Bright, but several inches
of snow fell last night.
The President wrote
a long letter to the Secretary yesterday concerning the assignment of
conscripts in Western North Carolina, at most only a few hundred, and the
appointment of officers, etc. A small subject.
Congress has passed
a resolution calling on the Secretary of War for information concerning certain
youths, alleged to have received passports to Europe, etc. Also one relating to
the Commissary-General's traffic in Eastern North Carolina, within the enemy's
lines. Also one relating to instructions to Gen. Smith, trans-Mississippi
Department, who assumes control of matters pertaining to the Treasury
Department.
General J. S.
Preston, Superintendent Bureau of Conscription, writes a long letter from South
Carolina indorsing an act of the Legislature authorizing the impressment of
one-fifth of the slaves between eighteen and fifty, for work on the
fortifications within the State, but also providing for impressment of an
additional number by the Confederate States Government. This, Gen. P. considers
a treasonable move, indicating that South Carolina, North Carolina, Alabama,
Mississippi, etc. have a purpose to disintegrate Confederate authority, and
that they will not contribute another man, black or white, to the Confederate
service, to be commanded by Confederate States authority. And he has several
thrusts at Gen. Bragg and Gen. Kemper, and, indirectly, at the President, for
interfering with his bureau. I see nothing in the act to warrant his interpretations,
and I have no faith in his predictions.
W. F. D. Saussure
and others, Columbia, S. C., petition the government to send a corps of Lee's
army to save their State and Georgia from devastation, as there are no adequate
forces in them for defense. They confess that Richmond is important to hold,
but insist that Georgia and South Carolina must be defended to hold it, etc.
They are frightened evidently.
Gen. Withers,
Alabama, denounces the inefficiency of the conscript system.
Lieut. Beverly
Kermon writes from the Rappahannock that "thus far (to Jan. 1st) our
movements (in connection with Capt. T. N. Conrad) are perfectly secret."
The next day he was to go to the Potomac. What has the Secretary sent him there
for?
J. R. Bledsoe
presents a design for a "new flag," red, white, and blue cross, which
Gen. Lee thinks both original and beautiful. Judge Campbell has a box of
clothing, sent from London by J. B. Bloodgood.
SOURCE: John
Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate
States Capital, Volume 2, p. 375-6
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