Today in History:

678 Series I Volume XXII-II Serial 33 - Little Rock Part II

Page 678 MO., ARK., KANS., IND. T., AND DEPT. N. W. Chapter XXXIV

ready to discharge all the duties of loyal men. The people are truly grateful to you for your efforts to protect them, and you may rest assured will never fail you in any emergency.

Yours, truly,

WILLARD P. HALL.


HEADQUARTERS DISTRICT OF SOUTHEASTERN MISSOURI,
Pilot Knob, Mo., October 25, 1863.

Captain W. T. LEEPER, Patterson:

I am surprised to learn that your horses are not shod. You ought not to go one day unprepared for duty.

On Tuesday evening, the 27th instant, 150 well-appointed troops will arrive at Greenville from Cape Girardeau. They will march for Doniphan on Wednesday morning, at which point they will make their headquarters until after election. You will join them with all the men you can spare from post duty, and, during their stay in that region, give old Tim. and his rascally gang such a hunt and extermination as they never yet had.

You will summon the wives of all the bushwhackers you can reach to come to Doniphan, and give them plainly to understand that either their husbands must come in and surrender themselves voluntarily and stop their villainous conduct, or their houses, stock, &c., will be given to the flames, and the families all sent down the Mississippi River, to be imprisoned at Napoleon, Ark.; and I will carry out this order as certain as jayhawking murdering is not immediately ended. Be firm, but discreet. I shall have a force at Poplar Bluff at the same time, and Major Wilson will remain at Alton until after elections are held. I shall look for some good work in the lower counties during the next twenty days.

CLINTON B. FISK,

Brigadier-General.

MEMPHIS, TENN., October 26, 1863.

Major-General SCHOFIELD, Saint Louis, Mo.:

Brigadier-General [D.] McRae, C. S. Army, has his headquarters at Jacksonport, and is conscripting strongly. From that point and Harrisonburg they will soon be upon the river.

S. A. HURLBUT,

Major-General.

LEBANON, MO., October 26, 1863.

Major-General SCHOFIELD:

GENERAL: On the 20th of October I marched from Lebanon with a detachment of the Eleventh Missouri Cavalry, two mountain howitzers, and three companies of the Eighth Missouri State Militia Cavalry, in pursuit of a band of rebels that burned Buffalo, and fled south via Huntsville. I followed them 75 miles in two days, and, deeming farther Huntsville. I followed them 75 miles in two days, and, deeming farther pursuit useless, I returned to this post, ordering the Eleventh Missouri Cavalry to Rolla from Huntsville on the 23rd, and one company of the Eighth Missouri State Militia Cavalry to Warden's Station, 18 miles west of Lebanon. I sent Captain [Henry D.] Moore south, through Dunklin County, with 100 men, in pursuit of them, scattering rebels, and returned to Lebanon with one company of the Eighth Missouri State Militia and the two howitzers, arriving at this post on the evening of the 24th


Page 678 MO., ARK., KANS., IND. T., AND DEPT. N. W. Chapter XXXIV