64 Series I Volume XXV-II Serial 40 - Chancellorsville Part II
Page 64 | N. VA., W. VA., MD., AND PA. Chapter XXXVII. |
McDowell court that the evidence in the case was closed before I received your order, which was detained by General Kelley a day or two.
The Thirteenth Pennsylvania reported to me for duty a few days ago, and the two companies of the First New York Cavalry, with the two sections of artillery, that were at Romney, reported here two days ago.
The rebel cavalry still annoy us some. A squad of 15 captured the stage 7 miles from this place, on the road to Martinsburg, on Friday night last, soon after dark. Captain [Charles W.] Dietrich, assistant adjutant-general, and Lieutenant [William] Burchard, aide-de-camp of General Cluseret, 2 soldiers, and 3 citizen, including 2 females, were in the stage. Lieutenant Burchard fortunately escaped soon after his capture; came on, and let me know what had happened, and I made such a disposition of my cavalry as to intercept them; killed 1, wounded 1, and captured 2, and rescued all our prisoners, horses, plunder, &c.
I learned yesterday by a deserter from Imboden's camp that he has been to Richmond recently, and been commissioned brigadier-general, and that he had got the old Twenty-fifth and Thirty-first Virginia Regiment, raised in Western Virginia (and which I met several times there), and has been assigned command of the country east of the Shenandoah Mountains, and its preparing for a campaign into West Virginia. I respectfully ask to be permitted to interfere with this arrangement. If General Moor will advance on Imboden by way of Huntersville and Warm Springs, and Mulligan will advance from New Creek, by way of Petersburg, to Franklin, and I move on him up the Valley, by Staunton (brushing Jones out of the way), his forces can all be gobbled up, the base of guerrillas and raids into West Virginia effectually cut off, and permanent peace given to that region.
I respectfully ask that my whole command may be assembled at this place, and that the injunction on my movements be moved. If this cannot be done soon, I will be compelled to resign, as I would much prefer being a private in an active fighting army to being kept in command of the stationary advance of a railroad guard under a brigadier-general not of a very hostile or pugnacious disposition toward traitors.
My scouts captured a rebel conscripting lieutenant yesterday, who has been a notorious bushwhacker, horse-thief, and murderer, known to have killed 2 of Banks' men in cold blood. What shall I do with him? I would like to hang him if Jefferson Davis and Halleck did not make too big a fuss about it. He richly deserves it.
I would be pleased if I could be trusted to regulate the trade with the citizens of this place and vicinity.
Very respectfully, yours, &c.,
R. H. MILROY,
Brigadier-General.
P. S.-Why is it that we can have no paymaster here? It is almost an unbearable wrong to the poor soldiers.
ENGINEER DEPARTMENT,
Washington, February 10, 1863.
Brigadier General G. W. CULLUM,
Chief of Staff of General-in-Chief, Washington:
GENERAL: I have to report for information of the General-in-Chief, that this department has just been informed by Messrs. Thomas Booz
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