Monday, November 10, 2014

John M. Forbes to Governor John A. Andrew, April 23, 1861

(Private.)
Boston, April 23,1861.
To His Excellency, John A. Andrew:

My dear Sir, — To give you an idea of the time it will take to get good hard bread for shipping: I should think for a month's supply to our Massachusetts troops now in the field it would need at least three days from the time the order was given to do it properly — possibly more.

Other things can be had quicker, but I should like, if you think proper, to have an order by the bearer to provide a month's supply of hard bread for 4000 men. By the time this is ready you will have plenty of troops here and an order for them, and with the bread can send other things to match. . . .

I don't want to interfere with the duties of your commissary-general that is to be, but some things take time, and bread ought to be ordered to-day.

You cannot be too careful in getting a working business man for the commissariat. It will save the State thousands of dollars, and save us our credit when accounts come to be settled after the enthusiasm boils past.

Yours,
J. M. Forbes.


At your Excellency's request the Committee on the Militia have considered the within proposition. We unanimously recommend that Mr. Forbes be authorized to purchase forthwith provisions for 4000 for thirty days, more or less, and that arrangements be made to forward them promptly.

Hugh W. Greene,
John I. Baker,
Oakes Ames,
Committee on Militia.


Let it be done.
J. A. Andrew.

SOURCE: Sarah Forbes Hughes, Letters and Recollections of John Murray Forbes, Volume 1, p. 212-13

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