Excerpt from The Conscript Quakers: Being a Narrative of the Distress and Relief of Four Young Men From the Draft for the War in 1863
Secretary Stanton received us cour teously, and we opened to him the object of our call; stated what the President had said as to whether or not any order had been issued to meet such cases. He replied, No, and there can be none. We set forth as well as we could the dis tress oi our young friends, in being called on for service in the war, which they could not in conscience perform. The Secre tary gave little or no encouragement that he could help us out of our troubles, but he told us that his own parents were Friends, and spoke of those they had liberated from Fort Delaware, of whom the President had told us; said that Thomas Evans (a Friend of Philadelphia whom we knew) came to Washington on their behalf, etc. The Provost Mar shal (fry) also treated us with much civility.
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