It rained last night. To-day there is an expectation of a
battle near Chancellorville, the battle-ground of June last. Meade is certainly
advancing, and Pickett's division, on the south side of the James River, at
Chaffin's Farm, is ordered to march toward Lee, guarding the railroad, and the
local defense men are ordered out.
My son Custis goes with his battalion to Chaffin's Farm in
the morning.
There are rumors of six or eight thousand of the enemy
marching up the line of the James River against Petersburg, etc. We have also a
rumor of Gen. Rosser having captured the wagon train of two divisions of the
enemy in Culpepper County.
From Bragg not a word since his dispatch from Ringgold, Ga.,
and nothing from Longstreet.
Gen. Whiting writes that a large number of Jews and others
with gold, having put in substitutes, and made their fortunes, are applying for
passage out of the country. They fear their substitutes will no longer keep
them out of the army. Gen. W. says they have passports from Richmond, and that
the spy who published in the North an account of the defenses of Wilmington,
had a passport from Richmond. The government will never realize the injury of
the loose passport system until it is ruined.
Never have I known such confusion. On the 26th inst. the
Secretary ordered Gen. Pickett, whose headquarters were at Petersburg, to send
a portion of his division to Hanover Junction, it being apprehended that a raid
might be made in Lee's rear. Gen. P. telegraphs that the French steam frigate
was coming up the river (what for?), and that two Federal regiments and three
companies of cavalry menaced our lines on the south side of the river. The
Secretary sent this to Gen. Elzey, on this side of the river, asking if his
pickets and scouts could not get information of the movements of the enemy.
To-day Gen. E. sends back the paper, saying his scouts could not cross the
river and get within the enemy's lines. So the government is in a fog—and if
the enemy knew it, and it may, the whole government might be taken before any
dispositions for defense could be made. Incompetency in Richmond will some day
lose it.
Three o'clock P.M. The weather is clear, and Lee and Meade
may fight, and it may be a decisive battle.
I met Mr. Foote, of Tennessee, to-day. He asked me if I did
not think our affairs were in a desperate condition. I replied that I did not
know that they were not, and that when one in my position did not know, they
must be bad enough.
SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's
Diary at the Confederate States Capital, Volume 2, p.
107-8
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