[309] Hamilton, in his Reminiscences, p. 130, tells of the ride to Wilmington.
[310] Published in Haywood’s Branch.
[311] Letters published in Haywood’s Branch.
[312] During the Bank controversy Ingham attacked Jackson and defended the Bank. He died in Trenton, New Jersey, in 1860, never having held office after leaving the Jackson Cabinet.
[313] Berrien’s position is clearly disclosed in conversations with Francis Scott Key, who wrote Roger Taney. See Tyler’s Life of Taney.
[314] Letters and Times of the Tylers, I, 423.
[315] At Philadelphia, where he met Dallas, an intimate, Livingston appears to have discussed nothing more important than his rosebuds at Montgomery Place. Hunt’s Life of Livingston.
[316] First Forty Years, 252, 319.
[317] Letter from F. W. Armstrong, quoted in Nancy Scott’s Memoir of Hugh Lawson White.
[318] Nancy Scott’s Memoir of Hugh Lawson White.