Four of Barrett's company under arrest. I wrote out the charges, etc., of three. One mink skin, $2.50. One-half of a rat skin, 10.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
Four of Barrett's company under arrest. I wrote out the charges, etc., of three. One mink skin, $2.50. One-half of a rat skin, 10.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
Singing book and lessons, $2. Train left.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
We received our song books, The Academy Vocalist. A scene about them.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
Matches, 15. I sold six traps for $5.50. I paid expressage on box containing Sioux skull, 50.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
I copied proceedings of court martial.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
Beautiful mirage. I wrote to Mrs. Dilley, acknowledging the reception of hospital stores. Sergeant Fred Miller, Company G of the 7th, reduced to the ranks. At singing school. (Adjutant sings in my office.)
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
Henry Selover and I recited tactics I translated some Virgil.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
Butter 35. Studied the second part, School of Battalion.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
I was sick. Adjutant excused me from guard mount. I cleaned my gun. Studied music lesson, etc.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
Feel some better and did my office business. Made out a new roster for February. Very blustery, snowy, a howling, blustering storm.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
Whitney and train returned. I sold my gold watch for $28 and bought a silver lever, $23, and sold it to Norton. Received $7. He owes me $16. I bought a silver Lepine for $17. Singing school. Sore eyes.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
I wrote off eight orders for officers. Battalion drill. Paper, postage, 10.
SOURCE: Lewis C. Paxson, Diary of Lewis C. Paxson: Stockton, N.J., 1862-1865, p. 11
Dear Sir:—In your
paper of the 1st inst., I observed a notice of a long article in the
"Mississippi Advertiser," being an attack upon my "friends"
in general, and myself in connection with the fact, that the 2d Mississippi
Regiment, had offered to elect me their Colonel, and that I declined to accept.
Much stress is laid upon a paragraph in a number of your paper issued whilst I
was in Mexico, referring to a rumor that I would probably become the commander
of the 2d Mississippi Regiment. I saw the paragraph, and at the same time
a notice of it in a New Orleans paper, which treated the rumor as ridiculous.
Either or both views seemed to me very unimportant, as no vacancy existed, and
there was no prospect that one would happen. Col. R. Davis left his Regiment on
leave of absence, not to resign, but to make such arrangements as would enable
him to return to his command, and remain during the war. This information
communicated to me, by himself, I frequently gave to others, to correct an
impression that he would not return.
He rejoined his
Regiment very soon after I left Monterey. Ill health has subsequently compelled
him to resign, and a vacancy thus unexpectedly occurred. In the mean time your
paragraph, which the Advertiser considers as so effective, had become old, if
you can bear the supposition, perhaps Sir, it was forgotten in the 2d Regiment;
the more supposible, as the report you noticed came from them, and could
acquire no additional importance by travelling back. The "Advertiser"
says: "The announcement of the rumor of some circumstances, had time to
reach the camp of the 2d Regiment in Mexico, and also the refusal of the tender
of the Brigadier Generalship." Now, Sir, I have just said I thought the
announcement had too much time, and I have some reason to believe the refusal
had not enough. A Physician formerly a member of the 1st Mississippi Regiment,
now on duty in the medical staff of the division which includes the 2d
Mississippi Regiment, wrote to me from camp Buena Vista, on the 10th July; five
days before the letter of the committee, from whose letter I make the following
extract: "The 2d Mississippi, leave for Augua Nueva, in a few days, and
more troops are expected up. We were all delighted to hear that you have been
promoted to Brigadier, and would take command of this Division."
The idea of electing
me Colonel of the 2d Mississippi Regiment, I have been informed by some of the
officers, was as old as its organization; and repeatedly when we were at
Monterey, members of the 2d Mississippi Regiment, expressed a wish, in the
event of their Colonelcy becoming vacant to have my services in that capacity.
These will remember, whilst I acknowledged the compliment, the extent to which
I always discouraged the proposition, and will recognize in the third reason of
my letter to their committee a principle they have heard me more fully present.
By them my reply might have been anticipated, yet if they supposed I could not
resist an invitation so generously and unexpectedly given, they were not far
wrong. Had
I been physically
able, and free to accept, they would probably have been right.
Now, Sir, to return
to the article of the "Advertiser," having gratuitously made the
supposition, that the invitation of the 2d Regiment, was procured to subserve
some purpose, and be refused, the editor with all the solemnity of an
indictment proceeds: "If Col. Jefferson Davis has, at any time, or in any
form," &c &c, to instruct me what it is requisite for me to do in
the case. To the low suspicion, I have nothing to reply. It must find its
rebuke in every ingenuous mind, and its refutation must come from my friends of
the 2d Mississippi Regiment, who best know the degree of its falsehood. How an
unprejudicated mind could originate such things, it is difficult to conceive. Nor
is it more easy for me to imagine whose vanity has been wounded, whose envy
excited, whose jealousy has prompted him to this misrepresentation of a free
offering, an honorable distinction, which my fellow citizens of the 2d
Regiment, have been pleased to confer upon me.
At the close of the
Advertiser's article, is a call for information as to the ground on which I
declined the proffered command. Those who volunteer advice, ought to have a
great deal of information, and I am happy to have it in my power to contribute
any. I therefore send you for publication the correspondence in relation to
this transaction. It is comprised entire, in two letters herewith enclosed. No.
1 the
letter of the committee, No. 2, a
copy of my reply.
SOURCE: Dunbar
Rowland, Editor, Jefferson Davis, Constitutionalist: His Letters,
Papers and Speeches, Volume 1, pp. 96-8
Genl. Jefferson
Davis—Sir: — As you will doubtless have learned before this reaches you, the
office of Colonel of the 2nd Mississippi Rifles will be vacated on the 1st of
September next, by the resignation of Col. Reuben Davis.
Feeling a deep
interest in the selection of his successor, the officers held a meeting on last
evening to ascertain, if possible, who was the choice of the regiment.
Knowing and
appreciating the high reputation you have acquired as commander of the 1st
Mississippi Regiment, there was on the part of the meeting a unanimous
expression of opinion in your favor, and the undersigned were appointed a
committee to ascertain the preference of the whole regiment, to communicate
with you upon the subject, and to know if you would accept the command if
tendered to you. We have made such enquiry among the men, and we are happy to
be able to state, that you are the unanimous choice of the whole regiment. We
therefore request that you will communicate to us at the earliest practicable
period, what your views are upon the subject, so that we may communicate the
same to the regiment. Permit us to indulge the hope personally that it may not
be incompatible with your wishes and interests to assume the command, and that
we may soon have the pleasure of greeting you as our leader.
SOURCE: Dunbar
Rowland, Editor, Jefferson Davis, Constitutionalist: His Letters,
Papers and Speeches, Volume 1, pp. 98-9
SOURCE: Dunbar
Rowland, Editor, Jefferson Davis, Constitutionalist: His Letters,
Papers and Speeches, Volume 1, pp. 99-100
SOURCE: Dunbar
Rowland, Editor, Jefferson Davis, Constitutionalist: His Letters,
Papers and Speeches, Volume 1, pp. 101-2
Received orders to
move tomorrow. Our camp life at Smith's Plantation has been as pleasant as we
could wish. Our time was spent in batallion and company drills and dress
parades. Part of the time we were engaged in building bridges across the bayou
for troops to cross on which would shorten the distance materially between
Milliken's Bend and Grand Gulf, or Carthage, which is opposite. One of the
wonders of the day was our men bringing a small steamboat through the bayou
from the Mississippi with commissary stores and ammunition, something I believe
was never done before. This plantation is a large sugar and cotton plantation
and has several large sugar works and cotton gins on it. It is a valuable one,
worth before the war many hundreds of thousands of dollars, but as the darkies
have all left, there is no saying what it is worth today. I enjoy the morning
and evening walks, as the weather then is delightful. I saw quite a number of
acquaintances pass on their way to the front. Among them Batteries A and B,
Chicago Light Artillery. We have heard of the battles in the front and that our
armies have been victorious. One day quite a number of rebel prisoners passed
to the rear. Our orders are to move in as light marching order as possible. I
take nothing but what my saddlebags will hold, namely, a change of
underclothing and tooth brush and comb. Captain James, with two companies, C
and I, have been detailed some seven miles from the main camp to guard a bridge
over a bayou. I rode down to see them and found them contented and happy,
indulging in blackberries to their hearts' content. I enjoyed them myself. We
heard the guns at the attack on Grand Gulf, which was a strongly fortified
place, and which defied the gunboats. It was taken by troops crossing below and
forcing their works. Companies C and I returned to the regiment last night.
SOURCE: Joseph
Stockton, War Diary (1862-5) of Brevet Brigadier General Joseph
Stockton, p. 13
Left camp on Smith's
Plantation early this morning. Marched to Perkin's Landing, on the Mississippi
River. Men on half rations; everything reduced to the smallest allowance
possible.
SOURCE: Joseph
Stockton, War Diary (1862-5) of Brevet Brigadier General Joseph
Stockton, p. 13
Reveille at four
o'clock; started on our march after a "hearty cup of coffee." Struck
inland and marched around Lake St. Joseph, through one of the most beautiful
countries I ever saw; the plantations large and residences elegant; one in
particular, Judge Bowie's, was one of the most elegant places in the South; the
flower garden eclipsed anything of the kind I ever saw. Most of the men had
bouquets stuck in their muskets. My horse had his head decorated with them.
This elegant place was in ruins by the time we got there. The house had been
burned, as were most of the residences around the lake, and all the cotton
gins. Most of the owners had fled and left their houses to the care of the
servants. I must say that the officers did what they could to prevent it, and
General Ransom halted the brigade and said he would have any of his command
severely punished if caught in the act of setting fire to any building, yet
while he was talking, flames burst forth from half a dozen houses. Marched
eighteen miles.
SOURCE: Joseph
Stockton, War Diary (1862-5) of Brevet Brigadier General Joseph
Stockton, pp. 13-4
Started at 5 a. m.
Marched to "Hard Times" landing, on the Mississippi, where we
immediately embarked on board a transport and were ferried across to Grand
Gulf. Visited the fortifications, which were most extensive and almost
impregnable; our forces coming up in the rear forced the Rebs to evacuate them.
SOURCE: Joseph
Stockton, War Diary (1862-5) of Brevet Brigadier General Joseph
Stockton, p. 14