To John A. Dix1Jump to section
Fort-Monroe June 30, 1862
Is it not probable the enemy have abandoned the line between White House and McClellan's rear? He could have but little object to maintain it; and nothing to subsist upon. Would not Stoneman better move up and see about it. I think a Telegraphic communication can at once be opened to White-House from Williamsburg. The wires must be up still. A. LINCOLN
Annotation
[1] ALS, RPB. Dix telegraphed Stanton at 11 A.M., ``Will you please say to President Lincoln that the report from Williamsburg is just in. The enemy had not been at White House at 8 o'clock last evening. Our pickets extend to New Kent Court-House, 6 miles this side.'' (OR, I, XI, III, 278). At 2 P.M. he replied to Lincoln's dispatch, ``We have no doubt that McClellan intended to abandon the White House. Our only line of communication with him by telegraph from that point would be along the railroad, which the enemy will hardly give up.
``The communication of . . . Goldsborough, telegraphed to Gideon Welles, will have advised you that the general relies on the James River for all his communications