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g those of the enemy. Troops, he said to Halleck, must depend for subsistence on what they can get from the country, and the little we can send from Chattanooga. Soon after this, Foster was relieved from duty at his own request, an old wound received in the Mexican war having reopened; and Major-General John M. Schofield was, at Grant's desire, appointed to the command of the Department of the Ohio. Schofield, however, did not arrive at Knoxville till the 9th of February. On the 11th of December, Grant wrote to McPherson, who had been left in command at Vicksburg: I shall start a cavalry force through Mississippi, in about two weeks, to clean out the state entirely of all rebels. This was the germ of what has been known as the Meridian raid. On the 23d, he said to Halleck: I am now collecting as large a cavalry force as can be spared, at Savannah, Tennessee, to cross the Tennessee river, and cooperate with the cavalry from Hurlbut's command, in clearing out entirely the force