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Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 3. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Book I:—the war on the Rapidan. (search)
es. The former were distributed among the various brigades, which were made to undergo a complete reorganization. Two brigades were added to Jackson's corps, while the others received one or two new regiments each. The effective force of Jackson's corps rose, in three months, from twenty-five to thirty-three thousand men. The resources of the whole of Virginia were collected together for the purpose of provisioning the army and forming depots capable of securing its subsistence: that of Guiney's Station especially became of great importance. The arsenals of the Confederacy redoubled their activity, the blockade-runners made some happy ventures, and the Southern soldiers received a large number of new arms, as well as ammunition in sufficient quantity, while their equipments were likewise much improved. Important reforms, in short, were introduced in the personnel of the army. All the batteries of artillery, which until then had been independent of each other, were united into