John A. Logan.
"I entered the field to die, if need be, for this government and never expect
to return to peaceful pursuits until the object of this war of preservation has
become a fact established." Thus spoke John A. Logan in 1862, when asked to
return home from the field and become a candidate for Congress.
General Logan was born February 9th, 1826, in Murphysboro, Illinois, and was
the eldest of eleven children. He received his education in the common schools
and in Shiloh Academy.
The Mexican war broke out when young Logan was but twenty years of age, and
he at once enlisted and was made a lieutenant in one of the Illinois regiments.
He returned home in 1848 with an excellent military record, and commenced the
study of law in the office of his uncle, Alexander M. Jenkins, who had formerly
been lieutenant-governor of the State.
In 1844, before he had completed his law course, he was elected clerk of
Jackson county, and at the expiration of his term of office went to Louisville,
Kentucky, where he attended law lectures, and was admitted to the bar in the
spring of 1851. In the fall of the same year he was elected to represent Jackson
and Franklin counties in the legislature, and from that time has been almost
uninterruptedly in the public service, either civil or military.
He was twice elected to the legislature, and in 1854[356] was a Democratic presidential
elector, and cast his vote for James Buchanan.
The year of 1860, the year of the great Lincoln campaign saw Logan serving his
second term in Congress as the representative of the Ninth Illinois
Congressional District. Mr. Logan was then a Democrat and an ardent supporter of
Stephen A. Douglas, Mr. Lincoln's opponent. On the floor of Congress he several
times in 1860 and 1861 attacked the course of the Southern members.
The war came at last, and Logan was one of the first to enter the Union army.
He resigned his seat in Congress in July, 1861, for that purpose, and took a
brave part in the first battle of Bull Run. He personally raised the
Thirty-first Illinois Regiment of Infantry, and was elected its colonel. The
regiment was mustered into service on September 13th, 1861, was attached to
General M'Clernand's brigade, and seven weeks later was under a hot fire at
Belmont. During this fight Logan had a horse shot from under him, and was
conspicuous in his gallantry in a fierce bayonet charge which he personally led.
The Thirty-first, under Logan, quickly became known as a fighting regiment, and
distinguished itself at the capture of Forts Henry and Donelson. In this last
engagement Logan was severely wounded, and for many weeks unfitted for duty.
During his confinement in the hospital his brave wife, with great tact and
energy, got through the lines to his bedside, and nursed him until he was able
to take the field once more.
"Logan was promoted to the rank of Brigadier-General of Volunteers soon after
reporting for duty. This was in March, 1862, and he was soon after hotly engaged
in Grant's Mississippi campaign. In the following year he was asked to return
home and go to congress again, but[357]
declined with an emphatic statement that he was in the war to stay until he was
either disabled or peace was established. Eight months after his promotion to
the rank of Brigadier-General he was made a Major-General for exceptional
bravery and skill, and was put in command of the Third Division of the
Seventeenth Army Corps, under General M'Pherson. After passing through the hot
fights of Raymond and Port Gibson, he led the center of General M'Pherson's
command at the siege of Vicksburg, and his column was the first to enter the
city after the surrender. He was made the Military Governor of the captured
city, and his popularity with the Seventeenth Corps was so great that a gold
medal was given to him as a testimonial of the attachment felt for him by the
men he led.
"In the following year he led the Army of the Tennessee on the right of
Sherman's great march to the sea. He was in the battles of Resaca and the
Little Kenesaw Mountain, and in the desperate engagement of Peach Tree Creek
where General M'Pherson fell. The death of M'Pherson threw the command upon
Logan, and the close of the bitter engagement which ensued saw 8,000 dead
Confederates on the field, while the havoc in the Union lines had been
correspondingly great.
"After the fall of Atlanta, which occurred on the 2nd of September, General
Logan returned to the North, and took a vigorous part in the Western States in
the campaign which resulted in the election of Abraham Lincoln for the second
time to the presidency. He rejoined his command at Savannah, and was with it
until the surrender of Johnson, after which he went with the army to
Washington.
"His military career ended with his nomination in[358] 1866 by the Republicans of
Illinois to represent the State as Congressman at-large in the Fortieth
Congress. He was elected by 60,000 majority. He was one of the managers on the
part of the House of Representatives in the impeachment proceedings which were
instituted against Johnson. In 1868 and 1870 he was re-elected to the House, but
before he had finished his term under the last election he was elected to the
United States Senate to succeed Senator Yates. The last term for which he was elected expires in 1891.
"He took an active part in the last presidential campaign, when he and Mr. Blaine were the candidates on the presidential ticket, and had a strong
influence in holding the soldier vote fast in the Republican ranks."
Mr. Logan's views in regard to the immortality of the soul was clearly
expressed in a speech delivered at the tomb of General Grant on Memorial Day, 1886:
"Was any American soldier immolated upon a blind law of his country? Not one!
Every soldier in the Union ranks, whether in the regular army or not, was in the
fullest sense a member of the great, the imperishable, the immortal army of
American volunteers. These gallant spirits now lie in untimely sepulcher. No
more will they respond to the fierce blast of the bugle or the call to arms. But
let us believe that they are not dead, but sleeping! Look at the patient
caterpillar as he crawls on the ground, liable to be crushed by every careless
foot that passes. He heeds no menace, and turns from no dangers. Regardless of
circumstances, he treads his daily round, avoided by the little child sporting
upon the sward. He has work, earnest work, to perform, from which he will not be
turned, even at the forfeit of his life. Reaching his appointed place, he
ceases even to eat,[359] and begins to spin those delicate fibres which,
woven into fabrics of beauty and utility, contribute to the comfort and
adornment of a superior race. His work done, he lies down to the sleep from
which he never wakes in the old form. But that silent, motionless body is not
dead; an astonishing metamorphosis is taking place. The gross digestive
apparatus dwindles away; the three pairs of legs, which served the creature to
crawl upon the ground, are exchanged for six pairs suited to a different
purpose; the skin is cast; the form is changed; a pair of wings, painted like
the morning flowers, spring out, and presently the ugly worm that trailed its
slow length through the dust is transformed into the beautiful butterfly,
basking in the bright sunshine, the envy of the child and the admiration of the
man. Is there no appeal in this wonderful and enchanting fact to man's highest
reason? Does it contain no suggestion that man, representing the highest
pinnacle of created life upon the globe, must undergo a final metamorphosis, as
supremely more marvelous and more spiritual, as man is greater in physical
conformation, and far removed in mental construction from the humble worm that
at the call of nature straightway leaves the ground, and soars upon the gleeful
air? Is the fact not a thousand-fold more convincing than the assurance of the
poet:
"It must be so; Plato, thou reasonest
well;
Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond
desire,
This longing after
immortality?
Or whence this dread secret and inward
horror
Of falling into naught? Why shrinks the
soul
Back on herself, and startles at
destruction?
'Tis the divinity that stirs within
us;
'Tis heaven itself that points out an
hereafter,
And intimates eternity to
man,
Eternity! thou pleasing, dreadful
thought."
[360]
"On December 26th, 1886, the strong man succumbed to rheumatism. His death
was a great shock to his numerous friends throughout the Union, and he was
mourned by a great and mighty nation. From the lowly ranks to whom he belonged
by birth, to the most exalted circles, the sympathy for the bereaved was genuine."
Memorial for John Logan