Warm, beautiful weather. A busy day, settling disputes
between citizens and their quarrels. I held a sort of police court. Dr. Joe
also decided cases. The parties under arrest, we hear their stories and
discharge or put on bread and water as the case seems to require. All local
tribunals suppressed or discontinued. We also are full of courier and express
duty. Colonel Withers, a Union citizen of the old-fashioned Intelligencer reading
sort, called. He is a true patriot. We sent out a courier to meet Colonel Ammen
with the Twenty-fourth, preparatory to greeting and escorting him. But he isn't
coming yet. Colonel Scammon is policing and disciplining in a good way. The
colonel improves. As soon as taps sounds he has the lights put out and all talk
suppressed.
When we came to Weston, Colonel Lytle was here with four
companies. The Seventeenth returning home (three-months men) passed through
here about the second or third. The Nineteenth about the first. Colonel E. B.
Tyler with the Seventh is beyond Sutton. Colonel Bosley with the Sixth is at
Beverly.
SOURCE: Charles Richard Williams, editor, Diary and
Letters of Rutherford Birchard Hayes, Volume 2, p. 57
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