Page:The Granite Monthly Volume 7.djvu/306

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��Chester Alan ArtJiur.

��[May,

��SO, and was requested, on his arrival, to act as secretary at a confidential meet- ing of the governors of loyal States, held at the Astor House, on the twenty- eighth of July, 1862, After a full and frank discussion of the condition of affairs in their respective States, the governors united in a request to the President to call for more troops. President Lincoln, on the first of July, issued a proclamation, thanking the governors for their patriotism, and call- ing for three hundred thousand three- years volunteers, and three hundred thousand nine -months militia -men. Private intimation that such a call was to be issued would have enabled army contractors to have made millions ; but the secret was honorably kept by all until after the issue of the proclama- tion. The quota of New York was 59,705 volunteers, or sixty regiments, and it was desirable that they should be recruited and sent to the front with- out delay. General Arthur, by special request of Governor Morgan, resumed his duties as quartermaster-general and established a system of recruiting and officering the new levies, which proved wonderfully successful. In his annual report, made to the governor on the twenty-seventh of January, 1863, he said : —

" In summing up the operations of the department during the last levy of troops, I need only state as the result the fact that through tlie single office and clothing department of this depart- ment in the city of New York, from August I to December i, the space of four months, there were completely clothed, uniformed, and equipped, sup- plied with camp and garrison equi- page, and transported from this State to the seat of war, sixty-eight regiments of infantry, two battalions of cavalry,

��and four battalions and ten batteries of artillery."

In December, 1863, the incoming of the Democratic state administration deprived General Arthur of his office. His successor, Quartermaster-General Talcott, in a report to Governor Sey- mour, paid the following just tribute to his predecessor : —

" I found, upon entering on the dis- charge of my duties, a well-organized system of labor and accountability, for which the State is chiefly indebted to my predecessor. General Chester A. Arthur, who, by his practical good sense and unremitting exertion, at a period when everything was in con- fusion, reduced the operations of the department to a matured plan by which large amounts of money were saved to the government, and great economy of time secured in carrying out the details of the same."

Resuming his professional duties, at first in partnership with Mr. Gardiner and aftei-ward alone, he became coun- sel to the city department of taxes and assessments, with an annual salary of ten thousand dollars, but he abruptly resigned the position when the Tam- many Hall city officials attempted to coerce the Republicans connected with the municipal departments.

When the next presidential election drew near. General Arthur entered enthusiastically into the support of General Grant, and was made chair- man of the Grant Central Club, of New York. He also served as chairman of the executive committee of the Republican State Committee of New York, In 1871, he formed the after- wards well-known firm of Arthur, Phelps, Knevals, and Ransom.

President Grant, without solicitation and unexpectedly, appointed General

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