HEADQUARTERS VALLEY
DISTRICT,
November 20, 1861.
Hon. J.P. BENJAMIN, Secretary of War:
SIR: I hope you will pardon me for requesting that at once
all the troops under General Loring be ordered to this point.
Deeply impressed with the importance of absolute secrecy
respecting military operations, I have made it a point to say but little respecting
my proposed movements in the event of sufficient re-enforcements arriving; but
since conversing with Lieut. Col. J. T. L. Preston, upon his return from
General Loring, and ascertaining the disposition of the general's forces, I
venture to respectfully urge that after concentrating all his troops here an
attempt should be made to capture the Federal forces at Romney.1
The attack on Romney would probably induce McClellan to
believe that the Army of the Potomac had been so weakened as to justify him in
making an advance on Centreville; but should this not induce him to advance, I
do not believe anything will during the present winter. Should the Army of the
Potomac be attacked, I would be at once prepared to re-enforce it with my
present volunteer force, increased by General Loring's. After repulsing the
enemy at Manassas, let the troops that marched on Romney return to the valley,
and move rapidly westward to the waters of the Monongahela and Little Kanawha.
Should General Kelley be defeated, and especially should he be captured, I
believe that by a judicious disposition of the militia, a few cavalry, and a
small number of field pieces, no additional forces would be required for some
time in this district.
I deem it of very great importance that Northwestern
Virginia be occupied by Confederate troops this winter. At present it is to be
presumed that the enemy are not expecting an attack there, and the resources of
that region necessary for the subsistence of our troops are in greater
abundance than in almost any other season of the year. Postpone the occupation
of that section until spring, and we may expect to find the enemy prepared for
us and the resources to which I have referred greatly exhausted. I know that
what I have proposed will be an arduous undertaking and cannot be accomplished
without the sacrifice of much personal comfort; but I feel that the troops will
be prepared to make this sacrifice when animated by the prospects of important
results to our cause and distinction to themselves.
It may be urged against this plan that the enemy will
advance on Staunton or Huntersville. I am well satisfied that such a step would
but make their destruction more certain. Again, it may be said that General
Floyd will be cut off. To avoid this, if necessary the general has only to fall
back towards the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad. When Northwestern Virginia is
occupied in force, the Kanawha Valley, unless it be the lower part of it, must
be evacuated by the Federal forces, or otherwise their safety will be
endangered by forcing a column across from the Little Kanawha between them and
the Ohio River.
Admitting that the season is too far advanced, or that from
other causes all cannot be accomplished that has been named, yet through the
blessing of God, who has thus far so wonderfully prospered our cause, much more
may be expected from General Loring's troops, according to this programme, than
can be expected from them where they are. If you decide to order them here, I
trust that for the purpose of saving time all the infantry, cavalry, and
artillery Will be directed to move immediately upon the reception of the order.*
The enemy, about 5,000 strong, have been for some time slightly fortifying at
Romney, and have completed their telegraph from that place to Green Spring
Depot. Their forces at and near Williamsport are estimated as high as 5,000,
but as yet I have no reliable information of their strength beyond the Potomac.
Your most obedient
servant,
T. J. JACKSON,
Major-General, P. A. C. S.
[Indorsement.]
HEADQUARTERS,
Centreville, November 21, 1861.
Respectfully forwarded. I submit that the troops under
General Loring might render valuable services by taking the field with General
Jackson, instead of going into winter quarters, as now proposed.
J. E. JOHNSTON,
General.
_______________
1 General Kelly was then at Romney with a force
reputed to be five thousand men, to cover repairs on the Baltimore and Ohio
Railroad.
SOURCES: The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the
Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 5 (Serial
No. 5), p. 965-6; Mary Anna Jackson, Life and Letters of General
Thomas J. Jackson (Stonewall Jackson), p. 218-21
No comments:
Post a Comment