Equipments for armies, the supply of, [478];
their manufacture, [478].
Everett, Edward, nominated for the Vice-Presidency in 1860, [50];
his assertions relative to the Constitution, [129];
views on the sovereignty of the States, [148].
Evans, General N. S., his force near Leesburg, [437];
fight at Ball's Bluff, [437].
Expedition, Naval, to reënforce Fort Sumter, [274];
the circumstances, [274];
its arrival delayed by a storm, [274];
dissensions in Mr. Lincoln's Cabinet, [274];
impossible that he was ignorant of the communications of the Secretary, [275];
yet the Secretary was not impeached, [275];
a transaction in the Cabinet, [275];
letter of Mr. Blair, [277];
letters of the Commissioners, [277], [278];
message of President Davis to Congress, [277];
the relief squadron, [284];
correspondence of Major Anderson, [288];
arrival of the fleet off Charleston Harbor, [289];
its failure to relieve the fort, [289];
report of Captain McGowan, [291].
Fairfax Court-House, The conference at, [445];
circumstances, [449];
questions considered at the conference, [449];
a paper relating to the conference, [450];
details respecting it, [450];
position unfavorable for defense, [452];
establishment of a battery near Acquia Creek, [452];
possibilities in the Valley of the Shenandoah, [452];
correspondence, [452];
reference to, [464].
"Faith as to Sumter fully kept"—the written answer of Secretary Seward, [273];
official notification of reënforcement served on Governor Pickens on the same day, [274].
False representations made of us at the close of 1860, [77].
Federal Constitution, how the term was freely used, [93].
Federal Government, the tendency to pervert the functions delegated to it, and to use them with sectional discrimination against the minority, [32].