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d'etat, were varied and in some instances remarka-
ble, forming the groundwork of many an enter-
taining conversation with friends in after life.
Among other incidents, perhaps the most exciting
was that in which he took the American mode of
compelling a fraudulent agent in London to
deliver up a very large amount of money belong-
ing to him. He had engaged as secretary and
business man a former private secretary of King
Louis Philippe, whose keen eye for his own inte-
rest rather blinded him to that of his employer.
This man having in his possession, with evident in-
tent to abscond, one hundred thousand dollars be-
longing to General Walbridge, the latter waited in
his room until midnight, captured him, locked the
11'
dour, and put the key in his pocket, and then, with
revolver in hand, demanded settlement or death.
The man succumbed. The moral courage requi-
site to the performance of such an act in London,
with a subtle, accomplished, and extraordinary
antagonist, can hardly he appreciated without
reciting 1 details which cannot find room here.
There were probably very few of General Wal-
bridge's friends who knew of this incident or who
credited him with the possession of those traits of
character necessary to its performance. Beneath
an amiable exterior there lay in him a strength of
will which few possess.
In 1853 he was elected as a Representative in
Congress from New York city, and immediately
thereafter took a trip to California, returning time
enough to take his seat, with a fund of informa-
tion regarding the Pacific coast, in addition to
that acquired abroad. His representative career
was honorable and successful. Every measure
calculated to promote the commerce of the coun-
try or develop its resources received his support,
and he upheld the Union in its entirety with undi-
vided heart. He was eminently patriotic at all
times, and his devotion to the Republic was not
mere lip service, but heart sentiment as well as
fixed principle. With such views, he of course
sustained the credit of the government.
When the Crimean war broke out, involving the
13
three great powers of England, France, and Rus-
sia, as well as Turkey, General Walbridge thought
the time had come for the United States to declare
the rights of neutrals, and he introduced in the
House of Representatives resolutions setting
forth that "'The United States as a maritime
power, having neutral rights to maintain, deem it
proper to declare and make known that every
American vessel engaged in the lawful pursuits
of commerce is held by this government to be
protected by the flag which covers her," and that
" any attempt to enforce an absolute right of im-
prisonment, secret detention or irritation in regard
to such American ship, will be regarded as an act
of hostility towards the United States, and just
cause of war."
The adoption of this policy by our government
would have obviated the unfortunate affair of the
San Jacinto, and perhaps have permanently en-
larged the rights of neutrals, in which we are. as
much, if not more, interested than any other
nation. Such rights have certainly been since
assumed against us, and there is no good reason
why the United States should continue to operate,
within narrower restrictions than other powers.
Time, therefore, only served to strengthen Gene-
ral Walbridge in the principles he then advocated,
and it is probable they will yet become established
international laAV.
14
With ;t view of making the United States as
powerful on the ocean as they confessedly are on
land, General "Walbridge elaborated a plan for
making- the commercial marine an adjunct to the
naval forces of the country, hj organizing what
he aptly termed the "Militia of the Seas;' This
measure he proposed in 1856, in a speech delivered
at Tammany Hall, and it is an evidence alike of
his clearness of perception and the hold he bad
upon public opinion at that time, that although he
held no official position through which to enforce
his views, they were copied with approbation by
journals of every shade of political opinion in
America, were editorially discussed and adopted
as in a large measure applicable to England by
the London Times, and furnished the suggestion
for several salutary reforms in the British navy.
In this speech, which w r as forcible and states-
manlike throughout, he developed a plan of naval
reorganization which, if it bad been adopted, would
have utterly prevented the destruction of Ame-
rican commerce by European privateers during
the late rebellion. It would have Americanized
our navy, and infused into it some of the progress
and vitality characteristic of our republican insti-
tutions. The following extract will serve to indi-
cate the general purport of his views on that sub-
ject :—
"Suggestions that seek to make radical changes
15
should always bo advanced with hesitation and
distrust; } T et all great improvements in govern-
ment have heretofore sprung from the experience
of the people themselves, who are usually in ad-
vance of their rulers in whatever most concerns
their own prosperity and welfare. The General
Government should hold out some inducements to
our great commercial marine to aid in protecting
itself. Under the sanction of law, with ample
guards and i*estrictions, there should he organized
a militia navy, an arm of defence corresponding
to that employed by the Government in the land
service, under our enrolled militia system, by
which ship-owners should receive encouragement
and aid by law in construction of their vessels, so
as to make them capable of bearing guns if
required in the service of their country. The
captains and subordinate officers should be com-
missioned in the name of the General Government,
upon some equitable plan that will give them
rank and emolument in proportion to the demands
upon their time and service in the new capacity of
representing the naval power of the Union. The
humblest youth who enters as a cabin-boy, or in
the lowest capacity as a seaman, should be edu-
cated and trained in his honorable though adven-
turous and dangerous profession, that not only in
the navy proper, but in this new service, the naval
powers of the Union will be represented.
1G
" Our noble Empire State, second to none, but
foremost of all, this great commercial emporium,
the scat of energy, enterprise, and commercial
power, are felt and acknowledged throughout the
world, have a right to he heard, upon this, as upon
all questions affecting the trade and prosperity of
the Union. New York demands the recognition
and absolute immunity from such a detention of
our flag upon the high seas ; that her commerce
and expanding trade should be left unshackled by
unwise restraints of legislation; and then, with
her resources in every department of industry, in
agriculture, in manufactures, in commerce, and
trade, she will vindicate her pre-eminence and
power in the great family circle of free and in-
dependent States that constitute our National
Union."
When General Walbridge entered Congress he
was a comparatively wealthy man, and felt justified
in withdrawing from business so as to devote his
whole attention to his representative duties. He
intrusted the bulk of his fortune in the shape of
ready money without security into the hands of a
friend, in whose judgment and integrity he re-
posed implicit confidence. Before his first term
expired he lost every dollar of it, and felt com-
pelled to abandon politics for business again.
Hence, when the Democrats of his district ten-
dered him a renomination he declined it, and
17
renewed business immediately to endeavor to
recover from his serious losses. He was not the
man to he disheartened, he never for a moment
desponded ; and before a great while he was more
prosperous than ever.
Such was his public spirit, however, that while
he felt constrained to decline official position, he
took an active part in all the great movements of
his day. Having again secured leisure by assured
success, he gave up a great deal of his time to the
niaintainance of the Union, before and during the
rebellion. lie was a supporter of Stephen A.
Douglas for the Presidency in the election of
I860, and fully sympathized in that distin-
guished leader's devotion to the Union. When
war actually came he assisted in organizing the
War Democracy, and arraying them on the side
of the administration. He comprehended the
issues involved and the real magnitude of the
struggle, and at once advocated putting the
country on a war footing for not less than three
years, with an enrolment of six hundred thousand
men. Experience demonstrated the wisdom of his
suggestions ; but few were prepared to adopt them
when iirst put forth in May, 1861. President
Lincoln, with whom he established intimate and
confidential relations, acknowledged his indebted-
ness to General Wal bridge in a note dated No-
vember 18, 1861, not only fur the suggestions of
IS
largely increased forces before his own mind be-
came convinced of their necessity, but also for first
pointing out to him the strategic importance of
Port Royal and Beaufort. Through the influence
thus established he secured the acceptance of ten
Massachusetts regiments, and a battery of artil-
lery, when it was feared they might prove super-
fluous, for which he afterwards received public
thanks. General Cameron, Secretary of War,
formally tendered him a commission as Brigadier-
General, which he declined; and President Lin-
coln personally offered to make him a Major-
General, and this he also declined. But his labor
Avas unremitting in his chosen field of operations,
that of keeping public opinion up to the support
of the government during its long and arduous
struggle. He was an effective speaker, and in
the darkest days of 18(32, his voice was heard at
the Cooper Institute declaring that New York
would never abandon the government till, after
quelling treason at home, it could present itself
as a great, powerful, and united nation, capable
of commanding and enforcing respect the world
over. He travelled from State to State, kept up
an extensive correspondence with governors and
leading men, and gave his whole heart and time
to his country, until victory finally perched upon
the banner of an undivided republic.
Regarding the rebellion as a revolutionary
19
movement in behalf of slavery, and emancipation
as the only just solution of the war problem, he
became allied with the Republican party, and an
advocate of reconstruction on a free-labor basis,
instead of restoration on the basis proclaimed by
President Johnson, which would have left the
laboring element of the South at the mercy of the
landed and privileged classes.
He advocated General U. S. Grant's election to
the Presidency, and was a warm personal friend
of that gentleman, as well as earnest supporter of
his administration to the day of his death.
In the summer of 1865, General "Walbridge
made a tour of the west, and was received more
like an eminent public personage than a private
citizen. He discussed questions of commerce and
internal improvement at various cities, and the
press reproduced them and commented upon them
at as great length and with as much care as is
usually bestowed upon state papers of import-
ance. He was elected President of the Interna-
tional Commercial Convention, which assembled
at Detroit on the 11th July, 18G5, and was promi-
nent in every similar convention except the last
held since that time. An able sketch of General
Walbridge, which appeared in Hunt's Merchant's
Magazine of January, 1800, concludes with the
following just tribute to his character : —
"Imperfect as this sketch necessarily is, enough
20
has been given to show the genius of the man.
He is, perhaps, one of the best instances of
American versatility now living. He would
have made a good lawyer, but could never consent
to be a pettifogger; he would aspire to be a
statesman, but would refuse to be a mere politi-
cian ; he is a merchant, but would not readily
consent to transact the petty details of an insig-
nificant business. He loves to plan on a large
scale, to do things boldly, and he would rage
in inactivity. He is jealous of bis honor, and
despises meanness. Possessing a large social
nature, liberal, ambitious of honorable distinction,
he is an earnest friend, a genial companion, and a
public-spirited citizen, and active in every enter-
prise which he undertakes. He is in the prime of
life, and, if spared, will yet occupy a prominent
place in our country, having already succeeded in
identifying himself closely with its history."
The last sentence of this paragraph was a pro-
phecy, only limited by the two little words " if
spared/" Was there presentiment in this? Who
knows? Alas! he was not " spared."
Just as the hour had struck for its fulfilment —
just as they who knew him most, and therefore
loved him best, felt sure that the time had come
for him to exert his best influence on the affairs of
the country where it would be felt, the messenger
came whom all men must obey. It is useless to
2\
dwell on the never-dying theme, "What mighl
have been." It was not !
Let us so live that when the inevitable hour
comes and we are called, we too may go to our
last resting-place, honored and loved, because we
are like him.
J. J. S.
Baltimore, December, 1870.
£2, (31
Of (Obsequies.
<&
The following account of the obsequies of General Wal-
bbidge is taken from the " National Republican" newspaper
of Washington, D. C, dated December 12th, 1870:—
The funeral of General Hiram "Walbbidge
took place on Saturday afternoon, according- to
announcement, from the family homestead at
Ingleside to the cemetery of Glenwood.
Throughout the forenoon, carriages from the
city kept rolling out Fourteenth Street, past
Columbia College, and into the beautiful grounds
that surround the Ingleside mansion. There was
a something meet and consonant with the mourn-
ful character of the occasion in the heaps of dead
and dying leaves that lined the winding avenues
and strewed the spreading lawns ; and in the
bleakness of the unfoliaged trees and the solemn
stillness of the scene the house of death appeared
to stand amid appropriate surroundings. Ingle-
side, in its summer glories, is the chief rural
gem that encircles the city of Washington.
21
In the ample space between the high pine trees
and near the stables, the carriages were parked,
while the services in the house were being per-
formed.
DISTINGUISHED ATTENDANCE.
Carriage after carriage drove up to the pillared
portico in rapid succession, and of those who de-
scended were the President and Secretaries Fish,
Bontwell, Delano, Belknap, Robeson, and Attor-
ney-General Ackerman; Senators Sherman and
Thurman, of Ohio; Fenton, of New York; Har-
lan, of Iowa; Representative Cobb, Treasurer
Spinner, Colonel II. D. Faulkner, and General
Alfred Pleasonton, of New York; Hon. J. J.
Stewart, of Baltimore ; Colonel John T. Pickett,
of Kentucky; Judge Watterson, of Tennessee;
D. P. Brown and family, Mrs. Dr. Gnrley, B. T.
Swartz and family, Governor Wright, Mr. and
Mis. Dunbar, and Mrs. General Sherman.
Col. A. II. Jackson, who married a step-daugh-
ter of the General's, attended to the duty of re-
ceiving those who came, and to the general super-
intendence of the family arrangements, in which
he was perfectly successful. Of the family ami
relatives who were present, were Messrs. Horace S.
and Heman 1 >. "Walbridge, brothers of the General,
Mr. Charles B. Blake and wife, Dr. Philips and
wile. Mrs. Walbridge, dressed in deep mourning,
25
was supported throughout the sorrowing cere-
mony by the brothers of the deceased. All the
rooms upon the first floor were thrown open, and
every seat was occupied hy the time the funeral
services were begun. In a carpeted, richly fur-
nished room, oft' the vestibule, the remains of the
< reneral were laid out.
THE REMAINS.
The body was inclosed in one of Fish's metallic
caskets, in imitation of rosewood, heavily mounted
with silver, and bearing the following inscription :
"Hiram AValbridge, died December (3, aged 49
years," and was placed in the saloon parlor. The
lid of the coffin Avas one muss of flowers, the
gifts of General N. P. Banks and others ; Hon.
Horace Greeley also laid a beautiful floral testi-
monial at the foot of the coffin of his friend. In
the same room was a full-length likeness of the
deceased, taken in the crimson flush of his hopeful
and brilliant life.
At one o'clock the order of ceremonies began
by the entrance from an adjacent room into the
one where the corpse was lying of the following
pall-bearers: General Sherman, Horace Greeley,
Secretary Boutwell, Senators Nye, Wilson, and
Fenton, Speaker Blaine, General Butler, Judge
20
Casey, Representatives Banks and Peck, and Col-
lector Murphy, of New York.
IN THE CHAMBER OF MOURNING.
The President, Cabinet, and pall-hearers, to-
gether with the family and relatives of the de-
ceased, were seated in a kind of semicircle in the
saloon parlor, at the head of which, near appropri-
ately draped tables, stood the officiating clergy-
man, Rev. Mr. Buck, pastor of Rock Creek
church, and Rev. Dr. Samson. Mr. Buck read
the beautiful service for the dead of the Episcopal
Church, and was followed by Dr. Samson with
the following discourse : —
•27
THE SEKMON.
Fuxeral gatherings have a great influence on
our character and life. When one of a family, or
any circle of associates, falls in death, all pause
and gather for an hour about the deserted frame
that held his spirit. In halls of legislation, in
court rooms, in chambers of commerce, men in
every walk of life think and speak as they do
nowhere else. The earthly life, the human virtues,
of the departed come up in a review that is impar-
tial, and therefore just, while it is generous.
Then, too, the mind of every man looks forward.
The world beyond the grave becomes real and
palpably impressive. We speak, we think of the
abode of the spirits of men, and of the home to
which the departed is gone. We become sincere
then ; scepticism, if ever cherished, vanishes as a
state of mind as unfounded as it is unnatural.
How these stirring convictions, in the minds of
us all, were realized in the utterance of the pro-
foundly wise King of Israel, twenty-eight cen-
turies ago, in the words : " It is better to go to
the house of mourning than to the house of feast-
ing. This is the end of all men. The living will
lay it to heart; and by the sadness of the
countenance the heart will be made better."
28
This thought in the house of mourning, around
the lifeless form of a fallen comrade, turns to-
wards the spirit's condition ; while Ave remember
the departed and dimly imagine his present state.
Then our judgment controls for a time our im-
pulses; and Ave feel that to be decided in our
religious convictions and actions, is iioav the only
important interest. In religious conviction, it
should be recognized, men of true thought pre-
serve the same reticence as on other matters of
profound and vitally important consideration. It
is only to an intimate in the same line of study or
occupation, that the enterprising merchant, the
judicious statesman, opens the secrets of his deep
conviction. It is only to his or her physician or
pastor that the private suil'erings and soitoavs of
those Avho seem to he free from all trouble are
known. And here one of the most important of
practical questions is pressed on our considera-
tion.
There is a power at work in our land, mightier
than all the intellectual and moral influences that
ever controlled a great people. It never A\as
imagined in ancient India, Greece, or Rome ; and
it has been but partially known in the history of
modern Europe. It is the profound conviction of
the mass of leading minds among us, that there is
a truth and a grace in the religion of Jesus Christ,
never yet realized in any of its professed ad he-
29
rents. It has ever been a marked feature in the
history of this Divine gift to man, even from its
first announcement, that among its most intelli-
gent and weighty promoters have been the men
who never openly professed the Christian faith.
AY r hen John first preached repentance and faith in
Him to come, we read of Herod, the thoughtful
though impulsive tetrarch of Galilee, that he
"feared John, knowing that he was a just man
and a holy ; and he observed him ; and when he
heard him he did many things and heard him
gladly." And who can forget that the chief
mourners, the pall-bearers of our Redeemer him-
self, were two Senators of Israel : ISTicodemus,
who came to converse with him at night at the
very opening of his ministry, and who defended
him under Jewish law when he was arraigned ;
and with him, Joseph of Arimathea, " a disciple
of Jesus, though secretly" ? AVhat a scene was
that — what a profound testimony — when, though
his simpler-minded and sincere disciples forsook
him through fear, these noble senators, who never
had professed their faith in him, bore his Divine
form in the dim evening twilight, to its resting-
place ! It is the more instructive because it was
a true foreshadowing of what has ever since been
true.
John, who wrote after the Jewish State had
fallen, and its chief families perished, and who
30
alone mentions what otherwise would have been
a betrayal of confidence — John writes, " many
of the chief rulers also believed on him; but
because of the Pharisees they did not confess
him." Why did the guiding spirit prompt the
beloved disciple in his old age to reveal this fact,
unless it were to intimate the truth, that the hesi-
tation which constrains men of the most profound
convictions, who never profess the Christian faith,
arises from that keen sense of responsibility,
which is all the more fearful of personal assump-
tion, because of the manifold imperfection of those
claiming to represent religious sentiment?' Here
a long array of facts in Christian history comes
up in review ; while, too, their deep principle
assumes an aspect which in a land like ours should
he duly weighed, and be joyfully accepted.
When the great apostle of Jesus proclaimed the
gospel of Christ, the leaders in thought and action
were his most enthusiastic hearers. Sererius Pau-
lusj the Roman governor of Cyprus, "a prudent
man,''' sent for him, and "desired to hear the word
of God more perfectly;" Dionysius, the Athenian
senator, "believed and clave to him;" Felix, the
governor of Judea, wished a "more perfect know-
ledge" of his message, and when he heard him
again, he trembled, and determined at a future
season to follow his teaching; while King Agrippa,
the able Jewish historian, as well as Roman states-
31
man, declared, "Almost thou persuadest me to be
a Christian."
So, too, all along down the history of the ad-
vancing nations who received the religion of Christ,
what mean such examples as shine out on its every
page ! Constantine, led as a youth to believe in
the divine origin of the Christian faith, because
when his father, the emperor, indignant one day
at the corruption of some of his officers, demanded
of a priest of the old religion, "Where are the
men that can be trusted?" the honest reply was
wrung from trembling lips, " The Christians arc
the trusty men." Constantine, studying Christ's
life and teachings till he embraced them; advo-
cating their claim all his lifetime, yet scandalized
beyond measure by the bitter contest of the op-
posing parties in the church, never professes his
faith till just before his death. What, again, arc
avc to judge as to Grotius, called " latitudinarian"
in the times of Calvinistic controversy, and yet
spending his old age in writing the most complete
demonstration of the divine doctrines of the Chris-
tian religion that the world perhaps possesses!
What, indeed, shall we infer from the spirit of
men like Rousseau, opposing, not Christianity, but
the corruptions of its professors ; even exclaiming,
"Socrates died indeed as a philosopher, Jesus
Christ died as a God" ! Its meaning is learned in
the counter fact of the power wielded by such
sincere .and heavenly spirits, after Ihe likeness of
Paul the apostle, as Chrysostom at the Roman
Capitol, and of Fenelon at the French court. And
where shall we stop in this enumeration? If
any centre of mighty interests has ever fully at-
tested this important fact in history, it is our city;
conspicuous for the reality of the religious influ-
ences which it has ever witnessed. Never perhaps
was there seen such a testimonial of the inherent
truth of the gospel as this; that, in a land where
the church is entirely severed from the State, and
where no motive hut a man's oavii sincere con-
viction can inlluence his act, scarcely one of the
great leaders in American society is to he found
who has not in word and act reverenced in his
active life the religion of Jesus; while .in the
evening of their days the majority of our chief
magistrates, our great statesmen, and our men of
thought and enterprise have publicly professed
their faith by union with the Christian church.
Perhaps now the principle which underlies this
great fact deserves our consideration. The reli-
gion of Jesus Christ makes all outward forms but
symbols of an inward spirit. What an announce-
ment that of Christ's, "The kingdom of heaven is
within you"! His sermon on the Mount demands
a righteousness greater than that which any man
ever possessed; even "the righteousness of the
kingdom of God" itself. It demands that we be
o3
" perfect even as our Heavenly Father is perfect."
Who can attain, who has possessed in the past or
can aspire to reach in the future, that perfection ol
angels which all in heaven possess ! Where is
there any hope but in the gospel revelation; which
proclaims trust in the merits of our Divine lie-
deemer for the blotting: out of transgressions in the
past, and reliance on the Divine Spirit's power
"to work in us," in the future, "to will and to do
all God's good pleasure" ! Is it possible that a
thoughtful man, looking forward to the world of
spirits, can imagine " any other name under heaven
among men whereby we must be saved" ? Men
that think at all, men that have any trust at all,
find this hope to be an anchor to the soul, sure and
steadfast !
Is it to be wondered, now, that in our national re-
ligious life, in our social, domestic, and individual
intercourse, all should find, that, while many
with perhaps too little thought profess themselves
disciples of Christ, very many with perhaps too
much thought of their own insufficiency, never,
until in ripe old age, can avow their simple faith
in Jesus Christ ! Is it wonder that so many great,
earnest, enthusiastic leaders in those enterprises
which develop the fruits of Christ's religion give
a testimony far surpassing that of many profess-
ing their devotion ; their failing, among a race all
at fault, being this, that they never can bring
34
themselves to profess so high a calling as that of
a complete Christian consecration.
May not such a survey be timely in this house
of mourning? May not its consideration make all
our hearts better? May it not prompt a new con-
viction that greater fidelity to our duty of love to
(<<>d and our fellow is a present demand, and that
true repentance for past neglect and humble faith
in God's grace should be our immediate resort?
General Hiram Walbridge, born in February,
1821, not yet attained to fifty years, though a
native of New York, reared in Ohio, then prac-
tising his profession and attaining his wealth and
honor in two distant States, has been especially
an esteemed and admired citizen of our District.
He is, therefore, known to us, and his character
has been deeply read. His intellectual power
was of a high order ; his limited early education,
his completion of his law studies at nineteen,
his being chosen representative in New York at
the age of thirty-two, his conception in advance
of his age of the Pacific railroad, his selection as
president of the first great commercial conven-
tions of our country, his wonderfully comprehen-
sive grasp of national issues, and the heroism
with which he sacrificed himself during his
months of failing health to great public benefac-
tions — all these reveal the man of no ordinary
compass of mind. His universal courtesy and
35
urbanity, his finish and power as a popular
speaker, all spoke of the man of true culture.
His devotion to the interests of the capital of his
country, a city which bears the name of its
adored founder, whose prosperity he justly con-
ceived was allied to the nation's reverence for the
father of his country, his charity abounding in
every public benefaction, all spoke of a great
heart and noble soul.
And what thought he of that relation higher
than any earthly, and of that world of purity for
which no man in himself is prepared? It was
revealed and made fully manifest to those who
knew him well and watched at his last bedside.
In his mature life at Washington, General
Walbridge always spoke with enthusiasm of his
esteem for Rev. Dr. Gurley, the pastor of his re-
vered mother. No man could really admire the
preaching and personal acquaintance of such a
man and such a preacher as Dr. Gurley, who had
not a deeper love for the simple gospel of Christ
than a mere outward profession sometimes pro-
claims. General Walbridge was always fond of
conversation in private on the subject of personal
religious duty. His last hours showed what con-
victions always dwelt as a hidden fountain in his
breast, ready to break forth when their depths
should be stirred and the vent be opened. "When
he had passed through the excruciating agony of
36
surgical operations for the acute disease which
wore out his life in a few short days, his Christian
profession was as manly as his heroic meeting of
suffering.
Refusing to take chloroform, he looked on
calmly at the mutilation of the surgeon's knife
which made others shudder. When convinced
by his own feelings and the assurance of his
physician that he must soon sink under the
exhaustion of pain, he called for pen and paper,
dictated his last will, and then signed it. His
duty to his family and the world discharged,
all his thought turned upwards. To his wife,
Avho spoke of his apparent approaching death,
and asked forgiveness for any unintentional fault,
he exclaimed, " O, it is I that need forgiveness
of God." When asked if he believed in Jesus as
his Saviour, he said, " Yes, I do believe in Him;
I have been thinking much during the time of my
sickness about death and of preparation for it."
Those words are the sincere expression of convic-
tions that control thousands of men like him.
They are testimony to a power which will save
our country, or any land whose leaders are con-
trol led not by a profession reluctantly demanded,
but by a faith that all through manhood sways
them as by an invisible bond.
Let the lessons of our dear departed friend's
death go with us from this place.
37
He has fallen, and we, too, shall soon go. Let
those inward convictions of our religious need,
and of the world's only hope, be cherished. Let
us never do thoughtless despite to the spirit of
grace, the sincere convictions of childhood.
He has left a void by his decease. There is a
vacancy behind, a desolation in the home. It is a
void the world can never fill. Thank God, as we
all grow older Ave look less to the world for com-
panionship and support. Thank God, there is a
friend closer than a brother.
He has left a lesson. We love too much this
earth, and so often lose the object of our pursuit.
How many destroy their own power by the very
weight of care and the strain of noble endeavor.
]S T o end but a rare one can justify self-immolation.
Let a true Avisdom so temper our ambition that
"our moderation" shall shine as a chief virtue.
"We all need a guidance and support that come
from One higher than Ave. What a boon in the
Avords, "Seek first the Kingdom of God and
its righteousness, and all these things shall be
added to you." May that Avisdom from above,
that Kingdom of Heaven, be Avithin us.
The folloAving letter of General Walbridge illus-
trates his attachment to his parents' pastor : —
38
Inoleside, I). C, Nov. 26, I860.
My dear Doctor : —
On behalf of our dear mother and brothers,
I cordially thank yon for the many kindnesses yon
extended to father during- his recent fatal illness.
The testimony yon have borne to his many
virtues will always be gratefully remembered by
all of us, since you had ample opportunities to
know the purity, the gentleness, and the integrity
and uprightness of his life.
That happiness and health may always be yours
and that of your estimable family, is our sincere
wish.
Truly,
H. WALBRIDGE.
KEV. DR. GURLEY.
39
TO THE GRAVE.
The services concluded, the funeral cortege
moved off in the following order: In front two
mounted policemen, carriages containing the un-
dertakers, hody-bearers (eight in number), clergy,
p;dl-bearers, hearse, relatives, President of the
United States, Cabinet officers, Senators, members
of Congress, and friends of the family. The pro-
cession moved down the road to Fourteenth Street
as far as K, and thence by K Street and Lincoln
Avenue to Glenwood Cemetery.
The grave was six feet deep, walled with brick,
and when the coffin was lowered down to its final
resting-place, smooth stone slabs were placed
above and closely cemented together. The funeral
service was very feelingly read by Rev. Mr. Buck.
The General was laid with his feet to his father's
grave, in a spacious lot on Grand Avenue, near
the centre of the cemetery. Here both his parents
take their eternal repose, and here the son has
been laid to rest after a useful, honorable, but
sadly premature existence.
Over his grave friends and admirers paid their
last sad tribute of regard, and political opponents
were there, who, coming together in dissension,
went away in harmony.
W 73
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