The Winder Building Annex It was here that President Lincoln came on January 10, 1862 and complainedto General Meigs about the inaction of the Army of the Potomac and the illness of its commander: "General what shall I do?1 The people are impatient; Chase has no money and he tells me he can raise no more; the General fo the Army has typhoid fever. The bottom is out of the tub. What shall I do?" In response, Meigs advised the President to convene a meeting of army leaders. It was here in Halleck's office on September 1, 1862 that President Lincoln asked General George B. McClellan to assume command of the Union Army's defense of Washington after the General John Pope's defeat at the Second Battle of Bull Run. President Lincoln frequently visited the Winder Building because of his interest in testing weapons for the Union Army. The President took an active interest in the new weapons -- in part because the Chief of Ordnance, General James W. Ripley, thought the war would not last long enough to justify experimenting with untested weapons which would have to be put into mass production. President Lincoln, for example, pushed Ripley to use balloons for army intelligence. Eventually, Ripley's deliberate obstruction of the use of breach-loading and repeating rifles led to his replacement by Colonel George D. Ramsey. Robert Bruce, author of Lincoln and the Tools of War, observed: "Across Seventeenth Street from the small, brick War Department stood the 'Northwest Executive' or Winder Building, where the Army Ordnance Department had its headquarters during the Civil War. The Winder Building (pronunciation as in "stem-winder") was a plain, boxlike, brick structure five stories high, with marble facing on the basement and a plaster coating over the remainder. In Lincoln's time the double doors of its main entrance opened onto the pavement - not, as now, onto a flight of stone steps - and there was an iron grillwork balcony along the second floor which made a convenient reviewing stand when soldiers of the Union paraded down the dusty street below. Otherwise, the Winder Building stands today [in 1957] with much the same face it first presented to Washingtonians when Zachary Taylor lived in the White House across the street." Footnotes
Visit
Winfield Scott Montgomery Meigs George B. McClellan Armory The Ellipse and Treasury Park Abraham Lincoln and Technology Mr. Lincoln | Residents & Visitors | The White House | Nearby Washington | Meeting Mr. Lincoln | Visitors Center | Search
Mr Lincoln's White House © 1999 - 2013 The Lincoln Institute. All rights reserved. A project of The Lincoln Institute founded by The Lehrman Institute. | |||