The following dispatch indicates the prestige of success for
the year 1864, and it is probable it will be followed by a succession of
successes, for the administration at Washington will find, this year, constant
antagonisms everywhere, in the North as well as in the South, and in the army
there will be opposing parties—Republicans and Democrats. On the part of the
South, we have experienced the great agony of 1863, and have become so familiar
with horrors that we shall fight with a fearful desperation. But the dispatch:
“Glorious news! The whole Yankee force,
about 150, are our prisoners, and their gun-boat 'Smith Briggs,' destroyed.
“No one hurt on our side. Four Yankees
killed and two or three wounded.
“The prisoners are now at Broad Water.
Send down a train for them to-morrow.”
We learn that this Yankee force was commissioned to destroy
a large factory at Smithfield, in Isle of Wight County. We do not know the size
or composition of our command which achieved the results noticed above, but
understand that it contained two companies of the Thirty-first North Carolina
Regiment.
Congress has not yet finally acted, on the Tax bill, nor on
the new Conscription bill.
The Secretary of War said to-day that he would not allow the
increased pay to any of his civil officers who were young and able to bear
arms—and this after urging Congress to increase their compensation. It will be
very hard on some who are refugees, having families dependent on them. Others,
who board, must be forced into the army (the design), for their expenses per
month will be some fifty per cent, more than their income.
The weather is clear but colder.
SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel
War Clerk's Diary at the Confederate States Capital, Volume 2, p.
141-2