Mcclure's Magazine, Vol. 31, No. 1, May 1908

Cover Mcclure's Magazine, Vol. 31, No. 1, May 1908
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The President did notanswer. The silence became awkward, and I bowed myself out.
President Johnson evidently wished to suppress my testimony as to thecondition of things in the South. I resolved not to let him do so. Ihad conscientiously endeavored to see Southern conditions as theywere. I had not permitted any political considerations or anypreconceived opinions on my part to obscure my perception anddiscernment in the slightest degree. I had told the truth, as Ilearned it and understood it, w
...ith the severest accuracy, and Ithought it due to the country that the truth should be known.
_Why the President Reversed his Policy_ Among my friends in Washington there were different opinions as to howthe striking change in President Johnson's attitude had been broughtabout. Some told me that during the summer the White House had beenfairly besieged by Southern men and women of high social standing, whohad told the President that the only element of trouble in the Southconsisted of a lot of fanatical abolitionists who excited the negroeswith all sorts of dangerous notions, and that all would be well if hewould only restore the Southern State government as quickly aspossible according to his own plan as laid down in the North Carolinaproclamation, and that he was a great man to whom they looked up astheir savior.


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