Dispatch

A. Pleasonton, December 4, 1862

HEADQUARTERS CAVALEY BRIGADE,

December 4, 1862.

GENERAL: Your dispatch of this date received. In answer, I beg to inform you that I sent the Eighth New York and Third Indiana Cavalry (the latter six companies strong) to re-enforce Colonel Gregg. This force is from 700 to 800 strong. I have also directed Colonel Gregg to withdraw all parties in any danger of being cut off, and to be vigilant by patrolling the country. I have further directed him, in case the gunboats remove down the river, to draw in his artillery to his main body at the Court-House. Colonel Gregg reported he had received orders from the provost-marshal-general to place guards at certain houses, which, in the colonel’s opinion, would expose them to capture. I told the colonel to do nothing which would risk his men; that the provost-marshal-general’s orders to him in such cases could only be conditional. I have also sent out patrols from my camps here, in the direction of the Court-House and vicinity. The straggling is pretty much stopped. Citizens or somebody else fire at individuals on the roads down the Peninsula nowadays.

Very respectfully,

A. PLEASONTON,
Brigadier-General, Oommanding.
Major-General PARkKE, Ohief of Staff.
P. S.—I shall send Colonel Gregg additional instructions on your dispatch.
Editor's Notes
From: Operations in N. Virginia, W. Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, 1862–63. Summary: Brigadier General Pleasonton reports reinforcing Colonel Gregg with cavalry, instructing cautious withdrawal and patrols to prevent capture, and addressing local threats and straggling during the 1862 Peninsula Campaign.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 21 View original source ↗