeting of directors,&#13;
r • .&#13;
' '&#13;
(T K ' I&#13;
wj '7'&#13;
■',' ■&lt;''!&gt;V&#13;
,.-; •&gt;,&#13;
May, 1867. « • ,' '&#13;
and will consult with some of the parties who have more experience •&#13;
in 'these matters than I have, and write you. There was a meeting h,&#13;
of stockholders of Cr. Mobr. at Phila. ^turday, at which Duraat, ' -&#13;
Killiams and Gray were left off of Board of Directors, And Dillon,&#13;
Alley and Hazard put on, Dillon to be President. I thin)c that, the;—&#13;
new board will have all the efficiency of the old, and will have the&#13;
confidence of the stockholders and public., and wj.ll carry every&#13;
needful economy into the construction of the road. In furnishing&#13;
supplies to engineering parties, I notice large, numbers of buffalo&#13;
robes, hlanket.s, pistols, rifles and such, b.s it would seem should&#13;
last a long time. Are the parties that receive .these supplies uiade^&#13;
accountable? It occurred to me that from the number being talcqji&#13;
that they might sell them or be careless and lose them, expdcting&#13;
the Company would keep them supplied. I also .notice freight to&#13;
Salt Lake charged at 60 and 65 cents per lb. In lookin after&#13;
these men, it would be well to make them feel that-they are respon&#13;
sible for their equinent; and if not returned, will be charged to&#13;
them, whenever lost by their'fault. « i irlt&#13;
C. C. Nourse to Gen. Dodge; Des MoineS , 18th; 'tfO&#13;
Yours of the IBth received. The young man's full name'is&#13;
Willism Thompson Crosthwait; age 18 years Feb. 15, 1867; place of&#13;
rosi&lt;!|ence, Des Uoines, Iowa. I have obtained the papers, and think&#13;
there is no doubt Crosthwait can pass muster, except as to age.&#13;
The regulations say none can be admitted except betwaen the ages&#13;
of 14 and 18 years. Crosthwait was 18 the 15th of Fehy. last. I&#13;
&lt;&#13;
hope this will not matter, . . .&#13;
i » - , I •&#13;
* I&#13;
I son much obliged by your kindness. Hope youare better of&#13;
that UiioLL cold. UUJLii • Harlan ncll iw.li here today. Don't -know why. f All well. .&#13;
^itGen. Dodge to Gen. Shenaan, Council ^luffs, 20th:&#13;
I am beginning to have serious doubts of Gen. Axxguer's ability&#13;
to make a campaign into Powder River, and at the same time give&#13;
ample protection to the R. R. , the Llail route and the Telegraph.&#13;
His forces are too limited to do all well, while they are suffi- . •&#13;
*• )&#13;
cient tp do one of them efficiently.&#13;
In the last two weeks the Indians have developed their game&#13;
t&#13;
same as they did in spring of '65.&#13;
1st. They struck us this side of Sedgwick and cleaned out&#13;
.t*o of our sub-oontractors of everything they had, and soared the&#13;
wrkmen out of their boots, so they abandoned the work and we can&#13;
not iget them back. , , ,&#13;
end. They, .truck one of my engineering parties on Lodge Pole&#13;
and took one pair of mules, and'notified them to leave, pulling up&#13;
' t&#13;
all of our stakes, Ac.&#13;
3rd. They attacked our tie men in the Black Hills and drove&#13;
them off. Oheyenen burning up their traps, fto; and also cleaned out&#13;
on# small party '-n LaraAie plains.&#13;
4th. They attacked Mr. Brown's engineering ?Sriy, on'^tWri4th,&#13;
.Vlteok Creek, killing one of his men, Lr. Stephen Clark of He. . 1 ' ''HHtP'f'j ' ' V&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
York*, taking his stock; and also killed one of the escort, and took&#13;
part of their stock. 'SVhile pitching into us, they burned the stage&#13;
station called Fairview, between Morgan and Sedgwick; also burned&#13;
stage station at Cooper Creek, and ^ock Creek, west of Saunders,&#13;
taking stock.&#13;
The mail will stop unlessAugur will protect the stations. You&#13;
know men will not run those routes with scalping Indians along the.:i,&#13;
unless troops are there to protect the^n. And we cannot hold our men&#13;
to our work unless we have troops, and Augur cannot furnish them even&#13;
after the ro'-d is built up there. Our station men will not stay at&#13;
the tanks and stations, some 20 miles apart, iinprotected. ^&#13;
The great difficulty is that Augur has only two companies of&#13;
cavalry to scout that whole line, and seven or eight companies of&#13;
infantry to protect 300 miles of opened work. Now, is it not more&#13;
Important to, this year, use his available force to potect our gen&#13;
eral line of travel, the mail, telegraph and stage, than to push&#13;
north into a c ountry that not a man will travel this serason, and&#13;
t&#13;
next fall or spring, when we are at Crow Creek and you can get a&#13;
mounted force frcm the Souterhn states to make the Northern camqpgin?&#13;
Hi til the Cheyenne and Sioux of the South hostile, playing between&#13;
atioky Hill and Platte, andAugur with all his forces far north, it&#13;
"seems to me we are at the mercy of the ReS Man. My engineering&#13;
parties are driven into Saunders, and Augur says it is- impossible&#13;
to now increase their escort, and they are working'in the worst&#13;
May, 1867. . ■ C&#13;
Indian country you have got. You must take into consideration the&#13;
line over Laramie Plains. It is the most exposed of all, and where&#13;
we have got to operate extensively this season. Would it not be&#13;
best to garrison the posts of Larainie, Casper, Reno, Phil Kearney&#13;
and F. aaith strongly, so that 2 to 400 men can at any time be&#13;
massed to go after my bands and place all under an active man, and&#13;
Ifct him take care of the Indians up there? No white man or train,&#13;
except government, will travel that route this year, therefore to&#13;
take care of the posts we have to go there and to hold the Indiana&#13;
up there is all that is required. Let A-ugur take the rest of his&#13;
forces and operate along the line from North Platte West. He will&#13;
then have force enough' to give confidence to the workmen, the stage&#13;
and the emigrants. . j .&#13;
I submit this for you to consiaer. pien we went into the&#13;
Powier River country in '68, we took more mounted troops to hold ^&#13;
open the stage route alone than Gen. Augur has got in his depart&#13;
ment. and he has got Just as big a Job on his hands now as we had&#13;
then and larger, because the Indians have more confidence.&#13;
If Chas. Bent or George is with the Southern Cheyennes, thoy&#13;
will play h—1 "Ith our completed road. We are now at Alkali, 40&#13;
miles west or North Platte. and I tremble every day for fear of a&#13;
' stampede. Have smothered all the recent attacks and kept them out&#13;
of the press.' Augur and myself only know it, but should our men&#13;
get at the real truth, twy will stampede. Stage agents, telegraph&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
men, emigrants, tie contractors and'R. • R.'"men"of all descriptiohftJ ' '&#13;
'^ut there* are pressing for protection, and while Augur feels the&#13;
Importance of giving it, how can he if he moves all his mounted men&#13;
500 miles north? If-the Indians south had kept quiet, I should&#13;
have felt easier, hut between two fires, with the temptation.we&#13;
are holding out to the., in the vast amount of stock, provisions, w&#13;
icc. on the line, with such temporary means as we have to protect&#13;
ourselves, I know they will give us grief, I know from a long talk&#13;
with Gen. Augur that he does not feel competent to protect these&#13;
routes and make the campaign. And knowing this, I have written frankling to you, I say nothing to any one else, because I am determine(^__^j&#13;
to go through to Crow Creek if we have to abandon everything else,&#13;
no matter what the In^'ians do. I am going up on our road. Un&#13;
fortunately, I am sick; have been for two weeks confined to the&#13;
house, butt my presence up there will g^-ve' confidence to a portion&#13;
of Wh men. If we cte hold our men to' it, we will be at Sedgwick&#13;
in ^une. •&#13;
pf Augur had another regiment of cavalry, that alone would&#13;
'^fhim on his feetj tout I' know it is impossible for you to get a&#13;
j therefore I ha-tfe very strong convictions that Augur should&#13;
put his energies on the great route, while Hancock uses his movable&#13;
force to tollow and fight the Gheyennea and Sio\ix on the Platte and&#13;
Smoky Hills, The Arapahoes will soon be heard from. They are&#13;
working thwards Laramie- Plains, and when they get to work we will&#13;
^&gt;1&#13;
81 'B16&#13;
"' ^ • aV. . .. .&#13;
■• .' •■ ^ t a)'. ,i&#13;
' ' tf&#13;
fm ,?5 /; /, .&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
have fun. To cross us from Sedgwick to Bridgers Pass, I do nof"*&#13;
see how it is to he done with less than a regiment of cavalry. And&#13;
unless I can operate extensively this season, we are tied up for&#13;
next year, I am looking every day to have them hum our ties dis&#13;
tributed up Pole Creek, ^e have heen placing them on every l/s mile&#13;
1300 in a place and if disposed they could do us irrepar&amp;hle&#13;
damage.&#13;
&gt; 2Ift '■ ■■ . '&#13;
^ (Jen. Dodge to Jesse L. VJilliams, 22nd.&#13;
. i: !&gt;.-o . t&#13;
I saw Snyder -today. He said Gilman took hold well. If he&#13;
does well, he would put him forward. He*is now Baggage Master on&#13;
a train. Said he would keep an eye out for him, a^d promote him&#13;
&amp;c. so you can depend on his taking an interest in him.&#13;
Have got location made over Black Hills. Party under Hills were&#13;
Tip Lodge Pole. Indians bad; killed one man In Brown's party on&#13;
. Laremie Plains, and stole some stock, but t .ill keep the thing mov&#13;
ing, Indians or no Indians. Have increased Brown's escort and put&#13;
him «, his feet again. Have mada strong appeal to Sheman to aban&#13;
don all expeditions into Powder River country and throw whole force&#13;
-n.te protect mall, telegraph, stage and ra'llroad routes to Utah.&#13;
• • *lrfj&#13;
: ¥. T. Co. sold out to TJells, Fargo &amp; Co. for $50,000&#13;
Ul* and* $15000 or $23,000 in W. F. &amp; Co. stock -forget Which-'.: it&#13;
Will pay us about 30 per cent on investment, so they sAy, and he a&#13;
good thing, I guess, with Indians so had.&#13;
write me aft.r the May meeting. Do all you can to keep things&#13;
May 18G7. -r&#13;
■ A&#13;
moving and get 5th hundred under way. ' ,5^7 3.-»r&gt; 0 :T .fic't tru:*&#13;
^ Am better today. Have been out as far as Elkhorn Bridge and&#13;
back. Am hopeful that I am going to get right up.&#13;
^ • Some man by name of Rogers makes a good railroad to Utah up&#13;
Boulder. It is a pretty strong thing on paper. He has never been&#13;
on ground, but he makes a strong argument.&#13;
L. P. Browne to Gen. Dodge, Kansas City, 22nd:&#13;
i 00.31&#13;
I enclosed deed of trust, which has just been returned from&#13;
the Recorder's office. I sent you the note before you left Ft.&#13;
Leavenworth.&#13;
. ! f&#13;
Hope you had a safe and* pleasant trip home. ^ t T*'#&#13;
St. Louis, May 22, 1867&#13;
Dear sister Annie:&#13;
' n : ifty u I '&#13;
I have just closed a further engagement with Messrs.&#13;
Charles Beardslee &amp; Bros, to remain with them for an'indefinite time,&#13;
and this will prevent my going north this stuamer, did not care to&#13;
remain but they would not let me off. I* had become quite inclined to&#13;
go to Minnesota and so had Carrie , and I jddge from your letter thdt&#13;
you would also like to go. And, having, decided to remain in&#13;
the city, I shall, as soon as possible,' make arrangements for housert keeping* and just as soon as I can get settled I will take Laura&#13;
. Please tell her for me that I'am very much surprigi^&#13;
and sorry to learn that she hasbecome 86 dlscont^lWihl Had upfttajMty,&#13;
,, . ' ' I iiPtitfi ft#&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
She may never finri another so good a home as she now has. I was&#13;
very glad on her account that you wanted her, and knowing that you&#13;
were &gt;able to do better by her than I could, I would have been will&#13;
ing to leave .her ,with you always ' but if she is discontented, 1 tr--'&#13;
-will take her home as soon as I .can get ready,&#13;
I am. Truly, . J. LI. Brovai, • ^&#13;
XOOT' ^&#13;
S. Seymour to Gen, l^odge, New York, 22nd: -&#13;
■ -&#13;
Not knowing just how far you may be posted about matters here,&#13;
I shall take the liberty of* giving you a few items a's they are&#13;
passing. Li o&#13;
Since retxirning here from Omaha, I -have opened a cor-respondence&#13;
with the Interior Department, and also tith Mr, ^lickensflerfer in&#13;
relation to the Eastern \)ase question, and have been to Washington&#13;
once upon that and other business for the company. The result Is&#13;
that Mr. B*s final instructions were sent to him on the 20th, and he&#13;
writes me a very kind letter stating that he has a three weeks' en-&#13;
' i '&#13;
gagament in Lancaster County, Penna,, and after that, he will either&#13;
come here, go to Washington, Chicago, or anywhere else that Uie&#13;
company or myself may desire in order to facilitate matters. This&#13;
will take till about the 12th or 13th of June. I have j\xst come up&#13;
from reading the correspondence to the Board of Directors, which is&#13;
now in seaaicn. ^\/&#13;
The "Credit Mobiller" stockholders-had an election of direc-&#13;
'tmrs in Philadelphia on Saturday and turned out Doctor Durant,&#13;
'' , 'f.&#13;
r ■ , » " ~&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
electing Dnion to fill his place, with Messrs Alley and Hazard on&#13;
the Executive committee. Mr. Haven supercedes Messrs. Crane and&#13;
-Brunker In whatever they v/ere doing in connection with that insti&#13;
tution. As I was in the Director's room just now, Mr. Be]1 served&#13;
a legal paper on the -President, Mr. Ames, which I understand to he&#13;
an injunction restraining the Company from recpgnkzing, or doing&#13;
anything under the Willisms contract. This, of course is a declara&#13;
tion of war on the part of the Doctor, and what the result may be,&#13;
«&#13;
God only knows. I peally hope, however, that the matter may yet&#13;
he compromised in some manner satisfactory to all parties, and that&#13;
nothing will occur to interfere with the rapid progress of the wor' .&#13;
I eua very anxious for the particulars of the Indian attack on&#13;
Brown's party. I telegraphed you yesterday, but get no repjy as&#13;
% - ' ' '&#13;
yet. Mrs. Seymour is very anxious about our son, and urges me to&#13;
try and get him transferred to construction east of the mountains.&#13;
you and Mr. Reed can arrange this^ for me, you will lay mo under&#13;
•rioat obligationsy ai)d pur consolation into the heart of an unhappy&#13;
woman. if . S"!f^t'&#13;
i&gt;la^i|a^let me know what your arrangements are for your western&#13;
trip- ;5eoy» Otto Informed me that he had arranged with the war&#13;
for Mr^ ^lickensderfer's escort. Hadn't we all better&#13;
go together? ^ ii&#13;
" ' 0, W..:Tuttldd| to. Oop, Dpdge, New York, 22nd: ^ P&#13;
the. Board of Directors of the tmion Paoj/i]^&#13;
520&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
R. R. Co. held this day at the office of the Coapany in New York,&#13;
it was Resolved,&#13;
That the salary of the Chief Engineer of the Union Pacific&#13;
Railroad Company be fixed at ten thousand dollars, $10,000, per&#13;
annum.&#13;
t, . M •• i Oi- t&gt;-' n''0&#13;
" " Gen. Dodge's Vf.A ii" .;.c I private Mem. 23rd; f .;.c I&#13;
Indians struck working party on Lodge. Pole; killed four men,&#13;
A. G. Lathrop (for Secy) to Gen^ Dodgej New York, 23rd:&#13;
I onclose herewith copies of two resolutions by the Board of&#13;
Directors of this" compny at their regular monthly meeting. . ,&#13;
1st. Fixing your salary as Chief Engineer at $a0,000 per annum,&#13;
2nd. Referring to facilities and assistance you are requested&#13;
to extend to the Engineer appointed by the President of the United&#13;
States, to settle the Eastern base of t^e Rocky Mountains.&#13;
* Oliver Ames to Gen. Dodge, New York, 23rd: , • ►&#13;
V I enclose here.lth copies of nesolutlons passed by the Board&#13;
of Directors of this company, appointing yoi) as Sgent and Trnsteo&#13;
for this companyv to lay out and locate towns and townsltes along&#13;
the line of the road, and empowering you to sell and convey the s^&#13;
as said Agent or Trustee. Also a resolytlon appointing you, as&#13;
A^ent for ihls company, to receive the lan^a granted by the United&#13;
States for this compshy, and to perfons each «)ts in the name of&#13;
,he company as to place the ooispany An full pessesslon of said&#13;
lands, &amp;C,&#13;
■off&#13;
-• oq f. i. ' r'T&#13;
"'M, .liT'&#13;
' , V ■■ '.■\i •-•• rf ■ ;..• •■&#13;
May, 1867. . T&#13;
^ ' f In the performance of the "aid duties it, is deemed advi.^able&#13;
to limit them to the first one hundred miles weet of Omaha-. ; ;&#13;
I;:.l'Gen, Dodge to Sidney Dillon, 22nd:&#13;
1; wro.t:.e Durant today about Indian depredations. I want you&#13;
5o get your men to work on the 5th hundred as soon as possible,&#13;
I am afraid unless we do that, the Jndians pill biu&gt;n our ties scat&#13;
tered along Pole Creek, As soon as we get groiuids broken up there I&#13;
can stretch' out the military, 1 made out a list of lots held in Du&#13;
rant's name, included in the grounds that our shops are on- the de&#13;
pot grounds proper for him. to-deed to the Company. That deed ought&#13;
to be made'and sent to-me for recjord. .&#13;
I wrote Ames recommending that 500 f€et additional bridging&#13;
be put in at Elkhorn. He told Snyder it should be done, ^ave&#13;
Board act" on recommendation, so we can work to it in our repairs,&#13;
I have not yet time to get in estlpiate before meeting of Board, but&#13;
'It will not cost ten thousand. L put ,.in a cedar pile opening; it&#13;
is cheap and will last, . . . .&#13;
Repairs on roadT are progressing, and it is getting in good&#13;
condition. House went over the entire line last week, and it has&#13;
all th4 business itf -d'an dd. Snyder drops me a line tonight saying&#13;
iast week will sho* |40,000 Govt, business and over $20,000 cash.&#13;
I have written Duff fully about lands, and sent him resolution&#13;
to cover all, tmen ^ypua ppoint a Lend Com.jir,sloner he ou^t to be&#13;
a western man and one fully posted. I think Hoxie would make a&#13;
10-H&#13;
W'T'fVr&#13;
'-\ (i ,&#13;
A".&#13;
May, 18G7. ft%r&gt; ■ r,:&#13;
good one, If he could "be .spared from hia other duties. \ '0&#13;
,, N. TT. P. is slow yet, but will get in condition soon. Dunlap, Ferry, Turner &amp; Co,, have, "been out. I do. not know what they:&#13;
did, as I could not get out"to see them. , Am just getting out, and&#13;
as soon as Dr. will let me, am going over the Work to Fort Sedgwick.&#13;
Thb Missouri River is falling fast, and the'"bars show themselves&#13;
all around. '&#13;
At Board I want you to make up youi* minds about getting prop&#13;
erty for terminal at South Omaha. Give me authority to get it,&#13;
I will then pitch into the cit: and tell them, unless they obtain&#13;
it fbr us, we shall have to look at other points and secure it be&#13;
fore it is too late-. Now is a good time to try them on. As they&#13;
•know, telegraph poles have gone" up, and they think Child's Mill is&#13;
a favorite "place and would jump at the chance, to do anything that&#13;
will tend to help the location of the bridge at ^their city.,&#13;
Gen. Dodge's Private Hem. 24th': .5 f'A*&#13;
" Indians killed man at Bowens in Bluffs and drove off stock.&#13;
Gen. Dodge's Private kemf 25th. , , ..j'&#13;
■commissioners arrived Omaha. Indians attacked train at end&#13;
of t«ok; tooit six liead of stock from Doolna, eight frca C^^rlotlan,&#13;
and a,«nteen''fA» licOoy. In-alght of Lt. Hays' oam» on Boyle's ^&#13;
ranch, 65 miles'Wat of North Platto! killed three men and woundjd&#13;
carrying off stock. At Capt. licArthnrAs Poat, opposite Botran's&#13;
lndi«.» take 30 head of stock and killed one of UoArthur's -en.&#13;
r&#13;
Hay, 1867.&#13;
Ollvej? Allies' to Gon. Dodge, Boston, 25th;&#13;
.""iT aftL&#13;
- •" I. The ejectment of Durant from presidency of Credit Mobilier has&#13;
raised the very devil in that amiable gent., and he has come down :&#13;
upoa. us with injunctions, and propses to visit us with every form&#13;
of legal document to keep us honest, Buch a lover of honesty and&#13;
fair, open dealing can't bear to see the money of the II. P. R Rwasted on snch scoundrels as make up the balance of the_Board of&#13;
Directors. I cannot understand such a change as has come over the&#13;
Doctbr- the man of all others who. has from the beginning stolen&#13;
wherever he had the: chance, and who is today, we think, holding&#13;
stock, and a large portion of his stock, on fictitious claims,&#13;
trumped-up accounts. He is now In open hostility to the road and&#13;
any orders he may give you, or. any parties under you, should be&#13;
entirely disregarded. Dr. Durant has been, and is now, seeking to&#13;
favor other roads, and other interests, and at cur meeting yesterday&#13;
it was voted that the power tp? direct action on ,the road should be&#13;
placed in the hands of a coimittee, and that committee is Duff,&#13;
Dillon, carter, Bushnell and Apnes.&#13;
^ L. filllams to G«n. Dodge, Port Wayne, 27th:&#13;
■ .♦ ■ Your letter of 15th was forwarded to N. Y. and that of 2lat&#13;
§eceived here, ysaterday pn my return. On reading the first letter,&#13;
I introduced a resolution fixing your salary at $10,000 w' ich was&#13;
' ^iSed; no on^ objected. You have large duties. You must d'irect&#13;
^d UbI Act for you. In your state of health, allow me tc&#13;
May, 1867. f ,^||||&#13;
suggest, that you have always a Very competent agent or clerk at y&#13;
your-side. You can keep him "busy with correspondence, collections,&#13;
drawing up papers, &amp;c. Let y ur time and strength be spent, not .&#13;
in drudgery or penmanship, but in dictating and directing the pen&#13;
or the act of another. at one t me covered .the wh le State of&#13;
Indian, as Chief Engineer, embracing 13 different lines of public,&#13;
works, and know i^at it is.&#13;
• No doubt you have heard from New York. They had left Mr. .f. out&#13;
of the Credit Uobilter-', He then obtained an injunction against do&#13;
ing anything under thd tilliams contract. _ It looked as if the work&#13;
must stop. But we got up a resolution for a committee of five who&#13;
Shall proceed to sub-let the work for the company, and I suppose&#13;
the grading up lodge Pole is lof fP this time. Thus the Court was&#13;
respected. ^ , rr •_&#13;
Ur. Bliokensderfer says he can start out by 16th or SOtJl June.&#13;
His mission is most important of all. He will no doubt want to&#13;
traverse the Black Hill, and go to Danver, and may want to go to&#13;
Bridger'-e Pass. To maU.&lt; him feel perfectly easy, you should see&#13;
• that he has an'rtapls ateort. Col. Seymour is promised as aide for&#13;
osoort from Pashlngton but of course the men will come out of Oen.&#13;
Augur's force, already too m»ll. Ae JObr time of leaving is about&#13;
the same, ooAld Mt rijtl go together up the line, or as far as fort&#13;
Saunders at le.Ji,'tmae&gt; the eBcort, having, it largei This you&#13;
understand heat, fill *» ««•■.tl»» lost by ,Ur. Brown's party delay&#13;
■'M&#13;
May, 1867, *^"8^&#13;
your time of starting"? I notice in your letter to Mr. ^me.s you name&#13;
' latter part of June. But this was before Brown was attacked. Will&#13;
you start before July? Give me time as near as you can. . r&#13;
■ ' ~ If I should have to forego the pleasure of the trip to Utah&#13;
with such a company, no one could regret it so much as myself. I&#13;
hope to he able to go. The great lengt- of time from home and from&#13;
business is the chief difficulty. In the present troubled state,&#13;
' I 'should probably have to remain in Utah as long as you would, so&#13;
"as to have the protection of your escort back. This might take me&#13;
" from home 8 or 10 weeks. • How long do you expect to be absent from&#13;
Omaha? When do you leave? iDoes Rawlins go? .&#13;
In writiAg to Mr. McCulloch from N.Y. I gave my views of the&#13;
"foreshadowed Indian-troubles, and gave my opinion, in that the Pow&#13;
der River force ought to be brought to the railroad line. I en&#13;
closed a note to Mr. hOCulloch aa you suggest. : ,&#13;
Ho definite recomnendatlon was made by Bridge Ooinmlttee&#13;
They all seem to be afraid'of it. I suppose it must settle down to&#13;
a low draw bridge* above town or a high bridge below town, as Dey&#13;
■ suggested. At either poiht it-is no .6 weeks or 12 months' matter.&#13;
■ t have no faith'in anything belaB tasporary. It is a big Job, and&#13;
'■'"a plan must be got ap that will.co«and outside capital. ,&#13;
J to'ifti'the Roegera report. Hho is Rogers! Will the&#13;
Snowy Wgi ■ yAA "tb him logic, and get out of the way? Will the _ Rooky Hountalns *klp Uke lambs to use a Bible expression!&#13;
,A.K,-, 7r :*.. ■• v , ,.&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
June, 1867 and Jan. S;867. "&#13;
. icr .I/tji&#13;
■s^ »lr : J' .r' ■ : xTT&#13;
' In looking over the line in detail up the Locfge Pole and over&#13;
the Black Hills, I would like in addition to the profiles,* a rough&#13;
map on a scale of say 1,000 ft. to the inch, with topography, ra&#13;
dius of curves, &amp;c« upon it, so that we can judge of* the effect&#13;
which any slight change, that may be sugges-ted, may have upn the&#13;
profile or cost of the work. I presume that either Mr. Evans or'&#13;
Hills may have these hough maps on hand. •&#13;
Please inform me in New York as early as you can- of the day&#13;
: . ^ . -XJ&#13;
when you propose to start.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to Col. S. Seymotir, Omaha, Jan 1st, 1867.&#13;
. X enclose profile of line run from below stone quarry with&#13;
crossing -of river; you will perceive it does npt show favorably for&#13;
bridge with 40 ft. ^rade; distance too short. ^ ^ . ^&#13;
' . I, also enclose line from same point on Mud Creek, being same lin&#13;
to Station 78 the one crossing the river there to depot grounds,&#13;
Omaha, which shows wc ca^,$P there from Mud Greek, station 200 on&#13;
30 ft. grade. I have ^bean the ground and m confident that line&#13;
on table 8«th of town wil^ be better. I can get crossing just&#13;
north UV. V.I. of « train town,with « 2300 feet river - ... an&lt;t 1400 feet table on'OiX&#13;
west Side and st« run through near old line on 40 ft. grade with -&#13;
'&#13;
30, but very heavy work.. I can connect this crossing with depot&#13;
grounds without much difficulty swinging round on table or can turn&#13;
south and go out on the line adopted by Preside t, on ^Wt. grade.&#13;
R4J7;)5 «dl&#13;
May, 1867,&#13;
t «M&#13;
The bridge at this crossing wouod cost difference between 2000^ -&#13;
feet at Child's mill and 3700 feet here; the last line I am now&#13;
running. shall not be able to get in full report of the line&#13;
until Jan, 15th to 20th, TiTill have them ready to submit at meeting Jan. 20th. Map o-f the line of which. I send profile today were&#13;
sent to ITew York by Lir. Evans and must be there Please show th.is r&#13;
toiDr. Durant; will save my writing him. ^&#13;
„' Gen.Dodge to Gen. P. St» George Cooke, Omaha, Jan. 36d, . .&#13;
It is proper that I should inform you of our intended opera&#13;
tions this comincr summer and the amount of military protection we&#13;
..T-i , ,&#13;
shall need,&#13;
r&#13;
"fey the first of March,' if weather will permit, we shall open&#13;
work from near Alkali to crossing of Laranie River near Fort Saun1 - ■ - • •&#13;
ders. Our line is located up Lodge Pole Creek, 110 miles from o&#13;
Sedgwick, then crossihg to Crow Creek 31 miles, .then crossing Black&#13;
Hills on d'ivide between Crow Creek and Lone Tbeek creek, passing&#13;
svanmit of Evan's Pass ten miles south of Cheyenne Pass and enters&#13;
Laramie Plains 1^7 miles from Fort Saunders. The line the entire&#13;
distance runs through a country infested with bhnds of hostile Ind&#13;
ians and during the past season a great many depredations have&#13;
been committed by thea Inmediately along route, which cuts «t right&#13;
ahgles all the trails north and aotith Which the Tnai&amp;fJS travel, and&#13;
^tmloss we have full military protectloA it is keep, our&#13;
^ pen oh it, scattered as they must be; " ' ' ^ pK&#13;
11 ru&gt; .tife eji&#13;
Llay, 1867.&#13;
••t»£i iw?^ temporary posts (&gt;r camps—say every twenty miles —could be&#13;
establi^ed, and the coimtry north and south kept tl'.oroughly scouted&#13;
I think we could keep our men at work. ^&#13;
VJe shr^l also need escorts for four parties of engineers, viz;&#13;
One for party east of Black Hills which would naturally come&#13;
."from Port Sedgwick; one party in Black Hills; and one party in&#13;
Laramie Plains, both of which will be most convenient to Fort ^&#13;
-Saunders;» and one, party between Salt Lake and Green River, which&#13;
will be most convenient to Bridger or Camp ^Bouglas, unless Indians&#13;
become very hostile on this point of the line, I think the esocrts&#13;
would be sufficient fifty strong, part infantry and part mounted.&#13;
For the work mentioned, I think it would require at least&#13;
twelve companies of troops. That will be at rate be as small a • I .&#13;
number as I would consider safe. As we advance west, or as diffi&#13;
culties diminsih, they may be reduced. We desire in the spring to&#13;
start out well protected in order to get all the men upon the&#13;
work we can. My knowledge of the country north of the Platte and&#13;
east' of the mountains tells me that there will be no peace with the&#13;
Indians until the Govemmoht makes war upon the hostile tribes in&#13;
earnest, punisheVtlfem for past crimes and, forces them to respect&#13;
the power of the boverhment, and live fulljy up to their agreements,&#13;
and 1 do not believe it "can be dorie in tHW district meAtioned with&#13;
less than five thousand effeetive troops. ' . .cI make this application for troop, requesting that it be con-&#13;
Jan. 1867.&#13;
sidered as soon as po ssible, arid that I maiy be notified your de&#13;
cision upn it, and what we may depend upon, and I till then notify&#13;
you from time to time as we place our men upn the work that pro- ^&#13;
'' vision may be taade to cover them as they eitend west.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to Chas. Tuttle, Omaha, 4th:- ' if.'T ipl "&#13;
I enclose herewith statement of accounts up ;to Jan. 1st, 1807.&#13;
Also vouchers for my credit, as follows: ''I&#13;
' to Nov. 3 th, 1866 ^ 'I* $12,262.32.- - 8': Jan. 1st, 1867. '■ i 27 .977.15&#13;
Total 40,239.47&#13;
® 5 r .. . T . . &gt; rl «-i r. «» ■ ■ i r:o 2. '&#13;
Please acknowledge receipt.&#13;
■•.t' .V ' t tti" "&#13;
Gen. Dodge to K. C. Crane, Omaha, 11th:&#13;
I have the honor to submit, herewith statement of a/c with&#13;
T. C. Durant as Trustee for mining operations up to Jan.1st, 1867.&#13;
■'^gn. Dodge to T, 0. Duriant, Omaha, 11th: c. , . . -j,&#13;
^ "'^le amount of city taxes assessed by the City of Omaha on ^&#13;
personal 1#»''$##600. Th® amount of County taxes assess&#13;
ed by County of DougUh on U. Pi Rt R. personal is nearly $10,000;&#13;
i have not yet investigated the matter, but am told that they assessed&#13;
on all machinery, rtiops, dep©4 grpunds and railroad in city and&#13;
• county, which It seetts to me thoty have no legal right to do. I&#13;
J ; 1&#13;
wish instructions by letter In the matter. .&#13;
Geo. li. Bailey to.J. A, Brown, Omaha, 10th|&#13;
94. SI ^ «i fs&#13;
.L. ■ •*:' '&#13;
Jan. 1867. ,t'iP r&#13;
I am instructed by Gen. Dodge to say that we will-get the ma- .. . f ^ . • • • • •&#13;
terial requested and send out first opportunity.&#13;
, . Under yoior directions we paid iirs. Brown $200 in November, $200 * J' ' *) * &gt; ^&#13;
in Dec. and $100 in Jan. We will credit you for engineering what&#13;
ever Asst. Engineer in charge of party^ says is proper for you to&#13;
.j-l-j Gen. Dod^e to C. Durant, Omaha, 14th:&#13;
I send today profile of located line to finish 4th hundred&#13;
miles,, and of located line on 5th hundre,to point where we leave&#13;
Lodge Pole Creek: Station, ^nsth jundred, from this point to Crow&#13;
Creek i-t is profile of preliminary which you have in New York and&#13;
I a-end it again so. as to give it continuous This part of profile&#13;
will be naturally changed fpr better in «&#13;
Crow Creek Crossing for 20 miles is located line, but balance is&#13;
over lines run th4% Winter and*which we are now locating. On pro&#13;
file with notes show about what location will be the preliminary&#13;
run, having been changed tihtil it lays nearly op grade of location.&#13;
By comparing it with'profile of old peliminary in New York, you&#13;
will see the -changei Wd also that it is much better generally.&#13;
I send this part of it in peximiatrm location may .change some grades&#13;
and reduce some of the cute, ■ ,'t li ^ , ,2&#13;
Gen. D&lt;idge to Capt, Geo, Pi Price, Omaha, 12th. ^&#13;
fc " ' It aftwt» »e plehiwe t© furnish thp following statement for&#13;
the purpose ItteSlfciiHg ^''evet rank. ^&#13;
V -1' ,&#13;
- ■•: , ■ r •'"&#13;
■' - :' ■&gt;:'/' ■■ .&#13;
■ - ■•■■■;■• ■\'&#13;
' ' ■^A'::'\ •&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
' ' I '' ' '^&#13;
•^''^Oeo, m/ Bailey• to Capt). C. Griffith, Omaha, 15th^&#13;
I am inat-ructed by Gen, ^odge. Chief Engineer, to inform you&#13;
. ' * that your application hris been referred to WN. Snyder, Asst. Supt.&#13;
at this city.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to Gen. Augur, Omaha, 30th: ■I ,if;( A "icva&#13;
f . (D have the honor to enclose a copy of the letter I wrote Gen.&#13;
„ • Cook, applying for escorts for'Engineering Corps, and-military protection for workmen on the U.P.R.R.&#13;
V ' I stated verbally to, you that we would need escorts, for four&#13;
engineering parties, but» I may not' have-said, as I should have&#13;
done these escorts woul' be no protection to the workmdn or con&#13;
struction force on the r6ad from Alkali to Ft. Saunders (Laramie&#13;
River crossing)-. The engineer Corps, you are aware, will be devel&#13;
oping a new country, running new lines, and preparing for our work&#13;
in 1868-, and must neceasarlly be far in advance of any construction&#13;
force for 1867. iSmoo&#13;
oii ooj lib tl'ope to stretch Dut. our force on constructin weather per&#13;
mitting from Altakli to St. Saunders, and it is all important to us&#13;
^at there Should go on the ground with confidence, and well ,&#13;
assured of amplir mlltary protection and when we get settled if.&#13;
Indian troubles diminish, or if the.campaign north nd south -hould&#13;
drive them away from the Plttte Route, the protection would be&#13;
dimihaed; but any scare or attaok in the commencement would be&#13;
fatal to \ia,'hik'%hm0i lB{Mft«lbIe to obtain the necessary laborers.&#13;
May, 1867. 061 i '&#13;
My idea is that temporary capps of detachments should be 'distribut&#13;
ed with the different parties, say every fifteen or twenty miles,&#13;
as we put the workmen on the ground add from the scouting parties&#13;
made up to thoroughly scout the country, north and south of our&#13;
line, to give amf)le warning of approach of hostile bands of Indians.&#13;
You will find that the couhtry between the Lodge Pole and&#13;
South Platte, &gt;*hich comprises the "Bhite and Pine Bluffs, the&#13;
'•'""Pawnee Cut Bluffs, and Crow Creek country, have been heretofore&#13;
great resorts for hostile Indians, and really secure resorts, as^&#13;
it is in a country very , little » known • until •&#13;
the - past year, • * when we&#13;
developed it by our different engineering parties; also the country&#13;
between Lodge Pole ad Lanarance Fork. Indians from this coun&#13;
try have always made their dash on the overland routes up Platte.,&#13;
and Lodge ^ole. In this country we will have many parties getting&#13;
out" ties and they will'liieed some protection.- .&#13;
I am well aware that It is the anxious endeavor of the mi1-&#13;
""""itary authorities to do all in their power to aid our enterprise.&#13;
In fact, Sen. German has often told me that he considered our .&#13;
RaUroad was th-: best solution of the Indian problem that oouldb e&#13;
got. and was very anxious we should penetrate the country as fast&#13;
as poaaible, "uid x'consider it my duty to infom you of our Inten-&#13;
. ij '&#13;
tions and interests.&#13;
We. of courae sr. willing, at all times to do all-in omr power&#13;
Will foeward the interest of the OoT.roa.nt. As we place&#13;
'' .rr ^'&#13;
January, 1867.&#13;
temporary parties on construction I-will notify you. t „i&#13;
About_March 1st, I shall start out my engineering parties;&#13;
two (2) for the Black Hills, and one (1) for Salt Lake and should&#13;
like by the rth or tenth to have escorts ready at For6 Sedgwick, Ft.&#13;
Saunders, and Camp Douglass for the engineering parties as follows:&#13;
Party going west of Ft. Sedgwick, (5) fifty men, (20) 'twenty&#13;
mounted (30) thirty infantry; party in Black Hills (5) five mounted&#13;
(20) twenty infantry; party on Laramie Plains (20) twenty mounted&#13;
and (30) thirty infantry; party in Utah (20) twenty mounted and&#13;
(30) infantry. ' ' -&#13;
Gen, iJodge to Thos. H. Bates, Omaha, 29th; ■ 1 .1 dl&#13;
The Company"have called my attention to the fact of the large&#13;
ly Increased exiienaes of the Salt Lake party tinder you, over that&#13;
of any other party heretofore in the field in that territory. It&#13;
is also much lsu:*ger-than the expense of any one of the parties in&#13;
field east of Utah. Gran, provender and ever thing except gro- ,&#13;
"ceries should be cheaper In Utah thau in Colorado,&#13;
• • - The greatest possible economy must be used in running the.par&#13;
ties, Every advantage taken t® decrease the expenses.&#13;
• You must alsf wake reports to this effect oftener, that we&#13;
4ay know.what is bein£»4^'^® • ^ have received so far only one short&#13;
-report. froW your operations; ao genera"i report, mrp, profile, to&#13;
-ive us any detailed i-^ea of the country or lines, the profile,&#13;
*&#13;
;^fWoimaps, fto, of lines run west of Salt Lake should have been in so as to&#13;
'' -' ' ♦ *■ ' ■ 0 *' D i'; ♦&#13;
edil fs.tt&#13;
* ■ ' -1 " ' '&#13;
^ •)-&#13;
, .- ' . . V&#13;
■ . '-VV?&#13;
January, 1867. ""f,&#13;
have been incliji^ed ,in the yearly report, which I am now holding for&#13;
your report.&#13;
It seems to me to be advantageous for merchants to, charge 7&gt;%&#13;
on bills of goods sold you when yon give a sight draft. Drafts on&#13;
New ^'ork have been generally sold at par or l/s premium.&#13;
X«i t ^&#13;
Gen. Dodge to Ldr. Knapp, Omaha, Sept. 17, 1866 (21DR218)&#13;
r&#13;
You are hereby furnished plot of the town of Grand Island,&#13;
flnri authorited to sell, lots at the following prjoces:&#13;
* , .&#13;
Note; Ofen. Dodge to L. B. Nichols, Omaha, Sept. 17, 186'6 (21DR218(&#13;
: II " M " Chittondon, Omaha, Sept.17 '66 (21DR219)&#13;
Evans, Omaha, Sept. 17, 1867 (21DR219)&#13;
(Jen. Dodge to T. Bur ant, Omaha, Jan. 31, 1867 (21DR220)&#13;
In answer to your dispatdh &amp;£ th® SOth 1 submit a statement&#13;
6f the Engineer account: ' i." 1&#13;
t'l .r .4%^ j suppose y&lt;iu mue-tT'hSVe assume d In your-dispatch that as both&#13;
Engineer's and Land accoUlttai ^re charged up to me as Chief Engi&#13;
neer, that It all le eharg»al3le to Engineering account, and you&#13;
compare that with former engineering aocounts; whereas. Land ac&#13;
count used to be returned by Mr. Cook now It Is returned b;r me as&#13;
*Land Account, but Is^ehlWd up to me as Chief En-ineer In Engi&#13;
neering account. h . - h&#13;
There Is chargeable to Land account proper |23,200.00&#13;
•• Expenses of Mr. Maxwell's of 7,550.00&#13;
501766. GO&#13;
'"'Ct ■&#13;
■'4'- ■ ^&#13;
mmM&#13;
' it&#13;
January, 1867. .7X'"&#13;
' As Mr. Maxwell was employed most of the time on depot grounds,&#13;
towns, right of way and section lines. **&#13;
Upon examination £svaTn1in&lt;^ + i r\Trt of r\'f* the tVi o foremen r\ r»ornori expenses of rvf* the +.Vi^a Division Dttttot r\Y^ Engi- TS&#13;
neers, I find that their accounts are very little more this year&#13;
than any'other year, although they have done twice as much work&#13;
the past year as'they ever'did before, arid have been i'n the field&#13;
*nearly ten months instead of six or eight as formerly; and two&#13;
parties, one in Black Hills and one in Utah, have kept the field&#13;
I'../ all wintei:; while one or two parties have been engaged all winter&#13;
on'the river .and ri\(er lines. / .t "&#13;
Another .thing which l^as been a saving to the company this&#13;
'year&gt;'all parties their teams. Company now owns them; they&#13;
are in good condition Jteady fojr spring work.&#13;
The only party I am inclined to charge with^'extravagance ,is&#13;
Sfi^lt Lake party --thairiexpensea have run up largely. I have written&#13;
Mr. Batiea eaationing him'as to expenses; but being so far away I do&#13;
not like to Judge the necessity of them without a full knowledge&#13;
of the facts; his expenoeS are much larger than Mr Reed's were,&#13;
ihough Mr. Reed did not keep a party in field through the winter but&#13;
i think worked as ma^iy- .i»ntha in the year as Mr. Bates up to Jan. 1st.&#13;
During the pa»t year we have kept two more prties in the&#13;
■ field than any year before wtid the result of, the year's work ^&#13;
■ -'stwihw-that too much enginde^PAng H don© in a country so&#13;
little known as the plains and mountains west of us.&#13;
''' .. ,&#13;
i Vi;, '&#13;
■ ■ Vu''-^'&#13;
■ / ■•••■X-iR ■&#13;
Janu0y*y» 1867. ' , ': ':T.&#13;
, ' If yot^ take the expenses of parties per month thfct they have&#13;
worked, you will see that their expenses aSe less than any year's&#13;
before, .and if you could compare the work done in 1866 with any&#13;
other year, the amount of lines r\in, loc.ated, &amp;c. you will perceive&#13;
it is. twi e as much as ever befoj e. j .&#13;
I have given a statement from the books of total amount ex&#13;
pended, amount of .vouchers returned and on hand, and have the ex&#13;
pense's all distributed, . ' . .ik&#13;
For this year we have, our• trains. I shall bring all my pro-&#13;
"visions here, whicft'will be*a great saving,, and transporting them&#13;
ourselves to our depot at Ft. Saunders; this will relieve us of the&#13;
high prices-paid oi4 the plains last s^eason. We never have heretofore&#13;
in that manner. been prepared for cfiabping on our ,.g . in that manner.&#13;
' parties will-start out this season by March 1st. taking&#13;
their escorts from obhVeniepi posts, and we will be able to keep&#13;
50&#13;
out Of the way and have bime to examine our lines and correct them.&#13;
The past year grading and track have been on our heels, and&#13;
last sprin- w- had not one mile's work ahead,not even a prelimin&#13;
ary line to guide 'ikHf th IJhe country we built through; now we have&#13;
180 mles Ideated in advance and our line determined to Laramie&#13;
Plains, which will give us the season tg work up the country fr m&#13;
there to Salt Lake, and we expect to materially cheapen that line&#13;
and improve It Wl iwU lievcW the pntire country adjcent to it.&#13;
Since i no.t to draw except on order, I&#13;
January, 18C7,&#13;
*v have met the drafts on me to the best of my ability, until I am&#13;
some $9000 behind and the out-fitting of the parties in February&#13;
for the coining year will cause pretty heavy drafts on us, ,&#13;
/ Gen. Dodge tOT Jas, A. Brown, Omaha, 29th: (21DR224) ■ ''--'Jo&#13;
Yours of the 21st to Capt, Bailey has been handed me. 'The&#13;
money was paid your wife on her application in which she states&#13;
she was authorized to draw so much ever;- month. \Ve supposed that&#13;
to be_the fact, and paid her drafts. She had drawn $100 for Jan&#13;
uary before your letter was received. She has also made application&#13;
•for $100 more for February, but-1 instirjcted the office not to pay&#13;
^ except by your order. Hereafter no drafts of hers will be paid ■&#13;
unless by your direct order; she has been so notified. .&#13;
* Gen. Dodge to C. Durant, Omaha, February 2, 1867 (21DR225)&#13;
Augur has agreed with me to place detachments from Alkali&#13;
t*6 Laramie River t cover our workmen., placing them at convenient&#13;
'distances, not to excee&gt;^~ 2® miles apart, and to cover the road&#13;
' north and south with scouting parties, to give notice of the approach&#13;
of any hostile bartfla of Indians,.' . -&#13;
^ The troops will move out on the work with 't^e laborers, and&#13;
will be stationed at SuOh'flaees as w* iw^y recommend.&#13;
* Troops are 8saroe» and with the number they have in the de-&#13;
^partn«nt, the? have been liberals ; ia, o&#13;
(Jen. 6'6^ to Thos. H. Bates, Omaha, ?©b. 14, (3EiDR226) :-&#13;
G. T. M. Davis, Jr., maps and profiles tff line&#13;
January, 1867. . . ,&#13;
from Salt Lake City to Green River, at mouth of Bitter Creek, via&#13;
Weber River, Echo Canon, Yellow Creek, Sulphur Creek, Black Fork,&#13;
The line sent is the one recomaiendecl for adoption and location&#13;
by Mr. Reed, after spending three seasons in that country. He ex&#13;
amined numerous other lines shown on.the tracing that you have,&#13;
and one that I send with this. , -&#13;
This-line I want located and improved. You are not confined&#13;
to this line if you can find a better one. This is sent as the&#13;
■ .2&#13;
guide for future operations in locating, '"t- 1 j &gt; tiuooS ;&#13;
t desire that particular attention be given, to reducing work,&#13;
grades and curvature if possible. I desire to get from Green River&#13;
to Salt Lake with grades not to exceed 90 ft, per mile, at any rate&#13;
not to exceed 100 ft. per mile. ^ « g*&#13;
1 have not seen the coxmtry personally,'tut call your"atten&#13;
tion to canon at ,nout^ of Weber River, and west of that line. I&#13;
think it can be thrown up on slope so as to come iSown through canon&#13;
at 90 ft. to 100 ft. grade: - - •&#13;
2 id. The aummit to *t' e head of Echo Canon,' if more distance&#13;
could be gotten to lighten upgrade and work, or if you could com&#13;
mence ascending further down canon; '&#13;
3rd. The country betwden"Muddy and Sulphur Creeks, try to&#13;
find a ridge leading up that will give you better grades, or that&#13;
«ay entirely avoid head of Sulphur and let you into Bear Rfver at&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
some-other point. We have found, so far, that it is easier to reach&#13;
'Summits on ridges instead of following valleys and streams, but&#13;
the Wahsatch may b3e so broken that it is impracticable. .n'&#13;
./jOJtu i'j ' 4th. The country'between Black Fork and mouth of Bitter Creek,&#13;
ttf! ^at we want is a located line over the Wasatclj Mountains that&#13;
cannot hereafter be excelled. Mr. Reed has decided the country the&#13;
lin--: should go through, and he has given the whole mountain range&#13;
a thoroiogh examination, surveying lines urall streams, that indi&#13;
cated that they Iwere'practicable, and-the line he determiined to ,&#13;
locate is the one.I send you, I desire to give distance to grades&#13;
* When necessary, and many of the grades laid on the profiles in the&#13;
valleys can be reduced. f" '•) f.&#13;
■' .re I send you the pofile of Mr. Reed*s best line as a guide and&#13;
to Improve on, and I am very desirous that the maximum grade at any&#13;
jbint should not be^over 90 or ICQ ft. and as little of that as&#13;
pbssjible '. ~ c" ''p. „ ; iv i: " .r: »&#13;
*1 ".flir," Btihw ViU. h^^„e. party on the Laramie Plains developing&#13;
the country between Oreen River and Laramie^ River, and as soon as&#13;
■ llne'iw^dbcidbd, upon we shall locate,.&#13;
*■ - ' ' 'TdW had start your locationg&#13;
* i -&#13;
at Salt Lake, Locate to&#13;
sections of 100 miles ea-h, that Ig, from Station 0 to 5280, com&#13;
mencing •Mh'lOO mtlms 0. At each 100 miles is located • J .•&#13;
send profiles to at thi%pja^y, i , , . • . - , . During tha aummwr I Wha^e^P to Salt Lake to examine thai&#13;
January, 1867. .T*",!; , ■&#13;
country and decide upon the lines. I want you to meet me at Green&#13;
Riyer. TThenever the country indicates Ithat you can improve the&#13;
\&#13;
line by using other streams, ridges, &amp;c. try them. It will not do&#13;
for us to build a line over these mountains that some day it may&#13;
be, discovered, there are oth' r and better onos,&#13;
— •« • &lt;&#13;
The Wasatch Range, it is supposed, can be turned by way of&#13;
I " «&#13;
Bear River, but the direction is bad and increases distance tgo&#13;
much unless we should go north of Salt Lke. I wrote you about&#13;
that country, and you may develop something in your trip north that&#13;
will cause us to run lines in that direction.&#13;
I have been informed that the conntry between Pear River and&#13;
Green River is very ligh and broken; also the country betwe h Bear&#13;
' • ■ - t ■ a -&#13;
River and Salt Lake is the same, so that we will have to make the&#13;
* t 1&#13;
entire Ijand from Wliere we enter Bear River at Ft. Bridger or to&#13;
Salt Lake.&#13;
Should we take that route, it is not improbable that I shall&#13;
order a preliminary from southwest of Promontor;'' Point to Bear River;&#13;
thence up that strewa to where Mr. Reed's line c rosses it; at the sam&#13;
time endeavoring to find a feasible crossing from Bear River to&#13;
Green, farther north than lir. Reed's, but not too far north for a&#13;
good connection with the Laramie Plains line.&#13;
Wo can craBf the main range at any point between South and&#13;
Bridgor'o Passeo&#13;
' 'ft ■) ' , ■?&#13;
run this line I will telegraph you.&#13;
i '&#13;
January, 1867.&#13;
Prom #iat knowledge I can get of the country, the past surveys indi&#13;
cate that a line to Humholdt River is best, by way of Promontory&#13;
*■ ' 'f ^ V » ^ ' ■ d&#13;
Point, Thousan'^ 'Springs Valley' &amp;c. '&#13;
I desire you to communicate with me oftener than you have done&#13;
the part year, giving me an i'^ea of the country you are developing,&#13;
the progress of your work, and sending me' rough maps and profiles.&#13;
when necessary to have me fully understand the question, so that in&#13;
case it is not convenient to send the field notes I can ma ke them&#13;
up here. You will also note carefully the availabili'ty of the&#13;
country to furnish material of all kinds for the building of the&#13;
road, its geology, mineral and agricultural resources, and collect&#13;
specimens of all, carefully labelling them, and when found, also&#13;
give attention to the coal, iron one copper.&#13;
Ve not only desire to overcome the engineering obstacles, but&#13;
to obtain a full knowledge of the country,&#13;
I must Impress upon you the Importance of using the greatest&#13;
j T a V:&#13;
Dossible economy in your operations, having in view the effectiveness of your party, also that no time be wasted.&#13;
No detailed information or notes of the surveys will be given,&#13;
t&#13;
except uon the order of the company or upon mine. In drawing&#13;
drafts for your current expenses while in the field, it would be&#13;
better to make them at a few days sight, in all cases notify me by&#13;
letter of yopr drafts that I can prepare to meet* them. *'« v&#13;
On the niaps sent you, I have noted changes by Mr.&#13;
January, 1867.&#13;
Reed, and by the profll§ and topography of the coantry thre line up&#13;
Lost Creek and over the Wasatch Mountains I v/ant carefully examined.&#13;
Mr. Reed is strongly of the opinion that it will giyo mope distance,&#13;
lighten grades and work.if we should determine.to run a line up.&#13;
It will be well to seek an outlet for it to Hanj's Fork and&#13;
then to Creen River, the tracings of Mr. Reed show his lines and&#13;
' reconnoissances up the Wasatch Mountains. He has never examined&#13;
. the line up Bear Creek. no r , . : ^ .^&gt;2&#13;
' Gen. Dodg® to T. Brown, Om^ha, 29th (21DR230).,&#13;
i?" ' You will this season^ take charge of your old party and report&#13;
to'kr.Evarls for instructions relating to your future duties, and&#13;
feceive orde s from him. L . .&#13;
AS you are to develops new country, and will, a portion of your&#13;
time be by yourself, I desire you to write me as often as pactioable, giving.ae such information as may be of interest, also that&#13;
* •itli'feur notes »ty t#pt full and accurate. The reports made to&#13;
me are simply for my information as may be of interest, also that&#13;
all your notes may be kept full and accurate. The reprts made to&#13;
me are simply for my information and to enable me to keep posted&#13;
a« to your pfTOfpress, Your orders and instructions will come from&#13;
'"'"litid. .fevans. . ; .&#13;
i^eetHhiah yW work. With the greatest possible econ&#13;
omy. Rote the geology of the country its agricultural and mineral&#13;
resourcae, retain apeaimens, and especially note the ability of&#13;
the country for providing all kinds of material for building the&#13;
V...&#13;
January, 1867. . ! , ' '&#13;
. '■■n You will accomfsny Mr. Evans to Ft. Saimders about Hacch 1st,&#13;
I enclose letter of credit should you at time be obliged&#13;
to draw. Mr, Evans wii:* generally provide you with furids.&#13;
. 1 1 . Note: Hen. Dodge to F. W. Hammel, Omahg., 27th (21DR231)0&#13;
Nw JIt Gert. Dodge to L. L, Hills, Omaha, 14th (21DR232)&#13;
fc rr " You will take the .field with your party about March Ist,&#13;
Proceed to Fort Sedgwick; there obtain your escort of 50 men,&#13;
20 mounted and 30 infantry, the order for.which you will obtain/&#13;
from Brevt. Maj. Gen. C. .C. Aug\ir, Comd, Dept. of the Platte.&#13;
When you will proceed up Lodge Pole Creek and make the changes&#13;
in located line that I have designated to you on the map, or try&#13;
the changes in order to see if you can improve Abe grades on pro&#13;
file. •' • 1 :;v ' , jAfter acrcomplishing this you will immediately examine the&#13;
country between Lo^^ -e Pole and Crow Creek crossing, to ascertain the&#13;
best possible line to be gotten on that 31 miles, giving particular&#13;
attention'to the rough Crow Creek, to ascertain&#13;
if we cannot reach that valley without the heavy grades and re&#13;
duce the work.&#13;
I desire to reach Crow Creisk wi^H hot. to exceed a 30 ft, grade&#13;
or "t any rate not to exceed a 40 ft. unless it be jus.t east of the&#13;
descent to Crow Creek, as heavy grades here are not,sw objection&#13;
able as one further east. ~ - . . j o o'* u . ^&#13;
After finishing thii/^^Ation"f«l^ nt^tlfy Mr. Evans of the&#13;
February, 1867&#13;
distance on the 6th 100 miles, so that he can end the location of.&#13;
the 6th 100 at the proper station. ; • ■ ' ' 'V&#13;
Then the country to Denver, having in view a branch, will be&#13;
carefully examined, especially the divide between Lone Tree and&#13;
Crow Creek, and between Lodge Pole and Crow Creek. , , ; ^&#13;
I desire to get the best practicable line through that country,&#13;
at the same time availing otirselves of the .immense coal fields near *&#13;
and betvreen Crow, Cre©it and Box Elder. ^ • • ^&#13;
This line ^11 he constructed to Denver on north side of Platte&#13;
Ffiver", to ascertain how it compares with line on east side of&#13;
Platte River. After developing the country for branch line to&#13;
Denver -cm will receive further orders from me. I desire to be&#13;
kept fully posted as to your progress, what you develop, and fur&#13;
bished with maps and profiles of line, so that I can, a- they may&#13;
progress, have si full understanding of the .matter. You must bear&#13;
in mind that you cAnnot make your notes too full or your reports&#13;
too often. ' ^ M ,&#13;
Soi will also give attention to the facllltteB of the country&#13;
for affording all kinds of material for the building of the,road.&#13;
of Its eulogy,soil ani agrloultural oapabllltias. oolleotlng and&#13;
proourlng and properly labelling specimens to be forwarded to this&#13;
office. Oosl, 'iron 'and copper will be espeoially noted, and aflj.&#13;
other facts relating to thd geography of the oountryor anything that&#13;
■ 'will b. of interewt to th. will be fully noted and reporty/im f&#13;
■ ■.5^1 m' l®&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
ed on,&#13;
TiV&lt;i&#13;
"'S oc , '^11-. ?:i "'ja oos/oiri;:.&#13;
You will take with you aa many supplies for party as your&#13;
*' transportation will admit of, and when practicable will notufy Mr.&#13;
House at Omaha office of your wants, when he wi-ll purchase and ■&#13;
forward to such "parts as you may 'direct. &lt;&#13;
" • Use all possible economy in your expenditures and expense® of&#13;
the party, having in view its efficiency and effective organiza&#13;
tion, and allow no time this -summer to be waflted. Tmen in the o&#13;
field, parties should work from svnrise to dark.&#13;
For the necessary expenses of the party in the field you will&#13;
draw on me. It is better to draw qn a few days sight in all cases,&#13;
when practicable, notifying me in advance of your drafts. (&#13;
- According to the instructions of the company no information&#13;
or note of our surveys will .be given except by their or my order.&#13;
^ Gen. Dodge to J. E.. House, Omaha, 14th, (21DR234)&#13;
ThP Ottaha office* lan4 and right of way, station ground and&#13;
Mr, Maxwell's party is placed in your charge, and during my absence&#13;
• 'you will have to take charge of the necessary duties devolving up&#13;
on me, keeping close w atch of the 1 nd and station towns, also such&#13;
duties as under, the contract may devolve upn this office.&#13;
' ' " The track will h"® measured up before examined, such maps&#13;
' j&#13;
and profiles as may reqiilre finished.&#13;
' A# stjon as R map off ^ 10(1 mileej^ comee in on located line, on&#13;
Wilf W immediately t»o Hew.York to be filed in Washington ^&#13;
also profiles and maps furnished the superintendent of construction.&#13;
L&#13;
,11 t( ■ ■.\&#13;
I V,'&#13;
' . ■'/. .Vvv^.&#13;
■■ ., •«. V,&gt;V 'L i'.A' V&#13;
■ • ■ 4f.'-&#13;
February, 1867. ^&#13;
The regular monthly estimates will be made by you, and if I&#13;
should not return before work is opened or new sections examined,&#13;
\L desire you to go over the work, to see that at is in accordance&#13;
with the contract, and is in a fit condition to submit to the com&#13;
missioners. Mr. Reed who will have charge of construction will no&#13;
/ioubt give you the necessary facilities for doing this.&#13;
You will respond to the calls of the chiefs of parties in the&#13;
field and furnish them;with hhat they may nded. You are also authorize.d to sifin ayjT name to such reports and documents as require&#13;
ay signature^ ■ 1 o " . " .&#13;
* Mr. kaxwell will lay out the depots as fast as located at all&#13;
points between North Platte and Fort Sedgwick; 160 acres will be&#13;
laid out and &gt;640 claimed; at Fort Sedgwick 320 acres • will • • be laid&#13;
out and two sections claimed. The lots fronting the depot will&#13;
hereafter be reduce^ to-24 ft. front, al3 others same size as for&#13;
merly. The price of the lots at the intermediate stations may be&#13;
reduced to range CMm |25 to $100 but at importarrt stations it is&#13;
better to Bell alternate lots and increase rather than decrease in&#13;
prices, especially the business and warehouse lots 'fronting on de&#13;
pot&#13;
^ ' i desfctti! b© fcwre all the papers, books, maps and profiles in&#13;
the office oTerhauled, as soon as your great hurry is over, proper&#13;
ly labelled, regulated and syatematlzo'i. Also our land and&#13;
matter .ill, as soon as « get the necessary blanks, be system-&#13;
L.&#13;
February, 1867. ♦ til"&#13;
atized.' work, as it comes in from the field parties, will be&#13;
* worked up and got into shape for reference and use. "&#13;
. " • According to the instructions of the Cou.pany, no information&#13;
or notes will be given to persons not entitled to them,,except&#13;
o: " ' • • . .&#13;
Upon their or my order. Al"' information requested by- the mili&#13;
tary or to the parties using it in the interests of the company,&#13;
,;Wlll be proper to give.&#13;
• ^ • 4 '&#13;
Gen. Dodge' to Oliver Ames, New York, 27th, (21DR23B)' t-il&#13;
&lt;•'! lupm-i&#13;
In compliance with your resolution of January 8th, 1867, I&#13;
have the honor to submit herewith an estimate of quantites on&#13;
abandoned line, with actual cost as given hy the Superintendent&#13;
and Engineer in charge when work was r^one.&#13;
Gen, Dodge to f," C. Duranf, New York, 27th (21DR23.6)&#13;
lUn -• .&#13;
In accordance with your instructiftns, I submit herewith in-&#13;
'n. I* ■ •&#13;
structions to chiefs of engineering parties, taking the field this&#13;
XXiir •&#13;
spring.&#13;
I respectfully request that if any change is made'in the instructions, that it be done At earliest possible moment, as the&#13;
parties are now all ready waiting for a telegram from-me^ to start&#13;
out; and our work is so extensive and so many com?&gt;ip«ited questione ai* to be decided \)y tfiis year'a' tha.t I desire to&#13;
ui^ ,eve 1^ moment of time.'*''*** ioit fo ••rtJ ^&#13;
feme t^eXferfmiT&#13;
,1. "etd j,&#13;
858» ■« .rcfw&#13;
yVT--frTT&#13;
• • ^ • &gt;, ** -s *' .. . . .V '• , ' . . 'ij- ; '.u;&#13;
». .;■ ■ ■ ■ . ■' ■■.4!-'. • ";■'&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to T. C. Durant, Omaha, 11th, (21DR237) :-. '&#13;
I enclose the footings of the estimates I have.made from end&#13;
of third hundred miles to Laramie River.&#13;
The country between Station 4434 and Crow Creek crossing was&#13;
examined so late, and in a snow stom, that I re-examined it to see&#13;
just what can be done, but I know I can reduce thd w rk as shown&#13;
on the profile. The line over Black Hills, as shown on profile&#13;
sent you, lays very nearly where location will lay, except in locat&#13;
ing we ^tfrtall throw out some 5ust before reaching summit .and decrease&#13;
work so®e west of"Uale Creek on Lodge Pole. . ,,&#13;
5th hundred, I shall make a few changes to shorten some of&#13;
the'di^ek crossings and throw out some of the long 30 ft. grades.&#13;
You will notice I make no estimates for contingencies that may, and&#13;
mbst always ftfe 'arise. ' '&#13;
Gen. Dodge io Gen. Augur, Omaha,. 7th (21DR240)^ .. .&#13;
This will intorudce Ur, J. A. Evans, Division Engineer in&#13;
charge of a party in Black Hills, also of party on Laramie Plains.&#13;
' 'Please give 'him the necessary orders to procure his escort at&#13;
Fort Saunders, as agreed by us, being twenty cavalry and thirty&#13;
infantry for party on Laramie Plaii&gt;6, and ten cavalry and twenty&#13;
Infantry for party in Black Bills• ^ ^&#13;
oen. to P. T. Brown, Omah- , 7th '21DR241)&#13;
•** 'tou are h«N»r awtb-orized to draw on me as Asst. Engr. for&#13;
the necessary expenses of your party while in the field during&#13;
Feb uary, 18G7.&#13;
1867. ' . ■ • VT.k., . n- :;r . •&gt; .•" -it ^h-&#13;
'' Gen. Dodge to Col. Henry R. Miziier, OmaHa, (21DR242)&#13;
Through the courtosy of the military authorities we have been&#13;
allowed to put a building and make our headquarters at Fort Saunders.&#13;
Mr. J, A. Evsuis, Div. Engr., who has charge of the work in&#13;
Black Hills and to Green River will keep his office with you; he&#13;
will at all times render you any assistance in giving you a knowl-&#13;
-'edge of the country, or do any work you may need in his line, with&#13;
lit: pleasure, You will find him a gentleman desirous of responding&#13;
pro ptly to rules and'Ordera. 1 bespeak for him that aid and as&#13;
sistance that I know you can always afford, and which my past ao-&#13;
•quaintance with you renders certain you will be glad to give.&#13;
« I hope to visit you during the summer, and enclose a trip-pass&#13;
should you want to come in beofre I send out our yearly passes.&#13;
§en. Dodge to jas..A. Evans, Omahg., 14th (21DR252)&#13;
'* '' You will take the field for. the coming season's work about&#13;
March let, 1867, •&#13;
' ' Two parties are now ifi Black Hills and Mr. Brown's will be&#13;
placed at your chftbge and will woir^ under your direction and in&#13;
structions. ■^inn malte -your depot of supplies at Fort Saunders&#13;
and that will be your headquarters. The party now in Black Hills&#13;
will finish'the "I'ooetion over Black Hills to Laramie River, and&#13;
the location west in lifl&lt;e'««'l »ay decide to adopt. Mr. ^&#13;
I • ^ &gt;.r&#13;
February, 1867. - ,&#13;
• I&#13;
Brown's party will be started west from Laramie River immediately&#13;
on arrival at Fort Saunders, to run preliminary line between Fort&#13;
Saunders and Green River. Thin country I want fully developed, and&#13;
the best practicable line for railroad from Laramie River to Green&#13;
River determined, I think the first line should bear strong north&#13;
80 as to keep out of the broken country along the base of the Medi&#13;
cine Bow Mountains and have if possible the high grades and work over&#13;
Rattlesnake Pass avoided. The country between Rock Creek and the&#13;
summit of the Main Range I desire to be given • particular • •&#13;
attention •&#13;
to,&#13;
and its adaptability for a railroad examined until the question is&#13;
satisfactorily determined. In closing, on Green River you are not&#13;
confined to any definite point, only to make a feasible and practi-&#13;
«i|)3l8 camiection with the line considered best by Llr. Keed and which&#13;
*&#13;
*&#13;
, l9B&gt; iwcoBiBiefided for location in a.is report,&#13;
J am anxious to obtain a line from Laramie River to Green&#13;
River that will reduce materially the grade In the old line; that&#13;
r., will also listen the work and not materially Increase the distance,&#13;
though X prefer to give distance to grades where It Is actually&#13;
- -,t,|iTT"y. In locating the line over the Black Hills I desire you&#13;
U study it on the ground and make a very careful location, reduce&#13;
works and grades, and endeavor to llghteh up all grades around&#13;
- curves so as to equalise then ae much as pssible, also examliA"&#13;
- minutely the ero.slngs of the Branch of I^ne Tree 6reeli and Dale&#13;
■ creek, having In view.the best^menner of crossing them with a per-&#13;
February, 1867.&#13;
■■ ■ , V . . . 1 . - . • _ f&#13;
menent structure, also the best manner of crossing them with a ternv prary structure. Our work may be so'delayed in the spring that&#13;
we may have to adopt a temporary crossing to rea ch Ft. Saunders&#13;
this season.&#13;
You will aloo examiine the points Where heavy work has to be&#13;
-i'&#13;
done in the mountains, to ascertain the feasibility of running&#13;
arbtind it temporarily, without interfering with permanent line or&#13;
work on it. You understand from personal conversation withme what&#13;
« T.o' ' •&#13;
is required, better than I can set it forth in instructions» arid will&#13;
, ' ^ .1 • c:&#13;
follow as far as possible those views.&#13;
The better policy this season will be to inform Mr, House of&#13;
What provisions you will need, in time, that he can purchase and&#13;
forward to your depot of supplies. Such funds as you may need "in&#13;
the field to keep up the necessary current expenses of the party,&#13;
^ you are authorized to draw on me for, and it Will be better to 'raw&#13;
on a few days' sight,&#13;
♦ •p:' • .. . .&#13;
It is not necessary to urge upon you the necessity of seeing&#13;
„that the chiefs of parties use the greatest possible economy and&#13;
keep the expenses of the party down as low aw ossible, without in&#13;
terfering with the effectiveness or the efficient organization;&#13;
klBo that their time in the field is not wasted. ^&#13;
I. have procured escorts for your parties of Gen. Augur, Comadding Department of the Flatte, men, 20 mounted and 20 in- F&#13;
fentry for Mr. Brown's Party» and 10 mounted and 80 inf*antry for&#13;
• ■ ^ ' I V . -J&#13;
February, 1867. '&#13;
the Black Hills party, - v .-,f&#13;
vf.,. On leaving Omaha, you will apply to Gen. Augur for .the neces&#13;
sary orders for your escort to join you at Fort Saunders, also on&#13;
Gen. Myers, Chief Q. Li. for orr^ers allowing the necessary repairs&#13;
that you may need at the different stations.&#13;
• •&#13;
The Secretary of War has furnished me an order for the purchase of coEjmll^fi^y supplies, a copy of which you will take with&#13;
you.&#13;
' I desire you to communicate with me as often as possible, that&#13;
1 may be kept fully posted in .the progress of your parties and de-&#13;
&lt; *&#13;
velopment of lines, sending such maps and profiles as will enable&#13;
■ j&#13;
me to obtain a full \anderstanding of the lines and country. 4 . fc . *•&#13;
I Shall endeavor t9 visit you in May or June, to examine the&#13;
lines personally, and hope our, surveys may be so far advanced that&#13;
we may •* detemine very nearly what portion •&#13;
of the country west rt. . of&#13;
Laramie River tt will )&gt;e best to make * our final S' location. You will&#13;
also give attention ic the ^^piallitlos of the country, in affording&#13;
all kinds of material for building of the road, of its geology,&#13;
soil and agricultural oapabilitles, and preserving specimens of&#13;
coal, iron and dcps^r will bw especially noted, its extent, &amp;c.&#13;
According to the inftructioae of the Company, no informaton&#13;
or not^s nf s^vey will be, given owt except by their order "or mine.&#13;
'''den. T&gt;o^ge to S. B. Ree.^ Ikiaha, 16th, (21DR243)&#13;
The profile of the 8th hundi^mlles. so far as located, has&#13;
February, 18C7. ' t/r;&#13;
been sent you. The map is being traced. 'An estimate of qaantities&#13;
by section will also be handed you in a few days. I have endeavor&#13;
ed to k(?ep our grades below 30 feet per mile , and in order to do&#13;
this and avoid some objectionable work, I -sha-ll change the line in&#13;
a few places, lir. Hills will do this early in March. If he should&#13;
not be able to make his change, so as to throw line out of very&#13;
light cutting, I'^am in f'avor of' increasing the grade, thus increas&#13;
ing-the bank.&#13;
I desire, also that the engineers in charge of bonstruction to&#13;
be instructed, when practicable, when the grade strikes the surface&#13;
or skims it closeiy/'^o change grade so as to-give it at least one&#13;
foot bank. No doubtf, in levelling up thd grades they may vary some&#13;
•J flrom what the profile shows, especially when grade line lays near&#13;
the surface, and the enginebr on the work can always change them&#13;
80 as to improve such points.&#13;
■ Buring n,y abaonca lir. House U left in charge of my office and&#13;
he will furnish you with suOh' data a« yob may need, and prepare.any&#13;
ijprk that la" required of hlH. 1 have given him full Instructions&#13;
abou» measuring up track, lajlng off towns, 4o. and would like you&#13;
give him the lid of four ewperlence in any matter you think can&#13;
be improved on oV needs atteftding to.&#13;
J. E. House to''%os. Ctoaha, S^th. (21DR244) ^&#13;
• • i ♦ M iwljftiiX t)od|5e gone to^ iVash ington.&#13;
a;i&lt;louxlv to hlifi- fr* Kta In regard to sending (&#13;
February, 1867. r&#13;
♦ t ' ' ' - .1&#13;
your instrrnnents. Instructions, stationary, &amp;c. which he ordered&#13;
me not to send, when he left, until I heard from him after he arrived&#13;
in New York,. Your things are all here waiting his orders an will&#13;
be sent to you in charge of a gentleman from this office so as to&#13;
insure no delay. , . . .&#13;
I hope yotz have met with no accidents in the snows of the&#13;
Bannock Mountains.&#13;
t to aftftlq&#13;
"iT '♦r&#13;
^en. Dodge to Oliver Ames, ^21BFl259)&#13;
The estimate for 400 ft. trestle briging, pile foundati on at&#13;
foot of.grade in Elkhorn Valley is 4,413 dollars, and of 100&#13;
feet at east end of bridge, 1,200.00 dollars, which is much less&#13;
than I expected, and less than I wrote you,&#13;
I have turned bill of timber over to Mr. Snyder to be gbtten&#13;
out. Would like approval of proper authorities before putting it&#13;
^ .::rW* « • ig., , 4 _&#13;
Vice President to Hon. 0, H. Browning New York, March 16th.&#13;
.N."&#13;
The Union Pacific Railroad company in December submitted to&#13;
your department a map and profile showing their line over the Rocky&#13;
Mountains and requested that by the President of the Uhited States,&#13;
under Section of thd Act of July 2d, 1862, a point on the&#13;
line as sho n on map and profile known as the Crow Crebk Crossin«» b^.^f,^pated as, inder the Act above mentioned, the East&#13;
.of-tlie Rofky Mountains. Upon consideration of the matter, the&#13;
President deciied to send an engineer to examine t'he line, Verify the&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
, "tejittSo -i&#13;
map and profile and to decide' thb point.' We'nbw respectfully but&#13;
urgently request that the engineer'be appointe-^ and sent. The Com&#13;
pany are willing to pay the expenses of the engineer and make all&#13;
the necessary arrangements to enable him to detemine the matter&#13;
and fully comiy with the requirements of the President. The delay&#13;
in this matter is causing a derangement and embarrassment in the&#13;
plans of the compny that will be very detrimental to our progress&#13;
this year. Our work in the mountains must be commenced immediately&#13;
to enabl-^ us to cross them this year; and we cannot commence work&#13;
t * ' ■ t ■ so far in advance of our completed line and in the mountains until&#13;
the east base of the Rocky Mountains is decided, as upon that is&#13;
■■ f&#13;
based all our plans for provi'^ing the money and finding the means&#13;
It ' I ,&#13;
^ .to make our payments on work so heavy and costly.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to Benj. F. Brinker, Omaha, 21st, (21DR246) Note.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to Charles Tuttle, Omaha, 21st, (21DR246)&#13;
Enclosed please find draft in payment for David Van Lennep's&#13;
vouchers, as directed in yours of 16th March.&#13;
J. 8. Rouse to Thos, H. Bates, Omaha, 21st, (21DR247)&#13;
I send you the following Instructions, that were given me by&#13;
* ' ■ t . n ,&#13;
Oenl. Dodge V, .&#13;
In accordance with the instructions from the compan/, -each&#13;
Chief of party or 1st Asst. will provide'hia own transit. ^8hen he&#13;
has none, one of the Company's will be furnished, and charged up&#13;
to him.&#13;
■"1 '!&lt; -&#13;
. 'v-i'&#13;
, » • y«.%Vv' iy2&#13;
' ,- *J l' , • W I&#13;
Jil3.rclij 1867 • -i~. . - 'g'! ■'&#13;
. . ^ . Each Asst. using level and rodman carrying rod, will be gov&#13;
erned in the same'way, ■ - . .&#13;
This is intended to establish a rule that all instriaments are t&#13;
be furnished by the persons using them, •&#13;
Ge'.;, Dodge to Gen. Sherman, January 14th, 1867. , jfDfw&#13;
v^ » • Yours of 5th Jan. came duly to hand, I enclose a rough map&#13;
of located line from North Platte Gity (crossing of North Platte&#13;
river) to Fort Saunders crossing of Laramie River, for your private&#13;
information. It will give you location better than I can describe&#13;
it. V'e run up Lodge Pole 150 miles, leaving it 65 miles east of&#13;
camp Walbach, not far from where the Middle Fort Laraiaie and Denver&#13;
wagon-rdad crosses that stream. You put a lot of friendly Indians&#13;
*&#13;
in campwhere this road crosses Hen Creek when you were up there&#13;
.last yefMp. We then'^ave 31 miles to crossing of Crow Creek, going&#13;
some 700 ft. elevation in this distance; here commence ascending&#13;
- mountairrs, and *e consider Crow Creek Crossing as the Eastern base&#13;
of liouhtalna. It t« on a meridian nearly 20 miles east of Cainp&#13;
Walbaoh; from this crossing to Ft.. Saunders it is 59 miles. We get&#13;
into Willow Springs stage station. ,&#13;
I noto ^at you say about military permits. At North Platte&#13;
fit the and" Of. first 400 mile division. We shall put up extra warehoujses, romm houses, machine shops, &amp;o. and it is now rapidly&#13;
huildln^ tM4) p town. No difficulty in accommodating here ali&#13;
bu8lne»B or 4r*|w.A)vernn^S|fe,aay send over us. North Platte la&#13;
m.&#13;
March 1867. • - -&#13;
- also the "base from which contractors will operate next season, the rail&#13;
road from Omaha to that point going into Compzn's hands Jan. Isli'&#13;
to be operated by them. We are putting up there all-our ties,&#13;
iron ^.c. for next year's operations. In Llay we mean to be at Sedgwick where we can '1 n^^ all Oovernment steres if desired, and by 1st&#13;
of September at Crow Creek Crossing, and at the end of 1867 at Fort&#13;
Saunders. Either at point where we leave Lodge Pole or at Crow&#13;
Creek crossing will be the end of our neX' division and where we&#13;
shall change machinery for movement west. We shall no doubt build&#13;
up a great' place hei'e or near'here, and the Denver Branch" will- i&#13;
connect at or" near one of these points. I am unable to say whiciC ^&#13;
Just now, but" think Crow Creek " ill be the place. Fort'LKramie c»r&#13;
will be reached in 60 to 70 miles over an excellent road, either!&#13;
by road going "along east base of Black Hills, which you .travelled,&#13;
or by Middle Laramie road, equally as good and, I think, better...&#13;
Wagon treads, in fact, from either pointy in any dlrectiqn» are good.&#13;
It may be, you will finally determine to make .your depot for&#13;
^Laramie on north. At Saundeffe M, is nearer timber, coal, &amp;o, than&#13;
either of the points on east base, and is not much farther from Fort&#13;
Laramie, Howdver, during the season you, no doubt, will use Lodge&#13;
Pole crossing first, then Crow Creek, and then determine where |ou&#13;
will finally settle down.''' • , .o'.uo&#13;
We are doing all in the powe'r fsttlftg ®ut tiee,i&#13;
' Jt ^ ' tTs&#13;
paahing forward interests, so that wfe dAli»1»nftLeit0 Qur plans ..j&#13;
March, 186 7.&#13;
) . getting to Laramie Rivei in 1867, If we have no financial crisis,&#13;
P' 80 as to close our urse strings, and meet with no unforeseen ob&#13;
stacle, I predict we will make it. I have my fears for the future.&#13;
Financial matters generally do not look well for the country. If&#13;
♦ ♦&#13;
extravangance and bringing to use more than we sell d n't throw us&#13;
on the breakers, we are all right.&#13;
I wrote vou about Gen. Cooke, We get along first rate with&#13;
" « • . -■ "■ ■&#13;
all the military, and if any new commander comes, I am ready, and&#13;
' -i&#13;
shall be glad, to give him all aid, information or anything else&#13;
in my power to help him along in taking care of Indian troubles,&#13;
' ' I' • t •&#13;
• .&#13;
overland route, &amp;c.&#13;
We want to cover our work from Alkali to Laramie RiVer as soon&#13;
* - ' •« *&#13;
as the frost leaves the ground. Con tractors are arriving*, pushing&#13;
west and getting ready. I hope you will have troops to give us&#13;
ample protection. We are going to b" scarce of laborers, and any^&#13;
lajck of protection, so that workmen lose confidence in their secur''&#13;
ity, wowld he almost fatal to us, as we must not lose a minute's&#13;
time if we carry out our plans. I believe the moment you get into the&#13;
Indian country with troops for a camping, they wil 1 leave the&#13;
Platte route, h»t yo» kng,w that it will require troops on the line to&#13;
give the workmen confidence, Tha t ^&#13;
made an official application setting forth what I thought we should need&#13;
Gen. Myers is an able &lt;4, m.;., understands his business hnd does&#13;
X, Sir- '''*&#13;
and ^ have n® trouble. j ,&#13;
* • i&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
■ ,.7 &lt;/A ■ . . U "ti , . .i... ■ ^ ■■' .&#13;
I aai^l in my letter about Cooke thct you would need 5000 men&#13;
east of the moimtains and north of the Platte. To put it st onger,&#13;
I think in Nebraska, caiorado, Utah, Dakota and Montana, west of&#13;
• ',T&#13;
Missouri River, you will nerd ten thounand. At any rate, don't do t ■&#13;
as I had to--get well after the Indians, and then let the Interior&#13;
Department at Washington stop you; but get after them early and&#13;
follow them to Doomsday, without any let up, until they are punish&#13;
ed for past crimes'and will respect the pow-r of tlie Government in&#13;
the future. They look upon us now as a lot of old women, who do&#13;
' . v,. ' -li&#13;
not know whether we are for war, or peace, or both.&#13;
Q, B &amp; Bt, Joe R.H. is now rtmning from Council Bluffs feo iniles&#13;
south; N.W.R. within five miles, landed your troops within eight&#13;
of Omaha. You can buy all the produce, flour, grain &amp;c. needed&#13;
for troops and posts north of Kansas and Nebraska state line in ^ «&#13;
Western loU', and lay it down in Bluffs or Omaha cheaper than you^^ . ■&#13;
can buy it in St.Louis The Road sout lets us 'right into finest C '&#13;
part of Northwestern Missouri, and best part of western Iowa; road&#13;
east takes us right into the grain and produce regions of Centrali&#13;
Iowa.&#13;
; .'it&#13;
to very busy making surveys for "the bridge across lllsMUTVl&#13;
!'Rlv.r-a knotty',uestlon. but can solve It. »a"t to build this&#13;
, ,,»ar, ,,Jla, be forced to wait until after eprlng freshets before we&#13;
oan do nuch; then we .111^ ti^ iV on". ' • .r&#13;
Mrs. D. and myself desire to be rdmenibered to lirm. rS,. and fsisl&#13;
m&#13;
March, 1867. , • was very, very sorry to hear of Sayer*s death. Saw Gen. Grant in&#13;
Washington. Says he^wlll go to Denver in the spring. I go to Utah&#13;
about Mav or J'une to settl'-: location from Laramie River to Salt&#13;
■' , I&#13;
Lake, Are you not going out then? ^&#13;
I .believe I have answered all questions and given y-^u such in-&#13;
• - 1 «&#13;
Sight as will enable you to reap the benefit (if there is any) in&#13;
your military operations, I keep Gen, Coo e an^^ his staff depart—&#13;
" I&#13;
ments privately posted, so they can take all advantages in their&#13;
movements.&#13;
■ 1 .: i' ':r&#13;
Iffhat I have said a" out points, intentions, &amp;c. of Railroad&#13;
Company I prefer you should not make public, as such things often&#13;
give us trouble.&#13;
(JO&#13;
Gen• Shennan to Gen* Dodge, St. Louis, January 18, 1867#&#13;
'&#13;
I have jusr re a"' with intense interest your letter of the&#13;
14th though you wanted it kept to myself, I believe you will&#13;
I&#13;
sanction my sanding it to Gen. Grant for his individual perusal, I , . u •&#13;
to be returned to me.&#13;
f* &lt;-) »»&#13;
It is almost a miracle to grasp your proposition to finish to&#13;
' r&#13;
Fort Saunders this year, but you have done so much that I mistrust&#13;
my own accept yours.&#13;
I regard this road of yours as the solution of the Indian af&#13;
fairs and of the Mormon qu.estion, and therefore give '4)U all I pbssibly can, ' ut the demand for soldiers everywhere and the slowness&#13;
of enlistment, especially among the" Blacks, limits OUr -bility to&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
f. .&#13;
respond. Naturally each officer exaggerates his own trou"6les, and&#13;
appeals for men, thus "Ord is greatly exercised lest the'Blacks and&#13;
whites commence a War of Race, and would have four or five regiments&#13;
scattered over the whole State of Arkansas to prevent local trouhles.^1 want to punish tand subdue the Indians, who are the enemies&#13;
of our race and progress, but even 'I'n that, it is well scmetimes to&#13;
— ^ . .. *&#13;
proceed with due deliberation. 1 now have'General Terry on the&#13;
Upper Missouri, Genl, Augur with you, and General Hancock just&#13;
belowj all young enterprising me, fit for counsel or the'field.&#13;
♦ t ' %&#13;
I will endeavor to arrange so that hereafter all shall act on com-&#13;
. ' r * • .&#13;
mon principles and with a common urpose, and the first step, of&#13;
coxirse, is to arrange for the accumulation of the liecessary men and&#13;
materials'at the right points, for which your railroad Is the very&#13;
thing.&#13;
; 'rv r ^ .&#13;
AufTur will be with you before this, and ydu will find him pre&#13;
pared to second you to the utmost of his power. I want him to&#13;
study.bis problem and call on Grant through me, for the least force&#13;
that is adquate for we must respect the demand from other quar-&#13;
• *&#13;
ters. Of course, 1 em disosed to find fault that our soldiers-'ai^e&#13;
now tied up in the Sout'-ern States, but in the light they are hoW&#13;
regarded, it would be impolitic and iraprodent for me to say so pub&#13;
licly. All I can do, is to keep General Grant well informed, so *&#13;
way distribute his army to the beat advantage f&lt;Jr lihe'^hdle&#13;
aount ry,&#13;
" '' -ij&#13;
• . -T;&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
r , f -&#13;
• t&#13;
As to supplies, Gen, Augur will be, and is, at liberty to con-&#13;
'&#13;
trol this question according to the state of facts. The staff of&#13;
ficers at Omaha are supplied with funds, and are on the spot, au-&#13;
• - •&#13;
thorized to buy or call for supplies from Chicago or SaijJt Louis,&#13;
#&#13;
Though West Iowa might supply your markets abundantly, yet if suddenly called on for millions of punds of flour, sugar, coffee and&#13;
bacon, they would jumpthe price, but you know we now have Quarter&#13;
masters and Commissaries absolutely disinterested, and qualified to&#13;
arrange this natter,&#13;
«&#13;
I will surely jDe up this year many times, and will go over&#13;
every rail more than once, I don't want to go to Utah until your&#13;
*&#13;
road appoached Bridger, which cannot be this year; and I don't , I&#13;
want Congress to bother itself about Mormon affairs till then--and&#13;
the Gentiles would do well to hold their tongues and pens xintil it&#13;
becomes feasible to act in case of laws or threats. It is nonsense&#13;
now for us to send a la^ge force there, and, besides, it is impossi&#13;
ble, and wouM be to the interest of the Mormons, by the prices&#13;
"Umw wou3id exact of us for meat and bread,&#13;
' , Don't fail to keep in with Augur, Myers, Sec,, who can of&#13;
.'o ,&#13;
service to you in ma^ we»ye« .&#13;
Qen. Sherman to Gen, Bodge, Saint Louis, January 22, 1867. *-( •&#13;
Jan. 9th, for some reason, did not reach me till toI had nothing to do with Cooke's removal, brdefr' orlginat-&#13;
: Ji -re&#13;
567&#13;
. • '&#13;
. ' • i t . O'i'"&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
• ,f..l f f- •• , • . i. f tr - •;•&#13;
ed at TTashington, and came to me completed, without my being consult-&#13;
- , v.;&#13;
ed, and I do not know what influenced Genl. Grant, but never sup&#13;
posed* G n . Cooke was in the least bo blamce for the Phil. Kearney&#13;
massacre. That post had been completed and e garrison increased&#13;
to the largest estimate made by anyone up to that time, and I would&#13;
have volunteered to Genl. Cook that explanation, only the instant&#13;
I sent him a copy of the feelegram,'he replied that he presumed I&#13;
was the cause of' his removal which debarred me from-.^making any&#13;
• * « ^&#13;
explnna tion.&#13;
As to Augur*, I only know him of his old army record, which was&#13;
very ^ood. He was always a favorite, and was, I think, one of&#13;
Grant's comrades of the 4th Infty. The probabilities are he will&#13;
be in conimand of that department a long time, and will soon master&#13;
all the questions, and be able himself, if necessarjr, in person, to&#13;
lead his troops. You will lose nothing by the change, for I will&#13;
make it incumbent on the military to give an earnest attention to&#13;
the protection of your road. You have Gen. H ncock on the south&#13;
of you and Augur alth you, two of our best officers, anil 'they shall&#13;
have every man that I can'get and spare. We are pressed for men&#13;
at all points. I fear the political status Bas a tendency to make&#13;
.. .the-WU of , property south obllvfous to "their own interest, for&#13;
outrages on negroes •nd'Union men south dppnr'to lnor».se. It la&#13;
alleged, because th..better.people don't lend their help to step.&#13;
It, as they say it u'none of their business. If our am, has to&#13;
568&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
do all the dirty police work of the so'^th :*ou c^n see it-wil] all \/&#13;
be absorbed the-e, giving us a small shore of the o.rmy for the real&#13;
public enemy--the Indian. But so far as interest in your success&#13;
is concerned, you may rest easy, that both Grant and I feel deeply&#13;
r&#13;
concerned in t e safety, of your national enterprise.&#13;
f&#13;
Gen, Sheman to Gen, Dodge, Saint Louis, February 20, 1867.&#13;
. t I have just received your letter of Feb. 8th and map. I now&#13;
have an engineer officer with me, Col. Merrill, the sai-ie, you will&#13;
remember, who went with Tliomas as far as Atlanta, He will now be&#13;
a.i3ie' to compile and make useful all u^aps that are authentic, and I&#13;
'■ , ••• "»&#13;
will be obliged for all and any you can giv-e me. f . * • ^&#13;
By this time you must be well acquainted with General Augur,&#13;
sJ&#13;
and I hope you will work together like brothers.&#13;
I will want to come up.to Omaha soon, and would like to have f \ ' '&#13;
a pass over the road from Chicago to Omaha. I have a yearly pass&#13;
over the Chicago and Northwestern road, but don't think that is&#13;
t J ■ y;&#13;
the company that coijes to Omaha, Do you know if the railroad from&#13;
Keokuk to will join the Boonesboro road by the Main Val&#13;
ley or move to the west Uy the Coon service of the Rock* Island&#13;
Road?' ^All.oould save distance by making junction with the finished&#13;
Omaha road at^a point in Carroll county. I am satisfied that our&#13;
St. Louif an4^1i4%sy;iri.peof»e are ative to the necessity and will,&#13;
tltiitii have communication witft Council Bluffs via&#13;
St.. Joaeph and, thg. Missouri Valley , as also by prolonging the North&#13;
.Jala&#13;
Mcrch, 1867. * ■&#13;
Missouri Railroad to the Keokuk and Des Moines. Condit Smith is&#13;
the contractor on hot'i and tells cie he is making* sure and good&#13;
■ ■ r;l ■ rln! 1 ' z . ■ " ^ 1-- -.v • ; - -•&#13;
progress.&#13;
■ V&#13;
, I think in another year, by'these railroads and the extension&#13;
of your great ro"d to the Blac^ Hills (Sanders, if possible) and&#13;
the Smoky Hill to tfie* rieighborhobd of Cheyenne hills , w6 can act&#13;
so energetically that both Sioux and Cheyennes must die, or submit&#13;
to our dictation. "This year'we ahe fofced to do the b^st we can,&#13;
but I hope you will keep your men at work, spite of rumors, and&#13;
even apparent dangers, for both General Augur and I will do all to&#13;
cover the working parties that is possible, only we may considerit better done by combining all against the rostile SiQux offen~&#13;
sivelyi instead of keeping the soldiers close in, in sight of&#13;
your men, I think with a little explanation from you, the working&#13;
parties will tmderstand that they are more safe along the Lodge&#13;
Pole, with our aoldierw two or three hundred miles ncfcth than if&#13;
•• f ^ » I those, same soldiora were close at hand, " ^&#13;
Gen* Sherraan to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, April 15, 1867&gt;&#13;
I got your two despatches from Chicago and Boone , and am sorry&#13;
at the general deluge, which cut you off froa the East, and has&#13;
prevented mo Tro going out to the end of the track. I Wanted to&#13;
see you, of course, because I know you will not exaggerate the.&#13;
chances.l\ You toow as well as I do that thfe failure' to transfer to&#13;
us the management of the Indisns simply makes it impossible for us&#13;
.■? Hf&#13;
' "I '&#13;
March, 1867.&#13;
to do anything conclusive., and sooner or later we must dispose of&#13;
the Sioux. Knowing,the previous nature of the Missouri River, I ,&#13;
prefer to operate.northward fro:r. the Pacific roads as a base, for&#13;
the reason that it is safer than to work bac/,*^as Sully did, to the&#13;
*&#13;
Missoiiri. ti'&#13;
I want to feel a reasonable certainty that the road will reach • ,&#13;
the crossing of Crow Creek this year, from thence, I take it we must&#13;
-haul north, and I know that you may have to expend a good deal of&#13;
labor yet on't^at finished part of the road, so as to diminish the&#13;
chances of its being interrupted. I would much rather see it fin&#13;
ished good to this base of the Black Hills, this year than to have&#13;
it slighted over to Sanders. ^You know that Sanders will not be a&#13;
good deot for Lftpamie, from thence the wagons would,have to haul^&#13;
back this way over the Black Hills to get to the Laramie noad,u4-&#13;
less ther^ be. wagon road straight from Sanders up to Fort Casper,&#13;
or better BtiU, straight toward Reno. \ xr;&#13;
i^rfHH&gt;08e we can oount on the Sioux fighting fromtthe Powder&#13;
Rivor BnS Co\uCi,ty,. which;; will be better for us than if&#13;
they go north of the liissoUrl* .j . »r .&#13;
I wish Gen# Augur had more cavalry, but it seems impossible&#13;
fo^ us to get more men; But if we can work past this year, I think&#13;
the next we cAn finish up thr Sioux, except as to their small horwethievlng bands, that mlkf trouble us-.for yea^s.&#13;
Tou saw thai Coftgreea w^d«i(i^ let me cleaij out the Republi-&#13;
M- - &gt; •&#13;
March, 1867. &lt; 'c wl:&#13;
can CoTinty. That may be all ri^t, isut I think a'clamor will ije&#13;
tfaised in Colorado, Kansas and Nebraska, that will force-it upon&#13;
us. Under present instructions we cannot attemjjt it unless they&#13;
break oftt intr open war, '&#13;
No matter what happens, my wish is that your road should bei&#13;
pushed to the east foot of the Black Hills, and then i don't care.&#13;
• t&#13;
Wright and Shoemaker promise 250 miles west of Riley this&#13;
year. Quien Sabef 'feut I hope so. ■ . n&#13;
Gen. Sherman to*t?6ii. Dodge, St. Louis, Ma:, 7, 1867. ' ickImI&#13;
I have your valuable" letter of April 28, and am fully convinc&#13;
ed that you will finish'that road this season to the head of Crow&#13;
Creek, and it may be to Port Sanders. -Where the spring has been&#13;
so prolonged, 1 think you may safely count o» a late fall. I will&#13;
not lo^6tie surprised if you lay rails up to Christmas. • • f.: -.'o v'&#13;
• V I think this year is our crisis 6n the plains, because every&#13;
month and year will diminish, the necessity for troops in the recon&#13;
structed states and give us more and more troops for the plains,&#13;
especially cavalry. If we could cheoic the universal disposition .&#13;
to cry out for help we could even nnw direct more men to the real&#13;
points of danger. General AUgur is bdanfl to make the progress of&#13;
your road safe, because it iS'the military base for the future, ,,&#13;
\nd the only difficulty h^"-will have will be to prevent sanding off&#13;
more and more of his troops to those remote places where the peo|e&#13;
clamor for'protection* At this mooent, there is an appeal from&#13;
-V' ■uiW'f':'.&#13;
S'l&#13;
' ''l',.' ' 'f;&#13;
1 .. . 11&#13;
Montana where they have a telegraph. Many ask for help, little- r&#13;
thinking it takes two or three months to get soldiers there. . rr. ,&#13;
' r ' We were all disappointed that Congress v.ould not transfer to ^&#13;
our custody the Indians. It would "ive us more work; but as soon • •&#13;
as any trouble arises, why the agents drop the Indians and call on&#13;
UH, But the real reason why we should have the control of the an- ^&#13;
nuities is, that* by means of the money already apporpriated for&#13;
the treaty Indians, our post commanders would have the means to r&#13;
- find and take care of the Indians who doa't want to fight. Whereas&#13;
now the rascals wKo are off all year on hunting and war parties,&#13;
come into the agencies at the time fcr the annual payments, and&#13;
receive just as much as the better dispose'd" class. ■ This, money, or&#13;
the goods and provisions, ought no-t to be given annually or semiannaully but rather daily or weekly as the Indians need.&#13;
I suppose I am in for the excursion up the Mediterranean., We&#13;
are advertised to sail for Glbralter June 8, and ought to reach . ..&#13;
Marseilles July 4. We are then to cruise along the Mediterranean&#13;
and Black Seas, stopping at Genoa, Leghorn. Naples, Athens, ConBtantinople and the Crimea (Sebastapol); then out to Smyrna,&#13;
Beirout, Joppa and Alexandria, back to the coafet of Spain and out&#13;
to k^-dina, and home in bctober. If you will keep Hichols here ad- „&#13;
vised, he will beach me through Gen..Dix at Paris, and I will arrange for Genl. Grant tb tele^«flr)h me, should anything, of enough&#13;
l,iportanae occur to call me back, in which event I will be^^repared&#13;
to leave the- ship and return via. England. My departments are now&#13;
well coniQanded, and should any combination of the troops be nexessary, General Grant will order. I would not go if I thought any&#13;
thing would suffer, but it is vain forme to.suppose my presence&#13;
necessary when Gen. Grant freely offers to spare me. I will bear , .&#13;
in Aind your wish and will write you some letters from nborad as a&#13;
keepsak" , and as evidence of my personal friendship. Wishing you-^&#13;
and, yours all possible happiness, &amp;c. ' ^ o-'i&#13;
- ' Gerr. Sheraa to Gen'. Dodge, St, LouiSfMay 27, 18G7,&#13;
«' ■" i received' your dispatch ajad now h-ve your interesting letter&#13;
V4' ' » ' t haVe h'ad ^-igisod 'deal o.T correspondence about the protection&#13;
of the country along the railroad, which I ^deem of the first im&#13;
portance, al-thougi to make it effectual I see no other way than&#13;
first to attack the Sioux wHo remain near the Yellowstone in de&#13;
fiance. If they&gt;omlkdnk as aTnatter of ^^curse, they will not&#13;
fine themsoi-^ to'ati«olring the trains that go to supply Phil.&#13;
Kearney,'an&lt;! '15. F. Siifttii tut wlH come south to your road. I&#13;
think GSn. Augur should go there in force, and we must also get&#13;
other troops to defend your working p^irties. I have asked Gen&#13;
Grant for another battalioA of cavalry for that special purpose,&#13;
and'if ke can he will grant it.. You know that thessame.call comes&#13;
from every other quarter, and. it ie very hard to aay which is of ^&#13;
most importance. I «l«h to: Ineurq you that I do pot under-value&#13;
you^^ work, for, on its-account, I give up^ my propsed trip to Europe,&#13;
"but if I can will come upthis sunmier and attend to it in person;. ,&#13;
but I know that of myself I can do little without a force in re&#13;
serve, and that I will try and obtain. If the worst comes to the ^&#13;
worst, I will call on Nebraska for a regiment of mounted troops,&#13;
&lt;for the special task of defending interests which are vital to her&#13;
progress. -I don't want to do this if it can be avoided, as every&#13;
state and territory that has contact with Indians ,wlll raise- a -&#13;
clamor, as has been done more than once, for local troops serving&#13;
in their own interest. One' would suppose more of the Regular Army&#13;
should be among the Indians where danger is imminent, instead of •&#13;
in Southern cities such as Mobile and' New Orleans, but when Mr.&#13;
Kelly can announce that he can hove all the Regular Army to back&#13;
'him in hia speeches at the South, we see that there is a call for&#13;
troops there, on questions that Snngress thinks as vital as those&#13;
of the Indians. I have the same appeals from Minnesota, Montanaand Dakota, as well as from Kansas, New Mexico and Colorado. Each&#13;
wants enough of the army to guard them against all the Indians, but&#13;
I'note your road as of the most importance and have given Cen,&#13;
Augur a very large portion of my whole command, but will increase&#13;
it if I can get the men. i ^ .&#13;
Gen, Sherman to Gen. Dodge, St«. tibuis, Jan. 5, 1867.&#13;
At New Orleans, I received your telootoe letter from New York&#13;
and I assure you, on its faith. I boafeted not ar little of the vast&#13;
« energy of our countryaien. 303 mllee of railrokd finish&amp;d in on^'t&#13;
year is a Teat that may well be boasted of . I assure you of my&#13;
^hearty congratulations and that the great problem of the railroad&#13;
seems to be solving itself very fast. * ^ .'"le''&#13;
• You are exactly right in making your location independent of&#13;
local influence. When I was at Denver and saw the lay of the land,&#13;
I felt cerbain that you would locate north of thab city, and said&#13;
so incidentally, but some fellow-got "ipld of it and pitched into&#13;
ite.iv'fts. it wasi none of my .business, I held my tongue and co^unsel,&#13;
but now the' pebbe there will see that thoug^: Denver is some, still&#13;
it is hot enough to direct from its course the Great national Hiyhwav.- I also learn wi't": pieasure that your Eastern connection is&#13;
done Within S2 miles, and I have ordered all troops and stores for&#13;
the department of the Platte to 50 via Chicago, Clinton and Omaha.&#13;
llie "l^d^s'df Col. Patterman,'s command up at Phil Kearney may&#13;
urnMs yeur people; but don't let it, for we shall persevere and&#13;
push that ro'atf to Virginia City, and it will divert the attention&#13;
of'thi-Itostlle Sioux f?e» your road. The point where you cross the&#13;
North Platte and Fort Laramie will become great military points,&#13;
and ydu should m&amp;kf arrangements with cars to land theee our troops&#13;
and stores. I take it for granted that you get along well^with^&#13;
Cooke and hi« quarte^aster* 'tlyers. ^&#13;
I wbuld like to- far. this side of old Camp Walbach yo «&#13;
- propose to l.av. the lcig. ?ole. It lookoA to me that you oouia&#13;
f '&#13;
take the divide seme ten miles this.side, and get up some 700,or&#13;
800 feet before you reach the Black Hills. I rei..ember well the&#13;
» difficulty in California. Our first locations clung to tho valleys&#13;
Cor some 30 miles out of Sacramento, and then it was too late to&#13;
rise the mountains. Whereas, now, the road begins to rise at one®&#13;
' on leaving the Sacramento, so that they get up near two thousand&#13;
feet before they strike the momtain. I suppose your location de&#13;
scends into the Laramie Plains not far from Willow Sr ngs stction,&#13;
12 miles southwest of the new Fort Stevens (John Buford).&#13;
The coming year, for better or worse, is to be an important&#13;
one for our country, and if you cQuld, by superhnman energy, reach the&#13;
. foot of the moTontains near Walbach, it would be a great achievement.&#13;
That will be the military point for th® road. North and south from&#13;
that point are good by reason of the nearness of wood, the abundant&#13;
' grass and water, and valleys which afford good roadways for travel&#13;
ling. I will do my utmost that Gen. Dooke have force enough to&#13;
• cover your parties absolutely, which will be easy from the forks&#13;
of the Platte westward, . , • r -&#13;
1 came up from I®w Orleans by rail. Saw our old stamping ^&#13;
ground, Jackson., Miss. ,^Canton, Grenada, Grand Junction and Kack-^&#13;
son, Twnn. t would offend me, but such was not&#13;
the case. 1 ^ ar^-quantity of old rebels, who were as&#13;
tt#'pdSSlble, **' ' . hut&#13;
- vn I the .great enteu?prlse as much suecess^ln 1867, as in&#13;
,*•' f.'&#13;
■■ f ^&#13;
1866, I am as ever your friend', i ' ^ I iMucli •ilf «3fP5i&#13;
■&gt;' : carter on Fort Bridger Reservation:. O'^ OOl&#13;
ti'^Xr. V There is^a tract of country, some two hundred miles in'width,&#13;
lying♦ilJdtw^.en the Rocky i.iountains on the east, and the Wasatch&#13;
Mountains on the west, the former dividing the vjaters that flow • .&#13;
into the Missouri River from those thn t ^low into th.e Gulf of Calif&#13;
ornia, the latter forming the .eastern rim of the Great Basin.&#13;
• Green River-rising to the north near the sources of the Mis&#13;
souri, Yellow Stone and Goltnnhia JRivers, flows south through the&#13;
centre of this tract and receiving the numhQrous at-^eams that flow&#13;
west from the Rocky Mountain-chain and east fr9n\ the "Wasatch and&#13;
its spur, the tiinta, cuts its way through the deep gorges of the&#13;
(&#13;
mountains and winding'around the eastern extremity of Uinta runs -&#13;
on to unite with Grand River to form the Colorado.&#13;
f'■ •"Id Uinta is a spur of the l/ITasatch, jutting out far to the East&#13;
and having thl®?^ks covered'*with perpetual snow,. . . .&#13;
Fort Brl3g4i»'i3 situated in arbeautiful valley of Black Fork,&#13;
a tributary of Green River, some thirty miles distant from the.&#13;
imse of the Uinta chain. Its latitude is 41 18* and 12 longitude&#13;
^ - *1 ^&#13;
110^ 32' 23" and elevation' above the sea 7Q1P&#13;
One mile aboVe the Fort, Black Pork dividesitself into five&#13;
hhannelB, and after pa'ssing thrdh^'tlie valley, again unita^, ,its&#13;
waters one mile below the post. One of these beautiful streams,&#13;
some thirty feet wide, spanned by foOt bridges, runs swiftly over&#13;
578&#13;
its pebbly bed thropgh the centre of. the parade ground, affording&#13;
to the garrison an abundanne of delicibup water, free from, all iranrities. I\tn isa-x 1&#13;
The portion of the valley in which the Fort is situated is&#13;
about three miles in width and is clothed with luxuriant and nu-&#13;
. 1&#13;
tricious grass, which is also the case with the Bench lands that&#13;
i -jij , . .&#13;
extend to the base of the mountains.&#13;
The atmosphere is so pure and transparent that the mountain&#13;
tops, t'^ough fifty miles distant, appear but a short way off. The&#13;
hea^ in the valley is never oppressing, being constantly dispelled&#13;
by cooling breezes from the mountains.&#13;
The officers' quarters are sit-uated on the east side of the&#13;
*&#13;
stream fronting west, those of the soldiers lie on the opposite&#13;
side fronting north and south towards the parade ground.&#13;
Fort Bridger was established in the spring oV 1858, by Gen.&#13;
A. 5. Johnston then in coiBmand of the army sent to Utah. During&#13;
the winter of 1857, the army occupied Camp Scott, one and one-half&#13;
miles above the. Fort. A party of officers was detailed the' follow&#13;
ing spring to select a suitable site for building a post, and the&#13;
present site was chosen. The forst was called Fort Bridger after&#13;
JoiAOS Bridger a celebrated mountaineer who had settled in this vAl&#13;
ley many ye^rs agp and had established a trading post, and waS at&#13;
" ' ' ^ o&#13;
Uie time guide to the army*&#13;
' ■(&#13;
lIoteL rRoster of cosnnlssioned officers, Department Of thei&#13;
•-Platte. Omaha, Nebraska, Dec. 5, 1867,&#13;
Note:- List of members House of Representatives, 4pth Congress.&#13;
til ba ' ^ ' r . • • - ,gr&#13;
Gen. Dodge to L. L. Hills, (21DR248)&#13;
"Xfrt&#13;
I am in receipt of yours stating loss of mules and I hope you&#13;
will find them, but you must not let your stock oul to graze with&#13;
out herders or guard. If you do, under existing difficulties, you&#13;
will lose it all. You are in the debatable country and Indians&#13;
are near you all the time. It behooves you to be very careftil,&#13;
very givilantj Indians strike when least expected, therefore never&#13;
♦ ■ * -f ■&#13;
be off your guard.&#13;
Wien you finish up the 5th hundred miles, take into consideration the distance gained and lost in the changes of 4th and 5th&#13;
hundred miles, so as to bring it out an even 500 miles wes^'o^"^ '&#13;
■ . ' : f&#13;
Omaha.&#13;
The country between Lodge Pole and Crow Creek will reqnoire&#13;
^ ^tudy, especially towards Crow Creek, It is tViought by some, we&#13;
can find a high crossing at Crow Creek and avoid the depression we&#13;
^et in falling into tbat stream. I do not believe it can be done;&#13;
Ubut we Should get a line that on^y gives us the natural from summit&#13;
•aat of Crow Creek to the valley, which is about 40, thus throwing&#13;
out all the tmdulations directly east of Crow Creek.&#13;
I am now, and have been for two'-^eeks, confined to *1^ hd4se,&#13;
#&#13;
suffering fran an old wound. .. r, XJ n . Uvy&#13;
t,i' Gen. Dodge to John Duff, (21DR249) . i.. ^ . t ^ • ,,i •' . I..&#13;
I enclose the resolutions necessary to be passed by the Board&#13;
of Directors authorizing and legalizing the acts already proposed&#13;
X&#13;
by me for the company in laying out, selling, &amp;c. the depot towns.&#13;
f&#13;
I draw, in one, resolution, the authority to act as agent and&#13;
tmistfee the declaration of trust, i.e. make that a part of the authority and the indemnity of the Co.apany to me. Please have it&#13;
.passed at next meeting of Board and official copy sent me with seal&#13;
&gt;&#13;
of Company, attached. . . ..&#13;
Parties .purcjiasing'the property are beginning to ask for my&#13;
authority, and have, so far, gone on the knew/ledge they have that I&#13;
'&#13;
- am officially connected with it. Tlhat I have done has been on ver- f&#13;
bal authority. The matter is now becoming of so much importance&#13;
that it should be properly and legally done.&#13;
'£«(.&gt; • purant. Vice President, to Gen. LI. C. Leigs, (21DR250)&#13;
. ^ ^ 1st. We are running a road 305 miles&#13;
west of .the,44anour,i River wg into the very heart of the Plains,&#13;
with no local traffic, and dapendent almost entirely upon thethrough&#13;
frei^ts for all our earnings., ^&#13;
2nd. Al,ong. the route of our road, the necessary material for&#13;
ruWnlne It, abM not, Oiowpti In other words, every oor'd of wood&#13;
"'""'burned, wW obllgedi toAaul- in som eases-hundreds of miler--;&#13;
all the proeisions, gro^arias, and in fact everything 'our men and . f * It&#13;
stock eat, and all material our read requires in its repairs or&#13;
wear is brought at great est^ense, to such points on the-route as&#13;
, , ' ; ol ■ ; ' T&#13;
they may be needed.&#13;
Our running expenses, therefore, are much greater than the two&#13;
roads you mention', as they are" rxinning through a he&amp;wily settled&#13;
country, abounding in wood, coal produce, &amp;c. V/ood^with us is&#13;
worth from 8 to 11 dls. per cord;'coal 11 to 12 per ton, this item&#13;
alone more than covers the difference in tariff.&#13;
That you may have a clear and full understanding of the matter,&#13;
it is only necessary for you to refer to the cost of supplying a&#13;
post at F9rt Leavenworth, and the costs at Forfes McPherson and&#13;
Sedgwick, All the disadvantages you labor under, we labor under, ^&#13;
and until the business of the road materially increases, it ie nec&#13;
essary for us to chrrge the present rates to pay the running ex-&#13;
• • &gt; L &gt; .I i -f' kf ! '&#13;
pensas on oui^ road. ^ ^ ^ ,&#13;
Our business Is' Increasing aAd ere long *e hep to mortify our&#13;
rptps. By examining our ubllshed rdtea, you will see that Oovernment le charged asme rates as Individuals and no more. Onder the&#13;
present rates, frPlght Is landed In Cenver and all points north of&#13;
K,&gt;nsas and Nebraska ,much I ohepper thbn by any other route, we being&#13;
so far west, out off 20o" to 300 mllss land travel. . .&#13;
Oen. Dodge to 2. Durant, Wa^ihgton, Deo. 12, 186' (21DR265)&#13;
. 1 saw the se'oretary this mdmlng. He says affidavit must con&#13;
form strictly to law and be slgnsd'by Oliver toss. today&#13;
May, 1867. •-&#13;
blanks filled out as required by theu. Telegraph Ames to be there&#13;
t to sign it. Commissioners will, not go until done here. Mr. Tnttle&#13;
sent me today certified copy of proceedings of Board electing Oli&#13;
ver jtmes Acting PPesident, Also action of Board adopting the Lone&#13;
Tree and CrotW Creek line. Gen. 3. agrees wxth us on line. _ Gen. Dodge to Gen. J. H. Simpson, Omaha, May 27 1867 (21DR256)&#13;
' I submit hereiwith the following data pertaining to the 10th'&#13;
... .- section examined of the U.P.R.R, extending from the 305th to&#13;
th e 345th mile, or from station 232 to 2337 - 36, 4th hundred miles.&#13;
Gen. Dodge to Oliver Ames, Council Bluffs, May 15, 1867.&#13;
Mr. Bates writes from Salt Lake that he considers'it necessary be&#13;
fore we settle our lines over Wasatch Range' Motintains, that we&#13;
Should examine the outlet from Soda Springs on Bear River to Snake&#13;
River and the facility of getting from Snake River to Thousand ■&#13;
Springs Valley, west &lt;rf Salt Lake'. This may have a controlling&#13;
infliienoe on tlje line we shall decide upon in crossing the '^asatch&#13;
* " ■ « V ■ ■ • •&#13;
Range of "ountnlno. Ur. Bates now has a temporary party In the&#13;
fieW with himself making some examlnntioris of the country east of&#13;
. 5alt LaV:e, and when he nnlshes that work that party can make the&#13;
..surveys Indicated, if the company desire It. If not. I shall disirWH,lMnd t-e party aa s oon as he'is through with their present work.&#13;
leaving only one party in Utah.&#13;
survey I mention, alai haa a'^iiknent bearing cm a branch&#13;
of t&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
to Idaho and Oregon. •'.irf.t B-r ■^ir&gt;&#13;
' • Gerr, Oodge to Thod. H. Bates','May 15, 1857, Council Bluffs,&#13;
"Y21DR261)jI om in receipt of your report, maps and profiles; also letter&#13;
enclosirig map with proposed routes .west jof Salt Lake, and your let-&#13;
""' ter of M^y 1st. « ' - .&#13;
Hereafter if it will save premium, you may draw sight drafts,&#13;
. notifying me by telegraph when dravmr o-r by letter time enough be-&#13;
. »&#13;
fore drawing that I may prepare for them. ,&#13;
la m not prepared to order the surveys from Soda Springs and&#13;
* a&#13;
Snake River and then to American Falls; have referred the matter&#13;
to the company for their order. Unless it is necessary to have&#13;
' these line* run before we can decided on our line over the Wasatch&#13;
Mountains, I do not think the Company wi'll authorize it. In get&#13;
ting a crossing of the Wasatch, would these lines have any bearing .to ' 1-.&#13;
on the question.&#13;
You otate, if going by "Y of Ham's Fork, Bear ^iver. Snake&#13;
River and Oooee Creek, to Tiiouaand Springs Valley—do you speak of&#13;
that line as a mail line to the Pacifio, and to oome Into compari&#13;
son With .ttje lines south of lake and immediately north of lakd, via&#13;
. promontory Point, Spring Valley &amp;o? Is there no way of orossigg&#13;
the Promontory Mdge that you turn to the (fouth? fan it he crossed&#13;
"'i to north of fart&#13;
I aa now confined to my house, and fiaVe time, suffe]&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
ing from an old*'jir6uhd. As soon as I a:.i a" le, I expect to start west&#13;
and be ^ith you a portion of the season. I'hope the surveys will&#13;
bd so far advanced that we can detemiheton the lines we shall take&#13;
over or aro'^nd the mountains.&#13;
Let me know whe n you will'discharge the"temporary party, so&#13;
I*can give the order for the surveys you-think should be "made be&#13;
fore the-party is discharged, if the Company decide upon making&#13;
--"'yhem. . ;iA .3 • , •&#13;
Note;' Resolution Board of .Directors, U.P.R.R. Co, (21DR263)&#13;
^ -Gen. Dodge to L» T., Hills, Omaha, May 23, (21DR264) ,&#13;
Yours of May 12th received today. : i7.&#13;
Ne have no means "of getting the provisions to you. You will&#13;
have to at Denver and La Porte unless you wait.until you&#13;
re+urn to this end of the-5th hundred. When you get thr ugh to Crow&#13;
Creek, I Mntend to ofder ybu back by telegraph to this end of the&#13;
5th hundred,'to re-r\ui the adopted line, restake it, and make it j&#13;
consecutive and eapecially re-run the levels. We find a dis- r&#13;
crepancy between your levels and Brown's of three feet, yours being&#13;
3 ft. lower. Yotir elevation at that point is 3ll7,7 at intersec&#13;
tion, while Brown's is 7314.47'; Brown»S elevation is 3120.8. : " '&#13;
Have you designated the linos try letters in the field as you&#13;
have on profiles and maps?&#13;
If T ©r«»Md you back I shall send full instructions as to&#13;
changes we hare adopted. At 1500 we adopted "B" line.&#13;
May, 1867.&#13;
The notes came today we have not workeed up. You should see&#13;
your report of changes, give an opinion as to best line and the ,&#13;
reason therefor, we, here, in examining some of the changes, may-not&#13;
see reasons for them that you do. ,&#13;
Brown's party was attacked at Rock Creek and one man killed—&#13;
Stephen Clark of New York. He was away from camp arid picked off.&#13;
Therefore be carefulf vigilant, and _make you men the sajne. ■&#13;
I engaged a 1st Assistant in New York, but since I came home&#13;
he has written me.he cannot come. I do not now know where- to get&#13;
one. If I see a man whom I think,competent, I will get him.&#13;
If you want provisions leftjat^Sedgwick for you whe n you come&#13;
Jfeack, I can have them." - I. t , ■&#13;
I Ceh. Dodge to Oliver Amee, Omaha,. 27, (21DR266) ^ .&#13;
ol t'l returnetS from the gpading today. While I was up there the&#13;
fdailtts attacked us at five different points, and between JTbrth ,&#13;
Platte and Fort Sedgwick t^ok r^bout 100 herd of mules. Most of them&#13;
belonged to parties travelling along our line. Th-y killed three men&#13;
along on ou|" work,,, wounded one, also killed four up Lodge Pole.&#13;
at»ut.40 miiLeW'Jwe^ of Ft. Sedgwick. They are giving us trouble&#13;
. . . S&#13;
daily;, but I have got our,men armed,, and am pushing cavalry into&#13;
the eountry to protect the line. Now we have only two companies,&#13;
and they have no man in this department that we can get. ♦. i&#13;
" If (jujj,. ama gradlhg on 4th hundre get out of wo^rk and come&#13;
'ka liA •be.fno:&#13;
586&#13;
aw&#13;
"/I.'&#13;
,\j; r...&#13;
» 1867, ^ of' Y o ' •i--" ■• &gt; . .'&#13;
back here, 'e never can get them back .there. Therefore, I would&#13;
give them immediate notice that the work on 5th hund-ed will be&#13;
put under contract immediately. 77ith this, I can hold them up there&#13;
until you let the work. As-long as they have something to do, they&#13;
do not get panic stricken; but the moment they are idle, all Indian&#13;
troubl.es grow and they get away as soon as possible.&#13;
The commissioners accepted 40 miles of work. It is the best&#13;
constructed forty miles of track that I have seen laid on the road.&#13;
• - ■ ft ■ . L* ■&#13;
"tljhe telegraph line, too, is excellent.&#13;
X must have some money to meet my drafts.&#13;
' 9*0? 4&#13;
- Gen. Pohge to Oliver Ames, Omaha, 1867 '21DR267)&#13;
* « . ■ ♦ t n ■ r,&#13;
I found on my arrival home your telegram and your letter. I&#13;
had been out over the work before I got them.I went as soon as I&#13;
could le^ve the house.&#13;
The Indians were so bad, and the Commissioners stayed and saw&#13;
the last rail laid to the 345 mile post and accepted the road to&#13;
that point; they will return 20 miles, toda", and as soon as they&#13;
notice, from Leavenworth, or where they are, the other twenty.&#13;
«&#13;
Ttoder their orders they must have notice from the Secretary of the&#13;
• . i '&#13;
Interior before they can report on any sectio . I proposed to them&#13;
to go and see Browning at Quincy and got him to revoke that rule,&#13;
so ,that, -they could examine all finished up to the Accept,&#13;
and fX think will get the order, "fhey expects to ♦receive'the&#13;
order for thte last twenty before they get away.'&#13;
; i -■) a'&#13;
In answer to your letter: When I took charge of the eng^ineering&#13;
Dept. last Vear no accountability of parties was required' This ■&#13;
year, when they went out, I invoiced to chief of each party every&#13;
article that they took ^^th them and" had them receipt for them, so&#13;
they are held toca strict account for all they have. Camping out&#13;
fits only last one year? tents, blankets and buffalo robes general&#13;
ly rot or get worn out. We save a prtion of each every year.&#13;
This year I armed the parties with Goverhment aras, but they were&#13;
useless and I had to get others.&#13;
The friehgt charged to Salt Lake of'65 cts. a pound is Wells&#13;
Fargo &amp; Go's charges for instruments, maps and profiles sent to&#13;
parties out there; and I desire td say that Wells, Fargo &amp; Co. show&#13;
us .no favors, and in return we make thorn pay over oiir road fof ^&#13;
everything we do in their line.&#13;
Eve lathing goes smoothly here except trmsfer, which should&#13;
be placed hapk in Hoxie's hands. Be oan handle it, and 1 know no&#13;
one else that pan. The transfer of pas-engers by the North Western&#13;
Road 1. a botch and .'great detriment to ue, as everybody charges&#13;
their delloqulenoy to our road. Hoxie night take them right over&#13;
on his boats in addition to the other transfer. They have a con&#13;
tract with Ur. Bullins and suppose they will stick to it. Bulllns&#13;
passengers In coaches and hauls the.i around through the nud&#13;
to The ferry, I guess, givee then no facilities, as&#13;
they 1«nV the job, wT ,,nd all around thay t., -J .' tTj travellers 'u mad . and r we&#13;
■" I.- ''&#13;
get the credit. Snyder is endeavoring to make a change to help it.&#13;
® • f&#13;
. I shall send in ^ full report of repairs needed this week,&#13;
X '&#13;
gtating the extraordinary ones. The minor repairs are going stead&#13;
ily forward. _ .&#13;
Gen. Dodge to S. B. Reed, Omaha, June 5th, 1867 (21DR269{&#13;
■. •&#13;
I submit herewith profile and notes for 50 miles of 5th hun&#13;
dred. You will see that in the light cuts I have noted "take out 4&#13;
ICQ feet wide" the material is intended for banks. Have eh^eavored&#13;
to. balance work at such places; at a few others have marked fence&#13;
cuts. I think it will be. well., at the light cuts where material has&#13;
to go into bank, to take out 75 feet on north side of cut and 25&#13;
feet on soptu side of cut; but to pay extra for it when material is&#13;
not needed, it will be cheaper to fence.&#13;
On making up quantity you can determine, or if work is let at&#13;
.30 t®' 45 cents, cut and fill can be let to balance, say, fill 14,&#13;
iJu cut 10, .Tiiis would leave it optional with sub-contractors to bor&#13;
row and waste, or haul if wasted. You can put, as you have hereto&#13;
fore done, in ridges and side of wide cuts.&#13;
I also request that Llr. Casement be instructed to watch carefully&#13;
tha to th.t It to all right; it" is very broUen, and&#13;
•1 dl hot wish to have aay bad alignment, if it can be voided.&#13;
They .ill be on th. ground and,could notify ua of any changes that&#13;
th„ think .ould help the line. The line up where bad alignment&#13;
la wa» changed by engineer in charge, at west end of cutting, and&#13;
'*10* 0 - IJC</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42594">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42583">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - May 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42584">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42585">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
May 1867&#13;
&#13;
For additional May 1867 correspondence, please refer to "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - March to November 1867 (miscellaneous)," pps 860-864.&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42586">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42587">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42588">
                <text>May 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42589">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42590">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42591">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42592">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42593">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4214" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="10423">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/8686045f52152c7c63e75126ad27ada4.pdf</src>
        <authentication>4d46f6e83719dc7a7618080bcdd5167b</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42514">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42503">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - November 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42504">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42505">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
November 1866&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42506">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42507">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42508">
                <text>November 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42509">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42510">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42511">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42512">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42513">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107557">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1551">
        <name>1866</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4226" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4302">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/3a56e94430df47571739d0ecc4afabde.pdf</src>
        <authentication>6a90b764d80f2f3b186dd29c07e8e00e</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58546">
                    <text>October, 1867, r '&#13;
Jas, Llaxwell tc Ge-i. Dodge, Caaip on Medicine Bowj, 3';&#13;
'. Befqre you 'left you spoke to me about the condition of th&#13;
stock. I ha ye eight head, erf nrules, six of which are very good animals;&#13;
the other two are old and would not. be fit for another season's service.&#13;
I think it would be advisable to dispose of them this, winter and get&#13;
otherw before starting .in ^the spring. .&#13;
. . You di'^' not gij^jfierany directions about where they were to be&#13;
wintered. If 3;t meetS;;with your approbation I would like to take them&#13;
to your farm, and leave "e 11s to take care of them so as to be sure&#13;
and have them in the most serviceable condition^ next season. The wagon&#13;
should also be thoroughly repaired., I would like to take all the&#13;
pepperty belonging to this party, store it at the most convenient , • •&#13;
place, make oat' a full inventory of all the articles and give them in&#13;
charge 8«life reliable person. y . « •&#13;
With a few exceptions all of my party are godd active reliable&#13;
men who take an interest in- pushing the work end doJ.ng it in the best&#13;
manner, several have bpen retained since last season, I would like&#13;
to retain all that ere good men if it suits you.&#13;
I have'nearly finished locating &gt;on. my lu'elimino.ry; get a g^-od&#13;
line with a ruling grade of eight-tenths perhundred, and light work&#13;
with the exception of rbout three miles going down into the valley of&#13;
the Platte where the work ie heavy but with a grade of six-tenths&#13;
r&#13;
November, 1867.&#13;
per hundred.&#13;
■ ■ ■ ■&#13;
■ I , 'I':&#13;
0. .1'^ ' . ' , .&#13;
Evans.has ohde'red'mo tcr locate Oh "Brown's lineV at which I shall&#13;
start in two or fthree daj^a as soon as I finish the one I am now on.&#13;
1*16886 to answer at Sanders.&#13;
Note: Nov. 4"'(21DR318 &amp;c.) "&#13;
». r ^ , r- '&#13;
lunclvfcw er' &gt; f"* ■ ) : :&#13;
H H. A, Hurlhut to Gen. Dodge, ChicagA", .5': I 'J* T e '&#13;
' • I have been reqiiested-5&gt;y A. Batty, 1st -Lieiit, 40th U.S.&#13;
Infantry, formerly Lieut. Colonel 57th Regt, Ills. Vol.^ Infantry,' to&#13;
do what I can for hiiri In-obtainiTig for'him'two favors fromthe UL S.&#13;
Government*; viz: first, a trevet commi.-sion equal to his volunteer '&#13;
rank; second, ah'^ap-pointment as'Aseist^t Quartermaster with rank',of&#13;
Captain, ,.j' "O&#13;
I saw Maj. 0en'.'^%lTAfe in regar* io the first who said it^ .&#13;
could be granted upon getting commendatory letters from the superior."',. .&#13;
officers.&#13;
I saw Gen. Jno. E. Carae, who iiVs given^lP'ttMbtbr a cop^ of whl-sh&#13;
I enclose recomme'hdlhg to the brevet commission. '" , .-u&#13;
You may possible remembbr iae m a slight acquaintance and as&#13;
having a brotbar,'^tfb rfbl. F.J. ^Vmit of srth Regt. Ills. Vol.&#13;
Infantry, who'^er^dd under ybn. - i: , , r&#13;
John R. Duff to Gen. bodge, Boston, 6: i&#13;
I haVe not forgotten my promise te write to yo a as -soon as&#13;
I got hom,e, but although it is a long time since we parted I have in&#13;
November, 1867.&#13;
reality just reached there.&#13;
I arrived in Boston with my pony all safe-and sound a week ago&#13;
last Fridaj' and only remained at home about ,a day when I started back&#13;
West again to Rochester to accompany my sister home, v.-ho had been&#13;
waitin;* there for me nearly a month. Lly mother, who had never been to&#13;
Niagara Falls, thinking that hsol was so near there concluded to ac&#13;
company me and so that has occupied the last week. I got home last&#13;
night and nov/ I feel as though a short rest^ would d^, me good.&#13;
I presaae by this time you have ully recruited and I trust your&#13;
health is mijch better. Father :ays that you \7ill leafn all that you&#13;
wish t know.aboi*t the affairs of the D. P.B.R. from llr. Ames and LIr,&#13;
Billon, therefore it will not be necesary for him to write a-ything&#13;
about it. Father says the Ames's and the rest conceded more t.o T.B.D.&#13;
than he was willing to 'o, but he was sick and knew nothing of the&#13;
proceedings at the time. I met T.6. in Chicago and „had a long talk&#13;
with him. He inqulfe^d e^bout you and whajt. you had been doing in the&#13;
Rocky Mountains. Of orurse I gave him a most flowery accoxmt and&#13;
spoke in the'highest everything I-had seen, and he was pleased&#13;
to syy during the qponversa^lon that he thought you were the best&#13;
practidal and the best locating engineer, he ever kne--. Still ho may&#13;
have made the threats that wo heard about certain persons being removed&#13;
if he got the po^^n again; biit then I dont believe he j/flll get the&#13;
power very soon. ■ ^ t ' -s , „&#13;
lIoveEiber, 1867. ' « '&#13;
I had a letter from Mr. Corwith thfe other day stating that ho&#13;
arrived 'safely in Galena, and t^ionght he should coftie to Boston sometime&#13;
during Noveasber. Gen, Rawlins^ T see by the newspapers, nrrivei in&#13;
Washington after a six months sojourn in the Rocky Mountains As to&#13;
Major Dunn, I do not know whether-he has been throivgh here or not on&#13;
his way down East, (Maine)".- • ■ - • - * -&#13;
My little brother was perfectiy delighted with the Indian pony&#13;
and every afternoon goes out to ride. The Te xah saddle that I had&#13;
made in Omaha attracts considerable notice. I left a boix of specimens&#13;
either in Gouncil Eliiffs or your office in Oiaahaj also a laria-t rope&#13;
artd a pair of buck horn^. ' Tf "you see them will you be so kind as to&#13;
hawe them taken care of for me -until the next time I come out? «&#13;
Please give my ri^gards to Mrs. Dd ge and thank* her' for her '&#13;
courtes" and politeness to me while in Coundil Bluffs; with best '&#13;
wishes for yourself.&#13;
'* « Tit&#13;
Elijah Sells to Gen. Dodge, Chicago, 111., 6: •- ''&#13;
My son, David, is a Captain in the Regular Army (41st Infty)&#13;
and by dr^er of Oeri, Sherldar? has been on Court Martial duty in" Now&#13;
Orleans during the entire yellow'feve'r season. His reViment'la. l*n ^&#13;
Texas on the Rid Grande, and'he is quite anxious , for his wife's sake ,&#13;
to remain upon detached sOi^ice at New Orleans.'&#13;
^en at Dos Moines, a few day's a^d', I tiad b convew^tttlon with&#13;
Col. Gee. Tlohenor, who thought you would be willing t'O interest&#13;
November, 18C7. * ' •&#13;
yourself in Davi-i's behalf to .secure him an appointment on Gen*.&#13;
Hancock's staff, ' "&#13;
Jno. Morgan to Gen. Dodge, In*Campon North Fork Platte, 7:&#13;
' i '&#13;
I arrived and went into camp at this*point lest evening on&#13;
my way in to*Fert Sanders ri^h my party, I am compelled to leave the&#13;
field this early on accourtt ^f my-escort having "to return *-to- the Fort&#13;
by the 15th inst., and-I am not sure that wfe could do much -more workfrovii this forward on account of-the variableness and inclemency of&#13;
the weatherj as we.have been having severe cold and heavy storms iBor&#13;
the last two weeks* There is a severe.storm of wind and sno w raging&#13;
while I write and no signs of ita' oeiaslng, an,d. I jaay be detained, here&#13;
two or three days. .■\'j o.&#13;
I have sxicceeded In "wsannecting Mr. Brown's" Mne, with that of Mr.&#13;
Apple ton's west and south of the* IfLrge Dry Xedoe east of. Cla^ Buttes _&#13;
I found a very good line 'getting doWn off the" summiit and I think a&#13;
grade line of 40 ft, par mile oan be obtained pn all except about ont&#13;
mile of the line on the west jslope^ I have also .explored the whole&#13;
f t^e main stUAalt range betw?on the lines mentioned, I co-uld not&#13;
find any depressibrt leading thrc\ugh the divide lower than where we have&#13;
crossed. I also eicplorwd thp ootintry between the weist foot'.of the&#13;
west summit nnd thfe hsadr; of Bitter Creek, some ten miles^ west of&#13;
Bane 11 brings. I found grod ground over all but about five miles of&#13;
the route, which is crossed nteafly at right angles by high and abrupt&#13;
^ &lt;■ ' -.' -y '"EVAIVi&#13;
N 1 . ^..,-||&#13;
■ ■'- /&#13;
»&gt;'»' O'&#13;
November, 1867.&#13;
ridges. . ,&#13;
■f ' ,1,1 ,. "* j .ii..' ''■'&#13;
My last exploration was over that portion of the country lying&#13;
between Clay.Buttes and Black Buttes on Bitter Creek some ten .miles&#13;
west of Pond Statioa. I find the ground for fiftasn miles east of the&#13;
Black Butte very fayorable and .the ascent not over 40 ft. ©r mile,&#13;
with a summit corresponding with Mr. Appleton's last summit but more&#13;
flat anr^ tide ?ind-about on© hundred feet lower. The ^approach-^to thi-a&#13;
simimit from the east is easy with an undulating grade, and I think a&#13;
contiaauous grade may be had by a more thorough exploratior^ than I v^as&#13;
able ^&gt;o give it on account of my hcrrse giving out £iQd having no means&#13;
of obtaining another. My mpvements haite also tteen materially impeded&#13;
by scarcity of water for animals and no conveniencius for carrying&#13;
needed slippl'fes. I hefve also. been.hisery considerably retarded ^n&#13;
my KluVMttienJIrf by the want, of alacrity in .movement on the part'of thu ^ •&#13;
commander-ol^ my e84ort who has failed to* render "the required assistahoe on several occaelons,' and I have, been compelled to move alorineiv.&#13;
through an Indian country withbilt ascorjb,&#13;
i will Vwa-it your instructions and orders aboiyt the disposition&#13;
of my party at Sanders or* at Cheyenne, and wo"uld be jyleased to-see&#13;
you in persofi if I can before you go East, when I can explain to ,you .&#13;
more ^lly toy Views of oountr*y in whldh I hmt9 «been opeijating jSj^&#13;
also as to the Work dOn© * • ' ...&#13;
fhos. H. Bates to Gdn. Dodge, Sanders, 7; • j,&#13;
November, 18G7.&#13;
We completed the "'e-Ucino Bow Survey the 2d.lnst.. and con&#13;
nected with Brown's line ^t Statin 3582. This is a line Brown started&#13;
d^yn.the iiedicine Bow and ,abjindoned..it at Station. 3604 on the bank of&#13;
the stream, bein^; unable to prosecute it further on account of hieh&#13;
water. We came up the Lledicine Bow valley all the way withour train;&#13;
got a very godd line, but of c nirse it will be greatly improved on a&#13;
located line. In other words, the.iledicine Bow has a fall of 257&#13;
feet in 29.miles or a grade of about 9 feet tq the mile.&#13;
There is no difficulty in getting froqi the mouth of Rock Greek&#13;
to the end of my line on a grade of from 8 to 15 feet per_m-lle with&#13;
only one crossing of the Medicine Bow. The .great objection, most seri&#13;
QUO one to the Medicine Bow Line, is the frequent crorsing of the&#13;
stream, but the channel of the atreaxvi can be changed in many places&#13;
and very ohoaply. It.will .not be necessary.to bridge the Medicine&#13;
Bow;^trettla,work will answer every purpose. My line to the valley&#13;
west of Hattlesnak^i Hills .is shorter and more direct than a ny other&#13;
that lias as yet-boen run. I cannot givr you a clear idea of the line&#13;
until you get my map and the balance of my profile.&#13;
It will take us about a week to get our outfit ready to tart&#13;
back to Salt Lako-everything got pretty badly smashed up. Gen. Gibbon&#13;
,iuuB set all his artizens at work fixing and repairing Bell's train and&#13;
as soon as he gets him fixed up, he will have ay outfit -repaired when&#13;
I shajll st^rt the partj bank to Salt Lake. I shall remain here until&#13;
riovember, 1867.&#13;
I get the*map and profile, and until I hear from you.&#13;
T would respectfully request a leave of absence for a short time&#13;
to go East to attend to some very important business, Uhen I came&#13;
IVest I left many things unsettled and among them an estate of my father&#13;
deceased, I have severan hundred dollars due me in Washington, J^.C.&#13;
from the Washington Chesepeake Canal Company.&#13;
If you will be good enotig'n t6 give me a leave'of absence, please&#13;
on receipt of this to send me a pass for myself and E.c.Snith, Judge&#13;
Drake's nephew, i/rtio desipes a leave also.&#13;
Jesse L. Williams to Oliver Ames, Fort Wayne, 7:&#13;
With a view ^o'n rapid progress of the bridge next year, 1^&#13;
if such be the aim of the board,*I deem it proper to give some stiggestion&#13;
as to stone for the |)iers, a more definite shape. «&#13;
It may be possible to procure fetone fast enough from a single&#13;
quarrv beginning next'spring even if the one most convenient, the&#13;
Bartlett quarry on the St, Joseph road was of a quality suited for&#13;
the facing of the piers, which 1 doitot. "While this quarry should be&#13;
oened early in'the spring and a track laid to'it to procure backing&#13;
and the large amount of rip rap required, yet I think we should be&#13;
■ 4 .&#13;
Also prepared to.open t e Fairview quarry on the Platte and also the&#13;
Granite quarry at Dale Creek. Having these quarries tested and their&#13;
extent.fully examined there will be no disappointment.&#13;
As present advised, I should say, face the lower part of piers '||&#13;
Nove'jiber, 1867,&#13;
t&#13;
from two feet below low water to tw- feet above high wate? with the I . • J- ' V • ■ * '&#13;
granite, if it turns out well, and all above high water from the Platte&#13;
quarries. The transportation from these two quarries will probably&#13;
be about the same cost. Should the ^artlett quarry appear durable, so&#13;
much of the piers as are under water which at the upper site woiild&#13;
average 7 or 8 feet, might be faced from this quarry.&#13;
At the Burlington bridge they procured stone from several different quarries at the same time with a view of hastening the work.&#13;
As I before suggested, I think a few stone of the several layer§, both&#13;
at the Bartlett and Fairview quarries, should be gotten*this fall and&#13;
4aced in some small water course or other wet place that you may have&#13;
a satisfactory test duriVig "the winter.&#13;
I respectfully suggest that these views concerning, the testing&#13;
ot the stone if approved be communicated to yolif Aj^ent at Omaha or&#13;
the superintendent of masonry.&#13;
Notes- TOa. Ward to Gen. Dodge: (Geological •'''&#13;
section of Bartlett quarry:)&#13;
Gen. Dodge to E. House, Couficil 8.&#13;
Send me list of^lots'and price. Sold following parties.&#13;
I h've divided Morgan^s lots as near as I could and sehd you&#13;
five contracts for Haj. Litchficld.&#13;
IJartshorn to gen. Dodge, Coi«yd&lt;5tt, IbWa, 9P ^&#13;
^ election news is bdd, very bad, bdt a§&#13;
-l''&#13;
November, 186'. ' - , - - - -&#13;
; - f V .&#13;
believe that the Republican party is the party of progress, and&#13;
; I' ,&#13;
contending for the rights of the oppressed and down-trodden,' and as I&#13;
feel assured that there is a great and good God who does all things&#13;
well I have faith to believe that in his good time (and that will be&#13;
at the Presidential election) he will give us the victory. It onlj^&#13;
remains for us to be true to freedom, country and the right; do our&#13;
whole duty, like men and victory will be ours.&#13;
■Among my brother "Rads". hero there is a strong prejudice against&#13;
Grant; we; were so infernally sold on Voses" that the boys are slow&#13;
to take hold of any ne who was with him in his drunken swing around&#13;
the circle. I have been and am a grant man, and have been working in&#13;
a quiet way t&lt;? make a sentiment in his favor. I want to send from&#13;
this county a 'Grant-Dodge delegation, ^nd as I have never failed yet&#13;
in having a delegation to represent the sentiment of the county, t&#13;
think you will-find you can count on Wayne. ^ have no fears on that&#13;
point.&#13;
The late eleotloM left me In possession of an Elephant. I&#13;
was elected to represent the 5th Dist. in the State Senate and shall&#13;
have to spend the winter in Dee Uolnes. I propse by deeds not words&#13;
to prove oy gratitude for your kindness in procuring for the lioniter&#13;
the publicatletn of the Laws.&#13;
I roaeived the appointment i went to conaWefable expensd&#13;
to be ready to enlarge the paper in time for the meeting of Congreas&#13;
Noveaber, 1867. . ,&#13;
in December, believing th^t that was th^ session for wjiicji I received it,&#13;
but I fear from what I have seen in some of- the papers _that the desig&#13;
nation of the sessions ha® been changed and that the first, the one&#13;
for which the Monitor is selected,^ only applies to the few days ses&#13;
sion in March and will end at the regular time of meeting in December.&#13;
If that is so it will be a sad disappointment to-jae ;and upset all my&#13;
calculations, and I shall esteem it a great fa-vor if it^ is as I now&#13;
fear, that you will-have my contract extended to cover what was&#13;
al ways designated-^s the first session, the meeting in December.&#13;
Thos. H. Bates to Gen. Dodge, Sanders, 9: ■ ^&#13;
' I have received your dispatch directi,ng the location on&#13;
Brown's lino fho» tl^e summit of the North Platte. I am very much&#13;
afraid the season is too far advanced to do any work in a satisfactory&#13;
mamwr. I shall, however, do the best I can; shall start the party&#13;
Bovn .8 tHey can be^^otten ready.ana Mr. Bvans returns with Instruo-&#13;
' ■ ■ U-i -'&#13;
tions. « .&#13;
, If it meets with your views I would like to send the party to&#13;
Bate the location and remain here myself a few days until I«get the&#13;
notes worked up and then go East on a short leave ab 1 before requested&#13;
Edward C. 9aith for whom I requested a leave, of course, will have to * • • '&#13;
remain. 1 have drawn the following! drafts.&#13;
oen. filbbo. desires oe to run out the military Veservatlon at this&#13;
point and d- some other work for him. I oh.lI try and do It.&#13;
November, 1867.&#13;
Gen. 11. Bailey to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 10: O .',t&#13;
t ceme in this morning" frr^m Julesburg dh my regular tVip and&#13;
• I . •&#13;
found two* letters from you. One discharging me from your employ and&#13;
the other stating that you had written to me In the fore part of the&#13;
• week directing me to com'e'over and go down to the timber with Llr.&#13;
PlatWr. If you still desire to have me go down with him I am at -&#13;
your service. ^&#13;
■'^ITou have befriended me and I do now and always shall oe you a&#13;
deUt of gratitude. Tomorrow I will get testimonials of the other&#13;
Route Agents, the Post master hare and -the Conductors. oi\ the road of&#13;
my conduct. Oh! General, after all the different pdsitlns I ^&#13;
^;|g|&#13;
have held, the Gove'mment money I hove- expended, the bribes I 'have&#13;
spumed, the honorable manner in which I left tha service after i •&#13;
having expended nearly three millions of dollars and serving .nearly&#13;
six years without ever doing a dlshmest deed evenUo the value of one&#13;
penny; always having before me my mother's advice "Honesty is.the best&#13;
policy", and now to be accused of anything while holding a lo'-, dirty&#13;
,^,!, .ten cent office, it nearly breaks my heart, not on my own account, but&#13;
, jiy pr wife and mother. ' 't .&#13;
Gen, Dodge to J. E. House, Council EXhffs, '&#13;
. - , 1 Jhaye had to take lot 8 block 167. «&#13;
it w ,&#13;
I send orer.my river map to have Purgeson's sounding put on.&#13;
'S I&#13;
November, 1867.&#13;
• • f&#13;
also the located lines r;an by Hudnutt and forwarded to me at Washington. If Evans does not cone in, send Reed profile of the -20 miles&#13;
from Little Laramie west with the grades changed, as I Changed them&#13;
J;o throw out the light cuts. Send it to him up to where the change of&#13;
line is to be made for 30 ft. r-rade. ■ ■ , ...h&#13;
' Geu., ^odg6 to J. E. House, Council Bluffy, 11. , „ ^&#13;
^ , If. Capt.-Bailey leaves, place Boker in charge of books, &amp;c.&#13;
until I get back in December.&#13;
; Mr. Bailey 13 buying the corn and hay for mules this winter and&#13;
tr. also putting up scm.e sheds, for mules.^ I think wp better get all&#13;
the grain now ps it Is raising fast.,, _ .&#13;
you can pay lir.Edd:; JlOO Pfr month if that is what Hill.- agreed&#13;
to pay. Cannot Eedy worK. on maf®' office if hp is going to&#13;
stay in city?. '.' T " ;«!&#13;
A rt x.*L_ /.an have him come back. The letter I&#13;
If you want Hofftoan jou i ,&#13;
i A A. -j *.« . -also one to Evans if he does not Vrroto tcy Rudnutt forward to him r -jax ^ .&#13;
«• j. t&gt; «./! iMid »went back with him. It seems to&#13;
come in. I think Bvane areti Roed ^&#13;
. . , 1 stronp" enoiigb to take a common safe,&#13;
me that the buildin- ought to be strong enoug&#13;
^ + rA„+. laf it. for it will fall of its own if it is not we get out^ » j&#13;
weight. . V&#13;
I want our papera-law and lot, puVphpre they will be safe, and&#13;
taking one Fro.t has'got saves buying one. Ldo not know how&#13;
large it is. Chapman says he sent over the lot books-one with 200&#13;
November, 1867.&#13;
pages, start Cheyenne in.&#13;
-i5:;7uS-&#13;
'ttfiif ff?! v, r run :: ul [ - £•&#13;
I do not want any delays on*those lots, Myers an6 Bowenger. If&#13;
they ask it I suppose we will have' to give It, but it is not right to&#13;
ask us any more time. I want you 'to gb' out as soon as possible And&#13;
see who has not paid up and cancel the sales-excej&gt;t those of officers&#13;
who are y4t aWay aftd not h4d a^chance to* pay. Llerritt,* Cuttis, Clark&#13;
and the officers who bought and* are with our parties are to pay when&#13;
they get in. *&#13;
Duff has a pair of horns and a lariat rope tfifere at office; see&#13;
that they are taken care of. Forward my letter t6 Evans Tight off.&#13;
I will authorize you to draw when I get to New York, I ^&#13;
J. E. House to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 12:* i- --V&#13;
*■ I failed to aemd* prof iles last ni^ft-'lis I telegraphed you.&#13;
Have had to make new profile from Sale Creek to Laramie jEHver, as Mr.&#13;
Kurd*8, that* wiaa sent me by Schimonsky, was profile of the- 80 ft. grade&#13;
I send the 80 f .t, "gTade to Sxttteiiti and 80 from tpQW down. I do not&#13;
know what has become of Evan's Black Hills profile^ tip],ess Dr. %rant&#13;
A.&#13;
took Mhem West with him. ^&#13;
Mr. Dillon called ^ flhV offfd^l this mcrrnlng; is getting ^long&#13;
quite well. He intends going West this evening and will cross the&#13;
Black Hills if possible. * -&#13;
wil' go to Cheyenne-^'Aboh a© I get through with the hurry at&#13;
■* .v.'*'. n.&#13;
'TTW&#13;
November, 1^67 . ' ,&#13;
the office and get work up closer.. Mr. Jtidder is making out the&#13;
accounts and I suppose will be off ei;e long.. Hi.s bills far .expenses&#13;
of party rafiae jfn very heavy, but I sxippose on the conditions that he&#13;
was hired re will have to" pay them. I will have Eddy com in the&#13;
office as the Captain has 1-eft.I will keep Bocker" at the .land matter&#13;
as that'will take soaie time t- fix upD. C. Bloomer to Gen. Dodge, Coi:ncil Bluffs, 13: _&#13;
I enclose statement in reference to the Steps I have tkken&#13;
to'procure'a pension for Mrs. Mohan- an Irish woman who has frequently&#13;
been"employed In your family and.in your brother's/amily. ^ It has&#13;
hung up in the penSlort office a long time. ; , .&#13;
M. h. Mophersoh to Gen. Ddge, T9interset, 15: .&#13;
I dont suppose you can do ^.nything in the way of&#13;
appolnlms'nts this winter for me, as 1 em a radical of tl?e deepest&#13;
dye, but should there be anything at your eommaad which will pay $2000&#13;
and expenses ' 1 will accept provided I do not have to awear alleglanoe&#13;
to Andy. Uy preferences are for a superintendenoy of Indian affairs.&#13;
AS appropoa ti this 1 want you to wote. far the Impeachment of&#13;
the drunken old cusa whd now sleeps in the TOite House.&#13;
3. Goodrell tc'Gen. Bodge, Defi MOlnes, 16: r •&#13;
Capt. Thomas Seeloy, Register of the Ladd Office at this&#13;
piece, h.e thle day sent his resignation as Heglster to the President&#13;
I herewith enclose letters-from our friends P. *. Pataer and heo. C.&#13;
A', "&#13;
' *4''..&#13;
■ , .u.;,v:&#13;
■/!.;■ •:i*&gt;'&#13;
'' »/. i'&#13;
November, 18C7.&#13;
Tichenor recomiiiending Felix G. -Clarii.&#13;
Gdii. Dodge to J. E.. House ,• New Yoj^k, 16:&#13;
" ,f, ,&#13;
IjtvV. 0,1 fj. .&#13;
i! I r, .,&#13;
Hurry up map.of locatiori 6th" l^undred miles,• Secj^. of Interio&#13;
demands its filinjJ hfefore hq, -will a.ccept of work or road built on&#13;
that portion. Send it toi fa®, at Washington. . •&#13;
I en close draft for ^:10,^000.. Pub on stamp and use it.&#13;
F. J. Hodges to Gen. .Dodge ^ Bear Riv&amp;r Statlp^n,- 17: ^&#13;
Jl ■ Tjie locatiori of Weber narrows being finished ,and the map and&#13;
profile forwarded, I have the honor tp submit the following report.&#13;
Rev.'Thos li. Stuart .to ;Gen. ^odg", S'lk Point, D.T. , 11:&#13;
I do not desire.the offiQe-for myself or any of my friends. |&#13;
I only desire that'saae godd Republican.have it. ^&#13;
Gen. Dodge to J. F. House, New York, .18:&#13;
Send A copy of ^heyenne map to me at Washington, and I will&#13;
have It lithogi'8,r«»a. Put on It the Government depot atvd Fort David&#13;
Russell, Riin Denver branch inter main line just at edge of town.&#13;
J. 0. Hudnutt to Gen, Dodge, Chicago University, 18:&#13;
Col. Williams will be here tomorrr w, and as he has the&#13;
bridge proper-ln kiind till, I truat. be ready to report to yon in fnll.&#13;
I will forward a copy of my work as you deyro. 1 am open for an&#13;
ongagement with ysu if yon deaire and think I can fill the bill.&#13;
7.54 .&#13;
November, 1807.&#13;
• t ' '&#13;
Please make the acquaintance of Senator Patterson of N.'. ( if y^u&#13;
have not done so already) as he^ is an old college chum of mine.&#13;
t •&#13;
Gen. Lodge to J. E. House, New York, 18; . .&#13;
Under the new contract fro 100th meridian west we must get&#13;
• . i.&#13;
the actual cost af each station house, tank, round house, machine shop,&#13;
machinery, turn table and all other buildings put up by the contrac&#13;
tors; buildings built by the company after road went into our hands&#13;
are not to be included. Get each separately and send me as soon as&#13;
possible. It will form the basis on .which .to make estiiuates infutrrre&#13;
add you need not retui^a any more estimates on old plan. Get time&#13;
schedules from Snyder of road to Uheyenne and send me; also send me » «&#13;
the proprotionate estimate based ori 50,000 per mile of Henry's; it&#13;
is iri ay desk; also your proportionate estimate on same.&#13;
You will also construct a proportionate estimate, dividing proper&#13;
parts as for grading, bridging, tieing, track-laying, telegraph equipment&#13;
which, ie to ,"be In cash cost !|7500 pr mile for f llowing distances and&#13;
pritea, C9(»i»tncing at lOOth meridian and going west.&#13;
'u t r' Is.t. 100 miles at rate of $42,000 per mile,&#13;
2nd. 167 167 « " - 45,000 " " '&#13;
3rd. - lOO&#13;
4th. KIO&#13;
6th. _100&#13;
'fith.^ 100&#13;
" 96,000&#13;
tt&#13;
" 80,000&#13;
" 90,000&#13;
" 96,000&#13;
"X*"'&#13;
'•v ;$ •&#13;
■ -i&#13;
'Af,, . * v-».&#13;
. 1 ■■'(o&#13;
November, 1867. * ♦&#13;
• * The proportionate changes i.e. grading, would increase over Black&#13;
Hilld and decrease again in LsLraniie Plains, increase again over main&#13;
divide and into the Black Fork. *&#13;
Morgan I learn is enroute in. I wrote' to Davis of the wrk to be&#13;
I&#13;
done on land motters, arid I w^nt the land map painted up and forwarded&#13;
as soon as practicable, and tne R.R. line and stations pt more pro&#13;
minently on it. I left you an order of instructions about getting&#13;
finaly estimate on road as far as constructed with actual cost; as near o;&#13;
practicable; tais is entirely independent of&#13;
Send me that rough tracing of map on P.O'. paper that Appleton&#13;
sent into me. Did Hudnutt get my letter? 1&#13;
J. A. Evans to Den. Dddge, Omaha, 19: • ' '■&#13;
Being here it seems conveneitti to vh^ite you respecting matters l^est.&#13;
The location la completed to the Platte«by this time. I.have&#13;
the maps and profiles here to within lO miles of Medicine Bo*, the&#13;
rest will follow as soon as they can be made up. The location iSf of&#13;
course, by Staxw'ell's line wekV of Medicine Bow. The^matter is nearly&#13;
In the following state:&#13;
East of Rattlesn.ake Hills Llax. grade. Brown's i-66 feet.&#13;
„ It " " " Maxwell's 2&gt;9 ffet.&#13;
' - , ti " " Brown's- 80 (not less than) n ir&#13;
West of&#13;
Maxwell's,*- 45 feet.&#13;
N'-wember, 18C7.&#13;
•« II&#13;
■ U: «r&#13;
West of North Platte River . " " Browner -• G3 foot,&#13;
• • . 1 .".r JV • nr " Bates' - 85 "&#13;
It appears than that Maxv/ell's Ijne is tigst east of Platte and&#13;
Brown's west of that river, including the crossing'of the Platte, .&#13;
it.^elf. Now, the most "desirable thing is to §o connect those lines as&#13;
to preserve the godd points in both. I am of the opinion - that - we can&#13;
connect on the western slope of the Rattlesnake Hills-thereby availing&#13;
ourselves of the lower altitude of Llaxwell's svunmit and at the same&#13;
. Ki . .. . ' :&#13;
time maintain ng as a point in the line Brown's crossing of the North&#13;
Platte. river.&#13;
r&#13;
The maximum grade on west slope of Rattlesnake on Brown s line&#13;
(00 ft.) are near the summit. If the connection proves favofable we&#13;
will reduce t^ia materially, starting as we shall from a lower sunLuit.&#13;
I have given instructions to have this line run.&#13;
Trgiins are running regularly to Cheyenne; time 24 hours. Durant&#13;
and Dillon are hero-expect to reach summit with track this fall- if&#13;
l&gt;rejBent weather continues a few weeks then may do it, still there Is&#13;
c«n»l.derablo grading to do. ^ ^&#13;
As soon JW^'Rpil's party return wili have them lay off town&#13;
•at %id0rs. Regards to your family, who I understand are with you.&#13;
. , J. A. E^'ano to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 19:&#13;
I find your letter Cf the I6th in'the office thl^ evening.&#13;
IflN**# you fully with reference to lines west* at rashlngtcn'today.&#13;
Ilovember, 1SC7.&#13;
supposing you to be there. f'?■). !'&#13;
Brhwn's line is much the best west of Platte. Maxwell's iine is&#13;
much the best east bf there. What I want to do now is to use Maxwell's&#13;
suHi.:ait ahd Brown's crossing of Nbtth Platte by connecting the'lines&#13;
on the western slope §f Rattlesnake.Hills. I think we^can do this.&#13;
Parties will set about it at*once.&#13;
J, E, House to Gen. Dodge, Omaha, 19:&#13;
It&#13;
. nYour letters of the 16th fnom New York came to hand this&#13;
^ . ... I&#13;
morning. The draft Cf $10,000 I placed to your Cr. in the First&#13;
* r • National. I have commenced the map of the 6th hundred'and will send ^&#13;
11 to you as soon as completed. Mr. Blickensderfer left this morning,&#13;
which releases Mr, Lambach fTomfurther*Work for him for the present.&#13;
I am in hopes now to soon get the most of the office Work done up.&#13;
The meandering of the river is completed and am now platting the&#13;
notes: will transfer them on the river map and then make the changes&#13;
• ■ f • ? . :&#13;
on your map. and, senW it to you.&#13;
The masonry of Loup Fork is progressing finely with every pros&#13;
pect n w of, completing before extreme co'ld weather sets in. I have&#13;
made three different plans and estimates on the cast of repairing&#13;
North platte bridgej one as you designed, another as Mr* Dillon and&#13;
the other as my plan. They stand'respectively ae regards-cost, yours&#13;
|l2,e00, Dillon's $10,000 and the last at $25,000 which includes new&#13;
November, 1867,&#13;
• e&#13;
superstruction throushout. t,will send you a tracing and estinate of&#13;
each in a fev; days. The Doctor a-d LIr. ^iHon have examined them but&#13;
as yet have ,a.dopted neither, Toiiorrow I am to laake an examinatdion and&#13;
estima.te for a temporary pile bridge across the Lissouri River,&#13;
Mr, Dillon starts for New York tomorrow, I do not know Whether&#13;
the Doctor will go or not, flur track reache-^ Cheyenne last Thursday.&#13;
I have i&gt;pt been up but will try and get away on Thursday of this week.&#13;
I received last week another remittance from Talfey amounting to about&#13;
$5000. Morgan arrived here with his party Saturday morning. He has&#13;
d'isbanded the'most-bf- .them} the balance ..^, back to Sanders to work&#13;
up the- notes of survey, • : I - , ,:&#13;
Mr. Evans ca .e in l^ondajE) momixig ^and goes back on Thursday, He&#13;
brought in notss and p«,,rila of loe*ted line to Rock Creek. He speaks&#13;
nf'SOM Chang.® necessary to be made on it.&#13;
- .Jh. matter of right of way .over the different bridge lines, Mr.&#13;
Dillon time. He says he will conf 1 t • ■ ^&#13;
with the Oootor bwfere he .leaves,and tell me more abouy it.&#13;
The sals of your lot on Jacks cm Street is an unsetlled matter.&#13;
It «ees&gt;s that parties have commenced a suit or .set up a claim that&#13;
the deed to th»en you purchase, d from was a forgery, its merits will&#13;
probably be dttermined at this of Court. The party who&#13;
desired to .p».-..s« In the meanwhile are willing to await the d^ision.&#13;
Their mdTieyls on deposit awaiting perfection of title.&#13;
N'verni er, 1867.&#13;
Lr, Evans will take out burial ca'ses for th ae bodies when he&#13;
goes. He thinks there will be no difficulty in*making the transfer&#13;
as the climate and aridhess of the soil is such that\decompsitioh&#13;
dods not take place so soon or tc such an extent as in other local&#13;
ities.&#13;
I never sUch delightful weather a*5 we are nov/ havlhg, iind if&#13;
it only continues a short time the most" of otir work on repairs will&#13;
be well out of the way.&#13;
' 1 disbanded the Kidder party as soon as the surveys viere compete&#13;
but they are still hanging around; do nlot know) i^at for or when they&#13;
intend leaving. I hope soon, as I have had janough o f. them. ^&#13;
J. E. House to (rejfi; trodge, Oma'^a, 21:- •&#13;
Please inform me what salary yott' weT© to pay John Morgan,&#13;
and if his services were to commence when he left Pennsylvania, or at&#13;
th- time he reported to the party; also if traveling expenses were to&#13;
be allowed from end of track, ftc. He has left the employ of the&#13;
Company end has auth^riaed Gen. Casement to 4ign'his vouchers« • There&#13;
is soi.iething very curious in his action^; came in on Saturday morning&#13;
... .t^s at the office all day, apparently aTl right and soufid ; cn Monday he&#13;
acted as thoggh he had bwen drinking but not to excess.- He left the&#13;
office in the mottling ftnd that was the last time I oiaw him. In writing t&#13;
casement he claims that he is Verglnlj ton^rtfs insanity and ere long&#13;
will be ho*pele\sly insane; family troubles the cause. His accounts&#13;
November, 1867.&#13;
«&#13;
with the Company are all right, having drawn.but&#13;
Evans goes West tomorrow night. I will not be able to go with&#13;
him. The Doctor has not left and is wanting something every day, so&#13;
I thought I would defer the journey till he was well out of the way,&#13;
I could then gi*e it more time, also want to get off the map of the&#13;
• •&#13;
6th hundred miles; have it about half finished. Will send you River&#13;
•-'W&#13;
map tomorrow.&#13;
- . . . i'*";.* -&#13;
Jesse L. Williams to Gen. D-^dge, Fort Wayne, 21:&#13;
I returned yesterday from a 10 days tour among the bridges,&#13;
Had fine weather and was much interested. If important that my report&#13;
!)« ready by 27th I shall be much pressed. I want to show you the&#13;
report before I hand to Board, but how can I accomplish this? Will&#13;
ot have time to go to Was ington. If I must submit report on 27th,&#13;
. j ' ' ', '&#13;
could you not run over to New York and meet me and the Board? Think&#13;
I shall start East next Monday night; dont know that the report will&#13;
be called for.&#13;
CoX. Hudnutt will send you copy of profiles &amp;c. He estimates&#13;
on your new line wast.from Child*a Mill Bridge, as best. We find it&#13;
beat to- throw bridge up river 75 ft. at west end to a void deep cut&#13;
throu-h ths^t aide. Evans, or whoever run that lino made a sharp&#13;
an ^ . . , . ^&#13;
I had Mv. Colburn*s comany to Cuincy. He explained to me fully&#13;
their difficul^^a as to water for runn ng their traina, FfSB Danville&#13;
November, 1867. . , . .&#13;
Ills. west of Jacitsonville n6 stream except the Langanon has a&#13;
drop of water in it. Between those points the Company have expended&#13;
$70,000 in experiment to get water to but little purpose. 'They dig&#13;
r; •&#13;
wells and put in tile feeder in everj' direction 6 ft. below ground, tho&#13;
being in water in wet weather but none in the drought,&#13;
I give these facts that you may profit by them in your locations.&#13;
The amount of water required to run a R.R. of large business is very&#13;
ppt to be underrated.&#13;
One :,iore point. Did you notice in highest water whether the flood&#13;
reached the 1-4 71, Sec. 2, proposed as exchange grounds? 1 was sur&#13;
* '&#13;
prised to find it so little above lew water at upper crossing and&#13;
Child'a Uill. It may be that the water would soak into engine pits;&#13;
If so the highest part of it should be used. I suppose the river 0&#13;
flows into the Little Lake.&#13;
I - , i'n ,&#13;
J. F. House to Cen. Dodge, Omaha, 22: - - .&#13;
• - w. f ^ ^&#13;
I sond you map of river surveys; have marked oh the presert 'U9 -&#13;
bs^ijts as shown "red line," have not extended it 'down to Child's&#13;
Mill AB there seems to be something wron"^ in the work of the old map&#13;
and I cannot find where the trouble is- have not '.ad time to make full&#13;
examinations. The changes have been so sllj^it in that vicinity that&#13;
it- is hardly worth whUe making a note of it, Tho work-Horth of Omaha&#13;
•earn to check first rate and Is undoubtedly ddrrect.&#13;
Tracing of Appleton's map will be sent tonorrow. It has been&#13;
November, ?867.&#13;
decided to bridge the river temporarily, have cKMBmfenced getting ont&#13;
piles.&#13;
J. . T^ans to 6en, Do'ge, fjmaha, 22;&#13;
iLct'rgan passed Sanders before your instruction-s reached there&#13;
He has now reached the pariy. LI; • House will explain. I leav for&#13;
Sanders this afternoon taking Apploton, how in charge of party, with&#13;
0(Nel 11 and Maxwell are ex|)loring in Rattlesnake Hills, 7.111&#13;
'send maps of everything as soon as possible.&#13;
^ If ydu Want me* to send tracings directly, either toNew York or&#13;
Washington, notify me by telegraph at Fort Sanders,. ,&#13;
J, 0, Hudnuttr to Gen, Dodge, Chicago University, 23:&#13;
Today I sent per express duplicate copies of map,profiles,&#13;
&amp;c. and reorts to Ur, TTilliaiiS at_Fort Wayne. They would have been&#13;
ready sooner by a few days ^xcept that U . 7. modified his plans some&#13;
what after his visit to Kansas City and Quincy; in particular with&#13;
'regkrd to width of wattr-way or length of bridge.&#13;
If. Snyder to G n. Dodre^C^ha, 23: ^&#13;
Yours 17th at hfthd. Congdon's estimate would have been&#13;
made out aoonei- but-., hava both been over the entire leneth of the&#13;
road for about two week* organizing business to Cheyenne.&#13;
'l aKed c. to have hla estimate of equiment required on four&#13;
trains daily ea*Il way. We will require that number each day.&#13;
«r&gt; ■■&#13;
November, 1867. .&#13;
TVe got "buaineas well .organized at Cheyenne'and "our earnings a' e&#13;
very good, . '&#13;
The discharged conductors an^ braketaen' under the ?.dvice of&#13;
Harbach and soine insiders are filing up the-affidavits on my case and&#13;
forwarding to llr, Ames at New York, offi.ce, t ■ . -&#13;
t ; All that I ask o'f "tiie .Coiupany is that they wil] probe this matter&#13;
thorous-hly; look through every transaction that has taken place and&#13;
sai-isfy themselves from the record's in the* office or testimony of&#13;
reliable men whether' I have been working for my employers or myself.&#13;
If they can f nd that I' hav^ ever uttcde one dime outside of my salary&#13;
I&#13;
their&#13;
want&#13;
interest&#13;
them to&#13;
s&#13;
dfscharge&#13;
solely and&#13;
me.'&#13;
have&#13;
If&#13;
.never'&#13;
thoy find&#13;
Qngagod&#13;
that&#13;
in&#13;
I&#13;
any&#13;
have&#13;
transactions&#13;
wo^rked for |&#13;
that Jy positiori' could affect'directly or "indirectly» it is sim|)y&#13;
asking Justice to have'them sustain me. . ^ ,&#13;
J, E, House to GenC Dodge, ddaha, 23: .&#13;
I send'you, this evening Appleton*s map, I have as yet&#13;
done nothing towarcls right of way over the-several bridge lines. LIr.&#13;
Poppleton tells me I can accomplish nothing, until some.one of the&#13;
lines in leteralned upon. That e .na-Jorlty of the lota are owned by&#13;
non reaiaenta and those who are here svade the price of their lota&#13;
and la-pro^emente. I h^ve talhed with Ur. Dillon and Durant about the&#13;
matter apd they have told me to'liaW &lt;nit the required Grounds for&#13;
depot"and rlcht of way and send'traeing to New York. That seams to be&#13;
.... 1-.&#13;
Noveiaber,&#13;
'&#13;
1867.&#13;
• i "- '&#13;
the tin'^erstandinj^ no-.v. I'r. Snyder is to stat'e the required '^mount&#13;
of ground that will he needed.&#13;
I am anxious to carry «out your -instructions, hut don't see. how I&#13;
can do anything at present. shall start for Cheyenne on. Monday&#13;
nin-ht if nothing prevents more ,than I Imov; of nov;.- Map of 6th hundred&#13;
is platted to I-aranie River; it will he a small task to put on topogra&#13;
phy. "'ill send you a tracing by last of week.- , U&#13;
J. T'odges to Gen. Dodge, Fort Bridge , 25: , ,&#13;
I have forwarded to you at Omaha complete returns of expenditurefl'and'receipts for August, September and October 1867. Map,&#13;
profilB-and report of location of iVeber narrows. Map and profile of&#13;
locixtion of head of Echo. Prbfile of preliminary from Bear River to&#13;
both Pioneer Hollow.and. Little Muddy., Profiles Kos. 1, 3 and 4 of Lost&#13;
creek- lines and two communications of the 27th October and 9th Ilovember,&#13;
1867, respectively. ■&#13;
• Us roconnolBsanooa of rim of baaln now comprise its entire eastern&#13;
crest from Sulphur Crook northward to fifteen miles above Salth's&#13;
Fcrk(moulh of) . Hie-lKiM which have, been run show the only eodd&#13;
routes. That which Ur. Heed abapdonei appears to be In as favorable&#13;
(Q locality-ae any from two miles north of auaklng Asp lo my line of&#13;
last summer. It Is my, oplnlpn that there is no ether except with long&#13;
■ tiinols and remalnlne map and'reports will be&#13;
forwarded at the awliast momani. ^&#13;
KovsUiber, 18C7. • »&#13;
It is due tWe California engineers to .state that they first dis&#13;
covered the Echo route upon which I have located. Their stakes being&#13;
placed 500 ft, apart I stumbled over them while reconnoitering the&#13;
route. Their line was run to IK ft. grade and" shpws .some heavy work.&#13;
Final location will somewhat cliange", it may be, my line as my report&#13;
will state. East of the Stunmit it is located With much care; west&#13;
of it we contended with eighteen "inches of snow for a day or two. The&#13;
desired information about my late reconnoissajjc^ of ^'ahsatoh is not&#13;
yet received. ' -K , ' t&#13;
* i start today torreconnoitre &lt; on horseback .the,^.route , down Hains&#13;
Pork. Uy party mows to Rreen Rlvor to comply with instruotlono there ^&#13;
on account of an accident t^ my ttanSit I.oannot run in curves, hut&#13;
will approach location as neaP as possible. As soon as this Is fin&#13;
ished I Shall send the p-rty back to Salt Lake for discharge, procecdinc myself to Omaha where I can have reference to my. notes, without&#13;
,rt,ich It is impracticable th vrite report of Boar River line.&#13;
There aro also o'her coneldertitlone of the highest oharaoter both&#13;
official and personal for reporting at Omaha. . ,&#13;
Oen. Dodge to J. B. House, Washington, 25: ... _&#13;
Morgan was employed at Juleeburg and received pay from the&#13;
date of dlmpatch to him at Juieeburg, alBo transportation from end&#13;
of track to his party. I made no agreemmnt with h,m as to pay. It&#13;
,a. my intention to make him Divielen HnT., but as ha has left do not&#13;
Noveaber, 1867. .&#13;
• »&#13;
think,we should pay him over .^150 per Jionth. I am sorry about Morgan&#13;
as I had supposed he would make a ,goocl man.&#13;
It sedms to me the bridge over the river is a cost not called&#13;
for. You can do all on the i(ie you can on a bridge and save all the&#13;
cost. I am looking for my Oregon map; also 6th hundred.&#13;
H. J» B, Oum...lng3 to Gen. Dodge, Winterset, Iowa 26:&#13;
A soldier dies after making application for the additional&#13;
* f&#13;
boxinty. Had he. died in service they would have got the $100. This&#13;
• «&#13;
does not seem right, but does seem to demand additioanl legislation.&#13;
John A. Jackson, to Gen. Dodge, Pulaski, 28:-&#13;
Hov; kind and good you are to answer my letter of long ago.&#13;
I thought at. the time of writing it there was but little happiness in&#13;
living .in the rebellious States if you dared differ from traitors,&#13;
but sine- my husband, in the face of oaths and indults, voted for Gov.&#13;
BrownlftW' an-^ other radicals, with open tickets, it has grown more&#13;
iiitolerahle and aneers and ^slights ore met with oftener.&#13;
To a gentleman these "things make but little difference unless he&#13;
meotti th.m ftice to face; to a laay they act as sloj. poison, sappins&#13;
l»alth, strength anrt life. Dn'er such olrouu^tanoos you must know&#13;
What pleaaa- .unveakahle we. should feel If the Government chore to&#13;
confer a co,pl»««.t upon us^ In the face or our enemies for having&#13;
atood by. our co&lt;intry. when.to be her friend was t6 be disgraced In&#13;
t' ■ li -j . I'.liJIU.,&#13;
Noveraber, 1SC7.&#13;
their eyeS. I could never tell you on paper what we have"undergone&#13;
since the close of the*war; annoyances and persecut:ons in a thousand&#13;
ways entirely unexpected or merited have been our portion.&#13;
I know you are and ever were a frieh-' tb sufering loyalist, I&#13;
know you would gladly confer favors upon all deserving ones,-to show&#13;
to rebels the difference between traitors and loyalists, as you kindl:&#13;
did v;hen you governed us as a military commander, were it left with&#13;
you. Mr. Jackson I fear could hardly get an appointment or even a&#13;
rsoommendatlon to the present Inoumient at the White House for office,&#13;
as 1 believe he Is deol'edly "opposed to-raaiiale 'going, abroad or holding. o-^fico if he can help it. 1&#13;
. .. . .You will find our friend. Col. Uullins, from Tenn., very much&#13;
of a.aOBtleman, X hope you will know him, also Ur. Arnell.&#13;
ExoBee, mo for writing at such length,' an' allow me to Insist&#13;
If you ever oome to Tenn. to pay ue r'vlslt at the same homestead.-&#13;
„0 on. would be more pleased to see you than Hr-, Jackson and myself^&#13;
J. K. House to Gen. hodge, Omaha, 29:&#13;
T have lust return-d from Ohbyftniie. spent one day there;&#13;
..he townis improving rapidly, but "no hW Pales have take^ place for&#13;
j +hn'-f» lots selected o-^id held&#13;
Bo»&gt; time. Mb. Talfey Informed me that tho. e lo&#13;
b. Officer, that are not paid le no fault of theirs, a. the paymaster&#13;
has not been there in some time and their .ur^h. funds have been&#13;
u.,d in buUdlng on their lots; that as soon as money came they would^&#13;
..n&#13;
Noveaber, 3 807. . » • « -&#13;
pay promptly, , : . 'a '&#13;
The w'eather is quite'severe, .snViv;.having Callen on Monday to the&#13;
depth of 6 8 inoJiatei and was snowing on the moutaihs, so that I&#13;
had no view bt Long Peak or the Snowy Range* I felt considerably&#13;
disappointed. * ' ' - ,&#13;
The track is completed to t'-e 526th mile post. . The' road is in&#13;
very good "condition as far west as Sidney* but from there on there is&#13;
no provision'made as yet- for enclosing tanks, &amp;cl all trains going&#13;
west are delajred very mticb on that account, everything fi'ozen up, no&#13;
shelter, nd Nothing as'it'oughf lio be. I understand that men are t -&#13;
be sent' out at oAee to make such ifflprovements as are necessary to keep&#13;
pum^s and men from freezing while pumpihg water. The masonry at Loup&#13;
Fork is cdmploted arid the bridge inost . raised, ..will bb able to use it&#13;
next week. * * • i ' ♦&#13;
1 smn&amp; you Hodge's report will send you ^ tracing of the map&#13;
in a few days, thW profile has itet.arrived yet..,&#13;
J. F. House to"®tfn". Dodge,.Omaha, 30j- ^ ^ ^&#13;
I send you'thls day by Merchants Union Express a tin case&#13;
containing map and profile aent, in by Hodges. I have looked over&#13;
them tut hasltly. t eee he has mKlit a voided Improvement at the head&#13;
of Boh- ahd reduced grades very much; also, his, line at the narrows&#13;
shoM pretty wall. I would have made copies of them before sending&#13;
but"it would have taken too muoh time, and If you return thla month&#13;
November, ]867. ^ , • y"&#13;
you would have had no opportunity of examining them. . •&#13;
I saw Hr. Reed in Cheyenne .and asked him for the actiial cost&#13;
of all budding, machnery &amp;c. He says it will be some time before&#13;
they can be gcrt at as part of the accounts are in the Omaha office,&#13;
part he has, &amp;c. I am inclined to ^hink they ca'-; never be gotten at&#13;
accurately, . . 'j&#13;
I have commenoC^ the estimate and will get it up as soon as pos&#13;
sible. The statepeni^ you asked for of original esttaate made by LIr,&#13;
,Honry I have not sent ,but will next week, ily trip to Qheyenne has&#13;
■jJUt me behind with ay ,work .but L will catbh up In ,a few days, ,I sent&#13;
you ^efi:ies thl3 v&gt;oek of loo^ted line as far as Evans has fnrnlshecj ^&#13;
them tb lee« Map of St^ihundred miles will be sent on Lioniay, and I&#13;
Will have it end as,near as possible whero it ought to, and i^r, Evans&#13;
will have the stakes corrected on the 7th hundred. * ' ' ■ i*&#13;
The weather is quite boifcdiand the'river is filldd with ice, wit&#13;
•very prospect of closing up. oBhe pile bridge Is commenced but no&#13;
piles have yet been driven. Mr.,ClebTlrp has gone West to stake out&#13;
coal altSM^a! Ante lope i HI lledele. and Cheyenne. f&#13;
'ten'. Pod'ge'te&gt;- F, Hou«A,Ma«hing+on, SO .&#13;
Any m-^^8 going to Sew. York muat be sent, to,me. 1 want to&#13;
see them before they are fMed in the New York office-no matter what&#13;
for or of what klrid.&#13;
I want thw profiles arid maps of Hodge's work, just as ^&#13;
770&#13;
November, 1867. . ,•&#13;
they come inj should have them here, before I leave, Christmas. They&#13;
may be sent to-^ort Sanders, but I got a letter from him stating that&#13;
he* would soon send them that came jBst after I left. ■ _&#13;
• - l'fear snow will closd wof-k at BiSck Hills before track gets to&#13;
summit. Presideiit fixed east base au.w'ek ago about five miles west&#13;
of Cheyenne,&#13;
Please see Snyder about sending estimate of machinery &amp;c.,that&#13;
I wrote for before I left omahar-I cannot ^Uvide machinery- .&#13;
100th meridian and contract west until I get his estimate.&#13;
J. L. TTilliams to Gen. Dodge, Fort- Wayrie,. 30.:- .&#13;
I learned from New York that no: meeting wOuld b© held on&#13;
the 27th, 30 I continued at work at my aatimates and .reports and am&#13;
.now about through, 'heave tcmorfow night to attend-meetin- of Ft.&#13;
Wayne Board An New York on 4th December. Have come out west to look&#13;
over the bridge subject before I hand in my report.,! suppose-I will&#13;
be in New York all next weeki If they permit it^ I want it done&#13;
while I am there. - ^ ' &gt;''J&#13;
The re,;;=rt lo not qufte done,- Ml D «1U enploee .to you a state&#13;
.ent or the. llnoe. cost, length, fto. .hich 'Ib very nearly If not&#13;
exactly as It will be. The importance ef-the subjoot and the differ&#13;
ent interests Induced me to go muc:. Into detail In estimating founda&#13;
tion' masonry, putt .ne'fair relatlwe prices to every Item at cut&#13;
u.te. according to the B-.l of my Judgment end with the beet light I&#13;
December, 1867. . " t&#13;
could get. I have never in estimating any work taken more pains,&#13;
thou^-there may yet be .contincencids.and changes inrelative cost;&#13;
yet it is as near right as .Cam" be.iaacl. In estimating the cost, I add&#13;
at lower Omaha and also for 4 piers at Child's Mill. I&#13;
have conferred with both Chanute and McAlpin'. At Chi3.d s mill some&#13;
of the 4 piers may possibly be founded in some different way but I&#13;
think the'dost will bs the same. As a matter of course I did&#13;
work better at moddrate».^^iepth much easier and, much cheaper, and so&#13;
the estimate shows. .&#13;
Col. J... 0. Hudnutt came over and staid a day with me this week&#13;
♦ •&#13;
Xeft with m© for you a copy of his report, estimates and profiles.^&#13;
■hiese I will send you mail today.&#13;
0. 1. Clark to Oen. Dddgo, Des^olnes, 1: \ t ^ r . ■ : . • j., ;; jQu have not already made the acquaintance of Josiah&#13;
allow me to introduce him to you as an old&#13;
oomrad. and'ver, parUoalaj frUpd of ,mine. He Is one of your oonstltuenta and haa b.en for aooatlme a elerk In the 2nd Audltor'a office.&#13;
• ■- Jaa. A. Svan» to 0»n., Dodge Fort Sanders, !•&#13;
yotailettora.of the nth, 17th an"d "zad of Hoveobor arc here&#13;
B, laat letter from Oaah. »a, ie oonalde'r.d aVeriy to oil except the&#13;
latter, ifeon yourlottar af Inatruotlcna're.ched Be the party in&#13;
charge of tiorgen had paa.e? here on their .ay tc Omaha, nr. U. haa aa</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42672">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42661">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - November 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42662">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42663">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
November 1867&#13;
&#13;
For additional November 1867 correspondence, please refer to "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - March to November 1867 (miscellaneous)," pp 868.&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42664">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42665">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42666">
                <text>November 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42667">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42668">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42669">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42670">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42671">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4213" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="10422">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/f5236131d50d50830198fb00d3329905.pdf</src>
        <authentication>f64524c2c675c34ddff9e4f86e43985f</authentication>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42501">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42491">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - October 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42492">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42493">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
October 1866&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42494">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42495">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42496">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42497">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42498">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42499">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42500">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="105269">
                <text>October 1866</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="107556">
                <text>Book</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="1551">
        <name>1866</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="4225" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="4301">
        <src>https://archive.councilbluffslibrary.org/files/original/84a5a0f50138a284e357fb3275233ce4.pdf</src>
        <authentication>107d31e41e0e1322012b3b8441b903b9</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="4">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="95">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="58547">
                    <text>September, 1867. •&#13;
gr'adients'and work. 1 will keep enoiigh on oide- hill to keep out o^f&#13;
the alkali, except whehe I have to crosis the valley to get. better ■&#13;
alignment and lighter work. ' » ■ ' ' • • ■ - -&#13;
i^e maximum'grade -will be 0.7 per hundred, which I have marked on&#13;
the profile on the eastern side; on the western the .grades are lighter&#13;
and I have ndt marked them' as I did not,'wish to try to. run to any&#13;
set grade as lortg as I did not exceed the maximum —r&#13;
The map and profile is only put in in lead pencil, as I have no&#13;
India ink, and have not .be»R able, to procure any since poiainG&#13;
The map got injured in .coming up last night in passing through the&#13;
thicket below here. It, hw^ver, shows me to be 10.3 miles north |and&#13;
2 west-of Brown's line . The .Saving ^ distance from^.the Medicine Bow&#13;
to the Blatle i«• about .si^ jailesv - ^&#13;
•••" ' P. Thrown to.Lira. Dodge, Ellswor th 2: , ^&#13;
iv* lo . fully established herc^^and find a very rough&#13;
place Indeed, w«pa« lhan I anticipated, but do.not find that it is&#13;
objectionable here more than elsewhere for a man to quietly&#13;
attend td hll bt««iWlMM-aiide#%?i«f«y«ntly our ho^se is riot like to&#13;
hiWB9»V difficulty* i '[c jeiiTp -,j , ' ..&#13;
The v.ohk on the railroad hero as well as there is progMsslng&#13;
rapidly. Oonstru&lt;rt4ho.»««J-.now ,run over 60 miles west of this place&#13;
and will rurt n&gt;tX ««• »«&lt;• "Wit. passenger trains will prob&#13;
ably go'threogh. im*th.. the, will pick np the town and move it or ,&#13;
October, 1867. • •&#13;
not I cannot say, but. should not be surprised if a considerable pportion of it moves out there, and maybe the balance will be better off.&#13;
The work has not progressed near so rapidly, however, as the northern&#13;
road, 'for some reason, and must be cheaper and easier to build, too.&#13;
I am very sorry that you had -so much to mar -the pleasiire of your&#13;
visi't at Kansas City. Hope you have got entirely well. Artless wrote&#13;
me about your being* iaick, and also that you were hot Well v/hen .you&#13;
went home. ' .&#13;
- . Kansas ®it,v, Oct, 1867. » ,1- . 4&#13;
Dear flhnie: ' ' &lt; -t - e&#13;
Your visit did me ever s-^ much good&gt; though felt desolate ^nough&#13;
v/hen the bus di^bVe SkWay. . : h • «&#13;
Annie *8 eyes are sore again, the •oold'weather hurts them.&#13;
liliJ ' • ' or I Truly, Lettie.&#13;
■WtJ i»c. B. Apple ton Qen. Podge, In Qalap, Pass Gr., 4:&#13;
' A'cCoiiltElhying you will find maps and profiles of my lines tun&#13;
si'noe leaving you at Point of Ro'cks. Ly route back from there was first&#13;
to Laclede Sf'tion, from thixft® I struck wast of north o^ossing the&#13;
•Creek Brown wAs killed on and striking into a large valley west of it.&#13;
I followed'f'is valley Aiy to its head and from there to the Clay&#13;
Buttes, at whlOh point I am sorry say that there is not nor ever&#13;
has been any sp^teg afl. (SoMlbfd by Sol Gee. In order to get to the&#13;
Buttes we RAd to «r4oa AlUg^ divide which is a continuation of the&#13;
mountains so the north of Little Snake R. and west of Luddy Cre'-h . I&#13;
I I'&#13;
October, 1867. -&#13;
afterwgirds fomid that this rid^e gave out west of where I crossed it&#13;
and that at a p-^int where you see an indicate d. line on the map. -From&#13;
the Clay Buttes I went ^nearly e'^st to Lake Ldisfortune, which then •&#13;
,contained some water; then north to the Evan's road to a point 6 miles&#13;
west of the summit and then up the opening we observed to the suxEmit&#13;
This opening .branches a little this side of the. summit to the a-r^d&#13;
E, I followed the east branch most direct but afterwards ascertained&#13;
f '&#13;
that should have done better to have kept the other, as it would&#13;
hnve lowered, an Eu.^it 60 feet or so.&#13;
All my exploring for this and the preceding day I was accompanied&#13;
only by 2 escort; the remainder of the hone©s being'-so exhausted&#13;
as to be able to make only the shortest di tAnce between camping places.&#13;
From the summit I Icept the, rlidge between the operning wo came up and&#13;
the one north of it. I did not have time to give the country still&#13;
farther nonCth ■•ai #^(*®ln(ation, ^erftCKihg Q^siP I four^d Cheabro had&#13;
obtained a much sufMSi^fOr line and' drossing, of the Platte to the old&#13;
one, and throwing out th» two Bi.immita Spring on the&#13;
old line, ha^ our Oftl3ft'W.rja with the aforesaid line&#13;
' ^■^y running rdund that small summit but had not got a very good line.&#13;
After reaching camp I ran a ocmn^ction with Fate's line up the&#13;
opening near the Platte; an #xcell4ifft line dan ba.tobiained. that&#13;
opning, better than Ay proflid'^alSSwfew^-!•••• had not .got along,fapd&#13;
we were forced to halt a'day'f6r"hlftr at Bells ^ringa, got ||&#13;
October, 18G7. . ' ' ,&#13;
his Bhls, end proceeded to the mouth of the canon near Separation&#13;
Creek where the coal indications were. From there ran a line&#13;
down the creek, crossin the ireek as soon as it was.passable with a&#13;
40 i't. grade and'running a line up,the Evan's road opening which I had&#13;
made up my mind was the best in that vicinity, I could not get them&#13;
through by hanging t othe slope west of Separation Creek? the ground&#13;
is too rough, also undulates. Up that opening the last water to be&#13;
had was at Sol Gree or Sulphur Springs; from there we ran 8 miles west&#13;
the first day, then made a dry cqmp on the summit, without water&#13;
barrels r n^ a-small escrt, and from there made the edge of the Red&#13;
Desert, on the evening of the third day out and camped,at Lake Misfor_&#13;
tune, where the water had become so bad that it was difficult to say&#13;
if it was mud or water. I then continued the line across the Red&#13;
' Sink with the intention of trying to break thraggh the ridge.to the&#13;
south of it a little to the east of whero I had crossed it in my explorations, but had to go into Bitter Creek with train on account of&#13;
water, being unable too finish the line. (Capt. Proctor joined us at&#13;
Lake ttiefortune) From Bitter CrSek I went back, tuimed the line east,&#13;
went down Brown's Creek wlt^^ it and Ihto the Bitfter Creeknabout 8&#13;
miles jl^ybnd Laclede Station.&#13;
Had*considerable difficulty to make this connection, had calcu&#13;
lated t 0 find n^ter in a-dry" creak In pools sufficient for my stock,&#13;
but poole wore then entirely dry; there had been water in them three&#13;
October', 1867. . ,&#13;
days beforaf. v/hen we had cr-ssed the creek with train going, to'Bitter Croek&#13;
As soon as we had reached Bitter .CrejoJt" a-three days srlow storm set in&#13;
duhil^ which Mr. iloggan joined us and immediately afj-er, thirthing we&#13;
could, then find water oVer. there, we went back to connect Brovyn's. old&#13;
line with the last'line rtan down Brown's .Oreekj we were not able to do&#13;
it. The w^ter in Lake ;Misfortxine was-ev^n wp^se than when we had&#13;
left it before, stock WQuid not drink it*^ "Morganj^tells p^e.^that h© has&#13;
written abotjij this, so I omi'^»-V • ; , ■ ot-"" . i. ;&#13;
'.We'are at present at- Pass Q^reek, having to wait for rations, as&#13;
transportat iwsorscaroe at the Post^that Capt, P. has had to send&#13;
down 8 teams, renderin- our moving impossible* have also had to&#13;
send down two teams, 'as ow.lng to a misunderstanding Hardin": sent us up&#13;
t&#13;
no rations bW;0«Pt. Prootor and have been_living as.y;:e b^st coul'^&#13;
lately, j; Ilhad.'aent4&lt;eor'supplies |to Qctober 15th to, oome up with Capt.&#13;
1 ■■ ' :» rftt n&#13;
I . .'m: ® am well aware thai-we hav«fino^;.fccomplish^d .as much .a s could be&#13;
roMsbnably expecttd.s.indS ypu were with ue. All I can answer to^it is&#13;
I ''fhat-whild'the wa^ty charge l used every m^an| Jn ray .&#13;
powe^'%o push *Tis.»#«IWl&gt;tia'throWgh,..but the.,scarcity, of w^ter and the&#13;
extreme bad condition of my stock delayed me a great deal. 1 feel that&#13;
on my «Jwo I havt'not had a square chance to do. well. I am not&#13;
» '^i'all sailefled with the workj know,you cannot be, • . ^ . J ) A&#13;
- a J a&#13;
Octobei^,&#13;
'&#13;
1807, • r'&#13;
* i&#13;
Brown'r old sxiHUTilt is 7108,^ Appleton's Ist,^ sunmit 6820, near&#13;
the Evan's road; Appleton's 2d siuruiii-t 7171, over the Little Snake&#13;
Ridge-, 'It is impossible to avoid sionL-iit, over the Little ^nake Ridge.&#13;
I think the best line, everything considered, west of Platte is&#13;
Chesbor's lino and crossing of that river Then.on.Brown's line&#13;
throug^ the Rawlin's Spring canon arui to where my line leaves it at&#13;
the mouth of Canon near Separation Creelo, then following my line to&#13;
near station 7500, then, south-west up the valley of Dry Creek ( a large&#13;
valley) to, Bummit of main divide; then down opening to-near Lake Mis&#13;
fortune and'out t- Bitter Creek (see indicated line..) . _ ' J i&#13;
The: valley of'this Dry Creek thati speak of has not been explor&#13;
ed, but I feel quite copfiident that a good line can, be obtained up it&#13;
to' tha 'summit ,of the mafin divide. On this line the. summit of the&#13;
Little Snake Ridge iwould Bot: I think exceed 6000 feet^ and would most&#13;
probably-be less than that.». Yqu will see M-r. Quis.t at^Fprt Sapders,&#13;
and 'dan make-inquli'ies of him. ' ta&#13;
oart. "Dodge' to Oltiter Ames, ^he-jjenne, D.T. 7:- ,&#13;
' Made no noz^ chejagesiJi Black Hills lines. The delay and&#13;
work done would have graded-a better .line than we have got to the&#13;
atiramit. All fof»»e {Kjseibie ehould be .put on from summit to Laraiaie&#13;
plains, te'fcan fi*^ih!-kl*»'C«'ading if proper effort is made by middle&#13;
December. The" change.at #uim .it is ©bJkP^fonable; makes heavy cross-&#13;
^ Ing of CroVCreeb^ No. wprk dene on that change yqt.&#13;
Ocotber, 1867.&#13;
' S.'Seymour t'o 0*liver Ames,-Camp on Lone Tree, 10' : (telegram)&#13;
Dale Creek ixjUte just surveye'd is two miles shorter and has&#13;
' two hundred and thirty-three feet less elevation than Evan's Pass'&#13;
route. Llaximiua'grades one hundred fee-t in both directions. I think&#13;
it will cost about two hundred thousand less and take three or four&#13;
months less time construct. Will report more fu*lly after making&#13;
further surveys about Evan's Pass and high bi^idge&#13;
OllverAmfes to Cren. Dodge, N. Easton, 7: . ■ " &gt;' i : '&#13;
Ychir letter was duly received from Salt Lake, but we have&#13;
had do-much excitement ali^u't our ahnual election and making up a new&#13;
board of directors and contract for building road that my whole thoiigbM&#13;
h^8 been given to that. We have now got thr ugh thatEand our ne^w board&#13;
is made up of the old board, removing frrm it Tuttlo, Dix, Lambard and&#13;
LlcCormick, who ai*B in'Europe, and sHi'stituting for them John B, A lley,&#13;
' Benj. E. Bates, T. 'Olidden and F. Dexter-all of bos-ton-. Ve had a&#13;
stormy time of it but are now all hamdny, and the Doctor agress to&#13;
go along in hanidny 8md*foi* the best IntwM^tr of the rood. The board&#13;
of directors is made up ^ nice gentlemen who wtLl loojs only to the&#13;
true interest of the road in their actionl • ' :&#13;
Carter has got back, and all of S«yiiotir^s wonderful Improvements&#13;
of the line turn out to be of no account, as far as yet reported,&#13;
" except the first Change to avoid Ih^ahlgh bridge which met ypur instant&#13;
approval. The'engineering department in your at^ence to Congiess. I&#13;
October, 1867. . *-4 -&#13;
suppose you will put in the hands of some copipetent. assistant, and it&#13;
occurred to me that if ^"eed is the ban you would like and feel tho t&#13;
he is competent in your absence to'direct, that' we might get a man to&#13;
take his placV more easily than, one to direct the -various parties In&#13;
your-absence Reed has b^en over' the whole-ground and, hext to your-&#13;
«adlf,* probably linows"'as much -about that has been done as any other^&#13;
person. Tou have to decide this- question soon, as your Congressi^hal&#13;
duties will how take you to'Washington whfeire" you can for the next 8&#13;
or 10 months have but'very little" time ■.to; look after the Pacific R.R.&#13;
I make' the a'uj^g^Btlon of Reed's name that you may haye the liberty to&#13;
choose him It you think he is the best man for the place, but not&#13;
with any desire to inf luerio'e^ your jud'-menV as it is our Ihterest to&#13;
hav you select the^ best man 'eritlretty aloof from outsi.de influence.&#13;
■ The North Platte and Loupe P«»irk» bridges have not yet been changed&#13;
as proposed; Win should be' '^rne bdfbhe winter prevents if pract!cable.&#13;
I am proposing, when We get our matters here fixed up, to resign my&#13;
place as President Irtlfavor of LicCbbmbS, who will be able to give&#13;
more time to it and IS quite desirous of the ]3osition. ■&#13;
Note:- ^Corttract Diarant, ^mSs and others, Qot. 16m,18G7. . ..&#13;
5ol» Oeo. Spancer to Gen. Dodge,.Tugkalooaa, Ala, 22;&#13;
*■ My great iifflfotion, and .Also sickne^f myself, and your&#13;
absence bombined,'prevented *e writiag you since my darling wife's&#13;
October, 1867. .&#13;
,Todsty I received your. letter Oct. 15 th. I ani now recovering&#13;
from a very severe attack of the fever and have not yet recovered my&#13;
strength. I am comjbetely broken down in spirits and care- but very&#13;
little for the future, I fe^el that my duty is to j?emain here and help&#13;
reconstruct th,is God forsaken and miserable country. It is truly an&#13;
awful place to live in, but since we have the colored men to help us,&#13;
we can out-vote them and 1 think if- it becomes necessary thet we can&#13;
-ut-fight them. I have lost all my ambition and have but little heart&#13;
•to engage In political life; "while I remain here T cannot help^doing it.&#13;
I' am having'a, good peal to do iri my office and will make at least&#13;
a god salanr ont of It, We have this state now in our hands and can&#13;
keep it if Cong»f«rf wtLll stick to its policy. Since the elections. In&#13;
Ohio and Pe'nnn , the rebela Jire very jubilant and talk of the time . * n j ^&#13;
When the-"' are again going to commence hanging. ^ tiiope Congress will&#13;
* not back down one-viMSg' but go- aheacti-' and that the first .thing they ^&#13;
will do will b^ to pass a general impeachment law and then impeach * I&#13;
the President", " We Will send ire Republican delegation to help&#13;
you frovi, this State* 1 can go to Congress ,if 1 w^sh but at present&#13;
do not'feel lilte.ltj ai* mdnths-may change view , I stand as&#13;
well is any TJnicDnaan in blje atftt^ and do that there is&#13;
any man'in the party that wields morf inf^Li^enco ^han, I do.&#13;
' ■ ' 1 have been trying'to persuade Tichenor to ,come here; v/e could. A.I - « "J .&#13;
October, 18G7.&#13;
send him to Congress if he would come soon. .1 shall go to the Nation&#13;
al Convent on and support Gen. Grant, Does that meet with your&#13;
views? ?rho shall we nominate, Vice-President? Senator "ilson&#13;
came down here last stun.ier to fix up the Southern States f-r himself*.&#13;
I am not a ^Vils.on man.&#13;
Please give my regards to ilrs. Dodge, Bella was speaking of writ&#13;
ing to her only a few days before her death and said: "As soon as I&#13;
get well I must write to Mrs. Dodge." How is your health? "hrough • • • . * . t • • •&#13;
the papers and from Tichenor I understand that It is very-poor. I ^ '&#13;
hope your trf^p did ,you good. I saw Phillip Henson a few d^ays- asoi- u\ hi&#13;
he is at ^orinth and the rebels are persecuting-him terribly:. They- .&#13;
have all Bp-rts-of ^uits against him,&#13;
When f#uig«i-rto G^ongrees, this winter I am going to send you a&#13;
petlttlBtoCor. a-'speicial pension for Tfta. Looneg, the guide and scout.&#13;
He is broken down in heplth and very poor and a family to support, and&#13;
Qftv»r ^ee«iv»d: for all his services only about $75 ahich you paid&#13;
him. I have li34ra*y,atP«*g petition signed by. about 500 . persons asking Congress to paas a joint resotuticn giving him a pension. Dont you&#13;
tliink you cotild get it'through without much tremble?.&#13;
t ttvi^p^se, ytm are vet'y bucy and as ever hard at work. I hope you&#13;
Will- not overtaok yowi^olf and that you will take, the world easier&#13;
than formerly. Please let me jioar froov you soon^^,^^^^^&#13;
..ry;;, p. g, I studied a Jong time to make out one of your questions, and ^&#13;
October, 1867&#13;
have conclxided that it was" "What is the porition worth?" I cannot yet&#13;
tell what it w'll be worth."■ I lary make'ten thousand dollars out of it&#13;
and may not dver fivd thousand. ' I dont think it'will be under the&#13;
latter figure or above the former. I have now 90 cases and will&#13;
probably reach 400 befoi e Jxine. The work is immense. It has been'so&#13;
long since f have ready arfy of ycfur writing that at f'i'rst It puzzles&#13;
me. I see that it, "is plain now. ■' e I&#13;
F. S, Hodges to Gen. Dodge*, Camp,* 105, Head of Echo, U.T. 27&#13;
' I have ^he honor to -report the location of Weber narrov/s&#13;
(seven miles') c'bmp'ete. The Lost^ Creek'qee't ion "thorouf^ly exhausted"&#13;
and two md-les of location at this point. A map and profile of Weber&#13;
narrows and a profile of Lost Creek nearly finished, thus employing&#13;
the two SDowstom'fi wS have alfeady had, but the weather has gieiherally&#13;
been so fiW ahd the approach of* winter so near th" t I have conflUfeftvr&#13;
myself to out dowr work eVery available' moment. ci r^'&#13;
Reports of Lost Creek will embrace about sixty miles.of line, and&#13;
four paasi^s within two to ilos of connection wlth'iUr. Bate's lino? that&#13;
route is impractlca'le on account of heavy grades without slopes to&#13;
overcome extraordinary elevations. A pass for thO north Is made on-fj&#13;
60 ft. grade without ttinnel o^ cut an#-As Just ICQ ft, hd^j^her than&#13;
Echo; but to reach its vicinity requirAa^t miles of..maJtiAW grade,&#13;
three of which show Very expensive Wohlt. ' : - rfl| , *&#13;
' ' Uade a reconnolsaance of the crest of this, ranger to. the northwari&#13;
October, 1867, • t&#13;
until I reached water flowinr; into Cache Vallej'", "Kill '^report on it&#13;
as Scon as further inforrnat on, wri-tten for/ is-received. Hope" to&#13;
show a better profile and'grade here than you expect, but running the&#13;
serie's of reversed curves requires much time. • -&#13;
Regret •fhat I'iiave been*^ unable to meet Ive^ of the C. P.R.R. owing&#13;
of failure of mails and a change of his programme. He returns westward after reaching Rains Pork via that stream.&#13;
On the 15th Sept. I telegraphed Omaha for 20 pay rolls, lOO&#13;
blank vouchers and led pencils to bB^ forwarded to "Bear River, care*&#13;
Myers. None have been 'Received. "On the 1st NovembSf shall forward"* g&#13;
such vouchers and papei^s as 1 have, sanding remainder when the&#13;
pay colls arrive. On the 1st of November I -shan draw on you for. :C&#13;
one thousand dollars for current expenses.- "^he maps and prqfilea&#13;
shall go forward as soon as complete. ' • ^&#13;
A.R. Anderson to Oen. Bodge, Sidney, 29": 'I&#13;
i learn with pleasure the t you have "returned from your labor&#13;
in the rest in comparatively go6d health. I hbpe you may be strong&#13;
for your labors in Washington the coming serfeion.&#13;
I l^arn that effort, growing out jjealopay and meanness, is being&#13;
made t remove our friend Dr; Rumbaugh from the Hanlyville Post office.&#13;
The Dr. does not care a fig for the offic^ but dont want the creatures&#13;
to beat him. The fight is not based upon political grounds, as the&#13;
incumbent and t ose trying to oust hdni are radicals, but is the rut-&#13;
' 1&#13;
October, 18G7. « .&#13;
growth of a trifling, ae^an spirit of rivaly among a ^a 11 -bored set |&#13;
of light-headed politicians. The Dr. is as good as any of,those oppos-.&#13;
ing and ©specially ^is he-as gooi as the leaders of the moyement,&#13;
prominent among v/hom is N, B. Loore, wlio wasn't a delegate to the On- - f-'&#13;
•.gressi.onal Convention, yet was there fighting for Rasson,&#13;
Anything.you can do towards holding this thing just as it is ^&#13;
would he good service, and I only sviggest to that end the propriety&#13;
of writing Randall the nature of the fight, thp-t it is not pQlitical as&#13;
all the parties are of the same.political faith and suggesting the&#13;
propriety of leaving ,it just-as it. is. Hanlyville and the, entire com-&#13;
* ■ ' •&#13;
munity supplied .at that office are all satisfied. The effort to oust ^&#13;
the Dr. csaaes from Clarinda. -&#13;
Well, General f -I got scooped put in the election, but after all&#13;
dont care much. I would, however, ^1 ike office if appointed. I could&#13;
enjoy that in connection with my other office business, and that would&#13;
suit my financial ct&gt;ndlti&lt;*i better than .to post off to Des Moines&#13;
during thre®'oft four of the rbest working months. And could you succeed&#13;
in raising this session wl».%, you came so .near lifting la st, you will ^&#13;
^laee^'me under i^newed dbligations of no ordinary character.&#13;
I wd^lld he-flsssed to hear from you, General, if you have the&#13;
leisti're. ^ ituf* 4ti'&#13;
i -ixor, , , 738 ;&#13;
yf*T n , .i. ■ * - jj,^&#13;
1 . . . ^&#13;
i* -.To ■&lt; r&#13;
•N ;</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="25">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104839">
                  <text>General Dodge Papers</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104840">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104841">
                  <text>Data chronologically arranged for ready-reference in the preparation of a biography of Grenville Mellen Dodge. &#13;
&#13;
Correspondence, diaries, business papers, speeches, and miscellaneous notes related to Dodge's family history, Civil War activities, railroad construction, life in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and travels in Europe.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104842">
                  <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104843">
                  <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="40">
              <name>Date</name>
              <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104844">
                  <text>1851-1916</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104845">
                  <text>Document</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104846">
                  <text>B D6643z</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="38">
              <name>Coverage</name>
              <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104847">
                  <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="47">
              <name>Rights</name>
              <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104848">
                  <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="44">
              <name>Language</name>
              <description>A language of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="104849">
                  <text>English</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Text</name>
      <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="7">
          <name>Original Format</name>
          <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42659">
              <text>Document</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42648">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - October 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42649">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916 -- Correspondence.&#13;
Union Pacific Railroad Company.&#13;
Generals -- United States -- Biography.&#13;
Railroads -- History.&#13;
United States -- History -- Civil War, 1861-1865 -- Correspondence</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42650">
                <text>General Dodge Papers - The War Period, Book 6&#13;
October 1867&#13;
&#13;
For additional October 1867 correspondence, please refer to "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 - March to November 1867 (miscellaneous)," pp 868.&#13;
&#13;
For an index for Book 6, please refer to the "General Dodge Papers - Book 6 Index" record.&#13;
&#13;
Typescripts of originals housed at the State Historical Society of Iowa.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42651">
                <text>Dodge, Grenville M., 1831-1916</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42652">
                <text>Council Bluffs Public Library Special Collections</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42653">
                <text>October 1867</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42654">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42655">
                <text>B D6643z</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42656">
                <text>Council Bluffs, Iowa</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42657">
                <text>Educational use only, no other permissions given. U.S. and international copyright laws may protect this item. Commercial use or distribution is not permitted without prior permission of the copyright holder.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="42658">
                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="743">
        <name>1867</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="202">
        <name>civil war</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="1165">
        <name>General Grenville M. Dodge</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="188">
        <name>Union Pacific Railroad</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
