1398 Series II Volume II- Serial 115 - Prisoners of War
Page 1398 | PRISONERS OF WAR, ETC. |
OFFICE OF THE PROVOST-MARSHAL,
Manassas, November 19, 1861.
Brigadier General J. H. WINDER, Inspector-General, C. S. Army.
GENERAL: I am directed by the commanding general to forward you the two disloyal citizens, Samuel Dentz (represented as an unsafe person to be at large, Colonel Robertson, commanding Fourth Virginia Cavalry, representing him as a notorious tritor, he having recently taken license to furnish the Federal Government with wood) and Forrest Olden, a citizen of Colchester. The general says: "olden must be sent to Richmond as a person whom it is supposed to be unsafe to leave at large. "
I remain, general, very respectfully, your obedient servant,
CORNELIUS BOYLE,
Major and Provost-Marshal, Army of the Potomac.
FAIRFAX COUNTY, VA., November 24, 1861.
Major H. W. THOMAS.
DEAR SIR: At the request of Mrs. Bowman I write to you to make some effort to have Josiah B. Bowman released from prison who is now held in Richmond by the Southern Confederacy on a charge of piloting the Federal army to Bull Run last summer, which was not the case. The evidence against him was taken from a Northern paper thanking him for his attention to them. The fact was this as I understood it: On Sunday morning of the Bull Run fight while the troops were at Vienna two reporters for Northern papers and a chaplain in the army wanted a conveyance to go to Centreville. They told Bowman that they must have his wagon whether he went or not, and he did go to Centreville to bring his horses and wagon back. He did what I would have done under similar circumstances.
I know three Virginians that were pressed to carry the tired-out soldiers down on their retreat from Bull Run; still no arrest made. I have always found bowman to be a very quiet man on the war question, taking no part either way. I think I know him and know him to be a good citizen. He has a wife and five children depending on him for a support. The citizens in the neighborhood think it a very hard case that he should be held a prisoner so long, he being arrested bout the 1st of August. Go and see Bowman and have him released if possible so he can come home to his family. The Federal troops have taken Bowman's two teams and the most of his cattle. His wife will have to depend on her neighbors to haul her wood. Doctor Hunter has been released by the Federal army. They still hold A. B. Williams, George Gunnell, Hugh Adams, Withers Smith, John McDaniel and Sam Anderson, Doctor Hunter thinks for the want of some one to bring their cases up before the authorities at Washington. The Federal army have made no advance yet. The troops scout up this far but sledom leave the big road.
Yours, very respectfully,
JERE. MOORE.
HEADQUARTERS WESTERN DEPARTMENT,
Bowling Green, November 25, 1861.A board is hereby constituted, to be formed of Judge Burnham and Major J. J. Williams, provost-marshal. Its duties will be to hear and
Page 1398 | PRISONERS OF WAR, ETC. |