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Collection Reference Number GLC08694
From Archive Folder Unassociated Civil War Documents 1861 
Title Letter from the Hon. Joseph Holt discussing the "pending revolution" and the neutrality of Kentucky
Date 1861
Author Holt, Joseph (1807-1894)  
Document Type Pamphlet
Content Description Full title is: "Letter from the Hon. Joseph Holt, Upon the Policy of the General Government, the Pending Revolution, Its Objects, and the Duty of Kentucky in the Crisis." Printed by Henry Polkinhorn in Washington, D.C. Printed copy of a letter Holt wrote to Kentucky Judge Joshua Speed on 31 May 1861. Is glad that Kentucky has not joined the Confederacy, but says it is disappointing they have chosen a neutral course and have denied the right of all to march on their soil. Goes on to say the South is at fault for the course of events. Says origins of conflict go back to the 1830s "When General Jackson crushed nullification, he said it would revive again under the form of slavery agitation: and we have lived to see his prediction verified. Indeed that agitation, during the last fifteen or twenty years, has been almost the entire stock in trade of Southern politicians." Lays out the case why Kentucky should avoid joining the Confederacy, saying "Could my voice reach every dwelling in Kentucky, I would implore its inmates-if they would not have the rivers of their prosperity shrink away, as do unfed streams beneath the summer heat- to rouse themselves from their lethargy, and fly to the rescue of their country before it is everlastingly too late." Original wrappers and stab-stich binding.
Subjects Civil War  Military History  Union Forces  Confederate States of America  Neutrality  Nullification  African American History  Slavery  President  Politics  Secession  
People Holt, Joseph (1807-1894)  
Place written Washington, D.C.
Theme The American Civil War; Government & Politics; African Americans; Slavery & Abolition; The Presidency
Sub-collection Papers and Images of the American Civil War
Additional Information Holt served as U.S. Postmaster General and U.S. Secretary of War in the final days before the American Civil War, in the administration of President James Buchanan. During the war he served as the Judge Advocate General of the U.S. Army and was the chief prosecutor during the trial of the Lincoln assassination conspirators in 1865.
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945