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- GLC#
- GLC02382.054-View header record
- Type
- Letters
- Date
- 14 December 1884
- Author/Creator
- Gibbon, John, 1827-1896
- Title
- to Henry Jackson Hunt
- Place Written
- Fort Laramie, Wyoming
- Pagination
- 6 p. : envelope Height: 20.1 cm, Width: 30.1 cm
- Primary time period
- Rise of Industrial America, 1877-1900
- Sub-Era
- Native Americans
Discusses current events, including recent elections. Writes that Hunt may be in a position to aid the army by influencing the Secretary of War to prohibit army appointments made by politicians. Writes "Try to have a rule adopted by which every officer shall have a 'service record' kept in the A.G.O. setting forth every duty he has performed, & the recommendations of the officers under whom he has served." Encourages military advancement by merit. Hopes the new President (Grover Cleveland, to take office in 1885), will make changes in medical programs for veterans. Encourages Hunt to remain at his post in Washington, D.C., hoping for positive future changes for veterans. Recalls Charles Sumner's statement to Edwin Stanton, Secretary of War under President Andrew Johnson, when Stanton refused to leave his post: "Stick!" Expresses sympathy that Hunt's oldest son left for the Colorado frontier, and discusses the Western climate. A newspaper article, apparently glued to page one, discusses the problem in Gibbon's military district of starving Shoshone and Arapahoe tribes. The article encourages donations of food for these tribes, to prevent their killing of ranchers' livestock. A pencil note on verso of the clipping asks: "Could you get this printed in some Washington paper? It might do some good." Written at Fort Laramie
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