EDITOR APPEAL: The
petition for a special policeman to perform certain duties for the Mothers’ Rooms, having given rise to much
discussion in the Board of Aldermen, and the matter being evidently from the
reports of that discussion greatly misunderstood, will you permit me to correct
the false impression created thereby and more particularly by the remarks of
Ald. Kortrecht. In the beginning of the
enterprise of the Mothers, the Vigilance Committee ordered the free women of
the city to do the washing of the establishment in regular course, and the
captain of the police was instructed to have them brought to the Rooms, and see
that they returned the articles in due time.
This required only a few hours time every week, and there being a larger
number of such women in the city enjoying the protection of the laws, for the vindication
of which our boys are in arms, the duty, if properly seen to by the police,
cannot fall upon the same person oftener than once in two or three months. It was to attend to this duty, only, that the
Mothers desired a special person detailed.
They have no further need for an officer in their establishment. I regret having troubled the city in the
matter, since it has given rise to a misunderstanding of their position and
wants.
In regard to the remarks of Ald. Kortrecht, I wish to state
that he has been misinformed. The
Secretary of War has been applied to, to give the appointment of a surgeon in
the army to G. W. Currey, M. D., the surgeon of the Rooms, but has not yet
acted upon the petition. Gen. Polk has
been ordered the payment of the soldiers’ rations to the Mothers while the
soldiers are in the Rooms, but they have not yet been drawn, and when drawn will
not support the institution or pay one tenth of the expenses. It takes charge of no soldiers but those in
the service of the Confederate States, and of no persons but the soldiers
themselves. It is not a charitable
institution. These men are periling their
health, their lives and the hopes of their families in many instances, for the
defense of our homes and dearest rights, and we cannot consent to have it
called a charity, in those who stay securely under the protection their valor
gives them, to care for them with the tenderness of mothers when they shall be
sick or disabled. The people have taken
this view of it, and sent to the Southern Mothers money, furniture, food, etc.,
that has made their institution a home to the sick and disabled soldier; and
the great-hearted southern people will do it still, and never think it a
charity. But upon the contributions of
that public to thise cause the Mothers ral[l]y, and have relied to this moment.
S. C. LAW, Pres. S. S.
M.
Mary E. Pope,
Secretary.
(City papers please copy.)
SOURCE: Memphis Daily
Appeal, Memphis Tennessee, Friday, August 23, 1861, p. 4
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