Letter

Gouverneur K. Warren to George D. Ruggles, March 17, 1865

HEADQUARTERS FIFTH ARMY CORPS,

March 17, 1865. Col. GEORGE D. RUGGLES, Assistant Adjutant-General: I have the honor to report all quiet on this front during the past twenty-four hours. Detail, 500 men on the new corduroy road.

Respectfully,

G. K. WARREN,
Major-General of Volunteers.
HEADQUARTERS SIxTH ARMY CORPS,
March 17, 1865.
Col. G. D. RuGGLEs:
I have the honor to report that nothing of importance has transpired
on the lines of this corps during the past twenty-four hours.
Editor's Notes
From: Operations in Northern Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania, Pt. 1. Summary: Major-General G. K. Warren reports to Col. George D. Ruggles that the Fifth and Sixth Army Corps fronts remain quiet with 500 men working on a new corduroy road on March 17, 1865.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 46, Part 1 View original source ↗