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Title: Cyrus W. Field; his Life and Work

Author: Isabella Field Judson

Release Date: September 16, 2013 [EBook #43753]

Language: English

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[Illustration: Portrait signed of Cyrus W. Field.]




                            CYRUS W. FIELD

                          HIS LIFE AND WORK

                             [1819-1892]

                              EDITED BY

                        ISABELLA FIELD JUDSON

                             ILLUSTRATED

                       [Illustration: colophon]

                               NEW YORK

                     HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS

                                 1896

              Copyright, 1896, by ISABELLA FIELD JUDSON.

                        _All rights reserved._

                            [Illustration]


                                  TO

                    MY FATHER'S FAMILY AND FRIENDS

                             THESE PAGES

                            Are Dedicated




CONTENTS


CHAPTER                                            PAGE

  I. PARENTAGE AND EARLY HOME LIFE (1819-1835)       1

 II. EARLY LIFE IN NEW YORK (1835-1840)             14

III. MARRIAGE AND BUSINESS LIFE (1840-1853)         27

 IV. OUT OF DEBT--A VOYAGE TO SOUTH AMERICA
         (1853)                                     42

  V. THE FIRST CABLE (1853-1857)                    59

 VI. THE FIRST CABLE (CONTINUED) (1857)             74

VII. A FLEETING TRIUMPH (1858)                      86

VIII. FAILURE ON ALL SIDES (1858-1861)              122

 IX. THE CIVIL WAR (1861-1862)                     131

  X. CAPITAL RAISED FOR THE MAKING OF A NEW
         CABLE--STEAMSHIP "GREAT EASTERN"
         SECURED (1863-1864)                       154

 XI. THE FAILURE OF 1865                           182

XII. THE CABLE LAID--CABLE OF 1865 GRAPPLED
         FOR AND RECOVERED--PAYMENT OF DEBTS
         (1866)                                    199

XIII. THE RECONSTRUCTION PERIOD (1867-1870)         232

XIV. INTERNATIONAL POLITICS--RAPID TRANSIT
         (1870-1880)                               267

 XV. THE PACIFIC CABLE--THE GOLDEN WEDDING
         (1880-1891)                               303

XVI. LAST DAYS AND DEATH--IN MEMORIAM (1891-1892)  321




ILLUSTRATIONS


CYRUS W. FIELD                     _Frontispiece_

SUBMIT DICKINSON FIELD         _Facing page_   2

DAVID DUDLEY FIELD                     "       6

THE PARSONAGE, STOCKBRIDGE, MASS.      "      10

VALENTIA: LANDING THE SHORE-END OF
 THE CABLE, 1857                      "      94

CYRUS W. FIELD, 1860                   "     124

LAST TWO PAGES OF LETTER FROM MR.
 GLADSTONE, DATED NOVEMBER 17, 1862   "     148

ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH CABLE CHART, 1865   "     188

THE NIGHT-WATCH                        "     194

ARDSLEY, IRVINGTON-ON-HUDSON           "     264

CERTIFICATE OF DISCHARGE FROM THE MERCANTILE
 MARINE SERVICE                       "     296

THE ANDRE MONUMENT, TAPPAN, NEW YORK   "     302




CYRUS W. FIELD

HIS LIFE AND WORK




CHAPTER I

PARENTAGE AND EARLY HOME LIFE

(1819-1835)


CYRUS WEST FIELD, the eighth child and seventh son of David Dudley
Field, was born in Stockbridge, Mass., November 30, 1819. He took his
double name from Cyrus Williams, President of the Housatonic Bank (in
Stockbridge), and from Dr. West, for sixty years his father's
predecessor in the pastorate of the old Church of Stockbridge. He was
the sixth in descent from Zachariah Field, the founder of the family in
this country, who was the grandson of John Field the astronomer.
Zachariah was born in the old home in Ardsley, Yorkshire, England. He
came over in 1630 or 1632, seemingly from Hadley, Suffolk, and settled
first in Dorchester, Mass., afterwards making his way through the
wilderness to Hartford, Conn. Then followed in the direct line his
oldest son Zachariah Junior, Ebenezer, David, and Captain Timothy, who
was born in the north part of Madison, Conn., in 1744. He served in the
Continental Army under Washington, and was in the battle of White
Plains.

David Dudley Field, Captain Timothy's youngest son, was born May 20,
1781. In 1802 he graduated from Yale, the next year was ordained a
minister of the Congregational Church, and a month later, October 31,
1803, was married to Submit Dickinson, daughter of Captain Noah
Dickinson, of Somers, Conn., who first served under Putnam in the French
War and afterwards in the War of the Revolution. Submit Dickinson was
called "The Somers Beauty."

[Illustration: SUBMIT DICKINSON FIELD

Born October 1, 1782

(From a Crayon by Lawrence)]

David Dudley Field was first settled in Haddam, Conn., and remained as
pastor of the Congregational Church for fourteen years. Seven of his
children were born while he lived there: David Dudley was the eldest;
then followed Emilia Ann, Timothy Beals, Matthew Dickinson, Jonathan
Edwards, Stephen Johnson 1st (who died when he was six months old), and
Stephen Johnson 2d. Cyrus West, Henry Martyn, and Mary Elizabeth were
the three children born in Stockbridge, Mass. Among the reminiscences of
his sojourn in Haddam is that it fell to him to preach the execution
sermon of Peter Long. The grim Puritanical custom still survived,
according to which a prisoner convicted of a capital crime, on the day
on which he was to be hanged was taken by a body-guard of soldiers to
church to be publicly prepared for his ending. He was placed in a
conspicuous pew, where he was obliged not only to listen to a long and
harrowing sermon, but when addressed by name to stand up facing the
preacher and receive the exhortation as he had received the sentence.
Dr. Field addressed the victim directly for some minutes, and closed
with these words: "Before yonder sun shall set in the west your
probationary state will be closed forever. This day you will either lift
up your eyes in hell, being in torment, or, through the rich,
overflowing, and sovereign grace of God, be carried by the angels to
Abraham's bosom. If in any doubt about your preparation, you may yet
find mercy. He who pardoned the penitent thief on the cross may pardon
you in the place of execution. Pray God, then, if perhaps your sins may
be forgiven you. Cry to Him, 'God be merciful to me, a sinner!' and
continue those cries till death shall remove you hence. May the Lord
Almighty support you in the trying scene before you, and through
infinite grace have mercy on your soul."

From the church the prisoner was led, clothed in a long, white robe, to
the scaffold. It is said that on this occasion the rope was cut by the
militiamen in attendance as a guard.

In May, 1819, Dr. Field accepted the call to the church in Stockbridge,
and on August 25th he was settled there as a pastor. In those days the
moving of a household from Haddam to Stockbridge was a formidable
undertaking. Teams were sent to Connecticut, a journey of several days,
to bring on the household furniture, and, most important of all, heavy
boxes piled with the volumes that comprised the pastor's library. The
clearest statement of the impression made upon the youth of his flock by
the ministry of Dr. Field is furnished in these words, written nearly
fifty years after his settlement in Stockbridge, and a fortnight after
his death, by the venerated president of Williams College:

"WILLIAMS COLLEGE, _April 30, 1867_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq.:

    "_My dear Sir_,--On my return I comply at once with your request to
    write out the remarks I made at your father's funeral. In writing
    to me, Mr. Eggleston simply said he should like to have me take
    some part in the services, but he did not say what, and under the
    circumstances I did not think it best to attempt anything but a few
    remarks bearing on my personal relation to him. I give them below
    as well as I can.

    "'On coming here I was not aware what the order of exercises was to
    be, or what part I was expected to take in them; but as I am drawn
    here by a deep personal regard to the departed, the few words that
    I shall say will have reference to him chiefly in that relation
    through which this regard was awakened.

    "'It was under the ministry of Dr. Field that I first united with
    the Christian Church. By him I was baptized in this place.

    "'For a long period my mind was in a state of solicitude and
    careful inquiry on the subject of religion, and during much of that
    time I sat under his ministry. Well do I remember his sermons and
    his prayers; we worshipped in the old church then, and the whole
    town came together. His sermons were lucid, logical, effective, and
    his prayers remarkably appropriate and comprehensive. One of his
    texts I remember particularly. It was this: "Lord, to whom shall we
    go? Thou hast the words of eternal life, and we believe and are
    sure that Thou art that Christ, the son of the living God." From
    these words he preached several discourses of great power showing
    that Jesus was the Christ, and that there was no one else to whom
    we could go. I regarded them then, and still do, as among the
    ablest discourses I ever heard. They had a powerful effect upon my
    mind.

    "'In respect to feeling he was not demonstrative, and some thought
    him cold. No mistake could have been greater. On sitting near him I
    remember to have been struck by noticing the big tears rolling down
    his cheeks when he came to the more touching parts of his
    discourse, while there was scarcely a sign of emotion in his voice
    or in the lines of his face. Perhaps intellect predominated.
    Probably it did; but he was a man of deep feeling, and under the
    impulse of it, as well as of principle, he was a faithful, earnest,
    laborious pastor. It was in that relation that I feel that his
    character and life and preaching and prayers were an important
    formative influence with me for good, and I have never ceased to
    regard him with affectionate veneration, and never shall.

    "'And what he did for me he doubtless did for multitudes of others.
    There is no higher educating power than that of a pastor thoroughly
    educated and balanced, earnest by proclaiming God's truths from
    Sabbath to Sabbath and dealing fairly with the minds of men. This
    he did, and in doing it was eminent among a body of men who have
    done more to make New England what it is than any other. In clear
    thinking, in able sermons, and in earnest labors, he was altogether
    a worthy successor of the eminent men who had preceded him.

    "'I see some here who will remember those earlier times. I am sure,
    my friends, you will verify all I have said, and that with me you
    do now and will continue to cherish with respect and with love the
    memory of our former pastor. It only remains to us now to emulate
    all in him that was good, and in deep sympathy with these mourning
    friends to aid in placing his dust where it will rest with so much
    other precious dust that makes this a hallowed valley, and where it
    will await the resurrection of the just.'

    "In reading over what I have written I can only say that it seems
    to me altogether inadequate as an expression of the sense I have of
    your father's worth and of the benefit he was to me, but having
    promised to do so I send it.

"With great regard, yours,
"MARK HOPKINS."



[Illustration: TABLET IN THE CHURCH IN STOCKBRIDGE]

[Illustration: DAVID DUDLEY FIELD

Born May 20, 1781

(From a Crayon by Lawrence)]

The recollection that his grandchildren have of him is of a quiet,
dignified old gentleman, who seemed quite lost when his call for "Mis'
Field" was not answered at once by his energetic wife, upon whom he was
very dependent. Occasionally he would gather his children's children
about him, and seemed to enjoy showing them how "the lady's horse goes,"
and the tumble that followed "and by-and-by comes old hobble-de-gee,"
was looked upon as great fun. He would also delight his youthful
audience by repeating a few of Mother Goose's Melodies, and they never
tired of hearing him.

Life in New England in those days, and especially the life of a pastor's
family, was earnest, with an earnestness that to the young, with the
eagerness of youth for enjoyment, may well have seemed repulsive. The
Puritanic rigor that has been so much relaxed during the past
half-century was then much what it had been in the earliest colonial
times.

 +------------------------------------------+
 |              IN MEMORY OF                |
 |          David Dudley Field,             |
 |        Pastor of this Church.            |
 |                                          |
 |   Born in Madison, Conn., May 20, 1781.  |
 |      Settled in Haddam, 1804-1818.       |
 |       In Stockbridge, 1819-1837.         |
 |                                          |
 |    Recalled to his Charge, he Preached   |
 |       again in Haddam till 1851,         |
 |         When he returned here            |
 |        To spend his last days.           |
 |                                          |
 |         Died April 15, 1867,             |
 |        Aged nearly 86 years.             |
 |                                          |
 |    The Hoary Head is a Crown of Glory    |
 |      when found in the way of            |
 |          Righteousness.                  |
 +------------------------------------------+

Morning and evening the entire family gathered in the sitting-room for
prayers, each one with a Bible, and all were required to join in the
reading. A chapter was never divided, and in turn the verses were read;
often comments were made. Afterwards came the long prayer, when all,
except Dr. Field, knelt; he stood, with his hands on the back of his
chair, and one of his favorite expressions, and one which greatly
impressed the younger members of his family, the more because they did
not understand it, was that the Lord would "overturn, overturn, overturn
.. until he come, whose right it is."

That the Puritanic atmosphere was no harsh and unmirthful thing in this
parsonage is shown by the story told by one who was a boy in Stockbridge
at the time. A hen was sitting in a box in the woodshed; each morning
Cyrus looked for the little chickens. One day in an adjoining box he
found the family cat with a number of kittens. These he placed with the
hen, and then with a very straight face asked his father to come and see
the chickens.

The controversy as to the scriptural limitation of the Sabbath, whether
it began at sunset on Saturday or at midnight, was then very active.
When Dr. Field was questioned as to which evening was the one to be
observed, he always advised those in doubt to keep both.

Once in speaking of the curious texts that he had known clergymen of his
generation to choose, he instanced: "Parbar westward, four at the
causeway and two at Parbar"; but he failed to give the lesson that was
drawn from the words.

In those old days in western Massachusetts cooking-stoves were unknown.
The pots were hung above the fire, the meats were broiled over the
coals or before them, and the baking was done in a brick oven. Neither
were there ice-closets nor travelling butchers. The winter's stock of
meat was laid in with the first cold weather; the chickens were killed
and packed in snow in the cellar, to be brought out as they were needed;
and pies were made in large quantities, and frozen and put away for
future use; and the foot-stove was taken down from the shelf. This was a
small iron box with holes in the top, and into it were put live coals.
The box was carried in the hand, and used in place of a footstool in
"meeting"; but even with this mitigation the cold was felt intensely.

The conflict in a conscientious pastor's mind between his sense of duty
and his kindness of heart was often severe and painful. Mrs. Field used
to say that the most difficult act her husband was ever called upon to
perform was to refuse church membership to those who had accepted Dr.
Channing's views. She was naturally more pitiful than he. A revivalist
who had come to the village in the course of his mission took occasion
at a service publicly to arraign one of the prominent men of the town
for drunkenness. Mrs. Field strongly disapproved of the time and place
chosen for the rebuke, and on her way home from the meeting expressed
her disapproval, and when she reached her gate said, "Wait, Cyrus, and
when Mr. ---- passes bring him to me and I will pick his bones for him"
(Micah iii. 2). She would not have approved of the method adopted,
according to a story current in her son Cyrus's family, by a pious man
in Connecticut who, when he thought himself imposed upon by his
neighbors, would say, with a long drawl, "Leave them to the Lord, leave
them to the Lord--he'll smite them hip and thigh."

Her son always remembered, as one of the strongest impressions of his
childhood, the deep and lasting grief of his mother at parting with her
eldest daughter, who married and went to Smyrna, Asia Minor, as a
missionary, when he was but ten years old.

An old lady in Stockbridge tells to his niece this story of him at about
the same age. "Your grandmother had been very ill. I watched with her;
many of us watched. I thought to keep her from talking by coming up
behind her to give her medicine, but she found out who I was and talked
a great deal. After she was better she still needed some one to sleep in
her room, keep up the fire and give her medicine. Your uncle Cyrus did
this one whole winter when he was a little boy, I should think not ten.
It was lovely of him." And it was just like him. He always remembered
that during this same illness his mother called him to her and said,
"Cyrus, the doctor says I am very ill, but I shall be up to-morrow." And
he would add, "She was."

By all Stockbridge tradition he was the hero of another tale, although
he himself always gave the credit of it to one of his brothers. A
certain rat-trap (perhaps of new and efficient style) had been lost.
After much search and questioning the minister gave orders that whenever
found it should be brought at once to him. So one day at a service, when
the sermon was in full progress, there came a clanging noise up the
aisle, and the missing article was set down in front of the pulpit with
the words, "Father, here is your rat-trap!"

Another laughable reminiscence occurred at the burning of the parsonage,
which took place about 1830. In 1822 or 1823 Dr. Field had bought a
small house in the village and had moved there. The fire was first seen
as the children were coming from school, and very soon after it was
discovered all hope of subduing it was given up, and the first thought
was to save the study furniture and books, and the study table was
thrown from the window. Imagine the surprise of the crowd and the
consternation of their pastor as the drawers of this, his private
repository, came open, and a shower of playing-cards fluttered forth and
whitened the grass. They had been found in the possession of his
children and confiscated.

It is remembered of Cyrus Field as a child that his dealings with his
playmates were most exact. He paid punctually all that he owed, and
required the same punctuality in return. He was the chosen leader in all
the games, and he was the victor in a race around the village green, one
of the stipulations being that a certain amount of crackers should be
eaten on the way.

His half-holidays were passed in roaming over the country-side, and he
has often said that the meal he enjoyed the most in his life was one
gotten on a Saturday afternoon when he had stopped, tired and hungry, at
a farm-house, and was given a plate of cold pork and potatoes. He was
obliged to be at home before sunset on Saturday, as every member of the
family was required to be in the house by that time, and all work to
cease; and as the children entered their father greeted them with the
words, "We are on the borders of holy time." Sunset on Sunday was
watched for most anxiously, for they were then again quite free to come
and go.

[Illustration: THE PARSONAGE, STOCKBRIDGE, MASS.

(As rebuilt after the fire)]

The simple life of the Massachusetts village was not without its
pleasures. There lies before me a yellow programme, printed sixty years
ago, which commemorates what was very likely at once the first
appearance of Cyrus W. Field on any stage and his last appearance in his
native village, and forms a fitting conclusion to the story of his
childhood.

=EXHIBITION.--STOCKBRIDGE ACADEMY=,

MARCH 26-27, 1835.

=THURSDAY EVENING.=

ORDER OF EXERCISES.

1. MUSIC.

2. Prologue.--United States Speaker.      JOHN HENRY ADAMS

3. Burr and Blennerhasset.--Wirt.      ESSEX WATTS

4. Bernardo Del Carpio.--Mrs. Hemans.      RALPH K. JONES

5. Death of the Princess Charlotte.--Campbell.      HENRY W. DWIGHT, JR.

6. MUSIC.

7. "Hail to the Land."--Author unknown.      PHINEHAS LINCOLN

8. Extract from Robert Treat Paine
   on French Aggressions.      DAVID L. PERRY

9. Parody of "The Young Orator."--Anonymous.      GEORGE W. KINGSLEY

10. A Dandy's----What?--Independent Balance.      WILLIAM STUART

11. MUSIC.

12. Patriotic Stanzas.--Campbell.      THOMAS WELLS

13. Injustice of Slavery.      JAMES SEDGWICK

14. Question Answered.--Ladies' Magazine.      GEORGE LESTER

15. Fall of Missolonghi.--E. Canning.      THEODORE S. POMEROY, Jr.

16. MUSIC.

17. The Rich Man and the Poor Man.--Khemnitzen.      LEWIS BURRALL

18. Man, the Artificer of His Own Fortune.      EDWARD SELKIRK

19. Pleasures of Knowledge.      MARSHALL WILLIAMS

20. Extract from an Oration by Wm. R. Smith.      EDWIN WILLIAMS

21. Running Dover, a Boaster.--Anonymous.      GEORGE W. KINGSLEY

22. MUSIC.

23. Influence of Intemperance
   on our Government.--Sprague.      BRADFORD DRESSER

24. Bunker Hill Monument.--Webster.      GEORGE W. PARSONS

25. Extract from Webster on the Slave Trade.      JOHN ELY

26. Parody of "Lochiel's Warning."--Edward Selkirk.
              Advocate of Temperance,        {EDWARD SELKIRK
              Vender of Ardent Spirits,      {THEODORE WILLIAMS

27. A Wife Wanted.--A Bachelor      EDWARD CARTER

28. MUSIC.

29. The Instability of Human Government.--Rutledge.      JOHN VALLET

30. Parody of "Brutus's Address to the
   Roman Populace."--Anonymous.      GEORGE W. BURRALL

31. Peter's Ride to the Wedding.--New Speaker.      GEORGE LESTER

32. Tragical Dialogue.--Columbian Orator.

     Indian Chief,           CHARLES POMEROY
     American Officer,       LEWIS FENN
     Son of the Chief,       CYRUS FIELD
     Soldiers,              {CHARLES DEMING
                            {JOHN VALLET

33. Petition of Young Ladies.--United States Speaker      JOHN HENRY ADAMS

34. MUSIC.

FRIDAY EVENING.

ORDER OF EXERCISES.

1. MUSIC.

2. _"SHE STOOPS TO CONQUER."--Goldsmith._

A COMEDY IN FIVE ACTS.

DRAMATIS PERSONAE.

 Sir Charles Marlow,      S. G. JONES
 Hardcastle,              H. C. FAY
 Young Marlow,            H. TREMAIN
 Hastings,                E. ROCKWELL
 Tony Lumpkin,            H. GARDNER
 Diggory,                 C. POMEROY
 Jeremy,                  T. WILLIAMS
 Stings,                  L. FENN
 Mrs. Hardcastle,         C. W. FIELD
 Miss Hardcastle,         F. FOWLER
 Miss Neville,            J. STEPHENS
 Maid,                    J. ELY
 Fellows of the Ale-house, Servants, etc.

ACT THE FIRST.

Scene 1.--A Chamber in an Old-fashioned House.

MUSIC.

Scene 2.--An Ale-house Room.

MUSIC.

ACT THE SECOND.

Scene 1.--A Room in Hardcastle's House, supposed by Marlow and
Hastings to be a Room in an Inn.

MUSIC.

ACT THE THIRD.

Scene 1.--A Room in Hardcastle's House.

MUSIC.

ACT THE FOURTH.

Scene 1.--The same Room.

MUSIC.

ACT THE FIFTH.

Scene 1.--The same Room.

MUSIC.

Scene 2.--The back of the Garden.

MUSIC.

Scene 3.--A Room in Hardcastle's House.

MUSIC.

3. Epilogue.--United States Speaker. THEODORE S. POMEROY, Jr.

MUSIC.




CHAPTER II

EARLY LIFE IN NEW YORK

(1835-1840)


It was on Wednesday, April 29, 1835, and only a few weeks after "She
Stoops to Conquer" had been performed in the village academy at
Stockbridge, that Cyrus Field, having persuaded his parents that he was
old enough to go out into the world and seek his fortune, left his home.
For three years before he had kept the family accounts, and had most
carefully entered every item of expense in a small paper book, and he
was well aware that it was only with strict economy that the eight
dollars given to him by his father at parting could be spared from the
family purse. Stockbridge in April lies bare and brown in the valley of
the Housatonic, and the tops of the mountains that are near are at that
season often still white with snow, and his heart was in harmony with
the scene as he looked back for the last sight of his beloved mother's
face. His first letter is dated

"NEW YORK, _May 12, 1835_.

    "_Dear Father_,--I received yours, Henry's, and Mary's kind letters
    of the 7th on the 9th by Jonathan, and I assure you that it did me
    good to hear from sweet home.

    "I stopped at Mr. Moore's, in Hudson, and they had not seen
    mother's handkerchief.

    "Your account of the Field family I was glad to receive, but I
    wish to know also from whom we are descended on my mother's side.

    "Tell Stephen, Henry, and Mary that I intended to write them all a
    long letter, but as I have not been very well for the last two
    days, and have a good deal to do to-day, it is impossible.

    "The purse which Mary mentioned in her letter Jonathan says that he
    did not bring.

    "I have seen R. Maclaughlin, and he sends his love to Henry. Tell
    George Whitney that the store boy sends his love to him. I do the
    same, and also to Edwin Williams, Mr. Fay, S. and A. Hawkings, and
    all the good people of old Stockbridge.

    "Uncle Beales and his daughter arrived here last night.

    "Mr. Mark Hopkins came from Stockbridge this morning. No letters.

    "Take good care of mother, and tell her she must not get overdone.

    "All send their love. Love to all.

"From your affectionate son,
"CYRUS."



He does not speak of his loneliness, although we know that it was great,
for his mother's last words to another son, who was going to New York a
few weeks later, were, "Bring Cyrus home if he is still so homesick."

It was on one of his first Sundays in New York that, after he had been
to church, and gone to his brother David's for dinner, his unhappiness
was apparent to the family and also to Dr. Mark Hopkins, their guest,
whose sympathy was never forgotten, nor his words, "I would not give
much for a boy if he were not homesick on leaving home." He has said
that many of the evenings during the long summer that followed his
coming to New York were passed on the banks of the Hudson watching the
boats as they sailed northward, and as he lay by the riverside he
pictured himself as on board of one of the vessels, and the welcome
that he would receive on reaching Stockbridge.

Towards the end of his life Mr. Field began the preparation of his
autobiography. From so much of this as serves the purpose of this
narrative, extracts will be made from time to time without express
credit.

In 1835 it took twenty-four hours to go from Stockbridge to New York,
and first there was a drive of fifty miles to Hudson on the river, and
then a long sail by boat.

Almost immediately on reaching the city he entered as an errand-boy the
store of A. T. Stewart, which had already a more commanding reputation
than any mercantile establishment possesses or perhaps can attain at
present.

His home was in a boarding-house in Murray Street near Greenwich, where
he had board and lodging for two dollars a week, a fact which is in
itself eloquent of the difference between life now in New York and life
sixty years ago. Stewart's was then at 257 Broadway, between Murray and
Warren streets. There the young clerk received for his services the
first year $50, and the second the sum was doubled. Even so, and with
what would now be the incredible frugality of his living, it is plain
that he could not have supported himself by his earnings. Of his life at
that time he said in after-years, "My oldest brother lent me money,
which, just as soon as I was able, and before I was twenty-one, I
returned to him with interest." The letter that follows tells how his
first money was spent:

"NEW YORK, _June 12, 1835_.

    "_Dear Father_,--I received by Mr. Baldwin five nightcaps, a
    pin-cushion, and some wedding-cake, for which I am very much
    obliged to mother and Mary.

    "Mary wrote to me to know of what color I would have my frock-coat;
    tell mother instead of having a linen frock-coat that I would
    prefer another linen roundabout, as they are much better in a
    store; I am not particular about the color.

    "When you write to me, direct your letters to Cyrus W. Field, at A.
    T. Stewart & Co., No. 257 Broadway, New York; if you do so, they
    will come to me quicker than in any other way. There is in the
    store besides the firm twenty-four clerks, including two
    book-keepers, one of whom is Mr. Smith, of Haddam; he says that he
    remembers you, mother, David, Timothy, and Matthew very well. Give
    my love to mother, brothers, sister, Mr. Fay, George Whitney, and
    other friends.

"From your affectionate son,
"CYRUS.

    "P.S.--On the other side you will find a list of my expenses.

    From the 29th of April to the 12th of June.--Cyrus W. Field,
    expenses.

 From Stockbridge to New York                  $2 00

 Paid to David for Penny Magazines              2 00
 (I am not agoing to take them any longer.)

 To hair cutting                                  121/2

 To one vial of spirits of turpentine (used to
 get some spots out of coat)                       61/4

 To get shoes mended                              183/4

 To one pair of shoe-brushes                      25

 To one box of blacking                           121/2

 To get trunks carried from David's to my
 boarding-house                                   25

 To two papers of tobacco to put in trunks to
 prevent moths getting in                         121/2

 To one straw hat (the one that I brought from
 home got burned and was so dirty that David
 thought I had better get me a new one.)        1 00

 To one steel pen                                 121/2

 To small expenses, from time to time, such as
 riding in an omnibus, going to Brooklyn,
 etc., etc., etc.                               1 25
                                               ------
                                   Total,      $7 50

    "When I left home I had $8, $7 50 of which is expended, leaving in
    my hands 50 cents. I do not know of anything that I want, but I
    think you had better send to me $4 more."

In all his letters of this period he calls his eldest brother by his
first name, David, and it was not until many years later that his second
name, Dudley, is added.

At first Mr. Field was obliged to be at his work between six and seven
in the morning, and after he was promoted from errand-boy to clerk the
hours for attendance at the store were from a quarter-past eight in the
morning until into the evening. "I always made it a point to be there
before the partners came and never to leave before the partners left.
Mr. Stewart was the leading dry-goods merchant at that time. My ambition
was to make myself a thoroughly good merchant. I tried to learn in every
department all I possibly could, knowing I had to depend entirely on
myself."

In his simple country home a theatre had always been thought of and
spoken of as an entrance to hell, but being of an inquiring mind he
determined, as so many country lads have done before and since, upon
giving one of his first evenings in the city to finding out for himself
what hell was like. The kindred desire to see a large fire was also soon
gratified, and the ardor of his curiosity on this subject was at once
cooled, for, as he stood watching the blaze, the hose was turned for a
moment in the wrong direction, and he was drenched.

The subject of the next letter is the "great fire of 1835," which took
place on December 16th, and destroyed 600 warehouses and $20,000,000 of
property.

"NEW YORK, _December 25, 1835_.

    "_Dear Father_,--Last week, on Wednesday night, a fire broke out in
    a store in Merchant Street which proved to be the largest that was
    ever known in this country. It burned about 674 buildings, most of
    which were wholesale stores, and laid waste all of thirty acres of
    the richest part of this city.

    "I was up all night to the fire, and last Sunday was on duty with
    David as a guard to prevent people from going to the ruins to steal
    property that was saved from the fire and laying in heaps in the
    streets.

    "The awful state that the city was in can be better imagined than
    described.

    "Mr. Brewer has arrived, and will take to Stockbridge some parcels,
    one of which is for Mrs. Ashburner.

"In haste, from your affectionate son,
"CYRUS.

    "P.S.--I wish mother would make for me a black frock-coat (she
    knows the kind that I want) and a plain black stock.

    "Perhaps you had better send me the $6 that you were to let me
    have.

"C. W. FIELD."



On July 25, 1836, he writes to his father:

    "I shall leave New York on Thursday evening the 11th of August, in
    the steamboat _Westchester_, which goes no further up the river
    than Hudson, and be at that place on Friday morning, the 12th,
    where I shall want to have some one to meet me and Mr. Goodrich
    with a good horse and wagon to take us immediately to
    Stockbridge.... I want to have some one be at Hudson rain or shine,
    and I would like to have you write to me and let me know who is
    coming, and where I shall find him if he is not at the wharf....
    Mr. G. and myself will pay the expense of coming to Hudson."

And in another letter:

    "The fare in the steamboat to Hudson is only 50 cents."

A month later, in a letter to his mother, dated New York, August 29th,
he says:

    "I arrived here on Thursday morning with Goodrich, in good health
    and fine spirits. I have sent to you by Mr. Platner, of Lee,

 10 yds. of fine long cloth, at 25 cents per yd.       $2 50
 15 yds. not fine long cloth, at 121/2 cents per yd.      1 871/2
 1 muslin collar                                       -----
 1 remnant of merino, 41/2 yds., for                      4 00
                                                      ------
                                                Total, $8 371/2

    "If Mary should like the merino for a cloak I will obtain another
    remnant for a dress.

    "Father has let me have $25 00 since I have been in New York, and
    if he wishes me I will pay the above amount, and then I shall be
    indebted to him $16 621/2. I will send the balance in money or obtain
    that amount worth of goods for him here at any time....

    "I wish you would all write to me by every opportunity, and tell me
    of anything and all things that happen at home and in good old
    Stockbridge.

    "Give my love to all friends. In haste.

"From your affectionate son,
"CYRUS.

    "_To my dear mother._"

He wrote to his mother again on October 31, 1836, and in the postscript
says:

    "Tell father that I have read through the _Pilgrim's Progress_
    which he gave me when at home, and that I like it very much; and
    also that Goodrich and myself take turns in reading a chapter in
    the Bible every night before we go to bed, and that we have got as
    far as the 25th chapter of Genesis."

His indebtedness to his father seems to have weighed heavily upon him,
for on November 25th he again alludes to it:

    "I am now in debt to you $4 75, which I will pay to you at any time
    you wish, or will obtain things for you here."

The thought that his home in Stockbridge is to be given up causes him
pain. On January 24, 1837, in a letter to his mother, he says:

    "I am sorry that father is going to leave that beautiful place
    Stockbridge, but when you do move to Haddam I hope that you will
    take everything, even the old and good dog Rover."

In a letter written to his father on April 15, 1837, he mentions various
articles he has sent to him, and then adds:

    "And also a silk handkerchief, which I wish you to accept for the
    interest on the $25 you lent me."

Towards the end of the letter is this sentence:

    "The election has closed and the Whigs have elected Aaron Clark
    their candidate for Mayor by a majority of nearly 5000 votes.
    Good."

His clothes were all of home manufacture. On May 1, 1837, in a letter to
his mother, he writes:

    "I wish you would make for me, as soon as convenient, a black
    broadcloth _coat with skirts_, and covered buttons, and as I wish
    it for a dress-coat the cloth must be _very fine and made extremely
    nice_. You cannot be too particular about it."

In his letter written from New York on July 15, 1837, he says:

    "David arrived on Monday, July 10th, in the packet ship _Oxford_,
    from Liverpool. He had a passage of thirty-seven days. He is in
    very good health. The Ladies' Greek Association of Stockbridge held
    their fair the 4th of July on Little Hill, and raised one hundred
    and twenty-seven dollars ($127). Well done for old Stockbridge."

The Mercantile Library in Clinton Hall, at the southwest corner of
Nassau and Beekman streets, proved an attractive place to him, and
whenever it was possible he went there in the evening to read; and he
also joined an "Eclectic Fraternity," to which Mr. Jackson S. Schultz
belonged. The Fraternity met for debate every Saturday evening in a
fourth-story room over a leather store in the Swamp.

Mr. Stewart's rules were strict. One of them was that every clerk must
enter in a book the minute that he came in the morning, left for dinner,
returned from dinner, went to supper and came back; and if he was late
in the morning, at dinner over an hour, or required more than
three-quarters of an hour for supper, he must pay twenty-five cents for
each offence. The fines thus collected, Mr. Stewart told his clerks,
would be kept and given to any charity that they should select. This
went on until September 30, 1837, and then this paper was drawn up:

"NEW YORK, _September 30, 1837_.

    "We, the undersigned, hereby nominate and appoint Cyrus W. Field
    treasurer to receive the fines of the young men _paid_ during the
    month of September to Messrs. A. T. Stewart & Co.:

 EDWARD K. SHED,
 J. R. MCELROY,
 JAMES SHOND,
 H. T. SELDEN,
 CHARLES ST. JOHN,
 WEBSTER THOMPSON,
 C. ZABRISKIE, JR.,
 JNO. K. WALKER,
 E. B. WILLIAMS,
 HENRY RUTGERS PRALL,
 THOMAS H. SELBY,
 JAMES BECK,
 J. B. SMITH,
 GEO. HAYWOOD,
 D. R. PARK,
 M. GOODRICH,
 JOHN WM. BYRON,
 A. MATTHEW,
 T. JONES,
 S. H. MAYNARD,
 C. AUSTIN,
 PAUL BURDOCK,
 P. FELLOWS,
 EDMUND S. MILLS,
 JAMES MACFARLAN,
 A. SAHTLER,
 R. WHYTE."



The clerks were paid at the beginning of each month, and on the 1st of
October the paper was presented, and the cashier was asked for the
money, which he declined to give. An appeal was taken to Mr. Stewart,
who ordered it to be given to the young men.

"I took the funds, and all of the clerks left the store that night in a
body and proceeded up Broadway to the corner of Chambers Street. We then
agreed to go into a large, well-known oyster-saloon in the basement. The
clerks at once voted unanimously that we should have an oyster supper,
and that the treasurer should pay from this fund the expense of the
supper, which was done. Then there was a long debate as to what charity
the balance should be given to. At last it was unanimously resolved that
there was no such charity in the city or State of New York as the clerks
of A. T. Stewart & Co., and that Mr. Field, the treasurer, should return
to each clerk the exact amount of his fines, less his proportion of the
supper. This occupied until nearly or quite daylight.

"Some one of the clerks or waiters told Mr. Stewart of what had
occurred, and we were all requested to remain at the store the next
evening after business hours, when Mr. Stewart called me up and asked me
to give him an account of what had been done with the funds paid to me
the previous evening. I told him the exact truth in regard to the
matter, when he dismissed us, saying that in the future he should be
very careful that the firm selected the object of charity that this fund
was given to."

At a dinner at the Union League Club on October 26, 1881, Jackson S.
Schultz, the beginning of whose acquaintance with Mr. Field has just
been referred to, related this incident: "Perhaps I cannot do better
than tell you an anecdote that was told me by Mr. Stewart at the great
celebration which we had at the Metropolitan Hotel after the laying of
the Atlantic cable. He said to me, 'Perhaps you don't know that I have
taught Mr. Field all the art of telegraphing he knows.' 'No, I am not
aware of that, Mr. Stewart.' He said, 'It is quite notorious in our
house.' Mr. Field was for a long time a clerk in that establishment, and
Mr. Stewart said Mr. Field was in the habit of watching the old
gentleman, and by a sort of tick, tick, giving notice to his
fellow-clerks of the fact that he was coming, so that every man was in
his place, and from that simple idea Mr. Field got the idea of
telegraphing, which had made his fortune."

The first intimation we find of his having decided to leave Mr. Stewart
is in a letter to his father, written on January 8, 1838:

    "I expect to go to Lee to live with Matthew on the 1st of March. He
    will give me two hundred and fifty dollars ($250) the first year,
    and my board and washing."

And again, on February 25th, he refers to the proposed change that he
intends making:

    "I have been very busy for the last five or six weeks in the
    evening attending Mr. Wheeler's school to obtain a thorough
    knowledge of book-keeping by double entry, so as to be able to keep
    Matthew's books when I go to Lee.... I have made arrangements with
    Matthew so that I shall not commence my year with him until the 1st
    of April."

He arrived in Lee, Mass., on Friday evening, March 30th.

It was early in this year that Mr. Stewart, having heard that Mr. Field
intended giving up his place as clerk after his three years'
apprenticeship to business, sent for him and urged him to agree to
remain with him for several years, and made him a very liberal offer if
he would do so. On the 2d of March Mr. Bunours, one of Mr. Stewart's
partners, sent him this note:

    "_Dear Field_,--You will accept the accompanying trifle as a token
    of esteem and sincere friendship, and whatever be your future
    pursuits, to know that they are successful will be a source of much
    gratification to

WILLIAM H. BUNOURS.

_March 2, '38._"



"The trifle" was a small diamond pin that the recipient of it wore for
over twenty-five years. Upon the same occasion this invitation was
received:

    "The undersigned, anxious to show their respect and esteem for
    their fellow-clerk, Cyrus W. Field, do hereby agree to give him a
    complimentary supper on Friday evening, March 2, 1838.

 HENRY RUTGERS PRALL,
 JAMES MACFARLAN,
 RICHARD MCELROY,
 JOHN WM. BYRON,
 PAUL BURDOCK,
 R. WHYTE,
 P. V. MONDON,
 JNO. K. WALKER,
 CHARLES B. ST. JOHN,
 JAMES BECK,
 W. THOMPSON,
 M. GOODRICH."



A letter written on March 6, 1838, by his brother David to his parents
ends with these words:

    "Cyrus has, as you will see from his letters, etc., left Stewart's,
    with the best testimonials of esteem from all his employers and
    associates. He is a noble young man--and I am proud of him."

His father had said on parting from him in 1835: "Cyrus, I feel sure you
will succeed, for your playmates could never get you off to play until
all the work for which you were responsible was done."

These few words tell us briefly how the following eighteen months were
passed:

"On leaving New York I went as far west as Michigan on business for my
brother Dudley. I went up the Hudson in a boat to Albany, from thence
to, I think, Syracuse in the cars, thence by stage to Buffalo, from
Buffalo by steamer to Detroit, and from there to Ann Arbor. On my return
East I went to Lee, Mass., as an assistant to my brother, Matthew D.
Field. He was a large paper manufacturer; he often sent me on business
to Boston, Philadelphia, Washington, and New York."

From this account of Mr. Field's beginnings in New York it is evident
that his subsequent success was not a matter of chance; the foundations
of it were laid in the character which commanded the confidence of his
employer and of his associates. This will be shown even more strikingly
in the pages that are to follow. His own narration of his early
experiences has an additional interest in the incidental and almost
unconscious disclosure of the vast difference between the conditions of
beginning a business career in New York now and sixty years ago. It
seems worth while to secure an authentic memorial of a life that already
seems so remote and is wellnigh forgotten.




CHAPTER III

MARRIAGE AND BUSINESS LIFE

(1840-1853)


"In the spring of 1840 I went into business for myself in Westfield,
Mass., as a manufacturer of paper, and on October 1st of that year I was
invited to become a partner in the firm of E. Root & Co., of No. 85
Maiden Lane, New York. I was not yet of age when I entered as a junior
partner in this house; the business of the firm was managed chiefly by
my senior partner. My part was to attend to the sales and manage the
business, principally away from New York, in Philadelphia, Baltimore,
Boston, Washington, and other places, making contracts and attending to
the business generally. On November 30, 1840, I was twenty-one, and two
days afterwards I was married to Mary Bryan Stone, of Guilford, Conn."

Mrs. Field's father, Joseph Stone, died of yellow-fever at Savannah,
Ga., July 9, 1822. He left a widow and three little children. Mrs. Stone
returned to her home and lived with her parents, and it was from their
home that her daughter was married. Mr. and Mrs. Fowler had been married
in 1776, and their house was built in 1784, and it was on account of
their age and to avoid all excitement for them that Mr. and Mrs.
Field's wedding was very quiet. The invitations were informal.

"NEW YORK, _November_ 25, 1840.

"_My dear Parents_,--I have only time to write a few lines, and will
come to the point at once.

"The writer of this intends to be joined in the bands of matrimony to
Miss Mary B. Stone one week from this day, that is, on next Wednesday
morning, December 2, 1840, at 10 o'clock A.M., and requests the pleasure
of meeting you both, with sister Mary, at the house of Mr. A. S. Fowler
in Guilford, at the above-mentioned time. David and Stephen will be
there. We expect father will perform the ceremony. I shall leave here
Tuesday in the New Haven steamboat, and you will find me Wednesday
morning at Bradley's Hotel in Guilford, where you had better all stop.

"There will be _only a very_ few friends at the wedding. Shall leave
immediately after the ceremony is over for New Haven, and from there
come to this city.

"If Henry is at home bring him with you, and send to Middletown for
Mary.

"With much love to all at home,
"I remain your affectionate son,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."

A cousin writes: "It is a long time to remember what passed fifty years
ago. It was a lovely morning, the 2d of December, 1840. Your dear father
came to our old home in Guilford. My memory says ten o'clock was the
hour for the ceremony, and it took place in the north room, now the
parlor. Your grandfather, Dr. Field, was the clergyman. I was
bridesmaid. Your dear mother and I wore dresses made alike of gray
cashmere. Lunches were an unheard of arrangement in those days; the
refreshment was three kinds of cake and wine. Then we drove to New
Haven; your uncle, Joseph Stone, lived there. I went to visit some
cousins; your parents went to a hotel, and came and spent the evening
with us."

Mr. Justice Field of the United States Supreme Court was groomsman for
his brother. Fifty years after this same group stood once more together
at the Golden Wedding on December 2, 1890. The married life thus begun
was singularly happy. It is impossible for the children of this marriage
to recall a word of unkindness as having been spoken by either father or
mother. Their little son's death in 1854 drew them closer to one
another. He writes that during his business troubles his wife was
perfectly calm, and that she looked upon the loss of money as but slight
in comparison to the happiness that had been left to her.

On December 3d Mr. and Mrs. Field left New Haven and came to New York by
boat; immediately on their arrival they drove to the house of Mrs. Mason
in Bond Street, and it was there that they boarded for the next two
years.

"In six months" (that is, on April 2, 1841) "E. Root & Co. failed, with
large liabilities, and though I was not the principal of the firm, yet
on me fell the loss and the burden of paying its debts. Such was the
condition in which I started in life, without capital or credit or
business, and with a heavy load of debt upon me. We were for many months
afterwards getting the affairs settled. I dissolved the firm immediately
and started on my own account. Some of the creditors came to see me, and
those that did not come I went to see, and on the best terms I could
settled and compromised and got released.

"My office at this time was in Burling Slip, and it was in 1842 or 1843
that the partnership of Cyrus W. Field & Co. was formed, the company
being my brother-in-law, Joseph F. Stone."

With characteristic regularity the home life as well as the business
life went on. I have on the table before me two account-books, which
show both how methodical were the young merchant's habits and how simple
was his life at the outset of his career.

 "No. 1, Cyrus W. Field, 1840, '41 and '42," and
 "No. 2, Cyrus W. Field, 1843."

The following are extracts from No. 1:

 "EXPENSES ACCOUNT

 1840                                           Dr.
 Dec. 2, to carriage to New Haven             $ 7 00
  "   2, to 50 newspapers                       1 00
  "   2, to gate fee                              25
  "   3, to expenses at the Pavillion           9 50
  "   4, to porter                                25
  "   4, to New Haven to New York               4 00
  "   4, to newspapers                            12
  "   4, to hack                                1 00
  "   4, to cartage                               44

 1841
 Jan. 15, to bill for board for 2 months      120 00
  "   29, to bill for vaccination               1 00
  "   31, to figs and crackers                    17
  "   31, to oysters and laudanum                 22
 Feb.  7, to doctor's bill--one visit           1 00
  "   18, to one box of pencil-leads               5
 May  25, to one umbrella                       1 00
  "   28, to repairing silk hat                   88
 Sept. 8, to letter from Mrs. Field               13
 Oct. 20, to paid Dr. Catlin in Haddam          5 00
 Nov. 13, to Mrs. Nolan's bill                 27 50
  "   15, to one willow cradle                  2 00
                                           ---------
 Dec. 1                                    $1,467 12

    "The above are our expenses for one year, from December 2, 1840, to
    December 2, 1841.

"CYRUS W. FIELD."



From this time until 1842 the accounts were kept with the same
exactness; some of the items for this latter year are:

 "1842
  June 13, to cutting coat, vest, 2 pair pants                  $ 1 75
   "   15, to soap, 8 cents; pepper, 5 cents; tobacco and linen     32
  July 4, to Niblo's Garden, M. E. F., M. S., and C. W. F.        1 50
   "   6, to Dr. Paine, $1; pill, 6 cents                         1 06
  Aug. 7, to letter to and one from Mrs. Field                      25
  Oct. 1, to W. H. Popham, 7 tons coal                           37 75
  Nov. 18, to shoestrings, 5 cents; tacks, 19 cents                 24
   "   22, to _Tribune_, 2 weeks                                    18
                                                             ---------
  Dec. 1                                                     $1,482 79

    "The above were our expenses for one year, December 2, 1841, to
    December 2, 1842.

"CYRUS W. FIELD."



And on December 1, 1843, at the end of the book we read:

                                            ---------
 "1843                                      $1,654 91

        Less
  Dec. 1, boarding ---- from October 8,
            1842, to date, 59-6/7 weeks @
            $3                    $179 57
   "   1, cash over to date[A]       6 30      185 87
                                            ---------
                                            $1,469 04

    [A] This amount is for sundries sold, and entered the past year in our
expenses, and for which I refund back the money.

    "The above are our expenses for one year, from December 2, 1842, to
    December 2, 1843.

    "CYRUS W. FIELD."

In 1842 he rented a house in East Seventeenth Street, No. 87, and his
brother Dudley questioned the wisdom of his living so far up-town, and
said that he must not look for frequent visits from him, that he could
only go to him on Sunday. He lived in this house for ten years, and in
the interval his brother Dudley moved to one immediately in the rear,
and Mrs. Robert Sedgwick and Mrs. Caroline Kirkland were near neighbors
and dear friends.

For many years Mr. Field took his breakfast by lamplight, and his dinner
and supper down-town. His children saw him only on Sunday. At this time,
he wrote long afterwards, "I was an ardent admirer of Henry Clay, and in
politics a Whig," and accordingly he took a warm interest in the
election of 1844.

"In 1844 I was not worth a dollar. What money I had made had all gone to
pay the debts of the old firm. My business was conducted on long credit;
we did a general business all over the country. I built up a first-rate
credit everywhere. All business intrusted to me was done promptly and
quickly. I attended to every detail of the business, and made a point of
answering every letter on the day it was received."

Mr. Schultz said of him at the dinner already referred to:

    "But, sir, I do recall the early days of Mr. Field. I remember him
    when he was first a clerk and then a merchant.... He had
    peculiarities then as he has always had. One I recollect was, he
    had over his desk 'Are you insured?' For no one that was not
    insured could get credit of him. He could not afford, he said, to
    insure himself and others too. Thus in all his transactions he had
    ideas and principles to carry out, but always good principles and
    ideas. I well remember when he came into the Mercantile Library
    Association; he had his own ideas, which did a great deal to add
    to the dignity and usefulness of that institution. In all his early
    life he was what he has been since--useful, practical."

It seems odd now to be reminded by the sight of old letters that at this
time envelopes were not in use. The sheets of paper were large, of
letter size; three sides were closely written on, and then it was folded
into nine, and it was not permitted to enclose even a slip of paper in
this sheet; the postage was usually thirteen cents. The currency was
puzzling; there was the short or "York" shilling of eight to the dollar
(that is, twelve and a half cents), and the New England or long shilling
of six to the dollar (sixteen and two-thirds cents). So rooted was each
kind of currency in its own section as often to cause travellers
annoyance and confusion.

The first and part of the second page of the New York _Tribune_ for
August 26, 1844, is most interesting. There is given an account of "The
Berkshire Jubilee," held at Pittsfield, Mass., on August 22d and 23d.
The paper mentions among those present, Dr. Orville Dewey, of New York,
William Cullen Bryant, Miss Catherine Sedgwick, Dr. Mark Hopkins, Mr.
Macready, the actor, Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, Mrs. Fanny Kemble, Dr.
D. D. Field, and David Dudley Field. This "Jubilee" lasted for two days.
There were forty-four vice-presidents appointed, and forty-four tables
were laid to accommodate the three thousand people who dined together.
On the first day, at two o'clock in the afternoon, Dr. Hopkins preached
a sermon on Jubilee Hill, west of the village, and Dr. D. D. Field
"offered up an eloquent prayer."

After dinner on the 23d there were speeches and singing.

"A young lady, as amiable as she is beautiful, and as intelligent as she
is both amiable and beautiful, gave the following sentiment by proxy:

   "'You scarce can go through the world below
       But you'll find the Berkshire men,
     And when you rove the world above
       You'll meet them there again.'

"At the close of Dr. Holmes's speech he read the poem that appears in
his works under the title of 'Lines recited at the Berkshire Festival,'
beginning:

   "'Come back to your mother, ye children, for shame,
     Who have wandered like truants for riches or fame;
     With a smile on her face and a sprig on her cap
     She calls you to feast from her bountiful lap."

And it appears from the report that "the recitation of this poem was the
most popular exercise of the day."

We have a book of French exercises with page after page written by Mr.
Field. They begin with "Avez vous le pain?" and the last sentence is,
"Votre ami a-t-il le miroir que vous avez ou celui que j'ai? Il n'a ni
celui que vous avez ni celui que j'ai, mais il a le sien." He never
spoke French, but one can fancy that these exercises were written before
he went to Europe, in April, 1849, and in preparation for the exigencies
of intercourse with the natives that might arise.

Mr. and Mrs. Field sailed for England in a packet-ship commanded by
Captain Hovey. They were eighteen days in crossing, and landed at
Plymouth, and posted through Cornwall. This journey was taken by the
advice of his physician. The excitement and work of the past fourteen
years had told very decidedly upon him, and perfect rest was imperative.
Their four little girls were left under the care of an aunt in New
Haven, Conn., and on arriving in England the parents' first thought was
of their children; and great was the joy with which these hailed the
advent of a box of toys, and in it was a blue-and-white tea-set which
gave unusual happiness. Here is one of the messages that came back
across the sea:

    "_Precious Little Isabella_,--What are you about just now? Can
    mother guess?

    "Well, Belle is singing her German song.

    "No. Does Belle say no? She is rocking her doll to sleep, and she
    is making a nice dress for dolly.

    "I have put up a little bundle of pieces for Grace, Alice, and
    Isabelle, and now you can make a great many dresses. Mother wishes
    much to see her little Belle and Fanny, and to give them a good
    number of kisses. Mother always wished to kiss all her little girls
    before she went to bed, but now she cannot reach them.

    "Will Belle kiss her sister for her mother and will she kiss her
    cousins, too?

    "Mamma hopes Belle will always mind her aunt, Miss Oppenheim, her
    cousins, and Anne.

    "Anne loves Belle and is very kind to her and does all for little
    Belle that she can.

    "Now, dear little Belle, good-bye, and do not forget

"MAMMA.

    "Mother sends Belle her bird in the cage."

Some of the reminiscences of this journey come back quite distinctly.
One of them was the indignation of an Irishman at being asked the name
of the river they were passing, which, unluckily for the questioner,
happened to be the Boyne. Another was of a service at a kirk in
Scotland, during which an old lady said to Mrs. Field, "Remember that
you are in the house of God." Her offence was that she had offered to
share her book of psalms with her husband. Indeed it must have seemed
impossible for those who did not know to believe that they were husband
and wife and that they had been married nine years, for both looked very
young at this time.

They travelled rapidly during the following five months. They visited
Manchester, York, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Belfast, Dublin, and London,
Paris, Geneva, and from there to Milan over the Simplon, to Leghorn,
Florence, Rome, Naples, Venice, Vienna, Dresden, Berlin, from Frankfort
down the Rhine to Cologne, to Brussels, back to England and Liverpool,
and from there by the steamship _Europa_ to Boston, and to their home in
New York in September.

They had been interested spectators of the events succeeding the great
uprising of the people in France, Germany, and Italy, and of their
failure to free themselves and obtain self-government.

Mr. George Bancroft was a fellow-passenger on the voyage home. He had
made an engagement to dine in Boston on a certain day, and while at sea
was troubled lest he should not arrive in time; but as Mr. and Mrs.
Field drove to the train they passed Mr. Bancroft on his way to dinner,
and he waved his hand to them. On his return to New York, Mr. Field
amused his friends by stating the characteristic fact that the first
word he learned of each new language, as he crossed from one country to
another, was "faster."

Mr. and Mrs. Field lived simply. The summer outings were short,
sometimes for only a few weeks were they and their children away from
the city, but their children look back with pleasure to the drives that
they took, during the long summer days, to Hoboken (the Elysian Fields),
to Astoria, to Coney Island, all very different places from those of the
present time. And the family cow was driven each morning to pasture on
land that is now known as Madison Square.

January 24, 1850, a son was born. Dr. Field, supposing that he was to be
named Cyrus, addressed the following letter, superscribed:

"Master Cyrus W. Field, Jr.,
"Of the Firm of Cyrus W. Field & Co.,
"No. 11 Cliff Street,
"New York."
"HIGGANUM, _January 28, 1850_.

"MASTER CYRUS W. FIELD, Jr.:

    "_Dear Grandson_,--We were happy in hearing of your safe arrival
    last Thursday morning, and hope you will be a great honor and
    blessing to your parents and to your delighted sisters. Your
    grandmother sends you much love, and says she hopes you will make
    as good a man as your father.

    "Give our love to your parents, to Grace, etc., etc., and by-and-by
    come up and see whether Higganum pleases you as well as New York.
    The Lord bless you and all your friends. Tell them that we are well
    and happy.

"Your affectionate grandfather,
"DAVID D. FIELD."



And Mrs. Kirkland sent a note beginning:

   "A boy! a boy!
    I wish you joy!"

She also wrote: "The pleasantest thing I have to tell you is that Miss
Bremer promises me a visit, and will probably be here in two or three
weeks." The visit was paid and gave great pleasure. Mrs. Field told of
one evening passed at Mrs. Kirkland's, when the Swedish novelist was
quite unconscious that from her cap hung a paper on which was written
2/6.

The autumn of 1850 was long remembered by parents and children. Early in
September the two-seated covered wagon and buggy were filled by the
entire family, who left New York for a drive of four weeks; first to
Guilford, Conn., then to Stockbridge, returning from Hudson to New York
by the night boat.

It was Mr. Field's custom to give an annual supper to his clerks. That
which took place in December, 1850, was signalized by the proceedings
thus officially recited:

    A meeting of the salesmen in the employ of Messrs. Cyrus W. Field &
    Co. was held December 20, 1850. S. Ahern was appointed to preside.
    After the objects of the meeting were made known by the chairman in
    a few brief and appropriate remarks, the following resolutions were
    unanimously adopted:

    _Resolved_, That in consideration of the innumerable acts of
    kindness manifested towards us by Cyrus W. Field, Esq., we deem it
    expedient to acknowledge them, not alone in expressions of
    gratitude, but by tangible proof of our appreciation of them.

    _Resolved_, That a committee of three be appointed to decide upon
    an appropriate testimonial of our esteem, to be presented to Cyrus
    W. Field; and that Augustus Waterman, John Seaman, and James Barry
    be appointed said committee.

    _Resolved_, That Augustus Waterman, in view of his long services to
    Cyrus W. Field, be deputed in behalf of himself and fellow-salesmen
    to make such presentation as the committee shall decide on.

    _Resolved_, That a copy of the foregoing resolutions accompany the
    presentation, and that said presentation and resolutions be
    presented on the occasion of the annual supper given by Cyrus W.
    Field to his employes, and that they be accepted by him as a faint
    token of our esteem.

AUGUSTUS WATERMAN,
JAMES BARRY,
SIMEON J. AHERN,
ANDREW CAHILL,
JOHN CAHILL,
JOHN SEAMAN (per A. W.).



The testimonial took the form of a silver pitcher suitably inscribed.

Early in June, 1851, Mr. and Mrs. Field left New York, and made quite an
extended journey over the then Southern, Western, and Northern States.
First to Virginia, where they had the pleasure of staying with Mr. and
Mrs. Hill Carter at their plantation, Shirley, on the James River; then
to the Natural Bridge, and it was while there that Mr. Field asked Mr.
Church to make a sketch for a picture, and suggested that it would be
wise to take a small piece of the rock back to New York. This Mr. Church
did not think necessary, but Mr. Field was so intent upon having the
color exactly reproduced that he put a bit in his pocket. When the
oil-painting was sent to his house he found the piece, and there had
been no mistake made in the color. From Virginia the party went to the
Mammoth Cave of Kentucky. It was in the course of the trip either up or
down the Mississippi, on one of the famous high-pressure boats of those
days, that the stewardess coolly remarked, when some of the passengers
expressed alarm at the racing, that it made no difference whether or not
the boat they were on happened to blow up, since it was in any case her
last trip. In the ardor of the race the fires were fed with any fuel
available: even the hams that formed part of the cargo were sacrificed.
At St. Paul they heard that a treaty was to be made with the Indians,
and Mr. Field immediately hired a boat for $400 to take him to the
scene. As many others were anxious to go he allowed the captain to sell
tickets at $10 to as many people as the boat would accommodate, and the
captain made a handsome profit, as he was required merely to reimburse
Mr. Field for his outlay. The Indians were frightened at the advent of
the party and at the noise of the whistle, and the treaty had to come to
a standstill until the boat could be sent out of sight.

Mr. Field was again at St. Paul in 1884, when the changes he found
seemed to him marvellous. Mr. F. E. Church, the artist, who had
originally been of the party, but had left it before the arrival at St.
Paul, wrote early in August:

    "I am delighted that you were able to be at the Indian treaty,
    which, from the description in your letter and the numerous letters
    published in the daily prints, convinces me that the occasion must
    have been one of extraordinary interest....

    "I am telling marvellous stories here of our adventures to gaping
    audiences, and exhibiting my blind fishes with tremendous
    effect....

    "All accounts from the children in Stockbridge bring alarming
    intelligence; it is said that they are getting fat, and nothing
    which has been tried has succeeded in stopping the spread of the
    complaint. I recommend a month on a Western steamboat in hot
    weather."

One of the party, a lady, was not at all times a pleasant travelling
companion. The stage drive, one morning in Kentucky, began at four, and
by six o'clock the sun poured down against the side of the coach in
which the lady was seated. As the heat increased, in the same degree her
irritability was manifested. At last she asked a Southern gentlemen who
was by her to let down the curtain. His answer was: "With pleasure,
madam, if you won't look so damned sight cross." This proved to be the
remedy required; from that time she was good-natured.

From a letter written to a New York paper this is copied:

"NIAGARA FALLS, _August 11, 1851_.

    "Among the recent arrivals at the Clifton House are Mlle. Jenny
    Lind and Cyrus W. Field and family....

    "Jenny Lind arrived yesterday from New York by way of Oswego. She
    keeps strictly private, and has her meals served in her own room.
    Last evening she was amusing herself by singing, accompanied by Mr.
    Scharfenberg, in her own rooms, with closed doors. Soon a crowd of
    a hundred had gathered round her door, without a whisper being
    heard. She sang for about half an hour, when, suddenly opening her
    door, she stepped in the hall for a candle, and then you would have
    laughed outright to see the people scamper, she looking so
    indignant."

When Mr. Field built the house on Gramercy Park, which was at first
numbered 84 East Twenty-first Street, that and the one next to it were
the only ones between Lexington and Third avenues, and the east side of
Gramercy Park was a large vacant lot. This house was afterwards known as
123 East Twenty-first Street, and there forty happy years were passed.




CHAPTER IV

OUT OF DEBT--A VOYAGE TO SOUTH AMERICA

(1853)


Although upon the failure for which he was not responsible of the firm
of which he was a member Mr. Field had effected a compromise with the
creditors of the firm which had procured his release from all legal
obligations, and which satisfied them as the best that they could hope
for, it did not satisfy him. He felt that in reality he was still their
debtor, and one of the chief incentives to his intense devotion to
business in the years following his fresh start was the hope of clearing
off the debt, so that no man should have lost by trusting him. In this
he succeeded. He himself says in the incomplete autobiography already
cited:

"There was no luck about my success, which was remarkable. It was not
due to the control or use of large capital, to the help of friends, to
speculations or to fortunate turns of events, it was by constant labor
and with the ambition to be a successful merchant; and I was rewarded by
seeing a steady, even growth of business. I had prospered so that on the
1st of January, 1853, I was worth over $250,000. I then turned to my
books for a list of the old claims which I had settled by compromising
ten years before, found the amount which my generous creditors had
deducted from their claims, added to each one interest for that time,
and sent to every man a check for the whole amount principal and with
seven per cent. interest, a sum amounting in all to many thousands of
dollars."

The letters that follow tell their own story and how the money was
received. Two of them indicate that he made use of his prosperity to
release his own debtors at the same time that he was paying in full his
creditors:

"HARTFORD, CONN., _2d March, 1853_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., New York:

    "_Dear Sir_,--Your favor of yesterday's date was duly received, and
    we would now acknowledge the same, and with no ordinary feeling of
    satisfaction, for in these degenerate days it is in truth a rare
    occurrence to find men who like yourself--as is evidenced by this
    act--are honest from principle, and who never consider themselves
    morally quit of a just debt, even though legally released, until
    the debt is paid in full. We would now express to you our thanks
    for the sum enclosed, not so much for the value thereof in currency
    as for the proof it affords that 'honesty still dwells among men.'
    With our best wishes for your continued prosperity and an assurance
    of our high regard,

"We are truly your friends,
"WOODRUFF & CO.,
"By Sam. Woodruff."



"LOWELL, _March 3, 1853_.

"C. W. FIELD, Esq.:

    "_Dear Sir_,--Yours of the 1st inst. was duly received, with check
    enclosed for $114 41, for which please accept my grateful
    acknowledgments.

    "I congratulate you upon the success of your business pursuits,
    which has enabled you thus honorably to liquidate your by-gone
    pecuniary obligations, and I hope your life and health may be long
    continued in the enjoyment of the well-earned fruits of your
    persevering enterprise.

    "It will always give me great pleasure to see you at my house in
    Lowell, and I hope to find opportunity during the coming season to
    visit the Empire City and the World's Fair and to avail myself of
    that occasion to call upon you.

"With much regard, I remain
"Yours truly,
"JOHN WRIGHT."



"PITTSFIELD, _March 3, 1853_.

    "_My dear Friend_,--The many and various exhibitions of kindness
    and good-feeling from you heretofore have placed me under very
    great obligations.

    "Language fails me to express my feelings on the receipt of your
    letter of the 1st, and this morning with your check for $317 20 for
    a claim amicably and satisfactorily adjusted about ten years since,
    and for which I have no legal or moral claim on you, nor, indeed,
    had it entered my mind for several years.

    "This act, entirely voluntary on your part, exhibits moral honesty,
    that all fair men approve, but few make known by their acts. I
    value it the more because it exhibits in my friend a conscience
    alive to right. You have made this present (for I have no claim)
    not because you considered I needed it, but because the ability
    that did not exist in 1843 does exist in 1853, and the act itself
    would be carrying out the principles of the Golden Rule. Please
    accept my warmest thanks for this token of love and friendship. May
    peace, prosperity, and happiness attend you all your days.

"I am truly your friend,
"WALTER LAFLIN.

    "To CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., New York."

"SPRINGFIELD, MASS., _March 5, 1853_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., New York City:

    "_Dear Sir_,--Allow me hereby to acknowledge the receipt of yours
    of March 1st with its contents.

    "We are perfectly conscious that in a legal point of view we had no
    claim upon you for this very unexpected document, but to your
    personal high sense of honor we are indebted for it, and for this
    act of honesty and fairness you have our very grateful
    acknowledgments.

    "With the best wishes for your future prosperity and good health,
    we remain,

"Dear sir, very respectfully,
"Your obedient servants,
"PARKER, DOUGLASS & CO.
"Per O. O. Parker."

    "P. S.--I shall be in your city soon and will be pleased to call
    upon you.

"S. PARKER.
"Per O. O. Parker."



"HOUSATONIC BANK, _March 7, 1853_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq.:

    "_Dear Sir_,--At the request of the Board of Directors of the
    Housatonic Bank I enclose resolutions passed by them this day.

    "Allow me to add, individually, my sincere thanks; and I am
    requested to ask if you will allow us to make mention of it, to
    show that such high moral principles in business have much to do
    with a man's prosperity.

"With great respect I remain,
"Your obedient servant,
"J. D. ADAMS, Cashier."



    "At a meeting of the directors of the Housatonic Bank, held at
    their banking-house on the 7th day of March, 1853, the cashier laid
    before the board a letter from Cyrus W. Field, Esq., dated 1st of
    March instant, enclosing a check on the Union Bank, New York, for
    seven hundred 62-100 dollars, being an unpaid balance and the
    interest in full on a note against the late firm of E. Root & Co.,
    due in 1841, which note had long since been given up to Mr. Field,
    the firm having become insolvent. Whereupon it was unanimously

    "_Resolved_, That the conduct of Mr. Field in voluntarily paying a
    debt for which the bank had no claim evinces a high degree of moral
    integrity, alike honorable to him as a merchant and gentleman.

    "_Resolved_, That such an instance of high-minded magnanimity
    should be held up as an example worthy of the more commendation
    because of rare occurrence.

    "_Resolved_, That we tender to Mr. Field our congratulations in
    view of his present prosperity, and our best wishes for its
    continuance.

    "_Voted_, That the foregoing resolutions be entered on the records
    of the board, and a copy signed by the president and cashier
    transmitted to Mr. Field.

"C. M. OWEN, President.
"J. D. ADAMS, Cashier."



"LEE BANK, _March 7th, 1853_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq.:

    "_Dear Sir_,--Your favor of 1st inst. was duly received, with draft
    on Union Bank, $1142 49.

    "I have been delaying acknowledging receipt of same, hoping to get
    our directors together and lay the matter before them, that I might
    communicate to you their feelings, but have not as yet been able to
    do so; shall have an opportunity soon.

    "Our stockholders will appreciate your generosity, and permit me to
    thank you in their behalf, as well as my own, for your magnanimity
    exercised towards us.

"I remain
"Truly yours,
"L. A. BLISS."



"LEE BANK, _March 8th, 1853_.

    "At a meeting of the directors of the Lee Bank held at their
    banking-house this day the following resolutions were unanimously
    adopted:

    "_Whereas_, During the last week, a draft was received by the
    cashier of this bank from Cyrus W. Field, Esq., of New York,
    amounting to eleven hundred forty two 49-100 dollars, it being the
    balance with principal and interest due upon a draft given by E.
    Root & Co. in 1841 of fifteen hundred dollars; and

    "_Whereas_, The Lee Bank had given Mr. Field a full discharge of
    the above debt by his paying the sum of nine hundred forty-two
    7-100 dollars in the year 1845; therefore

    "_Resolved_, That the full payment of a debt by the junior partner,
    having been contracted in the commencement of his business life and
    by misfortunes which rendered him unable to pay the same, is a
    mark of strict honesty and integrity, and is worthy of all
    commendation.

    "_Resolved_, That the foregoing resolutions be entered upon the
    records of this board, and a copy sent to Mr. Field.

"LEONARD CHURCH, President."



"HUDSON, _March 8th, 1853_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq.:

    "_Sir_,--Yours of 7th February conveying your check on the Union
    Bank for three hundred eleven 68-100 is received. The receipt of
    the above is especially gratifying to me as an evidence that there
    are some honorable exceptions to the rule that legal obligations
    are the only ones binding on the community. If in the course of any
    of your business transactions I can be of any service to you, it
    will be a sincere gratification to me to render to you any personal
    favors in my power.

"Truly your friend,
"SAM. R. MILLER."



"WESTFIELD, MASS., _April 4th, 1853_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--Yours of the 1st inst. was received this morning.
    The time is so short before you leave the country that I shall not
    probably have time to see all the persons to whom your letters with
    the checks were enclosed. There is to be a town meeting this
    afternoon, when perhaps I may see them all. I understand, however,
    on inquiry at the post-office, that all the letters have been
    received and duly distributed, and that all of the persons
    interested have felt very grateful to you for your kindness and
    generosity, and the reason why they have not answered your letters
    and acknowledged the receipt of the money was probably that they
    have been consulting as to the best _mode_ of acknowledgment, and,
    I believe, have been preparing a public acknowledgment to be
    published in our Westfield papers, but which has not as yet been
    quite matured.

    "I think you may, however, leave the city with a full assurance
    that your good intentions in regard to these persons have been
    fully accomplished and gratefully received, so that in various ways
    much good will thereby have been done. Captain S. S. Amory has been
    dead about two years, and his only son is now in California, but
    his widow, a very worthy woman, is still living, and, I am very
    sure, feels deeply grateful for this act of kindness, which will
    aid her very much in her lonely state.

    "With my own and Mrs. Fowler's best regards to yourself and wife,
    and many wishes for your safe and happy return to your family,

"Truly your friend,
"I. S. FOWLER."



"MILL RIVER, _April 17, 1853_.

"MR. CYRUS W. FIELD:

    "_Dear Sir_,--Your kind favor of March 1st was duly received, also
    yours of the 1st inst. within sixteen days from date, and my
    apology for not answering and acknowledging your first, with the
    enclosed check which it contained, is that I supposed Mr. Brett
    would do so, or had done so. I need not tell you that it was
    thankfully received, and that we feel truly grateful to you for the
    favor, and also feel happy that prosperity has smiled upon you.

    "Accept, dear sir, my best wishes for your prosperity and welfare,
    and believe me ever

"Truly yours with respect,
"EDWIN ADAMS,
"One of the firm of E. C. Brett."



"SO. HADLEY FALLS, _March 7th, 1853_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq.:

    "_My dear Sir_,--I have received your very kind favor of 1st inst.
    Your offer to cancel the judgment which you hold against me is
    conferring a favor which it is out of my power in any form to
    reciprocate. Please accept my sincere thanks. Your untiring energy
    and perseverance have been crowned with great success. You have an
    ample estate, and no one deserves it more.

    "In reply to some taunts of John Randolph, Henry Clay said his only
    patrimony was a widowed mother with nine children.

    "Your only inheritance was a load of debt, cast upon you at the
    commencement of your business life, which was not caused by lack of
    foresight or fault on your part. You bore up under this heavy
    burden and paid it as not one in thousands could or would have
    done, and by this very act you laid broad the basis of your
    subsequent success. Should I ever again visit your city nothing
    there will afford me so much pleasure as to meet your cordial
    greeting and to accept your kind invitation.

    "May your efforts be crowned with all the good-fortune you may
    desire, even if it be to place you side by side with the biggest of
    the big merchant princes of the Empire City, is the sincere prayer
    of

"Your friend,
"WELLS LATHROP."



"SPRINGFIELD, MASS., _March 8, '53_.

    "_My Dear Sir_,--Your very kind favor of the 7th is just received.

    "I enclose a satisfaction or discharge of the judgment you hold
    _vs._ H. & L., which, when you have dated and signed in presence of
    a witness, will become perfect.

    "If the pleasure of giving is greater than receiving then you are
    far more happy than President Pierce or any of his Cabinet.

"Most sincerely, your friend,
"C. HOWARD.

    "C. W. FIELD, Esq., New York."

"SPRINGFIELD, _March_ 10, '53.

    "_My dear Sir_,--Your letter of the 9th with its highly prized
    contents is received. I have no words to express my feelings for
    your unsolicited gift and your kind offer to serve me in any way in
    your power. This world is a wheel, and I rejoice that the spoke you
    are on is so nearly at the highest point, though mine is nearly the
    reverse. I hope that I shall never again be the direct or indirect,
    innocent or guilty cause of loss to you; but most earnestly hope
    that I may yet have it in my power to make some small return.

    "There is no _legal_ claim against me of that enormous amount of
    debt in which, seven years since, I most unexpectedly found myself
    involved. Nevertheless, it is all as justly due as it was before
    the Commissioner discharged me, and it would be the greatest
    happiness I could enjoy in this world to pay every farthing. But
    of this I have no hope. I have a small income from property
    belonging to my wife, which, with great prudence and economy, will
    just about pay for our bread and salt, and I can hardly expect to
    ever earn another dollar.

           *       *       *       *       *

    "Pray pardon this long yarn of myself and accept the enclosed one
    thousand dollars, being the same amount which I requested our
    friend, Mr. Ashburner, to offer you three years ago, though he did
    not, I believe, only _half_ do it. Accept also my most hearty good
    wishes for your continued health and prosperity, a long life and a
    glorious reward hereafter, and believe me,

"Most sincerely your friend,
"CHARLES HOWARD.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., Merchant, New York."



"I now wished," the autobiography goes on, "to retire from business
altogether, but at length I yielded to the solicitations of my junior
partner so far as to agree to leave my name at the head of the firm and
to leave in the business a capital of $100,000. But this was done with
the express understanding that I was not to be required to devote any
time to it."

His lot now seemed altogether enviable. He had retrieved the losses
incurred at the outset of his career; he could

   "Look the whole world in the face,
    For he owed not any man."

Not only this, but he was a rich man, as riches were counted forty years
ago. At all events, those who were dear to him seemed to be put beyond
the reach of want. His home life was, as it always had been and always
was to be, serene and untroubled. At the age of thirty-four, with his
energy and his faculties of enjoyment unimpaired, he found himself able
to retire from business, and to lead, if his nature had permitted him to
lead, a life of leisure. The first use he made of his release from the
cares of business was to project a long journey with his friend,
Frederick Church, the distinguished landscape-painter. He left New York
in April, 1853, for Central and South America. They took passage early
in the month in a sailing-vessel.

On the morning of the sailing he had said good-bye to his family, and
they were imagining him as already far down the bay, when a sudden ring
at the door was so like the one he was accustomed to give that one of
his children exclaimed, "There is papa!" and to the surprise of all he
walked into the room. The vessel had been detained in the harbor, and he
could not remain contentedly on board almost in sight of his home, and
so he came back to pass a few hours.

They sailed as far as Savanilla, New Granada (now Colombia), at the
mouth of the Magdalena, and from there up that river for six hundred
miles. Disembarking at the head of navigation, they passed four months
in mountain travel on mule-back, traversing the table-lands south to
Bogota, following the Andes to Quito, and crossing the equator and
Chimborazo, at last reaching the Pacific at Guayaquil. From Guayaquil
they were able to take steamers to Panama, but the railroad across the
isthmus was but partly built; for the rest of the crossing they had
again to resort to mules. This would be a difficult and toilsome journey
even now, and it was far more so forty years ago. But it had memorable
results, for it was at this time that Mr. Church made the sketches for
some of his most famous tropical landscapes. Before Mr. Field left New
York he had drawn the accompanying map and this paper, from which it
will be seen that he made most careful calculations of his expenses:

 CYRUS W. FIELD'S ESTIMATE OF EXPENSES TO SOUTH AMERICA IN 1853.

 Outfit                                        $150 00
 New York to Savanilla, per vessel               60 00
 Savanilla to Barranquilla, per horse            10 00
 Barranquilla to Honda, per steamer              90 00
 Honda to Bogota, per mule                       20 00
 Bogota to Popayan,            }
 Popayan to Pasto,             }
 Pasto to Quito,               } mule           200 00
 Quito to Mount Chimborazo,    }
 M. C. to Volcano of Cotopaxi, }
 Cotopaxi to Guayaquil,        }
 Guayaquil to Lima, per steamer                  75 00
 Lima to Valparaiso, per steamer                110 00
 Valparaiso to Santiago, per carriage            20 00
 Santiago to Valparaiso, per carriage            20 00
 Valparaiso to Panama, per steamer              190 00
 Panama to Aspinwall, per mule, railroad,
   and steamer                                   30 00
 Aspinwall to New York, per steamer              65 00
 Sundries, say for 180 days @ $2 00             360 00
 Extra premium on life-insurance                100 00
 Sundries                                       100 00
                                             ---------
                                             $1,600 00

On another paper was written:

 PLACES OF INTEREST TO VISIT.

 Emerald mines of Muzo.
 Bogota                                    8,700 feet.
 Falls of Tequendama                         574   "
 Bridges of Icononzo                         320   "
 Lake of Buga.
 Gold mine.
 Popayan.
 Pasto.
 Quito                                     9,500 feet.
 Mount Chimborazo (Kun)                   21,400   "
 Volcano of Cotopaxi                      18,900   "
 Guayaquil.
 Lima.
 Potosi silver mines.
 Valparaiso.
 Santiago.
 Panama.
 Gold mines.

This page of directions was given to his family:

    All letters to Cyrus W. Field by first steamer _via_ Aspinwall,
    care of

 1. Messrs. Hamburger Battis,
 Barranquilla,
 New Granada, S. A.
 April 6th to 13th.

 2. Hon. Yelvert P. King,
 Charge d'Affaires of the United States,
 Bogota,
 New Granada, S. A.
 April 13th to 28th.

 3. Charge d'Affaires of the United States,
 Quito,
 Ecuador, S. A.
 April 28th to May 20th.

 4. United States Consul,
 Guayaquil,
 Ecuador, S. A.
 May 20th to 28th.

 5. Messrs. Alsop & Co.,
 Lima,
 Peru, S. A.
 May 28th to June 20th.

 6. Messrs. Alsop & Co.,
 Valparaiso,
 Chili, S. A.
 June 20th to July 5th.

 7. Messrs. Garrison & Fritz,
 Panama,
 New Granada, S. A.
 July 5th to August 13th.

 8. A. M. Hunkley, Esq.,
 Agent Messrs. Adams & Co.,
 Aspinwall, Navy Bay,
 New Granada, S. A.
 August 13th to September 5th.

    These two sketches were made by Mr. Church and sent to Mrs. Field;
    across the back of the larger one is written, "Mr. Field and Mr.
    Church in the procession."

There is a Spanish proverb, "Never leave a river before you or your
baggage behind." One evening Mr. Field and Mr. Church forgot this, and
crossed, leaving the mules with their packs to follow in the morning.
During the night the river rose, and three weeks passed before it was
possible to bring over the baggage train, the weary travellers meanwhile
ruefully contemplating from day to day, from the opposite bank, their
inaccessible possessions.

In an Aspinwall paper of October, 1853, this was printed:

    "Among the passengers arrived yesterday in the steamship _Bogota_
    from Guayaquil are Messrs. Cyrus W. Field and F. E. Church, of New
    York, who have been travelling for the last six months in South
    America.

    "They say that the scenery in some parts of the Andes is grand and
    beautiful beyond description; and that words cannot express the
    kindness and hospitality with which they have been treated; that
    gold in large quantities can be obtained in Antioquia, and from the
    beds of many of the small streams that run down the Andes into the
    Pacific or the Amazon; and that the soil on the plains of Bogota
    and in the valley of the Cauca is very rich; and that they have
    been so much pleased with their journey that they intend soon to
    return to the land of beautiful flowers and birds, and to the
    continent for which the Almighty has done so much and man so
    little.

    "The following are some of the places of interest that they have
    visited: Falls of Tequendama, Natural Bridge of Icononzo at Pandi;
    silver mines of Santa Ana; emerald mines of Muzo; volcanoes of
    Purace, Pichincha, and Cotopaxi; cities of Mompox, Bogota, Ibaque,
    Cartago, Buga, Cali, Popagan, Pasto, and Quito.

    "They left Quito on the 9th of September. Stopped two days at
    Cotopaxi, four at Chimborazo, and eight at Guayaquil, and will
    leave in the next steamer for the United States."

Of the sail from Aspinwall to New York it was written:

    "The voyage was pleasant, but every day's run was studied with
    nervous anxiety by Mr. Field. He had hurried home in order to be in
    Stockbridge on October 31st, the day on which his father and mother
    were to celebrate their golden wedding; the steamer was delayed by
    stormy weather, and he did not arrive in New York until late in the
    afternoon of the 29th."

His family had watched almost as eagerly for his coming. Not only were
they anxious to see him, but their going to Stockbridge depended upon
it, and that could not be delayed beyond the morning of the 30th.

Mr. Field brought back a very miscellaneous assortment of the spoils of
travel; among them were some of the grass cloaks worn in South America.
He often amused his children by putting on these cloaks, and one day
they suggested that their father should show himself in this novel
costume to his sister, then living in the old home in Seventeenth
Street. Without thinking of the effect this might produce on the way, he
at once left his house, and had gone but a short distance when he found
that he was followed by a number of persons that soon swelled into a
crowd and gave chase, until at last he was obliged to take refuge in the
home of a friend.

He brought back also a live jaguar, specimen of a South American tiger,
and twenty-four living parroquets. The most interesting of all, however,
was an Indian boy of fourteen, whom he intended to have taught in the
United States, with the view of ultimately sending him back to his
native land as a missionary. The idea was good, but to carry it out was
quite impossible. Marcus was an imp. It was with almost magical rapidity
that he could plan and execute mischief. He succeeded in breaking the
collar-bone of the cook living in the family of Mr. David Dudley Field,
and his delight was to lay snares in dark halls and passages, and if he
was opposed he did not hesitate to seize a carving-knife and flourish it
frantically about. A civilized life was not attractive to him; and while
Mr. Field was in England in 1856, his relations, who had tried in vain
to Christianize the boy, decided to return him to his father, a
bull-fighter in South America.

But Mr. Field's special desire for returning home by an appointed day
was gratified. On October 31, 1853, all the descendants of Dr. and Mrs.
Field excepting their son Stephen and one grandson met in Stockbridge.
Thirty-nine of the family dined together in the old home, and that
afternoon all the friends and neighbors came to congratulate the former
minister and his wife. The house had, the year before, been bought by
their sons David Dudley and Cyrus, and had been put in perfect order,
and the younger son had had it completely furnished for his parents.

In writing to his mother on October 31, 1835, Mr. Field said: "Brother
Timothy sailed the day that I got back from Southwick; I received a
letter from him a few days ago. He sent his love to you, father, and all
friends, but had time to write only a few words as they passed a vessel.
He says the captain is a pious man, and that they have prayers morning
and evening." Later in the year came the news that Timothy had sailed
from New Orleans in the ship _Two Brothers_, and that vessel was never
heard from. For many years the family entertained the hope that he would
return, and his brother Cyrus spent "hundreds of dollars" advertising in
newspapers and offering a reward for tidings of him. About 1847 or 1848
a captain reported that he had had a shipmate named Field, whose father
was a clergyman, and who had many brothers who were not sailors. He also
said that his shipmate had married in South America, and was living
there a very wealthy planter. He gave these particulars to relieve the
anxiety felt by the family, and refused to take any reward. The news
caused great excitement among the brothers, and had a steamer sailed
that day one of them would probably have gone in her. But, failing that,
they consulted together and agreed to write. They not only sent letters
to their brother, but to the officials of the place. The letters were
returned, and the officials made answer that no such person lived there.
It was, however, with the same end in view that when rest was ordered
for Mr. Field, South America was chosen to be the country visited. The
search was a fruitless one, and no tidings were obtained. His mother did
not give up all hope of hearing from her son Timothy until she was told
that her son Cyrus had come home and had brought no news of him.

After Mr. Field's return to New York in November, 1853, he tried to
interest himself in work outside of his old business, and for one week
succeeded in staying away from his office in Cliff Street.

It was of this time that one of his brother's wrote, "I never saw Cyrus
so uneasy as when he was trying to keep still."




CHAPTER V

THE FIRST CABLE

(1853-1857)


The last sentence of the last chapter is a true indication of character.
Mr. Field had doubtless expected, when he retired from business, to
retire permanently, and to spend in ease not only the evening and the
afternoon but the meridian of his life. But it was not to be, and one
may well imagine that his previous experiences had been a providential
preparation for the great work of his life, the great work of his time.
It matters little who first conceived as a dream the notion of electric
communication across the Atlantic. To realize that dream there was
needed precisely the qualities and the circumstances of Cyrus W. Field.
Here was a man whose restless energy had not yet begun to be impaired by
time, but who was already a successful man. In virtue of his success he
was able not only to devote himself to a work which he was convinced was
as practical as it was beneficent--he was able also to enlist the
co-operation of wealthy men, whom the project of an Atlantic cable would
have left quite cold if it had been propounded to them by a mere
electrician. They could not have helped regarding the scheme as
chimerical and fantastic if a purely scientific man had approached them
with it, even with the most plausible figures to prove its
practicability and profitableness. To give it a chance of success with
them, it must be presented and believed in by one whose previous life
and whose personal success forbade them to regard him as a visionary,
and who by force of his position as well as of his qualities was able to
infect them with some part of his own confidence and enthusiasm. Mr.
Field was that unique man, and hence it is that he must be regarded as
the one indispensable factor in the execution of a transatlantic system
of telegraphic communication, inevitably soon to become a world-wide
system, and far to outrun in actual fact the poet's daring dream of
putting "a girdle round about the earth in forty minutes."

It was on Mr. Field's return from Washington late in the month of
January, 1854, that his brother Matthew asked him to have a talk with
Mr. Frederick N. Gisborne, who was stopping at the Astor House. Mr.
Gisborne was an engineer and telegraph operator, and his desire had been
to connect St. John's, Newfoundland, with the telegraphic system of the
United States.

In the spring of 1852 the Legislature of Newfoundland had passed an act
incorporating the Newfoundland Electric Telegraph Company, and had given
to Mr. Gisborne the exclusive right to erect telegraphs in Newfoundland
for thirty years, with certain concessions of land by way of
encouragement to be granted upon the completion of the telegraph from
St. John's to Cape Ray, and on his return to New York he formed a
company, and in the spring of 1853 set vigorously to work to build the
line. He had successfully completed some thirty or forty miles when his
work was suddenly brought to a standstill by the failure of the company
to furnish the means to carry it on.

"He returned to New York from his difficult and unaccomplished task
utterly disappointed and beggared, and at this time was waiting for
something to turn up." Mr. Field saw Mr. Gisborne, heard what he had
done and what he had failed to do, and became at once interested in the
work. This meeting was followed by many others, and after they had
parted late one evening, as Mr. Field stood studying intently the large
globe that was in his library, it flashed across his mind that, if it
were possible to connect Newfoundland with the United States, why not
Ireland with Newfoundland?

The idea once conceived, he lost no time in putting it into execution,
and the next morning's mail took letters to Professor Maury at
Washington and Professor Morse at Poughkeepsie. He also consulted his
brother, Mr. David Dudley Field, and his neighbor, Mr. Peter Cooper.

More than twenty-five years after Mr. Cooper told of the meeting:

    "It fell to my lot to be one of the first, if not the first, to
    whom Mr. Field applied to join him in the enterprise which has so
    much interested us this evening. It was an enterprise which struck
    me very forcibly the moment he mentioned it. I thought I saw in it,
    if it was possible, a means by which we could communicate between
    the two continents, and send knowledge broadcast over all parts of
    the world. It seemed to strike me as though it were the
    consummation of that great prophecy, that "knowledge shall cover
    the earth, as waters cover the deep," and with that feeling I
    joined him and my esteemed friends, Wilson G. Hunt, Moses Taylor,
    and Marshall O. Roberts, in what then appeared to most men a wild
    and visionary scheme; a scheme that many people thought fitted
    those who engaged in it for an asylum where they might be taken
    care of as little short of lunatics. But believing, as I did, that
    it offered the possibility of a mighty power for the good of the
    world, I embarked in it."

As soon as he obtained the co-operation of the men mentioned by Mr.
Cooper, Mr. Field asked them to meet in the dining-room of his house,
and for four nights they sat around the table examining the records of
the old company, studying maps, and making estimates. On the 10th of
March, 1854, the Electric Telegraph Company formally surrendered its
charter, and it was decided that if the government of Newfoundland would
give the new company a liberal charter they would carry forward the
work, and, if possible, extend it. On the 14th of March Mr. Cyrus Field
and Mr. Chandler White, and Mr. David Dudley Field as legal adviser,
left for Newfoundland; they took the steamer at Boston for Halifax, and
on the 18th left Halifax in the steamer _Merlin_ for St. John's. In his
speech at the Cable Celebration in the Crystal Palace on September 1,
1858, Mr. David Dudley Field said:

    "Three more disagreeable days voyagers scarcely ever passed than we
    spent in that smallest of steamers. It seemed as if all the storms
    of winter had been reserved for the first month of spring. A
    frost-bound coast, an icy sea, rain, hail, snow, and tempest were
    the greetings of the telegraph adventurers in their first movement
    towards Europe. In the darkest night, through which no man could
    see the ship's length, with snow filling the air and flying into
    the eyes of the sailors, with ice in the water, and a heavy sea
    rolling and moaning about us, the captain felt his way around Cape
    Race with his lead, as a blind man feels his way with his staff,
    but as confidently and safely as if the sky had been clear and the
    sea calm. And the light of the morning dawned upon deck and mast
    and spar coated with glittering ice, but floating securely between
    the mountains which formed the gates of the harbor of St. John's."

The little party was welcomed warmly by Mr. Edward M. Archibald, then
attorney-general of the colony, and for many years afterwards British
consul-general in New York, and by the governor, Ker Barley Hamilton;
Bishop Field, of Newfoundland, and the Roman Catholic bishop, John
Mullock, were among their entertainers, and became their warm friends.

On November 8, 1850, Bishop Mullock had written to the editor of the St.
John's _Courier_:

    _"Sir,_--I regret to find that in every plan for transatlantic
    communication Halifax is always mentioned and the natural
    capabilities of Newfoundland entirely overlooked.

    "This has been deeply impressed on my mind by the communication I
    read in your paper of Saturday last, regarding telegraphic
    communication between England and America, in which it is said that
    the nearest telegraphic station on the American side is Halifax,
    2155 miles from the coast of Ireland. Now, would it not be well to
    call the attention of Europe and America to St. John's as the
    nearest telegraphic point?

    "It is an Atlantic port, lying, I may say, in the track of the
    ocean steamers, and by establishing it as the American telegraph
    station, news could be communicated to the whole American continent
    forty-eight hours sooner than by any other route. But how will this
    be accomplished? Just look at the map of Newfoundland and Cape
    Breton. From St. John's to Cape Ray there is no difficulty in
    establishing a line, passing near Holy Rood, along the neck of land
    connecting Trinity and Placentia bays, and thence in a direction
    due west to the cape. You have then about 41 to 45 miles of sea to
    St. Paul's Island, with deep soundings of 100 fathoms, so that the
    electric cable will be perfectly secure from icebergs; thence to
    Cape North in Cape Breton is little more than 12 miles. Thus it is
    not only practicable to bring America two days nearer to Europe by
    this route, but should the telegraphic communication between
    England and Ireland, 62 miles, be realized, it presents not the
    slightest difficulty. Of course we in Newfoundland will have
    nothing to do with the erection, working, and maintenance of the
    telegraph, but I suppose our government will give every facility to
    the company, either English or American, who will undertake it, as
    it will be of incalculable advantage to this country. I hope the
    day is not far distant when St. John's will be the first link in
    the electric chain which will unite the Old World to the New.

"I remain, etc.,
"J. I. M."

_November_ 8, 1850.



Shortly after the arrival of the gentlemen from New York the Legislature
of Newfoundland repealed the charter of the Electric Telegraph Company,
in which it had been expressly stated that the line of this company is
designed to be strictly an "inter-continental telegraph," and a charter
was given to the "New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company."
Not only was the title of the new company suggestive, but the first
sentence expressly stated, "It is deemed advisable to establish a line
of telegraphic communication between New York and London by the way of
Newfoundland." And at the same time there was granted to the company an
exclusive monopoly for fifty years to lay submarine cables across the
Atlantic from the shores of Newfoundland.

When this work was begun the longest submarine cable in the world was
that between England and Holland, and one had never been laid in water
one hundred fathoms deep.

The party of three returned to New York early in May, and on Saturday
evening, the 6th, the charter was accepted, and the New York,
Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company was organized; at six o'clock
in the morning, on May the 8th, the papers were signed and fifteen
hundred thousand dollars subscribed. This meeting lasted just fifteen
minutes.

Late in the spring of 1854 Mr. Field was obliged to take his old place
at the head of the firm of Cyrus W. Field & Co., his brother-in-law and
partner, Joseph F. Stone, having died on the 17th of May. The following
August his only son died, and it was with a heavy heart that he began
this double work.

On January 25, 1855, he sailed for England to order the cable to connect
Cape Ray and Cape Breton. And while he was away his children received
this letter:

"MORLEY'S HOTEL,
"LONDON, _February 25, 1855_.

    "_My dear, dear Children,_--Many thanks for your affectionate
    letters, which I received last week in Paris.

    "I wish that you would tell your good uncle Henry that I am much
    obliged for his letter of January 30th, and give my warmest love to
    your dear grandfather and Aunt Mary, and thank them for writing to
    me, and tell them that if I do not get time to answer their letters
    I think a great deal about them, and hope that we shall soon all
    meet in health, and that then I shall have much to tell them of
    what I have seen and heard in the few weeks that I have been in
    Europe.

    "I hope at some future day to visit Europe again with your dear
    mother, and then, perhaps, we shall take all of our children with
    us.

    "I am sure that you would be very happy to see the many beautiful
    things that can be daily seen in London, Paris, and other parts of
    Europe.

    "When do you think it would be best for us to sail?

    "I am sure that you will be very kind to your mother and
    affectionate to each other, and do all in your power to make each
    person in our house very happy.

    "I hope that you will go very often to see your dear grandfather,
    grandmother, Aunt Mary, and Cousin Emilia; and whenever you see
    dear little Freddy kiss him many times for me.

    "It is one month to-day since I left home, and on the 24th of March
    I hope to leave Liverpool for New York.

    "In Paris I purchased some things for you, and the one that has
    been the best child during my absence shall have the first choice.

    "Good-bye, and may God bless you all, is the constant prayer of

"Your affectionate father,
"CYRUS W. FIELD.

"The Misses Field, New York."



On the 7th of August, 1855, a party sailed from New York on the steamer
_James Adger_ to assist at the laying of the cable across the Gulf of
St. Lawrence. To quote again from Mr. Cooper's speech:

    "We went along very pleasantly until we came to Port au Basque, and
    there we waited several days for the arrival of the ship that
    contained the cable, and when she came we directed the captain to
    take her in tow. Unfortunately he had taken umbrage at the action
    of Mr. Lowber, who, acting as a master of ceremonies, had placed
    Rev. Dr. Spring at the head of the table instead of the captain. So
    offended was he that he became as stubborn as a mule thereafter.

    "Four several attempts were made to get hold of the ship having the
    cable; and the darkness of night coming on, we had to go into Cape
    Ray. There we got the end of the cable to the telegraph-house after
    much labor; and when we had it fastened to the shore and properly
    connected we gave the captain orders to tow the ship across the
    gulf. In starting he managed to run into the ship, carrying away
    her shrouds and quarter-rail and almost making a wreck, so that we
    had to lay up, for in dragging the cable the connection was
    destroyed. We joined it again, and after some delay departed,
    directing the captain to take the ship in tow. We had taken the
    precaution to bring two very long and thick cables to tow her
    across the gulf. He started, and again had the misfortune to get
    the larger line entangled with the wheel of his vessel. In the
    confusion that followed the ship that had the cable by his orders
    parted her anchor; the line was cut, and she drifted towards a reef
    of rocks. We entreated the captain to get hold of her as quickly as
    possible, but before he did so she was almost on the reef. It was
    then found necessary to go back and have the machinery fixed, which
    took several days before we were ready to start again. At length,
    one beautiful day we got off. Before starting our engineer, who had
    charge of laying the cable, gave the captain instructions to keep
    constantly in view a flag placed upon the telegraph-house and bring
    it in range with a white rock upon the mountain, which would give
    him the exact lines upon which to steer. As soon, however, as we
    got off, I saw the captain was going out of the way, and, as
    president of the board, I told him so. The answer was, 'I know how
    to steer my ship; I steer by my compass.' I said, 'Your
    instructions were to steer for the flag and the rock on the
    mountain.' 'I steer by my compass,' was all I could get out of him.
    He went on steering in that manner until I found he was going so
    far out of the way that I told him I would hold him responsible for
    all loss. This had no effect. I then got a lawyer who was on board
    to draw up a paper warning the captain that if he did not change
    his course we should hold him responsible for the loss of the
    cable. He then turned his course, and went as far out of the way in
    the other direction. We soon after encountered a gale, and had to
    discontinue; and when we came to measure the cable, we found we had
    laid twenty-four miles of cable, and had got only nine miles from
    shore. That is only a sample of the trials we had to encounter in
    this enterprise, and I mention it to say that it was in great
    measure due to the indomitable courage and zeal of Mr. Field
    inspiring us that we went on and on until we got another cable
    across the gulf."

In July, 1856, a cable eighty-five miles in length was successfully laid
across the Gulf of St. Lawrence, connecting Newfoundland with Cape
Breton, and also one of eleven miles from Prince Edward Island to New
Brunswick. The lines, one hundred and forty miles in length, had also
been built across Cape Breton. The telegraph system of the United
States had thus been connected with the most eastern port of
Newfoundland.

How this work was done was told by Mr. Field on November 15, 1866.

    "It was a very pretty plan on paper. There was New York and there
    was St. John's, only about twelve hundred miles apart. It was easy
    to draw a line from one point to the other, making no account of
    the forests and mountains and swamps and rivers and gulfs that lay
    in our way. Not one of us had ever seen the country or had any idea
    of the obstacles to be overcome. We thought we could build the line
    in a few months. It took two years and a half, yet we never asked
    for help outside our own little circle. Indeed I fear we should not
    have got it if we had, for few had any faith in our scheme. Every
    dollar came out of our own pockets. Yet I am proud to say no man
    drew back. No man proved a deserter; those who came first into the
    work stood by it to the end....

    "It was begun and for two years and a half was carried on solely by
    American capital. Our brethren across the sea did not even know
    what we were doing away in the forests of Newfoundland. Our little
    company raised and expended over a quarter million pounds sterling
    before an Englishman paid a single pound. Our only support outside
    was in the liberal charter and steady friendship of the government
    of Newfoundland."

But it was now thought wise to enlist English co-operation. For this
purpose Mr. Field left New York by the steamship _Baltic_ on Saturday,
July 19, 1856. His work in London was begun at once, and John Brett,
Michael Faraday, George Parker Bidder, Mr. Statham, of the London
Gutta-percha Works; Mr. Brunel; Mr. Glass, of Glass, Elliott & Co.;
Charles T. Bright, and Dr. Edward O. W. Whitehouse were soon among his
friends and strongly impressed with the idea that a cable could be
successfully laid across the Atlantic. It was at this time that in
response to a note from his wife, Mr. Glass wrote, "Mr. Field is in
London," and that showed that no longer was his time his own.

Once when with Faraday, Mr. Field asked him how long a time he thought
would be required for the electric current to pass between London and
New York. His answer was brief and to the point: "Possibly one second."

Brunel was also as clear-sighted; he pointed to the _Great Eastern_ that
he was then building, and said, "Mr. Field, there is the ship to lay the
cable." Eight years later it was used for that purpose.

Before a company was formed he addressed a letter to Lord Clarendon,
then Foreign Secretary, and the answer to it was a request for a
personal interview. Professor Morse was in London, and he went with Mr.
Field to the Foreign Office, where they remained for over an hour.

Lord Clarendon seemed to be at once interested, and among the questions
asked was, "But suppose you do not succeed, that you make the attempt
and fail, your cable lost at the bottom of the ocean, then what will you
do?" "Charge it to profit and loss and go to work to lay another," was
the answer. Lord Clarendon on parting desired that the requests made
should be put in writing, and spoke words of encouragement.

The Atlantic Telegraph Company was organized December 9, 1856. It was
decided that for this work $1,750,000 must be raised. Mr. Field put his
name down for $500,000 (100 shares). He counted upon aid from America,
and did not intend to hold this large amount of stock individually. As
more money was subscribed than had been called for, but eighty-eight
shares were allotted to him. This was fortunate, for on his return to
New York he was able to dispose of but twenty-one shares.

Mr. George Saward wrote to _The Electrician_ on the 28th of March, 1862:
"Mr. Field in starting the Atlantic Telegraph Company took upon his own
account eighty-eight shares of L1000 each. Upon all of these he paid
into the coffers of the company in cash the first deposit of L17,600,
and upon sixty-seven of them he paid the entire amount of calls,
amounting to L67,000. This I am in a position to verify. A great number
of these have been sold at a loss; but Mr. Field is still the largest
holder of shares in the company paid up in cash." Among the original
subscribers in England were Lady Byron and Thackeray, and in America
Archbishop Hughes.

Mr. Field sailed for America on December 10th, and arrived in New York
on Christmas Day.

On December 23d the Senate had requested President Pierce, "if not
incompatible with the public interest, to communicate such information
as he may have concerning the present condition and prospects of a
proposed plan for connecting by submarine wires the magnetic telegraph
lines on this continent and Europe," and on December 29th Mr. Pierce
sent to the Senate the letter that had been addressed to him on December
15th by the New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company. The
substance of this letter was that "The contracts have been made for the
manufacture of a submarine telegraphic cable to connect the continents
of Europe and America." ... That "it is the desire of the directors to
secure to the government of the United States equal privileges with
those stipulated for by the British government." ... That "the British
government shall have priority in the conveyance of their messages over
all others, subject to the exception only of the government of the
United States, in the event of their entering into an arrangement with
the telegraph company similar in principle to that of the British
government, in which case the messages of the two governments shall have
priority in the order in which they arrive at the station." ...

"Her Majesty's government engages to furnish the aid of ships to make
what soundings may still be considered needful, or to verify those
already taken, and favorably to consider any request that may be made to
furnish aid by their vessels in laying down the cable." ... "To avoid
failure in laying the cable, it is desirable to use every precaution,
and we therefore have the honor to request that you will make such
recommendation to Congress as will secure authority to detail a
steamship for this purpose, so that the glory of accomplishing what has
been justly styled 'the crowning enterprise of the age' may be divided
between the greatest and freest governments on the face of the globe."

The bill was drawn by Mr. Seward, and was "An act to expedite
telegraphic communication for the uses of the government in its foreign
intercourse." The great contest over its passage was not until early in
the next year, 1857.

The suggestion made to the St. John's _Courier_ in 1850 by Bishop
Mullock, and which Mr. Gisborne had tried to carry out, had not been
lost sight of, as the following letter shows:

"TREASURY CHAMBERS, _19th November, 1856_.

    "_Sir,_--With reference to your letter of the 6th instant
    requesting that directions should be given for permitting British
    mail packets between Liverpool and the United Stales to receive and
    throw overboard off Cape Race and off Queenstown cases containing
    telegraphic dispatches, to be picked up by the telegraph company's
    own vessels, I am commanded by the Lords Commissioners of her
    Majesty's Treasury to acquaint you that their lordships have stated
    to the Lords of the Admiralty that after communicating with Mr.
    Cunard as to the feasibility of the plan, and receiving from him an
    assurance that it might be carried into effect without in any way
    retarding the regular mail service, they are of the opinion that
    the necessary directions may be given for this purpose, subject to
    the following conditions:

    "1. That the mail steamers shall not be delayed.

    "2. That they shall not be required to alter the course they would
    otherwise have taken.

    "3. That no responsibility shall attach to their ship or to the
    government.

    "4. That the companies shall make such arrangements in reference to
    the receipt and dispatch of messages as shall be satisfactory to
    the Treasury, in order to secure equal advantages to all persons
    using the telegraph.

"I am, sir,
"Your obedient servant,
"C. L. TREVELYAN."



In a New York paper of July 12, 1857, is this telegram:

"From the steamship _Persia_,
"OFF CAPE RACE, NEWFOUNDLAND,
"_Saturday_, July 11th, P.M.

    "We have thus far had a very pleasant passage and expect to reach
    Liverpool next Friday. All well and all in good spirits.

"CYRUS W. FIELD."



And below the telegram this was added:

    "This feat would seem to demonstrate the entire practicability of
    obtaining news from the Atlantic steamers as they pass Cape Race,
    and should the Atlantic telegraph cable fail from any cause, we
    understand that the telegraph company will make effective
    arrangements to carry something of this kind into operation."




CHAPTER VI

THE FIRST CABLE (CONTINUED)

(1857)


The following cable message was sent to Mr. Field by Sir James Anderson
on March 10, 1879, the twenty-fifth anniversary of "ocean telegraphy":

    "It cannot fail to gratify you, and should astonish your guests, to
    realize the amazing growth of your ocean child; sixty thousand
    miles of cable, costing about twenty million pounds sterling,
    having been laid since your energy initiated the first long cable.
    Distance has no longer anything to do with commerce. The foreign
    trade of all civilized nations is now becoming only an extended
    home trade; all the old ways of commerce are changed or changing,
    creating amongst all nations a common interest in the welfare of
    each other. To have been the pioneer _par excellence_ in this great
    work should be most gratifying to yourself and your family, and no
    one can take from you this proud position."

It would have seemed a strange prophecy if the above had been predicted
in 1856, when it was declared that the object of the Atlantic Telegraph
Company was "To continue the existing line of the New York,
Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company to Ireland, by making or
causing to be made a submarine telegraph cable for the Atlantic." At the
close of the year the contracts for the manufacture of the cable were
signed. Messrs. Glass, Elliott & Co. agreed to make one-half, and R. S.
Newall & Co., of Liverpool, the other. Both sections were to be finished
and ready to be laid on June 1, 1857, although the time fixed upon for
the sailing of the fleet was to be as nearly as possible at the end of
July, in accordance with the advice contained in a letter written in
March, 1857:

    "Perhaps it would be wise for the steamers not to join cables until
    after the 20th of July. I think between that time and the 10th of
    August the state of both sea and air is usually in the most
    favorable condition possible; and that is the time which my
    investigations indicate as the most favorable for laying down the
    wire. I recommend it and wish you good-luck.

Yours,
M. F. MAURY."



The English government had responded at once to the request of the
Atlantic Telegraph Company, and a ship was promised with which to help
lay the cable, and on Mr. Field's return home he asked the American
government for the same aid.

He landed from the steamship _Baltic_ on the 25th of December; on the
26th he went to Washington; next we hear of him in Newfoundland, and
then back in Washington early in the new year.

Mr. Seward referred to this time in his speech at Auburn in August,
1858:

    "It remained to engage the consent and the activity of the
    governments of Great Britain and the United States. That was all
    that remained. Such consent and activity on the part of some one
    great nation of Europe was all that remained needful for Columbus
    when he stood ready to bring a new continent forward as a theatre
    of the world's civilization. But in each case the effort was the
    most difficult of all."

The more liberal men in both Houses at Washington were from the
beginning in favor of the cable bill, and worked untiringly for its
passage. The President and Secretary of State, desiring to remain
friendly to both sides, took no active part in the discussion.

Mr. Field talked with almost every member of Congress, and tried to
persuade those who were opposed to him to drop their petty objections
and think only of the greatness of the work.

Extracts from a Washington newspaper of January 31, 1857, give some idea
of other trials to which he was subjected. On the arrival of the
steamship _Arago_ it was published that "great dissatisfaction exists in
London at the manner in which the Atlantic Telegraph Company has been
gotten up," and that "a new company has been formed to construct a
submarine telegraph direct to the shores of the United States."

He answered:

    "To this I may add that the object of this movement at this time is
    well understood by those who know the parties promoting it. I
    believe no such company can have been really organized in London as
    represented, because none of my letters by the same steamer from
    directors and parties largely interested even allude to such a
    movement, which must of necessity have been made public and well
    known to them if true. It cannot be believed that capitalists in
    London or elsewhere can now be found to take stock in a submarine
    line of telegraph of over three thousand miles in length, passing
    over the banks of Newfoundland or across the deep waters of the
    Gulf Stream, when it was by great exertion that subscriptions were
    obtained to a line of little more than one-half of that length, and
    that, too, upon a route the practicability of which had already
    been fully demonstrated by actual survey to be possible.

CYRUS W. FIELD."



On the 19th of February the Atlantic telegraph bill passed the House by
a majority of nineteen; but it was not until the 3d of March that it
passed the Senate, by a majority of but one, and then it was said to be
unconstitutional. Mr. Field sought Caleb Cushing, the Attorney-General,
and begged him to examine the bill and give his opinion. It was
favorable.

The date affixed to the bill is the 3d of March, but it was not until
the morning of the 4th at ten o'clock that the President put his name to
it as Mr. Field stood by his side. This was, therefore, one of the last
official acts of President Pierce.

The government at Washington had now united with that of Great Britain
in agreeing to give all that was asked. The frigate _Niagara_, the
largest and finest ship of our navy, was ordered to England. The New
York _Herald_ of Saturday, April 25th, says:

    "The performance of the vessel and of her machinery has fully come
    up to the most sanguine expectations. She is now on her way to
    London. By the recent news from England we learn that the British
    authorities have detailed three steamers to assist in laying the
    submarine cable and make soundings along the route. The
    _Agamemnon_, a ninety-gun ship, in connection with the Niagara will
    take the cable on board."

Very little rest was allowed him on his return from Washington--but two
weeks at his home. He sailed for Liverpool on the 18th of March, leaving
his wife with a baby four days old. He remained in England barely a
fortnight; he was at home on the 22d of April, and on the 8th of July he
was a passenger on the steamship _Persia_, once more bound for England.

Early in July the _Niagara_ had received her share of the cable from the
manufactory of Messrs. Newall & Co., and the _Agamemnon_ hers from the
works of Messrs. Glass, Elliott & Co.

Almost immediately on his arrival he was a guest at a _fete champetre_
given by Sir Culling Eardley, at Belvidere, near Erith. Following is the
card of invitation:

            _Sir Culling Eardley requests the Company of_

                       =Cyrus W. Field, Esq.,=

    _at Belvidere, on Thursday, July the 23d, on the occasion of the
    departure of The Electrical Telegraph Cable for the Atlantic Ocean.

    Messrs. Glass, Elliott & Co., the Contractors for the Cable, also
    request the honor of_ =Cyrus W. Field, Esq.'s= _Company at Dinner
    with the Directors and Friends of the Atlantic Telegraph Company,
    the Officers and Crew of H.M.S._ Agamemnon,_ and the Artisans of
    the Cable_.

    _An early answer is requested to Sir Culling Eardley, Belvidere,
    Erith._

It was at this _fete_ that he read this note:

"WASHINGTON, _3d July, 1857_.

    "_My dear Sir,_--Accidental circumstances which I need not detail
    prevented your kind letter of the 19th ultimo from being brought to
    my notice until this morning. I now hasten to say in reply that I
    shall feel myself much honored should the first message (as you
    propose) sent across the Atlantic by the submarine telegraph be
    from Queen Victoria to the President of the United States, and I
    need not assure you he will endeavor to answer it in a spirit and
    manner becoming the great occasion.

"Yours very respectfully,
"JAMES BUCHANAN.

"TO CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



The following account is copied from a letter written to the London
_Times_ on August 3, 1857:

    "During the progress of the _Agamemnon_ to the Downs the mechanical
    appliances for regulating the delivery of the cable into the sea
    were kept continually in motion by the small engine on board, which
    is connected with them; the sheaves and gearing worked with great
    facility and precision, and so quietly that at a short distance
    from them their motion could scarcely be heard.

    "The strength of the girders which carry the bearing of the entire
    apparatus, and which to the eye of a person unskilled in the
    practical working of this description of machinery may seem at
    first to be unduly ponderous, was found to contribute greatly to
    the easy motion and satisfactory steadiness of this most important
    agent in the success of the undertaking. So soon as the _Agamemnon_
    had passed the track of the Submarine Company's cable between Dover
    and Calais in order to avoid the possibility of its being injured
    by the laying or hauling up of another line at right angles to it,
    the experiments commenced. A 13-inch shell was attached to the end
    of a spare coil of the Atlantic cable for the purpose of sinking it
    rapidly with a strain upon it to the bottom, and was then cast into
    the sea, drawing after it a sufficient quantity of slack to enable
    it to take hold of the ground, and so set the machinery in motion.

    "The paying out then commenced at the rate of two, three, and four
    knots an hour respectively. The ship was then stopped, and the
    cable was hauled up from the bottom of the sea with great facility
    by connecting the small engine to the driving pinion geared to the
    sheaves. When the end was brought up to the surface it was found
    that the shell had broken away from the loop by which it had been
    fastened for the purpose of lowering it.

    "The exterior coating of tar had been completely rubbed off by
    being drawn through the sandy bottom of the sea, and attached to
    the iron coating of the cable were some weeds and several small
    crabs which came up with it to the surface.

    "On the following day a length of cable was run out and hauled in
    with perfect success opposite the Isle of Wight.

    "The speed was increased in this case to four knots. During the
    afternoon of the same day a length was run out, having fastened to
    the end of it a log of timber, and having been towed with a mile
    and a half of cable, was coiled in again with success.

    "On Wednesday about half-way between the Land's End and the coast
    of Ireland another length was run out at the rate of six and a half
    knots per hour, and subsequently hauled in. The _Agamemnon_ then
    steered for Cork, and reached Queenstown Harbor at four o'clock on
    Thursday morning, all on board being more than ever satisfied at
    the success of the enterprise."

The New York _Herald_ of August 28th published a letter from its
special correspondent on board the _Niagara_, and from it these extracts
are made:

    "From the deck of our ship we can see a small, sandy cove which has
    been selected as the place for the landing of the shore end of the
    cable, and a hundred yards from which a temporary tent has been
    erected for the batteries and other telegraphic instruments. In
    front of it is displayed an attempt at the Stars and Stripes; but
    it is only an attempt, and it would require one of the most
    shrewd-guessing Yankees that ever lived in or came out of
    Connecticut to tell what it was intended for. It will soon be
    replaced by another of a more unmistakable kind, however, and that
    ought to be sufficient to satisfy the most exacting patriot....

    "We arrived and anchored in Valentia Bay on the evening of the 4th,
    but at too late an hour to commence operations other than I have
    described. The work of landing the shore part of the cable was
    deferred, therefore, until the following morning at eight
    o'clock....

    "On the shore there were about two thousand persons, the whole
    population of the place and large contributions from miles around,
    waiting there from seven in the morning till seven in the evening
    for the arrival of the fleet of cable boats whose progress they had
    watched with so much anxiety and impatience. It was five o'clock
    when we started, and never before was such a scene presented in
    Valentia Bay, and the poorest spectator there, though he could not
    tell what strange agency it was that lay in the cable, understood
    what it was intended to effect, and his face beamed with joy as he
    heard his comrades say that it brought them nearer to that great
    land that had so generously stretched out the helping hand to their
    starving countrymen.... Among those on shore are the Lord
    Lieutenant of Ireland; Lord Morpeth, of anti-slavery proclivities;
    Lord Hillsborough; the Knight of Kerry; and nearly all the
    gentlemen connected with the enterprise. But here comes the cable
    in the hands of the crew of the _Niagara's_ boat, who rush up the
    beach with it dripping with water, for in their haste to carry it
    ashore they have to wade knee-deep through the water. Mr. Cyrus W.
    Field is there beside Lord Morpeth, or, as he is now called, Lord
    Carlisle, and as Captain Pennock comes up in advance of his men
    with the cable he introduces him. There is no time for the passage
    of formalities, and the introduction and the meeting are therefore
    free from them.

    "'I am most happy to see you, captain,' says Lord Morpeth, and the
    captain most appropriately replies: 'This, sir, is the betrothal of
    England and America, and I hope in twenty days the marriage will be
    consummated.'

    "The crowd now press around, all eagerness to help in pulling up
    the cable; and when the work is through those who have been
    fortunate enough to put their hands to it show the marks of the tar
    to those who have failed in the attempt, as a proof of their
    success. By dint of pulling and hauling they get it into the trench
    in which it is to be laid, and take up the end to the top of a
    little hill, where they secure it by running it around a number of
    strong stakes driven fast into the earth and placed in the form of
    a circle. This is the centre of the site marked out for a house in
    which the batteries and instruments are to be put, and which will
    be used as a temporary station till a better and more substantial
    one can be erected. When the cable was placed here and the
    enthusiasm of the people had somewhat subsided, the rector of the
    parish made a prayer....

    "The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland closed his speech with these words:
    'And now, my friends, as there can be no project or undertaking
    which ought not to receive the approbation and applause of all
    people, all join with me in giving three hearty cheers.'

    "Three cheers were given with a will; but it was not enough, and
    they cheered and cheered until they were obliged to give up from
    exhaustion. 'Three cheers,' said Lord Carlisle, 'are not
    enough--they are what they give on common occasions. Now, for the
    success of the Atlantic cable, I must have at least one dozen.' The
    crowd responded with the full number, and cheered the following:
    'The Lord Lieutenant of Ireland'; 'The United States of America';
    'Mr. Cyrus W. Field.' Mr. Field spoke as follows: 'Ladies and
    gentlemen, Words cannot express to you the feelings within this
    heart. It beats with affection towards every man, woman, and child
    that hears me; and if ever, on the other side of the water, one of
    you present yourself at my door and say you had a hand in this, I
    promise you an American welcome. What God hath joined together let
    no man put asunder.'

    "And more cheers were given for the following: For 'the sailor';
    for 'Yankee Doodle'; for 'the officers and sailors on board the
    ships that are intended to lay the cable'; 'the Queen'; 'the
    President of the United States'; 'the American Navy.'"

The sun set on the evening of August 5th with the shore end of the cable
safely landed, but the ships' anchors were not weighed until early the
next morning.

Five miles from shore a slight fault occurred, which was soon remedied.

The Knight of Kerry sent this note to Mr. Field.

"VALENTIA, _6th August, 1857_.

    "_My dear Sir,_--Fearing I may not be able to get on board the
    _Niagara_, I write a line to thank you for the most valuable gift
    you made me of the piece of cable, as I have just learned from my
    friend Crosby.

    "Yet I must say you owed me some compensation for having stolen the
    hearts of my wife and children and of every friend whom I was
    guilty of bringing into contact with you. I believe if you were
    obliged to make similar compensation for all the delinquencies you
    have been guilty of in this way, your whole cable, great as it is,
    would scarcely suffice. I know the inroad you have made into the
    Lord Lieutenant's affections would require a long bit of it. I was
    sincerely sorry to hear from Crosby that you were again suffering,
    but I reflect with satisfaction that probably the voyage, even with
    its accompanying excitement, is the best remedy within your reach.

"Yours most sincerely,
"FITZGERALD, Knight of Kerry."



All went most successfully, and although the excitement was still at
fever heat on board the _Niagara_, the probability of soon meeting the
_Agamemnon_ in mid-ocean and following her to the shores of Newfoundland
was most hopefully discussed, and this message was given to the press:

"VALENTIA, _Monday_, _August 10_, 4 P.M.

    "The work of laying down the Atlantic telegraph cable is going on
    up to the present time as satisfactorily as its best friends can
    desire. Nearly 360 miles have now been successfully laid down into
    the sea.

    "The depth of water into which the cable is now being submerged is
    about 1700 fathoms, or about two miles. The transition from the
    shallow to the greater depth was effected without difficulty. The
    signals are everything an electrician could desire. The ships are
    sailing with a moderate fair breeze, and paying out at the rate of
    five miles per hour. Messages are being instantly interchanged
    between the ships and the shore.

    "All are well on board, in excellent spirits, and hourly becoming
    more and more trustful of success.

"WILLIAM WHITEHOUSE, Electrician.
"GEORGE SAWARD, Secretary."



At nine o'clock the same evening, without any apparent cause, the cable
ceased working. At twelve o'clock the electric current returned, and it
was with a feeling of intense relief that all went to their berths. This
satisfaction was short lived. At a quarter before four came the cry,
"Stop her! back her!" and then the words, "The cable has parted."

The flags of the ship were put at half-mast, and the fleet returned to
Valentia.

This expedition had cost the Atlantic Telegraph Company $500,000, and on
August 25th Robert Stephenson wrote: "The Atlantic cable question is a
far more difficult matter than those who have undertaken it are disposed
to believe. The subject has occupied much of my thoughts, and as yet I
must confess I do not see my way through it. Before the ships left this
country with the cable I publicly predicted as soon as they got into
deep water a signal failure. It was in fact inevitable." The first
words of greeting were more cheering:

"VALENTIA, _14th August, 1857_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--In all our disappointment at the temporary check
    of the cable, our first thought has been about you. But I was very
    glad to hear yesterday from the officers of the _Cyclops_ that you
    were, as indeed I might have judged from your character, plucky and
    well. It is a great comfort to think that the experience that has
    been obtained in this, the first attempt, must immensely improve
    the chances of success on the next occasion. All here desire to be
    affectionately remembered to you.

"Ever yours, very sincerely,
"FITZGERALD, Knight of Kerry."



It was not proposed to abandon the enterprise, but to postpone work for
a year. The ships discharged their freight of cable, and the _Niagara_
returned to America, and before Mr. Field left England the directors
voted to increase the capital of the company and to order seven hundred
miles of new cable.

The news that met him upon his arrival at New York was most depressing.

The panic of 1857 had just swept over the country, and while he was at
sea his firm suspended, owing over six hundred thousand dollars, and
with debts due to it, from firms which had already suspended, of between
three and four hundred thousand dollars. He settled at once with his
creditors, by giving them goods from his store, or notes for the amount
in full at twelve, eighteen, or twenty-four months, with seven per cent.
interest added. The first notes were paid at maturity and the other two
some months before they were due, the holders discounting the interest.

On the 21st of November, 1857, Professor Francis Lieber wrote:

    "I wish to possess all the materials I can procure regarding the
    history and statistics of the subatlantic telegraph. It will be the
    most striking illustration of the increasing tendency of all
    civilization, that of uniting what was separate, and of the
    pervading principle in the household of humanity, that of mutual
    dependence. May Heaven bless your undertaking, and may the next
    months of June or July bring us the first message from old England,
    outrunning the sun by five hours and a half."

The Secretary of the Navy said to him in parting on the 30th of
December, "There, I have given you all you asked." This was that the
_Niagara_ and the _Susquehanna_ might form part of the cable expedition
of 1858, and that Mr. William E. Everett might again fill the position
of chief engineer.

On the evening of December 31st Professor Lieber wrote: "This may be the
last letter or note I write in the old year, and I cannot conclude it
without wishing from all my heart that

                              MDCCCLVIII

may be called in the future school chronologies the telegraph year."




CHAPTER VII

A FLEETING TRIUMPH

(1858)


In the fall of 1857 the directors of the Atlantic Telegraph Company,
realizing that it would be to their advantage to have Mr. Field take
general charge and supervision of all the arrangements and preparations
for the next laying of the cable, sent him an earnest request to come to
England. It was in response to this that he sailed on the 6th of
January, 1858, in the steamship _Persia_, arriving in England on the
16th. On the 27th the company passed resolutions offering him one
thousand pounds besides his travelling expenses. This he declined,
accepting only his expenses.

At a meeting of the board on the 18th of February the following
resolution was passed; it was offered by Mr. Samuel Gurney:

    "That the warm and hearty thanks of this company be tendered to Mr.
    Cyrus W. Field, of New York, for the great services he has rendered
    to the Atlantic Telegraph Company, his untiring zeal, energy, and
    devotion from its first formation, and for the great personal
    talent which he has ever displayed and exerted to the utmost in the
    advancement of its interests."

In seconding this resolution, which was unanimously passed, Mr. Brooking
told from his own knowledge of what "Mr. Field's most determined
perseverance, coupled with an amount of fortitude that has seldom been
equalled," had done for the company in Newfoundland in securing to it
the exclusive right to land on the shores of that island.

The report ends with these words:

    "The directors cannot close their observations to the shareholders
    without bearing their warm and cordial testimony to the untiring
    zeal, talent, and energy that have been displayed on behalf of this
    enterprise by Mr. Cyrus W. Field, of New York, to whom mainly
    belongs the honor of having practically developed the possibility
    and of having brought together the material means for carrying out
    the great idea of connecting Europe and America by a submarine
    telegraph.

    "He has crossed the Atlantic Ocean no less than six times since
    December, 1856, for the sole purpose of rendering most valuable aid
    to this undertaking. He has also visited the British North American
    colonies on several occasions, and obtained concessions and
    advantages that are highly appreciated by the directors, and he has
    successfully supported the efforts of the directors in obtaining an
    annual subsidy for twenty-five years from the government of the
    United States of America, the grant of the use of their national
    ships in assisting to lay the cable in 1857, and also to assist in
    the same service this year, and his constant and assiduous
    attention to everything that could contribute to the welfare of the
    company from its first formation has materially contributed to
    promote many of its most necessary and important arrangements. He
    is now again in England, his energy and confidence in the
    undertaking entirely unabated; and, at the earnest request of the
    board, he has consented to remain in this country for the purpose
    of affording to the directors the benefit of his great experience
    and judgment as general manager of the business of the company
    connected with the next expedition.

    "This arrangement will doubtless prove as pleasing to the
    shareholders as it is agreeable and satisfactory to the directors.

"By order of the directors.
"GEORGE SAWARD, Secretary."



His friend and pastor, the Rev. William Adams, D.D., wrote to him on the
10th of March:

    "_My dear Friend_,--I do not know whether your homeward thoughts
    ever include your minister, but mine very frequently traverse the
    sea towards you and your noble enterprise.... We have all watched
    with great interest the noble bearing of your good wife in all the
    sacrifices which she makes for you and the cause you so gallantly
    represent. These are things not so much thought of by the great
    world; but after all they are the chief elements in that great
    price which we are compelled to pay for everything good and
    great....

    "The _Niagara_ has sailed, and now all eyes are on you and on her.
    By-the-way, we all made a visit to the noble ship a week ago, and
    filled her full with a cargo of blessings and good wishes....

    "We watch the papers with great interest to find anything which
    bears on the success of your undertaking; and feel a personal and
    national pride at every mention which reflects honor on you and
    your laudable exertions....

    "With every good wish for you personally and for your great
    undertaking, I am,

"Yours very sincerely,
"W. ADAMS."



The difficulties encountered by the Newfoundland and the Atlantic Cable
Companies will be best understood by giving part of a letter from Mr.
(later known as Sir) Edward Archibald:

"NEW YORK, _March 30, 1858_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I am in receipt of yours of the 11th. I did
    not write you by last mail, as I had no further intelligence to
    communicate.

    "Since I last wrote Hyde has been here and returned again to Nova
    Scotia. I conferred with him, and have been in correspondence with
    our friends at Halifax as to what was best to be done to avert the
    threatened loss of our exclusive privileges; for the bill is not
    _finally_ disallowed, and I do think that if a deputation of your
    directors waited on Lord Stanley and brought the matter under the
    reconsideration of Her Majesty's government we might yet succeed
    in inducing them to confirm the act. The ground on which I based
    our claim to the exclusive right in Nova Scotia was that our
    project, being in the nature of an _invention_ (for its
    practicability is not yet fully tested), an invention of a most
    costly nature, in perfecting which an expenditure exceeding perhaps
    twice or thrice the _estimated_ cost might have to be incurred, we
    were justly entitled to such protection in the nature of a patent
    right, for a limited period, as would secure to us the
    reimbursement of the outlay and a fair remuneration for risk
    incurred, and that others who might lie by until we had, after
    repeated failures, achieved success, ought not (availing themselves
    of all our experience and expenditure) to be allowed _for a certain
    period_ to come into competition with us. Such a privilege as this,
    moreover, could not be abused, inasmuch as the public who are to
    use the telegraph (represented by the governments of Great Britain
    and the United States) reserve to themselves the right to regulate
    the tolls.

    "A telegraph under the Atlantic Ocean is vastly different from a
    submarine telegraph between England and the Continent. It is _in
    effect_ an invention (if it succeeds) and entitled to the same
    protection, at least, as would be granted to the invention of a new
    mode of propelling ships, or as is granted every day to the
    fabrication of such trifles as patent boot-jacks or corkscrews.

    "I really think that, as there is a _locus penitentiae_ and a new
    administration, it may be well to have an interview with the
    colonial secretary on the subject....

    "My wife and family are fairly well. They unite in kind regards to
    you and ardent wishes for your success.

"Most truly yours,
"E. M. ARCHIBALD."



This subject seems to have been often agitated during the years that
follow. On April 25th, 1862, Mr. Field writes to Mr. Saward:

    "Allow me to introduce to you my esteemed friend, E. M. Archibald,
    Esq., H.M. consul for New York. Mr. Archibald was one of the
    earliest, and has proved himself one of the best friends of the
    Atlantic telegraph.... Mr. Archibald can give you much valuable
    information in regard to Newfoundland and all the British North
    American provinces, and be of great service to you in your
    negotiations with the English government.

    "Mr. Jesse Hoyt telegraphs me from Halifax that fifty memorials to
    Lord Palmerston in favor of government giving aid to the Atlantic
    Telegraph Company have already been forwarded from Nova Scotia, and
    that more will go. I have been writing yesterday and to-day to my
    friends in Canada, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick, Nova
    Scotia, and Newfoundland, urging them to get up and send petitions
    to the English government in our favor.... We can and we will
    succeed in connecting Ireland and Newfoundland by means of a good
    submarine telegraph cable."

Shortly after the United States frigate _Niagara_ sailed for England a
New York paper published this short notice:

    "She goes not to assist in the assertion of resisted claims, in the
    vindication of outraged rights. Her task is a more peaceful and a
    more glorious one. She leaves our shores on a mission of fraternity
    and good-will--the harbinger of union and brotherhood amongst
    nations, and one of the chief agents in an enterprise which is
    destined to do more towards the realization of a millennium of love
    amongst men than the efforts of all the diplomatists and
    missionaries are ever likely to accomplish."

April and part of May were spent in preparation and putting the cable on
board the two ships. On May 29th the fleet left for a trial trip in the
Bay of Biscay, and on the 10th of June set sail from Plymouth to meet
again in mid-ocean.

On November 1, 1856, Mr. Field had suggested:

    "The two ends of the cable having been carefully joined together,
    the vessels will start in opposite directions, one towards Ireland
    and the other towards Newfoundland, uncoiling the cable and
    exchanging signals through it from ship to ship as they proceed. By
    this means the period ordinarily required for traversing the
    distance between the two coasts will be lessened by one-half, each
    vessel having only to cover eight hundred and twenty nautical
    miles in order to finish the task assigned to it. It is expected
    that the operation of laying the cable will be completed in about
    eight days from the time of its commencement."

On Friday the 25th of June, after encountering gales that at one time
amounted almost to a cyclone, the two ships came together at their
strange trysting place; but the splice was not made nor the parting said
until the afternoon of Saturday, July 26th. In making a splice the ships
were connected by a hawser and lay one hundred fathoms apart; the time
required for the work was usually two hours.

Three miles only were laid when the cable caught in the machinery of the
_Niagara_ and broke; a new splice was made, and again the ships parted.
Then forty miles were laid and the cable became suddenly lifeless and
was reported broken. On Monday, June 28th, the ships met for the third
time in mid-ocean, and without waiting for any useless discussion they
spliced the cable and once more set sail.

One hundred, two hundred miles of cable went safely down into the sea,
when again came a break, this time twenty feet from the stern of the
_Agamemnon_. It had been agreed that if after a hundred miles had been
paid out a new mishap should occur, no further splice should be made,
but that both ships should go back to Ireland; and without loss of time
the _Niagara_ turned her head to the east and arrived at Valentia on
July 5th. This agreement had been made on June 28th, and it was a formal
one, and was on account of the small amount of coal carried by the
_Agamemnon_.

The Board of Directors met in London, and word was sent to Ireland that
it was proposed to "abandon the enterprise." A meeting was called for
July 12th; Mr. Brown (afterwards Sir William), of Liverpool, would not
attend, and sent this note:

"TRENTON'S HOTEL, _July 12, 1858_.

    "_Dear Sir_,--We must all deeply regret our misfortune in not being
    able to lay the cable. I think there is nothing to be done but to
    dispose of what is left on the best terms we can.

"Yours very truly,
"WM. BROWN.

 "The Committee of the Atlantic Telegraph, Broad Street."



Mr. Brooking, who had so warmly upheld Mr. Field at the meeting in
February, resigned his office as vice-chairman, and left the room rather
than listen to the request that another attempt be made. But the counsel
of the majority prevailed, and on the 17th of July, without a parting
cheer or a word of encouragement from those on shore, the expedition
left Ireland.

On Thursday, July 29th, in latitude 52 deg.9' north, longitude 32 deg.27' west,
with a cloudy sky and a southeast wind, the splice was made at one P.M.,
and perfect signals passed through the whole length of the cable.

Five weeks later Mr. Field described this scene just before the splice
was made:

    "I was standing on the deck of the _Niagara_ in mid-ocean. The day
    was cold and cheerless, the air was misty, and the wind roughened
    the sea; and when I thought of all that we had passed through, of
    the hopes thus far disappointed, of the friends saddened by our
    reverses, of the few that remained to sustain us, I felt a load at
    my heart almost too heavy to bear, though my confidence was firm
    and my determination fixed."

On the evening of the 29th the _Niagara_ was fairly under way, and
already the 5th of August was the day determined upon for her arrival at
Trinity Bay. Signals alone were used; they were constantly passed from
ship to ship, and were understood by the electricians on board. The
expression "the continuity is perfect" relieved the minds of the
officers and those interested in the enterprise, but not the sailors.
The _Herald's_ special correspondent tells of this conversation:

    "'Darn the continuity,' said an old sailor at the end of a
    scientific but rather foggy discussion which a number of his
    messmates had on the subject--'darn the continuity; I wish they
    would get rid of it altogether. It has caused a darned sight more
    trouble than the hull thing is worth. I say they ought to do
    without it and let it go. I believe they'd get the cable down if
    they didn't pay any attention to it. You see,' he went on, 'I was
    on the last exhibition' (expedition, he meant, but it was all the
    same, his messmates did not misapprehend his meaning), 'and I
    thought I'd never hear the end of it. They were always talking
    about it, and one night when we were out last year it was gone for
    two hours, and we thought that was the end of the affair and we
    would never hear of it again. But it came back, and soon after the
    cable busted. Now, I tell you what, men, I'll never forget the
    night, I tell ye! We all felt we had lost our best friend, and I
    never heard the word continuity or contiguity mentioned but I was
    always afraid something was going to happen. And that's a fact.'"

At twenty-one minutes past two on the afternoon of July 30th the
_Agamemnon_ signalled that she had passed her one-hundred-and-fifty-mile
limit, and at twenty-four minutes of three the same was reported on the
_Niagara_. After this there could be no return for another splice; it
must be either Trinity Bay or Valentia for the _Niagara_. A new
complication was reported. The compasses were playing false. So soon as
the _Gorgon_ was told of this she offered to pilot the _Niagara_, and
she did so unfalteringly to the end, Captain Dayman remaining day and
night on deck.

At half-past five o'clock on the afternoon of July 31st the forward coil
of cables on the main deck was exhausted and the coil below was
attached. The quiet was intense while this change was made. Only Mr.
Everett, the chief engineer, was heard to speak.

At other times it was not so: games were played, sales of stocks were
made, and the telegraph stock rose and fell, varying with the reports
received from the electrician's room. At seven A.M. on the morning of
Wednesday, August 4th, came the glad cry, "Land ho!" and at half-past
two in the afternoon the ships entered the "haven where they would be."

That evening at eight Mr. Field left the _Niagara_ to make arrangements
for the landing that was to take place the next day. At half-past two on
the morning of August 5th he waked the sleeping operators waiting in the
telegraph-house, Bay of Bull's Arms, with the words, "The cable is
laid." This at first the men were unwilling to believe, but when they
saw the lights on the vessels in the distance they dressed and came back
with him to the shore, and two walked fifteen miles with the messages
that were to be telegraphed to the unbelieving world.

The paying out of the cable from the two ships had been carried on with
such regularity that the one arrived at Valentia and the other at
Trinity Bay on the same day; by noon on the 5th of August this
country was plunged into the wildest excitement.

[Illustration: VALENTIA: LANDING THE SHORE END OF THE CABLE, 1857

(From a Lithograph)]

These messages were sent to his wife and to his father:

        "TRINITY BAY, NEWFOUNDLAND, _August 5, 1858_.

    "Mrs. CYRUS W. FIELD, 84 East Twenty-first Street, New York:

    "Arrived here yesterday. All well. The Atlantic telegraph cable
    successfully laid. Please telegraph me here immediately.

CYRUS W. FIELD."




    "Rev. Dr. FIELD, Stockbridge, Mass., _via_ Pittsfield:

    "Cable successfully laid. All well.

"CYRUS W. FIELD."



It may interest some readers to follow this message to Stockbridge and
see his family at the time of its delivery. His wife and children were
passing the afternoon quietly, when all were startled by the appearance
of his mother. Almost breathless with excitement she exclaimed,

"Mary, the cable is laid. Thomas, believest thou this?"

Not a word was spoken, but a silent prayer was the response.

"To CYRUS W. FIELD:

    "Your family is all at Stockbridge and well. The joyful news
    arrived there Thursday, and almost overwhelmed your wife. Father
    rejoiced like a boy. Mother was wild with delight. Brothers,
    sisters, all were overjoyed. Bells were rung, guns fired; children,
    let out of school, shouted, 'The cable is laid! the cable is laid!'
    The village was in a tumult of joy. My dear brother, I congratulate
    you. God bless you.

DAVID DUDLEY FIELD."



The _Evening Post_ announced:

               SUCCESS OF THE ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH CABLE.

               ARRIVAL OF THE _NIAGARA_ AND _GORGON_ AT
                             TRINITY BAY.

                       1950 STATUTE MILES LONG.

                         NOT A SINGLE BREAK!

               THE ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH CABLE IS LANDING.

And its leading editorial of the same day said:

    "Such is the startling intelligence which reaches us just as we are
    going to press. We find it difficult to believe the report, for
    recent events have prepared us for a very different result, and yet
    the despatch comes to us through our regular agent, who would not
    deceive us. He may have been imposed upon, but that is quite
    unlikely. If the few coming hours shall confirm the inspiring
    tidings and the cable is landed and in working condition, all other
    events that may happen through the world on this day will be
    trifles.

    "To-morrow the hearts of the civilized world will beat to a single
    pulse, and from that time forth forevermore the continental
    divisions of the earth will in a measure lose those conditions of
    time and distance which now mark their relations one to the other.
    But such an event, like a dispensation of Providence, should be
    first contemplated in silence."

The message for the Associated Press was:

"TRINITY BAY, _August 5, 1858_.

    "The Atlantic telegraph fleet sailed from Queenstown on Saturday,
    July 17th.

    "They met in mid-ocean on Wednesday, the 28th, and made the splice
    at 1 P.M. on Thursday, the 29th. They then separated, the
    _Agamemnon_ and _Valorous_ bound to Valentia, Ireland, and the
    _Niagara_ and _Gorgon_ for this place, where they arrived
    yesterday.

    "This morning the end of the cable will be landed.

    "It is sixteen hundred and ninety-eight nautical or nineteen
    hundred and fifty statute miles from the telegraph-house at the
    head of Valentia Harbor to the telegraph-house, Bay of Bull's Arms,
    Trinity Bay.

    "For more than two-thirds of the distance the water is over two
    miles in depth.

    "The cable has been paid out from the _Agamemnon_ at about the same
    speed as from the _Niagara_. The electrical signals sent and
    received through the whole cable are perfect. The machinery for
    paying out the cable worked in the most satisfactory manner, and
    was not stopped for a single moment from the time the splice was
    made until we arrived here.

    "Captain Hudson, Messrs. Everett and Woodhouse, the engineers, the
    electricians and officers of the ships, and in fact every man on
    board the telegraph fleet has exerted himself to the utmost to make
    the expedition successful. By the blessing of Divine Providence it
    has succeeded.

    "After the end of the cable is landed and connected with the land
    line of telegraph, and the _Niagara_ has discharged some cargo
    belonging to the telegraph company, she will go to St. John's for
    coals, and then proceed at once to New York.

CYRUS W. FIELD."



Next in order were the message to President Buchanan and his reply:

"U.S.S.F. 'NIAGARA,'
"TRINITY BAY, NEWFOUNDLAND, _August 5, 1858_.

"To the President of the United States, Washington, D.C.:

    "_Dear Sir_,--The Atlantic telegraph cable on board the U.S.S.F.
    _Niagara_ and H.M. steamer _Agamemnon_ was joined in mid-ocean,
    Thursday, July 29th, and has been successfully laid.

    "As soon as the two ends are connected with the land lines Queen
    Victoria will send a message to you, and the cable will be kept
    free until after your reply has been transmitted.

"With great respect, I remain,
"Your obedient servant,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."

"BEDFORD SPRINGS, PA., _August 6, 1858_.

"To CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., Trinity Bay:

    "_My dear Sir_,--I congratulate you with all my heart upon the
    success of the great enterprise with which your name is so
    honorably connected.

    "Under the blessing of Divine Providence I trust it may prove
    instrumental in promoting perpetual peace and friendship between
    kings and nations. I have not yet received the Queen's despatch.

"Yours very respectfully,
"JAMES BUCHANAN."



Captain Hudson's telegram is given as it was written; it shows his
simplicity of character and warm heart:

"U. S. STEAM FRIGATE 'NIAGARA,'
"BAY OF BULL'S ARMS,
"TRINITY BAY, NEWFOUNDLAND, _August 5, 1858_.

    "_My dear Eliza_,--God has been with us. The telegraphic cable is
    laid without accident, and to Him be all the glory.

    "We are all well.

"Your ever-affectionate husband,
"WM. L. HUDSON.

    "Mrs. Captain WM. L. HUDSON, Mansion House, Brooklyn, New York."

Mr. Saward wrote from England immediately on the receipt of the news:

"ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH COMPANY,
"22 OLD BROAD STREET, LONDON, _August 6, 1858_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--At last the great work is done. I rejoice at it
    for the sake of humanity at large. I rejoice at it for the sake of
    our common nationalities, and last, but not least, for your
    personal sake I most heartily and sincerely rejoice with you, and
    congratulate you upon this happy termination to the fearful
    anxiety, the continuous and oppressive labor, and the
    never-ceasing, sleepless energy which the successful accomplishment
    of this vast and noble enterprise has entailed on you. Never was
    man more devoted, never did man's energies better deserve success
    than yours have done. May you in the bosom of your family reap
    those rewards of repose and affection which will be doubly sweet
    from the reflection that you return to them after having been
    (under Providence) the main and leading principle in conferring a
    vast and enduring benefit on mankind.

    "If the contemplation of future fame has a charm for you, you may
    well indulge in the reflection, for the name of Cyrus Field will
    now go onward to immortality as long as that of the Atlantic
    telegraph shall be known to mankind.

    "It has been such a shock to us here that we have hardly realized
    it at present.

    "I really think some of the people who come here don't believe it
    yet....

"In haste, yours truly,
"GEORGE SAWARD.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., Gramercy Park, New York."



Dr. Adams wrote:

"MEDFORD, _August 7, 1858_.

    "_My dear Mrs. Field_,--What shall I say to you? Words can give no
    idea of my enthusiasm. As your pastor I have known somewhat of your
    own private griefs and trials, and the sacrifices which you have
    made for the success of your noble husband. Now the hour of reward
    and coronation has come for him and for you. I wrote to him
    yesterday, directing to New York, to be ready for him when he came.
    I was at Andover when the news came, in company with several
    hundred clergymen. We cheered, and we sang praises to God. I was so
    glad that your husband inserted in his first despatch a recognition
    of Divine Providence in his success.

    "I sprang to my feet; I told the company that I was the pastor of
    Mr. Field, and that the last thing which he had said to me before
    starting was in request that we should _pray for him_; and then I
    had an opportunity to pay a tribute to his perseverance, his
    energy, and his genius, which I did, you may be sure, in no
    measured terms.

    "Many doubted the truth of the news. I hastened to Boston, and saw
    the superintendent of the telegraph wire, who told me the
    despatches had passed from Mr. Field to you and to your father.
    This satisfied me that all was right....

    "We think of nothing else and speak of nothing else. While the
    _public_ are rejoicing over the national aspects of this great
    success, our joyful thoughts are most of all with those private
    delights which are playing through the heart of your husband, his
    wife, and her children.

    "Tell Grace that I wish I had been with the boys when they ran to
    ring the bell. I would have swung it lustily, and thrown up my hat
    with them, as happy a boy as the best of them.

    "Please tell your good father and mother that they are not
    forgotten by me in this general rejoicing. Your husband's name will
    live in universal honor and gratitude. God bless you and yours in
    all times and in all ways; so prays

"Your affectionate friend and pastor,
"W. ADAMS.

    "A letter I have just received from Professor Smith, in New York,
    says: 'Genius has again triumphed over Science in the success of
    the Telegraph.'"

These extracts are made from a speech delivered at
Fishkill-on-the-Hudson, New York, on the evening of August 9th, by the
Rev. Henry Ward Beecher. This meeting was said to have been the first
public celebration of the laying of the cable across the Atlantic:

    " ...We are gathered to express our joy at the apparent
    consummation of one of those enterprises which are peculiar, I had
    almost said to our generation--certainly to the century in which we
    live. Do you reflect that there are men among you to-night, men
    here, who lived and were not very young before there was a
    steamboat on our waters? Ever since I can remember steamboats have
    always been at hand. There are men here who lived before they beat
    the waters with their wheels. And since my day railroads have been
    invented. I remember the first one on this land very distinctly. It
    was after I had graduated from college, and I am not a patriarch
    yet. It is within our remembrance that the telegraph itself was
    invented, and by a mere citizen of ours in this vicinity. All these
    pre-eminent methods of civilization and commerce and economy have
    been within the remembrance of young men--all but one within the
    remembrance of quite young men. Now this is not so much an
    invention as an enlarged application....

    "I thought all the way in riding down here to-night how strange it
    will seem to have that silent cord lying in the sea, perfectly
    noiseless, perfectly undisturbed by war or by storm, by the paddles
    of steamers, by the thunders of navies above it, far down beyond
    all anchors' reach, beyond all plumbing interference. There will be
    earthquakes that will shake the other world, and the tidings of
    them will come under the silent sea, and we shall know them upon
    the hither side, but the cord will be undisturbed, though it bears
    earthquakes to us. Markets will go up and fortunes will be made
    down in the depths of the sea. The silent highway will carry it
    without noise to us. Fortunes will go down and bankruptcies spread
    dismay, and the silent road will bear this message without a jar
    and without disturbance. Without voice or speech it will
    communicate thunders and earthquakes and tidings of war and
    revolutions, and all those things that fill the air with clamor.
    They will come quick as thought from the scene of their first fever
    and excitement, flash quick as thought and silent on their passage,
    and then break out on this side with fresh tremor and anxiety. To
    me the functions of that wire seem, in some sense, sublime. Itself
    impassive, quiet, still, moving either hemisphere at its
    extremities by the tidings that are to issue out from it....

    "We are called, and shall be increasingly so, to mark the
    advantages which are to be derived from the connection of these
    continents by this telegraphic wire. To my mind the prominent
    advantage is this: it is bringing mankind close together, it is
    bringing nations nearer together. And I augur the best results to
    humanity from this. The more intercourse nations have with each
    other, other things being equal, the greater the tendency to
    establish between them peace and good-will, and just as they are
    brought together will they contribute to advance the day of
    universal brotherhood.

    " ...That which is spoken at 12 o'clock in London will be known by
    us at 8 o'clock in the morning here, according to our time.... It
    is no longer in her own bosom that France can keep her secrets. It
    is no longer in her own race that Russia can keep her thoughts and
    her plans. It is no longer in the glorious old British Islands that
    their commercial intelligence can be confined. It is wafted round
    and round the globe. In less than an hour, whenever this system
    shall be completed, the world will be enlightened quicker than by
    the sun; quicker than by the meteor's flash. What is known in one
    place will be known in all places; the globe will have but one ear,
    and that ear will be everywhere....

    "I scarcely dare any longer think what shall be. I remember the
    derision with which Whitney's plan for a railroad to the
    Mississippi was hailed. I remember there was scarce a paper in the
    country that did not feel called upon to talk of the advisability
    of sending him to the lunatic asylum. I remember the time when the
    project of a steamer crossing the Atlantic was scientifically
    declared to be impracticable.... I remember when the first steamer
    crossed the Atlantic, and I have been told, though the story may be
    too good to be true, that the first steamer that made the passage
    to New York carried with her the newspaper containing the news of
    the impossibility of making the voyage, by Dr. Lardner....

    "While thus we are enlarging the facilities of action, let us see
    to it that we maintain, at home, domestic virtue, individual
    intelligence--that we spread our common schools, that we multiply
    our newspapers throughout the land, that we make books more plenty
    than the leaves of the forest trees. Let every man among us be a
    reader and thinker and owner, and so he will be an actor. And when
    all men through the globe are readers, when all men through the
    globe are thinkers, when all men through the globe are actors--are
    actors because they think right--when they speak nation to nation,
    when from the rising of the sun to the going down of the same there
    is not alone a free intercourse of thought but one current of
    heart, virtue, religion, love--then the earth will have blossomed
    and consummated its history."

Archbishop Hughes sent this note:

    "LONG BRANCH, _August 26, 1858_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--Under the blessing of Almighty God you have
    accomplished the work. But your merit, if not your human glory,
    would have been the same in my estimation if you had returned to us
    what they would call a disappointed man in whose scales of judgment
    enthusiasm had preponderated over 'common-sense.'

"Yours faithfully,
"JOHN, Archbishop of New York."



The letters which follow do not require explanation; the one from George
Peabody & Co. shows that Mr. Field did not profit largely by the success
of the cable:

"ST. JOHN'S, _August 9, 1858_.

    "_My dear Sir,_--Allow me, among many more worthy, to offer you my
    very sincere congratulations on the successful completion of the
    great enterprise which you have labored with so much and such
    admirable perseverance to carry through, in the midst of so many
    hinderances and discouragements.

    "It would give me very great pleasure if you would, during your
    stay in St. John's, make my house your home or place of abode. I am
    aware that you have many friends and engagements, but as I have no
    family you could have two rooms entirely at your disposal, and I
    would make my hours suit your convenience....

"I am, my dear sir,
"Very truly yours,
"EDWARD FIELD,
"Bishop of Newfoundland."



"ST. JOHN'S, _August 18, 1858_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field,_--Allow me to congratulate you most sincerely
    on the accomplishment of the wonderful work you so nobly carried
    out in the midst of almost insurmountable difficulties.

    "God from time to time sends men like you and Columbus for the good
    of humanity, men with the head to conceive and the heart to execute
    the grand ideas with which He inspires them. Human energies alone
    never could surmount the difficulties and disappointments you
    encountered in the projection and execution of this gigantic
    enterprise. God destined you for the work and made you the
    instrument. You have now completed what Columbus commenced, and
    posterity will link your names together. That God may grant you
    many happy years to witness the benefits you have conferred on the
    great human family is the sincere prayer of your humble servant and
    friend,

"+JOHN I. MULLOCK."

"LONDON, _10th August, 1858_.

    "_My dear Sir,_--I wrote you by last mail, since when all continues
    favorable, and I expect, long ere you receive this, messages will
    be regularly sent through the cable. Many things remain to be done,
    and there is a great want of efficient, practical workingmen, as
    you know, in the board, but Lampson still keeps at it, and all
    will, I hope, come right in the end.

    "I have a letter from Mr. Peabody, who says: 'I sincerely
    congratulate all parties interested in the great project, and very
    particularly our friends Lampson and Field. In the accomplishment
    of his grand object I can only compare the feelings of the latter
    to Columbus in the discovery of the new world.'

    "I hope the reaction from the desponding state in which we parted
    will not be too great for your health, and now I beg of you not to
    forget our conversation when last here.

    "The market for shares is weaker; several have been on the market.
    I sold one for you at L900, but could not go on. To-day they have
    sold at L840 to L850, and later they were firmer at L875; but
    seeing how the market was I withdrew and would not offer at any
    price. If I am able to go on at L900 or more I shall feel it for
    your interest to do so to a moderate extent, for I feel that you
    should embrace the opportunity to reduce your interest, which is
    too large. I still hope to sail on the 21st, but it must depend
    upon Mr. Peabody's health.

"Most truly,
"J. S. MORGAN."



_Ariel._

"LONDON, _10th August, 1858_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., New York,

    "_Dear Sir,_--We beg to advise by the present the sale of three of
    your Atlantic Telegraph Company shares, _viz._, two at L350 each
    prior to the successful laying of the cable, and one subsequent
    thereto at L900, less brokerage. The first cash 3d August, and the
    remaining two cash 13th inst., which please note.

"Yours truly,
"GEO. PEABODY & CO."



In the life of Longfellow, at page 323, is given this entry from his
diary:

    "August 6th. Go to town with the boys. Flags flying and bells
    ringing to celebrate the laying of the telegraph."

And on the 12th, in writing to Mr. Sumner, he says:

    "You have already rejoiced at the success of the Atlantic
    telegraph--the great news of the hour, the year, the century. The
    papers call Field 'Cyrus the Great.'"

These words express the feeling that pervaded the whole country: and in
order to contrast it with the days and months that had just passed, this
article, published in the New York _Herald_ of August 9th, is given:

    "SUCCESS OR FAILURE--A CONTRAST

    "Many terse and witty things have been said and written in all ages
    to show the difference with which the same enterprise is viewed
    when it results in success and when it results in failure. We have
    never had any better illustration of this than we now have in
    connection with the great enterprise of the age. After the first
    and second attempts to lay the Atlantic cable had failed, wiseacres
    shook their heads in sympathetic disapprobation of Mr. Field, and
    said, 'What a fool he was!' It was evident to them all along that
    the thing could never succeed, and they could not understand why a
    sensible, clear-headed man like Field would risk his whole fortune
    in such a railroad-to-the-moon undertaking. If he had ventured a
    third of it or a half, there might be some excuse for him, but to
    have placed it all on the hazard of a die where the chances were a
    hundred to one against him--worse even than the Wall Street lottery
    conducted under the name of the Stock Exchange--was an evidence of
    folly and absurdity which they could not overlook and for which he
    deserved to suffer.

    "Now all that is changed. Midnight has given place to noon. The sun
    shines brightly in the heavens and the shadows of the night have
    passed away and are forgotten. Failures have been only the
    stepping-stones to success the most brilliant. The cable is laid;
    and now the most honored name in the world is that of Cyrus W.
    Field, although but yesterday there were

   "'None so poor to do him reverence.'

    "The wiseacres who shook their heads the other day and pitied while
    they condemned him are now among the foremost in his praise, and
    help to make his name a household word. Bells are rung and guns are
    fired and buildings are illuminated in his honor throughout the
    length and breadth of his land; and prominent among all devices and
    first on every tongue and uppermost in every heart is his name. Had
    he not, like the great Bruce, persevered in the face of repeated
    failures until his efforts were at length crowned with success, he
    would have been held up to the growing generation as an
    illustration of the danger of allowing our minds to be absorbed by
    an impracticable idea, and his history would have been served up in
    play and romance, and used

   "'To point a moral or adorn a tale.'

    "As it is, the nation is proud of him, the world knows him, and all
    mankind is his debtor."

The ship _Niagara_ left Trinity Bay for St. John's, where she was
obliged to stop for coal, on August 8th. Immediately upon her arrival
the Executive Council of Newfoundland and the Chamber of Commerce of St.
John's presented congratulatory addresses to Mr. Field, and the governor
entertained him, together with his friends, at dinner, and a ball was
given at the Colonial Building. On the 11th of August the _Niagara_
sailed for New York.

The country was impatient; twelve days had passed and not a message had
been received. No one seemed to understand that a wilderness had to be
opened and instruments adjusted before it was possible to use the cable
as a means of communication between the two continents.

It had been decided to have a great celebration on the receipt of the
Queen's message; on the 16th that was reported as coming over the
submarine wire, and early on the 17th the firing commenced and the
excitement continued until the 18th, when the City Hall caught fire.

Churches rang their bells, factories blew their whistles, and in the
evening the river front blazed with bonfires and fireworks flashed
across the sky; the buildings were illuminated; one thousand lights were
said to have shone from the windows of the Everett House, and the
transparencies were striking. That on the front of the International
Hotel, on the corner of Broadway and Franklin Street, was eighteen feet
by thirty-one; the centre was white, with fancy letters, and the border
blue, with white letters, and the words were:

 +-----------------------------------------------------+
 |                                                     |
 |                  VICTORIA.                          |
 |                                                     |
 | All Hail to the Inventive Genius and Indefatigable  |
 |                Enterprise of                        |
 |A             JOHN AND JONATHAN,                     |
 |G That has succeeded in consummating the Mightiest  N|
 |A             Work of the Age;                      I|
 |M May the Cord that binds them in the Bonds of      A|
 |E              INTERNATIONAL                        G|
 |M Friendship never be severed,                      A|
 |N           And the FIELD of its                    R|
 |O Usefulness extend to every part of the Earth.     A|
 |N                                                   .|
 |. Let nations' shouts, 'midst cannons' roar,         |
 |  Proclaim the event from shore to shore.            |
 |                                                     |
 |                  BUCHANAN.                          |
 +-----------------------------------------------------+

These placards were in the windows of Bowen & McNamee's, corner of
Broadway and Pearl Street:

 +-----------------------------+
 |QUEEN VICTORIA:              |
 |                             |
 |"Your despatch received;     |
 |Let us hear from you again." |
 +-----------------------------+

 +----------------------------------------------------+
 |                    Lightning                       |
 |               caught and tamed by                  |
 |                    FRANKLIN,                       |
 |   taught to read and write and go on errands by    |
 |                      MORSE,                        |
 |          started in foreign trade by               |
 |               FIELD, COOPER & CO.,                 |
 |                      with                          |
 |                  JOHNNY BULL                       |
 |                      and                           |
 |                BROTHER JONATHAN                    |
 |                       as                           |
 |                special partners.                   |
 +----------------------------------------------------+


In the window of Anson Randolph, corner of Amity Street, was displayed
the following:

 +-------------------------------------+
 |                                     |
 |     The Old CYRUS and the New.      |
 |              One                    |
 |   Conquered the World for Himself,  |
 |           The Other                 |
 |   The Ocean for the World.          |
 +-------------------------------------+

 +---------------------+
 |    Our Field is     |
 |     THE FIELD       |
 |   of the world.     |
 +---------------------+

 +----------------------------+
 |        July 4, 1776,       |
 |      August 16, 1858,      |
 | Are the days we celebrate. |
 +----------------------------+

The Manhattan Hotel was splendidly decorated with colored lights and
flags of all nations. On a transparency was the following inscription:

 +--------------------------------------+
 |       Married, August, 1858,         |
 |                by                    |
 |           CYRUS W. FIELD,            |
 |  OLD IRELAND AND MISS YOUNG AMERICA. |
 | "May their honeymoon last forever."  |
 +--------------------------------------+


The _Tribune_ describes this procession:

    "The workmen upon the Central Park and the workmen on the new
    Croton reservoir made a novel parade, and after marching through
    the principal streets were reviewed by Mayor Tiemann in front of
    the City Hall.

    "The procession was headed by a squad of the Central Park police in
    full uniform; then came a full brass band and a standard-bearer
    with a white muslin banner on which was inscribed:

 +--------------------------+
 |                          |
 | The Central Park People. |
 |                          |
 +--------------------------+

    "The workmen, attired in their every-day clothes, with evergreens
    in their hats, next marched in squads of four, each gang carrying a
    banner with the name of their boss-workmen inscribed thereon. In
    the line of the procession were several four-horse teams drawing
    wagons in which were the workmen in the engineer's department. On
    the sides of the vehicles were muslin banners with the words:

 +-------------------+
 |                   |
 |  Engineer Corps.  |
 |                   |
 +-------------------+

    "The reservoir workmen were a hardy-looking set of men, and were
    fair specimens of the laborers of New York.

    "The procession filled Broadway from Union Square to the Park, and,
    as it was altogether unexpected, it created no little excitement
    and inquiry. If all the men and teams in this turnout are kept at
    the city's work we shall soon see great improvement in the new
    park....

    "The procession was composed of eleven hundred laborers and eight
    hundred carts from the Central Park, under the marshalship of
    Messrs. Olmsted, Miller, Waring, and Grant, and seven hundred
    laborers and carts from the new reservoir under the marshalship of
    Mr. Walker, forming a procession over three miles in length."

These same workmen presented to Mr. Field, the December following, a
pitcher made from wood of the Charter Oak.

Before the _Niagara_ arrived at New York on the morning of August 18th
Mr. Field prepared his report for the Atlantic Telegraph Company, and he
had it at once posted, and with it his resignation as general manager of
the company.

"How Cyrus Laid the Cable" was written by John G. Saxe for _Harper's
Weekly_, and was published on September 11th:

   "Come listen all unto my song,
     It is no silly fable;
   'Tis all about the mighty cord
     They call the Atlantic cable.

   "Bold Cyrus Field he said, says he,
     'I have a pretty notion
   That I can run a telegraph
     Across the Atlantic Ocean.'

   "Then all the people laughed, and said
     They'd like to see him do it;
   He might get half-seas-over, but
     He never could go through it;

   "To carry out his foolish plan
     He never would be able;
   He might as well go hang himself
     With his Atlantic cable.

   "But Cyrus was a valiant man,
     A fellow of decision;
   And heeded not their mocking words,
     Their laughter and derision.

   "Twice did his bravest efforts fail,
     And yet his mind was stable;
   He wa'n't the man to break his heart
     Because he broke his cable.

   "'Once more, my gallant boys!' he cried;
   'Three times!--you know the fable--'
   ('I'll make it thirty,' muttered he,
   'But I will lay the cable!')

   "Once more they tried--hurrah! hurrah!
     What means this great commotion?
   The Lord be praised! the cable's laid
     Across the Atlantic Ocean!

   "Loud ring the bells--for, flashing through
     Six hundred leagues of water,
   Old Mother England's benison
     Salutes her eldest daughter.

   "O'er all the land the tidings speed,
     And soon in every nation
   They'll hear about the cable with
     Profoundest admiration!

   "Now long live James, and long live Vic,
     And long live gallant Cyrus;
   And may his courage, faith, and zeal
     With emulation fire us;

   "And may we honor evermore
     The manly, bold, and stable,
   And tell our sons, to make them brave,
     How Cyrus laid the cable."

On the 20th of August Captain Hudson, Mr. Everett, and the officers of
the _Niagara_, were entertained by Mr. Field, and from the balcony of
his house he read this message to the crowd assembled in the street:

"VALENTIA BAY, _August 19, 1858_.

"To CYRUS W. FIELD, N. Y.:

    "The directors have just met. They heartily congratulate you on
    your success.

    "The _Agamemnon_ arrived at Valentia Bay on Thursday, August 5, at
    6 A.M.

    "We are just on the point of chartering a ship to lay the shore
    end. No time will be lost in sending them out. Please write me more
    fully about tariff and other working arrangements.

SAWARD."



He did not forget the sailors, as the following invitation shows:

 +--------------------------------------------------------------+
 |                                                              |
 |                COMPLIMENTARY RECEPTION                       |
 |                                                              |
 |                       OF THE                                 |
 |                                                              |
 |           CREW OF THE U.S. SHIP "NIAGARA."                   |
 |                                                              |
 |_Mr. Cyrus W. Field requests the pleasure of your Company     |
 |    at his Entertainment of the Crew of the_ Niagara, _to     |
 |be given at the Palace Gardens, at 10 o'clock, this Evening._ |
 |                                                              |
 |               W. A. BARTLETT, _for C. W. F._                 |
 |                                                              |
 |                 NEW YORK, August 25, 1858.                   |
 |                                                              |
 +--------------------------------------------------------------+

From one of the newspapers this account is taken of the meeting held
before the reception:

    "Upwards of two hundred of the sailors and marines of the frigate
    _Niagara_ assembled last evening in Franklin Square, formed in
    procession, and, preceded by the band of the _North Carolina_,
    marched to Cooper Institute. They carried with them an accurate
    model of the _Niagara_, made by one of her crew, which was gayly
    decked with flags, exactly as was the noble ship it represents when
    she last entered our harbor. On arriving at the Cooper Institute
    the tars were saluted with a discharge of fireworks and the hearty
    cheers of the multitude....

    "Cyrus W. Field was the next speaker. He was evidently a great
    favorite of the sailors, who, it is said, used to call him on board
    ship 'the Sister of Charity.' They cheered him extravagantly when
    he rose. He made only a short speech, consisting of reminiscences
    of the laying and landing of the cable, and the gallantry and
    faithfulness of the crew on these occasions. More singing and more
    cheers were followed by the entrance of Captain Hudson, who was
    greeted with the warmest enthusiasm, and made some appropriate
    remarks."

On the 26th Mr. Field, with a party, left for Great Barrington, and the
next day they were welcomed at Stockbridge by Mr. Field's old friends.

Between the 10th of August and the 1st of September ninety-seven
messages were sent from Valentia to Newfoundland, and two hundred and
sixty-nine messages from Newfoundland to Valentia.

The English government had, by cable, countermanded the return to
England of the Sixty-second and the Thirty-ninth regiments. The news of
the peace with China had also been sent to this country, and the English
papers of August 18th reported the collision between the Cunard steamers
_Arabia_ and _Europa_. This statement is taken from a letter written in
July, 1862, by order of the Atlantic Telegraph Company and signed by the
secretary of the company, Mr. George Saward.

The 1st and 2d of September were chosen as the days for a "General
Celebration of the Laying of the Atlantic Telegraph Cable."

In deference to the wish expressed by the rector and vestry of Trinity
Church, it was arranged that the first day should begin with a service
and Te Deum at ten o'clock. In the absence of Bishop Horatio Potter,
Bishop George Washington Doane, of New Jersey, took charge of this
service.

Trinity Church had never been so gayly dressed. "The edifice was
decorated from the steeple to the top of the spire with the flags of all
nations. Around the steeple were hung the flags of France, Spain,
Prussia, Austria, Russia, Portugal, and other nations, while the spire
about three-quarters of the way to the cross was decorated with the
Stars and Stripes and the Union Jack." It was this incident that called
forth these verses, written by Bishop Doane:

   "Hang out that glorious old Red Cross;
     Hang out the Stripes and Stars;
   They faced each other fearlessly
     In two historic wars:
   But now the ocean-circlet binds
     The Bridegroom and the Bride;
   Old England, young America,
     Display them side by side.

   "High up, from Trinity's tall spire,
     We'll fling the banners out;
   Hear how the world-wide welkin rings,
     With that exulting shout!
   Forever wave those wedded flags,
     As proudly now they wave,
   God for the lands His love has blessed;
     The beauteous and the brave.

   "But see, the dallying wind the Stars
     About the Cross has blown;
   And see, again, the Cross around
     The Stars its folds has thrown:
   Was ever sign so beautiful
     Flung from the heavens abroad?
   Old England, young America,
     For Freedom and for God."

At one o'clock the procession formed at the Battery and marched from
there to the Crystal Palace, then standing at Forty-second Street
between Fifth and Sixth avenues.

The account which follows is from the New York _Herald_ of September 2d:


                          THE CABLE CARNIVAL.

                   "Achieved is the Glorious Work."

                   THE METROPOLIS OVERWHELMED WITH
                              VISITORS.

               Over Half a Million of Jubilant People.

                 Broadway a Garden of Female Beauty.

                      A BOUQUET IN EVERY WINDOW.

              Glorious Recognition of the Most Glorious
                           Work of the Age.

                  REUNION OF ALL THE NATIONALITIES.

                              * * * * *

                          THE CABLE LAYERS.

                 THE BRITISH NAVAL OFFICERS IN TOWN.

               The Jack Tars of the _Niagara_ on Hand.

                        THE BIG COIL OF CABLE.

                              * * * * *

                    SCENES AT THE CRYSTAL PALACE.

                          THE CITY AT NIGHT.

                      THE FIREWORKS IN THE PARK.

                         THE CITY HALL SAFE.

                Torch-light Procession of the Firemen.

                            ILLUMINATIONS.

                 The Colored Lanterns _a la Chinois_,
                           etc., etc., etc.

    "The scene presented along Broadway altogether transcends
    description. Every available and even unavailable place was secured
    long beforehand, and from the Battery to Union Place one was
    obliged to run a gantlet of eyes more effective and more dangerous
    than any artillery battery. This display of female beauty,
    conjoined to the great array of flags, banners, and mottoes, made
    us think of a Roman carnival. To the pet military regiments, the
    Montreal artillery, and the officers and crews of the _Niagara_ and
    _Gorgon_ there was given a most splendid greeting all along the
    line. Everywhere we heard cheers for Field, Hudson, Everett, and
    their British coadjutors. We have never heard a more cheerful,
    hearty, and cordial shout than that which welcomed the gallant tars
    of the _Niagara_ as they moved up Broadway....

    "The crowd upon Broadway was so great that the military had much
    difficulty in getting through it, and so the procession was
    somewhat retarded....

    "The hour appointed for the interesting ceremonies inside the
    Palace to commence was half-past four o'clock, but the procession
    did not arrive there till within a few minutes of six. By that time
    there were about ten thousand persons in the building anxiously
    awaiting the arrival of the celebrities, whom all were desirous to
    see and hear....

    "The crew of the _Niagara_, with a model of that ship, entered by
    the front door, and, marching up the centre aisle, took their place
    in front of the platform. They were loudly cheered, and they
    responded in true sailor fashion by cheering lustily for Captain
    Hudson, Mr. Field, the mayor, and almost every one they recognized
    on the platform....

    "At night one would suppose the crowd would lessen. Not so. The
    illuminations, the fireworks, the many-colored lanterns, and the
    general gas and spermaceti demonstrations gave to Broadway a
    carnavalesque appearance which it is almost impossible to
    describe. Beginning with the clever design of the New York Club
    down to the Park there was a succession of illuminations and
    transparencies of every possible sort. The great bazaars vied with
    each other in the number and variety of their mottoes and designs,
    both for day and night; but, passing by all of them, we were
    especially struck with the following distich on the side of a car:

   "'With wild huzzas now let the welkin ring,
    Columbia's got Britannia on a string.'

    " ...The firemen's torch-light parade concluded the day's
    festivities. It was exceedingly beautiful, and as the long line
    moved through Broadway surrounded by an enthusiastic crowd on every
    side, and lighted by thousands of torches, candles, and colored
    lanterns, one might easily have imagined himself in a fairy-land.
    It was long after midnight before the great assemblage dispersed,
    and even then the streets did not resume their wonted aspect....
    The fact is, that an avalanche of people descended upon us, and New
    York was crushed for once; but we do not lay Atlantic cables every
    day."

On the 2d of September, at seven o'clock, a dinner ended the
celebration.

    "There were six hundred guests who sat down to as sumptuous a
    dinner as ever was laid on any great occasion in this city. The
    bill of fare was laid beside each plate:

                         =MUNICIPAL DINNER=

                                BY THE

                COMMON COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK

                                  TO

                           CYRUS W. FIELD,

                           AND OFFICERS OF

    H. B. M. Steamship _Gorgon_ and U. S. Steam Frigate _Niagara_,

                       IN COMMEMORATION OF THE

                   =LAYING OF THE ATLANTIC CABLE.=

               METROPOLITAN HOTEL, SEPTEMBER 2D, 1858.

                      OYSTERS ON THE HALF-SHELL.

                                SOUPS.

                            Green Turtle.
                          Gumbo, with rice.

                                FISH.

                 Boiled Fresh Salmon, lobster sauce.
              Broiled Spanish Mackerel, steward's sauce.

                               BOILED.

                        Turkey, oyster sauce.
                     Leg of Mutton, caper sauce.

                                ROAST.

                            Young Turkey.
                            Ribs of Beef.
                        Ham, champagne sauce.
                          Lamb, mint sauce.
                       Chickens, English sauce.

                             COLD DISHES.

                      Boned Turkey, with jelly.
                    Chicken Salad, lobster sauce.
                   Patties of Game, with truffles.
                     Ham, sur socle, with jelly.

                               ENTREES.

           Tenderloin of Beef, larded, with mushroom sauce.
                     Lamb Chops, with green peas.
               Chartreuse of Partridges, Madeira sauce.
                Forms of Rice, with small vegetables.
                Timbale of Macaroni, Milanaise style.
                       Wild Ducks, with olives.
                  Breast of Chickens, truffle sauce.
                    Soft-shell Crabs, fried plain.
                   Stewed Terrapin, American style.
                 Squabs, braisees, gardener's sauce.
               Sweetbreads, larded, with string-beans.
           Fricandeau of Veal, larded, with small carrots.
                 Flounders, stuffed, with fine herbs.
                     Reed Birds, steward's sauce.
                 Broiled Turtle Steaks, tomato sauce.
             Croquettes of Chickens, with fried parsley.
             Tenderloin of Lamb, larded, poivrade sauce.
                  Pluvier, on toast, Italian sauce.

                              RELISHES.

                            Raw Tomatoes.
                           Spanish Olives.
                           Pickled Oysters.
                            Currant Jelly.
                               Celery.

                                GAME.

                       Partridges, bread sauce.
                        Broiled English Snipe.

                             VEGETABLES.

                     Boiled and Mashed Potatoes.
                           Stewed Tomatoes.
                           Sweet Potatoes.
                             Lima Beans.

                               PASTRY.

                             Apple Pies.
                              Plum Pies.
                             Peach Pies.
                            Plum Pudding.
                  Fancy Ornamented Charlotte Russe.
                          Maraschino Jelly.
                          Fancy Fruit Jelly.
                           Pineapple Salad.
                      Gateaux, Neapolitan style.
                           Champagne Jelly.
                           Pineapple Pies.
                            Custard Pies.
                            Pumpkin Pies.
                           Cabinet Pudding.
                           Peach Meringues.
                            Madeira Jelly.
                             Punch Jelly.
                          Fancy Blanc Mange.
                            Spanish Cream.
                           Swiss Meringues.

                            CONFECTIONERY.

                Meringues, a la creme, vanilla flavor
                            Rose Almonds.
                          Fancy Lady's Cake.
                           Quince Soufflee.
                        Vanilla Sugar Almonds.
                        Ornamented Macaroons.
                          Mint Cream Candy.
                     Butterflies of Vienna Cake.
                          Vanilla Ice Cream.
                            Savoy Biscuit.
                         Variety Glace Fruit.
                         Dominos of Biscuit.
                         Fancy Variety Candy.
                            Roast Almonds.
                           Conserve Kisses.
                          Chocolate Biscuit.
                        Fancy Diamond Kisses.
                       Preserved Almond Kisses.

                              ORNAMENTS.

                  QUEEN VICTORIA, of Great Britain.
           JAMES BUCHANAN, President of the United States.
                   CYRUS W. FIELD, with his Cable.
            Professor MORSE, as Inventor of the Telegraph.
                        Dr. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN.
          The operative Telegraph of the METROPOLITAN HOTEL.
            The NIAGARA, Man-of-War of the United States.
           The AGAMEMNON and NIAGARA paying out the Cable.
       CYRUS W. FIELD, surrounded by the flags of all nations.
           The Coats of Arms of all nations, on a pyramid.
                POCAHONTAS, with real American design.

                          Temple of Liberty.
                     Grand Ornamented Fruit Vase.
                           Temple of Music.
                           Frosting Tower.
                Sugar Tower, with variety decorations.
                           Flower Pyramid.
                        White Sugar Ornament.
                 Fruit Basket, supported by Dolphins.
                     Fancy Decorated Flower Vase.
                           Tribute Temple.
                           Pagodi Pyramid.
                       Scotch Warrior, mounted.
                           Ethiopian Tower.
                       Floral Vase, decorated.
                          Frosting Pyramid.
                           Mounted Church.
                     Pyramid of Cracking Bonbons.
                          Chinese Pavilion.
                          Triumphant Temple.
                 Sugar Harp, with floral decorations.
                           Variety Pyramid.
                         Fancy Sugar Temple.
                       Ornamented Sugar Tower.
                            Temple of Art.
             Lyre, surmounted with Cornucopia of Flowers.

                               DESSERT.

                               Almonds.
                               Peaches.
                             Pecan Nuts.
                            Grenoble Nuts.
                          Hot-house Grapes.
                               Coffee.
                            Citron Melons.
                           Bartlett Pears.
                               Raisins.
                              Filberts.
                               Coffee.

    This was one of the toasts:

    "Cyrus W. Field: To his exertions, energy, courage, and
    perseverance are we indebted for the Ocean Telegraph; we claim, but
    Immortality owns him."

In his reply he said:

    "To no one man is the world indebted for this achievement; one may
    have done more than another, this person may have had a prominent
    and that a secondary part, but there is a host of us who have been
    engaged in the work the completion of which you celebrate to-day."

Mr. George Peabody wrote to him:

    "I read the accounts in the New York papers in celebration of the
    great event of the year and age with great interest, and although I
    think in some respects that they are a little too enthusiastic, yet
    so far as it regards yourself they cannot be so, for if the cable
    should be lost to-morrow you would be fully entitled to the high
    honor you are daily receiving."

As he left the Battery on September 1st a cable message was handed to
him dated that morning:

"CYRUS W. FIELD, New York:

    "The directors are on their way to Valentia to make arrangements
    for opening the wire to the public. They convey through the cable
    to you and your fellow-citizens their hearty congratulations in
    your joyous celebration of the great international work."

It was the last message that passed over the cable of 1858.




CHAPTER VIII

FAILURE ON ALL SIDES

(1858-1861)


From the daily press and from Mr. Field's papers the story of these
years has been drawn.

    "In the midst of all this rejoicing, intelligence came from
    Newfoundland that the cable, which it was fully anticipated would
    be open for public messages in a few days, had ceased working. The
    reaction was painful to witness, after the intense excitement of
    the past three weeks."

That it had become impossible to send a message through the cable was
definitely known in London through the letter given to the _Times_:

"_September 6, 1858._

    "_Sir_,--I am instructed by the directors to inform you that owing
    to some cause not at present ascertained, but believed to arise
    from a fault existing in the cable at a point hitherto
    undiscovered, there have been no intelligible signals from
    Newfoundland since one o'clock on Friday, the 3d inst. The
    directors are now at Valentia, and, aided by various scientific and
    practical electricians, are investigating the cause of the
    stoppage, with a view to remedying the existing difficulty. Under
    these circumstances no time can be named at present for opening the
    wire to the public.

    "GEORGE SAWARD."

Before the end of the month these telegrams were published in the New
York papers:

"NEW YORK, _September 24, 1858_, 12 M.

"To DE SAUTY, Trinity Bay, N. F.:

    "Despatches from you and Mackay are contradictory. Now please give
    me explicit answers to the following inquiries:

    "First: Are you now, or have you been within three days, receiving
    distinct signals from Valentia?

    "Second: Can you send a message, long or short, to the directors at
    London?

    "Third: If you answer 'no' to the above, please tell me if the
    electrical manifestations have varied essentially since the 1st of
    September.

CYRUS W. FIELD."



"TRINITY BAY, N. F., _September 24, 1858_.

"C. W. FIELD, New York:

    "We have received nothing intelligible from Valentia since the 1st
    of September, excepting feeling a few signals yesterday. I cannot
    send anything to Valentia. There has been very little variation in
    the electrical manifestations.

"DE SAUTY."



"TRINITY BAY, N. F., Saturday, _September 25th_.

"PETER COOPER, C. W. FIELD, W. G. HUNT, and E. M.
ARCHIBALD, New York:

    "I have not the least wish to withhold particulars as to the
    working of the cable, and until I have communicated with
    headquarters and ascertained the directions of the manager of the
    company, I will send a daily report of proceedings. We were not
    working to-day, but receiving occasionally from Valentia some weak
    reversals of the current, which, when received, are unintelligible.

"C. V. DE SAUTY."



"TRINITY BAY, N. F., Saturday, _September 25th_.

"C. W. FIELD, New York:

    "Your message received. The day before yesterday commenced
    receiving current from Valentia and was in hopes that I should be
    at work again soon after. So I informed Mr. Mackay. Then the
    current failed. This will explain the discrepancy between his and
    my message.

"C. V. DE SAUTY."



On the last page of the "Service Message-book" kept at the company's
station, Trinity Bay, this entry was made on the 30th of September:

    "Receiving good currents, but no intelligible signals."

For a short period there was again a feeling of encouragement, and there
seemed to be a possibility that the electrical current was not lost, and
a full month later the following letter was written:

"TO THE EDITOR OF THE _Times:_

    "_Sir_,--Eleven P. M. I beg to inform you that I have just received
    the annexed message from Valentia, which has been transmitted by
    Mr. Bartholomew, the superintendent of the company at that place.
    It would appear that by the application of extraordinary and
    peculiar battery-power at Newfoundland, in accordance with the
    instructions of Professor Thomson, of Glasgow (one of the directors
    of the company), it has been possible to convey, even through the
    defective cable, the few words recorded by Mr. Bartholomew in his
    message to me this evening.

    "This, however, though encouraging, must not be regarded as a
    permanent state of things, as it is still clear there is a serious
    fault in the cable, while, at the same time, it is not at present
    absolutely clear that any, except the most extraordinary and (to
    the cable) dangerous efforts can be made, more especially on this
    side, to overcome the existing obstacles in the way of perfect
    working.

    "The following is Mr. Bartholomew's message:

    "'Bartholomew, Valentia, to Saward, London.--I have just received
    the following words from Newfoundland: "Daniel's now in circuit."
    The signals are very distinct. Give me discretion to use our
    Daniel's battery reply.'"

    "Immediately on receipt of the foregoing I sent the necessary
    authority to use the Daniel's battery at Valencia.

"Yours truly,
"GEORGE SAWARD, Secretary.

"22 Old Broad Street, _October_ 20th."



And so the days passed, hope alternating with despair.

[Illustration: CYRUS W. FIELD

(From a Photograph by Brady, taken in 1860)]

It was in writing of this time that a friend said:

    "To Mr. Field and those who had labored with him for so long a
    period the blow came with redoubled force. The work had to be
    commenced afresh; and Mr. Field felt that an arduous duty devolved
    upon him, that of trying to infuse fresh courage into some of his
    friends, to overcome the doubts of others, and to fight against the
    persistent efforts of the enemies of the enterprise to injure it in
    every possible way. His faith in its ultimate success was still
    unshaken, his confidence unbounded, and his determination to carry
    it to completion as firm as ever."

On December 15, 1858, Archbishop Hughes wrote:

    "Our cable is dumb for the present; but no matter, the glory of
    having laid it in the depths of the ocean is yours, and it is not
    the less whether the stockholders receive interest or not. At
    present you have no rival claimant for the glory of the project."

It was in strange contrast with the rejoicing so soon over that the gold
snuff-box and the freedom of the city were received with this note:

"MAYOR'S OFFICE,
"NEW YORK, _2d August, 1859_.

    "The Mayor of New York has the pleasure to transmit to Cyrus W.
    Field, Esq., of New York, the address and testimonials voted him by
    the City of New York on the 1st day of September last, in
    commemoration of the esteem in which his services were held on the
    occasion of laying the Atlantic telegraph cable connecting Europe
    with America."

"DANIEL F. TIEMANN."



In May, 1859, we find him in London, and on June 8th at the meeting of
the Atlantic Telegraph Company, when it was decided to raise L600,000
with which to lay another cable, and, if possible, repair the old one.
He was in New York on the 29th of December, 1859, and it was then that
his office, 57 Beekman Street, was burned. Among his papers this
mention is made: "The fire which made the closing days of 1859 so black
with disaster broke out in a building adjoining Mr. Field's warehouse,
which destroyed that and several others. Mr. Field's store was full of
goods and was entirely consumed, and the loss beyond that covered by
insurance was $40,000." The evening papers of that day gave an account
of the fire, and at the same time published a card from Mr. Field
stating that he had rented another office, and that his business would
go on without interruption.

Up to January, 1860, only L72,000 had been subscribed towards the new
stock of the company, and the directors were discouraged at the lack of
interest shown in the effort they were making to secure funds with which
to lay another cable across the Atlantic. The government had guaranteed
the Red Sea cable and it had failed, and for that reason it refused the
same aid to the Atlantic Telegraph Company, although the two messages
sent on August 31, 1858, had prevented the expenditure of from L40,000
to L50,000, as that was the amount that would have been required to move
the two regiments that had been ordered from Canada to India. The report
to the stockholders on the 29th of February told of the attempt made to
raise the shore end of the cable in Trinity Bay, and added:

    "But then a circumstance occurred which is extremely encouraging.
    Notwithstanding that he (Captain Bell) was in one hundred and
    seventy-five fathoms, he found no difficulty in grappling the cable
    again, and he raised it once more in the course of half an hour."

This is the first time that it has been suggested that a cable might be
grappled for.

A bit of home life is recalled by this letter:

"STOCKBRIDGE, _March 3, 1859_.

    "_Dear Son Cyrus_,--If the weather be fair next Monday morning your
    parents design to start for New York on a visit to all our
    relations, and to as many of our other numerous friends there as we
    can well see.

    "I believe Mrs. Brewer and Master Freddy are expected to be with
    us.

    "Love to all inquiring friends. Cold weather is here, but general
    health and prosperity prevails.

    "Love to all inquirers.

"DAVID D. FIELD."



Mr. Seward's letter, which follows, is evidently in answer to one
written by Mr. Field in which he had expressed regret that the
nomination at Chicago had not been given to the candidate of the New
York delegation:

"AUBURN, _July 13, 1860_.

    "_My dear Friend_,--Your considerate letter was not necessary, and
    yet was very welcome. A thousand thanks for it. I do not care to
    dwell on personal interests. They are, I think, not paramount with
    me. But if I even were so ambitious, I am not like to be altogether
    successful. If the alternative were presented to a wise man, he
    might well seek rather to have his countrymen regret that he had
    not been, president than to be president.

"Faithfully yours,
"WILLIAM H. SEWARD.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



Mr. Field's recovery after the suspension of his firm in 1857 was much
more rapid than from his previous failure in business. In 1859 this was
published in one of the New York papers:

    "We are pleased to learn that the house of Cyrus W. Field & Co.,
    which suspended payment in the fall of 1857, during the absence of
    Mr. Field in England (on business connected with the Atlantic
    Telegraph Company) have recently taken up nearly all their extended
    paper, the payment of which is not due until October next, and have
    now notified the holders of the balance that they are prepared to
    cash the whole amount, less the legal interest, on presentation.
    This evidence of prosperity must be gratifying to their numerous
    friends."

The city of New York during October, 1860, was entirely given up to the
thought of entertaining the Prince of Wales, and it was of his visit
that Mr. Archibald wrote:

"BRITISH CONSULATE,
"NEW YORK, _October 20, 1860_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field,_--I have really been so pressed with arrears
    of business since my return on Wednesday evening, and still am,
    that I am obliged to say in writing briefly that which I should
    prefer to do personally, how much indebted I feel to you for your
    valuable and kind assistance to me during the prince's visit; and
    especially on Sunday last in reference to the matter of the _Daniel
    Drew_....

    "The reception which the prince has received in this country has
    not only immensely gratified himself and all his suite, as it was
    well calculated to do; but it will, I am sure, create in England a
    profound feeling of admiration for and of gratitude towards this
    country, the effect of which I cannot but think will be very
    beneficial to the future of both countries.

    "Although I was sorry to part from the prince on Wednesday, I
    cannot tell you with what a feeling of relief it was from the deep
    anxiety of which I could not divest myself during his stay here,
    lest any untoward event should mar the happiness or interfere with
    the safety of himself in a community composed of such heterogeneous
    elements. The responsibility in such an event would have centred on
    myself, as Lord Lyons never having been in New York, the visit to
    this city was determined on in pursuance of my representations. I
    thank God it is all so well and so happily over, and so vastly more
    successful than I had anticipated, or than any of us indeed had
    expected.

    "Again thanking you for your many kindnesses, I am,

"My dear sir, yours faithfully,
"E. M. ARCHIBALD."



The rejoicing was followed by days of depression and darkness. A
financial panic again swept over the country, and on December 7th Mr.
Field writes: "Made a hard fight, but was obliged to suspend payment."
On the 27th he addressed a letter to his creditors. After giving a brief
summary of his business experience, he said:

    "Such a series of misfortunes is not often experienced by a single
    firm, at least in such rapid succession, and is quite sufficient to
    explain the present position of my affairs. Against all these
    losses I have struggled, and until within a few weeks hoped
    confidently to be able to weather all difficulties. But you know
    how suddenly the late panic has come upon us. We found it
    impossible to make collections. The suspension of several houses,
    whose paper we held to a large amount, added to our embarrassment.

    "Thus, receiving almost nothing and obliged to pay our own notes
    and those of others, we found it impossible to go on without
    calling in the aid of private friends, and running the risk of
    involving them, a risk which I believe it morally wrong to take.

    "I thought it more manly and more honorable to call this meeting of
    my creditors to lay before them a full statement of my affairs, and
    to ask their advice as to the course which I ought to take.

    "Thus, gentlemen, you have the whole case before you, and I leave
    it to you to decide what I ought to do.

    "My only wish is, so far as I am able, to pay you to the uttermost
    farthing. I shall most cheerfully give up to you every dollar of
    property I have in the world; and I ask only to be released that I
    may feel free from a load of debt, and can go to work again to
    regain what I have lost.

    "It is for you now to decide what course justice and right require
    me to pursue."

His creditors accepted twenty-five cents on the dollar, and preferred to
have him manage his affairs rather than "place all in the hands of a
trustee or trustees;" but in order to make this payment and also the
amount then due upon the stock he had subscribed to in the New York,
Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company and in the Atlantic Telegraph
Company, he placed a mortgage upon everything he owned, including the
portraits of his father and mother.

His assets then were:

    House and furniture, 123 East Twenty-first Street (heavily
    mortgaged).

    Pew in the Madison Square Presbyterian Church.

    Stock in the New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company.

    Stock in the Atlantic Telegraph Company.

And against these a large amount of indebtedness.

On the 20th of December South Carolina seceded, and on the 26th of the
same month Major Anderson abandoned Fort Moultrie, and moved his small
garrison into Fort Sumter, and the first notes of the coming war were
sounded; to quote from Dr. William H. Russell's book on _The Atlantic
Telegraph_:

    "The great civil war in America stimulated capitalists to renew the
    attempt; the public mind became alive to the importance of the
    project, and to the increased facilities which promised a
    successful issue. Mr. Field, who compassed land and sea
    incessantly, pressed his friends on both sides of the Atlantic for
    aid, and agitated the question in London and New York."




CHAPTER IX

THE CIVIL WAR

(1861-1862)


December, 1860, had ended in financial disaster: it was the third time
in less than twenty years that Mr. Field had seen his business swept
from him, and yet he was of so buoyant a disposition that immediately we
find him back at his office and very soon at work for the advancement of
his great enterprise. On June 10th he wrote to Mr. Saward:

    "I never had more confidence in the ultimate success of the
    Atlantic Telegraph Company than I have to-day."

And Mr. Saward wrote to him on July 5th:

    "Vast improvements in everything relating to the structure of
    telegraph cables are constantly being made, and inquiry upon the
    subject is very active. We are becoming much more hopeful of a good
    time for the Atlantic company.

    "Two very favorable events for telegraphy have taken place this
    week. First, Glass, Elliott & Co. have laid without any check or
    hitch, in a very perfect condition, a cable for the French
    government between Toulon and the island of Corsica; and, second,
    the same firm have completed in precisely the same state of
    efficiency two-thirds of a line between Malta and Alexandria for
    the use of the English government; as the remainder is all shallow
    water, the event is certain."

After the civil war began he was often in Washington, and he was
untiring in his devotion to his country, and we find him in
correspondence with the Secretary of State, the Secretary of the
Treasury, and with others in official positions.

June 11, 1861, he wrote to Colonel Thomas A. Scott, then Assistant
Secretary of War, at Willard's Hotel, Washington, D. C.:

    "Pardon me for repeating in this letter some of the suggestions
    which I made to the President, yourself, and other members of the
    Cabinet during my late visit to Washington;

    "1. The government to immediately seize all the despatches on file
    in the telegraph offices which have been sent from Washington,
    Baltimore, Wilmington, Philadelphia, New York, Hartford, Boston,
    and other cities within the last six months, as I feel confident
    they will on examination prove many persons not now suspected to
    have been acting as spies and traitors.

    "2. The government to establish as soon as possible telegraphic
    communication, by means of submarine cables, between some of our
    principal ports on the sea-board and the nearest telegraph line
    communicating with Washington, so that the department can almost
    instantly communicate with the commanding officer at any particular
    point desired.

    "3. In each department of the government to adopt a cipher with its
    confidential agent at important points of the country, so that they
    can communicate confidentially by telegraph.

    "I consider it very important that the government should have the
    most reliable telegraph communication with its principal forts on
    the Atlantic coast.

    "If there is any information that I possess that would be of
    service to you in carrying out the wishes of the government in
    regard to telegraph matters it will afford me pleasure to give it.

    "I presume you are aware that there are very few persons in this
    country who have had any experience in the manufacture, working, or
    laying of submarine cables of any great importance.

"Very respectfully
"Your obedient servant,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



June 16th, while in Washington, he received a pass "beyond the pickets
and to return, good for five days." On July 30th he wrote to Captain G.
V. Fox, of the Navy Department:

    "In a letter I wrote the Secretary of the Treasury on the 11th of
    May last I used these words, viz.: 'For the government to send at
    once a confidential agent to England, with a competent naval
    officer, to obtain from the British government by purchase, or
    otherwise, some of the improved steam gun-boats and other vessels
    to protect our commerce and to assist in blockading Southern
    ports.'"

It was at this time that his firm in New York wrote to him that a debt
of $1800 had been paid and that $1000 was in silver. Such a payment
would hardly be appreciated now.

His mother's death, on the evening of Friday, August the 16th, was made
known to those living in the village of Stockbridge, according to the
custom of that time, by the tolling of the church-bell. After that six
strokes were given to show that a woman had died, nine would have been
struck for a man, or three for a child. Her age was then slowly rung,
and as one year after another was recorded, each brought back to her
family the joy or sorrow with which that year had been filled.

Her funeral was on Sunday, the 18th. A number of her friends among the
elderly ladies of the town acted as pall-bearers, and another custom
then observed was for the officiating clergyman, after the grave had
been filled--and every one waited until that was done--to return thanks
in the name of the family to all who had shown them kindness and
sympathy in their bereavement. Of her funeral the Rev. John Todd, of
Pittsfield, Mass., wrote:

    "At the gateway of one of our beautiful rural cemeteries a large
    funeral was just entering.... The bier was resting on the shoulders
    of four tall, noble-looking men in the prime of life.... Very
    slowly and carefully they trod, as if the sleeper should not feel
    the motion. And who was on the bier, so carefully and tenderly
    borne? It was their own mother. Never did I see a grief more
    reverent or respect more profound."

A few days later Mr. Field wrote to a friend, on the death of a child:

    "Having myself experienced such a calamity, I can judge of your
    feelings, and most sincerely sympathize with you and your good wife
    on this melancholy occasion. I hope you will both bear it with
    Christian fortitude, _for it is God's will_, and no doubt for some
    wise purpose."

Referring to his life-work, on October 23d he writes:

    "Who first conceived the idea of a telegraph across the Atlantic I
    know not. It may have been before I was born.

    "I have made twenty-four sea voyages solely for the purpose of
    connecting Europe and America by telegraph, and although the cable
    laid is not now in operation, the experience gained will, I doubt
    not, be the means of causing another cable to be submerged that
    will successfully connect Newfoundland and Ireland."

At 10 P.M. on October 26th this message from San Francisco was received:

"CYRUS W. FIELD, New York:

    "The Pacific telegraph calls the Atlantic cable.

"A. W. BEE."



He replied:

    "Your message received. The Atlantic cable is not dead, but
    sleepeth. In due time it will answer the call of the Pacific
    telegraph."

On October 29th, in a letter to a friend in Newfoundland:

    "There is now a very much increased interest being felt here in the
    importance of an early laying of another Atlantic cable from
    Ireland to Newfoundland, thus connecting Europe, Asia, Africa, and
    America.

    "I hope in a few days to have arrangements made so that we may on
    some given evening connect the lines between St. John's and San
    Francisco together, and by means of relays speak directly through,
    between these two points, a distance by the telegraph of over 5000
    miles."

Neither did he neglect his private business. On December 3d, within a
year of his failure, he was able to write:

    "All of our extension notes due on the 30th of September last were
    duly paid, and we have already taken up all that will be due on the
    30th of this month with the exception of $14,992 78, and all that
    are due on the 30th of March next except $326 40. You will see that
    we have reduced our liabilities to a very small amount, and we
    shall meet them all promptly at or before maturity."

He was so very exact in all his work that he could not understand the
lack of like exactitude in others. To one who failed to answer a letter
he sent this note:

    "_My dear Sir_,--If it takes four weeks _not_ to get an answer to a
    letter, how long will it take to get one?

    "I have not received a reply to my letter of November 4th.

    "I remain, very truly your friend,

"CYRUS W. FIELD.

"_December 2d._"



The news of the seizure of Mason and Slidell by Captain Wilkes, from the
steamer _Trent_, was received in Boston on November 24th, and at once he
saw another reason for urging the immediate laying of a cable across the
Atlantic, and in a letter to Mr. Saward he says:

    "The low rate of interest now ruling in Great Britain, and the
    great desire of the British government to have telegraphic
    communication with her North American colonies, both indicate that
    _now_ is the time to move energetically in the matter of connecting
    Newfoundland and Ireland by a submarine cable."

And on the 17th of December:

    "It does appear to me that now is the time for the directors of the
    Atlantic Telegraph Company to act with energy and decision, and get
    whatever guarantee is necessary from the English government to
    raise the capital to manufacture and lay down without unnecessary
    delay between Newfoundland and Ireland a good cable."

General T. W. Sherman had written to him from Port Royal on December
21st:

    "It was but the other day I was discussing the very subject you
    mention. We want very much a telegraphic communication between
    Beaufort, Hilton Head, and the Tybee. How can we get it promptly?"

This was in reply to a letter of Mr. Field's in which he had enclosed a
copy of the following letter and its indorsement:

"WILLARD'S HOTEL,
"WASHINGTON, _December 4, 1861_.

    "_Sir_,--Pardon me for making the following suggestions:

    "1. That government establish at once telegraphic communication
    between Washington and Fortress Monroe by means of a submarine
    cable from Northampton County to Fortress Monroe.

    "2. That Forts Walker and Beauregard be connected by a submarine
    cable.

    "3. That a submarine cable be laid between Hilton Head and Tybee
    Island.

    "4. That the Forts at Key West and Tortugas be brought into instant
    communication by means of a telegraph cable.

    "5. That a cable be laid connecting the Fort at Tortugas with Fort
    Pickens.

    "If I can be of any service to you or the government in this matter
    it will give me pleasure.

    "I shall remain at this hotel until to-morrow afternoon or Friday
    morning, and have with me samples of different kinds of cable.

"Very respectfully,
"Your obedient servant,
"CYRUS W. FIELD.

"Major-General G. B. MCCLELLAN, Washington, D. C."



On the 12th of December General McClellan indorsed the plans with these
words:

    "I most fully concur in the importance of the submarine telegraph
    proposed by Mr. Field, and earnestly urge that his plans may be
    adopted and be authorized to have the plans carried into execution.
    More careful consideration may show that a safer route for the
    cable from Fernandina to Key West would be by the eastern shore of
    Florida. This will depend on the strength of our occupation of the
    railroad from Fernandina to Cedar Keys.

"Very respectfully, etc.,
"GEORGE B. MCCLELLAN."



This expression is copied from a letter dated London, December 28, 1861:
"The rebels are waiting with great anxiety for the arrival of the
steamer _Africa_ and her news about the _Trent_ affair."

On January 1, 1862, he wrote to Mr. Seward, the Secretary of State:

    "The importance of the early completion of the Atlantic telegraph
    can hardly be estimated. What would have been its value to the
    English and United States governments if it had been in operation
    on the 30th of November last, on which day Earl Russell was writing
    to Lord Lyons, and you at the same time to Mr. Adams, our minister
    in London?

    "A few short messages between the two governments and all would
    have been satisfactorily explained. I have no doubt that the
    English government has expanded more money during the last thirty
    days in preparation for war with this country than the whole cost
    of manufacturing and laying a good cable between Newfoundland and
    Ireland.

    "At this moment you can telegraph from St. John's, Newfoundland, to
    every town of importance in British North America and to all the
    principal cities in the loyal States, even to San Francisco, on the
    Pacific, a distance by the route of the telegraph of over
    fifty-four hundred miles. From Valentia, in Ireland, there is also
    now telegraph communication with all the capitals of Europe, and to
    Algiers, in Africa, about twenty-one hundred miles; to Odessa, on
    the Black Sea, twenty-nine hundred and forty miles; to
    Constantinople, thirty-one hundred and fifty miles, and to Omsk, in
    Siberia, about five thousand miles.

    "All that is now required to connect Omsk, in Siberia, with San
    Francisco, California, on the Pacific, and all intermediate points,
    is a telegraph cable from Valentia Island to Newfoundland, a
    distance of sixteen hundred and forty nautical miles.

    "What could the governments of Great Britain and the United States
    do so effectually to bind the two countries in bonds of amity and
    interest as to complete at the earliest possible moment this
    connecting link between the two countries?...

    "Will you pardon me for suggesting to you the propriety of opening
    a correspondence with the English government upon the subject, and
    proposing that the Atlantic Telegraph Company should be aided or
    encouraged to complete their line, and that the two governments
    should enter into a treaty that in case of any war between them the
    cable should not be molested?"

Mr. Seward answered on January 9th:

    "Your letter of the 1st instant relative to the Atlantic telegraph
    was duly received; it will afford me pleasure to confer with you on
    that subject at any time you may present yourself for that
    purpose."

In a letter written by Mr. Seward on the 14th of January to Mr. Adams in
London he said:

    "In view of the recent disturbances of feeling in Great Britain
    growing out of the _Trent_ affair, we have some apprehensions that
    our motives in opening a correspondence upon the subject of the
    telegraph just now might be misinterpreted....

    "If you think wisely of it you are authorized to call the attention
    of Earl Russell to the matter.... You may say to him that the
    President entertains the most favorable views of the great
    enterprise in question, and would be happy to co-operate with the
    British government in securing its successful execution and such
    arrangements as would guarantee to both nations reciprocal benefits
    from the use of the telegraphs, not only in times of peace, but
    even in times of war, if, contrary to our desire and expectation,
    and to the great detriment of both nations, war should ever arise
    between them."

Mr. Field sailed for England in the steamer _Arabia_ on January 29th,
and on February 27th, at the request of Mr. Adams, sent a long letter to
Earl Russell. To this letter Earl Russell replied, and appointed
Tuesday, March 4th, at half-past three, as the time at which he would
receive him at the Foreign Office.

On March 6th he again wrote to Earl Russell, entering into details, and
at the end of his letter he referred to the two messages that were in
1858 sent for the English government, and said:

    "I enclose for your information a certificate from the War Office
    that this business was properly and promptly executed. The
    experimental cable which effected for them this communication has
    cost the original shareholders L162,000, which sum has been
    unremunerative during six years. They ask no advantage in respect
    of that from either government, being quite content to risk the
    sacrifice of the whole amount if the means be now granted them for
    raising, by new subscriptions, the means of carrying out to a
    successful issue the great work intrusted to them."

March 10th Earl Russell wrote that Her Majesty's government "have come
to the conclusion that it would be more prudent for the present to defer
entering into any fresh agreement on so difficult a subject."

It was at this time that Mr. George Saward published the article in _The
Electrician_ already referred to, and in it he said:

    "Mr. Field has crossed the Atlantic twenty-five times on behalf of
    the great enterprise to which he has vowed himself. He has labored
    more than any other individual in this important cause, and he has
    never asked the Atlantic Telegraph Company for one shilling
    remuneration for his valuable services, which he was in no way
    bound to render them; nay more, whenever an offer of compensation
    was made to him he refused it."

Professor Thomson, now Lord Kelvin, wrote in March of this year these
words of encouragement:

    "If any degree of perseverance can be sufficient to deserve
    success, and any amount of value in any object can make it worth
    striving for, success ought to attend the efforts you and the
    directors are making for a result of world-wide beneficence."

The account that follows has been given to show some of the petty
annoyances to which from time to time Mr. Field was subjected. He
arrived in New York on Friday, April 11, 1862, having come in the
steamship _Asia_. Early in the day the ship was reported, but it was
evening before he came to his home, and then he remained but a short
time with his family. In a letter written to a friend in England on
April 15th he says:

    "I found my family all in good health and spirits, and after
    spending about two hours with them and other friends at my house,
    left for Washington, which place I reached soon after nine o'clock
    on Saturday morning.... During my absence in Europe some parties
    here, acting, as I believe, in concert with enemies in England,
    have been doing all in their power to injure me on both sides of
    the Atlantic, but without success."

And in another letter he says:

    "I have obtained a large amount of information about this wicked
    conspiracy to injure me in Europe and in this country. Mr. Seward
    and other members of the government have acted in the most
    honorable manner, and defeated the plans of wicked men."

To Mr. Chase he wrote:

    "I lose no time in acquainting you with the circumstances and of
    laying the correspondence before you. Pray tell me if they are
    satisfactory to you. I do not know by whom, or where, the goods
    were arrested."

As far as it is possible to ascertain at this late day he had included
in the correspondence forwarded to Washington an article which had been
written in New York on January 18th, and said to have been shown to the
New York press, but never published. It appeared in the London _Herald_
of February 4th, and was signed "Manhattan." There were also letters in
the London _Standard_ and _Herald_ of March 29th dated New York, March
11th, stating that the Grand Jury had met and presented a bill of
indictment against Cyrus W. Field for "treasonable proceedings with the
public enemy."

In a letter written on April 17th are these few words:

    "The editor of the London _Herald_ has made an apology in his
    paper, as I am informed by telegrams from Halifax."

And again:

    "I have not yet been able to ascertain who made the complaint but
    no bill was found, and the Grand Jury have adjourned."

One of the Grand Jury writes:

    "I was a member of the United States Grand Jury in 1862. I remember
    that a complaint was brought to the attention of the jury.... I
    remember that some testimony was submitted to the jury, but upon
    the recommendation of the district attorney the matter was
    dropped."

Mr. Bates wrote to him:

"ATTORNEY-GENERAL'S OFFICE,
"WASHINGTON, D. C., _April 15, 1862_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., New York:

    "_Dear Sir_,--Your note of yesterday is just received, and upon
    reading the enclosures the affair (as far as it concerns you
    personally) looks rather like a stupid, practical joke.

    "Could the scheme have been meant as a blow at your business in
    Europe?

"Very respectfully yours,
"EDWARD BATES."



When on April 23d he received two more letters in the same handwriting,
one postmarked Springfield, Ill., April 18th, and the other Nashville,
Tenn., April 19th, and evidently designed "to entrap him," he wrote at
once to Mr. Chase:

    "I propose to take no further notice of them than to place copies
    in your possession and in the hands of the Attorney-General, that
    such action may be taken in regard to them as may be deemed
    necessary."

After this there was no further suggestion of trouble.

This very characteristic business note was found among his papers of
this year:

    "As we are all liable to be called away by death at any time, I
    should esteem it a favor if you would indorse the amount paid you
    by C. W. Field & Co. on the 5th instant, on my bond, and send the
    same to my office, as you proposed."

It was on May 1st that he addressed the American Geographical and
Statistical Society, and it is possible to make but a short extract from
his speech:

    "The London _Times_ said truly: 'We nearly went to war with America
    because we had not a telegraph across the Atlantic.' It is at such
    a moment that England feels the need of communicating with her
    colonies on this side of the ocean. And here I may mention a fact
    not generally known--that, during the excitement of the _Trent_
    affair a person connected with the English government applied to
    Messrs. Glass, Elliott & Co., of London, to know for what sum they
    would manufacture a cable and lay it across the Atlantic; to which
    they replied that they would both manufacture and lay it down for
    L675,000, and that it should be in full operation by the 12th day
    of July of this year. Well might England afford to pay the whole
    cost of such a work; for in sixty days' time she expended more
    money in preparation for war with this country than the whole cost
    of manufacturing and laying several good cables between
    Newfoundland and Ireland."

On his return he had found that the feeling against England was very
intense, and on April 29th he wrote to Mr. Thurlow Weed, who was in
London:

    "I regret exceedingly to find a most bitter feeling in this country
    against England. Mr. Seward is almost the only American that I have
    heard speak kindly of England or Englishmen since I arrived."

And to Mr. Seward his next letter is addressed:

"NEW YORK, _May 5, 1862_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--Yesterday I received a letter from our mutual
    friend C. M. Lampson, Esq., from London, April 17th, in which he
    says: 'Our letter has been before Lord Palmerston for more than a
    fortnight, and as yet have had no answer; he is now out of town for
    the Easter holidays, and we cannot have a reply for another
    fortnight. If we are to make sufficient progress to enable us to do
    the work in 1863, it will be only in consequence of the pressure
    you bring to bear on your side. This is our only hope for the
    present. If the Washington government would direct Mr. Adams to
    press the matter here, I think we should succeed.' It has occurred
    to me that, considering the great importance to the whole
    commercial interest of the country of a telegraph across the
    Atlantic, you would be willing to act on the suggestion of Mr.
    Lampson and direct Mr. Adams to press the matter upon the English
    government.

"With much respect, I remain
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD.

"Hon. WM. H. SEWARD, Secretary of State,
"Washington, D. C."



Mr. Lampson, in his letter of April 17th, had referred to a deputation
of the directors of the Atlantic Telegraph Company that on the 20th of
March had waited upon Lord Palmerston, who was then Prime-Minister.

Mr. Field replied:

"NEW YORK, _May 9, 1862_.

    "_My dear Mr. Lampson_,--.... Four weeks ago this evening I arrived
    from England, and almost every moment of my time since I landed has
    been occupied in working for the Atlantic Telegraph, either in
    seeing the President of the United States, or one of his Cabinet,
    or some member of the Senate or House of Representatives, or an
    editor of one of our papers, or writing to the British provinces,
    or doing something which I thought would hasten on the time when we
    should have a good submarine telegraph cable working successfully
    between Ireland and Newfoundland, and if _we do not get it laid in
    1863 it will be our own fault_.

    "_Now, now_ is the golden moment, and I do beg of you and all the
    other friends of the Atlantic telegraph to act without a moment's
    unnecessary delay.

    "I have written you and Mr. Saward so often since my arrival that I
    am afraid you will get tired of reading my letters; but from the
    abundance of the heart the mouth will speak, and I hardly think of
    anything but a telegraph across the Atlantic.

Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



Again on May 29th to Mr. Lampson:

    "I am disappointed at the answer received from Lord Palmerston, but
    not discouraged the least by it, for we can succeed without further
    assistance from either government, as I believe that an appeal to
    the public will _now_ get us all the money that we want, provided
    the business is pressed forward in a proper manner."

It was on the 7th of this month that he wrote to his brother Jonathan:

    "You will be glad to know that we have gotten all of our old
    matters settled."

From the first days of the war he had urged the necessity for accurate
despatches being sent out by each steamer; and one very hot July morning
of this summer he went up from Long Branch solely for the purpose of
seeing that the steamer, sailing the next morning, carried favorable
news of the movements of our armies.

With our purses full of change it is hard to realize that in October,
1862, it was almost impossible to secure even postal currency, and that
one of Mr. Field's clerks, after waiting four hours at the Sub-Treasury,
was able to obtain but $15.

Again he writes to Mr. Saward:

    "I sail per _Scotia_ on Wednesday, the 8th of October, and expect
    to arrive at Liverpool Saturday, the 18th, and get to London the
    same evening.

    "If agreeable to you, I will call at your house Sunday morning, go
    with you to hear the Rev. Mr. Spurgeon preach, and dine with you at
    two o'clock.

    "Monday morning, October 20th, I hope that we will be ready to go
    to work in earnest, and have _all_ of the stock for a new cable
    subscribed within one month, and our other arrangements so
    perfected that I can at an early day return to my family and
    country."

He never lost sight of an opportunity for helping his country. On
November 1st Lord Shaftesbury thanks him for the "documents" he had sent
to him. On November 25th his friend the Hon. Stewart Wortley writes:

    "Mr. Gladstone has fixed twelve o'clock to-morrow, in Carlton House
    Terrace. I have promised him that we would not ask him for
    anything, but that I believed you had some confidential
    communication to give him on the views of your government. Till I
    told him this he was very unwilling to listen to anything that was
    not contained in a written proposal."

It was on this day or the next that Mr. Field gave to Mr. Gladstone to
read _Thirteen Months in a Rebel Prison_. Mr. McCarthy, in his _History
of Our Own Times_, says: "It was Mr. Gladstone who said that the
President of the Southern Confederation, Mr. Jefferson Davis, had made
an army, had made a navy, and, more than that, had made a nation."

It was this sentiment that its author developed in the deeply
interesting correspondence which follows. This correspondence is of the
utmost value as elucidating the state of mind of the liberal Englishmen
from whom this country expected the sympathy it in so many cases failed
to receive, and very notably failed to receive from the statesman who
for more than a generation has been their intellectual and Parliamentary
leader.

"11 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE,
"_November 27, 1862_.

    "My dear Sir,--I thank you very much for giving me the _Thirteen
    Months_. Will you think that I belie the expression I have used if
    I tell you candidly the effect this book has produced upon my mind?
    I think you will not; I do not believe that you or your countrymen
    are among those who desire that any one should purchase your favor
    by speaking what is false, or by forbearing to speak what is true.
    The book, then, impresses me even more deeply than I was before
    impressed with the heavy responsibility you incur in persevering
    with this destructive and hopeless war at the cost of such dangers
    and evils to yourselves, to say nothing of your adversaries, or of
    an amount of misery inflicted upon Europe such as no other civil
    war in the history of man has ever brought upon those beyond its
    immediate range. Your frightful conflict may be regarded from many
    points of view. The competency of the Southern States to secede,
    the rightfulness of their conduct in seceding (two matters wholly
    distinct and a great deal too much confounded), the natural
    reluctance of Northern Americans to acquiesce in the severance of
    the Union, and the apparent loss of strength and glory to their
    country; the bearing of the separation on the real interests and on
    the moral character of the North; again, for an Englishman, its
    bearing with respect to British interests--all these are texts of
    which any one affords ample matter for reflection. But I will only
    state, as regards the last of them, that I, for one, have never
    hesitated to maintain that, in my opinion, the separate and special
    interests of England were all on the side of the maintenance of the
    old Union; and if I were to look at those interests alone, and had
    the power of choosing in what way the war should end, I would
    choose for its ending by the restoration of the old Union this very
    day. Another view of the matter not to be overlooked is its bearing
    on the interests of the black and colored race. I believe the
    separation to be one of the few happy events that have marked their
    mournful history; and although English opinion may be wrong upon
    this subject, yet it is headed by three men perhaps the best
    entitled to represent on this side of the water the old champions
    of the anti-slavery cause--Lord Brougham, the Bishop of Oxford, and
    Mr. Buxton.

    "But there is an aspect of the war which transcends every other:
    the possibility of success. The prospect of success will not
    justify a war in itself unjust, but the impossibility of success in
    a war of conquest of itself suffices to make it unjust; when that
    impossibility is reasonably proved, all the horror, all the
    bloodshed, all the evil passions, all the dangers to liberty and
    order with which such a war abounds, come to lie at the door of the
    party which refuses to hold its hand and let its neighbor be.

    "You know that in the opinion of Europe this impossibility has been
    proved. It is proved by every page of this book, and every copy of
    this book which circulates will carry the proof wider and stamp it
    more clearly. Depend upon it, to place the matter upon a single
    issue, you cannot conquer and keep down a country where the women
    behave like the women of New Orleans, where, as this author says,
    they would be ready to form regiments, if such regiments could be
    of use. And how idle it is to talk, as some of your people do, and
    some of ours, of the slackness with which the war has been carried
    on, and of its accounting for the want of success! You have no
    cause to be ashamed of your military character and efforts. You
    have proved what wanted no proof--your spirit, hardihood, immense
    powers, and rapidity and variety of resources. You have spent as
    much money, and have armed and perhaps have destroyed as many men,
    taking the two sides together, as all Europe spent in the first
    years of the Revolutionary war. Is not this enough? Why have you
    not more faith in the future of a nation which should lead for ages
    to come the American continent, which in five or ten years will
    make up its apparent loss or first loss of strength and numbers,
    and which, with a career unencumbered by the terrible calamity and
    curse of slavery, will even from the first be liberated from a
    position morally and incurably false, and will from the first enjoy
    a permanent gain in credit and character such as will much more
    than compensate for its temporary material losses? I am, in short,
    a follower of General Scott. With him I say, 'Wayward sisters, go
    in peace.' Immortal fame be to him for his wise and courageous
    advice, amounting to a prophecy.

    "Finally, you have done what men could do; you have failed because
    you resolved to do what men could not do.

    "Laws stronger than human will are on the side of earnest
    self-defence; and the aim at the impossible, which in other things
    may be folly only, when the path of search is dark with misery and
    red with blood, is not folly only, but guilt to boot. I should not
    have used so largely in this letter the privileges of free
    utterance had I not been conscious that I vie with yourselves in my
    admiration of the founders of your republic, and that I have no
    lurking sentiment either of hostility or of indifference to
    America; nor, I may add, even then had I not believed that you
    are lovers of sincerity, and that you can bear even the rudeness of
    its tongue.

"I remain, dear sir, very faithfully yours,
"W. E. GLADSTONE.

"CYRUS FIELD, Esq."



[Illustration: LAST TWO PAGES OF LETTER FROM MR. GLADSTONE, DATED
NOVEMBER 27, 1862. [See pp. 146-149.]]

"PALACE HOTEL, BUCKINGHAM GATE,
"LONDON, _December 2, 1862_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--Your letter of the 27th ultimo was duly received,
    and for it please accept my thanks.

    "I should have answered your letter at once, but I have been trying
    to find in London some documents to send you, for I am sure that if
    you have facts you will draw correct conclusions from them.

    "As I have not been able to obtain the papers that I want, I will
    send them to you on my return to New York.

    "I hope that you will get time to read the small book called _Among
    the Pines_, which I left at your house last Friday.

    "May I send a copy of your letter to Mr. Seward at Washington and
    my brother in New York?

"With much respect I remain
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD.

"Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE."



"11 DOWNING STREET, WHITEHALL,
"_December 2, 1862_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--I thank you for the kind reception you have given
    to my officious letter.

    "You are quite at liberty to make any use of it which you think
    proper except publication, which you would not think of, and I
    should deprecate simply on account of the tone of assumption with
    which I might appear to be chargeable.

    "I thank you very much for _Among the Pines_, which I am reading
    with great interest.

    "I am glad to find you are going to Cliveden, and I am sure you
    will enjoy your visit.

"Believe me, my dear sir,
"Most faithfully yours,
"W. E. GLADSTONE.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



And again he wrote:

"11 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE,
"_December 9, 1862_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--I have again to thank you for _Among the Pines_, a
    most interesting and, as far as I can judge, a most truthful work.
    It seems to open to view more aspects of society and character in
    the slave States than _Uncle Tom's Cabin_, and to be written
    without any undue and bewildering predominance of imagination.

    "I need not here stop even for a moment on the ground of
    controversy. We all vie with one another in fervently desiring that
    the Almighty may so direct the issue of the present crisis as to
    make it effective for the mitigation and even for the removal of a
    system which ever tends to depress the blacks into the condition of
    the mere animal, and which among the whites at once gives fearful
    scope to the passions of bad men and checks and mars the
    development of character in good ones.

"I remain, dear sir,
"Most faithfully yours,
"W. E. GLADSTONE.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



A very decided trait of Mr. Field was that when any business enterprise
was proposed he planned every detail, drew up statements, and asked for
statistics, and tried to determine the amount of work that it would be
possible to accomplish, and for that reason it does not surprise us that
before the money for the new cable was subscribed or the contracts
signed he wrote to Mr. Reuter, and received this reply:

"REUTER'S TELEGRAPH OFFICE,
"LONDON, _November 19, 1862_.

    "_Dear Sir_,--I have received your letter of the 18th inst.,
    wherein you ask whether I consider that a single wire from Ireland
    to Newfoundland would be sufficient, and what amount of business I
    think I should send through an Atlantic cable the first year.

    "In reply to the first inquiry I should say from my own experience
    that a single telegraph wire between Ireland and Newfoundland would
    by no means be sufficient to meet the requirements of the public.

    "With respect to the amount of business I might send through the
    new line I cannot, of course, speak positively, but believe I can
    say that for the first year it would certainly not be less than
    L5000.

"I remain, dear sir,
"Faithfully yours,
"JULIUS REUTER.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



At this time no one at all realized the amount of work that the small
wire would be called upon to do. Sixteen months after it was laid, on
the 2d of December, 1867, Mr. Field telegraphed to London that Mr.
Bennett was willing to sign a contract with the cable company for one
year, and that he would pay for political and general news $3750 a
month--that is, L9000 a year--and the agreement was to begin at once or
on the 1st of January, 1868.

The invitation to Cliveden to which Mr. Gladstone referred was given by
the Dowager Duchess of Sutherland, and this visit, early in December,
was followed by many others, and the friendship then formed lasted as
long as she lived.

He sailed for home on December 20th, and before he left England he sent
this letter:

"PALACE HOTEL,
"LONDON, _November 22, 1862_.

    "_My dear Daughters_,--Many, many thanks to you for all the letters
    that you have written to me since we parted at our happy home.

    "I think I hear you say, Why does not papa answer all of our
    letters? The reason is that I am so much occupied that I have
    hardly one single moment of leisure. I am busy all day at the
    Atlantic Telegraph Company's office; or at Messrs. Glass, Elliott
    & Co.'s; or at the Gutta-percha Company's works; or with some
    persons connected with the English government; and almost every
    evening I am engaged until a very late hour.

    "I will give you a list of my engagements for the next few
    evenings:

    1. Saturday, November 22d.--At Mr. Russell Sturgis's, to
    dinner and to spend the night.

    2. Sunday, November 23d.--At Mr. Russell Sturgis's, spend
    the day and night.

    3. Monday, November 24th.--Canning's, to dinner and spend
    the night.

    4. Tuesday, November 25th.--Meet Mr. Maitland and others
    on business, and then to Mr. Lampson to dinner, seven P.M.

    5. Wednesday, November 26th.--I give a dinner-party at
    this hotel.

    6. Thursday, November 27th.--At Mr. Gooch's, to dinner.

    7. Friday, November 28th.--Sir Culling Eardley's, to dinner
    and spend the night.

    8. Saturday, November 29th.--Lady Franklin's, to dinner.

    9. Sunday, November 30th.--Mr. Ashburner's, to dinner
    and spend the night.

    10. Monday, December 1st.--At Mr. Statham's, to dinner and
    spend the night.

    11. Tuesday, December 2d.--At Mr. Reuter's, to dinner and
    to spend the night.

    "Professor Wheatstone, Dr. Wallish, Captains Becher, Galton, and
    Bythesea, Mr. Adams, and Mr. Wortley are among the number that are
    to dine with me. There will be twelve in all.

    "How much I wish that I could have this dinner-party in our own
    home!

    "Several times since I arrived I have had three invitations for the
    same evening, and I _decline_ all that I can without injury to the
    object of my visit to England.

    "I have been very anxious to get through and leave here so as to be
    with you on Christmas, or certainly New-year's, but I do not see
    any prospect of being able to do so.

    "I have very often regretted that your mother or some of you were
    not with me.

    "Mr. Holbrooke returns in the _Scotia_ on the 6th of December, and
    will be able to tell you how I am. How much I wish that I could go
    with him!

    "Do, my dear children, be very kind to your blessed mother, and do
    everything in your power to make her happy.

    "I have purchased _all_ the things that you gave me a memorandum
    of, or have written me about.

    "Good-bye, my dear children, and may God bless you all.

    "With much love to your mother, Eddie, and Willie, and kind regards
    to all the servants,

"I remain, as ever,
"Your affectionate father,
"CYRUS W. FIELD.

    "Misses GRACE, ALICE, ISABELLA, and FANNY FIELD."




CHAPTER X

CAPITAL RAISED FOR THE MAKING OF A NEW CABLE--STEAMSHIP "GREAT EASTERN"
SECURED

(1863-1864)


On Sunday, January 4th, 1863, the steamer _Asia_ arrived in New York,
and Mr. Field writes that he had had a rough passage of fifteen days. On
January 27th, in a letter to Mr. Saward, he says: "The whole country is
in such a state of excitement in regard to the war that it is almost
impossible to get any one to talk for a single moment about telegraph
matters, but you may be sure that I shall do all that I can to obtain
subscriptions here." And in another letter: "Some days I have worked
from before eight in the morning until after ten at night to obtain
subscriptions to the Atlantic Telegraph Company."

Long afterwards he told how, during these years, he has often seen his
friends cross the street rather than have him stop them and talk on what
engrossed so much of his thoughts as were not given to his country. But
his love for his country was his master-passion, and only five days
after his arrival in New York he went to Washington to deliver a letter
that he had brought with him from Glass, Elliott & Co., in which they
repeat their offer to lay submarine cables connecting certain military
posts or points of strategic importance. He writes to this firm on
January 17th:

    "I went to Washington on January 9th, and the next day delivered
    your letter of December 19th to our government, and urged upon them
    the acceptance of your offer. I returned home on Sunday, and on
    Monday morning I received a telegram from the Navy Department
    requesting me to return immediately to Washington, which I did the
    next day."

The journey to Washington at this time was long and trying, and in
winter a very cold one, for it involved a ride of an hour across
Philadelphia in the street cars.

Mr. Gladstone, in writing from London on February 20th, again thanks Mr.
Field for books sent to him relating to the American war, and adds:

    "I hope I do not offend in expressing the humble desire that it may
    please the Almighty soon to bring your terrific struggle to an end,
    for all who know me know that if I entertain such a wish it is with
    a view to the welfare of all persons of the United States, in which
    I have ever taken the most cordial interest."

This letter of Mr. Bright's was written a week later:

"LONDON, _February 27, 1863_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--I have to thank you for forwarding to me Mr.
    Putnam's four handsome volumes of the _Record of the Rebellion_. I
    value the work highly, and have wished to have it. I shall write to
    Mr. Putnam to thank him for his most friendly and acceptable
    present.

    "We are impatient for news from your country. There is great effort
    without great result, and we fear the divisions in the North will
    weaken the government and stimulate the South. Sometimes of late I
    have seemed to fear anarchy in the North as much as rebellion in
    the South.

    "I hope my fears arise more from my deep interest in your conflict
    than from any real danger from the discordant elements among you.
    If there is not virtue enough among you to save the State, then
    has the slavery poison done its fearful work. But I will not
    despair. Opinion here has changed greatly. In almost every town
    great meetings are being held to pass resolutions in favor of the
    North, and the advocates of the South are pretty much put down.

    "This is a short and hasty note....

"Believe me always
"Very truly yours,
"JOHN BRIGHT."



On Wednesday, March 4th, he addressed the Chamber of Commerce. Mr. A. A.
Low offered a resolution expressing the confidence of the Chamber that a
cable could be laid across the Atlantic, and ended his speech in support
of it with these words:

    "Any one listening to Mr. Field as frequently and as attentively as
    I have with regard to this subject could not long entertain a doubt
    as to the success of the effort. He has studied it in all its
    bearings, and with the aid of the science and intelligence so
    readily at command on the other side of the ocean, where he has had
    the benefit of an experience far exceeding that of this country
    with regard to ocean telegraphs. I am confident that whatever
    hesitation may for a time retard the work, it will not be of that
    kind to defeat the enterprise. With regard to the argument that
    this telegraph is in the power of the English government, and that
    we would be debarred from its use in time of war, let it be borne
    in mind that it may be built by Great Britain without our
    co-operation. The English government is alive to all the great
    necessities of the day. I wish, indeed, our own were equally alive
    to the urgencies of the age.

    "The English government, as I said, is alive to all the great
    necessities of the times, and it will assuredly lay the telegraph,
    whether we work with it or not. If this government and people
    participate with the government and people of Great Britain in the
    work, it will be done under treaty stipulations which will secure
    to our country effectually great advantages and facilities. I have
    faith in Great Britain, and I believe if Great Britain enters into
    any compact with this country she will be true to her plighted
    faith. I have little fear on that score.... Our people ought not
    to be deterred by unworthy considerations from taking part in an
    enterprise called for by all the intelligence and wisdom of our
    times--such an enterprise as that now suggested. There is a risk
    which may well be incurred, in view of all the advantages the work
    presents. I, therefore, move the adoption of the resolution which I
    have had the honor to present."

The resolution was seconded by Mr. Cooper, and unanimously adopted.

On March 17th he addressed the produce merchants of New York, and on the
18th the Board of Brokers. It is quite impossible to give the names of
the persons, companies, or corporations to whom he wrote, or from whom
he solicited assistance, or the cities to which he went, making
speeches, and urging every one he saw to subscribe to the stock of the
new Atlantic cable, and early in June he was able to say: "The total
subscriptions in America to the Atlantic telegraph stock to date are
L66,615 sterling. Every single person in the United States and British
North American provinces that owns any of the old stock of the Atlantic
telegraph has shown his confidence in the enterprise by subscribing to
the stock."

These extracts are made from three letters written on March 24th, March
27th, and May 8th:

    "For the last three weeks I have devoted nearly my whole time to
    obtaining subscriptions to the Atlantic telegraph stock, and, when
    you consider the rate of exchange on England, I think you will say
    that we have done well. At all events, I have worked very hard,
    going from door to door."

    "I never worked so hard in all my life."

    "We must all work until the necessary capital is subscribed. Within
    the last two weeks I have travelled over fifteen hundred miles,
    visiting Albany, Buffalo, Boston, and Providence on business of
    the Atlantic telegraph, and I have promises of subscriptions from
    all these places."

The remarkable statement that follows is copied from a letter to Mr. C.
F. Varley, dated March 31, 1863:

    "There is a carriage-road all the way to California, and the mail
    is carried daily in wagons, and emigrants are constantly passing
    over the road alongside of which the telegraph line is built. The
    Indians are friendly and do not to injure the line."

The week before he sailed for England, on the 27th of May, he wrote a
letter to his firm and gave these directions:

    "During my absence in Europe you will please not sell any rags or
    paper manufacturers' stock except for cash, as in these times we
    had much better keep our goods than to sell them even on a few
    days' credit. Any manufacturer that is A No. 1 can get all the
    money he wants at interest, and will prefer to buy cheap for
    cash.... I would only purchase such papers as I wanted for
    immediate sales and could sell at a good profit."

Cyrus W. Field & Co. wrote on July 18th and gave their weekly statement,
and from the end of their letter this is copied:

    "Our books have been balanced for the six months by the following
    entries:

                PROFIT AND LOSS--CR.
 Merchandise                   $3,293 67
 58 Cliff Street               18,820 83
 Commission                       628 75
                               ---------
                                           $22,743 25

                 PROFIT AND LOSS--DR.
 Store expenses                $4,580 70
 Insurance                        123 99
 Interest                         964 86
 Advertising                       35 45
                               ---------
                                             5,705 00
                                           ----------
   Net profits for six months              $17,088 25



On the 1st of the month they had written:

    "Business has been almost entirely suspended for the last week on
    account of the great excitement arising from the rebel invasion of
    Pennsylvania.... Harrisburg, Baltimore, and Philadelphia are
    threatened by Lee."

And on the 15th:

    "Since our last letter a most fearful riot has broken out here in
    the city; it still continues, and business is almost entirely
    suspended."

This was the famous "draft riot" of New York, and it was brought near to
him; his house adjoined that of his brother David Dudley Field, whose
wife wrote:

    "My husband just got back in time to save, by prompt and vigorous
    action, our property. Our poor servants were terribly alarmed; they
    were threatened by incendiaries who warned them to leave the
    premises.... Think of one hundred and eighty soldiers sleeping in
    our stable, the officers being fed in the basement.... As the
    rioters approached our house they were met by a company of soldiers
    that Dudley had just sent for; their glittering bayonets and steady
    march soon sent them back before they had time to effect their
    demoniacal purpose."

In _Abraham Lincoln: a History_ we read that "The riots came to a bloody
close on the night of Thursday, the fourth day. A small detachment of
soldiers met the principal body of rioters at Third Avenue and
Twenty-first Street, killed thirteen, wounding eighteen more, and taking
some prisoners." This occurred within a square of Mr. Field's house, and
those who had been left in charge had not proved themselves very brave;
they fled from the house, leaving pictures, silver, and all valuables,
and took with them only a box of tea and a cat. The tea they thought
they would enjoy, and feared the cat might be lonely. The depression
felt in New York on July 1st, and mentioned in the letter written on
that day, was reported in England on the 16th, on which day the news
brought by the steamer _Bohemian_, was published, and those who
sympathized with the South were exultant, and were quite sure that the
steamer _Canada_, due on the 18th, would bring news of the utter defeat
of the Northern army under General Meade. The steamer did not arrive on
the day she was expected, and on the intervening Sunday he has said that
he was far too excited to think of going to church. Instead he hailed a
cab and drove to the house of Mr. Adams (then American minister in
London). Mr. Adams was at church. Next he stopped at the rooms of a
friend, and persuaded him, although he was in the midst of shaving, to
go with him to the city. They drove to Reuter's; the man in charge of
that office refused to answer any questions, saying that if he were to
do so he would lose his place; he was assured that if that proved to be
so he should immediately be given another place, and with an increase of
pay. These questions were then asked: "Is the steamer in from America?"
and "What is the price of gold in New York?" At last the wearied clerk
opened the door wide enough to say that "the steamer is in and gold is
131." This gave assurance of a victory for the North; and putting his
foot between the door and the jamb, Mr. Field refused to move it until
he was given every particular. "There has been a three days' fight at
Gettysburg; Lee has retreated into Virginia; Vicksburg has fallen."
Three cheers were given, and then three times three; they were hearty
and loud, and after that the one thought was to spread the good news as
rapidly as possible. First he made his way to Upper Portland Place,
where a message was left for Mr. Adams. Then he drove out of London, and
passed the afternoon in going to see his friends. He enjoyed very much
telling of the victory to those who rejoiced with him, but perhaps more
to those who, though Northerners by birth, were Southerners at heart,
and had not failed in the dark days just past to let him know that they
wished for a divided country. At one house in particular he entered
looking very depressed, and with a low voice asked if they had had the
news from Queenstown, and when the answer was "no" he read to them the
paper he carried in his hand. His appearance had deceived them, and they
had answered him smilingly, but their faces fell when they heard the
news, and as he drove from the house he waved the message at them and
called back, "Oh, you rebels! Oh, you rebels!"

Mr. Bright wrote on August 7th:

    "From the tone of the Southern papers and the spasms of the New
    York _Herald_ I gather that the struggle is approaching an end, and
    the conspirators are anxious to save slavery in the arrangements
    that may be made. On this point the great contest will now turn,
    and the statesmanship of your statesmen will be tried. I still have
    faith in the cause of freedom."

It is more probable that Mr. Chase refers in the following letter to Mr.
Bright's letter of February 27th than to the one just given:

"WASHINGTON, _August 21, 1863_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--I thank you for sending me a copy of Mr. Bright's
    letter. It is marked by the comprehensive sagacity which
    distinguishes his statesmanship.

    "Have you read "Callirrhoe," a fanciful story of George Sand's,
    which has appeared in the late numbers of _Revue des Deux Mondes_?
    It is founded upon the idea of transmigration, and especially upon
    the notion that the souls of those who have lived in former times
    reappear with their characteristic traits in the persons of new
    generations. If I adopted this notion I might believe that Hampden
    and Sidney live again in Bright and Cobden.

    "A letter expressing the same general ideas as are contained in
    that addressed to you was lately sent by Mr. Bright to Mr.
    Aspinwall. This letter Mr. Aspinwall kindly enclosed to me, and I
    read it to the President. I had repeatedly said the same things to
    him, and was not sorry to have my representations unconsciously
    echoed by a liberal English statesman. The President said nothing,
    but I am sure he is more and more confirmed in the resolution to
    make the proclamation efficient as well after peace as during
    rebellion.

    "My own efforts are constantly directed to this result. Almost
    daily I confer more or less fully with loyalists of the
    insurrectionary States, who almost unanimously concur in judgment
    with me that the only safe basis of permanent peace is
    reconstitution by recognition in the fundamental law of each State,
    through a convention of its loyal people, of the condition of
    universal freedom established by the proclamation. It was only
    yesterday that I had a full conversation with Governor Pierpont, of
    Virginia, and Judge Bowden, one of the United States Senators from
    that State, on this subject. Both these gentlemen agree in thinking
    that the President should revoke the exception of certain counties
    in southeastern Virginia from the operation of the proclamation,
    and that the Governor should call the Legislature together and
    recommend the assembling of a convention for the amendment of the
    existing constitution, and in expecting that the convention will
    propose an amendment prohibiting slavery. I think there is some
    reason to hope that the President may determine to revoke the
    exception, and more reason to hope that the convention will be
    failed and freedom established in Virginia through its agency.

    "I do not know that you are perfectly familiar with the present
    condition of things in Virginia. Soon after the outbreak of the
    rebellion the loyal people of Virginia organized under the old
    constitution, through a Legislature at Wheeling, and subsequently,
    through a convention, consented to a division of the State by
    organizing the northwest portion as the State of West Virginia. If
    you look at the map you will see that the line forming the southern
    and eastern boundaries of this new State commences on the big fork
    of the Big Sandy, in the west line of McDowell County, and thence
    proceeds irregularly so as to include McDowell and Mercer counties,
    along the crest of the Alleghanies to Pendleton County, where it
    diverges to the Shenandoah Mountains and proceeds northeast to the
    Potomac River, at the northeast corner of Berkeley, including
    Pendleton, Hardy, Hampshire, Morgan, and Berkeley counties.
    Congress consented to the admission of this State, and it is now in
    the Union, fully organized under a free-labor constitution. Its
    organization, of course, left the government of old Virginia in the
    hands of Governor Pierpont and his associates, by whom the seat of
    government has been established at Alexandria. At present only a
    comparatively narrow belt of counties from the Atlantic to the east
    line of Berkeley is practically controlled by the loyal State
    government, but the loyal men of these counties are recognized by
    the national government as the State, and as county after county is
    rescued from rebel control it will come naturally under this
    organization, until probably at no distant day Governor Pierpont
    will be acknowledged as the Governor of Virginia at Richmond. When
    this takes place, the State will be necessarily a free State, under
    a constitution prohibiting slavery. The loyal people of Florida are
    ready to take the same course which Governor Pierpont proposes to
    take in Virginia; and the same is true of the loyal people of
    Louisiana to a great extent. It will be found, doubtless, as the
    authority of the Union is re-established in other States included
    by the proclamation, that the same sentiments will prevail; so that
    it will be quite easy for the national government, if the President
    feels so disposed, to secure the recognition of the proclamation,
    and the permanent establishment of its policy, through the action
    of the people of the several States affected by it.

    "In this way the great ends to be accomplished can be most
    certainly reached. My own efforts are constantly directed to their
    attainment, and I never admit in conversation or otherwise the
    possibility that the rebel States can _cease_ to be _rebel States_
    and _become loyal_ members of the Union except through the
    recognition of the condition created by the proclamation, by the
    establishment of free institutions under slavery-prohibiting
    constitutions. I not only labor for these ends, but hope quite
    sanguinely that they will be secured.

    "The public sentiment of the country has undergone a great change
    in reference to slavery. Strong emancipation parties exist in every
    slave State not affected by the proclamation, and a general
    conviction prevails that slavery cannot long survive the
    restoration of the republic. The proclamation, and such recognition
    of it as I have mentioned, will have finished it in the
    proclamation States. In the other States the people will finish it
    by their own action. I do not care to sketch the picture of the
    great and powerful nation which will then exhibit its strength in
    America. Your own foresight must have anticipated all I could say.

    "The war moves too slow and costs too much; but it moves steadily,
    and rebellion falls before it. Our financial condition remains
    entirely sound. The new national banks are being organized as
    rapidly as prudence allows, and no doubt can, I think, be longer
    entertained that, whatever else may happen, we shall have gained,
    through the rebellion, an opportunity, not unimproved, of
    establishing a safe and uniform currency for the whole nation--a
    benefit in itself compensating in some degree, and in no small
    degree, for the evils we have endured. I trust you are succeeding
    well in your great scheme of the inter-continental telegraph. It is
    an enterprise worthy of this day of great things. If I had the
    wealth of an Astor you should not lack the means of construction.

Yours very truly,
"S. P. CHASE.
"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



Mr. Chase's letter was shown to Mr. Gladstone eight months later, and he
returned this reply:

"11 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE, S. W.,
"_April 26, 1864_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I return, with many thanks, these
    interesting letters: the one full of feeling, the other of
    important political anticipations.

    "It is very good of you to send a letter of Mr. Chase's to me, who,
    I apprehend, must pass in the United States for no better than a
    confirmed heretic, though I have never opened my mouth in public
    about America except for the purposes of sympathy and what I
    thought friendship.

    "I admit I cannot ask or expect you to take the same view on the
    other side of the water. Engaged in a desperate struggle, you may
    fairly regard as adverse all those who have anticipated an
    unfavorable issue, even although, like myself, they have ceased to
    indulge gratuitously in such predictions, when they have become
    aware that you resent, as you are entitled to judge the matter for
    yourselves. I cannot hope to stand well with Americans, much as I
    value their good opinions, unless and until the time shall come
    when they shall take the opposite view, retrospectively, of this
    war from that which they now hold. If that time ever comes, I shall
    then desire their favorable verdict, just as I now respectfully
    submit to their condemnation.

    "What I know is this, that the enemies of America rejoice to see
    the two combatants exhaust themselves and one another in their
    gigantic and sanguinary strife.

    "As respects Mr. Chase, he is, if I may say so, a brother in this
    craft; and I have often sympathized with his difficulties, and
    admired the great ability and ingenuity with which he appears to
    have steered his course.

"I remain, my dear sir,
"Faithfully yours,
"W. E. GLADSTONE."



The "letter full of feeling" to which Mr. Gladstone refers was an
account sent to Mr. Field by his daughter Alice of a visit to the
headquarters of the Army of the Potomac. On account of this reference,
and also for its interest as a contemporaneous sketch of the war time by
a non-combatant, it is here inserted:

"WASHINGTON, D. C., _February 25, 1864_.

    "_My dear Mother_,--Since I last wrote I have been to the army
    front, passing on the way many of the battle-fields whose names
    bring up sad memories, and finally living for two nights and much
    of three days within view of the enemy's signals, and in the midst
    of our own encampments.... Early on Monday morning we found
    ourselves in the government train on the way to Brandeth Station.
    This is a five hours' journey from Washington, but the time could
    not have dragged with any one interested in the history of our
    country. We saw the battle-ground of Manasses; we crossed the Bull
    Run stream and the fields made memorable by Pope's disastrous
    campaign. Indeed, along the long line of the railway runs a
    battle-field--the "race-course," as an officer told me it was
    called, so often have our troops and the enemy's pursued each other
    there. Everywhere one sees the evidences of war; the whole country
    is desolated, and the earth ploughed by the tread of armies; broken
    earthworks border the brows of the hills, and wherever a camp is
    seen around it is a stockade or abatis to protect it from Mosby's
    guerillas, who infest this region.

    "As we were whirled past these scenes, I listened to the talk of
    the officers about me, and expressions such as these made the story
    doubly real: "It was there the cavalry was attacked"; "The bridge
    we are now crossing was contested all day in the action of the
    other day"; "We held those hills where that body of artillery is
    now moving." So those five hours hurried away, and we did not wake
    up to the present until we reached Brandeth Station. Here stood
    lines of ambulances to receive the army's guests, and soon we were
    placed in an ambulance and jolted over corduroy roads to General
    ---- 's tent. After an hour's jolting we reached our first
    destination. The general's tent was one of a large encampment on a
    hill which commands a view of our fortifications all about the
    country and those of the rebels across the river, only four or five
    miles away.

    "General ----, commander of the Third Brigade, Third Division,
    Second Corps, received us very courteously, and with him and three
    of the officers of his staff we lunched in the tent. This tent is
    charming. At one end blazes in a huge fireplace--open, of course--a
    bright wood fire: in the centre stands a table, over which hangs a
    chandelier holding three candles; on one side is the bed; and all
    about are army chairs.

    "Our lunch, where the officers presided as hosts and waiters,
    consisted of ham sandwiches, pickles, jelly, ale, and tea. The
    three officers were our escorts to our quarters, which we found to
    be in the old Virginia manor Milton, owned and still inhabited by
    the well-known family of ----.

    "They did not smile upon us at first, but we made a great effort
    to propitiate the two sad-looking Virginia ladies who received us.
    They both were in mourning for the son of one of them, who was
    killed during the Peninsula campaign--a rebel. Poor, poor fellow!
    We felt so much for these proud women, obliged to receive Northern
    strangers, and unable to conceal their fallen fortunes, that we did
    our best to heal their wounded self-love. After tea we dressed for
    the ball. I wore the blue tissue, the white lace waist, and a blue
    ribbon only in my hair.... Our three escorts arrived long before we
    were ready, but at last we were put again into our ambulance. Just
    fancy the strangeness of going to a ball in an ambulance, and the
    ball-room itself, indeed, was as odd a mingling of contrasts. It
    was an immense boarded room, with a pointed roof from which hung
    many flags and banners, most ragged and full of bullet-holes, some
    in ribbons; guns were stacked against the building, and these were
    draped with evergreens; on either side of the platform used by the
    band rested cannons pointed towards us; these were almost concealed
    by banners again. From this end of the room came excellent music
    all the evening.

    "I was made quite happy by General Meade's condescension in
    speaking to me twice. We had four hours' sleep that night, or
    rather the next morning. The whole of Tuesday was given to a great
    review--that of the Second Corps. General Meade reviewed the
    troops. There were 7000 infantry and 3000 cavalry; these last were
    Kilpatrick's, and they showed us a cavalry charge; this was very
    exciting, and their shrieks in rushing upon the supposed enemy so
    overcame us that we clung to each other in terror. The day was more
    than May, it was June. Far away rose the Blue Ridge (well named, we
    thought), while all over the country in every direction were
    marching the infantry, or the artillery was rumbling, or the
    cavalry dashing about in the soft Virginia breezes. When General
    Meade reviewed the army, as he rode with his staff past each
    brigade the general and officers joined the cavalcade of the
    commander-in-chief, the band playing and colors flying and bayonets
    glistening, all in the bright sunlight of that perfect day. I
    cannot tell you how touching was the sight of those regiments that
    have been long in the service, and have but two or three hundred
    left. They march so firmly, carrying their torn banners, with the
    names of the battles in which they have fought written upon them.

    "During the review we received an invitation from the general to
    dine with him, which we accepted. I must reserve a detailed account
    of this dinner for another letter.

    "The next morning we bade good-bye to our friends, and returned to
    the restraints of city life."

It was during this year that Mr. Varley made the statement that when the
cable was laid it would be possible to send through it eight words a
minute, and possibly thirteen and a half words. This assertion called
down upon him some criticism. On July 6, 1885, Mr. Field sent
ninety-five words from London to the President of the United States at
Washington in eighteen minutes. Ten minutes were required to send the
message from Buckingham Palace Hotel to Throgmorton Street, and eight
minutes from there to Washington.

When in London he was up by five o'clock, though out at dinner every
night, and the servants at his hotel were known to say, "Mr. Field never
goes to sleep." His work while on either side of the Atlantic was
constant, and for that reason the long sea voyages proved a blessing.
The first days after sailing he would sleep continuously, only getting
up for his meals, and by so doing was rested and ready for any emergency
or pleasure on landing.

Immediately upon his arrival in New York on September 23, 1863, he
prepared to welcome Vice-Admiral Sir Alexander Milne. A reception was
given to Sir Alexander and Lady Milne by Mr. and Mrs. Field early in
October, and the letter from Washington refers to that entertainment:

"TREASURY DEPARTMENT, _October 7, 1863_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I am glad that you are doing your part
    towards making the stay of the naval officers of the _Good Queen_
    in our metropolitan harbor agreeable to them. My faith is strong
    that the English government will yet see that the interests of
    mankind demand that there should be no alienation of the two great
    branches of the Anglo-Saxon family from each other, and will do its
    part towards removing all causes of alienation by full reparation
    for the injuries inflicted on American commerce by unneutral acts
    of British subjects, known to and not prevented by the responsible
    authorities.

    "That's a long sentence, but I believe it conveys my meaning. I am
    sorry I cannot accept the kind invitation of yourself and Mrs.
    Field (to whom please make my best regards acceptable) to meet
    these gallant officers.

"Yours, very truly,
"S. P. CHASE."



The answer to this letter was written on October the 9th:

    "I fully concur in every word you say in regard to the conduct of
    the British government towards us: and hope, with you, that they
    will see it is for our mutual interest, as well as for that of all
    mankind, that friendly feelings should always exist between 'the
    two great branches of the Anglo-Saxon family.' Vice-Admiral Sir
    Alexander Milne left for Washington this morning....

    "I have been very glad to do everything in my power to make his
    visit to this city agreeable as possible, and I hope he will take
    away with him from our shores very pleasing impressions of them,
    and of the country and people."

The coming of the English fleet to New York had been the subject of
discussion both in England and America; this command had been given to
the admiral:

    "The naval commander-in-chief on the North American and West India
    Station is especially directed by the eighth article of his
    instructions as follows:

    "You are strictly to abstain from entering any port of the United
    States unless absolutely compelled to do so by the necessities of
    the service."

The order was not modified until the fall of 1863, when Admiral Milne
sailed from Halifax in H.M.S. _Nile_, with the _Immortalite_, _Medea_,
and _Nimble_ in company, and arrived off Sandy Hook early in October. To
use his own words:

    "On being visited by Mr. Archibald, Her Majesty's counsel, he
    informed me of the strong and unfriendly feeling which then existed
    against England in consequence of the building of the two ships of
    war in Liverpool for the Southern States, and from various other
    matters connected with the existing civil war, and that my
    reception would probably be unsatisfactory. This, however, was not
    the case; my visit was evidently acceptable, and proved most
    satisfactory, and I received every attention from the authorities,
    as well as private individuals, not only at New York, but also at
    Washington, as will be seen by the following correspondence:

"'WASHINGTON, _November 30, 1863_.

    "'_Sir_,--Vice-Admiral Sir Alexander Milne having reported to the
    Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty the great kindness and
    courtesy with which he was received at Washington by the President
    of the United States and the members of the Cabinet, I have been
    instructed to convey to the government of the United States the
    expression of the gratification which their lordships have felt at
    the courtesy and attention so handsomely shown to the vice-admiral.

"'I have, etc.,
"'LYONS.

    "'The Hon. W. H. SEWARD, Secretary of State, Washington.'

"'DEPARTMENT OF STATE,
"'WASHINGTON, _December 3, 1863_.

    "_'My dear Lord Lyons_,--I have made known to the President and to
    the heads of departments the agreeable communication you have made
    to me in regard to the reception of Vice-Admiral Milne on the
    occasion of his visit at this capital.

    "'The just, liberal, and courteous conduct of the admiral in the
    performance of his duties while commanding H. M.'s naval forces in
    the vicinity of the United States was known to this government
    before his arrival, and it therefore afforded the President a
    special satisfaction to have an opportunity to extend to him an
    hospitable welcome.

"'I am, etc.,
"'W. H. SEWARD.

"'The LORD LYONS.'"



About this time there came unfavorable reports from England of the
affairs of the telegraph company. The work then was at a standstill, and
on November 20th Mr. Field wrote to Mr. Saward: "If you have new and
formidable difficulties you must make the greater exertions." And on
December 16th Mr. Saward wrote, urging him to come immediately to
England.

On December 1, 1863, accordingly, he retired from business in New York,
in order to devote his whole time to further the efforts then being made
to lay a cable across the Atlantic, and on the 17th he gave up the
building No. 57 Beekman Street, where his office had been for some
years. His arrival in England early in January was reported in the
London _Telegraphic Journal_ of February 6th in these words:

    "The Atlantic telegraph project is again attracting public
    attention. Mr. Cyrus W. Field, one of the leading spirits of the
    undertaking, is again amongst us, full of hope and ready to embark
    once more in the gigantic enterprise."

Mr. John Bright said, in a speech made at a dinner given on the evening
of April 15, 1864:

    "Just before I came here I was speaking to a gentleman, a member of
    Her Majesty's government--one of the present Cabinet--and I told
    him, as I was coming out of the House, that I was going to dine
    with some friends of the Atlantic telegraph. His countenance at
    once brightened up, and he said to me: 'I look upon that as the
    most glorious thing that man ever attempted; there is nothing else
    which so excites my sympathies.' When he said that he spoke only
    the feelings of every intelligent and moral man in the whole
    world."

But to carry out "the most glorious thing that man ever attempted" there
was endless work awaiting him, and what he accomplished in three months
is best told by himself, and is made to read continuously, although, in
fact, the words were spoken at different times on the evening just
referred to; he failed to say that he was one of the ten men who each
subscribed L10,000:

    "When I arrived in this country in January last the Atlantic
    Telegraph Company trembled in the balance. We were in want of funds
    and were in negotiations with the government and making great
    exertions to raise the money. At this juncture I was introduced to
    a gentleman of great integrity and enterprise, who is well known,
    not only for his wealth, but for his foresight, and in attempting
    to enlist him in our cause he put me through such a
    cross-examination as I had never before experienced. I thought I
    was in the witness-box. He inquired of me the practicability of the
    scheme, what it would pay, and everything else connected with it,
    but before I left him I had the pleasure of hearing him say that it
    was a great national enterprise that ought to be carried out, and
    he added, 'I will be one of ten to find the money required for it.'
    From that day to this he has never hesitated about it, and when I
    mention his name you will know him as a man whose word is as good
    as his bond, and as for his bond there is no better in England. I
    give you 'The health of Thomas Brassey.' The words spoken by Mr.
    Brassey ... encouraged us all, and made us believe we should
    succeed in raising the necessary capital, and I then went to work
    to find nine other Thomas Brasseys (I did not know whether he was
    an Englishman, a Scotchman, or an Irishman, but I made up my mind
    that he combines all the good qualities of every one of them), and
    after considerable search I met with a rich friend from Manchester,
    and I asked him if he would second Mr. Brassey, and walked with him
    from 28 Pall Mall to the House of Commons, of which he is a member.
    Before we reached the House he expressed his willingness to do so
    to an equal amount. A few days after that it was thought there
    would be a great advantage arising out of the fusion of the
    Gutta-percha Company and Messrs. Glass, Elliott & Co. into a public
    telegraph construction and maintenance company, who would in that
    form be able, with advantages to themselves, to help forward the
    Atlantic telegraph. Mr. Pender then entered into it heart and soul,
    and we have now a list of eminent capitalists in the United Kingdom
    pledged to carry out that enterprise in the very best manner. I
    therefore feel we are deeply indebted to Mr. Brassey and Mr. Pender
    for the energetic way in which this matter has been taken up by
    them, and I am truly glad to see the Telegraph Construction and
    Maintenance Company established with the object and power of
    carrying forward the extension of telegraphic communication in all
    parts of the world.

    "The _Great Eastern_ Ship Company have acted in the most liberal
    manner towards us, inasmuch as at present they are truly engaged in
    a labor of love. From this day to the 31st of December, 1865, we
    are to have the use of that magnificent vessel; and, if the cable
    be not successfully laid, we shall not have to pay a single
    shilling for the use of her. Should it be successful, we are then
    to hand to the directors of the _Great Eastern_ Ship Company
    L50,000 in shares. In all my business experience I have never known
    any offer more honorable. I wish to say that those of you who last
    honored me with your company at dinner in this house will recollect
    that on that occasion I proposed the health of Mr. George Peabody
    and his worthy partner, Mr. Morgan, and the latter replied to the
    sentiment. I had stated in the course of my remarks preliminary to
    the toast that when I called upon him in 1856 he gave the name of
    his house as subscribers for L10,000 of the company's stock. In
    reply to the toast, Mr. Morgan spoke of that L10,000 as lost money,
    but promised a further subscription, nevertheless, towards carrying
    out a new cable, and I am happy to say that yesterday he redeemed
    his promise. That statement that he lost his money is not strictly
    accurate. It is not lost. He knows where the cable is and can go
    and get it. The money has been sown, and the plant is already out
    of the ground, and is now growing up splendidly. It will soon be in
    flower--I mean at a premium--and then there will be in the office
    of Messrs. George Peabody & Co. more rejoicing over that L10,000
    which was lost and is found than over any L99,000 of their profits
    that were never in danger. When I invited Mr. Morgan here this
    evening, he consented to come upon the express condition that he
    should not have to reply to any toast or make a speech. I will
    therefore give you a sentiment, which, remember, he is on no
    account to reply to; but I hope you have all, by this time, drunk
    enough wine to enable you to imagine what he would say in reply to
    it if he were under any obligation to respond. I ask you, then, to
    drink success to the house of Messrs. George Peabody & Co."

Before his friends left him, he said:

    "My stay in England is now drawing to a close, and never before
    when about to embark for America did I feel more satisfied and
    rejoiced at the position of our great undertaking; but with all
    this a feeling of sadness at times steals over me. It seems to me
    in those moments very doubtful whether many of us will ever meet
    again. What little I could do has been done, and the enterprise is
    now in the hands of the contractors, who, I am sure, will carry it
    out to a triumphant success. It will do much to bind together
    England and America, and base, indeed, will be the man, to whatever
    country he may belong, that may dare, with an unhallowed tongue or
    venomous pen, to sow discord among those who speak the same
    language and profess the same religion, and who ought to be on
    terms of the completest friendship. I shall leave in a few days for
    my native land, for I think it wrong on the part of any American to
    be away in the hour of peril to his country, unless it be on a
    mission of peace; his place is otherwise at home at such a moment.
    I will say, however, that if anyone here present should come to see
    us in America, he will receive a hearty welcome from me, at all
    events."

The importance attached by his colleagues in the great enterprise to Mr.
Field's presence and personal participation in the task has often been
made evident in these pages, and it is explicitly set forth in the
following letter received by Mr. Field at a time when he considered that
his duty to his family might require his immediate return to America:

"78, THE GROVE, CAMBERWELL, S.,
"_23d February, 1864._

    "_My dear Sir_,--Before you finally decide on leaving England let
    me beg of you, in behalf of the great work for which you have
    already made so many sacrifices, and also in regard to your large
    pecuniary interest therein, to carefully consider the consequence
    of prematurely going away. You will recollect that on both of the
    two last occasions when you were good enough to cross the Atlantic
    on this business, I strongly urged you to remain until all the
    various matters preliminary to a fair start with the manufacture of
    the cable were concluded and the necessary arrangements finally
    settled; and had not your most natural anxiety to be again among
    your family prevailed, I do think you might have been spared at
    least your last voyage.

    "On the present occasion the undertaking has been benefited very
    greatly by your presence, and the contracts now about to be entered
    into are in their present position mainly on account of your
    exertions. But they are not _completed_. Even if accepted to-day
    there will be a great many points, when they come to be arranged in
    a legal form, which I shall have to battle with the contractors and
    others, and in doing which your aid will be most invaluable to me.
    There are also arrangements to be made for securing the regular and
    proper progress of the work, so as to give security that nothing is
    neglected that will secure the success of the cable in 1865, and I
    feel that if you remain I shall have security for getting them into
    proper position. I therefore on every ground ask you not to leave
    us until you have seen with your own eyes the cable actually
    commenced and everything organized for its due continuance. You can
    then leave with a comfortable assurance that all will go well.

    "I know how hard all this is for Mrs. Field, and you, who know how
    much I love my own home, will, I am sure, believe me when I say how
    much I sympathize with you and her in the sacrifices involved in
    these continual separations; but it must be borne in mind that you
    have been marked out by the Ruler of all things as the apostle of
    this great movement, and this is a high mission and a noble
    distinction, in which I am sure Mrs. Field herself would deeply
    regret that you should come short of success, independently
    altogether of the very large results to herself and family from the
    pecuniary success or failure of the undertaking, all concerned in
    which have hitherto been compelled to make greater or smaller
    sacrifices in its behalf.

    "I leave this for your consideration, having felt it a duty to say
    thus much to you in my private capacity upon what I consider a most
    important subject.

"I am, very dear sir,
"Very truly yours,
"GEORGE SAWARD].

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esquire, Palace Hotel, Buckingham
Gate."



At the end of the report made to the shareholders of the Atlantic
Telegraph Company on March 16th, the Right Hon. James Stuart Wortley
said:

    "Without saying anything to detract from my deep source of
    gratitude to the other directors, I cannot help especially alluding
    to Mr. Cyrus Field, who is present to-day, and who has crossed the
    Atlantic thirty-one times in the service of this company, having
    celebrated at his table yesterday the anniversary of the tenth year
    of the day when he first left Boston in the service of the company.
    Collected round his table last night was a company of distinguished
    men--members of Parliament, great capitalists, distinguished
    merchants and manufacturers, engineers, and men of science--such as
    is rarely found together, even in the highest home in this great
    metropolis. It was very agreeable to see an American citizen so
    surrounded. To me it was so personally, as it would have been to
    you, and it was still more gratifying inasmuch as we were there to
    celebrate the approaching accomplishment of the Atlantic
    telegraph."

And at a meeting of the Board of Directors of the Atlantic Telegraph
Company on May 4th, it was unanimously resolved, on the motion of Mr.
Lampson:

    "That the sincere thanks of this board be given to Mr. Cyrus W.
    Field for his untiring energy in promoting the general interests of
    the Atlantic Telegraph Company, and especially for his valuable and
    successful exertions during his present visit to Great Britain in
    reference to the restoration of its financial position and
    prospects of complete success."

His friend of many years wrote:

"HOUSE OF COMMONS, _27th April, 1864_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field,_--I am obliged, I am sorry to say, by the
    state of my health to deny myself the pleasure of accompanying you
    to-morrow to witness the process in connection with the great
    project for bringing the two worlds into instantaneous
    communication--a project with which your name will be always
    associated. I hope to have the pleasure of again shaking hands with
    you before you leave us. If not, I shall look forward to the
    gratification of welcoming you on the triumph of the Atlantic
    telegraph.

    "With my best wishes for your welfare,

"I remain
"Sincerely yours,
"RICHARD COBDEN."



March 3d his name appears on the list of those who attended the meeting
at the London Tavern, when an "organization was formed of Americans in
the United Kingdom as an auxiliary to the United States Sanitary
Commission. One of the contributions that he received was one thousand
tons of coal from Mr. (now Sir George) Elliot. He sailed for home on May
7th, and on the 26th of the same month the New York, Newfoundland, and
London Telegraph Company passed this resolution:

    "That this company tender to Mr. Cyrus W. Field their sincere
    thanks for the untiring perseverance, industry, and skill with
    which he has labored gratuitously for over ten years to promote the
    interests of this company, and to secure the successful laying of a
    submarine cable from Newfoundland to Ireland. And we hereby express
    our conviction that to him is due the credit, and to him this
    company and the world will be indebted, for the successful laying
    of the same."

August, 1864, was passed in Newfoundland, and it was at this time that
he chose the landing-place for the new cable. "The little harbor in
Newfoundland that bears the gentle name of Heart's Content is a
sheltered nook where ships may ride at anchor, safe from the storms of
the ocean. It is but an inlet from that great arm of the sea known as
Trinity Bay, which is sixty or seventy miles long and twenty miles
broad. On the beach is a small village of some sixty houses, most of
which are the humble dwellings of those hardy men who vex the northern
seas with their fisheries. The place was never heard of outside of
Newfoundland till 1864, when Mr. Field, sailing up Trinity Bay in the
surveyors steamer _Margaretta Stevenson_, Captain Orlebar, R.N., in
search of a place for the landing of the ocean cable, fixed upon this
secluded spot. The old landing of 1858 was at the Bay of Bull's Arm, at
the head of Trinity Bay, twenty miles above. Heart's Content was chosen
now because its waters are still and deep, so that a cable skirting the
north side of the banks of Newfoundland can be brought in deep water
almost till it touches the shore. All around the land rises to
pine-crested heights."

This is from a letter written to Mr. Saward on October the 10th:

    "Since my return home in May last I have been doing my utmost to
    carry out the wishes of the directors and yourself in regard to the
    control of the lines between Port Hood, New York, and Montreal,
    with separate offices at Port Hood, Halifax, St. John's, N. B.,
    Boston, Quebec, Montreal, and New York, for the Atlantic telegraph,
    and the best place for landing the cable in Newfoundland. To
    accomplish these two objects I have seen almost all of the persons
    who control the principal telegraph lines in America, and have
    visited Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Poughkeepsie, Boston,
    and Portland in the United States; St. John's and Fredericton in
    New Brunswick; Charlottetown in Prince Edward's Island; Truro and
    Halifax in Nova Scotia; Port Hood and Sydney in Cape Breton; St.
    John's and Trinity and Placentia bays in Newfoundland; Quebec and
    Montreal in Canada, and have travelled over sixty-three hundred
    miles, viz.:

 "By railway, over 3280 miles.
 "By steamers, over 2400 miles.
 "By open wagon, over 500 miles.
 "By stage-coach, over 150 miles.
 "By fishing-boats, about 100 miles."



And on October 24th:

    "I can hardly keep the business of the Atlantic Telegraph Company
    out of my mind for a single moment."

The future captain of the _Great Eastern_ wrote:

"R.M.S.S. 'EUROPA,' _October 25, 1864_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq.:

    "_My dear Sir_,--I am in receipt of your favor of the 24th inst.,
    for which I thank you. So far as it has gone you have paid me a
    very high compliment. I have been afraid at times that you may have
    thought me lukewarm upon the subject of commanding the _Great
    Eastern_, and am desirous you should understand that I have
    restrained my enthusiasm because I have not thought it likely I
    should be chosen, and that, after all, it might be only your
    partiality for me.

    "I would not have been surprised if, after consulting with Mr.
    Cunard, your letter to me had alluded to the propriety of my giving
    it no more heed. It is so difficult to know what estimate other
    people may have formed of one's capacity for any considerable
    effort--small things often give a strong bias--and he might have
    suggested some other man to you as more likely than I.

    "I am, besides, still of opinion that the applicants for the honor
    will be so numerous, and apparently so eligible, that the majority
    of the directors will prefer a man over whom they will like to feel
    that they have the greatest possible control. It will probably
    appear objectionable to employ a man who felt himself the servant
    of another company, and who, for anything they could tell, might
    become ridiculously elated with the preference shown to him.

    "I feel these are objections that will be advanced, because were I
    director I should urge them myself until well assured of fair
    reasons for abandoning them.

    "You do, however, want a man who is familiar with the Atlantic--its
    fogs, ice and method of its gales--and, above all, one who will
    devote himself to working with the engineers of the cable, who,
    after all, _must be_ obeyed. Any fellow who shows signs of
    advancing his own whims in opposition to theirs must be thrown
    overboard. No want of harmony should interfere with so great a
    scheme.

    "I would recommend that whoever you may put in command should be
    sent to have a look at the locality and neighboring coast where the
    cable is to be landed. This may prove of vital importance should
    the coast be approached in the summer fogs or haze.

    "I hope you will understand from this that I fairly covet the
    distinction, yet could not wisely leave so fine a service for
    anything so indefinite as the command of the _Great Eastern_ may
    prove to be. Should I be chosen for the temporary command, I would,
    for my own reputation, and in my friendship for you, bend all my
    energies to insure success to so grand an international scheme.

    "I know Professor Bache very well. Admiral Dupont, General Doyle,
    Agassiz, Pierce, and others dine with me to-day. I know Bache so
    much that I think nothing too good for him. The United States coast
    survey is a monument to his fame that can never die or become
    useless, and I think its accuracy is unquestionable.

    "With renewed thanks for your interest in me, and every kind wish
    to you and yours,

"I remain
"Yours very truly,
"JAMES ANDERSON.

    "P. S.--I think I resume command of the _China_ again on my return,
    but do not yet know."

For the account of a dinner given by Mr. Field on the evening of
December 12th in this year we are indebted to the _Life of General John
A. Dix_:

    "On the ---- of December, 1864, while in command of the Department
    of the East, I was dining at the house of Mr. Cyrus W. Field with a
    party of ladies and gentlemen. Lord Lyons, the British Minister,
    sat on Mrs. Field's right hand, and my seat was next to his. When
    the dinner had been a short time in progress a telegraphic despatch
    was brought to me at the table informing me that a party of
    secessionists from Canada had taken possession of the village of
    St. Albans, in Vermont, and were plundering it. Informing Mr. and
    Mrs. Field that I had received a communication which demanded my
    personal attention, I left the table, promising to return as soon
    as possible. I immediately went to my headquarters, and telegraphed
    to the commanding officer at Burlington--the nearest military
    station--ordering him to send the forces at his disposal to St.
    Albans with the utmost despatch, and, if the marauders were still
    there, to capture them if possible. I instructed him also that if
    he came in sight of them and they crossed the Canada line while he
    was in pursuit, to follow them.

    "After giving these orders I returned to the dinner-table, and,
    having resumed my seat, told Lord Lyons that I had been called away
    by a very unpleasant summons, and informed him what I had heard
    from St. Albans and what order I had given."

This dinner was referred to by Mr. Field, and he has said that when
General Dix told him of his order he exclaimed, "That means war." He was
persuaded that had it not been that Lord Lyons and General Dix were
together this evening when the news of the invasion was received serious
trouble might have arisen between the two countries. Before the evening
was over the general and the minister had had a long talk, and later
General Dix modified his order, so far as it related to the pursuit of
the invaders into Canadian territory.




CHAPTER XI

THE FAILURE OF 1865


On February 25, 1865, Mr. Field writes:

    "I have been absent from New York for some time on a visit to
    Washington and to General Grant's army."

It was on the previous day that he had written to London:

    "I do most sincerely hope that Captain James Anderson, of the
    Cunard steamer _China_, will be appointed to the command of the
    _Great Eastern_ during the laying of the Atlantic telegraph
    cable.... With Captain Anderson in command and Messrs. Canning and
    Clifford superintending the laying of the cable, I should feel the
    greatest confidence that all would go right."

The _China_ was at this time on her way to New York. She sailed again on
her return voyage, March 8th, and Mr. Field was on board as a passenger.
The following letter from Captain Anderson is evidently the sequel of
their conversations on the voyage:

"34 RICHMOND TERRACE, BEECH ROAD,
"LIVERPOOL, _March 19, 1865_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I purpose going up to London sometime
    to-morrow. I did not get the _China_ moored until four P.M., so
    that I have still the necessary custom entries to make.

    "I shall meet you at breakfast Tuesday morning as early as you
    like, and shall look for a note upon my arrival at your hotel. I
    shall telegraph when I start.

    "Mr. David MacIver appears to have laid his plans for the
    possibility of my being required to remain behind at this time, but
    will require an answer at latest on Wednesday morning. It will
    therefore be necessary that I should be in communication as early
    as possible on Tuesday morning with some one who could proceed to
    the ship with me and talk the matter over.

    "I dare say there may be no more work required than could be done
    after my arrival in May, but it would then be too late to undo
    anything.

    "I have, however, the greatest faith in the engineering skill and
    experience of Messrs. Glass, Elliott & Co., and believe I shall
    find myself unable to suggest much that they are not already quite
    familiar with, but I naturally would like to identify myself with
    some knowledge of the storage and plans for lifting the ship, with
    a view to trim for steering, pitching, or rolling as she becomes
    lighter.

    "I would like to see how the tanks are connected with each other in
    their communication, and to understand the process of paying out,
    the possibility of ever requiring to check it, and to be generally
    familiar with men and material below the deck.

    "You know I think prevention better than cure, and that it is the
    distinct duty of a ship-master to be familiar with what is to be
    apprehended, and, so far as he can, to have some plans in his mind
    to which he can resort when his foresight has proved insufficient.
    I do not apprehend or fear any difficulty to your great enterprise,
    but as little as possible should be left to chance or inspiration.

    "The essentials, as far as I am concerned, would be to _see for
    myself all_ the ground tackling _clear_ and efficient;

    "The steering gear and prevention ditto in good order;

    "The sails necessary to steady the ship in a chance breeze;

    "The _compasses_ and their _adjustment_ and all the means that are
    available for freeing the ship from water.

    "I should like to get around me such a staff of men that I might
    hope to rely at least upon a portion of them.

    "If the crew are all shipped at the last moment, you begin with a
    difficulty at once. I would not, of course, incur the expense of
    employing a large crew at present, but I would select a good
    nucleus, and have the ship's work and discipline well in hand in
    good season.

    "Is the ship to go into Valentia Harbor? If so, I advise you to let
    me go and see it. It is narrow. Should it prove a calm day this
    might be of no moment, but it is not always calm in Ireland; we
    might have to wait for a day or two. But these are first thoughts.
    I will see what I think on Tuesday. Perhaps you might show this
    letter to Mr. Canning, or any one you like. If they think I should
    now join them, immediate application should be made; if not, it
    will be very bad if I cannot work with the tools I get.

"Sincerely yours,
"JAMES ANDERSON."



The foresight and circumspection displayed in this note were
characteristic, and were among the qualities which, combined with
Captain Anderson's seamanship and long experience on the Atlantic, made
Mr. Field anxious to secure his services. The application to the Cunard
company for a leave of absence was granted, and there was no fault to be
found with the manner in which the temporary captain of the _Great
Eastern_ performed this part of the work.

    "The _Great Eastern_ had arrived at her berth in the Medway on the
    11th of July, 1864," wrote Mr. Field, "and the work on the three
    tanks was begun at once. They were not completely finished until
    February, 1865, although the coiling began on January 20th. The
    admiralty had detailed two vessels, the _Amethyst_ and _Iris_, to
    take the cable from the works to the _Great Eastern_, and late in
    June all was safely on board."

This work was progressing so successfully that upon Mr. Field's arrival
in England he found it unnecessary for him to remain there, and that it
was possible for him to go to Egypt to attend the preliminary inspection
of the Suez Canal. He was duly accredited as a representative from the
Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York. His letter of appointment
is dated March 7, 1865, and sets forth: "You have been selected to
represent this chamber at the conference of representatives of Chambers
of Commerce invited to meet at Alexandria, Egypt, on the sixth day of
April next, by the Universal Company of the Suez Canal, to survey and
report upon the works undertaken by them to connect the Mediterranean
and the Red seas, and the great advantages to commerce which this new
line of water navigation promises." This journey was a most interesting
one. In his speech at Ismailia, on April 11th, he said:

    "I am sure that all who witness what we have will agree that a ship
    canal can be made across the Isthmus of Suez by the expenditure of
    money under the direction of the best engineers of the nineteenth
    century. You, Mr. President, are engaged in the great work of
    dividing two continents for the benefit of every commercial nation
    in the world.... Within the next three months I hope to have the
    pleasure of seeing two hemispheres connected by a submarine cable,
    and when that is done you will be able to telegraph from this place
    in the Great Desert of Africa, through a part of Asia, across the
    Continent of Europe, under the deep Atlantic, and over America to
    the shores of the Pacific; and your message will arrive there
    several hours in advance of the sun."

And at Cairo, on the 17th, he said to M. de Lesseps and those with him:

    "Thirteen days since I arrived in Egypt an entire stranger, six
    thousand miles away from home, but you received me with such
    kindness that I at once felt that I was surrounded by friends; and
    now, when we have met for the last time that we shall all be
    together in this world, I have mingled feelings of joy and sadness.
    Joy and gratitude that I have been with you on our most interesting
    journey across the Isthmus of Suez, to examine that great work now
    being constructed, of a ship canal from the Mediterranean to the
    Red Sea; sadness that we now bid each other farewell. For all of
    your kindness to me I most sincerely thank you, and if any of you
    should visit America, while my heart beats you will receive a most
    cordial welcome from me."

As it was not thought imperative for Captain Anderson to remain in
England in March, he made another voyage in command of the _China_, and,
on April 14th, while in New York, wrote to Mrs. Field:

    "I am glad you have had such good news from your good husband. I
    shall be astonished if he reports well of the canal, and should be
    well satisfied to be assured of a healthy life until the first ship
    sailed through the great ditch. I am quite curious to know what he
    will say about it."

Mr. Field returned to London on May 1st, and that same day was at a
public meeting of Americans held "in order to give expression to their
feelings respecting the late distressing intelligence from America"--the
assassination of President Lincoln. Mr. Adams, the American minister,
presided, and Mr. Field closed his speech with these words:

    "Just before leaving America I called to see President Lincoln, and
    I know how deeply he desired peace in America and peace in all the
    world. I trust, therefore, that everything calculated to stir up
    ill-feeling between North and South--even the last sad deeds--or
    between England and America, will be allowed to die with the good
    man who has been taken away and will be buried in his grave
    forever. If Mr. Lincoln could speak to-day he would urge upon every
    one to do all he could to allay the passions which have been
    excited in America; and I hope all will comply with what I believe
    would be his wish."

The weeks passed rapidly in active preparation for the summer's attempt
to lay another cable. This account is from the London _Star_ of May
30th:

    "At ten minutes past five yesterday afternoon the new telegraphic
    cable, destined once more to connect England with America, was
    completed. The last thread of wire was twisted, the last revolution
    of the engine accomplished, and the mechanism of that subtle and
    silent speech which henceforth is to unite two continents was ready
    to be put in operation.... It was not to be expected that such a
    propitious occasion should be allowed to pass without the
    celebration of a dinner. No true-born Englishman could have lent
    his countenance to a scheme which was not so inaugurated, and
    therefore, towards evening, the gentlemen who had visited the works
    of Messrs. Glass & Elliott proceeded westward to the Ship Tavern,
    where a very princely entertainment had been provided. John Pender,
    Esq., M. P., was in the chair. One of the toasts was: "Cyrus W.
    Field, Esq.--may his energy and perseverance in behalf of the
    Atlantic Telegraph Company be rewarded by the permanent success of
    the cable."

What follows is the beginning of a long article in the London _Times_ of
June 19th:

    "At length all the preparations connected with the final departure
    of this great telegraphic expedition are completed. On Wednesday
    the _Amethyst_ left the telegraph works with the last length of 245
    miles of cable on board, and on Saturday the operation of coiling
    this in was begun. This work will probably last till the 22d inst.,
    when the _Great Eastern_ will have in her as nearly as possible
    7000 tons of cable, or, including the iron tanks which contain it
    and the water in which it is sunk, about 9000 tons in all. In
    addition to this she has already 7000 tons of coal on board, and
    1500 tons more still to take in. This additional weight, however,
    will not be added till she leaves the Medway, which she will do on
    the morning of the 24th for the Nore, when the rest of the coals
    and special stores will be put aboard, and these will bring her
    mean draught down to 321/2 feet. Her total weight, including engines,
    will then be rather over 21,000 tons--a stupendous mass for any
    ship to carry, but well within the capacity of the _Great Eastern_,
    of which the measurement tonnage is 24,000. Her way out from the
    Nore will be by Bullock's Channel, which the admiralty are having
    carefully buoyed to avoid all risk in these rather shallow waters.
    Before the following spring tides set in, about the 6th or 7th of
    July, the _Great Eastern_ will start for Valentia. There she is
    expected to arrive about the 9th or 10th, and there she will be met
    by the two ships of war appointed to convoy her--the _Terrible_ and
    the _Sphinx_. Both these vessels are being fitted with the best
    apparatus for deep-sea soundings; with buoys and means for buoying
    the end of the cable, if ever it should become necessary; and with
    Bollen's night-light naval signals, with which the _Great Eastern_
    is likewise to be supplied. To avoid all chance of accident the big
    ship will not approach the Irish coast nearer than twenty or
    twenty-five miles, and her stay off Valentia will be limited to the
    time occupied in making a splice with the massive shore end which
    for a length of twenty-five miles from the coast will be laid
    previous to her arrival. This monstrous shore end, which is the
    heaviest and strongest piece of cable ever made, will be despatched
    in a few days, and be laid from the head of a sheltered inlet near
    Cahirciveen out to the distance we have stated, where the end will
    be buoyed and watched by the ships of war till the _Great Eastern_
    herself comes up. Some idea of the strength and solidity of this
    great end may be guessed by the fact that its weight per mile is
    very little short of one-half the weight of an ordinary railway
    metal. For the shore end at Newfoundland only three miles are
    required, and this short length will be sent in the _Great
    Eastern_."

The request that American war vessels should accompany the expedition
was made in the early spring, as is shown by this correspondence:

"NEW YORK, _March 1, 1865_.

    "_Sir_,--The undersigned honorary directors of the Atlantic
    Telegraph Company have the honor to transmit to the President of
    the United States the draft of a letter to the Honorable the
    Secretary of the Navy, deeming it a matter of propriety that an
    application of so interesting a character shall be made to the Navy
    Department of the United States through the chief executive of the
    nation, whose interest in behalf of the enterprise thus presented
    is earnestly invoked.

 "We have the honor to be,
 "Very respectfully,
 "Your obedient servants,

 "W. E. DODGE,        PETER COOPER,
 "WILSON G. HUNT,      A. A. LOW,
 "E. M. ARCHIBALD,     CYRUS W. FIELD,
 "Honorary Directors in America.

    "To his Excellency ABRAHAM LINCOLN, President of the United
    States."

[Illustration: ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH CABLE . 1865]

"NEW YORK, _March 1, 1865_.

    "_Sir_,--Under an act of Congress approved March 3, 1857, the
    government of the United States detailed the steam frigates
    _Niagara_ and _Susquehanna_ to assist in laying the cable of the
    Atlantic Telegraph Company from Ireland to Newfoundland, and the
    following year sent the _Niagara_, under the command of Captain
    Hudson, to co-operate with the _Agamemnon_, of her Britannic
    Majesty's navy, in the further prosecution of this enterprise.
    These vessels meeting in mid-ocean on the 28th day of July, 1858,
    after connecting the wire, separated, the _Agamemnon_ sailing for
    Valentia, on the coast of Ireland, and the _Niagara_ for Trinity
    Bay, on the coast of Newfoundland. They reached their respective
    destinations on the 5th day of August, and the work of uniting the
    two continents by telegraphic communication was successfully
    accomplished.

    "For a brief time messages were transmitted from one continent to
    the other, among the most interesting being the announcement of
    peace between Great Britain and France and China. The success, as
    happily achieved, but only temporary, was still sufficient to
    assure the parties engaged of a final and perfect fulfilment.

    "The capital of the Atlantic Telegraph Company has once more been
    filled up, and a new cable is now in course of shipment, on board
    of the _Great Eastern_, and will be wholly embarked on or before
    the 1st of June next. During that month we have every reason to
    think it will be successfully laid, seven years of experience, with
    the added teaching of science, affording very ample grounds for
    this conclusion.

    "Regarding this as an enterprise of great international importance,
    we invite the attention of the government of the United States to
    this new effort of the Atlantic Telegraph Company, and respectfully
    request the Honorable the Secretary of the Navy once more to detail
    a ship of war to act with such vessel of the British navy as her
    Britannic Majesty may appoint to accompany the _Great Eastern_ on
    her projected mission.

    "The lapse of time since the first attempt was made to unite the
    continents by a system of telegraphic communication has not tended
    to abate the interest which originally centred upon this bold
    undertaking. On the contrary, four years of civil war, prolific of
    events demanding immediate and mutual explanations between Great
    Britain and the United States, have contributed to strengthen and
    deepen the interest with which at first it was so universally
    regarded. May we not reasonably indulge the hope that, as the old
    cable first conveyed to the Western World the news of restored
    peace in China, one of the first messages through the wires about
    to be immersed may convey to the Old World from the New tidings of
    peace re-established in the West, of the States reunited, and
    slavery everywhere abolished, and that henceforward all causes of
    misunderstanding between Great Britain and the United States may be
    instantaneously removed?

 "We have the honor to be,
 "Very respectfully,
 "Your obedient servants,

 "PETER COOPER,      WM. E. DODGE,
 "A. A. LOW,         WILSON G. HUNT,
 "CYRUS W. FIELD,    E. M. ARCHIBALD,

 "Honorary Directors in America.

    "To Hon. GIDEON WELLES, Secretary of the Navy, Washington, D. C.

The only explanation ever vouchsafed of the failure of this application
was the suggestion, published in a New York paper, that it was "because
England had not withdrawn her proclamation excluding our vessels from
her ports under what is termed her 'twenty-four hours' rule.'"

The _Great Eastern_ left Medway on June 24th, and removed to the Nore,
and on July the 15th left that anchorage. The progress of the great ship
is chronicled in the following extracts from the London papers:

"PORTSMOUTH, _July 16th_.

    "The _Great Eastern_ passed Newton at 2 P.M., five miles off land,
    under steam and sail; wind light, southerly."

"VALENTIA, _July 23d_.

    "Yesterday morning the first great step in the important
    undertaking was accomplished by hauling on land the massive shore
    end up the cliffs at the southwestern extremity of this island."

"VALENTIA, _July 24th_.

    "Before this reaches the public the _Great Eastern_, if all goes
    well, will already have laid some 300 miles of the Atlantic cable."

"ON BOARD 'GREAT EASTERN,'
"_Friday morning_.

    "Five hundred nautical miles of cable were paid out at 10.50 A.M.
    to-day. The distance run at 9.50 A.M. was 450 miles.

    "The signals are perfect; weather fine."

"ON BOARD 'GREAT EASTERN,'
"_Wednesday morning, August 2d_.

    "Twelve hundred miles paid out at 7.50 A.M.; 1050 run by _Great
    Eastern_ at 6.50 A.M.

    "All going on well."

"_August 7th._

    "Although the precise cause of the catastrophe is still a mystery,
    there remains but faint hope that the fate of the Atlantic cable is
    not already decided. Four days have elapsed since the signals
    ceased to evoke any return, and those received at Valentia became
    unintelligible."

"_August 17th._

    "Arrival of the _Great Eastern_, Crookhaven. Failure of the
    Atlantic telegraph expedition."

An illustrated paper published on the _Great Eastern_, and called _The
Atlantic Telegraph_, tells of some of the days that passed so
mysteriously to those on land:

"_Saturday, July 29, 1865._

"OUR WEEKLY SUMMARY.

    "The week just completed has been most exciting, several mishaps
    having occurred, but we are enabled to state that everything at the
    time of our going to press was most satisfactory, both as regards
    the ship's progress and the chief objects of her voyage across the
    Atlantic.

    "On Monday the hopes of all interested in the success of the
    undertaking were much damped by the intelligence that all was not
    right with the cable. The chief engineer immediately proceeded to
    stop the 'paying out' of the cable, and gave orders for 'paying in'
    the same. This latter operation is very slow and unsatisfactory,
    and answers to the 'paying out' of the pockets of the shareholders,
    whereas the 'paying out' of the cable contributes to the 'paying
    in' as regards the same pockets. This curious feature will be
    better understood by a reference to our money market intelligence.

"MONEY MARKET.

    "Money scarce. Exchange, 00.

"STOCK EXCHANGE.

    "There has been great fluctuation in the shares of the Atlantic
    Telegraph and Great Ship companies.

"NEWS OF THE WEEK.

    "The _Great Eastern_ speeds nobly on her mission of towing the
    islands of Great Britain and Ireland to America. In less than ten
    days it is expected that a splice will be effected between the two
    countries, and long, long may it last.

"AMUSEMENTS FOR THE DAY.

    "12 noon.--Luncheon and _Daily Navigator_.

    "5.30.--Dinner.

    "8.--Tea.

    "9 to 11 P.M.--Grog, possibly with whist.

    "From daylight till dusk.--Looking out for the _Sphinx_. (Through
    the kindness and liberality of the admiralty, this interesting
    amusement will be open to the public free of charge.)

    "N. B.--The above amusements, with the exception of whist, are
    gratis.

"FINIS.

    "_The Atlantic Telegraph_ will be published till further notice.
    The price will be, for the series, five shillings, including the
    cover, and the proceeds will be devoted to such purposes as Captain
    Anderson shall appoint.

    "Communications to be addressed to the editor at No. 14 Lower South
    Avenue, Middle District.

"FINIS."



"THE ATLANTIC TELEGRAPH.

"_Saturday, August 12, 1865._

    "The events of the last ten days have caused so much anxiety to the
    chiefs of this expedition, and, indeed, to all on board, that it
    appeared to us unseemly to allow our funny writer, or any one in
    our employ, to utter any ill-timed joke. That anxiety is now over,
    and though it be not supplanted by the exultation of success, let
    us accept our failure in the healthy spirit shown by the chief
    sufferers, and with an expression of sincere regret let us wipe
    from our brain what of the past is unavailing, and turn to the
    future with that hope and confidence which are justified by the
    experience gained by failure. As in kingdoms they say, 'The king is
    dead; the king liveth,' so let us say, 'The cable is dead; the
    cable liveth.' All honor and glory to our new sovereign!


    "DEEP-SEA FISHING.

    "It being ascertained that the sea-serpent was somewhere in
    latitude 51 deg. 30' N., longitude 39 deg. W., Captain Anderson,
    accompanied by Messrs. Canning and Clifford and a party of
    scientific gentlemen, endeavored to capture the monster. It being
    found that the lazy brute lies perfectly still at the bottom of the
    ocean, and being fed by sea animals, a bait was useless. A strong
    wire rope, with a grapnel attached, was lowered to a depth of 2000
    fathoms. After drifting a while, they grappled the monster and
    brought him up 1000 fathoms, when, unfortunately, the swivel gave
    way. Two or three attempts were made, with a like result, and it
    was resolved to postpone all operations to a more favorable time.


    "ADVERTISEMENT.

    "Captain Anderson will sell by auction in the chief saloon of the
    _Great Eastern_, on Saturday, August 12th, at one o'clock, the
    following articles, the property of various gentlemen leaving their
    present quarters:

    "Lot 1.--_The Great Eastern._ For cards to view apply to Mr. Gooch,
    on board.

    "Lot 2.--The good-will of the Atlantic Telegraph Company. (This
    invisible property is in Mr. Field's possession.)

           *       *       *       *       *

    "Lot 12.--A free pass from Boston or Halifax to Liverpool by any of
    the Cunard boats, the proprietor, Mr. W. Russell, having no use for
    the same."

The accompanying illustration appeared at the end of the papers, with
this verse:

   "No useless sentry within the tank,
      Not in slumber or sleep we found him;
    But he sat like a warrior stiff on his plank,
      With his Inverness cloak around him."

It was while Mr. Field was on watch on August 2d that "a grating noise
was audible as the cable flew over the coil," and "There is a piece of
wire" was called to the lookout man. The fault was discovered, and the
cable was transferred without difficulty to the bows, and the picking up
was going on quietly when the strain became too great and it parted.

To quote from _The Atlantic Telegraph_:

    "Mr. Canning appeared in the saloon, and, in a manner which caused
    all to start, said: 'It is all over--it is gone,' and hastened
    onward to his cabin. Mr. Field, ere the thrill of surprise and pain
    occasioned by those words had passed away, came from the
    companionway into the saloon, and said, with composure admirable
    under the circumstances, though his lip quivered and his cheek was
    blanched, 'The cable has parted and gone overboard.'

    "After this grappling was determined upon. At 11.30 on August 11th
    the _Great Eastern_ signalled to the _Terrible_, 'We are going to
    make a final effort.' The cable was caught and was brought up 765
    fathoms, and was then lost."

At Dundee, Scotland, in 1867, Sir William Thomson said:

    "I shall never forget the day when we last gave up hope of
    finishing the work in 1865. On that day Cyrus Field renewed a
    proposal for the adoption of the plan which has been adopted, and
    which has led to the successful completion of the enterprise. Cyrus
    Field's last prospectus was completed in the grand saloon of the
    _Great Eastern_ on the day when we gave up all hope for 1865."

[Illustration: THE NIGHT-WATCH

(From a lithograph drawn and printed on board the _Great Eastern_.)]

On the morning of the 12th the _Terrible_, one of the vessels detailed
and the one that had acted as pilot, was directed to resume her journey
westward and to carry letters to America. As she steamed away she
signalled "Farewell"; the _Great Eastern_ answered "Good-bye, thank
you."

The following message is without doubt the one sent by this conveyance
to Mr. Field's family:

    "_Great Eastern_ left mouth of the Thames July 15th. Shore end
    landed in Ireland on 22d. Parted on August 2d in latitude 51 deg. 25'
    north, longitude 39 deg. 6' west, 1062.4 miles from Valentia Bay, 606.6
    miles from Heart's Content. Spent nine days in grappling; used up
    all wire, rope; nothing left, so obliged to return to England.
    Three times cable was caught, and hauled up for more than
    three-quarters of a mile from bed of the ocean."

The news of the failure of the cable expedition reached New York after
the middle of August, and in a degree the country was prepared for it.
The _Cuba_ early in August had brought word of the trouble that had
occurred on the 29th of July.

The suspense and anxiety had been so great to Mr. Field's family that
the loss of the cable was as nothing compared to the relief they
experienced at knowing that he was alive. Mr. David Dudley Field has
told of going to Garrison's on the Hudson, where the family were passing
the summer, to express sympathy, and that he found a very happy group,
and was met with the words, "Is not this delightful?"

This letter was one of the first received by Mrs. Field:

"NORTH CONWAY, _19th August, 1865_.

    "_My dear Friend_,--Emerging from the wilderness at Moosehead Lake,
    my first inquiry was for news concerning the cable. I have not had
    a full long breath ever since, such has been my suspense.

    "Day and night our thoughts have been with you and dear Mr. Field.
    Outside of your own family perhaps no one has known more of the
    hopes, the sacrifices, the efforts involved in this great
    undertaking. Certainly no one has felt more of interest in his
    success than I have. His pluck, bravery, and faith have always
    elicited my admiration, and inspired me with absolute confidence in
    his ultimate triumph over all difficulties. He has surely done his
    part well. He deserves the approbation and honor of the civilized
    world.

    "To-day for the first time I have heard of the parting of the
    cable. It seems as if a strong cord had snapped in my own heart. I
    feel most keenly for Mr. Field's disappointment. The disaster comes
    home to us all.

    "Mrs. Adams and myself talk much of you. We hope you have good news
    as to the health of your husband. How does he bear up with all this
    excitement and revulsion? I trust he will soon be returned to you
    safe and well; most of all, that he and you and we may yet see the
    complete success of this wonderful enterprise....

    "Very truly and affectionately your friend and pastor,

"W. ADAMS."



To copy once more from his papers:

    "This last attempt at ocean-cable laying proved conclusively that
    all the principal difficulties had been overcome in the way of
    carrying the grand enterprise to successful completion. The _Great
    Eastern_ as a cable ship had proved herself admirably fitted for
    the service on which she was employed. The cable itself could
    hardly be improved. The paying-out apparatus was almost perfect,
    and on this occasion it did not require any great amount of
    persuasion to induce the directors of the company to go on with the
    work.

    "A meeting was at once called, and the board resolved not only to
    pick up the lost cable, but to construct and lay another, both
    operations to be performed in the following year, and the _Great
    Eastern_ to be employed in the service. The contractors made a
    liberal offer to the company, and the directors decided to raise
    L600,000 of new capital."

All work for the coming year having apparently been most satisfactorily
settled, he returned home in September. A friend on the steamer with him
said:

    "We heard Mr. Field was a passenger. We felt the deepest sympathy
    for him, and to our surprise he was the life of the ship and the
    most cheerful one on board. He said: 'We have learned a great deal,
    and next summer we shall lay the cable without doubt.'"

But again came discouragement. November 3d Captain Anderson wrote:

    "I cannot yet write a cheerful letter.... I cannot see any
    difficulty to our success but the one item of money. We are losing
    time. The board has already lost its margin, and it will end, must
    end now, by being in a hurry at the last.

    "I am sorry you are not here. Somehow no one seems to push when you
    are absent."

On November 27th Mr. Field wrote to Mr. Saward:

    "Unless I have more favorable news from London in regard to the
    Atlantic telegraph, it is my intention to sail for Liverpool on the
    _Scotia_ on the 13th of December."

He did not reach England a day too soon. On December 22d the
Attorney-General had given the opinion that only an act of Parliament
could legalize the issue of the twelve per cent. preference shares.
Parliament was not to meet until February, and then there would be a
delay in passing the bill. For this reason the money subscribed had been
returned, and the work of manufacturing the cable stopped. Mr. Field
accepted the opinion given, but also saw a way out of the difficulty.
It seems as if Mr. O'Neil's words in _Blackwood's Magazine_ referred to
this crisis and not to the failure of the previous summer:

    "Mr. Cyrus Field, the pioneer of Atlantic enterprise, full of hope
    and confidence, and never betraying anxiety or despair even at the
    most serious disaster--a man whose restless energy is best shown in
    his spare yet strong frame, as if his daily food but served for the
    development of schemes for the benefit of mankind in general and
    the profit of individuals in particular, every stoppage in our
    progress being marked by the issue of a fresh prospectus, each
    showing an increase of dividend as the certain result of confiding
    speculation--and, I say, all honor to him for his unswerving
    resolution to complete that great work for the success of which he
    has toiled so long and so earnestly."

It was on December 30th that Captain Anderson wrote:

"SHEERNESS, _Saturday, 30th, '65_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--Thanks for your cheering letter. I have
    great hopes in your energy and talent. I feel as if our watch had
    got the mainspring replaced, and had been trying to go without it
    for the last three months. At all events, I know nothing will be
    left undone that human energy can accomplish.

    "With the compliments of the season, and every kind wish, in which
    my good wife joins me,

"I remain
"Sincerely yours,
"JAMES ANDERSON."






CHAPTER XII

THE CABLE LAID--CABLE OF 1865 GRAPPLED FOR AND RECOVERED--PAYMENT OF
DEBTS

(1866)


Mr. Field said of this crisis:

    "I reached London on the 24th of December, 1865, and the next day
    was not a 'Merry Christmas' to me. But it was an inexpressible
    comfort to have the counsel of such men as Sir Daniel Gooch and Sir
    Richard A. Glass; and Mr. Brassey said, 'Mr. Field, don't be
    discouraged; go down to the company and tell them to go ahead, and
    whatever the cost, I will bear one-tenth of the whole.

    "It was finally concluded that the best course was to organize a
    new company, which should assume the work; and so originated the
    Anglo-American Telegraph Company. It was formed by ten gentlemen
    who met around a table in London and put down L10,000 apiece.

    "The great Telegraph Construction and Maintenance Company,
    undaunted by the failure of last year, answered us with a
    subscription of L100,000. Soon after, the books were opened to the
    public through the eminent banking house of J. S. Morgan & Co., and
    in fourteen days we had raised the whole L600,000. Then the work
    began again, and went on with speed. Never was greater energy
    infused into any enterprise. It was only the first day of March
    that the new company was formed, and was registered as a company
    the next day; and yet such were the vigor and despatch that in five
    months from that day the cable had been manufactured, shipped on
    the _Great Eastern_, stretched across the Atlantic, and was sending
    messages, literally swift as lightning, from continent to
    continent. The cable was manufactured at the rate of twenty miles a
    day."

Captain Anderson wrote from the _Great Eastern_ at Sheerness on March
2d:

    "I hope you are keeping well and not sacrificing your health for
    even the Atlantic cable."

After referring to some slight complications, he adds:

    "But this will all come right, as you so often say, and surely we
    shall live to laugh at it yet. At least you ought to have your day
    of triumph, as you have had your long years of struggle."

March 5th, Captain Moriarty wrote from H.M.S. _Fox_:

    "I am as sanguine as even yourself in the practicability and almost
    certainty of raising the present cable, and feel all the more
    interested in it in consequence of the incredulity of naval men and
    others."

Mr. Field gave a dinner at the Buckingham Palace Hotel on April 5th; the
American minister, Mr. Adams, sat on his right, and the Earl of
Caithness on his left. _The Morning Star_, in speaking of the dinner,
said: "Mr. Field, with almost inspired fervor, spoke of the certainty
with which it would soon be possible to speak between England and
America in a minute of time."

"ROCHDALE, _March 26, '66_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I shall not be in London before the 9th
    April, and therefore shall not be able to dine with you on the 5th,
    which I much regret.

    "If you could come down here on your way to Liverpool, I should be
    very glad to see you. I expect to be at home till the end of the
    week.

    "I hope your telegraph labors have been successful, and that before
    the summer is over you will see your noble effort successful.

    "I am anxious about what is doing in Washington, but I have lost
    faith in the President, and think Mr. Seward is allowing himself to
    be dragged into the mud of his Southern propensities. If Grant
    continues firm with the Republican party, he may prevent great
    mischief. The power of the President seems too great in an
    emergency of this nature. His language shows that his temper is not
    calm enough for dangerous times. In this he falls immeasurably
    below Mr. Lincoln.

    "But if I despair of the President, I shall have faith in the
    people.

    "I wish you a pleasant voyage and a complete success in your great
    undertaking.

"Always sincerely your friend,
"JOHN BRIGHT."



"ROCHDALE, _March 28, '66_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I will try to come to Liverpool to meet you
    on Friday, the 6th April, nothing unforeseen preventing.

    "I shall be glad to spend a quiet evening with you before you sail.
    I shall be glad also to meet Mr. Dudley.

    "You seem, as usual, to be hard at work up to the last day of your
    stay here.

Always truly your friend,
"JOHN BRIGHT."



He sailed from Liverpool on April 7th by the steamship _Persia_,
arriving in New York on Thursday, April 19th, and he immediately took
his return passage for England in the steamship _Java_, which was to
sail from New York on May 30th. May 1st he wrote to Captain Anderson:
"Many thanks for your kind letter the 13th ultimo, received yesterday."
Every word of encouragement was always helpful to his eager temperament,
and of course it was especially so at this time, after so many
disappointments.

Mr. Russell, in his book on _The Atlantic Telegraph_, says:

    "It has been said that the greatest boons conferred on mankind have
    been due to men of one idea. If the laying of the Atlantic cable be
    among those benefits, its consummation may certainly be attributed
    to the man who, having many ideas, devoted himself to work out one
    idea, with a gentle force and patient vigor which converted
    opposition and overcame indifference. Mr. Field maybe likened
    either to the core or the external protection of the cable itself.
    At times he has been its active life, again he has been its
    iron-bound guardian. Let who will claim the merit of having first
    said the Atlantic cable was possible, to Mr. Field is due the
    inalienable merit of having made it possible and of giving to an
    abortive conception all the attributes of healthy existence."

"_Friday evening, 29th May._

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I had hoped to see you to-day, but I have
    been a prisoner.... If I do not see you before you leave to-morrow,
    I pray God to bestow His best favor on you and the noble work in
    which you are so fervently engaged.

    "You will be remembered by very many who will not cease to implore
    success on your undertaking from Him who holds the winds and the
    waves. Please present my best regards to Captain Anderson.

    "Hoping for your safe return, with all the triumph which you have
    so richly deserved,

"I remain, my dear sir,
"Your affectionate friend and pastor,
"W. ADAMS."



The great ship was ready to sail on the day that had been named so many
months before, and the London papers had daily messages from her:

"MARGATE, _July 1st_.

    "The _Great Eastern_, with the Atlantic telegraph cable on board,
    passed here at half-past 3 P.M."

"VALENTIA, _July 6th_.

    "Shore end of the Atlantic cable successfully landed at 3 P.M.
    Tests perfect. The _William Corey_ proceeding to sea, paying out
    slowly. Weather fine. Cable of 1865 tested at noon to-day; is
    perfect as when laid."

"VALENTIA, _July 8th_.

    "Vessels _Blackbird_, _Pedler_, _Skylark_, and _William Corey_
    returned to Berehaven at 3.30 A.M. All vessels will complete
    coaling at Berehaven to-morrow night, and will proceed to sea to
    splice main cable to shore end on Wednesday morning, weather
    permitting. All going well.

    "The _Great Eastern_, with the Atlantic cable on board, has arrived
    at Berehaven, a natural haven on the western coast of Ireland, near
    Foilhommerum Bay, from whence the proposed electric communication
    is to start seawards towards America. Another vessel, the _William
    Corey_, has had confided to it the duty of laying the shore end,
    and it was intended when that was completed that the _Great
    Eastern_ should run round at once, make the splice, and begin its
    work."

"VALENTIA, _July 12th_.

    "Canning to Glass.--Latitude 51 deg. N., longitude 17 deg. 29' W. Cable
    paid out, 283 miles; distance run, 263. Insulation and continuity
    perfect. Weather fine. All going on well. Seaman fell overboard
    from _Terrible_; was picked up; life saved."

    "Canning to Glass.--

"_Noon (ship's time), July 16th._

    "Latitude 52 deg. N., longitude 20 deg. 36' W. Cable paid out, 420 miles;
    distance run, 378 miles. Weather fine. All on board well.

    "Gooch to Glass.--Nothing can be more satisfactory than everything
    is going on on board. Weather glorious."

"VALENTIA, _July 23d_, 5.30 P.M.

    "The following telegram received from the _Great Eastern_ this day:

"'_Noon(ship's time), July 23d._

    "'Canning to Glass.--Latitude 50 deg. 16' N., longitude 42 deg. 16' W.
    Cable paid out, 1345.24 miles; distance run, 1196.9 miles.
    Insulation and continuity perfect. Insulation improved 30 per cent,
    since starting.'"

"VALENTIA, _July 27th_.

    "_Great Eastern_ steaming up Trinity Bay at 4.25 this morning;
    expect to land shore end at noon, local time."

"VALENTIA, _July 27th_.

    "Shore end landed and splice completed at 8.43. Messages of
    congratulation passing rapidly between Ireland and Newfoundland.
    Insulation and continuity perfect. Speed much increased since
    surplus cable has been cut off."

Mr. Field's own diary is interesting, but it is impossible to give here
more than a few extracts:

"STEAMSHIP 'GREAT EASTERN,'
"_Saturday, June 30, 1866_.

    "Sailed at noon from her moorings off Sheerness. The _Great
    Eastern_ has on board 2375 nautical miles of cable."

"_Sunday, July 1st_.

    "Started at 12 noon, under easy steam, through the Alexander
    Channel. Pilot left us. Squally weather, with rain at night."

"_Wednesday, July 4th_.

    "Strong wind and heavy head sea. Made Fastnet light at about 8 P.M.
    Celebrated the ninetieth anniversary of the independence of the
    United States by hoisting the American flag and speeches at
    dinner."

"_Wednesday, July 11th_.

    "Completed coaling _Great Eastern_ and taking in provisions.
    Received on board of _Great Eastern_ at Berehaven:

   LIVE STOCK.
  10 bullocks,
   1 milch cow,
 114 sheep,
  20 pigs,
  29 geese,
  14 turkeys,
 500 fowls.

   DEAD STOCK.
     28 bullocks,
      4 calves,
     22 sheep,
      4 pigs,
    300 fowls,
 18,000 eggs."



"_Thursday, July 12th_.

    "Religious service held at Valentia at 2.30 P.M."

"_Friday, July 13th_.

    "The _Great Eastern_ and _Raccoon_ joined the _Terrible_, _Medway_,
    and _Albany_ at buoy at the end of shore cable at 6 A.M.

    "Splice between shore cable and main cable completed on board of
    the _Great Eastern_ at 3.10 P.M. 3.50 Greenwich time the telegraph
    fleet started for Newfoundland.

    "The telegraph fleet sail as follows: The _Terrible_ ahead of the
    _Great Eastern_ on the starboard bow, the _Medway_ on the port, and
    the _Albany_ on the starboard quarter.

    "It was foggy nearly all day and rained very hard most of the
    forenoon. Signals through cable perfect."

"_Saturday, July 14th_.

    "Wind W.S.W. Weather fine. Distance from Valentia, 135.5 miles;
    from Heart's Content, 1533.5. Depth of water, 210 to 525 fathoms.
    Cable and signals perfect."

"_Monday, July 16th_.

    "Calm, beautiful day. Signals perfect."

"_Tuesday, July 17th_.

    "Sent Mr. Glass at Valentia the following telegram:

    "'Field to Glass.--Please write Mrs. Field to-day at Newburg, New
    York, and tell her, "All in good health and spirits on board of
    this ship, and confident of success." Machinery works perfectly,
    and the cable pays out splendidly.'"

"_Friday, July 20th_.

    "Total distance run, 830.4 miles. Distance from Heart's Content,
    838.6 miles. Depth of water, 1500 to 2050 fathoms. Wind S.W., with
    rain."

"_Sunday, July 22d_.

    "_Great Eastern_ has passed the place where the cable was lost last
    year, and all is going on well."

"_Monday, July 23d_.

    "At 8.54 A.M. I sent the following telegram:

    "'Field to Glass.--Please obtain the latest news from Egypt, China,
    India, and distant places for us to forward to the United States on
    our arrival at Heart's Content.'

    "At 7.05 P.M. I sent the following telegram:

    "'Field to Glass.--Please send us Thursday afternoon the price that
    day for cotton in Liverpool and the London quotations for consols,
    United States five-twenty bonds, Illinois Central and Erie Railroad
    shares, and also bank rate of interest. The above we shall send to
    New York on our arrival, and I will obtain the latest news from the
    States and send you in return.'"

"_Tuesday, July 24th_.

    "At 9.05 A.M. I sent the following telegram:

    "'Field to Glass.--We are within four hundred miles of Heart's
    Content, and expect to be there on Friday. When shall the Atlantic
    cable be open for public business?'

    "At 10.25 A.M. I received the following:

    "'Glass to Field.--If you land the cable on Friday, I see no reason
    why it should not be open on Saturday.'"

"_Thursday, July 26th_.

    "Field to Glass.--We expect to land the cable at Heart's Content
    to-morrow; all well."

"_Friday, July 27th_.

    "At 7 A.M. made the land off Heart's Content. At 9 A.M. we sent the
    end of the cable to the _Medway_ to be spliced. I left the _Great
    Eastern_ in a small boat at 8.15 A.M., and landed at Heart's
    Content at 9 o'clock.

    "The shore end was landed at Heart's Content at 5 P.M., and signals
    through the whole cable perfect.

    "At 5.30 P.M., service held at the church at Heart's Content."

Nothing in this diary is so remarkable and characteristic as the tone of
absolute confidence while the issue of the voyage was still in doubt. It
was this confidence that not only sustained the projectors of the
enterprise through all its mutations, but that infected his associates.
Perhaps it was the moral effect of his mere presence, even more than the
labor of which he took so large a share, that made them so often appeal
for his return to England. Difficulties that looked insurmountable in
his absence seemed to vanish when he appeared.

Hope had so often been deferred that his family hardly dared to think
what a day might bring to them; and they went to church on Sunday, July
29th, and after the service it was suggested that before they return to
their home (Plum Point, below Newburg) they should drive to the
telegraph office. On their way there their attention was attracted to
the day boat, then coming to her dock, gayly dressed with flags, and
very quickly followed the news that the cable was laid, and that this
message had been sent to Mrs. Field:

"HEART'S CONTENT, TRINITY BAY,
"NEWFOUNDLAND, _Friday, July 27, 1866_.

"Mrs. CYRUS W. FIELD, Newburg, New York:

    "All well. Thank God the cable has been successfully laid and is in
    perfect working order. I am sure that no one will be as thankful to
    God as you and our dear children. Now we shall be a united family.
    We leave in about a week to recover the cable of last year. Please
    telegraph at once and write in full, and I shall receive your
    letters on my return here.

    "On the 15th inst. I received through the cable from Valentia your
    message from Newport and Grace's telegram from Newburg, and on the
    22d inst. your telegraphic despatch of the 10th inst., and this
    moment your letter of the 12th inst.

"CYRUS W. FIELD."



It was on the 28th of July that these resolutions were passed:

    "_Resolved_, The directors of the Telegraph Construction and
    Maintenance Company and the directors of the Anglo-American
    Telegraph Company wish in some substantial manner to express their
    high appreciation of the good conduct and admirable way in which
    all engaged in the work of laying the Atlantic cable have performed
    their duties.

    "It has given them great pleasure to order that a gratuity of a
    month's pay be presented to each man on his return to England.

    "The directors, while thanking the men for the past, feel confident
    that in the more difficult task yet before them they will display
    the same hearty zeal in the performance of the work."

Mr. Willoughby Smith mentioned this incident at a dinner given in
London:

    "I remember well, in 1866, during the laying of the Atlantic cable,
    as we went on day by day, Mr. Field used to say to me: 'Thank
    goodness, we are over another day; only let us get safely across
    with the cable, and I will retire on the largest farm in America
    and keep the largest cows and fowls, and receive my dividend daily
    in the shape of eggs and milk.'"

The account of these days is contained in this letter:

"'GREAT EASTERN,'
"HEART'S CONTENT, _August 7, 1866_.

    "_My dear Mrs. Field_,--Thanks for your kind note of July 30th. I
    am, of course, much pleased that the result of all these efforts of
    thought, and concentration of experiences, and long-continued
    indomitable energy, and expenditure of such heaps of gold, has been
    a success. It was very, very near failing. Do what you will, the
    laying of cables (threads!!!) across deep oceans of great breadth
    will always be speculative; although when laid, so far as we can
    conjecture or reason from scientific knowledge or all that is known
    of physical geography, there is no one reason having any sound
    basis in it that can tell us in what direction to apprehend any
    danger, always excepting man's malice or enmity. The very thing we
    proved last voyage, and go to verify in a few days, proves that any
    enemy well equipped can destroy what has cost all these years to
    accomplish.

    "I have no fear of completing the cable of 1865, although I never
    quite got rid of the feeling that it is a very odd thing to do, and
    we can fancy bad weather exhausting our stock of coals, materials,
    and perhaps hopes, by frequent breakages; but we have 7700 tons of
    coal, twenty miles of ropes for grappling, three ships fully
    coaled and provisioned and equipped for the purpose. Two ships are
    now on the ground. Given, then, the opportunity, there is no known
    reason to prevent us being here a fortnight hence with the double
    success. Then what next? God knows. But Mr. Field is not one bit
    quieter than he was in London. He wants a third cable laid, and two
    complete lines from here to New York, before he will be satisfied.
    The success of this one will make the others comparatively easy,
    but I am not sure if he will even then take the repose both he and
    you deserve. He is very well; but how he stands the endless
    excitement I do not know. One thing I may give you now as a sound
    opinion: he would not stand many more London campaigns without you
    or one of your daughters with him. He takes absolutely no repose
    when in London, and it is only because he cannot help himself that
    he gets it at sea. I heartily congratulate him and you upon this
    good termination to the real foundation of future oceanic
    telegraphy; he deserves all honor from his countrymen.... To your
    husband especially belong the creation and the perseverance that
    have moved so many into the vortex.... With every kind wish to you
    and yours,

"Sincerely yours,
"JAMES ANDERSON."



Bishop Mullock wrote on August 6th:

    "In my answer to a society who addressed me yesterday on the
    occasion of my departure for Europe I alluded to your example as a
    great lesson of perseverance, showing that to a man of good energy
    nothing almost is impossible, and telling them in all difficulties
    to have the example of Mr. Cyrus W. Field before their eyes.

    "May God grant that you may be able to resuscitate the old cable. I
    have myself no doubt but that you will accomplish it, and exhibit
    to future generations the greatest example of energy and
    perseverance ever shown by an individual.

    "You ought to be a proud man, for like the name of Columbus, yours
    will be in Europe and America a household word."

Whittier's "Cable Hymn" responds to the feeling experienced at this
time:

   "O lonely bay of Trinity,
     O dreary shores, give ear!
   Lean down unto the white-lipped sea,
     The voice of God to hear.

   "From world to world His couriers fly,
     Thought-winged and shod with fire;
   The angel of His stormy sky
     Rides down the sunken wire.

   "What saith the herald of the Lord?
     'The world's long strife is done;
   Close wedded by that mystic chord,
     Its continents are one.

   "'And one in heart, as one in blood,
     Shall all her peoples be;
   The hands of human brotherhood
     Are clasped beneath the sea.

   "'Through Orient seas, o'er Afric's plain,
     And Asian mountains borne,
   The vigor of the Northern brain
     Shall nerve the world outworn.

   "'From clime to clime, from shore to shore,
     Shall thrill the magic thread;
   The new Prometheus steals once more
     The fire that wakes the dead.'

   "Throb on, strong pulse of thunder! beat
     From answering beach to beach;
   Fuse nations in thy kindly heat,
     And melt the chains of each!

   "Wild terror of the sky above,
     Glide tamed and dumb below;
   Bear gently, ocean's carrier-dove,
     Thy errands to and fro.

   "Weave on, swift shuttle of the Lord,
     Beneath the deep so far,
   The bridal-robe of earth's accord,
     The funeral shroud of war.

   "For lo! the fall of ocean's wall,
     Space mocked and time outrun;
   And round the world the thought of all
     Is as the thought of one!

   "The poles unite, the zones agree,
     The tongues of striving cease;
   As on the Sea of Galilee
     The Christ is whispering Peace!"

We find in Mr. McCarthy's _History of Our Own Times_ these words:

    "Just before the adjournment of Parliament for the recess a great
    work of peace was accomplished, perhaps the only work of peace then
    possible which could be mentioned after the warlike business of
    Sadowa without producing the effect of an anti-climax. This was the
    completion of the Atlantic cable....

    "Ten years, all but a month, had gone by since Mr. Cyrus W. Field,
    the American promoter of the Atlantic telegraph project, had first
    tried to inspire cool and calculating men in London, Liverpool, and
    Manchester with some faith in his project. He was not a scientific
    man; he was not the inventor of the principle of inter-oceanic
    telegraphy; he was not even the first man to propose that a company
    should be formed for the purpose of laying a cable beneath the
    Atlantic....

    "But the achievement of the Atlantic cable was none the less as
    distinctly the work of Mr. Cyrus W. Field as the discovery of
    America was that of Columbus. It was not he who first thought of
    doing the thing, but it was he who first made up his mind that it
    could be done, and showed the world how to do it, and did it in the
    end. The history of human invention has not a more inspiriting
    example of patience living down discouragement and perseverance
    triumphing over defeat....

    "At last, in 1866, the feat was accomplished, and the Atlantic
    telegraph was added to the realities of life. It has now become a
    distinct part of our civilized system. We have ceased to wonder at
    it. We accept it and its consequent facts with as much composure as
    we take the existence of the inland telegraph or the penny post."

Before the two weeks were passed the _Great Eastern_ was at sea and on
her way to recover the cable lost the year before, and from his diary we
copy these short extracts:

"_Thursday, August 9th._

    "The _Great Eastern_ and _Medway_ left Heart's Content at noon."

"_Sunday, August 12th_, at 3 P.M.

    "_Great Eastern_ and _Medway_ joined the _Terrible_ and _Albany_."

"_Monday, August 13th._

    "At 1 P.M. commenced to lower grapnel from _Great Eastern_; at 2
    P.M. grapnel down; at 8.30 P.M. commenced to heave up grapnel, as
    _Great Eastern_ would not drift over cable."

"_Wednesday, August 15th._

    "At 2 P.M. commenced lowering grapnel; at 8.30 P.M. grapnel hooked
    cable. Hove up 100 fathoms and paid out again to wait until
    morning."

"_Friday, August 17th._

    "At 4.30 A.M. commenced heaving up cable; at 10.45 A.M. cable above
    water; at 10.50 A.M. cable parted about ten feet above the water."

"_Monday, August 27th._

    "At 2.30 P.M. got cable from buoy in over the bow and found, by
    tests, it to be only a short length of a few miles which must have
    been cut from the main cable by grapnel."

_"Saturday, September 1st._

    "At 4.50 A.M. cable up to 800 fathoms from the surface.

    "At 5 P.M. commenced heaving up; found the cable to be hooked."

"Sunday, September 2d.

    "12.50 A.M.--Cable above the surface.

    "2.16.--Bight of 1865 cable on board.

    "3.11.--End brought into testing-room.

    "3.50.--Message received. 'Cable of 1866 and Gulf cable both O. K.'

    "3.52.--Cable taken from test-room to make splice.

    "6.50.--Shipped from bow to stern.

    "7.01.--Commenced paying out cable.

    "At 9.28 A.M. I sent the following telegram 720 miles east of
    Newfoundland:

    "'Mrs. CYRUS W. FIELD, Newburg, New York:

    "'The cable of 1865 was recovered early this morning, and we are
    now in perfect telegraphic communication with Valentia, and on our
    way back to Heart's Content, where we expect to arrive next
    Saturday. God be praised. Please telegraph me in full at Heart's
    Content. I am in good health and spirits. Captain Anderson wishes
    to be kindly remembered to you.

CYRUS W. FIELD.'"



"_Saturday, September 8th._

    "Landed cable at Heart's Content.

    "Position of ships entering Trinity Bay:

    _Lily_,        _Great Eastern_,         _Terrible_,
    _Medway_,                          _Margaretta Stevenson_."



Of his own feeling, as he stood waiting on the _Great Eastern_ at dawn
on Sunday morning, September 2d, Mr. Field told in a speech made in
London on March 10, 1868:

    "One of the most interesting scenes that I ever witnessed ... was
    the moment when, after the cable had been recovered on the _Great
    Eastern_, it had been brought into the electrician's room, and the
    test was applied to see whether it was alive or dead. Never shall I
    forget that eventful moment when, in answer to our question to
    Valentia, whether the cable of 1866, which we had a few weeks
    previously laid, was in good working order, and the cable across
    the Gulf of St. Lawrence had been repaired, in an instant came back
    those six memorable letters, 'Both O. K.' I left the room, I went
    to my cabin, I locked the door; I could no longer restrain my
    tears--crying like a child, and full of gratitude to God that I had
    been permitted to live to witness the recovery of the cable we had
    lost from the _Great Eastern_ just thirteen mouths previous."

    (From the London _Times_ of Wednesday, September 5th.)

"The recovery of the cable of 1865 from the very lowest depths of the
Atlantic seems to have taken the world by surprise. It is not, however,
too much to say that no class of the community has felt more
astonishment than those who are best acquainted with the difficulties of
the task--the electricians....

"Night and day for a whole year an electrician has always been on duty
watching the tiny ray of light through which signals are given, and
twice every day the whole length of wire--1240 miles--has been tested
for conductivity and insulation.... Suddenly last Sunday morning at a
quarter to six, while the light was being watched by Mr. May, he
observed a peculiar indication about the light, which showed at once to
his experienced eye that a message was near at hand. In a few minutes
afterwards the unsteady flickering was changed to coherency, if we may
use such a term, and at once the cable began to speak:

"'Canning to Glass.--I have much pleasure in speaking to you through the
1865 cable. Just going to make splice.'"

    (From _Harper's Magazine_, October, 1866.)

"A great historical event has occurred since our last talk, and it has
been received almost as a matter of course. The distance between Europe
and America has been practically annihilated; the Atlantic Ocean has
been abolished; steam as an agent of communication has been antiquated.
We read every morning the previous day's news from London or Paris, and
there is no excitement whatever. Scarcely a bell has rung or a cannon
roared. Not even a dinner has been eaten in honor of the great event,
except by the gentlemen immediately concerned; and the salvo of speeches
which usually resounds upon much inferior occasions from end to end of
the country has been omitted.... The steamers bring the cream no longer.
That is shot electrically under the sea, and the ships suddenly convey
only skim-milk. They are yet young men who remember the arrival of the
_Sirius_ and the _Liverpool_ and the _Great Western_. Their coming was
the occasion of a thousandfold greater excitement than the laying of the
cable. Yet if some visionary enthusiast had said to his friend as they
watched with awe the steaming in or out of those huge ships, 'Before we
are bald or gray we shall look upon these vessels as we now look from
the express train upon the slow old stage-coaches,' he would have been
tolerated only as a harmless maniac.... The name which will be always
associated with this historical event is that of the man who has so
patiently and unweariedly persisted in the project, Cyrus W. Field. With
an undaunted cheerfulness, which often seemed exasperating and
unreasonable and fanatical, he has steadily and zealously persevered, no
more dismayed or baffled by apparent failure than a good ship by a head
wind. We remember meeting him one pleasant day during the last spring in
the street by the Astor House in New York. He said that he was going out
to England by the next steamer.

"'And how many times have you crossed the ocean?'

"'Oh,' he replied, with the fresh enthusiasm of a boy going home for
vacation, 'this will be the twenty-second voyage I have made upon this
business.' And his eyes twinkled as we merrily said good-bye. We heard
of him no more until we saw his name signed to the despatch announcing
the triumph of his blithe faith and long labor."

The number of voyages is understated here. That made on May 30th, he
writes, was his thirty-seventh.

In his lecture on "The Masters of the Situation" Mr. James T. Fields has
said:

    "There is a faith so expansive and a hope so elastic that a man
    having them will keep on believing and hoping till all danger is
    past and victory sure. When I talk across an ocean of three
    thousand miles with my friends on the other side of it, and feel
    that I may know any hour of the day if all goes well with them, I
    think with gratitude of the immense energy and perseverance of that
    one man, Cyrus W. Field, who spent so many years of his life in
    perfecting a communication second only in importance to the
    discovery of this country. The story of his patient striving during
    all that stormy period is one of the noblest records of American
    enterprise, and only his own family know the whole of it. It was a
    long, hard struggle."

After a painful experience was past he never cared to recall it, and for
that reason the world never knew to what straits he and his family were
often pushed. Not a luxury was allowed, and during those twelve years
any wish that might be expressed could only be gratified "when the cable
was laid." All waited for that day, but not always patiently, for one or
another was often heard to explain, "Oh, if that old cable was only at
the bottom of the ocean!" and to this he would invariably answer, "That
is just where I wish it to be."

Neither does the world know what his books tell, that at this very time
his hand was stretched out to both his relations and friends. The
surrogate was so impressed with his management of a trust estate that he
could not believe his statement, and said that he must take the papers
home and verify them, for he had never before known that such an
increase was possible.

It was in London, in March, 1868, that he told of the strange
fluctuations he had seen in the stock of the two telegraph companies in
which he had so long been interested.

    "It is within the last six months only that we have received the
    first return from the money we had put at the bottom of the
    Atlantic. I do not believe that any enterprise has ever been
    undertaken that has had such fortune: that has been so low, and,
    one might almost say, so high. I have known the time when a
    thousand pounds of Atlantic telegraph stock sold in London at a
    high premium. I have known the time when a thousand pounds of the
    same stock was purchased by my worthy friend, the Right Honorable
    Mr. Wortley, for thirty guineas. At one time when I was in London
    trying to raise money to carry forward this great enterprise, a
    certificate for ten thousand dollars (L2000 sterling) in the New
    York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company sold at the
    Merchants' Exchange in New York by public auction for a ten-dollar
    bill (L2). On my return home the gentleman handed the certificate
    to me and asked me if it was worth anything. I said to him, 'My
    dear sir, what did you pay for it?' and to my mortification he
    showed to me the auctioneer's bill for ten dollars. I said to him,
    'I shall be happy to pay you a good profit on your investment.' He
    replied, 'No; what do you advise me to do with it?' I rejoined,
    "Lock it up in your safe. Do not even think about or look at it
    until you receive a notice to collect your dividends.' The holder
    now receives a dividend of eight hundred dollars per annum or
    (L160) in gold for his investment. If any gentleman here has ever
    possessed a more fluctuating investment I should like to hear it."

Later in the evening the Right Honorable Mr. Wortley said:

    "I have been a shareholder from the first, and I am somewhat proud
    of my original L1000 shares, and of those shares to which you have
    alluded, which I truly bought at L30 each. I am anxious, however,
    that those gentlemen who heard that statement should understand
    that I have not yet made a fortune out of the cable. The
    vicissitudes we have gone through have prevented us from doing much
    financially, and, indeed, we have had difficulty at times in
    keeping the enterprise afloat."

The following telegram and letters are among those received at this
time:

"21 REGENT STREET, LONDRES.

    "Envoyez telegramme suivant a FIELD, _Great Eastern_:

    "Felicitations pour perseverance et grand succes.

"LESSEPS."



"11 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE. S.W.,
"_August 28, '66_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--The message which you did me the honor to send me
    from Newfoundland at the commencement of this month, embodying in
    part the contents of a speech delivered by me in the House of
    Commons a few hours before, was a signal illustration of the great
    triumph which energy and intelligence in your person, and in those
    of your coadjutors, have achieved over difficulties that might well
    have been deemed insurmountable by weaker men. I offer you my
    cordial congratulations, and I trust that the electric line may
    powerfully contribute to binding our two countries together in
    perfect harmony.

    "The message reached me among friends interested in America and
    produced a very lively sensation.

    "We live in times of great events. Europe has not often of late
    seen greater than those of the present year, which apparently go
    far to complete the glorious work of the reconstruction of Italy,
    and which seem in substance both to begin and complete another
    hardly less needed work in the reconstruction of Germany. But I
    must say that few political phenomena have ever struck me more than
    the recent conduct of American finance. I admire beyond expression
    the courage which has carried through the threefold operation of
    cutting down in earnest your war establishments, maintaining for
    the time your war taxes, and paying off in your first year of peace
    twenty-five millions sterling of your debt. There are nations that
    could lay an electric telegraph under the Atlantic and yet could
    not do this. I wish my humble congratulations might be conveyed to
    your finance minister. This scale can hardly be kept up, but I do
    not doubt the future will be worthy of the past, and I hope he will
    shame us and the Continent into at least a distant and humble
    imitation."

"I remain very faithfully yours,
"W. E. GLADSTONE.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



Captain Anderson's letter of September 9th is to Mrs. Field, and was
written on board the _Great Eastern_:

    "I cannot tell you how I have felt since our new success. It is
    only seventeen months since I first walked up to the top of the
    paddle-box of this ship at Sheerness upon a dark, rainy night,
    reviewed my past career in my mind, and tried to look into the
    future, to see what I had undertaken, and realize, if possible,
    what the new step in my career would develop. I cannot say I
    believed much in cables; I rather think I did not; but I did
    believe your husband was an earnest man of great force of
    character, and working under a strong conviction that what he was
    attempting was thoroughly practicable; and I knew enough of the
    names with which he had associated himself in the enterprise to
    feel that it was a real, true, honest effort, worthy of all the
    energy and application of one's manhood, and, come what might of
    the future, I resolved to do my very utmost and do nothing else
    until it was over. More completely, however, than my resolve
    foreshadowed, I dropped, inch by inch, or step by step, into the
    work, until I had no mind, no soul, no sleep, that was not tinged
    with cable. I am fortunate that my duties were such that I might
    well ask a blessing upon it, or I had better never have gone to
    church or bent a knee--in a word, I accuse your husband of having
    pulled me into a vortex that I could not get out of, and did not
    wish to try. And only fancy that the sum total of all this is to
    lay a thread across an ocean! Dr. Russell compared it to an
    elephant stretching a cobweb. And there lay its very danger. The
    more you multiply the mechanism the more you increase the risk.
    With all the vigilance and honesty of purpose of chosen men,
    exigencies must arise and may occur. When the nights are dark and
    stormy there comes the torture that may ruin all if not
    successfully met. And so that task has been a series of high hopes
    and blank, dark hours of disappointments, when it seemed as if the
    difficulties were legion and we were beating the air. Mr. Field, at
    least, never gave out. He never ceased to say, 'It would all come
    right,' even when his looks hardly bore out the assertion. But at
    last it did. We came through it all, and I feel as if I had said
    good-bye and God bless you to a wayward child who had cost me great
    thought and was at last happily settled for life just where I
    wished her. I do not think, though, that I could or would have
    nursed the wretch for twelve years, as your husband has done, to
    the destruction of the repose of himself and all the rest of his
    family. I should have discarded her and adopted some other. He has
    persevered, however, and to him belongs all the credit your country
    can bestow."

Professor Wheatstone wrote:

    "According to my promise I enclose a copy of my letter of
    September, 1866, to the Secretary of the Privy Council, in answer
    to his inquiry respecting the persons most deserving of honor in
    connection with the successful completion of the Atlantic
    telegraph.

"'19 PARK CRESCENT,
"'PORTLAND PLACE, N.W., _September 22, 1866_.

    "'_My dear Sir_,--The following is my opinion respecting the
    principal co-operators in the establishment of the Atlantic
    telegraph:

    "'The person to whose indomitable perseverance we are indebted for
    the commencement, carrying on, and completion of the enterprise is
    undoubtedly Mr. Cyrus Field. Through good and through evil report
    he has pursued his single object undaunted by repeated failures,
    keeping up the flagging interest of the public and the desponding
    hopes of capitalists, and employing his energies to combine all the
    means which might lead towards a successful issue. This gentleman
    is a citizen of the United States, and there would perhaps be a
    difficulty in conferring on him any honorary distinction.

    "'From the staff of officials by whose practical skill and
    unwearied attention the great project has been at last achieved, it
    appears to me there are four gentlemen who might, in addition to
    special merits of their own, be taken as the representatives of all
    those who have labored under or with them in their respective
    departments.

    "'Public opinion, I think, would ratify the selection.

    "'These are:

    "'Mr. Glass, the manager of the Telegraph Maintenance Company,
    under whose superintendence the great connecting link has been
    manufactured, and to whose former firm is mainly owing the high
    perfection which the construction of submarine cables has now
    attained.

    "'Mr. Canning, the able engineer of the same company, to whose
    experience and skill we are chiefly indebted for the successful
    laying down of the new cable and the restoration of the old.

    "'Captain Anderson, the commander of the _Great Eastern_ steamship,
    who under new and untried circumstances brought this leviathan of
    the waters to work in subjection to the requirements of the great
    operation. An honorary distinction to this gentleman would no doubt
    be received as a compliment by the mercantile marine.

    "'Dr. W. Thomson, who, distinguished already in the highest fields
    of science, has devoted his talents to improvements in the methods
    of signalizing, and whose contrivances specially appropriated to
    the conditions of submarine lines have resulted in the attainment
    of greater speed than was at first expected.

    "'In naming these gentlemen I have limited myself to those actually
    engaged in the great enterprise which at present occupies so much
    public attention. I have left out of consideration the claims of
    others, however great, who have preceded them in similar
    undertakings of less importance, or who have either in thought or
    deed worked out results which have rendered the present great work
    practicable or even possible.

"'I remain, my dear sir,
"'Yours very truly,
"'C. WHEATSTONE.

"'ARTHUR HELPS, Esq.'"



At the banquet given at Liverpool on October 1st, the chairman read this
letter:

"BALMORAL, _29th September, 1866_.

    "_Dear Sir Stafford_,--As I understand you are to have the honor of
    taking the chair at the entertainment which is to be given on
    Monday next in Liverpool to celebrate the double success which has
    attended the great undertaking of laying the cable of 1866 and
    recovering that of 1865, by which the two continents of Europe and
    America are happily connected, I am commanded by the Queen to make
    known to you, and through you to those over whom you are to
    preside, the deep interest with which Her Majesty has regarded the
    progress of this noble work, and to tender Her Majesty's cordial
    congratulations to all of those whose energy and perseverance,
    whose skill and science, have triumphed over all difficulties, and
    accomplished a success alike honorable to themselves and to their
    country, and beneficial to the world at large.

    "Her Majesty, desirous of testifying her sense of the various
    merits which have been displayed in this great enterprise, has
    commanded me to submit to her for special marks of her royal favor
    the names of those who, having had assigned to them prominent
    positions, may be considered as representing the different
    departments whose united labors have contributed to the final
    result.

    "Her Majesty has accordingly been pleased to direct that the honor
    of knighthood be conferred on Captain Anderson, the able and
    zealous commander of the _Great Eastern_; on Professor Thomson,
    whose distinguished science has been brought to bear with eminent
    success upon the improvement of submarine telegraphy, and on
    Messrs. Glass and Canning, the manager and engineer respectively of
    the Telegraph Maintenance Company, whose skill and experience have
    mainly contributed to the admirable construction and successful
    laying of the cable.

    "Her Majesty is further pleased to mark her approval of the public
    spirit and energy of the two companies who have had successively
    the conduct of the undertaking by offering the dignity of a
    baronetcy of the United Kingdom to Mr. Lampson, the deputy chairman
    of the original company, to whose resolute support of the project,
    in spite of all discouragements, it was in great measure owing that
    it was not at one time abandoned in despair; and to Mr. Gooch,
    M.P., the chairman of the company which has finally accomplished
    the great design.

    "If among the names thus submitted to and approved by Her Majesty
    that of Mr. Cyrus Field does not appear, the omission must not be
    attributed to any disregard of the eminent services which from the
    first he has rendered to the cause of transatlantic telegraphy, and
    the zeal and resolution with which he has adhered to the
    prosecution of his object, but to an apprehension lest it might
    appear to encroach on the province of his own government if Her
    Majesty were advised to offer to a citizen of the United States,
    for a service rendered alike to both countries, British marks of
    honor which, following the example of another highly distinguished
    citizen, he might feel himself unable to accept.

    "I will only add, on my own part, how cordially I concur in the
    object of the meeting over which you are about to preside, and how
    much I should have been gratified had circumstances permitted me to
    have attended in person.

"I am, dear Sir Stafford,
"Very sincerely yours,
"DERBY."



The celebration on the western shore of the Atlantic was not less
general and cordial. We quote from the report of a New York newspaper:

    "A dinner was given in this city on the evening of the 16th instant
    by the New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company to
    Cyrus W. Field, who has recently returned to this country, after
    assisting in the successful laying of the Atlantic telegraph
    cable, with which movement Mr. Field has been more prominently
    identified from the beginning than any other of its advocates and
    supporters. A considerable number of our first citizens were
    present, including the honorary directors of the Atlantic Telegraph
    Company.... Mr. Peter Cooper told of the formation of the New York,
    Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company, and then said: 'On
    those eventful evenings we became fully magnetized and infatuated
    with a most magnificent idea. We pictured to ourselves that in a
    short time we should plant a line of telegraph across the vast and
    mighty ocean. We as little dreamed of the difficulties at that time
    that we were destined to encounter as did the Jews of old dream of
    the difficulties that they were doomed to meet in their passage to
    the promised land. We, like the Jews of old, saw the hills green
    afar off, and, like them, we had but a faint idea of the bare
    spots, the tangled thickets, and rugged cliffs over and through
    which we have been compelled to pass in order to gain possession of
    our land of promise. We have, however, been more fortunate than the
    Jews of old; we have had a Moses who was able to lead on his
    associates, and when he found them cast down and discouraged, he
    did not call manna from heaven nor smite the rock, but just got us
    to look through his telescope at the pleasant fields that lay so
    temptingly in the distance before us, and in that way he was able
    to inspirit his associates with courage to go on until, with the
    help of the _Great Eastern_, and the means and influence of the
    noble band of men that Mr. Field has been able to enlist in the
    mother country, we have at last accomplished a work that is now the
    wonder of the world.

    "In the accomplishment of this work it is our privilege to regard
    it as a great and glorious means for diffusing useful knowledge
    throughout the world.... I trust our united efforts will hasten the
    glorious time when nations will have war no more; when they will
    beat their swords into ploughshares and their spears into
    pruning-hooks. I trust our own country and government will always
    stand as a bright and shining light in the pathway of nations to
    cheer on with hope the suffering millions of mankind who are now
    struggling for life, liberty, and happiness--a happiness that is
    possible to men and nations who will cultivate the arts of peace
    instead of wasting their energies in wars of mutual destruction.

    "Let us hope that the day will soon come that will secure peace and
    good-will among the nations of the earth."

Mr. Cooper concluded with a toast to "The health and happiness of our
Moses, Mr. Cyrus W. Field."

The Common Council of New York passed these resolutions on the 8th of
October:

    "_Whereas_, The recent arrival at his home in this city of Cyrus W.
    Field, Esq., seems peculiarly appropriate for testifying to him the
    gratification felt by the authorities and people of the city of New
    York at the success attending his unexampled perseverance in the
    face of almost insuperable difficulties, and his fortitude and
    faith in the successful termination of the herculean labor to which
    he has devoted his rare business capacity, his indomitable will,
    and his undaunted courage for a series of years--that of uniting
    the two hemispheres by telegraphy;

    "_Resolved_, That the municipal authorities of the city of New
    York, for themselves and speaking in behalf of their constituents,
    the people, do hereby cordially tender their congratulations to
    Cyrus W. Field, Esq., on the successful consummation of the work of
    uniting the two hemispheres by electric telegraph--a work to which
    he has devoted himself for many years, and to whom, under Divine
    Providence, the world is indebted for this great triumph of skill,
    perseverance, and energy over the seemingly insurmountable
    difficulties that were encountered in the progress of the work; and
    we beg to assure him that we hope that the benefits and advantages
    thus secured to the people of the two nations directly united may
    be shared by him to an extent commensurate with the energy and
    ability that have characterized his connection with the
    undertaking.

    "_Resolved_, That a copy of the foregoing preamble and resolution
    be properly engrossed, duly authenticated, and presented to Cyrus
    W. Field, Esq., as a slight evidence of the appreciation by the
    people of this city of the service he has rendered in uniting the
    old and new worlds in the electric bands of fraternity and peace."

The invitation to a banquet to be given by the New York Chamber of
Commerce is dated October 15th, and in it "the members request that they
may hear from your lips the story of this great undertaking;" and the
evening of November 15th was the one chosen.

The toast to which he replied was:

    "Cyrus W. Field, the projector and mainspring of the Atlantic
    telegraph: while the British government justly honors those who
    have taken part with him in this great work of the age, his fame
    belongs to us, and will be cherished and guarded by his
    countrymen."

"The story of this great undertaking" has been told, and as far as
possible in his own words, in these chapters; but there are two or three
further extracts from his speech that it seems expedient to give, for
they explain the pages just read; they refer to the voyage, grappling,
and manner of working the cable.

    "Yet this was not a 'lucky hit'--a fine run across the ocean in
    calm weather. It was the worst weather I ever knew at that season
    of the year. In the despatch which appeared in the New York papers
    you may have read, 'The weather has been most pleasant.' I wrote it
    'unpleasant.' We had fogs and storms almost the whole way. Our
    success was the result of the highest science combined with
    practical experience. Everything was perfectly organized to the
    minutest detail. We had on board an admirable staff of officers,
    such men as Halpin and Beckwith; and engineers long used to this
    business, such as Canning and Clifford and Temple, the first of
    whom has been knighted for his part in this great achievement; and
    electricians, such as Professor Thomson, of Glasgow, and Willoughby
    Smith, and Laws; while Mr. C. F. Varley, our companion of the year
    before, who stands among the first in knowledge and practical
    skill, remained with Sir Richard Glass at Valentia, to keep watch
    at that end of the line, and Mr. Latimer Clark, who was to test the
    cable when done. We had four ships, and on board of them some of
    the best seamen in England, men who knew the ocean as a hunter
    knows every trail in the forest. Captain Moriarty had, with Captain
    Anderson, taken most exact observations at the spot where the cable
    broke in 1865, and they were so exact that they could go right to
    the spot. After finding it they marked the line of the cable by a
    row of buoys, for fogs would come down and shut out sun and stars,
    so that no man could take an observation. These buoys were anchored
    a few miles apart. They were numbered, and each had a flag-staff on
    it, so that it could be seen by day, and a lantern by night. Thus
    having taken our bearings, we stood off three or four miles, so as
    to come broadside on, and then casting over the grapnel, drifted
    slowly down upon it, dragging the bottom of the ocean as we went.
    At first it was a little awkward to fish in such deep water, but
    our men got used to it, and soon could cast a grapnel almost as
    straight as an old whaler throws a harpoon. Our fishing-line was of
    formidable size. It was made of rope, twisted with wires of steel,
    so as to bear a strain of thirty tons. It took about two hours for
    the grapnel to reach bottom, but we could tell when it struck. I
    often went to the bow and sat on the rope, and could feel by the
    quiver that the grapnel was dragging on the bottom two miles under
    us. But it was a very slow business. We had storms and calms and
    fogs and squalls. Still we worked on day after day. Once, on the
    17th of August, we got the cable up, and had it in full sight for
    five minutes--a long slimy monster, fresh from the ooze of the
    ocean's bed--but our men began to cheer so wildly that it seemed to
    be frightened, and suddenly broke away and went down into the sea.

    "This accident kept us at work two weeks longer; but finally, on
    the last night of August, we caught it. We had cast the grapnel
    thirty times. It was a little before midnight on Friday night that
    we hooked the cable, and it was a little after midnight Sunday
    morning that we got it on board. What was the anxiety of those
    twenty-six hours? The strain on every man's life was like the
    strain on the cable itself. When finally it appeared it was
    midnight; the lights of the ship, and in the boats around our bows,
    as they flashed in the faces of the men, showed them eagerly
    watching for the cable to appear on the water. At length it was
    brought to the surface. All who were allowed to approach crowded
    forward to see it; yet not a word was spoken; only the voices of
    the officers in command were heard giving orders. All felt as if
    life and death hung on the issue. It was only when it was brought
    over the bow and on to the deck that men dared to breathe. Even
    then they hardly believed their eyes. Some crept towards it to feel
    of it--to be sure it was there. Then we carried it along to the
    electrician's room to see if our long-sought treasure was alive or
    dead. A few minutes of suspense and a flash told of the lightning
    current again set free. Then did the feeling, long pent up, burst
    forth. Some turned away their heads and wept. Others broke into
    cheers, and the cry ran from man to man and was heard down in the
    engine-rooms, deck below deck, and from the boats on the water and
    the other ships, while rockets lighted up the darkness of the sea.
    Then with thankful hearts we turned our faces again to the west.
    But soon the wind arose, and for thirty-six hours we were exposed
    to all the dangers of a storm on the Atlantic. Yet in the very
    height and fury of the gale, as I sat in the electrician's room, a
    flash of light came up from the deep which, having crossed to
    Ireland, came back to me in mid-ocean telling that those so dear to
    me were well.

    "When the first cable was laid in 1858 electricians thought that to
    send a current two thousand miles it must be almost like a stroke
    of lightning. But God was not in the earthquake, but in the still,
    small voice. The other day Mr. Latimer Clark telegraphed from
    Ireland across the ocean and back again with a battery formed in a
    lady's thimble! And now Mr. Collett writes me from Heart's Content:
    'I have just sent my compliments to Dr. Gould, of Cambridge, who is
    at Valentia, with a battery composed of a gun cap, with a strip of
    zinc, excited by a drop of water, the simple bulk of a tear!'"

These were among the toasts given on the same evening:

    "Captain Anderson and the officers of the _Great Eastern_ and the
    other ships engaged in the late expedition: they deserve the thanks
    not only of their own country, but of the civilized world."

    "The capitalists of England and America who use their wealth to
    achieve great enterprises, and leave behind them enduring monuments
    of their wise munificence."

And this sentiment was read:

    "While expressing our grateful appreciation of the energy and
    sagacity that practically achieved the spanning of the Atlantic by
    the electric current, let us not fail to do honor to those whose
    genius and patient investigation of the laws of nature furnished
    the scientific knowledge requisite to success."

A reception was given to Mr. Field by the Century Club on Saturday
evening, November 17th.

It was in a speech made at Leeds early in October that Mr. John Bright
had said:

    "To-morrow is the greatest day in the United States, when perhaps
    millions of men will go to the polls, and they will give their
    votes on the great question whether justice shall or shall not be
    done to the liberated African; and in a day or two we shall hear
    the result, and I shall be greatly surprised if that result does
    not add one more proof to those already given of the solidity,
    intelligence, and public spirit of the great body of the people of
    the United States. I have mentioned the North American continent. I
    refer to the colonies which are still part of this empire, as well
    as to those other colonies which now form this great and free
    republic, founded by the old Genoese captain at the end of the
    fifteenth century. A friend of mine, Cyrus Field, of New York, is
    the Columbus of our time, for after no less than forty passages
    across the Atlantic in pursuit of the great aim of his life, he has
    at length by his cable moved the New World close alongside the Old.
    To speak from the United Kingdom to the North American continent,
    and from North America to the United Kingdom, now is but the work
    of a moment of time, and it does not require the utterance even of
    a whisper. The English nations are brought together, and they must
    march on together."

And Mr. Bright also wrote:

"ROCHDALE, _November 23, 1866_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I sent a short message to Sir James
    Anderson, that he might send it on to the chairman of the banquet.
    I have not heard from him since, but I hope it reached you in
    proper time. The words were as follows: 'It is fitting you should
    honor the man to whom the whole world is debtor. He brought
    capital and science together to do his bidding, and Europe and
    America are forever united. I cannot sit at your table, but I can
    join in doing honor to Cyrus W. Field. My hearty thanks to him may
    mingle with yours.'

    "This is but a faint expression of my estimation of your wonderful
    energy and persistency and faith in the great work to which so many
    years of your life have been devoted.

    "The world as yet does not know how much it owes to you, and this
    generation will never know it. I regard what has been done as the
    most marvellous thing in human history. I think it more marvellous
    than the invention of printing, or, I am almost ready to say, than
    the voyage of the Genoese. But we will not compare these things,
    which are all great. Let us rather rejoice at what has been done,
    and I will rejoice that you mainly have done it.

    "I wish I could have been at the dinner, for my reluctance to make
    a speech would have given way to my desire to say something about
    you and about the cable, and its grand significance to our Old
    World and your New one.

    "I need not tell you how much I am glad to believe that in a sense
    that is very useful in this world you will profit largely by the
    success of the great enterprise, and how fervently I hope your
    prosperity may increase....

    "Your elections have turned out well. I hope you will yet be
    'reconstructed' on sound principles, and not on the unhappy
    doctrines of the President.

    "If I were with you I could talk a good deal, but I cannot write
    more, so farewell.

"With every good wish for you,
"I am always sincerely your friend,
"JOHN BRIGHT."



A joint resolution presenting the thanks of Congress to Cyrus W. Field
was introduced in the Senate of the United States on December 12th, and
it was reported by Mr. Sumner without amendment on December 18th.

    "_Resolved._ By the Senate and House of Representatives of the
    United States of America, in Congress assembled,

    "That the thanks of Congress be, and they hereby are, presented to
    Cyrus W. Field, of New York, for his foresight, courage, and
    determination in establishing telegraphic communication by means of
    the Atlantic cable, traversing mid-ocean and connecting the Old
    World with the New; and that the President of the United States be
    requested to cause a gold medal to be struck, with suitable
    emblems, devices, and inscription, to be presented to Mr. Field.
    And be it further

    "_Resolved_, That when the medal shall have been struck, the
    President shall cause a copy of this joint resolution to be
    engrossed on parchment, and shall transmit the same, together with
    the medal, to Mr. Field, to be presented to him in the name of the
    people of the United States of America. And be it further

    "_Resolved_, That a sufficient sum of money to carry this
    resolution into effect is hereby appropriated out of any money in
    the Treasury not otherwise appropriated.

    "Approved March 2, 1867."

Immediately on his return to New York Mr. Field sold enough of his cable
stock to enable him early in November to write to those who had
compromised with him in 1860 and enclose to each the full amount of his
indebtedness, with seven per cent. interest to date. One check was for
$68 60, another was for $16,666 67; in all he paid $170,897 62.

The New York _Evening Post_ wrote of this act:

    "We hope we do not violate confidence in stating a fact to the
    honor of a New York merchant, which, though a private transaction,
    ought to be known. Our fellow-citizen, Mr. Cyrus W. Field, whose
    name will always be connected with the Atlantic telegraph, has
    twice nearly ruined himself by his devotion to that enterprise.
    Though a man of independent fortune when he began, he embarked in
    it so large a portion of his capital as nearly to make shipwreck of
    the whole. While in England engaged in the expedition of 1857 a
    financial storm swept over this country and his house suspended;
    but on his return he asked only for time, and paid all in full with
    interest. But the stoppage was a heavy blow, and being followed by
    a fire, in 1859, which burned his store to the ground, and by the
    panic of December, 1860, just before the breaking out of the war,
    he was finally obliged to compromise with his creditors. Thus
    released, he devoted himself to the work of his life, which he has
    at last carried through. The success of the Atlantic telegraph, we
    are happy to learn, has brought back a portion of his lost wealth,
    and his first care has been to make good all losses to others. He
    has addressed a letter to every creditor who suffered by the
    failure of his house in 1860, requesting him to send a statement of
    the amount compromised, adding the interest for nearly six years,
    and as fast as presented returns a check in full. The whole amount
    will be about $200,000. Such a fact, however he may wish to keep it
    a secret, ought to be known, to his honor and to the honor of the
    merchants of New York."

It was at this time that Mr. George Peabody gave him a service of
silver, and asked that this inscription should be engraved on each
piece:

                            GEORGE PEABODY
                                  TO
                           CYRUS W. FIELD,
                    In testimony and commemoration
                        of an act of very high
                   Commercial integrity and honor.
                    New York, 10th November, 1866.




CHAPTER XIII

THE RECONSTRUCTION PERIOD

(1867-1870)


The Governor of the State of Wisconsin, in his annual message to the
Legislature in January, 1867, suggested that the State make to Mr. Field
"a suitable acknowledgment of their appreciation of the priceless value
of the success he had achieved."

The recommendation was acted upon. Resolutions were adopted by both
branches of the Legislature and approved by the Governor on March 29th,
and a gold medal was also ordered to be sent, "properly inscribed."

On the 6th of February Mr. Field sailed for England for the purpose of
making "arrangements between the Anglo-American Telegraph Company and
the New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company." The land
lines across Newfoundland were often broken; complaints were made; the
public was naturally inclined to overrate trivial accidents, and it was
necessary to give an explanation.

"22 OLD BROAD STREET, _January 24th_.

"TO THE EDITOR OF THE _Daily News_:

    "_Sir_,--A statement having appeared in the paper of this day to
    the effect that the communication with New York was interrupted, I
    have to inform you that in consequence of a heavy fall of snow the
    land line in Cape Breton appears to have broken down. The cables
    of this company are, as they ever have been, in perfect order.

"I am, etc.,
"JOHN C. DEANE, Secretary."



Before Mr. Field sailed for home this was published in the London
papers:

    "It appears that a contract was signed yesterday by Mr. Cyrus W.
    Field, acting in behalf of the New York, Newfoundland, and London
    Telegraph Company, with the Telegraph Construction and Maintenance
    Company for a submarine cable between Placentia, Newfoundland, and
    Sydney, Nova Scotia. The line will be laid in the early part of the
    summer. Mr. Field, having effected this very satisfactory
    arrangement in the interests of Atlantic telegraphy, will leave for
    New York in the _Great Eastern_ on the 20th of March."

Soon after his arrival in London the letters that immediately follow had
been received:

"PARIS, _February 28, 1867_.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq.:

    "_Dear Sir_,--The undersigned American citizens, at present in
    Europe, hearing of your arrival in England, and desiring to express
    their warm appreciation of your untiring labors and your final
    success in the laying of the Atlantic telegraph, desire to give you
    a public reception in this city at an early day, or at your own
    convenience.

    "Hoping soon to hear from you, we remain, sir,

"Your sincere friends,
"SAMUEL F. B. MORSE,
"JAMES MCKAYE,
"JOHN MUNROE,
"EMORY MCCLINTOCK,
"CHAS. S. P. BOWLES,
"And many others."



"PARIS, _March 1, 1867_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--Singular as it may seem, I was in the midst of
    your speech before the Chamber of Commerce reception to you in New
    York, perusing it with deep interest, when my valet handed me your
    letter of the 27th ult.

    "I regret exceedingly that I shall not have the great pleasure I
    had anticipated with other friends here, who were preparing to
    receive you in Paris with the welcome you so richly deserve. You
    invite me to London. I have the matter under consideration. March
    winds and that _boisterous Channel_ have some weight in my
    decision, but I so long to take you by the hand, and to get posted
    up on telegraph matters at home, that I feel disposed to make the
    attempt....

"With unabated respect and esteem,
"Your friend, as ever,
"SAMUEL F. B. MORSE.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., Palace Hotel, London."



The next letter is from the Speaker of the House of Commons:

"HOUSE OF COMMONS, _March 12, 1867_.

    "_Dear Sir_,--The last few hours before your departure will be too
    much occupied for me to intrude upon them. I should have been glad
    to have thanked you (I might have ventured to have done so in the
    name of the House of Commons) for the services you have rendered to
    this country, as well as to your own.

    "I offer you my best wishes for a safe and prosperous voyage.

"Believe me
"Faithfully yours,
"J. EVELYN DENISON.

    "C. FIELD, Esq., Palace Hotel."

The next is from the Prime-Minister:

"ST. JAMES SQUARE, _March 17, 1867_.

    "_Sir_,--Understanding that you are on the point of returning to
    the United States after a short visit to this country, I am anxious
    to take the opportunity of saying to yourself, what in the Queen's
    name I was authorized to write to the chairman of the banquet in
    the autumn at Liverpool, how much of the success of the great
    undertaking of laying the Atlantic cable was due to the energy and
    perseverance with which, from the very first, in spite of all
    discouragements, you adhered to and supported the project. Your
    signal services in carrying out this great undertaking have been
    already fully recognized by Congress, and it would have been very
    satisfactory to the Queen to have included your name among those on
    whom, in commemoration of this great event, Her Majesty was pleased
    to bestow British honors, if it had not been felt that, as a
    citizen of the United States, it would hardly have been competent
    to you to accept them. As long, however, as the telegraphic
    communication between the two continents lasts your name cannot
    fail to be honorably associated with it.

    "Wishing you a safe and prosperous return to your own country,

"I have the honor to be, sir,
"Your obedient servant,
"DERBY.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



"AMERICAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE,
"LIVERPOOL, _18th February, 1867_.

    "_Dear Sir_,--The American Chamber of Commerce of Liverpool, being
    desirous of commemorating the successful completion of the Atlantic
    cable between England and America, resolved in September last to
    present gold medals to yourself, Sir Samuel Canning, Sir James
    Anderson, and Mr. Willoughby Smith as representatives of the
    enterprise.

    "The medals are now ready, and it is proposed to present them at a
    banquet to be given by the Chamber at Liverpool.

    "I understand that the 14th of March next will suit yourself and
    Sir James Anderson....

"I remain
"Yours truly,
"HENRY W. GAIR, President.

    "CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., Palace Hotel, Buckingham Gate, London."

This invitation was accepted, and the description of the banquet which
follows is taken from the Liverpool _Daily Post_ of March 15th:

    "The members of the American Chamber of Commerce in this town gave
    a splendid banquet last night, in the Law Association Rooms, Cook
    Street, to Sir Samuel Canning, Sir James Anderson, Mr. Cyrus W.
    Field, and Mr. Willoughby Smith, the layers of the Atlantic
    telegraph cable, on which occasion a magnificent solid gold medal
    was presented to each of those gentlemen....

    "The chairman in proposing 'The projector and the associates in the
    laying of the Atlantic cable,' said: Gentlemen, I now come to the
    business, to the pleasure which has brought us together this
    evening, and if what I say on the subject is short, it is not
    because there is not a great deal to be said on it, but because I
    know you are impatient to hear it said by those whose acts give
    them the means and right to speak with knowledge and authority.
    Acts are better than words, and in the acts we are met here to
    perform we but express the gratitude we feel to those who through
    so many difficulties and discouragements have brought this great
    work to a successful termination. This success is one of which we,
    as a nation, are proud, and rightly so. But it is good for our
    humility--a virtue in which we do not naturally excel--to remember
    that the first credit of that success is due, not to an Englishman,
    but to an American, Mr. Cyrus Field. He is the projector of the
    plan, and had it not been for his tenacity of purpose, his
    faith--which, if it did not remove mountains, at least defied
    oceans to shake his purpose--the plan would long ago have been
    abandoned in despair. In this tenacity and utter incapacity to
    understand defeat Mr. Field is a representative man of the
    Anglo-Saxon race wherever found.... I have now the pleasure to
    propose that the health of the projector and his associates in
    laying the Atlantic cable shall be drunk with a hearty three times
    three.' The call was vociferously responded to, and the chairman
    then handed a medal to Mr. Cyrus Field, Sir James Anderson, and Mr.
    Willoughby Smith, each of whom was loudly applauded on rising to
    receive it.

    "Mr. Field said: 'Mr. Chairman, I thank you for the kind manner in
    which you have spoken of me, and you gentlemen for the flattering
    way in which you have responded to the toast.... I think I may
    safely affirm that never before were so many men brought together
    in one enterprise who were so pre-eminently fitted by diversified
    endowments and by special knowledge and experience to solve the
    problem of the Atlantic telegraph. Most fortunate, moreover, were
    we in finding such a ship as the _Great Eastern_, and such a
    commander as Sir James Anderson. The man was made for the ship,
    and both were made for us. I would also give expression to the
    sense of gratitude we must all feel to the press of England and
    America for its support in adversity as well as in good fortune,
    and to the statesmen of all parties on both sides of the Atlantic,
    whose cordial sympathy and encouragement were never once
    withheld.... Nor must I forget that, during the thirteen years to
    which I have referred, prayers for our success perpetually ascended
    to the Almighty from Christian men and women who, although most of
    them had nothing to gain or to lose by the undertaking, were drawn
    towards it by the deep-felt conviction that, if it were realized,
    it could not fail to serve their Divine Master's cause by promoting
    'Peace on earth and good-will among men.'"

The _Great Eastern_, in which steamship he sailed for home, arrived in
New York late in the first week in April, and the spring and early
summer of this year were passed with his family and friends. From one of
the latter he received this note, written on paper which bore the red
cross and the words "American Association for the Relief of Misery of
Battle-fields":

"NEW YORK, _May 16, 1867_.

    "Many thanks, dear Mr. Field, for your letter. I shall hope to have
    the pleasure of meeting you abroad. But in any event I wish you and
    your family prosperity and increase of your well-earned honors, and
    your rightful self-complacency in your victories over time and
    space, and at last over this world and its last enemy.

"Affectionately yours,
"H. W. BELLOWS."



July 1, 1867, he writes:

    "Left last Wednesday for Canada and the provinces; to-day at
    Ottawa. Returned to New York for a few days, and then for six weeks
    was in Nova Scotia and Newfoundland; on August 15th at the
    Government House, St. John's, Newfoundland."

Many minor trials came to the telegraph companies during these first
years of ocean telegraphy, and this letter refers to some of them:

"NEW YORK, _October 1, 1867_.

    "_My dear Mr. Deane_,--In relation to the tariff, and particularly
    that part touching _ciphers_, I must again appeal to you, and I do
    wish my words could carry conviction to your mind of the fatal
    tendency of the course we are carried into by your rules....

    "But let us inquire if we are benefited by this rule of strictness.
    We see that very few acknowledged cipher messages are forwarded.
    There are people who can make messages apparently in plain text but
    which are actually cipher, and in the various attempts to get much
    into little there lies the germ of many disputes between customers
    and receiving clerks. The truth is, we make nothing and lose much.
    Many who were our best customers now use the line only in cases of
    emergency, whereas they would use it daily if our terms were
    liberal. The U. S. government and the representatives at Washington
    of all the foreign governments are determined to use us as little
    as possible. We are reviled on every side. The government, the
    press, and all the people will do all in their power to encourage a
    competing line. Something must be done to arrest this feeling. Why
    not try reduction for three mouths, and see what the effect will
    be....

"I remain, my dear Mr. Deane,
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



Mistakes made in the transmission of messages by cable were of course
more annoying than other telegraphic errors in proportion to the
costliness and delay of correcting them. One cablegram as received at
the Western Union office, New York, read: "Letter thirteen received; you
better travel." The first change was from "you" into "son"; and it was
delivered in Paris, "Letter thirteen received; son pretty well." By this
time the message had become unintelligible, and therefore useless. A
serious complaint was naturally made when instead of the cable message
reading "Protect our drafts" it was "Protest our drafts."

In a letter to London on February 4th he says:

    "I think there can be no doubt if the several telegraph lines
    between London and New York were under an efficient management the
    business could be done much better and enormously increased, and I
    would work energetically with you, Mr. Morgan, and others to secure
    this object if it can be done in a satisfactory manner. I consider
    it of great importance that this business should be under the
    control of persons that can comprehend what it can be made."

On the eve of sailing for England, on February 18th, he wrote to the
Hon. Hugh McCulloch, Secretary of the Treasury:

    "I have undoubted confidence in the good faith of our government
    that it will pay the principal and interest of every dollar of its
    bonded debt in gold, and shall do all in my power to make my
    friends in Europe think as I do."

The day before this had been sent to him:

"WASHINGTON, _February 17, 1868_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--Accept my thanks and best wishes. I have only to
    say that the wise men whom you will find in the East are not very
    wise in expecting that our troubles will diminish while they insist
    upon concessions which we cannot make.

"Very truly your friend,
"WILLIAM H. SEWARD.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



"ROCHDALE, _March 8, 1868_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I have only just received your kind
    invitation. Unluckily Tuesday is fixed for the Irish debate, and I
    cannot be away from the House on that evening.

    "I regret this very much, for it would give me much pleasure to
    spend an evening with you. I must call upon you, and have a talk
    with you on the new crisis which has arisen in your country.

    "Some of your statesmen are in favor of repudiation, and you are
    dethroning your President, and yet your stocks are not sensibly
    shaken by all this in the English market. There is more faith in
    you than there was three or four years ago!

    "But I hope your people will not repudiate.

"Always sincerely yours,
"JOHN BRIGHT.

    "I expect to be in town in the course of to-morrow."

Mr. Bright's letter referred to the dinner to be given by Mr. Field, on
March 10th, at the Buckingham Palace Hotel, "on the fourteenth
anniversary of the day on which the first contract with the New York,
Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company had been signed at his house
on Gramercy Square, New York."

On the evening of March 6th there had been a debate in the House of
Commons on the _Alabama_ claims, and many of the speeches at the dinner
bore references to that debate. The key-note of the occasion was struck
when the Right Hon. James Stuart Wortley said:

    "One of its greatest feats" (of the ocean telegraph) "has lately
    been accomplished under the auspices of our worthy chairman by his
    sending the conciliatory debate of the House of Commons on the
    _Alabama_ claims to America. I am very glad this has been done, as
    it is far more likely to create good feeling between the two
    countries than anything else."

In giving one of the toasts Mr. Field said:

    "Gentlemen, on Friday evening I had great pleasure in hearing the
    debate in the House of Commons on the _Alabama_ claims. Before
    that, I confess to you, I felt exceedingly anxious about the
    relations between England and the United States; and on Thursday
    last, in sending a private telegram to Washington, I used these
    words: 'When you see the President, Mr. Seward, and Mr. Sumner,
    please say to them that I am perfectly convinced that the English
    government and people are very desirous of settling all questions
    in dispute between the United States and this country, and that
    with a little conciliation on both sides this desirable object can
    be accomplished.' Gentlemen, we are honored here to-night with the
    presence of several distinguished persons connected with the press
    in England and America, and I am going to give you as a toast 'The
    Press' of those countries; and I shall ask them, who so well know
    public opinion, to tell us frankly whether I was justified in
    sending such a message to Washington."

Mr. Walker, of the _Daily News_, ended his speech with these words:

    "As to this matter of the _Alabama_ claims at present dividing the
    two countries, I think we are approximating to an understanding.
    One after another misapprehensions have been removed, and I cannot
    but think that, with the prevailing good disposition on both sides
    of the Atlantic, the matter will be more easily settled than we in
    England have been inclined to imagine."

Colonel Anderson, of the New York _Herald_, closed his speech in this
way:

    "About the message which Mr. Field sent to America the other day, I
    may say that some months ago I sent a similar one, for I had found
    that among a large class of people in England there was a
    disposition to settle all disputes with the United States. I am
    pleased to see in the press of both countries evidence of a kindly
    disposition, and I hope that nothing will ever occur to disturb the
    friendly relations now existing. I believe that I had the honor of
    sending the first message for the press through the Atlantic cable
    after it was opened for business. That was a message of peace
    announcing the end of the war in Germany. I may have to use the
    telegraph in England for many years, but I sincerely trust that no
    angry word will ever pass through the Atlantic cable."

Mr. Smalley, of the New York _Tribune_, said:

    "Having been away so long from home, I have, perhaps, no right to
    say what they think there, though the perseverance and enterprise
    of our friend Mr. Field have brought England so near to America
    that we ought to be able to know what is going on at home as if we
    were living in New York. Independently of that source, I think one
    is entitled to say that the feeling in America responds to the
    feeling of Great Britain in a degree which it has not for the last
    seven years. I heard with pleasure from Mr. Field that he had sent
    the _Alabama_ debate to New York, an instance of public spirit for
    which the two countries owe him a debt of gratitude; for through it
    there is, I suppose, this morning in every journal in America,
    certainly in every large journal on the Eastern coast, full tidings
    of the debate. It is, perhaps, such a message as was never before
    sent from one country to another. It was my fortune to listen to
    that debate. No newspaper report can give such a notion of the tone
    and temper of the House as hearing it conveyed to me. It was not
    only the sincere purpose, it was not only the enthusiasm and
    earnestness, the good-will to America which every speaker showed,
    but there was a certain electric sympathy which seemed to pervade
    the House. It manifested itself in cheers for every liberal
    sentiment and every kindly expression that fell from the speakers'
    lips. Several members of the House came to me as I sat under the
    gallery, and with what I may be pardoned for calling an almost
    boyish enthusiasm, said, 'Is not that capital?' as some sentence of
    conciliation and of justice fell from the lips of Lord Stanley, of
    Mr. Forster, or of Mr. Mill. Now, sir, I should not be loyal to the
    journal which I represent if I did not say that this authoritative
    declaration of a changed feeling in England is sure to be welcome
    in America. Not one but many journals came to us from the United
    States in advance of this debate breathing a similar spirit. The
    cloud which for years has hung between the two countries seems to
    be passing away, and it would be ungrateful not to believe that a
    spark along this cable has helped to dispel it. At any rate, I
    cannot make a mistake in saying that any disposition to close up
    the old quarrel, any wish for future union which English lips may
    utter, is sure to find a cordial echo from the press on the other
    side of the Atlantic."

On the same evening Mr. Field said:

    "I now propose a toast: 'The memory of Richard Cobden, who proposed
    to the late Prince Consort that the profits of the exhibition of
    1851 should be devoted to the establishment of telegraphic
    communication between England and America, and who, later, desired
    that the English government should supply one-half of the capital
    necessary to establish telegraphic communication across the
    Atlantic.' Mr. Cobden's argument was this: 'I am opposed to the
    government giving an unconditional guarantee, because it is a
    bargain all on one side. If you fail, then government pays the
    loss; if you succeed, you reap all the benefit. But I will
    advocate, with all my power, that the government shall supply
    one-half the money necessary to establish telegraphic communication
    between England and America, and in the event of success that they
    should have half the profit.' If the government had followed his
    advice they would to-day be receiving half the dividends on the
    Anglo-American and Atlantic telegraph stocks. I hope this
    consideration may lead them to pursue a liberal policy in regard to
    the extension of the telegraph to India, China, and Australia."

This toast was drunk in silence, all present rising.

Before dinner this note was handed to the chairman:

"HOUSE OF COMMONS, _March 10, 1868_, 7 P.M.

    "_My dear Sir_,--I have cherished to the last the hope of coming to
    see you, but unhappily it is now arranged that Lord Mayo will not
    speak until after dinner, and I therefore fear that my presence at
    the only time of the evening when it would have been of use will be
    impossible. I should have much enjoyed, and I had greatly coveted,
    the opportunity your kindness offered--speaking a word of good-will
    to your country--but I am detained here by a higher duty; for there
    is in my judgment, no duty for public men in England which at this
    juncture is so high, so sacred, as that of studying the case of
    Ireland, and applying the remedies which I believe it admits.

    "We shall lie here until midnight, but not without thoughts of your
    festival and of the greatness of the country with which it is
    connected. You are called upon to encounter difficulties and to
    sustain struggles which some years ago I should have said were
    beyond human strength. But I have learned to be more cautious in
    taking the measure of American possibilities; and, looking to your
    past, there is nothing which we may not hope of your future.

"I remain, my dear sir, most faithfully yours,
"W. E. GLADSTONE.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



In one of the weekly letters sent to him from New York there is this
announcement:

    "A circular has been received from the State Department, dated June
    3d, stating that they have received for you from Paris 'A Grand
    Prize and Diploma.'"

He was invited to a banquet to be given at Willis's Rooms on July 1,
1868, "as an acknowledgment," so the invitations read, "of the eminent
services rendered to the New and Old Worlds by his devotion to the
interests of Atlantic telegraphy through circumstances of protracted
difficulty and doubt."

The Duke of Argyll was chairman of the Committee of Invitation, and Sir
James Anderson was at the head of the Executive Committee.

The following letter was received from the American minister to France:

"PARIS, _24th June, 1868_.

"SIR JAMES ANDERSON:

    "_Dear Sir_,--No one appreciates more highly than myself the
    valuable service rendered by Mr. Field in establishing a connection
    by telegraph between the Eastern and Western Hemispheres, and the
    unfaltering confidence and persevering efforts with which he
    entertained this great international enterprise through the
    circumstances of protracted difficulty and doubt to which you
    allude. It would have given me sincere pleasure, had it been in my
    power, to unite in the tribute of respect proposed to be paid to
    him--a pleasure I relinquish with an equally sincere regret.

"I am, dear sir, very respectfully yours,
"JOHN A. DIX."

"_June 19, 1868._

    "_Sir_,--It would give me great pleasure to show any mark of
    respect in my power to Mr. Cyrus Field and to the great nation to
    which he belongs.

    "I shall be happy to attend the dinner on July 1st, if by so doing
    I can attest my sense of Mr. Field's services.

    "I trust that I shall not give offence, should I be compelled to
    retire before the rest of the company.

"I remain your servant,
"SHAFTESBURY.

"Sir JAMES ANDERSON."



"GROSVENOR CRESCENT, _June 7, 1868_.

    "_Sir_,--I am extremely sorry that a prior engagement must prevent
    my attending the banquet that is to be given to Mr. Cyrus W. Field.

    "It would have been a real pleasure to me to take part in any
    proceeding having for its object to do honor to that distinguished
    gentleman, for whose energetic character, as well as for his
    zealous efforts in promoting friendly relations between our
    respective countries, I have long felt the highest admiration.

I am sir,
"Your obedient servant,
"Clarendon.

"JAMES ANDERSON, Esq."



"107 VICTORIA STREET, S. W.,
"GARRICK CLUB.

    "_My dear Anderson_,--I would like so much to dine with you all in
    honor of Cyrus the Great.

"Yours very truly,
"W. H. RUSSELL."



"120 PICCADILLY, _June 18, 1868_.

    "_Dear Sir_,--I fully intend to be present, if possible, at the
    banquet to Mr. Cyrus W. Field, but I have been of late in the
    doctor's hands, and it may happen that I could not be present.

    "I should, therefore, feel much obliged to you if you would give
    the reply to the toast to some one else, and release me altogether
    from making a speech. For various reasons I am anxious not to speak
    on the occasion, especially as I have been compelled to decline
    all invitations to public dinners of late; otherwise anything that
    I could have done to contribute to the success of this
    well-deserved tribute to the great services of Mr. Cyrus Field I
    would have done with the greatest pleasure.

"Yours truly,
"A. H. LAYARD."



"LONDON, _June 30, 1868_.

    "_My dear Field_,--I regret very much not being able to be one of
    those who will meet to-morrow to do you honor for your great
    services in carrying out telegraphic communication between this
    country and America. No one present will feel and appreciate more
    than I do how important a part you took in that great work, and
    with what energy and perseverance you devoted yourself to its
    success.

"Wishing you long life and every happiness,
"Believe me,
"Yours very sincerely,
"DANIEL GOOCH."



The speeches made at this dinner can be given only in part.

The Duke of Argyll said:

    "My Lords and Gentlemen,--It now becomes my duty to propose that
    which is pre-eminently the toast of the evening, and to ask you to
    return to our distinguished guest our warm and hearty
    acknowledgments of the great service he has rendered to England, to
    America, and to the world by his exertions in promoting the success
    of the Atlantic telegraph, an enterprise which is the culminating
    triumph of a long series of discoveries prosecuted by many
    generations of men. It is not easy to apportion with exactitude the
    merits which may belong to those who have engaged in it; but I much
    mistake the character of our distinguished guest--and I have now
    known him for several years, and have had much communication with
    him--I much mistake his character if he desires to displace for a
    single moment any of those who have preceded him in the history of
    electrical discovery. This great triumph may be looked at from
    various points of view, and in the first place I think I am safe in
    saying that we all feel it to be a triumph of pure science--I say,
    of pure science, of the pure desire and love of knowledge.... I
    have the honor of speaking to many distinguished scientific men,
    and I think they will hear me out when I say that if there is one
    question which they hear with the utmost indignation and contempt
    addressed to them when they are in the course of their
    investigations it is the question, What is the use of their
    discoveries? The answer which the man of science returns to this
    question, as to what is the use of his discovery, is, 'I only tell
    you what is the interest of that discovery, that interest which
    compels and impels me to go on in the path of investigation.' It is
    knowledge, mere knowledge of the facts and laws of nature, that the
    scientific mind seeks to gain. Nevertheless, I think it is a great
    comfort to scientific men to be sure that even those discoveries
    which for years, and even for centuries, remain apparently entirely
    useless may at any time and at any moment become serviceable in the
    highest degree to the human family.... And I believe the success of
    this enterprise would have been delayed for many years--perhaps for
    whole generations of men--had it not been for the single exertions,
    for the confidence and zeal, for the foresight and faith,
    amounting, as I think, to genius, of our distinguished guest, Mr.
    Cyrus Field. None of us in our day, I rejoice to think, are
    disposed to undervalue the influence which the spirit of commercial
    enterprise is having upon the progress and civilization of mankind.
    In nothing perhaps is there so strange a contrast between the
    spirit and the wisdom of modern times and the spirit and wisdom of
    ancient philosophy. It is surely a most wonderful fact that in the
    most brilliant civilizations of the ancient world the wise men of
    those times--and they were men so wise that many of us to this day
    are influenced by their thoughts--many of those men held that
    commercial enterprise was the bane of nations. Now I must say this,
    that of all commercial enterprises which have ever been undertaken,
    this one on the part of Mr. Cyrus Field represents the noblest and
    purest motives by which commercial enterprise can ever be inspired.
    I believe it was the very greatness of the project--the great
    results which were certain to issue--I believe it was this, and
    this alone, which supported him with that confidence and decision
    which through many difficulties and many disappointments has
    carried him at last to the triumphant conclusion of this great
    project. And, gentlemen, I rejoice to say that whilst as a
    commercial enterprise it has come from the other side of the
    Atlantic, it has been well seconded and supported by the
    capitalists not only of America but of England. And surely this is
    another link of friendly intercourse between the people of the two
    countries. Now let me also say this--and this is a point which I
    have ascertained from other sources--I believe so great was the
    confidence of Mr. Field in the triumph of this great undertaking
    that he risked every farthing of his own private fortune in
    promoting its success. On these grounds, ladies and gentlemen, I
    ask you to drink his health. But on one other ground also I ask you
    to drink it, and that is this, that he is personally one of the
    most genial and kindly-hearted of men. At a time when his country
    was in great difficulty, and when many Americans thought at least
    they had something to complain of in the tone of English society, I
    was in the constant habit of meeting Mr. Field, and I never saw his
    temper ruffled for a moment, I never heard any words fall from him
    but words of peace between the two countries; and I often heard him
    express a hope that a time would come when a better understanding
    would arise in the minds of the people of this country and those of
    the United States; and I have reason to believe that his services
    and exertions in the United States have not a little contributed to
    secure the return of that feeling, what I believe is the real and
    permanent feeling of the people of those two great countries. Allow
    me, then, to ask you most heartily to drink this toast with me--the
    health of Mr. Cyrus Field, as the promoter of this great
    enterprise, and as a gentleman whom we all know and honor."

The Right Hon. Sir John Pakington said:

    "There are few men who, more than myself, have in their own
    personal experience been struck by the greatness of the event which
    we are now assembled to celebrate. I am one of the few--and they
    are quickly becoming fewer--who made a tour in the United States
    not only before electric telegraphs were thought of, but before
    even steamboats had crossed the Atlantic. I went to America in the
    quickest way it was then possible to go, in one of the celebrated
    American liners; but it so happened that the wind was in the west,
    as it generally is, and I was exactly six weeks from shore to
    shore. My next personal communication with America was just ten
    years ago. It then became my duty, on account of the office I
    held, to attend the Queen upon the occasion of her visit to the
    Emperor of the French at Cherbourg--one of those interchanges of
    courtesy which have done so much to create and prolong good feeling
    between France and England. One of the festivities during that
    visit was a banquet given by the Emperor to the Queen, on board one
    of his finest line of battle ships. I had the honor of being
    present, and during the dinner a servant came to me and delivered a
    letter which contained a telegram from the United States,
    announcing the completion of telegraphic communication between
    America and England. I can never forget the interest of such a
    communication at such a moment, nor the feeling which it excited
    among the distinguished persons of both nations by whom I was then
    surrounded.

    "Another agreeable memory of the same period was the assistance
    which my office enabled me to give by lending the ships of war of
    this country for the accomplishment of that extraordinary event. It
    is true that the communication so established was shortly
    afterwards interrupted, but it is now restored. We may now, without
    exaggeration, say that England and America are no longer separated
    by the breadth of the Atlantic Ocean, for even during this dinner
    we have been corresponding briskly with our American friends; and
    it is impossible, gentlemen, to resist the conclusion that this
    greatest triumph of modern science must have the effect of
    softening prejudice, increasing and cementing good feeling, and in
    every way promoting the welfare and the prosperity of the two great
    peoples so brought together.

    "That communication, which at the time to which I first referred
    occupied six weeks, may now be effected in as many minutes, and I
    rejoice that I am enabled to attend here to-day to join in doing
    honor to the man to whom, more than to any other human agency, we
    are indebted for this wonderful change."

Mr. John Bright spoke as follows:

    "In attempting to respond to the sentiment that has been submitted
    to us, I have a certain anxiety with regard to a mysterious box
    which is said to be on these premises, containing an instrument by
    which every word we utter to-night, be it wise or be it foolish,
    will be transmitted with more than lightning speed to the dwellers
    on that part of the earth's surface which we describe as the
    regions of the setting sun. But we are so entirely agreed that
    there seems no possibility that anything will be said to-night
    which any one who hears it will desire to contradict, and I hope we
    may avoid the charge of saying anything that is foolish or hasty.

    "Sir Stafford Northcote has submitted this sentiment, 'The peace
    and prosperity of Great Britain and the United States,' which
    means, I presume, that we are here in favor of a growing and
    boundless trade with America, and at the same time desire an
    unbroken friendship with the people of that country. With one heart
    and voice I presume to accept that sentiment, and without any fear
    of contradiction we assert that we are on that point truly
    representative of the unanimous feeling of the three kingdoms.
    There are those--I meet them frequently, for there are cavillers
    and critics everywhere--there are those who condemn the United
    States, and sometimes with something like scorn and bitterness,
    because at this moment the people of the United States are bearing
    heavy taxation, and because they have a ruinous tariff; but if
    these critics were to look back to our own position a few years ago
    they would see how much allowance is to be made for others. During
    the years which passed between 1790 and 1815, for nearly
    twenty-five years the government and people of this country were
    waging a war of a terrific character with a neighboring state. The
    result of that war was that which is, I believe, the result of
    every great war--enormous expenditure, great loans, heavy taxation,
    growing debt, and, of course, much suffering among the people, who
    have to bear the load of those burdens. But after that war, during
    twenty-five years, from 1815 to 1841, there was scarcely anything
    done by the government of this country to remedy the gross and
    scandalous inequalities of taxation, and to adopt a better system
    in apportioning the necessary burdens of the state upon the various
    classes of the people. But since 1841, as we all know, we have seen
    a revolution in this country in regard to taxation and finance, and
    I need not remind you that this has been mainly produced by the
    teaching of one who is not with us to-night, but who would have
    rejoiced, as we now rejoice, over the great event which we are here
    to celebrate, whose spirit and whose mind will, I believe, for
    generations yet to come stimulate and elevate the minds of
    multitudes of his countrymen. But this revolution of which I speak
    is not confined to this country, for, notwithstanding what we now
    see in the United States, it may be affirmed positively that it is
    going on there, and that in the course of no remote period it will
    embrace in its world-blessing influence all the civilized nations
    of the globe. The United States have had four years of appalling
    struggle and disaster. It was, nevertheless, in some sort a time of
    unspeakable grandeur, and it has had this great result, that it has
    sustained the life of a great nation and has given universal and
    permanent freedom over the whole continent of North America. But as
    was the case with our war, so with the American war: it has been
    attended with enormous cost, with great loans, with grievous
    taxation, and with a tariff which intelligent men will not long
    submit to; but at this moment and for some time the strife has been
    ended, the wounds inflicted are healing, freedom is secured, and
    the restoration of the Union, surmounting the difficulties that
    have interposed, is being gradually and certainly accomplished. I
    conclude that such a nation as the United States--such a people, so
    free and so instructed--will not be twenty-five years before they
    remedy the evils and the blunders and the unequal burdens of their
    taxation and their tariff. They will discover, in much less time
    than we discovered it, that a great nation is advanced by freedom
    of industry and of commerce, and that without this freedom every
    other kind of freedom is but a partial good. This sentiment speaks,
    also, of unbroken friendship between the two countries. May I say
    now, in a moment of calm and of reason, that with regard to the
    United States both our rulers and our people, and especially the
    most influential classes of our people, have greatly erred? Men
    here forget that, after all, we are but one nation having two
    governments, we are of the same noble and heroic race. Half the
    English family is on this side of the Atlantic in its ancient home,
    and the other half over the ocean (there being no room for them
    here) settled on the American continent. It is so with thousands of
    individual families throughout this country. No member of my family
    has emigrated to America for forty years past, and yet I have far
    more blood relations in the United States than I have within the
    limits of the United Kingdom; and that, I believe, is true of
    thousands in this country. And I assert this, that he is an enemy
    of our English race, and, indeed, an enemy of the human race, who
    creates any difficulty that shall interfere with the permanent
    peace and friendship of all the members of our great
    English-speaking family. One other sentence upon that point. No man
    will dare to say that the people of the United States or the
    people of the United Kingdom are not in favor of peace.... But
    leaving for a moment--in fact, leaving altogether--the sentiment
    and the toast which have been submitted to us, you will permit me
    to turn more immediately to the purposes of this banquet only for a
    sentence or two. I rejoice very much at this banquet, because we
    are met to do honor to a man of rare qualities, who has conferred
    upon us--and, I believe, upon mankind--rare services. I have known
    Mr. Field for a good many years, and although, I dare say, to any
    sailor who may be here it is not much, to me it seems a good deal
    that Mr. Cyrus Field, in the prosecution of this great work (not
    being a sailor, always bear that in mind), has crossed the Atlantic
    more than forty times; and he has, as you know, by an energy almost
    without example, by a courage nothing could daunt, by a faith that
    nothing could make to falter, and by sacrifices beyond
    estimation--for there are sacrifices that he has made I would not
    in his presence relate to this meeting--aided by discovery and by
    science and by capital, he has accomplished the grandest triumph
    which the science and the intellect of man have ever achieved. Soon
    after the successful laying of the cable I had an opportunity of
    referring to it in a speech spoken in the north of England, when I
    took the liberty of describing Mr. Cyrus Field as the Columbus of
    the nineteenth century; and may I not ask, when that cable was
    laid, when the iron hand grasped in the almost fathomless recesses
    of the ocean the lost and broken cable, if it be given to the
    spirits of great men in the eternal world, in their eternal life,
    to behold the great actions of our lives, how must the spirit of
    that grand old Genoese have rejoiced at the triumph of that hour,
    and at the new tie which bound the world he had discovered to the
    world to which but for him it might have been for ages to come
    unknown!... I believe no man--not Cyrus Field himself--has ever
    been able to comprehend the magnitude of the great discovery, of
    the great blessing, to mankind which we have received through the
    instrumentality of him and his friends, the scientific men by whom
    he has been assisted. I say with the greatest sincerity that my
    heart is too full, when I look at this question, to permit me to
    speak of it in the manner in which I feel that I should speak. We
    all know that there are in our lives joys, and there are sometimes
    sorrows, that are too deep for utterance, and there are
    manifestations of the goodness, and the wisdom, and the greatness
    of the Supreme which our modes of speech are utterly unable to
    describe. We can only stand, and look on, and wonder, and adore.
    But of the agency--the human agency--concerned we may more freely
    speak. I honor the great inventors. In their lifetime they seldom
    receive all the consideration to which they are entitled.... I
    honor Professor Wheatstone and Professor Morse and all those men of
    science who have made this great marvel possible; and I honor the
    gallant captain of that great ship, whose precious cargo, not
    landed in any port, but sunk in ocean's solitary depths, has
    brought measureless blessings to mankind; and I honor him, our
    distinguished (may I not say our illustrious?) guest of to-night,
    for, after all that can be said of invention, and of science, and
    of capital, it required the unmatched energy and perseverance and
    faith of Cyrus Field to bring to one grand completion the mightiest
    achievement which the human intellect, in my opinion, has ever
    accomplished."

Viscount Stratford de Redcliffe, in closing his speech, said:

    "If the share I had in bygone transactions between the two
    countries is indifferent to you, as it may easily be, you will
    feel, nevertheless, with me how naturally the Atlantic cable and
    all its prospective advantages bring to mind that state of things
    which formerly estranged us from America and threatened the
    interruption of those friendly relations which so many motives of
    interest and sympathy concur in urging both parties to maintain and
    improve. Mr. Cyrus Field has called forth our present expressive
    tribute to his character and merits of the signal exertion he made,
    at so much hazard and self-sacrifice, to realize the grand
    conception of the cable. He crossed the Atlantic more than forty
    times in pursuit of that glorious object, and I, who have crossed
    it but twice, have learned thereby to appreciate the results, as
    well as the perils, of so immense an undertaking. Eternal honor to
    him, and also to those of our countrymen who, in concert with him,
    have enabled the two worlds to converse with each other."

M. Ferdinand de Lesseps said:

    "Je viens d'etre charge de vous entretenir des avantages du
    telegraphe electrique entre les diverses parties du monde. Les
    hommes ont toujours cherche a creer et a perfectionner les moyens
    de communiquer entre eux. Reunir les peuples par des voies rapides
    et abregees est un progres veritablement chretien; car il nous
    permet de nous aimer et de nous aider les uns les autres pour nous
    rendre meilleurs et plus heureux. L'element essentiel de ce progres
    est la propagation de la pensee par la parole, par l'ecriture, par
    l'imprimerie, par la presse periodique et journaliere, enfin par la
    telegraphie electrique, merveilleuse invention moderne mettant au
    service de l'homme la force que les anciens donnaient pour embleme
    a la divinite; et qui, au lieu de planer sur nos tetes en signe de
    menace, poursuit une marche bienfaisante jusque dans les
    profondeurs des mers. La telegraphie electrique est encore a son
    debut et deja elle enveloppe le monde. Son application la plus
    surprenante, celle qui a demande le plus de courage et d'efforts
    perseverants, a ete la communication instantanee entre l'Amerique
    et l'Europe. Honneur a Cyrus Field, qui a ete le grand propagateur
    et fondateur de la telegraphie transatlantique! Honneur a ses
    compagnons de travail et de victoire!"

The Duke of Argyll sent the following message to his Excellency Andrew
Johnson, President of the United States, Washington:

    "I am now surrounded by upwards of three hundred gentlemen and many
    ladies who have assembled to do honor to Mr. Cyrus Field for his
    acknowledged exertions in promoting telegraphic communication
    between the New and the Old World. It bids fair for the kindly
    influences of the Atlantic cable that its success should have
    brought together so friendly a gathering; and in asking you to join
    our toast of 'Long life, health, and happiness to your most worthy
    countryman,' let me add a Highlander's wish--that England and
    America may always be found, in peace and in war, 'shoulder to
    shoulder.'"

Mr. Seward's answer from Washington was read during the evening:

    "Your salutations to the President from the banqueting-hall at
    Willis's Rooms have been received. The dinner-hour here has not
    arrived--it is only five o'clock; the sun is yet two hours high.
    When the dinner-hour arrives the President will accept your pledge
    of honor to our distinguished countryman, Cyrus W. Field, and will
    cordially respond to your Highland aspiration for perpetual union
    between the two nations."

And before the company separated the Duke of Argyll said:

    "I hope you will allow me to read to you another thanks which I
    have received by telegraph from Miss Field, New York:

    "'I thank you most sincerely for the kind words you have spoken of
    my father, causing me to feel that we are friends, although our
    acquaintance is thus made across the sea and in a moment of time.'"

This testimonial banquet afforded a congenial text for the newspapers of
both countries, and some extracts follow from the comments of the London
papers.

From the London _Times_:

    "Mere knowledge is itself a great possession; but we want things
    done as well as known, and we are impelled by an irresistible
    instinct to honor the men who actually do them, or get them done.
    This is Mr. Cyrus Field's distinction. By general confession it is
    to him we owe it that the science of men like Faraday and
    Wheatstone was utilized, and that philosophers and sailors and
    capitalists and governments were all united to produce one great
    result. It is surprising even now to read his enumeration of the
    agencies which co-operated in the work. Scientific investigations
    above and beneath the sea, the survey of the Atlantic basin, the
    manufacture of the cables, the mechanical appliances for laying
    them, the skilful seamanship, the great ship, the enterprises of
    capitalists, the ability of directors, the resources of
    governments--in a word, the unexampled combination of nautical,
    electrical, engineering, and executive resources--all these were
    necessary to stretch that piece of wire from continent to
    continent. We may imagine what energy, determination, and skill
    were needed to set all these agents at work, and to maintain them
    in working order in spite of disappointments; and it is as having
    been the principal cause of this perseverance and co-operation that
    Mr. Field received so handsome an acknowledgment the other
    evening."

From _The Daily News_:

    "The name which the general estimate of the public--an estimate
    seldom erroneous in such matters--has associated with the idea of
    transatlantic telegraphy is that of Mr. Cyrus Field, the guest of
    last night's dinner. The credit of the undertaking is far too vast
    to be monopolized by any single name, and common justice, as well
    as regard for national honor, bids us remember that the material
    resources of the enterprise were due in the main to English energy,
    English wealth, and English perseverance. The organized power of an
    old country was required to accomplish an undertaking too immense
    to be successfully grasped by the not less powerful but less
    concentrated resources of a new community. Still, if the glory of
    the ultimate achievement rests with England, the credit of having
    conceived and initiated the enterprise must be ascribed to America.
    And of the American pioneers of the work, there is none who has
    labored so indefatigably as Mr. Cyrus Field. The distinguished
    guest deserves to be numbered among the 'representative men' of his
    own country. If you want to understand how it is that America has
    grown to be what she is, you must seek for an explanation in the
    fact that men of the Field type are not only to be found among her
    citizens, but are able to develop their peculiar powers after a
    fashion impossible in an old-fashioned country like our own."

From the _Morning Star_:

    "Mr. Cyrus W. Field is too earnest and energetic a man, too
    completely devoted to great projects and great success, to have
    much of mere egotism left in him. A life so thoroughly absorbed in
    pursuits which belong to the business and benefit of the whole
    world can have little time for the indulgence of vanity. But one
    might well excuse a little self-gratulation and pride on the part
    of a guest entertained as Mr. Cyrus Field was at Willis's Rooms
    last night. Not often, certainly, is such a banquet given in
    England to a man who is neither a politician nor a soldier.... Mr.
    Field, when he glanced around that splendidly filled banquet-room
    last night, may have felt but little personal pride in the
    well-merited honors he received. But he must have felt gratified at
    the evidence thus practically and brilliantly afforded that the
    public of civilized nations are at last trying to unlearn the fatal
    habit which made them so long ungrateful to some of their best
    benefactors.

    "We never remember to have read of a public demonstration to any
    individual in London which had less of a sectarian or sectional
    character. The Duke of Argyll, one of the most advanced of our
    Liberal peers, one of the most enlightened of our scientific
    thinkers, was hardly more prominent in doing honor to Mr. Field
    than was Sir John Pakington, the steady-going Tory of the old, old
    school. Lord Stratford de Redcliffe, the great Elchi of Mr.
    Kinglake's delightful sensation romance, sat side by side with Mr.
    Bright, who denounced in such powerful and unsparing eloquence so
    much of Lord Stratford's policy and conduct during the Crimean war.
    Mr. Layard joined with Sir Stafford Northcote in the compliment to
    the guest. Two common sentiments animated the whole of the
    company--a company representing politics, science, literature,
    arts, and commerce--the sentiment of personal admiration for Mr.
    Field's labors and character, and that of cordial friendship
    towards the great people of whose indomitable energy he is so
    striking an illustration.... Much of the honor, of course, was
    entirely personal. It was tendered to Mr. Field because he
    individually had deserved it. Mr. Bright, in a few words,
    accurately described Mr. Field's position as regards the Atlantic
    telegraph. Other men may have thought of the project; other men
    may, for aught we know, have thought of it even before he did;
    other men may have mentally planned it out, and proposed schemes
    for its realization.... The idea is not exclusively Mr. Field's;
    nor is the success exclusively his. But assuredly his was the
    energy, the prodigious strength of will, the unconquerable
    perseverance, which forced the scheme upon the intellect, the
    activity, and the influence of England and America, and never
    desisted until the dream had become a reality. A slight and
    delicate allusion was made once or twice last night to the
    sacrifices Mr. Field had made, the responsibilities he had
    incurred, the risks he had run, to bring forward his darling scheme
    again and again after each new defeat and disaster. There are more
    men by far who could bear to make the sacrifices than men who could
    raise their heads as Mr. Field did, undismayed after every defeat,
    full of new hope after each disaster. Certainly that glorious
    vitality of hope is one of the rarest as it is one of the grandest
    of human attributes. Mr. Field brought to the great project with
    which his life will be identified more than the genius of a
    discoverer--he brought the courage, the energy, the heart, and hope
    of a very conqueror. Therefore was his share in the work so unique;
    therefore did the company at Willis's Rooms last night do him
    special honor. But in honoring him they honored also his country.
    Better words, holier messages of peace and brotherhood, were never
    sent along a wire than those which thrilled last night through the
    depths of the Atlantic from the Englishmen around Mr. Field to the
    brethren of their race in America."

"ARGYLL LODGE, KENSINGTON, _July 3, 1868_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I am much obliged by your kind note. I
    assure you it gave me great pleasure to preside at your banquet. I
    would rather have my name associated with the Atlantic Telegraph
    than with any other undertaking of ancient or modern times.

"Yours very sincerely,
"ARGYLL."



"MORTIMER READING, _July 2, 1868_.

    "_My dear Friend_,--I was exceedingly sorry that I was prevented
    from taking part, as I had intended, in doing honor to you last
    night. You know that in all that number of admirers there was not
    one whose feelings towards you were warmer than mine. Indeed, few
    of them could feel the personal gratitude which I feel to the
    author and the indomitable promoter of an enterprise the success of
    which will link me, though far away, to my English home.

"Ever yours sincerely,
"GOLDWIN SMITH."



"CASTLE-CONNELL BY LIMERICK,
"_July 20, 1868_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I saw by the papers that the great banquet
    given to you at Willis's Rooms passed off most successfully, and
    Mr. Bright, who has been staying a week with me, confirms even the
    most favorable accounts. I think you may well be satisfied with
    the honors that have been paid you on both sides of the Atlantic,
    but should more be proffered you may readily receive them as
    deserved....

"Very respectfully and truly yours,
"GEORGE PEABODY."



When he sailed for England, in February, Mr. Field had taken to Mr.
Bright an invitation to visit this country, signed by many of his
American friends, and ending with these words: "Your presence at this
time would tend to strengthen the ties between your country and ours,
and we beg leave to suggest a visit during the ensuing spring."

"TORQUAY, DEVON, _October 13, 1868_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--Your letter has been sent on to me, and has
    followed me in my journey in Cornwall.... I rejoice at the
    patriotism of your countrymen, many of whom have gone or are going
    home to take part in the great election; and I hope most earnestly
    that the Republican candidates may be elected by a grand majority.

    "In this country the elections seem likely to go strongly against
    the Tories; they deserve to be well beaten.

    "As to the invitation from New York, I can say nothing except that
    I am deeply indebted to your friends for their kind invitation, and
    that I regret extremely that I have never yet been able to visit
    your country. I need not tell you how many are my engagements here,
    and how uncertain is the prospect of my being able to see the many
    kind friends I have in the States.

    "I must ask you to thank the gentlemen who wrote to me, and to say
    that I am very grateful to them for their kind remembrance of me.

    "I wish you a pleasant voyage and return. I almost envy you the
    ease with which, after your long experience, you cross the
    Atlantic.

    "I shall wait with confidence, but not without anxiety, what the
    cable will bring us the day after your election. I see four States
    have their elections to-day, from which something may be judged of
    what is to come.

"I am, always very sincerely, your friend,
"JOHN BRIGHT."



November 2, 1868, in writing to a friend he says, "I returned home last
Thursday in time to vote for General Grant."

On December 29, 1868, a banquet was given to Professor Morse, who in
closing his speech said:

    "I have claimed for America the origination of the modern telegraph
    system of the world. Impartial history, I think, will support the
    claim. Do not misunderstand me as disparaging or disregarding the
    labors and ingenious modifications of others in various countries
    employed in the same field of invention. Gladly, did time permit,
    would I descant upon their great and varied merits. Yet in tracing
    the birth and pedigree of the modern telegraph, 'American' is not
    the highest term of the series that connects the past with the
    present; there is at least one higher term, the highest of all,
    which cannot and must not be ignored. If not a sparrow falls to the
    ground without a definite purpose in the plans of infinite wisdom,
    can the creation of an instrumentality so vitally affecting the
    interests of the whole human race have an origin less humble than
    the Father of every good and perfect gift? I am sure I have the
    sympathy of such an assembly as is here gathered if, in all
    humility and in the sincerity of a grateful heart, I use the words
    of inspiration in ascribing honor and praise to Him to whom first
    of all and most of all it is pre-eminently due. 'Not unto us, not
    unto us, but to God be all the glory.'

    "Not what hath man, but 'what hath God wrought.'"

"DEPARTMENT OF STATE,
"WASHINGTON, _January 7, 1869_.

    "_Sir_,--Pursuant to the resolution of Congress of March 2, 1867,
    the President has caused to be prepared for presentation to you, in
    the name of the people of the United States, a gold medal, with
    suitable devices and inscriptions, in acknowledgment of your
    eminent services in the establishment of telegraphic communication
    by means of the Atlantic cable between the Old World and the New.
    This testimonial, together with an engrossed copy of the resolution
    referred to, is herewith transmitted to you by direction of the
    President.

I am, sir, your obedient servant,
"WILLIAM H. SEWARD."



Two years had passed since this resolution was adopted and the medal
ordered, and the reason for its not having been given before this time
was a strange one. In 1868 he had received word that the medal would be
presented to him on his going to Washington, but upon his arrival there
he was asked not to name the subject. The medal had been shown at a
meeting of the Cabinet and had disappeared. Another had been ordered,
and would be sent to him as soon as possible. The mystery was not solved
until 1874, when in London he received a cable message from Washington.

    "The missing original Congressional gold medal, a duplicate of
    which was made and presented to you, has been found. Its value is
    about $600. Secretary Treasury wishes informally to know whether
    you wish to possess it. If so, it will be given to you on receipt
    of value."

Soon after his return home he was in Washington, and while there was
told this story: One day a clerk in the Treasury Department asked the
Secretary why Mr. Field had never received the medal ordered for him.
When desired to explain his question, he answered that he had been
directed to put the medal away _carefully_ after the meeting of the
Cabinet, and that he had not heard the subject mentioned since that day;
neither had he known that the medal was sought for. And now when Mr.
Field called for the "original medal" he was told that it had been given
to the Mint in Philadelphia. A telegram was sent to the director, and
only just in time, for already a hole had been drilled in it.

Mr. Varley wrote this letter on his visit to New York, but it was over
a year before the suggestions that he made were acted upon.

"FIFTH AVENUE HOTEL,
"NEW YORK, _October 6, 1868_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--I hope you will pardon me for addressing you upon
    the subject of the Atlantic circuits.

    "I am a small shareholder in the New York, Newfoundland, and London
    Telegraph Company, a larger in the Anglo-American and Atlantic
    Telegraph companies; and it is with deep regret that I see that the
    latter two companies are fighting instead of working.

    "It seems as if they were re-enacting just the same farces that
    were performed when we were endeavoring to raise funds both for the
    1865 and the 1866 cables. I venture unhesitatingly to assert that
    we should not have succeeded but for the indomitable energy and the
    excellent judgment of Mr. Cyrus Field.

    "I do not believe the present attempt at an adjustment will end in
    any useful results unless some one like Mr. Cyrus Field, enjoying
    the confidence and personal regard of those interested on this
    side, as well as such men as Brassey, Hawkshaw, Fairbairne, Fowler,
    Gladstone, Bright, Whitworth, and others in Europe, go to England
    empowered to act on behalf of your company. The jealousies and
    conflicting interests existing between the directors on the other
    side prevent them from acting with that vigor and integrity of
    purpose so necessary to command success, and which qualities are
    possessed to so large an extent by Mr. Cyrus Field, to whom the
    world is mainly indebted for the Atlantic cables. He of all others
    is, in my opinion, the one most capable of effecting the settlement
    we are all so interested in. He succeeded in restoring public
    confidence, in harmonizing the disputants, and in raising the money
    when the enterprise had twice proved a failure, and had as often
    been virtually abandoned by its natural protectors. How much the
    more, then, will he succeed now when he reappears amongst his old
    supporters and his true friends, backed this time not by failure,
    but by triumphant success, and with all his predictions
    realized!...

"Very truly yours,
"CROMWELL F. VARLEY.

"PETER COOPER, Esq., New York."



On January 20th Mr. Field sailed from New York in the steamship _Cuba_
and joined his wife and two of his daughters, who were in Pau. He was in
England early in the spring, and among the cable messages sent to him we
find this, dated the 10th of May, which he was asked to forward to
General Dix in Paris:

    "Completion of Pacific Railway celebrated to-day by Te Deum in
    Trinity Church."

He was back in New York early in June, and almost immediately after his
return his country-house at Irvington-on-the-Hudson was opened; this was
the first summer that he passed there.

"IRVINGTON-ON-THE-HUDSON, _June 24, 1869_.

    "_My dear Mr. Sumner_,--Many thanks for your letter of the 13th
    instant; it should have been answered at once, but it was sent to
    my house in Gramercy Park.

    "I thank you for your letter to Secretary Fish. I do most sincerely
    hope that we shall soon have a better feeling between this country
    and England, and I know of no one that can do more to bring about
    this desirable result than yourself.

    "You may be sure that I shall do all I can. I wish you would write
    our mutual friend, Mr. John Bright, frankly.

    "I hope soon to have the pleasure of seeing you again and renewing
    our late conversation.

"With great respect I remain, my dear Mr. Sumner,
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



"NEW YORK, _August 9, 1869_.

    "_My dear President Woolsey_,--I have this day read in the _New
    Englander_ for July with great pleasure your very able article on
    the _Alabama_ question, and I cannot help writing to thank you for
    it. I shall mail it Thursday to my friend, Mr. John Bright.

"With great respect,
"I remain, my dear President Woolsey,
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."

"NEW YORK, _August 9, 1869_.

    "_My dear Mr. Bright_,--Since my return from England I have seen
    many of our ablest men, including the President of the United
    States, the Secretary of State, Secretary of the Treasury, Senator
    Sumner, several other members of the Senate, and members of the
    House of Representatives, the Governors of several States, leading
    editors in New York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Washington, and I
    have found only one that advocated war with England.

    "I am more than ever convinced that if the English government would
    send to Washington yourself, the Duke of Argyll, and Earl Granville
    as special ambassadors to act with the British minister, the whole
    controversy between England and America could be settled in a few
    months. Please give this matter your careful consideration. I send
    you by this mail the _New Englander_ for July, containing an
    article on the _Alabama_ question written by President Woolsey, of
    Yale College.

    "With kind regards to your family and with great respect,

"I remain, my dear Mr. Bright,
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



"ROCHDALE, _August 24, 1869_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--I am glad to have your letter, and note its
    contents with much interest. I do not see how your suggestion can
    be adopted at present.

    "Whatever is done now towards a settlement must necessarily come
    from your side. We have done all we can. Your government sent an
    envoy with the unanimous assent of the Senate. He came avowedly
    with the object of arranging an existing difficulty. He made
    certain propositions on the part of his government. These were
    considered by our government, and finally were adopted and
    consented to. A convention was signed, including everything your
    minister had asked for, and this convention was rejected by your
    Senate. Who knows that it will not reject any other convention? If
    you have an envoy who has no power to negotiate, and an executive
    government which cannot ratify a treaty, where is the security for
    further negotiation? We cannot come to Washington and express our
    regret that Reverdy Johnson did not ask for more. We gave him all
    he asked for, all that Mr. Seward asked for, all that the then
    President asked for. What could we have done, what can we now do
    more?

    [Illustration: ARDSLEY, IRVINGTON-ON-HUDSON

    (Home of Cyrus W. Field)]

    "It is clearly for your government to explain why the convention
    failed, and what, in their opinion, is now required from us. The
    civilized world, I am quite sure, will say that we are on a certain
    vantage-ground, having consented to all that was asked from us, the
    convention not having failed through our default.

    "I could easily suggest a mode of settlement which all mankind,
    outside the two countries, would approve of; but how do I know what
    your government can do? If there is passion enough for Mr. Sumner
    to appeal to, or believers in his wild theories of international
    obligation, how can any settlement be looked for? There is abundant
    good feeling here to enable our government to do what is just, but
    no feeling that will permit of any voluntary humiliation of the
    country.

    "Until something is known of what will content the powers that will
    meet in Washington in December next, I do not see what any mission
    from this to you would be likely to effect. I have read the article
    in the _New Englander_. It is moderate, and written in a good
    spirit. I do not know that there is anything in it that I could not
    freely indorse. Upon the basis of its argument there could be no
    difficulty in terminating all that is in dispute between the two
    countries. But the article is in answer to Mr. Sumner; and the
    question is, does your government, and will your Congress, go with
    Mr. Sumner or with the review article? And what view will your
    people take?

    "I write all this privately to you. It is not from a Cabinet
    minister, but from an old friend of yours, who is a member of the
    English Parliament, and who has taken some interest in the affairs
    of your country. You will consider what I say, therefore, as in no
    degree expressing any opinion but my own. I have abstained from
    writing or speaking in public on the subject of the dispute. I
    could say something to the purpose probably if I thought men on
    your side were in a mood to listen and to think calmly. But after
    what has happened in connection with the convention I think we can
    only wait for some intimation from your side.

    "There is a good opinion existing here with regard to your
    government, and especially as regards your Secretary of State. I
    hope he may have the honor of assisting with a wise moderation to
    the settlement of the disputes on which so much has been said and
    written and so little done....

    "Believe me always sincerely your friend,

"JOHN BRIGHT."



He answered this letter on September 14th:

    "I regret Mr. Sumner's speech and his course about the _Alabama_
    claims more than I can express, and shall do all I can to
    counteract the effect of his actions, and you can help me, I think,
    very much, if you will take the trouble to write your views
    fully.... I am anxious to do all in my power to keep good feeling
    between England and America."

And on November 1st he wrote again to Mr. Bright:

    "I do hope and pray that all matters in dispute between England and
    America will be honorably settled, and I felt encouraged when I
    read the sentence in your letter, 'I feel sure that some more
    successful attempt at settlement cannot be far off.'"

Dean Stanley's words, spoken at the breakfast given to him by the
Century Club on his visit to New York in 1878, describe Mr. Field's life
during these years:

    "The wonderful cable, on which it is popularly believed in England
    that my friend and host Mr. Cyrus W. Field passes his mysterious
    existence, appearing and reappearing at one and the same moment in
    London and New York."




CHAPTER XIV

INTERNATIONAL POLITICS--RAPID TRANSIT

(1870-1880)


The journey to England in December, 1869, was taken in order, if
possible, to effect the consolidation of the Anglo-American and the
Atlantic Cable companies; this was done, the latter losing its name and
being absorbed in the other. Mr. Field also made a working arrangement
between the Anglo-American Telegraph Company, the French Cable Company,
and the New York, Newfoundland, and London Company, and a division of
revenue was arranged between the three companies.

He returned to his home in February, and he was in Washington in March,
and while there had a talk with Mr. Sumner on the settlement of the
_Alabama_ claims.

The New York _Herald_ of March 22d says:

    "Mr. Field proposes that the United States shall name three eminent
    persons, crowned heads, as arbitrators, from whom Great Britain
    shall select one, and his decision of the case shall be binding on
    both parties. Or that Great Britain shall name the arbitrators, and
    that the United States shall make the selection of the fated
    individuals. Mr. Field had a long conference yesterday with Mr.
    Sumner upon the subject. The latter does not favor the proposition.
    With all his respect for royalty, he does not think the United
    States will get a fair show from any of the crowned heads of
    Europe. He is opposed to all sorts of arbitration in this matter,
    because he considers it beneath the dignity of our government to
    submit to anything of the kind."

Fourteen months later a treaty had been made and was before the Senate
of the United States.

On the evening of May 23, 1871, Mr. Field gave a dinner to Her Britannic
Majesty's High Commissioners. The Marquis of Ripon said in his speech:

    "It is sufficient for me to say that I believe--aye, I think that I
    may say that I know--that it is an honest treaty, that it has been
    the result of an honest endeavor to meet the just claims of both
    countries. I do not doubt that if this treaty had been written
    exclusively in London or exclusively in Washington it would have
    contained different provisions from those now found in it. The
    treaties which are not compromises, which represent only one side,
    can be dictated only under the shadow of a victorious army. These
    are not the treaties, these are not the conventions, that are made
    between free and equal people."

Before the evening closed the Marquis of Ripon said that he wished to
propose the health of the host of the evening, and then added:

    "He trusted that both branches of the late commission had done
    their share ... but far greater credit was due to the little wire
    which tied the two nations so close together."

He had written to Mr. Field two weeks before from Washington:

    "I am delighted to hear that you are inclined to look with favor
    upon our work. I believe the treaty to be equally fair and
    honorable to both countries; and if it is to be confirmed by the
    Senate it will, I trust, lay the foundation of a firm and lasting
    friendship between the two nations."

On May 18th Professor Goldwin Smith wrote:

    "No doubt you rejoice, as I do, in the treaty. I suppose it is
    safe."

Thirteen years later the Marquis of Ripon wrote, expressing regret that
he would not be able to dine with his host of 1871, and added:

    "Also because I might thus have had an opportunity of bearing my
    testimony to the very important part which the telegraph cable
    played in the negotiations for the treaty of Washington. If it had
    not been for the existence of the cable, those negotiations must
    have been protracted in a manner which might have been very
    injurious to their success."

And at the same time Lord Iddesleigh, who as Sir Stafford Northcote had
served as a member of the commission, wrote of the use of the Atlantic
cable during the Washington negotiations:

    "There can be no doubt that it was a main agent in the matter. We
    usually met our American colleagues at midday, and we were by that
    time in possession of the views of our home government as adopted
    by their Cabinet in the afternoon of the same day."

At a dinner given by Mr. Field in London on Thanksgiving Day, November
28, 1872, Mr. Gladstone said:

    "The union of the two countries means, after all, the union of the
    men by whom they are inhabited; and among the men by whom they are
    inhabited there are some whose happy lot it has been to contribute
    more than others to the accomplishment of what I will venture to
    call that sacred work. And who is there, gentlemen, of them all
    that has been more marked, either by energetic motion or by happy
    success in that great undertaking, than your chairman, who has
    gathered us round his hospitable board to-night? His business has
    been to unite these two countries by a telegraphic wire; but,
    gentlemen, he is almost a telegraphic wire himself. With the
    exception of the telegraphic wire, there is not, I believe, any one
    who has so frequently passed anything between the two countries. I
    am quite certain there is no man who, often as he has crossed the
    ocean, has more weightily been charged upon every voyage with
    sentiments of kindness and good-will, of which he has been the
    messenger between the one and the other people."

It is appropriate here to introduce a note from Mr. Beecher of May 7,
1870:

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--On Friday noon, as I sat writing in the
    _Christian Union_ office, about twelve of the clock, it suddenly
    flashed across me that I had engaged to breakfast with you at nine
    of the morning, alas! and have only to say in excuse that I forgot.

    "Ordinarily that would be an aggravation, for it would argue
    indifference; but in a man who forgets, he is grieved to say,
    funerals, weddings, and social engagements; who forgets what he
    reads, what he knows, it ought not to be considered as a specific
    sin so much as a generic infirmity. I pray you forgive me, and
    _invite_ me again! Then see if I forget.

"I am very truly yours,
"HENRY WARD BEECHER."



It was about this time that Mr. Field's thoughts were turned to the
possibility of laying a cable across the Pacific, and in that way
carrying out his favorite project of completing the circuit of the
globe.

In writing on April 22, 1870, he says:

    "I enclose a memorial and bill before Congress in regard to a
    submarine cable from California to China and Japan."

On April 23d:

    "If I obtain (as I hope) my telegraph bill, I propose that the
    Pacific Submarine Telegraph Company make an agreement, offensive
    and defensive, with the submarine lines from England to China _via_
    India. Our cable would give an alternate route from China to
    England, and I would suggest that we have a joint office in China,
    and that parties there have the option of sending by either line;
    and in case one line should be down, messages should be immediately
    forwarded by the other."

"_August 20, 1870._

    "At the request of prominent members of the United States
    government we have decided to adopt the following route for the
    Pacific cable:

 San Francisco to Sandwich Islands    2,080 miles.
 Sandwich Islands to Medway Island    1,140   "
 Medway Island to Yokohama            2,260   "
 Yokohama to Shang-Hai                1,035   "
                                     ------
                                      6,515   "

    "Medway Island is the new coaling station of the steamers between
    California and Japan."

He writes to Captain Sherard Osborn in August, 1870:

    "In your letter of 10th June you state the total length required
    for the Pacific cable as 7842 nautical miles, and give the price
    for the whole, complete, as L2,900,000 sterling. This is at the
    rate of over L382 9_s._ per nautical mile."

From a letter written on January 21, 1871:

    "It is uncertain what Congress will do with regard to the Pacific
    telegraph."

On the 13th of June, 1871, he sailed from New York as one of the
deputation from the American branch of the Evangelical Alliance,
commissioned to wait on His Majesty the Emperor of Russia in behalf of
religious liberty for all his subjects.

It was upon his return to England that he wrote the following letter to
the Grand Duke Constantine, and the one of September 19th on his return
to New York:

"LONDON, _11th August, 1871_.

"To His Imperial Highness the Grand Duke CONSTANTINE:

    "_Sir_,--With this I have the honor to enclose a memorial addressed
    to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia respecting the establishment
    of a submarine telegraph communication between the west coast of
    America and the eastern shores of Russia, China, etc.

    "I shall esteem it a great favor if your Imperial Highness will be
    so good as to forward the memorial to His Majesty, with any
    observations on the subject which may be thought desirable.

    "With respect to the gentlemen mentioned in the memorial as
    prepared to join me in the enterprise, I may explain that they are
    among the very first merchants and capitalists of the United
    States.... As I am leaving for the United States this evening, my
    address will be Gramercy Park, New York. I would express my sincere
    thanks for the great kindness shown to myself by your Imperial
    Highness, and for the interest you have taken in the subject I have
    so much at heart.

"I beg to subscribe myself,
"With great respect,
"Your most obedient servant,
"CYRUS W. FIELD.



"'_To His Imperial Majesty the Emperor of Russia_:

    "'The memorial of Cyrus West Field, a citizen of the United States
    of America, respect fully thereto,

    "'That having taken an active part in the establishment of electric
    telegraph communication across the Atlantic Ocean between America
    and Europe, and having been also interested in the laying of the
    existing submarine telegraph lines between Europe and the East, he
    is now desirous of submitting to your Majesty a project for
    completing the electric telegraph circle round the globe by uniting
    by submarine cables the western coast of America with the eastern
    shores of your Majesty's dominions, and with China or Japan, or
    both, as may be found most expedient.

    "'Having regard to the complete success, both scientific and
    practical, of the submarine telegraph cables now working, which are
    in the aggregate about 40,000 miles in length, your memorialist
    deems it wholly unnecessary to enlarge on the perfection attained
    in the manufacture of telegraph cables, or the facility and
    certainty with which they are laid in all parts of the world.

    "'Experience has proved that submarine telegraph cables can readily
    be recovered and repaired in case of accident, so that there is
    practically no limit to the length of line which may be employed
    or the depth of the water in which they may with perfect safety be
    submerged.

    "'Memorialist is aware of the strong desire existing in the United
    States of America for the establishment of a telegraph cable across
    the Pacific Ocean in order to the furtherance of commercial
    interests and to the strengthening of the friendly relations which
    have for so many years existed between the United States and your
    Imperial Majesty's government.

    "'From communications which memorialist has had with the government
    of the United States and with many leading members of Congress, he
    is able to say with confidence that both the government and the
    legislature take a deep interest in the subject, and that, as
    memorialist believes, they will readily join with your Majesty in
    making such arrangements as may be found necessary to carry out the
    enterprise.

    "'Memorialist has made diligent inquiry from the persons best able
    to advise with respect to the practicability of uniting the two
    great continents by telegraphic cable, and he has received most
    satisfactory assurances on the subject.

    "'The proposed line would be about 6000 miles in length, and would
    be made in at least two lengths, landing at one or more of the
    islands of the Pacific Ocean.

    "'From this point the line would extend on the one hand to Russian
    territory, where it would be connected with the imperial system of
    land lines, and on the other hand it would run to the western coast
    of the United States, joining there the American wires, and thus
    give direct communication between Russia and the whole continent of
    America, and, by means of the cables now laid, with every important
    telegraph line in the world.

    "'Your Majesty will not fail to appreciate the importance and value
    of such a communication to Russia as well as to the United States
    of America.

    "'It would be an act of presumption on the part of memorialist to
    affect to point out to your Majesty the advantages of the line in
    its international and political aspect. The cost of the line cannot
    be ascertained until the route is definitely settled, but it will
    be manifest that for such an undertaking the very best description
    of cable must be used.

    "'From the best information which could be obtained, and from the
    experience of existing lines, memorialist is led to believe that
    for some years such a line would not in itself be remunerative as a
    commercial speculation, although there would doubtless be a large
    amount of business passing through it; and, further, that having
    regard to the risks necessarily incident to so great a work, it is
    and will be impossible to raise the capital required for
    establishing the line without material aid from the governments
    directly interested.

    "'Memorialist is therefore led to look to your Majesty and the
    United States government for assistance in carrying out this great
    undertaking, and, having taken counsel of his associates in former
    telegraphic enterprises as to the best means of effecting the
    desired object in the shortest time, he respectfully submits to
    your Majesty the following project:

    "'1. That the proposed Pacific telegraph line should be established
    by a company formed by responsible persons experienced in
    telegraphic business, under the sanction and supervision of your
    Majesty's government and the government of the United States of
    America.

    "'2. That the respective governments should each appoint a
    permanent director of the company.

    "'3. That the course of the line, its termini and stations, and
    other needful arrangements be determined under the joint approval
    of the official directors representing the two governments.

    "'4. That each government should guarantee for twenty-five years
    interest at three per cent. per annum on the cost of the line, the
    net receipts for each year (after providing for maintenance and
    repairs) being applied pro rata in relief of the guarantees.

    "'5. That one-half net profits above six per cent. per annum be set
    apart as a sinking fund for return of capital, and the balance
    divided equally between the stockholders and the government.

    "'6. That at the end of twenty-five years of guarantee the company
    shall retain the cable and other property, but without any
    exclusive right.

    "'Memorialist believes that with such assistance as is indicated
    above the cables could be made and laid within three years.

    "'The following eminent citizens of the United States have
    expressed their willingness to join memorialist in this important
    enterprise:

 "'Peter Cooper,
   Moses Taylor,
   Marshall O. Roberts,
   Wilson G. Hunt,
   Prof. S. F. B. Morse,
   Dudley Field,
   Wm. H. Webb,
   Darius Ogden Mills.

    "'Memorialist now humbly seeks your Majesty's approval of the above
    project, believing that if so approved the government of the United
    States will give their concurrence, and that the work will be
    speedily accomplished.

"'CYRUS W. FIELD,
"'of New York.'"



"GRAMERCY PARK,
"NEW YORK, _19th September, 1871_.

    "_Sir_,--Referring to my personal interviews with you, and to my
    letter of 11th ultimo, in which I enclosed a memorial to His
    Majesty the Emperor of Russia respecting the establishment of a
    submarine telegraph cable between Russia and the United States of
    America, I now beg respectfully to submit to your Imperial Highness
    the following modifications of the propositions contained in that
    memorial, which I think will commend themselves to your good
    judgment:

    "1. The proposed guarantee of three per cent. _not_ to commence
    until the day the cable is completed and in successful working
    order.

    "2. The amount of capital guaranteed _not_ to exceed L3,000,000.

    "3. The company to bind itself not to kill seals, nor to deal in
    furs on any portion of Russian territory.

    "4. The cable not to be landed on the island of Saghalien.

    "5. In the event of any dispute arising between the cable company
    and any subject of His Imperial Majesty, the question to be
    referred to the Russian courts. In disputes between the cable
    company and American citizens, the courts of the United States to
    have sole jurisdiction.

    "May I respectfully solicit your Imperial Highness to take these
    proposed modifications into your consideration, and, should they
    meet with your approval, I would beg the favor of your laying them
    before His Majesty the Emperor, with such suggestions as may seem
    to you advisable.

    "It is important that I should know the views of His Imperial
    Majesty's government at the earliest moment, as the Congress of
    the United States meets on the first Monday in December.

    "I beg again to express my sincere thanks for the great kindness
    shown to myself by your Imperial Highness, and for the interest you
    have taken in the subject I have so much at heart.

"I have the honor to subscribe myself,
"With great respect,
"Your Imperial Highness's most obedient servant,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



In January, 1872, he was again in Russia, but after that time there
appears to be no mention made of that government's taking any interest
in a Pacific cable, and it is only possible to give bits of
correspondence in connection with this project, to which he gave so much
of his time and thought.

On the 27th of November, 1876, he wrote:

    "I strongly advise that the Pacific cable be landed a few miles
    south of San Francisco, at a spot which I selected two years ago.
    There is a most excellent sandy beach, and the cable could be
    easily connected with the existing telegraph lines across the
    continent."

"_July 11, 1878_.

    "When the Hawaiian government fulfil their promise to me in regard
    to landing cables on their shores, the question of a Pacific
    submarine telegraph may be entertained by me. Until then I
    certainly shall do nothing towards the accomplishment of the
    enterprise _via_ the Sandwich Islands."

"HAWAIIAN LEGATION, _March 10, 1879_.

    "_Sir_,--The twenty-fifth anniversary of the formation of the
    company for laying the Atlantic cable seems an appropriate occasion
    for giving an impulse to the great work of extending a cable across
    the Pacific.

    "I am sure that you will not be satisfied with anything less than a
    cable round the world.

    "The Hawaiian Islands have a very central position for the
    navigation of the North Pacific. They are a great resort for the
    naval and mercantile marine of the commercial countries.

    "His Majesty the King has long realized the great importance of a
    submarine cable to his kingdom, as well as to all nations whose
    vessels and citizens visit there, and has authorized me, by advice
    of his Cabinet, to grant you, your associates and assigns, the
    exclusive privilege of landing a submarine cable or cables on any
    of the Hawaiian Islands, and for using the same for connection with
    the United States, or any other country, and crossing any or all of
    the islands, and this for the period of twenty-five years.

    "Any land which you may find necessary to have for any of these
    purposes will be furnished by the government free of expense to
    you, not intended to include land for offices or houses.

    "It is to be understood that if you do not within five years begin
    the construction of the cable necessary to connect the islands with
    the United States, and establish the connection within ten years,
    this grant is to cease.

    "The King and Cabinet, having the greatest confidence in your
    ability and energy, anticipate the completion of the cable to the
    islands at an early day.

"I have the honor to be, sir,
"With great respect,
"Your obedient servant,
"ELISHA H. ALLEN,

    "His Hawaiian Majesty's Envoy Extraordinary and Minister
    Plenipotentiary."

It was on the evening of the 10th of March, 1879, that he said:

    "One thing only remains which I still hope to be spared to see, and
    in which to take a part: the laying of a cable from San Francisco
    to the Sandwich Islands ... and from thence to Japan, by which the
    island groups of the Pacific may be brought into communication with
    the continents on either side--Asia and America--thus completing
    the circuit of the globe."

Two months later this note was sent:

"NEW YORK, _May 17, 1879_.

    "_Dear Judge Allen_,--I sail for Europe on Wednesday next, the 21st
    instant, and shall be absent five weeks from this city. During my
    visit there I shall confer with my friends in regard to the Pacific
    cable, and I am willing to head a subscription list with my own
    subscription of one hundred thousand dollars.

    "I shall be happy to confer with you on my return to this country.

    "I have had a bill introduced into Congress granting permission to
    land and operate cables in the United States, which I hope will
    pass during this session.

"With great respect,
"I remain, dear Judge Allen,
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



To follow his steps more closely, it is best to turn back to the fall of
1871. It was on October 10th that he cabled to London:

    "A great fire has been raging in Chicago for the last two days, and
    more than 100,000 persons are homeless and destitute of food,
    shelter, and clothing. Five square miles in heart of Chicago
    utterly destroyed. Loss between two and three hundred millions. All
    principal business houses, banks, and hotels destroyed. Could not
    you, Captain Hamilton, and Mr. Rate call upon the large
    banking-houses connected with America, such as Morgan, Baring, Jay
    Cooke, Morton, Brown, Shipley, and others, and endeavor to organize
    a relief committee for the purpose of rendering the assistance that
    is so much needed? The large cities of the United States are acting
    nobly in this fearful calamity that has befallen Chicago, and the
    citizens subscribe liberally."

The cablegrams that he received and forwarded on this occasion were
numberless. Those that follow were sent by Mr. Mason, the Mayor of
Chicago:

    "We are sorely afflicted, but our spirit is not broken."

    "God bless the noble people of London."

    "Receive our warmest blessing for your most noble response to our
    stricken city. It was received by our committee in tears."

    "Your generosity defies space, as these wonderful gifts have been
    flashed to us from all parts of the earth. We are lifted from our
    desolation. The arm of the civilized world is thrown around us.
    Heaven bless you for this needed help and for the language of
    encouragement and deep love which it speaks to an afflicted
    people."

    "Our people, lifted from despair by this regal aid, are to-day in
    the work of restoration, full of hope. We read in these gifts the
    determination of the universal world that we shall go forward."

Mr. Field received an official invitation from the Italian government,
and he was also the representative of the New York, Newfoundland, and
London Telegraph Company, to attend the Triennial Telegraphic Convention
of representatives from the various governments and telegraph companies
of the world appointed to meet in Rome in December, 1871.

On the 4th of that month Professor Morse wrote:

    "I have wished for a few calm moments to put on paper some thoughts
    respecting the doings of the great telegraphic convention to which
    you are a delegate.

    "The telegraph has now assumed such a marvellous position in human
    affairs throughout the world, its influences are so great and
    important in all the varied concerns of nations, that its efficient
    protection from injury has become a necessity. It is a powerful
    advocate for universal peace. Not that, of itself, it can command a
    'Peace, be still' to the angry waves of human passions, but that,
    by its rapid interchange of thought and opinion, it gives the
    opportunity of explanations to acts and to laws which, in their
    ordinary wording, often create doubt and suspicion.

    "Were there no means of quick explanation it is readily seen that
    doubt and suspicion, working on the susceptibilities of the public
    mind, would engender misconception, hatred, and strife. How
    important, then, that in the intercourse of nations there should be
    the ready means at hand for prompt correction and explanation!

    "Could there not be passed in the great international convention
    some resolution to the effect that, in whatever condition, whether
    of peace or war between nations, the telegraph should be deemed a
    sacred thing, to be by common consent effectually protected both on
    the land and beneath the waters?

    "In the interest of human happiness, of the 'Peace on earth' which,
    in announcing the advent of the Saviour, the angels proclaimed with
    'good will to men,' I hope that the convention will not adjourn
    without adopting a resolution asking of the nations their united,
    effective protection to this great agent of civilization."

This telegram was sent from Rome on December 28th:

    "Telegraphic conference to-day, after a long debate, by a unanimous
    vote, adopted Mr. Cyrus Field's proposition to recommend the
    different governments represented at the conference to enter into a
    treaty to protect submarine wires in war as well as peace, and
    recommended that no government should grant any right to connect
    its country with another without the joint consent of the countries
    proposed to be connected."

In speaking of this convention he said:

    "It represented twenty-one countries, six hundred millions of
    people, and twenty six different languages."

The proposal of Professor Morse was so obviously in the interest of
peace and humanity that it may seem that its adoption was a matter of
course. In fact, however, the opposition to it was at first so strong
and general that it would have been defeated but for the personal
exertions of Mr. Field in its behalf, and his own narrative of how the
adoption was brought about is so interesting as to deserve being given
in full. In his report, dated Rome, January 14, 1872, to the directors
of the New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company, he said:

    "The International Telegraph Conference adjourned this afternoon
    after a session of six weeks and three days....

    "The conference opened on Friday morning, December 1st, but I did
    not arrive here till the 20th ultimo. On my arrival I was very
    sorry to learn that the representative from Norway had on the 4th
    of December proposed to the conference that they should recommend
    to their different governments to enter into a treaty to protect
    submarine cables in war as well as peace, and that his proposition
    had met with such opposition that he had withdrawn it, as he was
    sure it could not pass. As soon as I got all the facts, I
    determined my course. It was to get personally acquainted with
    every delegate and urge my views upon him before bringing them
    before the conference. Finally, on Thursday, the 28th ultimo, I
    presented my views in a carefully prepared argument to the
    conference. Every single member was in his seat, and finally, after
    a long discussion, in which there were forty-nine separate
    speeches, my propositions were carried without a dissenting voice.
    The representatives of nine governments, although personally in
    favor of it, were not willing to take the responsibility of voting
    without positive instructions from their governments, so they
    simply abstained from voting.

    "The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Italy, Visconte Venosta, will
    prepare a circular and send it to the different governments,
    inviting them to enter into an international treaty to protect
    submarine cables in time of war.

    "I shall leave here to-morrow morning for New York _via_ Vienna,
    St. Petersburg, Berlin, Paris, and London. In each of these cities
    I hope to persuade the American minister to help on this treaty,
    which I believe will add much to the security of submarine
    telegraph property."

Soon after he reached London he received this note from Mr. Gladstone;
he refers, doubtless, to the letter already given in this memoir,
setting forth the view he entertained, during the early part of the
civil war, of the hopelessness of endeavoring to restore the Union by
arms. It had not, however, been published in 1872, nor has it appeared
until the publication of this volume.

"11 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE,
"_February 10, 1872_.

    "_Dear Mr. Cyrus Field,_--Will you kindly refer me, if you can, to
    a letter of mine, I think addressed to you respecting my
    declaration in 1862 that the leaders of the South had made a
    nation--as to its date, and, if possible, without inconvenience, as
    to any publication in which I might find it, though probably the
    date will suffice?

"Believe me,
"Very faithfully yours,
"W. E. GLADSTONE."



Mr. Field was in London during the excitement caused by the claims for
indirect damages which were to be put forward by the American agents at
Geneva. These letters refer to that controversy:

"HOUSE OF COMMONS,
"LONDON, _March 1, 1872_.

    "_Dear Mr. Field,_--As I hear, with regret, that you are detained
    here by illness, I take the liberty, as an old acquaintance, of
    asking whether you cannot do something in your compulsory leisure
    to help our countries in this untoward business as to the case.

    "If you, who are so well known here, believe your government to be
    in the right, and that they never did waive, or meant to waive, the
    claim for indirect damages, and if you will make this statement
    publicly here, in any manner you please, it would certainly go far
    to induce me, and I think most of the other public men who were
    strong Unionists during your civil war, to advocate the submission
    of the whole case as it stands to the Geneva board. On the other
    hand, if you cannot do this, I really think we may ask for your
    testimony on the other side.

    "If you do not see your way to taking any action in the matter,
    pray excuse this note, for which my apology must be that this is no
    time for any of us who are likely to get a hearing to keep silence.

"I am always yours very truly,
"THOMAS HUGHES."



He thanked Mr. Hughes for his "kind note," and at the same time gave to
him the letter he had written to Mr. Colfax on February 24th, and this
letter Mr. Hughes sent to the _Times_:

"LONDON, _24th February, 1872_.

    "_My dear Mr. Colfax,_--Having read this morning a brief
    telegraphic summary of the speech which you delivered at Brooklyn
    on Washington's Birthday, I feel constrained to address you on the
    subject upon which you have spoken with so much emphasis. I refer
    to the Treaty of Washington. I share your opinion that neither
    nation will dare, in the face of civilization, to destroy the
    treaty; but nevertheless the crisis is a grave one. It therefore
    behooves every one who can assist to bring about a better
    understanding on the points of difference between the two countries
    to make his contribution to that end. This is my apology for
    addressing you.

    "The grave misunderstanding which has arisen between Great Britain
    and the United States is due to the widely different manner in
    which the Treaty of Washington has been from the outset interpreted
    by the two nations. I have not met a single person on this side of
    the Atlantic who expresses any desire "to back out" of the treaty,
    or refuse the fulfilment of any one of the obligations which it is
    believed to impose; nay, more, my conviction is that if the British
    people were satisfied that the principle of referring vague and
    indefinite claims to arbitration had somehow or other crept into
    the treaty, they yet would, while passing emphatic votes of censure
    on their representatives at Washington, at the same time never
    dream of calling back the pledge which Lord Ripon and his
    colleagues had given on their behalf.

    "The excitement which followed the publication of the American case
    was occasioned by the belief--universal among all classes of the
    English people--that their own interpretation of the treaty was the
    right one, and that indeed no other interpretation had ever been
    or would be given to it. It is desirable that Americans should
    remember this fact--that until the publication of the American case
    nobody on this side of the water had the remotest idea that the
    Washington Treaty contemplated more than arbitration with reference
    to the direct losses inflicted by the _Alabama_ and other
    Confederate cruisers which escaped from British ports during our
    civil war. This is not a matter of surmise; it is demonstrable on
    the clearest evidence. I therefore contend that whether the public
    sentiment of England be well founded or not, its existence is so
    natural that even if we Americans are wholly in the right we ought
    to make every allowance for it--in fact, treat it with generous
    forbearance.

    "So early as June 12th last, when Lord Russell, in moving a
    resolution for the rejection of the treaty, charged the Americans
    with having made no concessions, Lord Granville retorted by
    pointing to the abandonment of the claim for consequential damages.
    'These were pretensions,' he said, 'which might have been carried
    out under the former arbitration, but they entirely disappear under
    the limited reference.' There could be no mistake as to his
    meaning, because in describing the aforesaid 'pretensions' he
    quoted the strong and explicit language which Mr. Fish had
    employed. We are bound to believe that Lord Granville spoke in
    perfect good faith, especially as the American minister was present
    during the debate, and sent the newspaper verbatim report of it to
    his own government by the ensuing mail. When the debate took place
    the ratification of the treaty had not been exchanged. If Lord
    Granville was in error, why did not General Schenck correct him?

    "On the same occasion the Marquis of Ripon, also replying to Lord
    Russell's taunt, remarked that 'so far from our conduct being a
    constant course of concession, there were, as my noble friend
    behind me [Earl Granville] has said, numerous occasions on which it
    was our duty to say that the proposals made to us were such as it
    was impossible for us to think of entertaining.' This, also, was
    understood to refer to the indirect claims.

    "Turning to the debate which took place in the House of Commons on
    the 4th of August, one searches in vain for any remark in the
    speeches of Mr. Gladstone, Sir Stafford Northcote, or Sir Roundell
    Palmer which indicated any suspicion that the _Alabama_ claims had
    assumed the portentous character which now attaches to them. The
    doubt which Lord Cairns at one time entertained had been set at
    rest by the ministerial explanations made at the time in the House
    of Lords, and not a single argument advanced in the Lower House,
    either in support of or in opposition to the treaty, touched upon
    the question of these claims. Even Mr. Baillie Cochrane, the
    well-known Conservative member, who denounced the treaty on all
    sorts of grounds, and whose avowed object was to pick as many holes
    in it as possible, was unable to allege that England had consented
    to an arbitration which might involve her in indefinite
    liabilities.

    "Sir Stafford Northcote, in the course of his humorous speech--a
    speech instinct with good feeling towards the United States--said
    that 'a number of the claims under the convention which was not
    adopted [the Johnson-Clarendon Treaty] were so vague that it would
    have been possible for the Americans to have raised a number of
    questions which the commissioners were unwilling to submit to
    arbitration. They might have raised the question with regard to the
    recognition of belligerency, with regard to constructive damages
    arising out of the recognition of belligerency, and a number of
    other matters which this country could not admit. But if honorable
    gentlemen would look to the terms of the treaty actually contracted
    they would see that the commissioners followed the subjects very
    closely by making a reference only to a list growing out of the
    acts of particular vessels, and in so doing shut out a large number
    of claims which the Americans had previously insisted upon, but
    which the commissioners had prevented from being raised before the
    arbitrators.' All this points unmistakably to the definite and
    limited character of the claims which, in the judgment of the
    English negotiators, were alone to be submitted to arbitration.

    "It seems to me that Judge Williams, in the speech he made at the
    banquet I had the honor to give to the British High Commissioners
    in New York, expressed sentiments which can only be similarly
    construed. 'Many persons,' he said, 'no doubt, will be dissatisfied
    with their [the Joint High Commissioners'] labors; but to deal with
    questions so complicated, involving so many conflicting interests,
    so as to please everybody, is a plain impossibility; but in view of
    the irritation which the course of Great Britain produced in this
    country during our late rebellion, and in view of the one-sided and
    generally exaggerated statements of our case made to the people,
    the American commissioners consider themselves quite fortunate that
    what they have done has met with so much public favor in all parts
    of the country and among men of all political parties.'

    "That true friend of America, the Duke of Argyll, speaking in the
    Upper House, was equally emphatic. 'The great boon we have secured
    by this treaty,' he said, 'is this: that for the future the law of
    nations, as between the two greatest maritime states in the world,
    is settled in regard to this matter, and that for this great boon
    we have literally sacrificed nothing except the admission that we
    are willing to apply to the case of the _Alabama_ and that of other
    vessels those rules, I do not say of international law, but of
    international comity, which we have ourselves over and over again
    admitted.' It is impossible that the duke would have expressed
    himself in language so hopeful and so contented if behind 'the case
    of the _Alabama_ and that of other vessels' he had seen looming up
    the colossal demands which were originally embodied in Senator
    Sumner's memorable oration.

    "The views thus put forward sank deep into the public mind, and the
    treaty was accepted and ratified by popular opinion on this basis.
    General Schenck, several months after the delivery of the above
    speeches, in addressing a Lord Mayor's banquet at the Guildhall,
    bade the English ministry and Lord Ripon 'congratulate themselves
    upon the success with which they have endeavored to bring about
    friendly relations between the United States and Great Britain.'

    "People here ask how he could congratulate the British government
    if he knew all the while that their construction of the treaty,
    which was to cement the friendship of the two countries, fatally
    differed from the construction put upon it by the government at
    Washington.

    "I have not given my own but the English view of the matter. When
    such momentous issues are at stake--when a false move on the
    diplomatic board may endanger the peace of two kindred nations--it
    is absolutely necessary that our people should know what is the
    English side in this controversy. The first duty of a loyal
    American citizen is to ascertain the whole truth, and not by
    ignorance or obstinacy to commit himself to a wrong course.

    "Many hard words have been lately spoken and written about Mr.
    Gladstone. I therefore feel it incumbent upon me to bear my
    testimony to the large and statesmanlike view of American affairs
    which he has taken for several years past, and to the cordial good
    feeling he has shown towards our country since he has been at the
    head of the present government. In spite of temporary
    misunderstanding, I will continue to hope that the Treaty of
    Washington will bear the fruit which he anticipated; that, to quote
    his own eloquent words in the House of Commons on the 4th of
    August, that treaty will do much 'towards the accomplishment of the
    great work of uniting the two countries in the ties of affection
    where they are already bound by the ties of interest, of kindred,
    of race, and of language, thereby promoting that strong and lasting
    union between them which is in itself one of the main guarantees
    for the peace of the civilized world.'

"With great respect I remain,
"My dear Mr. Colfax,
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



Mr. Bright wrote to him at this time:

    "This trouble about the treaty is very unfortunate. I think your
    letter admirable, and I hope it will do good in the States, where,
    I presume, it will be published. I confess I am greatly surprised
    at the 'case' to be submitted to the Geneva tribunal. There is too
    much of what we call 'attorneyship' in it, and too little of
    'statesmanship.' It is rather like a passionate speech than a
    thoughtful state document. And what a folly to offer to a tribunal
    claims which cannot be proved. No facts and no figures can show
    that the war was prolonged by the mischief of the pirate ships; and
    surely what cannot be proved by distinct evidence cannot be made
    the subject of an award. This country will not go into a court to
    ask for an award which, if against it, it will never accept. An
    award against it in the matter of the indirect claims will never be
    paid, and therefore the only honest course is to object now before
    going into court. Has the coming Presidential election or
    nomination anything to do with this matter? Or is Mr. Sumner's view
    of the dispute dominant in Washington? I should have thought your
    government might have said: 'We will not press the claims objected
    to before the tribunal, but we shall retain them in our "case" as
    historic evidence of our sense of magnitude of the grievance of
    which we complain.'

    "This, I dare say, would have satisfied our government and people,
    and practically it would have satisfied every reasonable man in the
    States. To such as would not be content with it, friendship and
    peace would, in the nature of things, seem to be denied."

Soon after his return home he received the following letter, and
returned the answer to that of Mr. Bright:

"WASHINGTON, 1512 H Street, _29th March_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field,_--I cannot tell you how grieved I have been at
    the difficulty which has arisen respecting the Washington Treaty.

    "I do not think that anything would have induced me to accept the
    appointment which brought me here but the pride I felt in taking a
    part, however humble, in the execution of a treaty which I thought
    the glory of the age and which seemed to me so full of promise to
    all civilized nations.

    "I cannot think with patience of all our hopes being dashed to the
    ground by what Bright truly describes as a 'passionate speech,'
    followed by a claim utterly extravagant, from which the party
    making it never expected to get a farthing.

    "I confess that I should not have been afraid to go to arbitration
    upon it, but I see the difficulty which any government would have
    in justifying themselves to their people in leaving it to any five
    persons to say whether a fine of two hundred millions should be
    inflicted on them.

    "You have done your part excellently, but why do not others raise
    their voices against this tremendous folly which is not unlikely,
    sooner or later, to lead us into war?

    "I fully believe that both governments are very anxious to
    accommodate matters, but I confess that I do not see how that
    accommodation is to be brought about without a concession, which it
    is very difficult for a government to make on the eve of a
    Presidential election.

"Believe me
"Very sincerely yours,
"RUSSELL GURNEY."



"GRAMERCY PARK,
"NEW YORK, _2d April, 1872_.

    "_My dear Mr. Bright,_--I arrived on 25th March, after a very rough
    passage of sixteen days....

    "Since my return I have devoted much of my time to ascertain the
    real sentiment of the people of this country in regard to the
    Washington Treaty, and as far as I can judge, after seeing many
    persons of different political parties, it appears to be almost
    unanimous that our government has made a great mistake in including
    these indirect claims in the 'case.' I am convinced that the best
    people in England and America desire to have this question settled
    in a fair and honorable manner. In fact, many say to me that they
    have got tired of hearing about the indirect claims....

"With great respect and kind regards to your family,
"I remain, my dear Mr. Bright,
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



It was while he was in London, in December, 1872, that Mr. Junius Morgan
said to him that he had just received a letter from Mr. John Taylor
Johnston about the Cesnola collection, then in London, and he asked him,
if he had the time to do so, to examine it and give him his opinion. Mr.
Field went at once to see it, and he was much impressed with its value.
Of this time General Cesnola writes:

    "The officers of the British Museum had already examined the
    collection, and it was perhaps on their report that Mr. Gladstone
    came to see the collection; but whether he came with a view to
    securing it for the British Museum or not I cannot say. Your father
    asked me to drive back with him to Mr. Morgan's office, and
    suggested to Mr. Morgan (as agent for Mr. Johnston) to close the
    purchase of the collection with me _verbally at once_, and a
    payment was made on account without delay, and without waiting for
    the papers to be drawn up.

    "It was through your father that my collection became the property
    of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. It was he who introduced me to
    Mr. Gladstone, Earl Granville, Mr. Adams, then United States
    minister in London; also to the Dean of Westminster and Lady
    Augusta Stanley, and to many other of his English friends. He
    invited a large party to meet me at dinner, and also brought many
    to see my Cypriote collection. I doubt if, without the great
    personal interest shown by your father, it would ever have become
    the property of the Metropolitan Museum; because it was only after
    this that the London press went wild over securing it for England.

    "I have said, and shall always say, that it is chiefly, if not
    wholly, due to Cyrus W. Field that my discoveries are in this city
    to-day."

The sale of the New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company was
made early in this year, and on July 2, 1873, he writes to Mr. Orton,
the president of the Western Union Telegraph Company:

    "The New York, Newfoundland, and London Telegraph Company, having
    been consolidated with the Anglo-American Telegraph Company,
    Limited, drafts will hereafter be made upon your company, and
    communications made in the name of the said Anglo-American
    Telegraph Company, Limited."

Among the cable messages sent during the autumn of this year these are
of interest:

    "September 19th.--Great panic here in money market."

    "September 20th.--Confidently believed, reliable quarter,
    government will take measures relieve market before Monday, but
    thus far panic has exceeded anything ever known."

    "Saturday, October 30th.--Most of the firms that have suspended are
    those that have been doing too much business for their capital, but
    confidence is so shaken that many stocks are being sold at whatever
    they will bring. Think perhaps have seen worst, but don't yet see
    signs permanent improvement."

    "Monday, November 1st.--Western Union sold before panic at 90. Has
    sold in last few days less than 44."

We find these entries in his diary:

    "January 13th, 1874.--Arrived in London."

    "February 14th.--Sailed from Liverpool for New York in the _Cuba_;
    fifty-sixth voyage."

This letter followed him to New York:

"11 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE,
"_March 31, 1874_.

    _"My dear Mr. Cyrus Field,_--When I was about to thank you for your
    kind letter of the 10th, I received that of the 17th announcing to
    me the funeral of Mr. C. Sumner, and the great manifestation of
    feeling which it called forth.

    "His loss must be heavily felt, and his name will long be
    remembered in connection with the abolition of slavery, which was
    wrought out in the United States by methods so wonderful and so
    remote from the general expectation.

    "As respects events in this country, they have brought about for me
    a great and personally not an unacceptable change. I have always
    desired earnestly that the closing period of my life might be spent
    in freedom from political commotion, and I have plenty of work cut
    out for me in other regions of a more free and open atmosphere.

    "As respects the political position, it has been one perfectly
    honorable for us, inasmuch as we are dismissed for or upon having
    done what we undertook or were charged to do; and as respects the
    new ministry, they show at present a disposition to be quiet.

"Believe me, my dear Mr. Field,
"Yours very faithfully,
"W. E. GLADSTONE."



The following extract is taken from Mr. Field's private papers:

"The bill for the expansion of the currency, which at this period passed
both houses of Congress, after exhaustive debates, created much alarm
among the leading financial men of New York and the Eastern States.
Meetings were held at various places to protest against it, and to
request the President to exercise his veto."

A number of the leading bankers, capitalists, and merchants of New York
assembled on April 15th at Mr. Field's house on Gramercy Park to
consider what action should be taken in the matter. A petition very
extensively signed was read, and the following resolutions were adopted:

    "_Resolved_, That the following gentlemen be appointed a committee
    to take charge of and present the foregoing petition to the
    President, bearing the signatures of all the 2500 leading bankers
    and business firms of the City of New York, asking him to interpose
    his veto to prevent the enactment of the Senate currency bill,
    which has recently passed both houses of Congress; or any other
    bill having in view the increase of inconvertible currency.

    "_Resolved_, That the Senators from the State of New York, and such
    members of the House of Representatives from this State as
    entertain the views indicated in the foregoing resolution, be added
    to the committee, and their co-operation invited. The members of
    this committee are:

    "J. J. Astor, Rev. Dr. Adams, Ethan Allen, W. H. Aspinwall, W. A.
    Booth, James M. Brown, August Belmont, S. D. Babcock, S. B.
    Chittenden, E. C. Cowdin, George S. Cole, John J. Cisco, W. B.
    Duncan, W. M. Evarts, Cyrus W. Field, Wilson G. Hunt, B. W. Jaynes,
    J. T. Johnston, A. A. Low, W. J. Lane, C. Lanier, C. P. Leverich,
    W. H. Macy, C. H. Marshall, R. B. Minturn, Royal Phelps, Howard
    Potter, M. O. Roberts, A. T. Stewart, J. H. Schultz, Isaac Sherman,
    Jonathan Sturges, Moses Taylor, J. A. Agnew, J. D. Vermilye, G. C.
    Ward, etc."

Mr. Field, with many influential members of this committee, proceeded to
Washington with the petition, and had an interview with the President,
who promised to give the subject his mature consideration. It is thought
that the arguments adduced by the committee on this occasion had great
weight with the President, and, combined with other influences, finally
determined him to veto the bill, which he did shortly afterwards in a
message in which he committed himself strongly against any further
inflation of the currency. Had this bill passed into a law it would have
been the first step towards national repudiation, for the wedge once
inserted, it is impossible to predict how far it would eventually have
been driven, and what effect even a moderate addition to the
inconvertible currency would have had, not only on commerce, but on the
moral conscience of the nation. A return of government bonds held in
foreign countries would have been the inevitable result, and all values
would have been unsettled. Reasoning and thoughtful men foresaw the
crisis that was impending, and the country owes a debt of gratitude to
the Chamber of Commerce for its prompt action, and to President Grant
for listening attentively to the arguments of the committee for saving
the country from threatened disaster.

On May 6th, Mr. and Mrs. Field were members of a large party which left
New York for California, and on the 12th, at Omaha, Canon Kingsley and
Miss Kingsley joined them. The journey was a pleasant one, but
uneventful. Friday, May 22d, he writes:

    "After breakfast I sent a telegraphic message to Dean Stanley,
    informing him that Canon Kingsley was well and would preach for us
    in the Yosemite Valley on Sunday."

In his sermon on the afternoon of Whit Sunday, Dean Stanley alluded to
this message.

Early in June he sailed for England, and of his journey to Iceland,
undertaken during this summer, Mr. Murat Halstead writes:

    "My judgment is that your father had no business reasons for going
    to Iceland. Really the trip was a sentimental adventure. Mr. Field
    had been a profound student of the North Atlantic, and was familiar
    with the fact that Iceland is but nine hundred miles from Scotland
    and Norway and three hundred from Greenland. 'It seemed so near,
    and yet so far.' ... In the spring of 1874 Mr. and Mrs. Cyrus W.
    Field visited Cincinnati, and at a reception given by Mr. Probasco
    Mr. Field said to me: 'Come and go with me to Iceland; it is the
    millennial year of the settlement of the island. It would be very
    interesting. The King of Denmark is to be there, and the whole
    affair will be extraordinary.' I asked how one could get to
    Iceland, and Mr. Field had evidently made the subject a close
    study. He said there were monthly boats from Copenhagen touching at
    Leith, the port of Edinburgh, and we should sail from Scotland, and
    Iceland was about a thousand miles from Scotland.

    "Mr. Field must have gotten his impulse to go to Iceland from his
    familiarity with the North Atlantic during the anxious years he
    spent in studying it with reference to the cable. He was struck by
    the narrowness of the ocean between Greenland and Norway, with
    Iceland between just below the arctic circle. He had, of course,
    contemplated a cable by way of Greenland and Iceland to Scotland if
    it should be found impracticable to cross the Atlantic between
    Newfoundland and Ireland. When it became known that Mr. Field was
    going to Iceland there were conjectures that he thought of a cable
    to the island; but that was a mere fancy. There was not a chance
    for business over the line. There would be no news except of
    volcanoes and the price of codfish. If there should ever be a cable
    connection with Iceland it would be for the weather reports.

    "I was thinking of a trip to Europe in the summer of 1874, when Mr.
    Field spoke to me, and a few weeks later decided to go. Mr. Field
    was going earlier than I could, and just before he sailed I
    telegraphed, asking on what date it would be necessary for me to
    meet him in London in order to go with him to Iceland. His reply
    was, 'July 9th.' On my arrival at Southampton by the Bremen boat I
    remembered the day was the 9th of July, and that night about ten
    o'clock I found Mr. Field at the Buckingham Palace Hotel, and he
    said he had been expecting me, and was waiting to see me before
    going to bed. That, I suppose, was a joke, but it was not all a
    joke. I found in London Bayard Taylor, going to the Icelandic
    millennium for the New York _Tribune_, and Dr. I. I. Hayes, the
    arctic explorer, going for the New York _Herald_; Dr. Kneeland, of
    the Boston Institute of Technology, and Professor Magnussen, of
    Cambridge University, an Icelander by birth. I resolved to go, and
    we chartered the steam yacht _Albion_, Captain Howland, sailing
    from Leith. Mr. Field and I made a tour through the Highlands, and,
    passing Balmoral and the Earl of Fyfe's hunting and fishing lodge,
    found the rest of the party at Aberdeen, where it was necessary for
    us to enlist as British seamen, and we were paid a shilling each
    for our services during the voyage, which was one of great interest
    and considerable hardship. We halted at the Orkney, Shetland, and
    Faroe islands, at the latter place falling in with the king's
    fleet. Our Icelandic experiences are familiar, as Mr. Taylor and
    Dr. Kneeland published books on the subject. Mr. Field's Iceland
    party, for he was our leader, attracted much attention--almost as
    much sometimes as the king's procession. We rode across the lava
    beds to the geysers, saw Mount Hecla--and the Great Geyser would
    not spout for the king."

It will have been observed, in the course of this narrative, that with
Mr. Field, so inexhaustible was his energy, rest was only a "change of
motion."

When he sought relaxation from exhausting business cares he found it in
fatiguing journeys, and he preferred that these should be as difficult
and adventurous as possible. This was the case in his journey to the
Andes with Mr. Church in his earlier manhood. It was the case with the
excursion in ripe middle age beyond the "furthest Thule" of the
ancients. He was now again, thanks to his own exertions, and after years
of struggle and of doubt that to others meant despair, independent in
circumstances, and, as it seemed, beyond the power of fortune, and he
was nearing his sixtieth birthday. Most men would have regarded this
condition as an occasion to "rest and be thankful." But it was in this
condition that Mr. Field undertook a new and arduous enterprise, for
which he had had little specific training. It is evident that its very
difficulty, as in the case of the Atlantic cable, was to him an element
of attractiveness. But there was this difference between the Atlantic
cable and the elevated railway system of New York. He was the pioneer,
the projector, of the former. The latter had already been undertaken,
and practically, it may be said, to have failed. Indeed, there was no
"system" of elevated railways. The fragmentary roads that were in
operation or projected were unrelated to each other in ownership,
management, and traffic. Financially and practically they were
languishing. It will be seen from the letter which will presently be
given that the company with which he proposed to ally himself, the New
York, which possessed the franchise for Third Avenue, had been so far
from successful that sixty cents on the dollar was held to be a fair
price for its securities. It may fairly be said that the elevated
"system" is due to Mr. Field. Whoever remembers the conditions of
transit in New York before 1877, and indeed for some years after, must
own that the creation of this system has constituted a public
benefaction. Many millions have been transported, with a loss of life
that has been infinitesimal in comparison with the volume of the
traffic, at a cost no greater than that of the conveyances which the
system has superseded, and at a rate of speed that has built up the new
and large cities, one on the east and one on the west side of Manhattan
Island, which before it went into operation were outlying districts,
practically inaccessible to busy men for purposes of residence. It was
on May 16, 1877, that Mr. Field made this entry in his diary:

    "Bought this day a controlling interest in the New York Elevated
    Railroad Company and was elected president of the company."

[Illustration: CERTIFICATE OF DISCHARGE]

Some of the conditions on which he had made this investment and venture
are set forth in the following letter to his friend, Mr. John H. Hall:

"NEW YORK, _14th May, 1877_.

    "_My dear Mr. Hall_,--It is possible that I may purchase a majority
    of the stock of the Elevated Railroad, but _before deciding_ I wish
    to ascertain whether, if I do, you will remain in the board with
    Mr. David Dows, myself, and some other gentlemen of character and
    financial strength, and also whether you will take bonds at sixty
    cents for the debt now due you. If I have anything to do with the
    company I want it free from _all floating debt_, and everything
    purchased at the lowest price for cash.

    "Mr. Dows has told me this morning that he will remain in the board
    and will take bonds for the $25,000 due him, provided I make the
    purchase and accept the presidency of the company.

    "Will you have the kindness to see our mutual friend, Mr. A. S.
    Barnes, and ascertain whether he will take bonds for the debt due
    him and remain as a director. If I go into the concern I shall be
    willing to be president, but _without salary_, for the enterprise,
    to be a success, must be managed in every way with the greatest
    economy.

"An early answer will oblige.
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



His promptitude and energy are shown in the fact that on June 4th, less
than three weeks after he took charge, a public meeting in favor of
rapid transit was held.

"_The Evening Post_,
"NEW YORK, _June 4, 1877_.

"TO CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq.:

    "I cannot be present at the meeting to be held this evening at
    Chickering Hall, but I am heartily with you and your friends in
    the object of the meeting. I hope that a decided expression will be
    given to the conviction that an absolute necessity has arisen of
    instituting some method of conveying passengers between the upper
    and lower parts of the city which shall unite the greatest
    convenience with the utmost possible speed.

"Yours faithfully,
"WM. C. BRYANT."



Mr. Charles O'Conor wrote on the same day to the chairman of the
meeting:

    "I much regret my inability to attend the meeting in favor of rapid
    transit, the state of my health not admitting of my doing so. I
    fully sympathize, however, with the objects sought to be obtained,
    and here repeat the remarks which I made in closing my address
    before the New York Historical Society at the Academy of Music on
    the 8th of last month:

    "'It is said, and doubtless with truth, that the great cities have
    hitherto been destroyers of the human race. A single American
    contrivance promises to correct the mischief. The cheap and rapid
    transportation of passengers on the elevated rail, when its
    capacity shall have been fully developed, will give healthful and
    pleasant homes in rural territory to the toiling millions of our
    commercial and manufacturing centres. It will snatch their wives
    and children from tenement-house horrors, and, by promoting
    domesticity, greatly diminish the habits of intemperance and vice
    so liable to be forced upon the humbler classes or nurtured in them
    by the present concomitants of their city life.'"

On the 26th of September of this year the new president wrote:

    "I believe that the early completion of the New York Elevated
    Railroad from the South Ferry, passing Wall, Fulton and Catharine
    Street ferries up the Bowery and Third Avenue to the Grand Central
    Depot, will be a benefit to the three great railroads the trains of
    which start from the depot."

And on the 1st of November, 1878, he was able to report to the
directors:

    "It is not eighteen months since I purchased from some of your then
    directors a majority of the stock of your company at such a price
    that to-day it sells for more than five times as much as it cost
    me; and at the same time I bought from the same parties a very
    large amount of bonds, and to-day they sell for more than double
    what they cost me, including seven per cent. interest to date. The
    above stock and bonds I purchased on the express condition that the
    contracts of the company with certain parties to build this road
    for one million two hundred thousand dollars per mile ($1,200,000),
    payable one-half in stock and the balance in first mortgage bonds
    of this company at par, should be cancelled. The amount that has
    been saved to this company by the cancelling of this contract you
    all well know."

William O. McDowell, in _Harper's Magazine_ for June, 1893, writes:

    "At the time of the strike of the engineers on the elevated road in
    New York I had a part in bringing the representatives of the
    engineers and the late Cyrus W. Field, a director in the elevated
    company, to a meeting that resulted in a quick understanding
    between the conflicting interests and an ending of the strike. Mr.
    Field was so pleased with the fairness of the committee
    representing the engineers with whom he had to deal that he invited
    them at once to dine with him at Delmonico's, an invitation which
    their representatives declined for them, fearing that its
    acceptance might be misunderstood. Mr. Field, however, continued to
    feel that he wished to extend some social courtesy to the employes
    of the elevated road, and at a later date, when he was all-powerful
    in that corporation, he issued a formal invitation to the employes
    to a reception at his house. To a large number the initials 'R. S.
    V. P.' on the lower corner of the invitation were a great mystery,
    and, as the story goes, the invited compared notes and sought an
    explanation of them. At last one bright young man announced that he
    had discovered what they meant, and he explained to the others that
    'R. S. V. P.' stood for 'Reduced salaries very probable.'"

This story is true, but the end is not given. The men accepted the
invitation, enjoyed their supper, and listened with great interest to a
speech made by Mr. Peter Cooper, which lasted over an hour. Mr. Cooper
told the men of New York as it was in 1800, and the story of his life.

Dean Stanley preached in Calvary Church on Sunday evening, October 7,
1878. He came to Mr. Field's home at Irvington the following morning.
Soon after breakfast on Tuesday the family realized that their guest was
more familiar with the history of this part of the country than they
were. It was just above Tarrytown that Major Andre had been captured; he
was executed across the river. That was enough to excite the curiosity
of the visitors, and at dinner on Tuesday evening it was proposed to the
dean that the next morning he should cross the river to Tappan and find
the spot. This was not easily done; no one knew the exact place. There
was Washington's headquarters, and he had closed his shutters so as not
to see Andre hanged, so that the scene of the execution must have been
near that house. At last an old man of over ninety came and said that in
1821, when Andre's body was removed to England, he had stood by and had
seen the grave opened; and that the roots of an apple-tree, which he
pointed out, were twisted about the head of the coffin. The drive had
been so long that it was past three o'clock before the party returned;
and not until dinner did they tell that their search had been
successful. It was then that Mr. Field said: "Mr. Dean, if you will
write an inscription I will buy the land and put up a stone, and then
the place will be known." His idea was simply to mark an event in the
history of the country; but a part of the press insisted that an
American had erected a monument to a British spy, and this was
reiterated far and wide, and flew from the Atlantic to the Pacific.

Dean Stanley felt this keenly, and wrote:

    "If you find that there is really a feeling against it, pray do not
    think of it. The game is not worth the candle. Poor Major Andre,
    engaging as he was, is not worth the rekindling forgotten
    animosities."

The monument was twice injured by explosion of dynamite. After the
second of these, on November 3, 1885, Mr. Field refused to replace the
stone. He said that the spot was now sufficiently marked. On the stone
were these words:

 +-----------------------------------------------------------+
 |Here died, October 2, 1780,                                |
 |Major John Andre, of the British Army,                     |
 |Who, entering the American Lines                           |
 |On a Secret Mission to Benedict Arnold,                    |
 |For the Surrender of West Point,                           |
 |Was taken Prisoner, tried, and condemned as a Spy.         |
 |His Death,                                                 |
 |Though according to the stern code of war,                 |
 |Moved even his enemies to pity,                            |
 |And both armies mourned the fate                           |
 |Of one so young and so brave.                              |
 |In 1821 his remains were removed to Westminster Abbey.     |
 |A hundred years after the execution                        |
 |This stone was placed above the spot where he lay          |
 |By a citizen of the United States, against which he fought,|
 |Not to perpetuate the record of strife,                    |
 |But in token of those better feelings                      |
 |Which have since united two nations                        |
 |One in race, in language, and one in religion,             |
 |With the hope that this friendly union                     |
 |Will never be broken.                                      |
 |                                                           |
 |      ARTHUR PENRHYN STANLEY, Dean of Westminster.         |
 +-----------------------------------------------------------+

The twenty-fifth anniversary of the signing of the first cable contract
was remembered on the evening of March 10, 1879. To use the words of the
New York _Evening Post_:

    "It was a notable anniversary which Mr. Cyrus W. Field celebrated
    last night, with the assistance of a multitude of his
    fellow-citizens, many of them eminent in various departments of
    public life. The obvious sentiment of the occasion, and the words
    with which everybody would describe it, are contained in the
    telegraphic message sent from Westminster Abbey by Dean Stanley,
    who calls it the 'silver wedding of England and America,' and says:
    'What God hath joined together let no man put asunder.' The event
    which was commemorated is scarcely more remarkable than the rapid
    advance of all nineteenth century events which the recollection of
    this one suggests. It is only twenty-five years since a determined
    effort was made to realize what had been wildly dreamed of; it is
    considerably less than twenty-five years since the dream became a
    reality; yet already instantaneous communication between the Old
    World and the New has been consigned to the commonplace book of
    history. It has become one of those familiar things which we forget
    all about because they are familiar, but which are also
    indispensable, as we would be sharply reminded if we should lose
    them for a day, or an hour--things which are of the highest value,
    but of which it is hard to speak without talking platitudes. With
    this great event the names of Mr. Field and other men of business
    whose intelligence, liberality, and energy make the work of Morse
    and other men of science a practical triumph will be always and
    honorably associated."

A short extract is given from the speech of Rev. Dr. William Adams:

    "I have no intention of saying a word in laudation of the Atlantic
    cable. The time for that has passed. 'He is of age: ask him: he
    shall speak for himself.' Though the ear catches no articulate
    words passing along its quivering strands, yet this polyglot
    interpreter is speaking now, with tongue of fire, beneath the
    astonished sea, in all the languages of the civilized world."

[Illustration: THE ANDRE MONUMENT, TAPPAN, NEW YORK]




CHAPTER XV

THE PACIFIC CABLE--THE GOLDEN WEDDING

(1880-1891)


The winter and early spring of 1880 were passed in the South of France
and in Algiers.

Mr. Field was back in New York in April; and on the 8th in a letter
says:

    "I have already written to London in regard to the estimated cost
    of manufacturing and laying a telegraphic cable across the Pacific.
    The route I have suggested is as follows: One cable from San
    Francisco to the Hawaiian Islands; one cable from the Hawaiian
    Islands to Japan; one cable from the Hawaiian Islands to Australia,
    touching at the Fiji Islands and New Caledonia."

In a letter to England on the 9th, he writes that he had received a
letter from Washington in which the hope was expressed that he would
give some attention to the transpacific cable before he left America. He
answered the question as to the expense of manufacturing a cable
briefly: "A submarine cable, like a watch, can be manufactured at a
great variation in price."

The two letters that follow were sent to Washington, the first on August
19, 1880:

    "Referring to my letters to you dated May 26th and June 10th, in
    relation to a telegraphic cable across the Pacific Ocean, I would
    suggest:

    "1. That the United States government obtain from some eminent
    electrician specifications for the best description of cable
    suitable for the great depths and the great lengths required to
    connect the western with the eastern coasts of the Pacific.

    "2. That the government advertise for tenders to manufacture and
    lay such description of cable, one-fourth the amount to be paid
    when the cables are all manufactured, one-fourth when they are on
    board the steamers and the steamers ready to sail, one-fourth when
    the cables have been successfully laid, and the remaining fourth
    when they have been worked successfully and without interruption
    for thirty days.

    "By adopting this course I think you would obtain a good cable at
    the lowest price.

    "The government could pay for such a cable by selling its four per
    cent, bonds, having a long time to run, at a considerable premium;
    and the revenue from such a cable would, in my opinion, steadily
    increase from year to year, and at no distant day be a source of
    revenue to the country."

           *       *       *       *       *

    "I thank you for your letter of yesterday, and for the interest you
    are taking in the matter of the proposed Pacific cable.

    "Have you ever written to the American ministers in Japan and China
    on the subject? If the United States government desired it, and
    took the proper steps, I think that England, Russia, France, Japan,
    and China would each do something towards encouraging the
    enterprise."

The latest mention I find of this project is on the 30th of April, 1884,
and then it is suggested as only possible as far as the Sandwich
Islands, and that it would cost L650,000. There had been no enthusiasm
shown, and as no company had been formed the grant given on March 10,
1879, had become valueless; but as long as his brothers dined with him
the thought of a Pacific cable was recalled by the favorite toast of Mr.
David Dudley Field, who would say, before the family left the table,
"And now, Cyrus, we must not forget to drink to the world encircling."
The recent revival of the subject has evidently been rather political
than commercial. It was during the summer of 1880 that this was written:

    "I decided some weeks ago upon leaving New York, on my trip around
    the world, on October 13th, provided I could find some Democratic
    friend who would pair off with me; and if I cannot accomplish this
    I shall wait and vote on November 2d, and leave on the 3d."

And on September 13th:

    "It appears to me to be all-important that the Republican party
    should carry the election in Indiana in October.... I have now
    decided not to leave for San Francisco until after the Presidential
    election."

And two days later, September 15th:

    "After mature reflection, I have determined to remain until after
    the election and do all I possibly can to secure the success of the
    Republican ticket by working until the polls close on the evening
    of November the 2d, and then leave on the morning of the 3d for San
    Francisco, and sail from thence in the _Oceanic_ on the 18th.... By
    remaining and working I hope to induce others to vote for our
    mutual friend, James A. Garfield."

These letters were sent to the New York Historical Society on September
17th and 20th:

    "I am glad to hear that it is proposed to erect a monument to
    Nathan Hale. Many years ago I joined with others in such a memorial
    at Coventry, Conn., where he was born. But one ought to be erected
    in this city, and, if possible, on the very spot where he died.
    That spot you have, I understand, ascertained to be at or very near
    the armory of the Seventh Regiment. What an inspiration would a
    monument there be to our young soldiers! There ought to be
    inscribed on it his own immortal words: 'I only regret that I have
    but one life to give for my country.'

    "If the New York Historical Society will obtain permission to have
    a monument erected there, I will, with pleasure, bear the whole
    expense."

           *       *       *       *       *

    "I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your letter 18th
    instant.

    "Enclosed I send you a printed slip of an inscription which I
    propose to put upon the stone which marks the spot where Major
    Andre was executed, should the New York Historical Society decide
    to accept the same, as suggested by me in a verbal conversation
    with Mr. George H. Moore."

This letter was received on September 30th:

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq, New York:

    "_Dear Sir_,--A few of your neighbors and personal friends are
    desirous of meeting you in a social and informal way before you
    start upon your tour round the world. They will be glad if you will
    give them the pleasure of your company at dinner on some evening in
    the latter part of October. Tuesday, the 26th, is suggested as a
    suitable time; but if any other day will better comport with your
    convenience, you have only to name it. They are not willing you
    should go away without their greeting and God-speed."

In his reply to the toast to his health he said:

    "Some of you began your business and professional life with me, and
    it will be pleasant to take so many of my old friends by the hand
    and to receive their kind wishes for a prosperous journey and safe
    return."

Mr. Field thoroughly enjoyed the evening. General Horace Porter closed
his speech with these words:

    "Now let me simply say that beyond the sentiment of friendship we
    all have a profound admiration for one who, at a period of life
    when most men, having surrounded themselves with the rich things of
    earth, in personal comfort, art, and literature, would be content
    to retire to some shady Arcadia and enjoy the rest to which they
    were so fully entitled, is bristling with all the activity of
    youth, seeking new worlds to conquer and projecting new
    enterprises.

    "I know I speak the sentiment of all in saying that the hearty
    leave-taking and hand-shaking will be surpassed by the cordial
    welcome extended to him when, after passing over many lands and
    many seas, he will gladden the hearts of his fellow-countrymen by
    once more setting foot upon his native shore."

He left New York, as he proposed, at four o'clock on the morning of the
3d of November, and it will surprise no one who knew him to hear that he
was in the South of France early in March and arrived in New York on May
the 15th.

"DEPARTMENT OF STATE,
"WASHINGTON, D. C., _23d May, 1881_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--Welcome, thou wanderer! We intend now to
    anchor you for some time in your native waters.

    "Your arrival is timely. You can be of great service to the country
    and to the administration, which counts you among its chief
    friends....

"Hastily and truly,
"JAMES G. BLAINE."



And on June 3d:

    "With reference to your kind invitation to visit you at Irvington
    on the Hudson about the 29th of June, I beg to say for myself that
    it is doubtful as to whether I shall be able to accompany the
    President upon his proposed visit to Williams College. Should I do
    so, however, it would give me the very greatest pleasure to accept
    of your hospitality. I have taken the liberty to transmit your
    letter to the President, and presume that he will write you
    directly with reference to his ability to become your guest."

This entry was made in his diary on June 6th:

    "I have invited President Garfield to come to Irvington for a visit
    and then go to Williamstown for Commencement on July 6th."

To quote again from his private papers:

    "Mr. and Mrs. Garfield, with several members of the Cabinet and
    their wives, were to come to us at Irvington, pass Sunday with us,
    and on Monday leave for Williamstown. It was as Mr. Garfield was
    leaving Washington, that he was shot in the Pennsylvania depot."

In a letter he writes:

    "When the first excitement had in a measure subsided, I wrote to a
    friend in Washington and asked if in case of Mr. Garfield's death
    his family would be left in comfortable circumstances."

It was on July 6th that he sent this message by cable and telegraph to
friends in Europe and America:

    "If President Garfield should die from the wounds received on 2d
    instant he would leave for his wife and five children about
    $20,000. I shall to-morrow, Thursday, morning exert myself to the
    utmost to raise a sum of money to be presented to him at once, as I
    feel confident it would help his recovery if he knew that in the
    event of his death his family would be provided for. I shall
    cheerfully subscribe $5000 towards the sum to be raised. If you or
    any of your friends would like to join, please telegraph to me
    early to-morrow, Thursday, for what amount I may put your name, and
    oblige."

The subscriptions were from $5000 to a ten-cent piece (given by an
office-boy), and there was deposited in the United States Trust Company
$362,238 52.

A silver coin of the value of ten cents was sold, and he sent this note
to the child who made the donation:

"145 BROADWAY,
"NEW YORK, _15th July, 1881_.

    "_My dear young Friend._--I was very much pleased to read your nice
    letter enclosing the silver coin you had kept so long. I showed
    your letter to a gentleman who came to see me at my office, and he
    kindly said he would give one hundred times the value of the coin,
    and handed me twenty dollars in exchange for it and your letter,
    so that you see your little offering to Mollie Garfield's mamma has
    realized quite a large sum.

    "I thank you very much for your contribution, and am

"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



"MR. FIELD:

    "_Dear Sir,_--I thought it was very funny to see my little letter
    printed in the newspaper, and I think it was so kind of that
    gentleman to give twenty dollars in my name. I wish I knew who it
    was, so I could thank him for it. Will you please thank him for me?
    I am seven years old.

"BERDIE HAZELTON.

    "I don't know Mollie Garfield very well, for I never saw her, but I
    am so sorry for her, 'cause her poor papa got shot."

With the invitation to attend the Garfield memorial service came this
note:

"WASHINGTON, _February 18, 1882_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field,_--You must come to the address on the 27th,
    Monday. You will go on the floor with me. I should feel that my
    audience was incomplete if you were not present.

Sincerely,
"JAMES G. BLAINE."



As he had received the thanks of Congress, he was entitled for life to
the privilege of going upon the floor.

A message sent from the Yorktown celebration, in October, 1881, to Mr.
Gladstone, called forth this answer:

"HAWARDEN CASTLE, CHESTER,
"_October 21, 1881_.

    "_Dear Mr. Cyrus Field,_--I thank you for your telegram. The
    gratifying intelligence which it contains may probably come through
    another channel. In the meantime, unofficially, I express the hope
    that we may one and all consider it a personal duty to cherish and
    foster the feelings so admirably expressed in the President's
    order, and prevailing, happily, alike on both sides of the
    Atlantic.

"I remain, very faithfully yours,
"WM. E. GLADSTONE."



In April, 1882, he suffered quite a disagreeable experience. One evening
a police officer and two or three gentlemen came to the house, bringing
the torn and burned remains of a package addressed to him. It had been
in the mail-bag which a postman threw on the platform of the Third
Avenue elevated road as he stepped off the train. As the bag fell there
was an immediate explosion, and, upon examination, the box and wrapper
of the package were found. The wrapper was an old German newspaper with
Mr. Field's name on it, and another like package in the bag bore the
name of Mr. Wm. H. Vanderbilt.

He took the matter very calmly, only afterwards telling the butler that
no package brought to the house must be delivered until it had first
been plunged in a bucket of water. This order spread consternation among
some members of the family, who trembled for their new spring clothes.

On August 25, 1884, he left Tarrytown in the car "Railway Age," with
several members of his family, for a journey that lasted six weeks, and
during that time he travelled 11,000 miles by rail and 300 by boat. On
September 12th he left Portland, Oregon, for Tacoma, and early on the
morning of the 13th, as he was waiting at Utsaladdy for the tide to
carry the _North Pacific,_ the boat he was on, through Deception Pass,
went on shore, and found that it was from this place that the wooden
mast for the _Great Eastern_ had been cut. It was sent to England by
the way of Cape Horn.

September 22d he joined Sir Donald Smith and his party at Silver
Heights, and his car was attached to their special train. Four days were
given to crossing the Rockies and returning to Winnipeg, to the then
western terminus of the Canadian Pacific. On the afternoon of September
24th the cars stopped in front of a large tent; it was the station, and
has since been known as Field.

A few hours earlier, as we all stood looking up at Mount Stephen, and
then off at the mountains, Sir Donald Smith turned to Mr. Field and
said, "That is Mount Field." One of the employes of the road suggested
that it had been already named, but that was of no account; Sir Donald's
word was law, and Mount Field it became.

It was upon one of his Western journeys that he stopped at a telegraph
office, wrote a message, and handed it to the clerk to send. Instead of
turning at once to his instrument, the man studied Mr. Field intently,
and then said, "Are you the original Cyrus?"

On his return home he was much interested in the Presidential election;
but he accepted the result quietly, and wrote to a friend:

    "I thank you for what you say in regard to the election. Whoever
    has received a majority of the votes will be declared elected. I do
    not know of any human being who wishes to defeat the popular will
    when known. In my own opinion, no one can tell who is elected until
    after the official count."

This year was that of the long and painful illness and affecting death
of General Grant. Mr. Field's sympathy with the sufferer was intense,
and it was with regret that he received this letter, and also one from
one of General Grant's sons, to which he refers in his answer:

"NEW YORK CITY, _January 6, 1885_.

    "_My dear Sir_,--Through the press and otherwise I learn that you,
    with a few other friends of mine, are engaged in raising a
    subscription for my benefit. I appreciate both the motive and the
    friendship which have dictated this course on your part, but, on
    mature reflection, I regard it as due to myself and family to
    decline this proffered generosity.

    "I regret that I did not make this known earlier.

"Very truly yours,
"U. S. GRANT.

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq."



"_6th January, 1885_.

    "_My dear General Grant_,--I have this moment received your letter
    of this date, and I shall, as requested in the letter from your
    son, send a copy immediately to Messrs. A. J. Drexel and George W.
    Childs, of Philadelphia; to General W. T. Sherman, St. Louis, and
    Mr. E. F. Beale, of Washington.

    "I have for several days been very anxious to call and see you, but
    have been prevented by press of business and a severe cold.

"With great respect, I remain,
"Dear General Grant,
"Very truly your friend,
"CYRUS W. FIELD."



He was in London part of the summer of 1885, and the extracts that
follow are made from a letter written to the New York _Tribune_ by Mr.
Smalley on July 5th, in which he gives an account of the Fourth in
London, and of a dinner given on the evening of that day. There were but
thirty present, and only eight Americans.

    "The toast of the evening was proposed by Mr. Field, and responded
    to first by the American minister and then by the Duke of Argyll.
    Mr. Phelps's speech had the one fault of being too brief. All he
    said was to the point, and was said with genuine feeling and in
    good taste. The duke has grown to be a venerable figure.... He
    speaks to-night with a depth of regard for America and Americans
    which goes straight to every American heart. The best friends of
    his life, he tells us, have been Americans--Prescott, Charles
    Sumner, Motley, Longfellow, and his host, Mr. Cyrus Field. He has
    brought back vivid memories of his brief visit to America, and
    paints for us one or two vivid pictures of American scenery and
    American life. He rejoices in our joy; in our independence; in the
    triumph of the Union over the rebellion; in the triumph we have
    since won here in England over English unfriendliness. And he says,
    truly, that it is difficult now to find an Englishman who is not
    convinced he was on our side all the time.

    "Mr. Bright followed. He is seldom heard in these days.... He gave
    us of his best. He went back to the days of the civil war, when, as
    he told us, and as I have heard him say often, he used to spend the
    week in anxious expectation of the news which the Saturday steamer
    was to bring of events in America, I forget whether it was in this
    speech or later in the evening that Mr. Bright described the
    emotion with which he received the tidings of the defeat of Bull
    Run. At the first moment he thought, as so many of us in America
    thought at the first moment, that all was over. 'No calamity ever
    seemed to me greater,' said this English friend of America. The
    ultimate victory of freedom over slavery filled his life with
    happiness.... If anything could make us free-traders it might well
    be Mr. Bright's eloquence, and his unequalled power of seeing the
    one side of the question in which his faith is so fervent. As long
    as I hear his voice I suspend my convictions....

    "This dinner of Mr. Cyrus Field's, though private in one sense, was
    pretty fully reported in the London papers.... Mr. Field's health
    was proposed by the Duke of Argyll, and drunk with all the honors.
    Telegrams were read to and from General Grant and the President of
    the United States."

Just a month later Mr. Phelps, then American minister in London, wrote
to Mr. Field:

    "You will be glad to know that I have a message from the Queen, who
    desires to send a representation to our service. I have also a
    telegram that Mr. Gladstone will attend, and Lord Harrowby, Lord
    Privy Seal, for the government."

The service referred to was the eulogy on General Grant, delivered at
Westminster Abbey, on August 4th, by Archbishop Farrar.

To this service these two letters also refer:

"_August 6, 1885_.

    "_My dear Mr. Field,_--I had a long search for you among the crowds
    at Westminster, after the service, when I found that you were not
    among those bound to the dean's lodging, but failed to find you,
    and I therefore write a line to thank you for having asked me to
    attend the service in memory of our great friend, as I was grateful
    for the opportunity to be again among so many of your countrymen,
    and to do honor to the memory of a most remarkable citizen.

    "I think Farrar's oration was excellent, and the place--the common
    shrine of so much of our past glories, to which both nations can
    equally look with pride--a very fitting one for the expression of
    our common mourning.

"Believe me, dear Mr. Field,
"Yours very truly,
"LORNE."



This is from Professor Roswell D. Hitchcock, of the Union Theological
Seminary in New York:

    "I hardly need say how glad I am that such a service has been
    provided for. Your countrymen owe you much gratitude for the lead
    you have taken in the matter."

It was after his return home this year that this telegraphic
correspondence occurred between him and his brothers and Mr. George
Bancroft, then at Newport:

    "Most hearty congratulations on your eighty-fifth
    birthday--congratulations which we hope to renew for many years to
    come.

"DAVID, STEPHEN, CYRUS, and HENRY FIELD."

    "_Dear David, Stephen, Cyrus, and Henry Field_,--Thanks for your
    good-will, and when I am gone keep the departed traveller kindly in
    memory.

"Ever yours,
"GEORGE BANCROFT.

"_6th October_."



Mr. Field was again in London in 1886, and was at a dinner given on July
16th by the Liberal Club to Mr. Chesson, who, in his speech, said:

    "My personal acquaintance with Mr. Field dates back for more than
    twenty years--from the period when the first Atlantic cable was
    laid; and I had reason then, as I have had greater reason since, to
    admire his indomitable perseverance, his unwearied patience, and
    his great ability. I was for a time on board the _Great Eastern_
    with him in 1866, when the Atlantic cable was successfully laid and
    permanent telegraphic communication established between the two
    continents. I saw him daily, and held constant social intercourse
    with him until the splicing of the shore end of the cable with the
    huge coil which filled the vast tank of the _Great Eastern_ took
    place; and I noticed that there was nothing in his demeanor to
    distinguish him from other persons on board, although when some of
    us cast wistful looks at the big tank we knew that it contained all
    his worldly goods, and, for aught he knew to the contrary, his
    fortune was destined to be buried, with the cable, at the bottom of
    the Atlantic."

The last of August and part of September this year were spent in another
journey to the Pacific coast, in which he was much impressed with the
marvellous beauty of the Canadian road.

From a New York paper of November, 1886, this is taken:

    "Mr. Field has fought almost since the very beginning of the system
    as a public conveyance for a uniform charge of five cents at all
    hours for passengers on all the New York elevated lines, and the
    morning of the 1st of October, 1886, first saw the complete
    victory which attended his effort in this direction."

When, in 1882, he bought a large tract of land in the valley of the Saw
Mill River, adjoining on the east his home at Irvington, he intended
building there a number of small but comfortable houses for working-men.
Around each house he proposed that there should be a plot of ground, and
the rent was to be from ten to twenty dollars a month for house and
land. The building of the new aqueduct made it impossible for him to
carry out at once this project, and before the aqueduct was completed he
suffered, in 1887, heavy financial losses from the sudden decline of the
stock of the New York elevated roads, in which he was so largely
interested.

The last message that passed between Mr. Field and Mr. Bright was on the
11th of December, 1888, when he cabled:

    "_The Right Hon. John Bright,_--Your friends in America read with
    interest the news that comes daily from your sick-room. Accept the
    affectionate remembrance of one who has known and loved you for
    more than a quarter of a century.

    "It may comfort you in your long illness to know that your name is
    on the lips and in the hearts of millions on this side of the
    Atlantic, who can never forget how you stood by the cause of their
    country.

"CYRUS W. FIELD."



December 2, 1890, was a day that his family had long looked forward to.
It was on this day that these messages and telegrams were received, and
that many friends came to offer their congratulations. Among the
messages of good-will was this poem from President Henry Morton, of the
Stevens Institute:

      "MR. AND MRS. CYRUS W. FIELD

"ON THE FIFTIETH ANNIVERSARY OF THEIR MARRIAGE

   "Golden light the sun is shedding,
    Ushering in this golden wedding,
    As he did on that bright day
    Fifty golden years away.
    Then as now the 'golden flowers,'
    Lingering after summer's hours,
    The chrysanthemums, foretold
    Anniversary of gold.
    Golden love and golden truth
    To gold age from golden youth,
    In the fire of life, thrice tried,
    Pure themselves, yet purified
    By the sorrows borne together,
    By the stress of stormy weather;
    This pure gold, outlasting earth,
    Proves its own celestial birth,
    And shall shine with golden light,
    Star-like, from heaven's dome of night."

"CYRUS W. FIELD, Esq., Gramercy Park, New York:

    "_Dear Sir,_--We, the undersigned, who have known you for many
    years, and some of whom have been long and intimately associated
    with you, desire to express to you and to your amiable and devoted
    wife our earnest and heartfelt congratulations on your
    golden-wedding day, the 2d of December, 1890.

    "We earnestly wish you both many years of health and happiness,
    enjoying the fruits of your useful and well-spent lives, and seeing
    on every side the wide-spreading development of the submarine
    telegraph enterprise in which you, Mr. Field, have labored so long,
    so zealously, and so successfully. This great work, pursued by you
    with unflagging energy and perseverance for many years, through the
    greatest difficulties and hinderances, has now become a first
    necessity of national and commercial life, and you have the
    profound satisfaction of knowing that its object and its results
    are, and ever have been, peaceable and beneficent in their
    character.

    "We ask you to accept this message of our good-will and good
    wishes, which will be sent to you both over and under the sea.

 Very faithfully yours,
 "Argyll,
 Frederic W. Farrar,
 Mouck,
 W. E. Gladstone,
 W. H. Russell,
 Douglas Galton,
 Tweeddale,
 Henry C. Forde,
 W. Andrews,
 H. Weaver,
 G. von Chauvin,
 J. H. Carson,
 Samuel Canning,
 Richard C. Mayne,
 C. W. Earle,
 Catherine Gladstone,
 J. S. Forbes,
 Caroline Roberts Van Wart,
 G. W. Smalley,
 Gerald Harper,
 William Barber,
 L. M. Rate,
 John Muirhead,
 George Draper,
 Richard Collett,
 W. Leatham Bright,
 Latimer Clark,
 R. T. Brown,
 F. A. Bevan,
 H. D. Gooch,
 W. Thomson,
 G. Shaw Lefevre,
 J. Russell Reynolds,
 John Pender,
 James Anderson,
 W. Cunard,
 William Ford,
 George Elliot,
 George Henry Richards,
 W. Shuter,
 Henry Clifford,
 Willoughby Smith,
 W. S. Cunard,
 Julius Reuter,
 H. A. C. Saunders,
 G. W. Campbell,
 H. M. Stanley, of Alderley,
 John H. Puleston,
 George Cox Bompas,
 James Stern,
 H. L. Bischoffsheim,
 Louis Floersheim,
 T. H. Wells,
 J. H. Tritton,
 W. H. Preece,
 C. V. DeSauty,
 George Grove,
 Jane Cobden,
 Thomas B. Potter,
 Charles Burt,
 Margaret Anderson,
 Robert C. Halpin,
 Edward Satterthwaite,
 Frank H. Hill,
 J. C. Parkinson,
 William Payton,
 Henry Dever,
 Kenneth L. M. Anderson,
 Charles W. Stronge,
 Oscar Wilde,
 Lewis Wells,
 John G. Griffiths,
 Robert Dudley,
 Emily F. Lloyd,
 Ch. Gerhardi,
 W. T. Ansell,
 Julian Goldsmid,
 John Chatterton,
 Frances Baillie,
 Constance Wilde,
 B. Smith,
 John Temple,
 Montague McMurdo,
 Philip Rawson."

 "WINCHESTER HOUSE,
 "50 OLD BROAD STREET,
 "LONDON, _December_ 3, 1890.

    "_My dear Mr. Field_,--It came to my knowledge last month that the
    2d of December was the golden-wedding day of Mrs. Field and
    yourself. It happened when we were in Paris at the telegraph
    conference in the month of June that my birthday occurred, aged
    sixty-six. (Is it not terrible that one should be so old?) But it
    was also fifty years since I went to sea as a sailor boy, and it
    was just twenty-five years since we made our first voyage in the
    _Great Eastern_.

    "Mr. Charles Burt, who was in Paris representing the Anglo-American
    Company, was kind enough to get up a dinner in my honor, and I was
    presented with an illuminated memorial or address. It occurred to
    me that it would be a pleasing act on our part to get up a similar
    address upon the occasion of your golden wedding, and no doubt you
    would have the result yesterday.

    "Mr. Charles Burt and the staff of the Anglo have cordially done
    all they could to get as many names as we could recall, but as they
    are a good deal scattered it has taken more time than we
    anticipated. Then, oh, how many have passed away! It is like
    calling the roll after a battle--so few could be found. We are
    to-day trying to get at a few more, who we feel sure would like to
    add their names. I was looking up Sir William Drake, but he was too
    ill, and died this morning....

    "Now, my dear Mr. Field, let me once more wish Mrs. Field and
    yourself every sort of kind good wish. The days and years are
    rolling away, and we may well cling to the memory of exciting and
    active days when we were twenty-five to thirty years younger and
    the future filled with nervous uncertainties.

"Always yours sincerely,
"JAMES ANDERSON."



   "In the glow of the morning was the song of rejoicing,
      Ye twain are now one till death shall you part;
    In the calm of the evening is the song of thanksgiving,
      Ye twain are still one in life and in heart.

   "It was faith in the morning, it is knowledge this evening,
      We sang of the future, we sing of the past;
    But this jubilee hour finds the refrain unchanging,
      We twain are still one, only one at the last.

   "We wait in the evening for the dawn of the morrow,
     But the song of our lives will not end with the day;
    'Midst the music celestial hear the anthem of glory--
      We twain are still one, for ever and aye."

                                    D. J. B.




CHAPTER XVI

LAST DAYS AND DEATH--IN MEMORIAM

(1891-1892)


The golden wedding was to be almost the last gleam of brightness and
happiness that came to the home of Mr. Field. It was in March, 1890,
that his children had been told that any sudden excitement might end his
life, and in April, 1891, they realized that their mother's illness must
soon come to a fatal termination. Both father and mother were watched
with eager solicitude throughout the summer of 1891.

The family dined together for the last time on the 28th of August in
that year--Mrs. Field's birthday--and her brother-in-law, Mr. David
Dudley Field, proposed her health and gave this toast:

    "Mary Stone Field, the wife of Cyrus W. Field, the mother of seven
    children and of sixteen grandchildren, a perfect wife, a perfect
    mother, a perfect grandmother. God bless her."

It was on the 23d of November that Mrs. Field died. An old friend writes
of the married life thus ended:

    "Oh, what a family theirs was--so loving, considerate, and true!
    How many hearts must be full of gratitude to them and all their
    benevolence! For theirs was true charity 'that vaunteth not
    itself,' not letting the left hand know what the right hand doeth."

And of her the Rev. Dr. Arthur Brooks wrote in _The Churchman:_

    "Mrs. Cyrus W. Field was one whose death has been felt as a great
    loss in New York City. By those who have shared her gracious,
    kindly, and intelligent hospitality she will never be forgotten.

    "For her large charity, wide information, quick memory, and
    unfailing tact made her the warm friend of all who met her. The
    position in which her life placed her was one which made great
    demands, and she met them all. As the centre of a large family
    circle, involving wide and important interests, and also as the
    intimate friend of men and women of leading position, she never
    failed to manifest the ready wisdom and large sympathy for which
    each occasion called. She was calm under all trouble, reasonable in
    all perplexity, and thankful in all happiness.

    "Mrs. Field's earnest and deep religious spirit was recognized by
    her intimate friends as the foundation of those graces which were
    evident to all. Her Christian faith was eminently strong and
    simple. It grew as the emergencies of life called for its exercise,
    and her intelligence and information were in the closest relation
    with her faith at all times. Her love for nature and her knowledge
    of trees and flowers were remarkable, and, to those who did not
    know her deep and large nature, surprising in one whose life in the
    city was so engrossing. Her interest in missionary undertakings was
    equally marked; it laid hold of her large experiences as a
    traveller in all parts of the world, and made them helpful to a
    large understanding of all movements in foreign lands.

    "One recalls with constant pleasure all the circumstances of so
    large, devoted, and refined a life, which, wherever it moved,
    brought new brightness and larger confidence and deeper faith. Her
    passage from this world to the larger realm of the life which is
    unseen is but the farther expansion under perfect conditions of the
    character which, while it was amongst us, was ever going from
    strength to strength."

It was at this time that disasters in business and calamities that were
calculated to affect him far more keenly fell upon him, and what
remained of his life was full of great anguish, both mental and
physical. On his seventy-second birthday, November 30th, he found that
of the fortunes that he had invested in the Atlantic cables, the
elevated roads, and the Washington Building, but one thousand pounds of
Anglo-American cable stock remained, and had it not been for the
kindness of his friend Mr. J. Pierpont Morgan, he could not in May,
1892, have gone to his country home. It was Mr. Morgan also who advanced
the necessary money to keep in force the premium on Mr. Field's
life-insurance policies. That in the New York Mutual Insurance Company
had been taken out in 1843, and was number 421. It was thought that the
change to the country would benefit him, but in fact it only increased
his distress and his weakness. Early on the morning of July 12th his
family were called, and watched by his side from half-past four until
ten minutes before ten, when the rest he so longed for was given. It was
with a prayer of thanksgiving that they laid his tired head back on his
pillow. During those long hours he had spoken but once, and that was to
ask for air, but his loving eyes followed them almost to the end.

From the New York _Tribune_ of July 15th these sentences are copied:

    "As simple and as unostentatious as he would have wished was the
    funeral of Cyrus W. Field, which was held yesterday. There was no
    eulogy, and there were few floral tributes. The simple Protestant
    Episcopal service was read."

He was buried in Stockbridge.

Some mention of his personal traits may not be unwelcome here.

His disposition was sunny and genial, and he thoroughly enjoyed his
home. All his life he was subject to periods of depression, but they
were quickly over, and, in connection with the trials that come to all,
he would say that this or that had been for the best, and that it had
brought with it good results. When asked how he was his answer
invariably was, "Jolly," and his telegrams ended with the words "All
well," or, "In good health and spirits."

His love for children was great. No matter how forlorn or poor the child
was, he would stop and speak to it, and offer to buy the little one, and
assure it that it was "an angel baby." And he delighted to gather his
family and friends around him. Both summer and winter he was up by six
o'clock, and by seven was in his library. It was there that he planned
his work for the day. Each morning a list was made of those he wished to
see and the order in which he desired to meet each one, and this list
was placed in his hat on his way to breakfast. That meal was served at
the instant; and once when reproached for not having waited until all
were at the table, he answered that he could not afford to lose ten
minutes in the morning, for that meant seventy in a week, or rather
sixty hours, two and a half full days, in the year. Telegrams or letters
received late in the evening were placed on his desk unopened. He would
say, "If they bring me bad news I shall not sleep if I read them, and if
the news is good it will keep until morning."

Letters that if seen would cause others pain or might be misunderstood
were instantly destroyed. Questions put to him that it would be
indiscreet to answer were apparently not heard.

An important paper was never thrust loosely into his pocket, but was
placed in an envelope and his name and address distinctly written upon
it; the same care was given to any package that he carried. His reason
for so doing was that if, after having taken this precaution, he lost
either paper or package, it would be at once returned to him.

His quick and energetic manner often amused his guests, and when a
friend was with him in 1885, he said, "It seemed like living on the top
of a 'bus." On Sunday evening, in reply to the question as to whether or
no he would be obliged to leave the next morning, this guest said: "I
shall go to town with you Mr. Field. At what hour do you breakfast?" The
answer surprised him: "At half-past seven o'clock sharp." The reply was:
"I am ready now." It was then past eleven.

These extracts are taken from two of Mr. Smalley's letters sent from
London to the New York _Tribune_:

    "Those in England who regret the great American's death on the
    grounds of private affection are many, and among them some of the
    best and most prominent Englishmen now living....

    "Mr. Cyrus Field was at one time almost as well known in London as
    in New York. The tributes now paid him show that he was not
    forgotten in the later years of his life, and that such misfortunes
    as befell him did not shake his hold on his English friendships. Of
    these he had a considerable number among the most eminent men in
    England. Mr. Gladstone was one, Mr. Bright and the Duke of Argyll
    were two others. These relations lasted for many years. They lasted
    in Mr. Bright's case till his death, and there was between him and
    Mr. Field something which might be called affection. The great
    orator spoke of the great American in terms which he did not bestow
    lavishly, and never bestowed carelessly. His respect for Mr.
    Field's public work was sufficiently shown in the splendid eulogy
    he passed upon him. To be called by such a man as Mr. Bright the
    Columbus of the nineteenth century is renown enough for any man.
    The epithet is imperishable. It is, as Thackeray said of a similar
    tribute to Fielding in Gibbon, like having your name written on the
    dome of St. Peter's. The world knows it, and the world remembers. I
    heard Mr. Bright use the phrase, and he adorned and emphasized it
    in his noblest tones. He had, indeed, a deep regard for great
    service done to the public, and for the doer of it, and he did not
    stint his acknowledgments. He was great enough to be willing to
    acknowledge greatness in others. Mr. Cyrus Field, for his part,
    returned the good-will shown him with fulness. He took a great
    pleasure in such friendships as these I have named. To secure Mr.
    Bright as a speaker at one of his dinners was a delight to him; and
    Mr. Bright made at least one of his most admirable speeches on such
    an occasion.... Even those who thought Mr. Cyrus Field somewhat
    masterful in business matters could not overcome their liking for
    the man. I have in mind one or two men, famous in telegraphy, who
    resented very strongly Mr. Field's handling of certain matters, and
    said strong things about it. I do not know whether he was right or
    whether they were right, nor does it matter. The point is that
    these very men remained attached to him, and were among his friends
    to the last in England. The secret of his power of winning over men
    might be difficult to define. Whatever it was, he possessed it in
    no ordinary degree. He had an affectionate and persuasive manner.
    No doubt, I think, ever crossed his mind that his aim, whatever it
    might be, was a right one. This conviction, arising in his own
    breast, he was able to impart to others. That is not an explanation
    of the mystery, it is only another way of stating it.

    "He seemed to me never to forget a friend, whether in prosperity or
    adversity. If, as his adversaries sometimes asserted after their
    defeat, he was hard in business matters, that is only what must be
    said of all successful men of business. It is a condition of
    success. He none the less had fine and generous impulses, and,
    unlike some others, acted on them. A good impulse unacted on seldom
    seems to be of any particular use to anybody--least of all to him
    who controls it. There was in Mr. Field none of that cynicism which
    led Talleyrand to say you must suspect your first impulse, because
    it is generally a good one. He was not cynical, whatever else he
    was.

    "He made himself liked, or rather he was liked whether he tried to
    be or not. He was genial, serviceable: liked to do a kind thing,
    and to give pleasure. His sterner and more efficient traits of
    character are known to everybody; on them there is no need to
    dwell. Every message that flashes through the Atlantic cables is
    his eulogy. His virtues are written in water in a new sense; and
    the memory of his indomitable courage; of his just sense of the
    right means to the right end; of his enthusiasm, and of his power
    of generating enthusiasm in others; of his fortitude; of his wise
    generalship; of his large views, and of much else, will endure."

The next extract is taken from the report of the Century Club for 1892.
It was written by Judge Howland, the secretary of the Century:

    "The name of Cyrus W. Field is worthy of association with those of
    Fulton, Stephenson, Morse, and Ericsson as benefactors to mankind.
    Inheriting from a vigorous ancestry a capacity, energy, and
    perseverance that would brook no obstacles--characteristic of other
    members of his family as well--he strode from poverty to wealth,
    through various vicissitudes, but with unstained integrity. Engaged
    in gigantic enterprises, he stood on the brink of financial ruin in
    promoting them; endured failure on the verge of success, despair on
    the heels of hope, ridicule swift after praise, long unbroken;
    wearying suspense, varying with exaltation and depression, until
    after thirteen years of doubt and trial and tireless labor his
    triumph came, and with it fame and the honors of two continents.
    The Atlantic cable is a monument to his memory that shall endure
    while time shall last, but as the promoter of the elevated railroad
    in New York, at a time when its feasibility was problematical,
    success uncertain, and capital was timid, he is entitled no less to
    the grateful memory of our people.

    "Despite mistakes (and who has not made them?), what single
    enterprise since the building of the Erie Canal has done more to
    enhance the wealth and prosperity of the metropolis than this last
    monument to his foresight and energy? Deceit and betrayal at
    various times by his associates he bore without a murmur; but at
    the last, when domestic sorrows came upon him--not as single spies,
    but in battalions--he sank beneath them, and our pity follows him
    as did our praise."

At the meeting of the Chamber of Commerce on October 6, 1892, Mr. Orr
said:

    "With sincere regret I announce the death of seven of our members
    during the summer. Two were honorary members, namely:

    "Cyrus W. Field, elected August 21, 1858, and died 12th July, 1892.

    "George William Curtis, elected March 5, 1891, and died 31st
    August, 1892.

    "As resolutions of respect and sympathy are to be presented for
    your consideration, I beg permission to suspend, for a short time,
    the general order of business, and call upon Mr. William E. Dodge
    to present the resolutions relative to the late Mr. Field."

Mr. Dodge thereupon offered the following preamble and resolutions:

    "_Whereas_, The death of Cyrus W. Field has removed from this
    country one of its most distinguished citizens, and from this
    chamber one of its oldest and most honored members, we wish to
    place on record our sincere regard for his memory and our esteem
    for his invaluable services to the cause of civilization and the
    progress of commerce; therefore, be it

    "_Resolved_, That the Chamber of Commerce of the State of New York,
    in common with the citizens of all portions of our country,
    sincerely mourns the death of Cyrus W. Field, the first honorary
    member of this chamber, as one who had through a long and useful
    life been closely identified with the commercial interests of this
    city, and by his great ability, tireless activity, and large
    achievements, had greatly honored the name of American merchant.

    "_Resolved_, That by the successful carrying out of the project for
    uniting the Old World with the New by the Atlantic cable he has
    brought all nations into instant touch and given lasting honor to
    his name, as among those who have done the world great service.
    During the long and weary years of discouragement and failure
    before this magnificent work was accomplished he showed an
    undaunted courage, a fertility of resource, an unwearied patience
    and untiring ability for work which won the wonder and admiration
    of two continents. The example of his success was at once followed
    by like communication across all seas, so that as the result of his
    supreme effort the conditions of commercial and friendly
    intercourse throughout the world have been changed, and instant
    communication made between all nations.

    "_Resolved_, That we wish to recall to our membership the words of
    eulogy and sincere appreciation spoken at the brilliant banquet
    given by this chamber to Mr. Field on the final successful laying
    of the cable more than twenty-five years ago, and to indorse and
    emphasize them by our action to-day.

    "_Resolved_, That as a loyal and enthusiastic American, a useful
    and enlightened citizen, and as a warm and faithful friend, Mr.
    Field's memory will always be held sacred by all who knew him here,
    and his invaluable service to mankind will make his name honored in
    all the civilized world.

    "_Resolved_, That the Executive Committee be requested to suggest
    to the chamber some plan by which an appropriate and lasting
    memorial to Mr. Field's great work may be procured for this city.

    "_Resolved_, That a copy of these resolutions be sent to the family
    of Mr. Field, with the assurances of our profound sympathy and
    regard."

    "Mr. President, in presenting these resolutions for your
    consideration may I be allowed to say a few words as to the
    character and life of our honored friend? Mr. Field needs no
    eulogy. His fame and his place in history are secure. The news that
    comes to us every morning from all parts of the world; the daily
    quotations on which we base our business action; the friendly
    messages which assure us of the instant welfare of dear ones in
    far-off countries, are ever-recurring reminders of his great
    genius. Although nothing we can say will add to the lustre of great
    deeds, still it is well for us, from time to time, to refresh our
    memories as to the full meaning of the great achievements which
    mark the progress of the world. In the rush and hurry of modern
    life, what at first startles us soon falls into the commonplace
    and is perhaps undervalued. In the pamphlet published in 1866 at
    the time of the banquet given to Mr. Cyrus W. Field by this
    chamber, the statement was made that 'the success of the Atlantic
    telegraph was one of the great events of the nineteenth century.'
    History will point to it as one of the landmarks of modern
    progress. On the morning after the landing of the cable at Valentia
    the London _Times_ said: 'Since the discovery of Columbus nothing
    has been done in any degree comparable to the enlargement thus
    given to the sphere of human activity.' This was confirmed by
    unanimous statement of distinguished men and leading journals in
    all parts of the world.

    "Our country was filled with enthusiasm and the world with wonder.
    John Bright, in a splendid tribute to 'his friend Cyrus Field,'
    spoke of him as 'the Columbus of modern times, who, by his cable,
    had moored the New World alongside the Old.' Mr. Evarts said:
    'Columbus found one world and left it two. Cyrus W. Field found two
    continents and left them one.'

    "In all the years that have passed, this cord of connection between
    the Old World and the New has grown more practical and useful, and
    the old cities in the far Eastern world can now communicate with
    the new cities of our Pacific shores in a few moments of time. What
    will be the result of these facilities we cannot estimate. Already
    practical schemes for the establishment of communication by
    telephone are under advisement, and it may be but a short time
    before we can converse with friends thousands of miles across the
    sea.

    "We do not claim for Mr. Field the discovery of the possibilities
    of the cable, but it was owing to his superb and almost superhuman
    exertions that the project was made practicable. It is hard for us
    to estimate the severe trials through which he passed. For nearly
    thirteen years he labored against every obstacle, crossing the
    ocean more than forty times, spending months with the cable ships
    on the stormy Atlantic, exhausting himself in the swamps and inland
    forests of Newfoundland and Cape Breton, with alternations of hope
    and fear, of success and discouragement, that would have exhausted
    almost any other man.

    "This was the great work of his life, but his energy, vigorous
    thought, and executive ability enabled him to carry out many other
    business enterprises, which were of great value to this city and
    country.

    "He was born of sturdy and choice New England stock. His father,
    the Rev. Dr. David Dudley Field, was a distinguished clergyman in
    Massachusetts, and his grandfather an officer in the Revolution.

    "His home training, in New England, was of the kind that has
    developed so many able men in the history of our country.

    "He very early entered in business, but a few months afterwards,
    through no fault or action of his, his firm became insolvent, and
    although from his youth and small capital he was to a certain
    extent exempt from the responsibility, he showed his nice sense of
    honor by devoting his first earnings afterwards to the payment of
    principal and interest of all the debts of the firm with which he
    had been connected. Years afterwards, when he had been most
    successful in his chosen line of enterprise, owing to the disturbed
    condition of affairs he again became involved in business
    difficulties, but with the same pluck and courage he resumed his
    work, and paid principal and interest on all his indebtedness.

    "But no details of ordinary business could confine his wide grasp
    of affairs, and he took hold of telegraph and cable with a faith
    and energy which deserved success.

    "Time and distance were as nothing to him on carrying out his
    projects. Although a loyal and enthusiastic American, he was, in
    the best sense, a 'citizen of the world.' I remember meeting him
    many years ago in southern Europe, and asking him to join some
    excursion for the following day. He told me how much pleasure it
    would give him, but that he unfortunately had to attend a meeting
    the next day. I found that he left that night by the fast express,
    and rushed through to London to spend two hours at a meeting of a
    committee, and without rest returned immediately to the place where
    I had met him.

    "His last years were crowded with sorrow and disappointment, under
    circumstances most pathetic and terrible. In all of this he had the
    warm sympathy of loving friends and of all his business associates.

    "I have felt that the terrific strain upon his whole system during
    the thirteen years of trial, when the efforts were being made to
    lay the cable, with their alternations of hope and fear and the
    great exposure, told upon his constitution more than he knew, and
    that when the reaction came he had not, perhaps, the same clearness
    of vision and wise power of judgment as before.

    "All the disappointment and sadness of his later life will be
    forgotten, and history will only remember the great loyal American,
    whose intense power and large faith enabled him to carry through
    one of the greatest and most beneficial enterprises the world has
    ever known."

   "Ah, me! how dark the discipline of pain
    Were not the suffering followed by the sense
    Of infinite rest and infinite release!
    This is our consolation; and again
    A great soul cries to us in our suspense:
    'I came from martyrdom unto this peace!'"

THE END

      *       *       *       *       *

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CAMPBELL'S THE PURITAN

    The Puritan in Holland, England, and America. An Introduction to
    American History. By DOUGLAS CAMPBELL. Two Volumes. 8vo, Cloth,
    Uncut Edges and Gilt Tops, $5 00. (_In a Box._)

    The tone of the work is calm and judicial, and the style of the
    writer is clear and dignified, possessing a literary finish which
    gives the work a place of honor among our national histories. It
    will modify many prevalent conceptions of American history with its
    novel way of accounting for some of the things existing among us;
    but the facts the author summons from the results of his wide
    researches, and his well-balanced judgment in dealing with these
    results, amply sustain him in the novel positions he assumes. The
    work is a classic of American history, and is an addition to the
    literature of the country of which we may be proud.--_Observer_, N.
    Y.

    The more one scrutinizes this book the firmer becomes conviction
    that the brilliant and scholarly author has made his point and
    accomplished his end. The tone is rational and wholesome, and the
    book itself a memorial of careful and laborious
    investigation.--_Philadelphia Ledger._

    A more interesting book of the kind has not appeared since Mr.
    Green wrote his "Short History of the English People."--_N. Y.
    Herald._

    The central idea of Mr. Campbell's book is that our country with
    its institutions is not as much a child of English parentage as it
    is of Dutch.... It is a book remarkable for boldness, for breadth,
    for analytical power, for commanding generalization, and for piling
    up all this mass of learning and argument with comprehensive
    system, and in a way to interest as well as instruct any reader of
    intelligence.--_Chicago Times._

    This work is destined to create a revolution in our early American
    history, as written by our standard historians.... In many respects
    it is the most important contribution to the colonial history of
    America that has yet been written.--_Lutheran Observer_,
    Philadelphia.

    A book of intense interest to every student of American
    institutions and character, and the development of its republican
    ideal.... This book is significant and suggestive.--_Presbyterian_,
    Philadelphia.

    Mr. Campbell enters very thoroughly and conscientiously into the
    examination of his subject, and his book is one that is valuable to
    the student of history, and full of interest for readers of all
    classes.--_Louisville Courier-Journal._

PUBLISHED BY HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK

_For sale by all booksellers, or will be sent by the publishers,
carriage prepaid, on receipt of the price._

CURTIS'S ORATIONS AND ADDRESSES

    Orations and Addresses of GEORGE WILLIAM CURTIS. Edited by CHARLES
    ELIOT NORTON. With Photogravure Portrait. Vol. I. Orations and
    Addresses on the Principles and Character of American Institutions
    and the Duties of American Citizens. Vol. II. Addresses and Reports
    on the Reform of the Civil Service of the United States. Vol. III.
    Historical and Memorial Addresses. 8vo, Cloth, Uncut Edges and Gilt
    Tops, $3 50 per volume. (_In a Box._)

    An exceptionally interesting speaker, he is on record here--as so
    often before now--as an exceptionally interesting writer. To young
    Americans they are golden volumes that present the mind of such a
    citizen and such a cultivated, discriminating literary mind.--_N.
    Y. Mail and Express._

    It is a great book which these addresses make [Volume III.]. All
    young men ought to read it and ponder it. Its insight into
    character, uplifting of lofty ideals, and deep, sturdy patriotism
    would cause it to live quite apart from its in their own way
    equally admirable literary ability and grace.--_Congregationalist_,
    Boston.

    A splendid memorial of that ideal man and patriot, George William
    Curtis. The books are a much-to-be-desired addition to any
    library.--_Interior_, Chicago.

    Mr. Curtis made a contribution of inestimable value in the
    application of morals to politics--an application needing all the
    time to be made, and which those noble discourses will assuredly do
    much to promote.--_Literary World_, Boston.

    The brilliancy, depth, power, and insight characteristic of the
    orations included in the first volume of this series are in the
    second volume displayed in a field Mr. Curtis had made peculiarly
    his own.--_Jewish Messenger_, N. Y.

    The eloquence of many of these addresses is of the highest order of
    public oratory, and merely as examples of the art of expression
    they are of permanent interest.--_Boston Beacon._

PUBLISHED BY HARPER & BROTHERS, NEW YORK

_For sale by all booksellers, or will be sent by the publishers,
carriage prepaid, on receipt of the price._

      *       *       *       *       *

Typographical errors corrected by the etext transcriber:

From you affectionate son=> From your affectionate son {pg 20}

Agamennon=> Agamemnon {pg 77}

arbritration=> arbitration {pg 285}

plus herueux=> plus heureux {pg 254}






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