Robert E. Lee
to
Jefferson Davis
Camp Culpeper [Virginia]
July 31, 1863
Mr. President
Your note of the 27 [sic] enclosing a slip from the
Charleston Mercury relative to the battle of Gettysburg is received.
I much regret its general censure upon the operations of the army, as it is
calculated to do us no good either at home or abroad. But I am
prepared for similar criticism & as far as I am concerned the remarks fall
harmless. I am particularly sorry however that from partial
information & mere assumption of facts that injustice should be done any
officer, & that occasion should be taken to asperse your conduct, who of
all others are most free of blame. I do not fear that your
position in the confidence of the people, can be injured by such attacks,
& I hope the official reports will protect the reputation of every
officer. These cannot be made at once, & in the meantime as you
state much falsehood may be promulgated. But truth is mighty &
will eventually prevail. As regards the article in question I
think it contains its own contradiction. Although charging Heth
with the failure of the battle, it expressly states he was absent wounded.
The object of the writer & publisher is evidently to cast discredit upon the
operations of the Government & those connected with it & thus gratify feelings
more to be pitied than to be envied. To take notice of such
attacks would I think do more harm than good, & would be just what is
desired. The delay that will necessarily occur in receiving
official reports has induced me to make for the information of the Department
a brief outline of operations of the army, in which however I have been unable
to state the conduct of troops or officers. It is sufficient to
show what was done & what was not done. No blame can be attached
to the army for its failure to accomplish what was projected by me, nor should
it be censured for the unreasonable expectations of the public.
I am alone to blame, in perhaps expecting too much of its prowess & valour.
It however in my opinion achieved under the guidance of the Most High a general
success, though it did not win a victory. I thought at the time
that the latter was practicable. I still think if all things could
have worked together it would have been accomplished. But with
the knowledge I then had, & in the circumstances I was then placed, I do not
know what better course I could have pursued. With my present
knowledge, & could I have foreseen that the attack on the last day would have
failed to drive the enemy from his position, I should certainly have tried
some other course. What the ultimate result would have been is not
so clear to me. Our loss has been heavy, that of the enemy's
proportionally so. His crippled condition enabled us to retire
from the country comparatively unmolested. The unexpected state of
the Potomac was our only embarrassment. I will not trespass upon
Your Excellency's time more. With prayers for your health &
happiness, & the recognition by your grateful country of your great services
I remain truly & sincerely yours,
R. E. Lee
SOURCE: Reprinted in Clifford Dowdey, editor,
The Wartime Papers of R. E. Lee (New York: Bramhall House, 1961),
pages 564-565.
This document and others linked to it through
the America's Civil War World Wide Web site are produced and made
available for the non-profit educational use of students at the University
of the South, Sewanee, Tennessee. Visitors to these pages are enjoined
against copyright infringement or for-profit applications.
|