Augusta County: J. D. Imboden to John McCue,
February 24, 1861
Summary:
Imboden discusses his failed bid to represent Augusta at the Virginia state
convention, railing particularly against Alexander H. H. Stuart, and promises to
leave Virginia if the state does not secede.
Feby 24/61
Staunton
Dear John.
Your letter asking me to meet you in Richmond this week was received yesterday. I am sorry I cannot do so, but as I returned from Richmond on Thursday I cannot go back again so soon.
I went down on last Monday to call Stuart to account for his denial on Friday of
what he had said to Harmon & myself. At Gordonsville I first saw his
apology of Saturday morning, but kept on to the city. When I got there I found
that there was but one opinion in regard to the matter, and that was that Sandy
had said inconsistent things, that he had either lied on Friday or on Saturday.
Gov. Wise, O. J. Wise, Lt. Gov. Montague, Wm F. Gowan & several others
with whom Harmon & I conferred, said there was no need of our pressing
the matter, that he (S.) had wholly acquitted us of all imputation & we
might drop it [deleted: the matter]. But on our own
[unclear: hook] to make the matter perfectly clear
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we
addressed Sandy a little billet doux, asking his
attention to the published report of his remarks on both Friday & Saturday, and to say in reply exactly what we were
to understand he meant in respect to us. About midnight we got a reply which was
a square back down, and exonerated us from all
possible imputation. I intended making a publication of this correspondence, and
also a more complete statement in detail of what he had said the evening he
mentioned the "plot" to us, and to have accompanied it with the letter of
another gentleman to whom he made a similar statement nine days after his conversation with Harmon
& myself, and said unqualifiedly that "there was a plot on foot, and if
it succeeded, one of the first acts of the Convention would be to change the
organic law of the State, and turn Letcher out of office & put Gov. Wise
in his place." The gentleman to whom he made this Statement furnished it to me
in writing, and another man in public life sent me word, that to him the same
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communication was made, and if it became necessary he would testify.
So that I should have had four witnesses against him
on the fact he denied to Wise in the Convention. But on consultation with Gov.
Wise & the other friends I have named, & numerous outsiders, the
universal opinion was that we ought not to publish, that the public already
understood that Sandy had lied, and that being down in the mud it would
unmagnanimous and unmanly to gouge & pummel him. We have therefore
simply filed away the documents for safe keeping & future use if
circumstances require it. I shewed the correspondence to scores of persons
before I left Richmond & here since my return.
The idea you mention that my defeat had anything to do with this matter is
absurd, for the conversation occurred before either Stuart or myself were
candidates, & not being in any sense private,
was communicated to Douglas & many others the same
night 13th January, and was talked about by us in the City all the next
day, & no doubt Stuart heard of our
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speaking of it before we
came home from Richmond & before either of us
was a candidate. By the way he left the impression in his response to Wise that
Col. Baldwin was present at the conversation. He takes all that back in his
letter to us and says he only meant to say Colonel
Baldwin was in the City at the
same time, & being his brother in law the
probabilities were that he would have mentioned the matter to him! but did not.
I wish I could be with you in Richmond You will soon be
disgusted with the submission feeling that pervades the body of the Convention.
Gov. Wise is the only real living embodiment of the true spirit which should
animate Virginia at this time. I told him in Richmond
the other day that I delegated him to represent me on
the floor of that body, as I have no immediate representative there. John we are
going to have fearful times here in Virginia. I am afraid we shall have a war
amongst ourselves. I have made up my mind that if Virginia submits to the dishonor of standing by and seeing war made in the
Seceded states, I will leave Virginia I am persuaded
that a majority of our people here are ready for that. I am not and never will
be. We must have immediately the constitutional
guarantees of the Crittenden plan at least or go with
the South. If these are refused, and Virginia
submit, I never will. I shall go to Florida or
Louisiana, take my family & cast my lot there for life. I will write to Gov. Wise whilst you are in Richmond. Mary writes in love to you and yours. She is a
red hot Southern Confederacy woman.
Yours truly
J D Imboden
P.S. Sorry you were beaten for Cur. but am not surprised since I have heard the causes that were at work.