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XX. November, 1862
- General Lee in Richmond: beard white.
-- first proposition to trade cotton to the enemy.
-- Secretary in favor of it.
-- all the letters come through my hands again.
-- Lee falling back.-5000 negroes at work on the fortifications.
-- active operations looked for.
-- Beauregard advises noncom-batants to leave the city.
-- Semmes's operations.
-- making a nation.- salt works lost in Virginia.
-- barefooted soldiers.
-- Intrigues of Butler in New Orleans.
-- Northern army advancing everywhere.
-- breach between the President and Secretary of War.
-- President's servant arrested for robbing the Treasury.
-- Gen. J. E. Johnston in town.
-- Secretary has resigned.
-- Hon. J. A. Seddon appointed Secretary of War.
-- the enemy marching on Fredericksburg.
-- Lee writes that he will be ready for them.
-- Kentuckians will not be hog drivers.
-- women and children flying from the vicinity of Fredericksburg.
-- fears for Wilmington.
-- no beggars.
-- quiet on the Rappahannock.
-- M. Paul, French Consul, saved the French tobacco.
-- Gen. Johnston goes West.
-- President gives Gov. Pettit full authority to trade cotton to France.
November 1
Gen. Winder's late policemen have fled the city.
Their monstrous crimes are the theme of universal execration.
But I reported them many months ago, and
Gen. Winder was cognizant of their forgeries, correspondence with the enemy, etc. The
Secretary of War, and the
President himself, were informed of them, but it was thought to be a “small matter.”
Gen. Lee made his appearance at the department to-day, and was hardly recognizable, for his beard, now quite white, has been suffered to grow all over his face.
But he is quite robust from his exercises in the field.
His appearance here, coupled with the belief that we are to have the armistice, or recognition and intervention, is interpreted by many as an end of the war. But I apprehend it is a symptom of the falling back of our army.
I have been startled to-day by certain papers that came under my observation.
The first was written by
J. Foulkes, to
L. B. Northrop,
Commissary-General, proposing to aid the government in procuring meat and bread for the army
from ports in the enemy's possession.
They were to be paid for in cotton. The
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next was a letter from the
Commissary-General to
G. W. Randolph,
Secretary of War, urging the acceptance of the proposition, and saying without it, it would be impossible to subsist the army.
He says the cotton proposed to be used, in the
Southwest will either be burned or fall into the hands of the enemy; and that more than two-thirds is never destroyed when the enemy approaches.
But to effect his object, it will be necessary for the
Secretary to sanction it, and to give orders for the cotton to pass the lines of the army.
The next was from the
Secretary to the
President, dated October thirtieth, which not only sanctioned
Colonel Northrop's scheme, but went further, and embraced shoes and blankets for the
Quartermaster-General.
This letter inclosed both
Foulkes's and
Northrop's. They were all sent back to-day by the
President, with his remarks.
He hesitates, and does not concur.
But says the
Secretary will readily see the propriety of
postponing such a resort until January-and he hopes it may not be necessary then to depart from the settled policy of the government — to forbear trading cotton to the
Yankees, etc. etc.
Mr. Benjamin,
Secretary of State, has given
Mr. Dunnock permission to sell cotton to the
Yankees and the rest of the world on the
Atlantic and Gulf coast.
Can it be that the
President knows nothing of this?
It is obvious that the cotton sold by
Mr. Dunnock (who was always licensed by
Mr. Benjamin to trade with people in the enemy's country beyond the
Potomac) will be very
comfortable to the enemy.
And it may aid
Mr. Dunnock and others in accumulating a fortune.
The Constitution defines
treason to be giving aid and comfort to the enemy.
I never supposed
Mr. Randolph would suggest, nay
urge, opening an illicit trade with “
Butler, the beast.”
This is the first really dark period of our struggle for independence.
We have acres enough, and laborers enough, to subsist 30,000,000 of people; and yet we have the spectacle of high functionaries, under
Mr. Davis, urging the necessity of bartering cotton to the enemy for stores essential to the maintenance of the army!
I cannot believe it is a necessity, but a destitution of that virtue necessary to achieve independence.
If they had any knowledge of these things in
Europe, they would cease their commendations of
President Davis.
Mr. Randolph says, in his letter to the
President, that trading
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with ports in possession of the enemy is forbidden to citizens, and not to the government!
The archives of the department show that this is not the first instance of the kind entertained by the
Secretary.
He has granted a license to
citizens in
Mobile to trade cotton in New Orleans for certain supplies in exchange, in exact compliance with
Gen. Butler's proclamation.
Did
Pitt ever practice such things during his contest with
Napoleon?
Did the
Continental Government ever resort to such equivocal expedients?
A member of
Washington's cabinet (and he, too, was a Randolph) once violated the “settled policy of the government,” but he was instantly deprived of the seals of office.
He acted under the advice of
Jefferson, who sought to destroy
Washington; and the present
Secretary Randolph is a grandson of
Jefferson.
Washington, the inflexible patriot, frowned indignantly upon every departure from the path of rectitude.
I can do nothing more than record these things, and watch!
Sunday, November 2
I watch the daily orders of
Adjutant and Inspector-Gen. Cooper.
These, when “by command of the
Secretary of War,” are intelligible to any one, but not many are by his command.
When simply “by order,” they are promulgated by order of the
President, without even consulting the
Secretary; and they often annul the
Secretary's orders.
They are
edicts, and sometimes thought very arbitrary ones.
One of these orders says liquor shall not be introduced into the city; and a poor fellow, the other day, was sentenced to the ball-and-chain for trying to bring hither his whisky from
Petersburg.
On the same day
Gov. Brown, of
Georgia, seized liquor in his State, in transitu over the railroad, belonging to the government!
Since the turning over of the passports to
Generals Smith and
Winder, I have resumed the position where all the letters to the department come through my hands.
I read them, make brief statements of their contents, and send them to the
Secretary.
Thus all sent by the
President to the department go through my hands, being epitomized in the same manner.
The new
Assistant Secretary,
Judge Campbell, has been ordering the
Adjutant-General too peremptorily; and so
Gen. Cooper has issued an order making
Lieut.-Col. Deas an
Acting Assistant Secretary of War, thus creating an office in defiance of Congress.
November 3
The right wing of
Lee's army has fallen back
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as far as Culpepper County, and the enemy advances.
Active movements are speedily looked for; many suppose a desperate attempt to take
Richmond.
Our government has decided that
no one shall be permitted to go North for thirty days.
A requisition for heavy guns to defend
Cumberland Gap, elicited from the
Inspector of Ordnance a statement of the fact that we are “short” of guns for the defense of
Richmond.
There was a rumor yesterday that the enemy was marching in force on
Petersburg.
This, at all events, was premature.
A letter from
Hon. C. C. Clay,
Senator, says there is much defection in
North Alabama, and that many people are withdrawing themselves to avoid conscription.
just at this time, if it were not for
Lincoln's proclamation, if the war were conducted according to the rules of civilized nations, I verily believe a very formidable party in favor of Reconstruc-Tion might spring up in the
South.
With a united South, two million of Abolitionists could not subjugate us.
November 4
An expose of funds in the hands of disbursing agents shows there are nearly seventy millions of dollars not accounted for!
The members of the legislature are fearful of an attack on the Southern Railroad, and asks that
Gen. Mahone be sent to
Petersburg.
The government is impressing flour at $12 per barrel, when it is selling at $24; and as the railroads are not allowed to transport any for private use,
it may be hoped we shall have our bread cheaper some of these days. But will the government make itself popular with the people?
The
Examiner says a clerk in the War Department is making money in the substitute business.
If this be true, it is rank corruption!
But, then, what is the cotton business?
The Chief of Ordnance Bureau,
Col. J. Gorgas (Northern by birth), recommends the
Secretary of War to remove the lighter guns, some sixty in number, from the lower tiers of
Forts Sumter,
Moultrie, and
Morgan, for the defense of the rivers likely to be ascended by the enemy's gun-boats.
I saw, to-day, the
President's order to revoke the authority heretofore given
Gov. Baylor to raise a brigade, and in regard to
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his conduct as governor (ordering the massacre of the Indians after collecting them under pretense of forming a treaty of peace). The President suggests that nothing be done until the
Governor be heard in his own defense. It was diabolical!
If it had been consummated, it would have affixed the stigma of infamy to the government in all future time, and might have doomed us to merited subjugation.
November 5
Major Ruffin, in the Commissary Department, says the army must go on half rations after the 1st of January next.
It is alleged that certain favorites of the government have a monopoly of transportation over the railroads, for purposes of speculation and extortion!
November 6
I believe the commissaries and quartermasters are cheating the government.
The
Quartermaster-General sent in a paper, to-day, saying he did not need the contributions of clothes tendered by the people of
Petersburg, but still would pay for them.
They were offered for nothing.
The
Commissary-General to-day says there is not wheat enough in
Virginia (when a good crop was raised) for
Gen. Lee's army, and unless he has millions in money and cotton, the army must disband for want of food.
I don't believe it.
There are 5000 negroes working on the fortifications near the city, and 2500 are to work on the Piedmont Railroad.
We are all hoping that New York and other States declared against the Republicans, at the elections in the
United States, on Tuesday last.
Such a communication would be regarded as the harbinger of peace.
We are all weary of the war, but
must and
will fight on, for no other alternative remains.
Everything, however, indicates that we are upon the eve of most interesting events.
This is the time for
England or
France to come to the rescue, and enjoy a commercial monopoly for many years.
I think the
Secretary of War has abandoned the idea of trading cotton to the enemy.
It might cost him his head.
November 7
Yesterday I received from the agent of the
City Councils fourteen pounds of salt, having seven persons in my family, including the servant.
One pound to each member, per month, is allowed at 5 cts. per pound.
The extortionists sell it at 70 cts. per pound.
One of
them was drawing for his family.
He
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confessed it; but said he paid 50 cts. for the salt he sold at 70 cts. Profit $10 per bushel!
I sent an article to-day to the
Enquirer, suggesting that fuel, bread, meat, etc. be furnished in the same manner.
We shall soon be in a state of siege.
Last night there was a heavy fall of
snow.
The authorities of
Charleston, with the concurrence of
Beauregard, advise all the non-combating population to leave the city, and remove their personal property.
The city will be defended to the last extremity.
What a change in the Executive Department!
Before the election, the
President was accessible to all; and even a member of Congress had no preference over the common citizen.
But now there are
six aids, cavalry colonels in rank and pay, and one of them an Englishman, who see the people, and permit only certain ones to have access to the
President.
This looks like the beginning of an imperial court.
But what may not its ending be?
I see that
Mr. Hurlbut, incarcerated once as a spy, or as a writer for an Abolition paper in New York, and a Northern man himself, after being protected by
Mr. Browne (the
English A. D.C. of the
President) and released by
Mr. Benjamin from prison, has escaped to the
North, and is out in a long article in the
Times! He says he got a passport from
Gen. Winder's
Provost Marshal.
Mr. James Lyons thought he had made H. a Southern man; what does he think now?
The “290” or
Alabama, the ship bought in
Europe, and commanded by
Capt. Semmes, C. S. N., is playing havoc with the commerce of the
United States.
If we had a dozen of them, our foes would suffer incalculably, for they have an immense amount of shipping.
I see
Semmes had captured the
Tonawanda, that used to lie at the foot of Walnut Street,
Philadelphia; but he released her, first putting the master under bond to pay
President Davis $80,000 after the war. I hope he will pay it, for I think the
President will want the money.
November 8
The
European statesmen, declining intervention in our behalf, have, nevertheless, complimented our
President by saying he has, at all events, “made a nation.”
He is pleased with this, I understand.
But it is one of the errors which the wise men over the water are ever liable to fall into.
The “nation” was made before the
President existed: indeed, the nation made the
President.
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We have rumors of fighting near the mouth of the
Shenandoah, and that our arms were successful.
It is time both armies were in winter quarters.
Snow still lies on the ground here.
We have tidings from the
North of the triumph of the Democrats in New York,
New Jersey, etc. etc.
This news produces great rejoicing, for it is hailed as the downfall of Republican despotism.
Some think it will be followed by a speedy peace, or else that the
European powers will recognize us without further delay.
I should not be surprised if
Seward were now to attempt to get the start of
England and
France, and cause our recognition by the
United States.
I am sure the Abolitionists cannot now get their million men. The drafting must be a failure.
The Governor of
Mississippi (
Pettus) informs the
President that a Frenchman, perhaps a Jew, proposes to trade salt for cottonten sacks of the first for one of the latter.
The Governor says he don't
know that he has received the consent of “
Butler, the beast” (but he knows the trade is impossible without it), but that is no business of his. He urges the traffic.
And the
President has consented to it, and given him power to conduct the exchange in spite of the military authorities.
The President says, however, that twenty sacks of salt ought to be given for one of cotton.
Salt is worth in New Orleans about one dollar a sack, cotton $160 per bale.
The President informed the
Secretary of what had been
done, and sends him a copy of his dispatch to
Gov. Pettus.
He don't even ask
Mr. Randolph's
opinion.
November 9
It is too true that
Charleston, Va., and the great
Kanawha salt works have been abandoned by
Gen. Echols for the want of an adequate force to hold them.
If the
President had only taken
Gen. Lee's advice a month ago, and ordered a few thousand more men there, under the command of
Gen. Ed. Johnson, we should have kept possession of the works.
The President may seem to be a good nation-maker in the eyes of distant statesmen, but he does not seem to be a good salt-maker for the nation.
The works he has just relinquished to the enemy manufacture 7000 bushels of salt per day-two million and a half a year — an ample supply for the entire population of the
Confederacy, and an object adequate to the maintenance of an army of 50,000 in that valley.
Besides, the troops necessary for its occupation will soon be in winter quarters, and quite as expensive to the government as if in
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the valley.
A Caesar, a Napoleon, a Pitt, and a Washington, all great nation-makers, would have deemed this work worthy their attention.
Only three days ago the
President wrote to the
Secretary that the idea of trading cotton to the enemy must be postponed until the first of January, and perhaps indefinitely, but now he informs
Mr. Randolph that he has sent the requisite authority to his friend,
Gov. Pettus, to launch out in that trade.
No, the people have made the nation.
It is a people's war, and it is the momentum of a united, patriotic people, which carries everything with it. Our brave men win victories under adverse circumstances, and often under incompetent officers, and the people feed and clothe the armies in spite of the shortcomings of dishonest commissaries and quartermasters.
They are now sending ten thousand pairs of shoes to
Lee's army in opposition to the will of the
Jew Myers,
Quartermaster-General, who says everything must be contracted and paid for by his agents, according to red-tape rule and regulation.
The weather continues cold, 38°, and snow still lies on the ground.
This
must produce a cessation of hostilities, and afford
Lincoln's drafted recruits opportunity for meditation.
If it be true that the Democrats have carried the day in the
North, I think the war is approaching a termination.
November 10
A day or two ago some soldiers marched through the city without shoes,
in the snow. A committee of citizens to-day obtained an order from the War Department, for the impressment of all the boots, shoes, blankets, and overcoats in the shops.
What a commotion among the Jews!
It is
certain that the enemy are advancing upon
Culpepper, on the way to
Richmond, in great force.
This we have in letters from
Gen. Lee, dated 7th inst., near Culpepper C. H. He says the enemy's cavalry is very numerous, while our horses have the “sore tongue,” and tender hoofs.
Lee has ordered the stores, etc. from
Gordonsville to
Lynchburg.
He says
Jackson may possibly march through one of the gaps and fall upon the enemy's flank, and intimates that an opportunity may be offered to strike the invaders “a blow.”
Yesterday, Sunday, a cavalry company dashed into
Fredericksburg, and after robbing the stores, and reporting that the Democrats
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had swept the
North, that
England and
France had recognized us, etc., they dashed out again.
The President sent to the department to day,
without comment, a defense by
Col. Baylor of his atrocious order for the massacre of the Indians.
It was in a Texas paper.
Baylor acknowledges its genuineness, and says the Apaches murdered our people invited to make a treaty with them, and he says it is his intention to retaliate by extermination of them.
Another proposition was received by the government to-day from a French firm of
New Orleans merchants, to furnish us salt, meat, shoes, blankets, etc., in unlimited quantities,
and guarantee their delivery, if we will allow them, with the proceeds of salt, the privilege of buying cotton on the
Mississippi River, and they will, moreover, freight French ships above New Orleans, and guarantee that not a bale shall be landed in any U. S. port.
Is it not
certain that “
Butler, the beast,” is a party to the speculation?
This is a strong temptation, and we shall see what response our government will make to this proposition to violate an act of Congress.
November 11
More projects from the
Southwest.
Mr. Jno. A. S. has
just arrived from
New Orleans, where, he states in his communication to the government, he had interviews and correspondence with the U. S. authorities,
Butler, etc., and they had given him positive assurances that he will be permitted to take any supplies to the planters (excepting arms and ammunition) in exchange for cotton, which may be shipped to any part of the world.
S. says that
Butler will let us have
anything for a bribe.
No doubt!
And Mr. L.,
President of the
L. Bank, writes that he will afford facilities to
Mr. S It remains to be seen what our government will do in these matters.
They smack of treason.
It is said heavy firing was heard yesterday in the direction of Culpepper C. H., and it is supposed a battle is in progress to-day.
No danger of it.
November 12
The heavy firing heard did no execution.
Letters from
Gen. Lee indicate no battle, unless the enemy should make an egregious blunder.
He says he has
not half men enough to resist
McClellan's advance with his mighty army, and prefers manoeuvring to risking his army.
He says three-fourths of our cavalry horses are sick with sore-tongue, and their hoofs are falling
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off, and the soldiers are not fed and clad as they should be. He urges the sending of supplies to
Gordonsville.
And we have news of a simultaneous advance of Northern armies everywhere; and everywhere we have the same story of deficiency of men and provisions.
North and south, east and west of us, the enemy is reported advancing.
Soon we shall have every one blaming the
Secretary of War for the deficiency of men, and of quartermaster and commissary stores.
The
Commissary-General, backed by the
Secretary of War, made another effort to-day to obtain the
President's permission to trade cotton with “
Butler, the beast.”
But the
President and
Gov. Pettus will manage that
little matter without their assistance.
Major Ruffin's (Commissary's Bureau) statement of the alarming prospects ahead, unless provisions be obtained outside of the
Confederacy (for cotton), was induced by reports from New Orleans.
A man was in the office to-day exhibiting
Butler's passport, and making assurances that all the
Yankee generals are for sale — for cotton.
Butler will make a fortune-and so will some of our great men.
Butler says the reason he don't send troops into the interior is that he is afraid we will burn the cotton.
It is reported that a fleet of the enemy's gun-boats are in the
James River.
November 13
The President has rebuked the
Secretary of War in round terms for ordering
Gen. Holmes to assume the command on
this side the
Mississippi.
Perhaps
Mr. Randolph has resolved to be really
Secretary.
This is the first thing I have ever known him to do without previously obtaining the
President's sanction-and it must be confessed, it was a matter of some gravity and importance.
Of course it will be countermanded.
I have not been in the
Secretary's office yet, to see if there is an envelope on his table directed to the
President marked “
Immediate.”
But he has not been to see the President-and that may be significant, as this is the usual day.
A gentleman, arrived to-day from
Maryland, reports that
Gen. McClellan has been removed, and the command given to
Burnside!
He says, moreover, that this change has given umbrage to the army.
This may be our deliverance; for if
McClellan had
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been let alone two weeks longer (provided he ascertained our present condition), he might have captured
Richmond, which would be holding all Eastern and much of
Central Virginia.
This blunder seems providential.
We learn, also, that the Democracy have carried
Illinois,
Mr. Lincoln's own State, by a very large majority.
This is hailed with gladness by our people; and if there should be a “rebellion in the
North,” as the
Tribune predicts, this intervention of the Democrats will be regarded altogether in our favor.
Let them put down the radical Abolitionists, and then, no doubt, they will recover some of our trade.
It will mortify the Republicans, hereafter, when the smoke clears away, to learn that
Gen. Butler was trading supplies for our army during this November, 1862-and it will surprise our secessionists to learn that our government is trading him cotton!
November 14
An order has gone forth to-day from the
Secretary of War, that no more flour or wheat shall leave the States.
This order was given some time ago — then relaxed, and now reissued.
How soon will he revoke it again?
Never before did such little men rule such a great people.
Our rulers are like children or drunken men riding docile horses, that absolutely keep the riders from falling off by swaying to the right and left, and preserving an equilibrium.
There is no rule for anything, and no stability in any policy.
To-day more propositions from Frenchmen (in New Orleans) have been received.
Butler is preparing to do a great businessand no objection to the illicit traffic is filed by the
Secretaries of State or Treasury.
Yesterday one of the
President's servants was arrested for stealing Treasury notes.
The Treasury Department is just under the Executive Department; and this negro (slave) has been used by the
President to take important papers to the departments.
The amount abstracted was $5000--unsigned-but some one, perhaps the negro, for he is educated, forged the
Register's and
Treasurer's names.
I saw
Gen. J. E. Johnston standing idle in the street to-day.
November 15
“ Now, by
St. George, the work goes bravely on!”
Another letter on my desk from the
President to the
Secretary.
Well, being in an official envelope, it was my duty
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to open it, note its contents, and send it to the
Secretary.
The
Secretary has been responding to the short espistle he received yesterday.
It appears he could not clearly understand its purport.
But the
President has used such plain language in this, that it must be impossible to misunderstand him. He says that the transferring of generals commanding important military districts, without conference with him and his concurrence; and of high disbursing officers; and, above all, the making of appointments without his knowledge and consent, are prerogatives that do not pertain to the
Secretary of War in the first instance; and can only be exercised by him under the direction of the
Chief Executive.
In regard to
appointments, especially, the
President has no constitutional authority nor any disposition to transfer the power.
He discussed their relative duties,--for the benefit of all future
Secretaries, I suppose.
But it looks like a rupture.
It seems, then, after acting some eight months merely in the humble capacity of clerk,
Mr. Randolph has all at once essayed to act the
President.
The
Secretary of War did not go to the
President's closet today.
This is the third day he has absented himself.
Such incidents as these preceded the resignation of
Mr. Walker.
It is a critical time, and the
Secretary of War ought to confer freely with the
President.
Sunday, November 16
Yesterday the
Secretary of War resigned his office, and his resignation was promptly accepted by the
President.
November 17
A profound sensation has been produced in the outside world by the resignation of
Mr. Randolph; and most of the people and the press seem inclined to denounce the
President, for they know not what.
In this matter the
President is not to blame; but the
Secretary has acted either a very foolish or a very desperate part.
It appears that he wrote a note in reply to the last letter of the
President, stating that as no discretion was allowed him in such matters as were referred to by the
President, he begged respectfully to tender his resignation.
The President responded, briefly, that inasmuch as the
Secretary declined acting any longer as one of his constitutional advisers, and also declined a personal conference, no alternative remained but to accept his resignation.
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Randolph's friends would make it appear that he resigned in consequence of being restricted in his action; but he knows very well that the latitude allowed him became less and less circumscribed; and that, hitherto, he was well content to operate within the prescribed limits.
Therefore, if it was not a silly caprice, it was a deliberate purpose, to escape a cloud of odium he knew must sooner or later burst around him.
A letter from
Gen. Magruder, dated 10th inst., at
Jackson, Mississippi, intimates that we shall lose
Holly Springs.
He has also been in
Mobile, and doubts whether that city can be successfully defended by
Gen. Forney, whose liver is diseased, and memory impaired.
He recommends that
Brig.-Gen. Whiting be promoted, and assigned to the command in place of
Forney, relieved.
A letter from
Gen. Whiting, near
Wilmington, dated 13th.
inst., expresses serious apprehensions whether that place can be held against a determined attack, unless a supporting force of 10,000 men be sent there immediately.
It is in the command of
Major- Gen. G. A. Smith.
More propositions to ship cotton in exchange for the supplies needed by the country.
The President has no objection to accepting them all, provided the cotton don't go to any of the enemy's ports.
How
can it be possible to avoid this liability, if the cotton be shipped from the
Mississippi River?
November 18
Well, the
President is a bold man!
He has put in
Randolph's place, temporarily at least,
Major-Gen. Gustavus W. Smith--who was Street
Commissioner in the
City of New York, on the day that
Capt. G. W. Randolph was fighting the New Yorkers at
Bethel!
Gen. Wise is out in a card, stating that in response to a requisition for shoes for his suffering troops,
Quartermaster-Gen. A. C. Myers said, “Let them suffer.”
The enemy attacked
Fredericksburg yesterday, and there was some skirmishing, the result of which we have not heard.
It is rumored they are fighting there to-day.
We have but few regiments between here and
Fredericksburg.
November 19
Hon. James A. Seddon (Va.) has been appointed
Secretary of War.
He is an able man (purely a civilian), and was member of our Revolutionary Convention, at Metropolitan
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Hall, 16th April, 1861.
But some thought him then rather inclined to restrain than to urge decisive action.
He is an orator, rich, and frail in health.
He will not remain long in office if he attempts to perform all the duties.
Two letters were received from
Gen. Lee to-day.
Both came unsealed and open, an omission of his adjutant-general,
Mason.
The first inclines to the belief that
Burnside intends to embark his army for the south side of
James River, to operate probably in
Eastern North Carolina.
The second, dated 17th inst. 6 1/2 P. M., says the scouts report large masses advancing on
Fredericksburg, and it may be
Burnside's purpose to make that town his base of operations.
(Perhaps for a pleasant excursion to
Richmond.) Three brigades of the enemy had certainly marched to
Fredericksburg.
A division of
Longstreet's corps were marched thither yesterday, 18th, at early dawn.
Lee says if the reports of the scouts be confirmed, the entire corps will follow immediately.
And he adds: “Before the enemy's trains can leave
Fredericksburg (for
Richmond) this whole army will be in position.”
These letters were sent immediately to the
President.
A letter from
Gen. Holmes calls for an immediate supply of funds ($24,000,000) for the trans-Mississippi Department.
A letter from
Gen. Pike says if
Gen. Hindman (Ark.) is to control there, the
Indian Country will be lost.
We shall soon have a solution of
Burnside's intentions.
Lee is in spirits.
He knows
Burnside can be easily beaten with greatly inferior numbers.
We hear of sanguinary acts in
Missouri-ten men (civilians) being shot in retaliation for one killed by our rangers.
These acts exasperate our people, and will stimulate them to a heroic defense.
The cars this afternoon from the vicinity of
Fredericksburg were crowded with negroes, having bundles of clothing, etc., their owners sending them hither to escape the enemy.
A frightened Jew, who came in the train, said there was an army of 100,000 near
Fredericksburg, and we should hear more in a few days.
I doubt it not.
Salt sold yesterday at auction for $1.10 per pound.
Boots are now bringing $50 per pair; candles (tallow) 75 cts. per pound; butter
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$2.00 per pound.
Clothing is almost unattainable.
We are all looking shabby enough.
Mr. K., the young Chief of the
Bureau, who came in with
Mr. Randolph, declines the honor of going out with him, to the great chagrin of several anxious applicants.
It is an office “for life.”
I shall despair of success unless the
President puts a stop to
Gen. Winder's passport operations, for, if the enemy be kept advised of our destitute condition, there will be no relaxation of efforts to subjugate us. And
Europe, too, will refuse to recognize us. I believe there are traitors in high places here who encourage the belief in the
North and in
Europe that we must soon succumb.
And some few of our influential great men might be disposed to favor reconstruction of the
Union on the basis of the Democratic party which has just carried the elections in the
North.
Everything depends upon the result of approaching military operations.
If the enemy be defeated, and the Democrats of the
North should call for a National Convention-but why anticipate?
November 20
A letter from
Brig. H. Marshall,
Abingdon, Ky., in reply to one from the
Secretary, says his Kentuckians are not willing to be made Confederate
hog-drivers, but they will protect the commissary's men in collecting and removing the hogs.
Gen. M. criticises
Gen. Bragg's campaign very severely.
He says the people of
Kentucky looked upon their fleeting presence as a
horse-show, or military pageantry, and not as indicating the stern reality of war. Hence they did not rise in arms, and hence their diffidence in following the fortunes of the new Confederacy.
Gen. M. asks if it is the purpose of the government to
abandon Kentucky, and if so, is he not
functus officio, being a Kentucky general, commanding
Kentucky troops?
Col. Myers has placed on file in the department a denial of having said to
Gen. Wise's quartermaster, “Let them suffer.”
Several ladies, near relatives of
Judge Campbell,
Assistant Secretary of War, came over yesterday under flag of truce.
They lived, I believe, in
Alexandria.
Another requisition has been made by the engineer for 5000 negroes to work on the fortifications of
Richmond.
No letters were received from
Gen. Lee to-day, and he may be busy in the field.
Accounts say the enemy is planting batteries on the heights opposite
Fredericks burg.
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It has been raining occasionally the last day or two.
I hope the ground is
soft, and the mud deep; if so,
Burnside cannot move on
Richmond, and we shall have time to prepare for “contingencies.”
Yesterday salt sold at auction for $1.30 per pound.
We are getting into a pretty extreme condition.
November 21
It rained all night, which may extinguish
Burnside's ardent fire.
He cannot drag his wagons and artillery through the melting snow, and when it diies we may look for another rain.
The new
Secretary is not yet in his seat.
It is generally supposed he will accept.
President Davis hesitates to retaliate life for life in regard to the
Missouri military executions.
Common shirting cotton, and Yankee calico, that used to sell at 12 1/2 cts. per yard, is now $1.75! What a temptation for the
Northern manufacturers!
What a
rush of trade there would be if peace should occur suddenly!
And what a party there would be in the
South for peace (and unity with Northern Democrats) if the war were waged somewhat differently.
The excesses of the Republicans
compel our people to be almost a unit.
This is all the better for us. Still, we are in quite a bad way now, God knows!
The passengers by the cars from
Fredericksburg this morning report that
Gen. Patrick (Federal) came over under a flag of truce, demanding the surrender of the town, which was refused by
Gen. Lee, in compliance with the unanimous sentiments of the people.
Gen. Patrick, it is stated, said if it were not surrendered by 9 A. M. to-day, it would be shelled.
Mr. Dargan, M. C., writes to the
President from
Mobile that the inhabitants of that city are in an awful condition.
Meal is selling for $3.50 per bushel, and wood at $15 per cord, and that the people are afraid to bring supplies, apprehending that the government agents will seize them.
The President (thanks to him!) has ordered that interference with domestic trade must not be permitted.
Mr. Seddon has taken his seat.
He has, at least, a manly appearance-his predecessor was said to look like a m----y.
The President has ordered our generals in
Missouri, if the
Yankee
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accounts of the executions of our people be true, to execute the next ten Federal officers taken in that State.
The
Enquirer, to-day, publishes
Col. Baylor's order to execute the Indians in
Arizona, coupled with
Mr. Randolph's condemnation of the act. Who furnished this for publication?
It is rumored that
Fredericksburg is in flames, shelled by the enemy.
We will know how true this is before night.
November 23
The cars which came in from the
North last night brought a great many women, children, and negroes from
Fredericksburg and its vicinity.
The benevolent and patriotic citizens here had, I believe, made some provision for their accommodation.
But the enemy had not yet shelled the town.
There is a rumor that
Jackson was to appear somewhere in the rear of the enemy, and that the
Federal stores which could not be moved with the army had been burnt at
Manassas.
Yesterday the
President remitted the sentence of a poor lad, sentenced to ball-and-chain for six months, for cowardice, etc. He had endured the penalty three months. I like this act, for the boy had enlisted without the consent of his parents, and was only sixteen years of age.
J. R. Anderson & Co. (having drawn $500,000 recently on the contract) have failed to furnish armor for the gun-boats-the excuse being that iron could not be had for their rolling-mills.
The President has ordered the
Secretaries of the Navy and War to consult on the propriety of taking
railroad iron, on certain tracks, for that purpose.
November 24
Fredericksburg not shelled yet; but the women and children are flying hither.
The enemy fired on a train of women and children yesterday, supposing the cars (baggage) were conveying military stores.
The Northern press says
Burnside is determined to force his way, directly from the
Rappahannock to
Richmond, by virtue of superior numbers.
The thing
Lee desires him to attempt.
The enemy are landing troops at Newport News, and we shall soon hear of gun-boats and transports in the
James River.
But no one is dismayed.
We have supped on horrors so long, that danger now is an accustomed condiment.
Blood will flow in torrents, and God will award the victory.
Another letter from
Gen. Whiting says there is every reason to
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suppose that
Wilmington will be attacked immediately, and if reinforcements (10,000) be not sent him, the place cannot be defended against a land assault.
Nor is this all: for if the city falls, with the present force only to defend it, none of our men can escape.
There is no repose for us!
November 25
Fredericksburg is not shelled yet; and, moreover, the enemy have apologized for the firing at the train containing women and children.
Affairs remain in
status quo — the mayor and military authorities agreeing that the town shall furnish neither aid nor comfort to the Confederate army, and the
Federals agreeing not to shell it — for the present.
Gen. Corcoran, last year a prisoner in this city, has landed his Irish brigade at Newport News.
It is probable we shall be assailed from several directions simultaneously.
No beggars can be found in the streets of this city. No cry of distress is heard, although it prevails extensively.
High officers of the government have no fuel in their houses, and give nearly $20 per cord for wood for cooking purposes.
And yet there are millions of tons of coal almost
under the very city!
November 26
No fighting on the
Rappahannock yet, that I hear of; and it is said the enemy are moving farther down the river.
Can they mean to cross?
Nothing more is heard of
Gen. Corcoran, with his Irish bogtrotters, on the
Peninsula.
The government has realized 50,000 pounds of leather from two counties in
Eastern North Carolina, in danger of falling into the hands of the enemy.
This convinces me that there is abundance of leather in the
South, if it were properly distributed.
It is held, like everything else, by speculators, for extortioners' profits.
The government might remedy the evils, and remove the distresses of the people; but instead of doing so, the bureaus aggravate them by capricious seizures, and tyrannical restrictions on transportation.
Letters are coming in from every quarter complaining of the despotic acts of government agents.
Mr. J. Foulkes writes another letter to the department on his cotton scheme.
He says it must be embraced now or never, as the enemy will soon make such dispositions as would prevent his getting supplies
through their lines. The
Commissary-General approves, and the late
Secretary approved; but what will the new one do?
The President is non-committal.
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What a blunder
France and
England made in hesitating to espouse our cause They might have had any commercial advantages.
November 27
Some of the late
Secretary's friends are hinting that affairs will go amiss now, as if he would have prevented any disaster!
Who gave up
Norfolk?
That was a calamitous blunder!
Letters from
North Carolina are distressing enough.
They say, but for the influence of
Gov. Vance, the
legislature would favor reconstruction!
Gen. Marshall writes lugubriously.
He says his men are all barefoot.
Gen. Magruder writes that
Pemberton has only 20,000 men, and should have 50,000 more at once-else the
Mississippi Valley will be lost, and the cause ruined.
He thinks there should be a concentration of troops there immediately, no matter how much other places might suffer; the enemy beaten, and the
Mississippi secured at all hazards.
If not,
Mobile is lost, and perhaps
Montgomery, as well as
Vicksburg,
Holly Springs, etc.
One of our paroled men from
Washington writes the
President that, on the 6th instant,
Burnside had but seventy regiments; and the
President seemed to credit it!
The idea of
Burnside advancing with seventy regiments is absurd.
But how many absurd ideas have been entertained by the government, and have influenced it!
Nous verrons.
November 28
All is quiet on the
Rappahannock; the enemy reported to be extending his line up the river some twenty miles, intending to find a passage.
He
might have come over last week but for a
ruse of
Gen. Lee, who appeared near
Fredericksburg twenty-four hours in advance of the army.
His presence deceived
Burnside, who took it for granted that our general was at the head of his army!
M. Paul carried the day yesterday, in the
Confederate Court, in the matter of $2,000,000 worth of tobacco, which, under pretense of its belonging to French citizens (though bought by
Belmont, of New York, an alien enemy), is rescued from sequestration.
In other words, the recognition of
M. Paul as Consul, and the validity of his demands, deprives the Confederate Government of two millions; and really acknowledges the
exequatur of the
United
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States, as
M. Paul is not Consul to the
Confederate States but to the
United States.
This looks like submission; and a great fee has been realized by somebody.
If the enemy were to take
Richmond, this tobacco would be destroyed by the
military.
Gen. Joseph E. Johnston is assigned to the command of the army of the West.
To-day we have a dispatch from
Gov. Pettus, saying authority to pass cotton through the lines of the army, and for salt to have ingress, must be given immediately.
The President directs the
Secretary to transmit orders to the generals to that effect.
He says the cotton is to go to
France without touching any port in the possession of the enemy.
November 29
The
Quartermaster-General publishes a notice that
he will receive and distribute contributions of clothing, etc. to the army, and even
pay for the shirts $1 each!
Shirts are selling at $12. The people will not trust him to convey the clothing to their sons and brothers, and so the army must suffer on. But he is getting in bad odor.
A gentleman in
Alabama writes that his agents are speculating in food: the
President tells the
Secretary to demand explanations, and the
Secretary does so.
Col. Myers fails, I think, to make the exhibit required, and it may be the worse for him.
I see by the papers that another of
Gen. Winder's police has escaped to
Washington City, and is now acting as a
Federal de-tective.
And yet many similar traitors are retained in service here!
The Governor of
North Carolina writes the
President that his State intends to organize an army of 10,000 men for its own defense, besides her sixty regiments in the
Confederate States service; and asks if the
Confederate States Government can furnish any arms, etc. The President sends this to the
Secretary of War, for his
advice. He wants to know
Mr. Seddon's views on the subject — a delicate and embarrassing predicament for the new
Secretary, truly!
He must know that the
President frowns on all military organizations not under his own control, and that he counteracted all
Gen. Floyd's efforts to raise a division under State authority.
Beware,
Mr. Seddon!
The President is a little particular concerning his prerogatives; and by the advice you now give, you stand or fall.
What is
North Carolina to the
Empire?
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You tread on dangerous ground.
Forget your old State-Rights doctrine, or off goes your head.
November 30
It is said there is more concern manifested in the government here on the indications that the States mean to organize armies of non-conscripts for their own defense, than for any demonstration of the enemy.
The election of
Graham Confederate States Senator in
North Carolina, and of
H. V. Johnson in
Georgia, causes some uneasiness.
These men were not original secessionists, and have been the objects of aversion, if not of proscription, by the men who secured position in the
Confederate States Government.
Nevertheless, they are able men, and as true to Southern independence as any. But they are opposed to despotic usurpation-and their election seems like a rebuke and condemnation of military usurpation.
From all sections of the
Confederacy complaints are coming in that the
military agents of the bureaus are oppressing the people; and the belief is expressed by many, that a sentiment is prevailing inimical to the government itself.