Order

L. Thomas. E to Thomas R. Cornelius, April 9, 1862

ORDERS, HEADQUARTERS HUMBOLDT MILITARY DISTRICT,

No.4. $ Fort Humboldt, April 9, 1862. I. Every Indian captured in this district during the present war

who has been engaged in hostilities against the whites, present or

absent, will be hanged on the spot, women and children in all cases being spared. * * * * * * * By order of Colonel Lippitt:

Acting Assistint Adjutant-General.

San Francisco, Cal., April 9, 1862. Col. THOMAS R. CORNELIUS, First Regiment Oregon Cavalry, Portland, Oreg. : COLONEL: Lieut. Col. E. B. Babbitt, deputy quartermaster-general, has submitted to me a communication received by him from Lieut. D. W. Porter, your regimental quartermaster, dated on the 2d instant. I will

thank you to refer to that letter and take immediate measures to correct the irregularities referred to. Make requisitions for all the supplies you may need on the chief of staff at these headquarters, and orders will then be given as to the mode of procuring them. It will not be necessary for you to purchase any horses, mules, or wagons, or any means of transportation, as we have sufficient on hand in the District of Oregon for use during the next summer. Do not allow your staff officers, either at your headquarters or with any portion of your regiment, to make any purchases or contracts without previous authority from these headquarters except for forage and fuel and straw. I find that the acting quartermaster with the battalion at Jacksonville has been building quarters, hiring a clerk, «c., all of which is disapproved, and vo such accounts or claims will be paid, and what is the most astonishing is that he has hired men to take charge of company horses. What is a cavalry soldier good for if he cannot take care of his horse? No money will be furnished to pay any of these amounts above referred to.

Clerks are not allowed for any staff officers in this department without my previous sanction. I hope, colonel, that you will take immediate steps to arrest all these irregularities; if permitted to go on a moment longer it will be injurious to your regiment in the highest degree. I understand that an unusual number of men enrolled in your companies have been discharged at Fort Vancouver, for various causes, Too much care cannot be bestowed on the examination of men presenting themselves for enlistment. The examining surgeon and recruiting officer should assure themselves that a man is perfectly sound, free from disease, able-bodied, sober, and of good character and habits, before passing him; aneglect of this positive duty subjects those officers not only to a pecuniary loss in refunding to the Goverment all the expenses of rejected men, but they are also amenable to trial by a general court-martial; all men desirous of joining the Army should, in every case, be entirely stripped of their clothing and critically examined by the surgeon and recruiting officer together at the same time. The man’s declaration as to his soundness will not be taken. Bear in mind that your adjutant and regimental quartermaster must be lieutenants in some company of your regiment; you are not allowed extra lieutenants for those positions. As your regiment has been reduced for the present to six companies, no more field officers will be appointed. If, under the authority of the War Department, all the field officers allowed for a regiment have been appointed, you can retain them until orders shall be received from the Secretary of War on the subject; but, in the meantime, should vacancies occur they will not be filled.

Very respectfully, your obedient servant,

Brigadier-General, U. S. Army, Commanding.
San Francisco, April 10, 1862.
Brig. Gen. L. THOMAS. E
Adjutant- General U. 8. Army, Washington, D. C.:
GENERAL: Since my communication addressed to you on the 5th
instant nothing of moment has transpired. The Indian difficulties in
the District of Humboldt have become so aggravated that I have
determined to throw additional troops into that country and close up that war for the last time. Inclosed herewith is a copy* of a letter of
Editor's Notes
From: Operations in Charleston Harbor, S.C., 1861. Summary: Colonel L. Thomas orders Colonel Cornelius to enforce the immediate hanging of hostile captured Indians, correct supply irregularities, and requisition needed provisions from headquarters without purchasing transportation.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 1 View original source ↗