Do you mean the General Election of 1864?
Because Lincoln was starting to gain credibility, with Sherman taking Atlanta, Sheridan clearing out the Shenandoah Valley and Admiral Farragut liberating the blockade-runners' port of Mobile.
The Peninsula Campaign
potomac river
His own natural caution, compounded by some vastly exaggerated estimates of enemy numbers, supplied to him by Pinkerton.
the effects of the war, were that france lost the war and the other ones won it
Yes. He was scared to lose his troops and allowed advantages that could have helped the Union to slip by.
McClellan's Peninsular campaign failed because the Confederate army was defending Richmond better that McClellan anticipated. They retreated, then turned and attacked McClellan, surprising the Union general.
George McClellan
The Seven Days Battles was the number of battles in the Peninsula campaign under George B McClellan.
George McClellan
Gen. George McClellan
5 miles
On July 1, 1862, the Battle of Malvern Hill was fought in the Peninsula campaign. Confederate forces under General Robert E. Lee suffered a serious defeat against entrench Union troops. Union commanders under General McClellan urge a counterattack, however McClellan believes he needs to retreat rather than lose more troops.
Union General George B. McClellan had plans for General Totten in the 1862 Peninsula campaign. Late in March of 1862, McClellan had requested that General Totten be made available to build fortifications on the peninsula leading to Richmond. He was an experienced engineer. McClellan understood that the experience of the Army's chief engineer, Totten would be invaluable in this campaign.
It was known as the Peninsular Campaign.
General McClellan blamed President Lincoln for the Union disaster in the Peninsula campaign. On June 28, 1862, as he begins his retreat back to Harrison's Landing, he sent a telegraph to Lincoln, accusing him and Secretary of War Stanton of sabotaging his campaign. Lincoln returns the message that he will support McClellan, ignoring McClellan's hostility. Realizing the unstable military position of the North, Lincoln began to call for 300,000 new recruits from the Northern state governors.
President Lincoln appointed Major General George B. McClellan to general in chief on November 1, 1861. He replaced the retiring General in Chief Winfield Scott. Lincoln relieved McClellan of his title on March 11, 1862. McClellan was not in Washington DC at this time. He was in the process of organizing the Peninsula campaign. It is written that Lincoln did not believe that McClellan could hold his position as general in chief and conduct the Peninsula campaign at the same time.
As the Union's Peninsula campaign was in its early stages, General McClellan was certain that President Lincoln was hampering McClellan's war operations. Lincoln had stepped in and retained the corps under General McDowell to defend Washington DC. Lincoln believed this was a necessity.