Sebastian, William K., [567].
Seward, Wm. H., [476], [477], [478], [481], [482], [483], [487].
Sherman, John, [580], [582].
Sickles, Daniel E., [579], [580].
Simmons, James F., [480].
Stanton, Benjamin, [574], [575].
Statement to N.Y. Legislature, [601], [603].
Stevens, Thaddeus, [576].
Sumner, Charles, [480].

T

Tyler, John, [471].
Trumbull, Lyman, [485], [486], [487], [535].

W

Wade, Benj. F., [488], [535].
Washburne, Elihu B., [577], [582].
Wilkinson, Morton S., [523], [524].
Wilson, James, [581].
Woodson, Samuel H., [580].
Wright, C.J., [601].


FOOTNOTES

[1] Mr. Ruffin stated the substance of the amendments he proposed in a voice so low, as not to be audible to the greater part of the Conference. They are not to be found in the Journal, nor in the documents printed by order of the Conference, nor were they heard by me.

[2] The speech of Mr. Davis is, I believe, the only one delivered in the Conference which I did not hear, and of which I did not preserve minutes more or less full. The reason for the omission was this: The morning session was protracted until a late hour, and the labor of reporting the remarks of the members had been very severe. The evening session commenced with some observations of my own; and after reporting the remarks of Mr. Logan, which followed mine, I found myself in such a condition of physical exhaustion that I was obliged to retire to my room. It was during this temporary absence that the remarks of Mr. Davis were made. I was informed that his speech was very animated and in excellent temper—that he took the position that North Carolina was loyal to the Union, but that he fully concurred with the Southern States in the necessity of demanding constitutional guarantees; and that if these were not given, her relations were such with South Carolina and the Gulf States that, however much she might regret the necessity, she could not do otherwise than to leave the Union and unite her future with those of the seceded States.

I have been unable to communicate by letter with any of the members representing the States now in insurrection. As Mr. Davis was the only representative from North Carolina who entered into a general discussion of the reports of the majority and minority of the Committee of One from each State, I was the more desirous of securing some report of his remarks. But in all the material which has been furnished me, by the many members with whom I have corresponded, I find that none of them preserved notes of his speech.