Robert Toombs to Alexander H. Stephens, March 16, 1860

    Source citation
    Robert Toombs to Alexander H. Stephens, March 16, 1860, in The Annual Report of the American Historical Association for the Year 1911, Vol. 2, The Correspondence of Robert Toombs, Alexander H. Stephens, and Howell Cobb, ed. Ulrich B. Phillips (Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1913), 464-465.
    Recipient (to)
    Alexander H. Stephens
    Type
    Letter
    Transcriber
    Don Sailer, Dickinson College
    Transcription date
    The following text is presented here in complete form, as it originally appeared in print. Spelling and typographical errors have been preserved as in the original.

    WASHINGTON, D.C., Mar. 16th, 1860.

    DEAR STEPHENS,… We are getting on badly. The Black Reps. are now strong enough to do mischief in the Senate and are using their power. The Nicaragua Treaty was beaten yesterday and injunction of secrecy taken off by us to expose them. It is nothing to us and I don’t care a fig for it, but they are such fools as not to understand their own interest. They will also defeat the Mexican treaty when action is had on it. You will see Ohio refuse to give up old Brown’s son and another of the refugees from Harper’s Ferry. So we go. New Hampshire has increased her Republican majority and we shall lose every Northern State in the Union except California and perhaps Oregon. The strife here runs “fast and furious” between the friends of the different candidates. It looks to me very much like the officers of ships being engaged in cheating one another at “three up” in the forecastle while the vessel is labouring [laboring] among the breakers. Douglas I think cannot weather the storm. Penn. and N. York are against him and he is weak in New England, but the great element of his weaknesses in the North is the hostility of the South to him. I fear he is not patriot enough [to] struggle for the country with the banner in any other hand than his own. Hunter’s prospects have greatly improved within the last week but he by no means show strength to command the nomination. Penn. wants a tariff man and of course expects the Dem. party now to swallow its past [illegible] secure her support, doubtful at least. Seward has the [illegible] with the Blacks and I think will be nominated but it is not certain. Neither New England nor Penn. politicians want him; but I think their people do, and that may finally settle it in his favour [favor]. The Democratic wing of the Blacks are rampant for the candidate but as they are a majority I suppose they will be whipped in. Buchanan is at his old game of breaking down in succession all democratic aspirations in order to get it himself, and is laughed at by his own menials and dependants.

    I went to see Holt about N. I did not find him in and wrote him a note. I have not yet heard from him. We hear there was trouble in the Geo. Convention. Our accounts tho’ are only up to 12 o’clock the first day of the session. It will be bad to have a split in Geo. and worse still to send two delegates. God knows one is as much as any people ought to stand in such a crowd. Crawford is well, and the House is getting on badly. Julia has thrown away her stick and improves slowly.

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