H. W. Halleck, May 19, 1864
AND Washington: GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFIOR, 13.99. The work of preparing the records of the war for public use was begun, under the resolution of Congress of May 19, 1864, by Col. E. D. Townsend, assistant adjutant-general, U. S. Army (then in charge of the Adjutant-General’s Office, and subsequently the Adjutant-General), who caused copies to be made of reports of battles on file in his office and steps to be taken to collect missing records. Under the provisions of joint resolution of July 27, 1866, Hon. Peter H. Watson was appointed to supervise the preparation of the records and to formulate a plan for their publication, but he performed no service under this appointment, which expired July 27, 1868, by limitation. This resolution having also repealed the former one, the project was suspended for the time being. The first decisive step taken was the act of June 23, 1874, providing the necessary means “to enable the Secretary of War to begin the publication of the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion, both of the Union and Confederate Armies,” and directing him “to have copied for the Public Printer all reports, letters, telegrams, and general orders, not heretofore copied or printed, and properly arranged in chronological order.” Appropriations have been made from time to time for continuing such preparation. Under this act the preliminary work was resumed by General Townsend. Subsequently, under meager appropriations, it was prosecuted in a somewhat desultory manner by various subordinates of the War Departinent until December 14, 1877, when the Secretary of War, perceiving that the undertaLing needed the undivided attention of a single head, detailed Capt. Robert N. Scott, Third U.:S. Artillery (subsequently major and lieutenant-colonel same regiment), to take charge of the office. The act of June 23, 1874, enlarged upon the first scheme of publication. On this more comprehensive basis it was determined that the volumes should include not only the battle reports, correspondence, etc., in possession of the War Department, but also “all official documents that can be obtained by the compiler, and that appear to be of any historical value.” Colonel Scott systematized the work, and, upon his recommendation, the Secretary of War approved the following order of publication: The first series will embrace the formal reports, both Union and Confederate, of the first seizures of United States property in the Southern States, and of all military operations in the field, with the correspondence, orders, and returns relating specially thereto, and, as proposed, is to be accompanied by an Atlas. lil In this series the reports will be arranged according to the campaigns and several theaters of operations (in the chronological order of events), and the Union reports of any event will, as a rule, be immediately followed by the Confederate accounts. The correspondence, etc., not embraced in the “reports” proper will follow (first Union and next Confederate) in chronological order. The second series will contain the correspondence, orders, reports, and returns, Union and Confederate, relating to prisoners of war, and (so far as the military authorities were concerned) to state or political prisoners. The third series will contain the correspondence, orders, reports, and returns of the Union authorities (embracing their correspondence with the Confederate officials) not relating specially to the subjects of the first and second series. It will set forth the annual and special reports of the Secretary of War, of the Generalin-Chief, and of the chiefs of the several staff corps and departments ; the calls for troops, and the correspondence between the National and the several State authorities. The fourth series will exhibit the correspondence, orders, reports, and returns of the Confederate authorities, similar to that indicated for the Union officials, as of the third series, but excluding the correspondence between the Union and Confederate authorities given in that series. ‘The first volume of the records was issued in the early fall of 1880. The act approved June 16, 1880, provided “for the printing and binding, under direction of the Secretary of War, of 10,000 copies of a compilation of the Official Records (Union and Confederate) of the War of the Rebellion, so far as the same may be ready for publication, during the fiscal year;” and that “of said number 7,000 copies shall be for the use of the House of Representatives, 2,000 copies for the use of the Senate, and 1,000 copies for the use of the-Executive Departments.” Under this act Colonel Scott proceeded to publish the first five volumes of the records.* *All subsequent volumes have been distributed under the act approved August 7, 1882, which provides that: “The volumes of the Official Records of the War of the Rebellion shall be distributed as follows: One thousand copies to the Executive Departments, as now provided by law. One thousand copies for distribution by the Secretary of War among officers of the Army and contributors to the work. Eight thousand three hundred copies shall be sent by the Secretary of War to such libraries, organizations, and individuals as may be designated by the Senators, Representatives, and Delegates of the Forty-seventh Congress. Each Senator shall designate not exceeding twenty-six, and each Representative and Delegate not exceeding twenty-one, of such addresses, and the volumes shall be sent thereto from time to time as they are published, until the publication is completed. Senators, Representatives, and Delegates shall inform the Secretary of War in each case how many volumes of those heretofore published they have forwarded to such addresses. The remaining copies of the eleven thousand to be published, and all sets that may not be ordered to be distributed as provided herein, shall be sold by the Secretary of War for cost of publication with ten per cent. added thereto, and the proceeds of such sale shall be covered into the Treasury. If two or more sets of said volumes are ordered to the same address, the Secretary of War shall inform the Senators, Representatives, or Delegates who have designated the same, who thereupon may designate other libraries, organizations, or individuals. The Secretary of War shall report to the first session of the Forty-eighth Congress what volumes of the series heretofore published have not been furnished to such libraries, organizations, and individuals. He shall also inform distributees at whose instance the volumes are sent.” PREFACE. Vv Colonel Scott died March 5, 1887. At his death some twenty-six books only had been issued, but he had compiled a large amount of matter for forthcoming volumes; consequently his name as compiler was retained in all the books up to and including Vol. XXXVI, although his successors had added largely to his compilations from new material found after his demise. The Secretary of War, May 7, 1887, assigned Lieut. Col. H. M. Lazelle, Twenty-third U.S. Infantry, to duty as the successor of Colonel Scott. He had continued in charge about two years, when, in the act approved March 2, 1889, it was provided— That hereafter the preparation and publication of said records shall be conducted, under the Secretary of War, by a board of three persons, one of whom shall be an officer of the Army, and two civilian experts, to be appointed by the Secretary of War, the compensation of said civilian experts to be fixed by the Secretary of War. The Secretary of War appointed Maj. George B. Davis, judge-advocate, U. S. Army, as the military member, and Leslie J. Perry, of Kansas, and Joseph W. Kirkley, of Maryland, as the civilian expert members of said board. The board assumed direction of the publication at the commencement of the fiscal year 1889, its first work beginning with Serial No. 36 of Vol. XXIV. July 1, 1895, by direction of the Secretary of War, Maj. George W. Davis, Eleventh U.S. Infantry (subsequently lieutenant-colonel Fourteenth U.S. Infantry), relieved Maj. George B. Davis as the military member and president of the Board of Publication. Subsequently Department, was appointed the military member and president of the board, relieving Lieut. Col. George W. Davis June 1, 1898. December 1, 1898, under the provision of the sundry civil act of July 1, 1898, relative to the War Records Office, the Board of Publication was dissolved, whereupon, by direction of the Secretary of War, the continuance of the work, beginning with Vol. VI, Series II, devolved on Colonel (now Brigadier-General) Ainsworth. By operation of law (contained in “An act making appropriations for the legislative, executive, and judicial expenses of the Government for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1900,” approved February 24, 1899), the War Records Office was merged into the Record and Pension Office, July 1, 1899, and since that date the work of pablication has been conducted under the supervision of the chief of that office. Each volume includes a copious index, and for the further convenence of investigators there will be, in addition, a separate general index to the entire set. Nothing is printed in these volumes except duly authenticated contemporaneous records of the war. The scope of the compiler’s work is to decide upon and arrange the matter to be published; to correct and “verify the orthography of the papers used, and, wherever deemed necessary, to add a foot-note of explanation. A ý A re Pas w? Gee vir A è HS.Go: 1866. h Be q : . 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E y : 2 E) aa! g El og ES A one a B 2 A a EZ RoR els) 18 E EA ET ef 3 219 2 a ES E 2 ee : De IS A : & gs ci BS as – n 2028 iS 3) € 3 Ea gp a 2> aja] ġ aos A A A S = En E Biel a 89 S 2 SE 3 ES ES Do > S ie 5 ed s 3 Sms z S Sl Je a Jẹ jg wS S FES SE EOR S ves all pee NS 5 a0 = Bla B saa ASS Aao A A A 4 a no 0 x E b e=! FF Number on hand Novem- 1 7 61) 51 74 744 1,685 3,939 22, 535/29, 097 43,814 117 8/1, 417 30, 639 ber 1, 1863. eean Number captured from 5 9 33 64/ 90 684 2,305 6,517) 56, 444 66, 151 85, 037156 18/2, 760 69, 085 November 1, 1863, to j S January 1, 1865. ma E = ¡=> ee === === Total on hand and 6 16 94/1115 164 1,428 3,990’10,456 78, 979 95, 248 128, 851273, 2614, 177 99, 724 captured. Total died, released, ex- 2 6 41 42 59 309 717 2, 965 26, 706/30, 847, 39, 065/156 18/2, 760 33, changed, &c., from November 1, 1863, to Jan- uary 1, 1865. Totalon hand Jan- 4 10 53 7311051, 119 *3, 283 7, 491/+52, 263 64, 401 189, 786/117 81, 417 65, 943 uary 1,1865. M _ U.S, CHRISTIAN COMMISSION, CENTRAL OFFICE, 11 BANK STREET, Philadelphia, January —, 1865. To ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME, GREETING: The U. S. Christian Commission have appointed and commissioned —— a delegate to proceed to Richmond, Va., and to such other places in the South as may be accessible to him, to relieve the wants of the Union prisoners now confined in the Southern military prisons by distributing among them food, clothing, medicines, and religious publications. * Should be 3,273. t Should be 52,273. f j , : t Using the correct figures, the ‘ Equivalent to privates” is as printed. Using the erroneous figures, the ‘ Equivalent to privates” is 89,816. These figures were used in “Number on hand,” &e., in the next statement submitted by the CommissaryGeneral of Prisoners, October 24, 1865. See post. 1 R R—SERIES II, VOL VIII (1) He is strictly enjoined to abstain from reporting anything not allowed by the authorities of the places he may visit, and to do no act that shall bring discredit on the cause in which he is engaged. All possible facilities and all due courtesies are asked for him in the discharge of the duties assigned him. GEO. H. STUART, Chairman U. S. Christian Commission. Attest. W. E. BOARDMAN, Secretary. Washington, January 1, 1865—10.30 a. m. Major-General CANBY, New Orleans : Mr. Ould reports to General Grant that the cotton was ready on board the lighter at Mobile on the 23d of December waiting for our transports; that our authorities had been so notified, but no answer had been returned. General Grant wishes that matter to be inquired into, and that there should be no neglect on our part to receive and transmit the cotton.
H. W. HALLECK,