Invasions of States, no right in the Federal government to, [411];
words of the Constitution, [411];
deemed a high crime, [411];
response of Governors to President Lincoln's call for troops, [411].
Invention exhausted itself in the creation of imaginary "cabals," "conspiracies," and "intrigues," [200];
examples, [209].
Jackson, General T. J., skill and daring in checking the enemy's forces in June, 1861, [344];
character, [454];
letter proposing a movement into the Shenandoah Valley, [455];
letter of the President, [457].
Jackson, Governor of Missouri, reply to Mr. Lincoln's call for troops, [412];
issues a call for fifty thousand volunteers, [421];
words of the Governor, [421];
his efforts to preserve the peace, [422];
his declarations, [422];
demands of the Federal officers, [422];
his march, [459];
its results, [459].
Jersey Plan, The, States rights, and opposed to national, as proposed in the Federal Constitutional Convention, [105];
arguments for it, [106].
Johnston, General Albert Sidney, resigns in United States Army, [308];
rank, [308];
appointment in Confederate Army, [309];
his early career, [405];
resigns in United States army, [406];
assigned to the command of the Confederate Department of the West, [406];
destitution at Nashville, [406];
his movements, [406];
his military positions, [406];
takes command at Bowling Green, [406];
his force, [407];
force of the enemy, [407];
efforts to procure arms and men, [407];
letter to the Governor of Alabama, [407];
letter to the Governor of Georgia, [407];
telegram to Richmond, [407];
answer of the Secretary of War, [407];
aid from the Governor and Legislature of Tennessee, [408];
measures taken to concentrate and recruit his forces, [408];
the result, [408];
resolves on a levy en masse, [409];
letters to the Governors of States, [409];
reënforced from Virginia, [410].
Johnson, Herschel V., nominated for the Vice-Presidency in 1860, [50].
Johnston, General Joseph E., commands army near Harper's Ferry, [340];
desires to retire, [341];
official letter addressed to him, [341];
apparent effort of the enemy to detain him in the Valley of the Shenandoah, [344];
his junction with Beauregard becomes necessary, [344];
extract from official letter, [345];
urged to join General Beauregard, [345];
correspondence lost, [346];
telegram sent to, by General Cooper, [346];
confidence reposed in him, [346];
the meaning of an order, [347];
the junction made with marked skill, [347];
answer to telegram to join Beauregard, [347];
his telegram asking his position relative to Beauregard, [348];
answer, [348];
his rank in the Confederate Army, [348];
letter relative to obstacles to the pursuit of the enemy at Manassas, [363];
his report, and the endorsement put on it by the President, [366];
remonstrates against the movement of General Jackson in the valley, [454];
letter, [456];
reconnaissance, [465].
Johnson, John M., chairman of committee of Kentucky Senate on military occupation, [393];
letter to General Polk, [393].
Jordan, Colonel Thomas, letter respecting the pursuit of the enemy after battle at Manassas, [354];
his order, [355].