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Southern Historical Society Papers, Volume 1. (ed. Reverend J. William Jones), Report of Colonel D. T. Chandler , (search)
August, 1863.
August, 2
Rode with Colonel Taylor to Cowan; dined with Colonel Hobart, and spent the day very agreeably.
Returning we called on Colonel Scribner, remained an hour, and reached Decherd after nightfall.
My request for leave of absence was lying on the table approved and recommended by Negley and Thomas, but indorsed not granted by Rosecrans.
General Rousseau has left, and probably will not return.
The best of feeling has not existed between him and the commanding general for some time past.
Rousseau has had a good division, but probably thought he should have a corps.
This, however, is not the cause of the breach.
It has grown out of small matters-things too trifling to talk over, think of, or explain, and yet important enough to create a coldness, if not an open rupture.
Rosecrans is marvelously popular with the men.
August, 3
The papers state that General R. B. Mitchell has gone home on sick leave.
Poor fellow!
he must have been taken suddenly,
John D. Billings, Hardtack and Coffee: The Unwritten Story of Army Life, chapter 17 (search)
Robert Underwood Johnson, Clarence Clough Buell, Battles and Leaders of the Civil War: The Opening Battles. Volume 1., Organization of the two governments. (search)
The Annals of the Civil War Written by Leading Participants North and South (ed. Alexander Kelly McClure), Life in Pennsylvania . (search)
Thomas C. DeLeon, Four years in Rebel capitals: an inside view of life in the southern confederacy, from birth to death., Chapter 31 : the Chinese -Wall blockade, abroad and at home. (search)
XXIX. August, 1863
Some desertion.
Lee falling back.
men still foolishly look for foreign aid.
speculators swarming.
God helps me to-day.
conscripts.
Memminger shipping gold to Europe.
our women and children making straw bonnets.
attack on Charleston.
Robert Tyler as a financier.
enemy throw large shells into Charleston, five and a half miles.
diabolical scheme.
Gen. Lee has returned to the army.
August 1
The President learns, by a dispatch from Gen. Hardee, of Mississippi, that information has reached him, which he considers authentic, that Gen. Taylor has beaten Banks in Louisiana, taking 6000 prisoners; but then it is said that Taylor has fallen back.
I see by Mr. Memminger's correspondence that he has been sending $1,000,000 in sterling exchange, with the concurrence of the President and the Secretary of War, to Gen. Johnston and Gov. Pettus.
What can this mean?
Perhaps he is buying stores, etc.
Gen. Pemberton, it is said, has proclaimed a th