1151 Series I Volume XLII-III Serial 89 - Richmond-Fort Fisher Part III
Page 1151 | Chapter LIV. CORRESPONDENCE, ETC.-CONFEDERATE. |
HEADQUARTERS LONGSTREET'S CORPS,
Near Richmond, Va., October 18, 1864.Lieutenant Colonel H. E. PEYTON,
Asst. Adjt. and Insp. General, Army of Norther Virginia:
COLONEL: On the 7th of August Lieutenant-General Anderson and staff left Richmond with Kershaw's division to co-operate with Lieutenant-General Early in the Valley of Virginia; returned to Gordonsville on the 22nd of September. The division was ordered on that date to report to Lieutenant-General Early, and Lieutenant-General Anderson to report with his staff to headquarters Army of Northern Virginia, which he did on the 27th of September.*
Very respectfully, your obedient servant,
JNumbers W. FAIRFAX,
Major and Assistant Adjutant and Inspector General.
WILMINGTON, N. C., October 18, 1864.
General S. COOPER,
Adjutant and Inspector General, Richmond, Va.:
Can I have the battalion of cavalry recommended by General Lee from South Carolina?
W. H. C. WHITING,
Major-General.
[Indorsement.]
Respectfully referred to General B. Bragg.
JOHN W. RIELY,
Assistant Adjutant-General.
(Copy sent to the Secretary of War.)
HEADQUARTERS,
Wilmington, N. C., October 18, 1864.General ROBERT E. LEE,
Commanding Army of Northern Virginia, Petersburg:
GENERAL: I have received your letter of 8th instant.+ I hope the battalion of cavalry you recommended to be sent from South Carolina will be promptly forwarded. I am in great hopes of getting a respectable force from the State, though I could wish to have it at once to put in some sort of training as well as familiarity with the locality. I am very glad that you have advocated the detention of the privateer expedition. I have most earnestly protested against it. They are still, however, impressing coal with a view to go out on the dark of this moon. This will be about the 23rd. As no orders have yet come to stop it, I hope you will press your recommendation. The Tallahassee's cruise has already cost some ten ships and your army a very large amount of supplies, and this one, if persisted in, will make all receipts extremely precarious. The enemy have prepared ten steam launches,
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*Some matters of detail omitted from this letter.
+Not found.
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Page 1151 | Chapter LIV. CORRESPONDENCE, ETC.-CONFEDERATE. |