Letter

A. Schoepf to Brigadier- General, December 12, 1861

Somerset, Ky., December 12, 1861.

(Received December 16, 1861.)

Brig. Gen. GEORGE H. THOMAS, ETN Commanding Division, Lebanon:

GENERAL: Having obtained much information relative to the face of the adjacent country, its roads, streams, and crossings, together with the ranges and haunts of the enemy, I would respectfully offer the following suggestion:

Let a respectable force move from Columbia along the road leading to Somerset until it reaches the salt-works, at the head of Fishing Creek; by this time its movements will have attracted the attention of the enemy, now on the river near the mouth of this creek.

At this moment let me cross the river with the principal part of my force at a point due south of Somerset (which I ean do). The enemy, on being crowded by the Columbia force, will attempt to recross the river, when, with that force in his rear and mine in front (south side of the river), his capture must be certain.

What do you say to this plan?

Very respectfully, your obedient servant,

Brigadier- General.
[DECEMBER 12, 1861.—General Orders, No. 24, Department of the
Missouri. See Series I, Vol. VIII, p. 431.]
DECEMBER 13, 1861.
General McCook, Camp Nevin:
I shall have a regular pontoon bridge ready for Munfordville to-morrow, but may not send it for the present. Will Johnson’s arrangements
make a bridge that can be depended on permanently? I don’t want

Editor's Notes
From: Operations in Kentucky, Tennessee, N. Alabama, S.W. Virginia, 1861–62. Location: Somerset, Ky.. Summary: Brigadier General A. Schoepf proposes a coordinated two-pronged military maneuver near Somerset, Kentucky, to trap and capture enemy forces by using a diversion from Columbia and a river crossing south of Somerset.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 7 View original source ↗