There is no confirmation of the report of the fall of Vicksburg,
but it may be so; nor is it certain that we have advanced to Harrisburg, but it
is probable.
Gen. D. H. Hill writes (on Saturday) from Petersburg that
40,000 of the enemy could not take Richmond; but this may be fishing for the
command. He says if Gen. Dix comes this way, he would make him a subject of the
cartel of exchange which he (Dix) had a hand in negotiating.
J. M. Botts writes, from his farm in Culpepper, that our men
are quartered on his premises, and do as much injury as a hostile army could.
He is neutral. They pay him ten cents per day for the grazing of each
horse.
The Commissary-General is again recommending the procuring of
bacon from within the enemy's lines, in exchange for cotton. Why not get meat
from the enemy's country for nothing?
Hon. R. M. T. Hunter writes to the Secretary of War to let
the Quartermaster-General alone, that he is popular with Congress, and that his
friends are active. It might be dangerous to remove him; the President had
better commission him a brigadier-general. He says Judge Campbell wants the
President to go to Mississippi; this, Mr. H. is opposed to. Mr. H. is willing
to trust Johnston, has not lost confidence in him, etc. And he tells the
Secretary to inform the President how much he (H.) esteems him (the President).
The New York Times publishes an account of one of their
raids on the Peninsula, below this city, as follows:
“Within the past three days a most
daring raid has been made into one of the richest portions of the enemy's
country, and the success was equal to the boldness of the undertaking.
“The expedition, which was conducted by
both land and water, was commanded by Col. Kilpatrick. It started from the
headquarters of Gen. Keyes on Wendesday, and returned yesterday. In the interim
the Counties of Matthews and Gloucester were scoured. All the warehouses
containing grain were sacked, the mills burned, and everything that could in
any way aid the rebels were destroyed or captured. Three hundred horses, two
hundred and fifty head of cattle, two hundred sheep, and one hundred mules,
together with a large number of contrabands, were brought back by the raiders.
“The rebel farmers were all taken by
surprise. They had not expected a demonstration of the kind. Not only were they
made to surrender everything that could be of the least use to us, but they
were compelled to be silent spectators to the destruction of their agricultural
implements.”
No doubt we shall soon have some account in the Northern papers
of our operations in this line, in their country.
SOURCE: John Beauchamp Jones, A Rebel War Clerk's
Diary at the Confederate States Capital, Volume 1, p. 364-5