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Partial letter from Maria Weston Chapman, [Weymouth, Mass.], to Anne Greene Chapman Dicey, [1862 July 21?]

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Holograph.The beginning of this letter is missing. This unsigned letter was presumably written by Maria Weston Chapman to Anne Greene Chapman [Dicey].Maria W. Chapman writes: "The moral sense of the great majority of even the abolitionists has been destroyed by it [Civil War] imperceptibly & they show an affinity for the dark ages, ...Garrison is untouched by this madness--but I see very few others able to stand the strain of this revolution. I should say, of public men [Charles] Sumner stood it best." Chapman believes that there will be a second great uprising "to force the war to a conclusion by breaking down slavery..." She points out that the result of the "delays before Richmond" does not in itself mean disaster, rather "it is that the army is a skeleton. These things are not permitted to be told." Chapman refers to a little New Hampshire town that sent 17 men to the army of the Potomac: "they are all dead: --not in battle." She tells of a New England regiment that started for the Potomac 900 strong, 60 are left. Chapman comments that "McClellan's prestige is fading out." She enumerates some encouraging features, such as the passing of the confiscation bill, "in effect an Emancipation bill with clogs on." The young [James] Lowell "is alive after all, or was. He was carried to a farm-house off the field." Edward Dicey has just left; Anne Greene Chapman will soon see him, for he sails tomorrow. Chapman discusses the English criticism of...
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Correspondence Manuscripts
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