L.C. BAKER
Silver Member
Shortly before this time, Jefferson Davis was making a deal in Washington D.C. with the aide of blockade runner Benjamin Franklin Ficklin who had already ran the blockade with the first load of C.S.A. cotton in a boat that Davis had purchased for the deed. The deal had taken place sometime in March of 1865 following Singleton's trip to Richmond which was permitted by Lincoln through the sneaky leverage of Orville Browning. The Singleton cotton deal would have given Orville Browning, John Singleton and Ben Ficklin and Pres. Davis a chance to sell the C.S.A cotton without taking the oath of allegiance to the Union, not to mention a monopoly on cotton sales. Most of all, It would have also made the C.S.A. all a great deal of money to fuel the rebellion and continue the Civil War. Lincoln was savvy to the fact that he would only be fueling a flame he was trying to extinguish by allowing the C.S.A. (DAVIS) to sell cotton in the North without taking the oath. At one point in the discussions between he and Orville Browning, President Lincoln said " I would rather puke than sign the permit"
Great stuff ECS, L.C.
Great stuff ECS, L.C.