Letter

Lorenzo Thomas to The Hon. SECRETARY OF WAR, December 11, 1861

HDQRS. OF THE ARMY, ADJUTANT-GENERAL’S OFFICE,

Washington, December 11, 1861.

SIR:

I have the honor to acknowledge the reference to this office of a resolution from the honorable the House of Representatives, dated December 4, 1861, asking what measures have been taken, or ought to be taken, “to expose and punish such of the Officers now on parole as were guilty of treason or cowardice” in the surrender of a ” force of United States troops,” under Maj. Isaac Lynde, in New Mexico, in July, 1861, “to an inferior force of Texas troops,” We.

In compliance with your instructions, I have the honor to report that Major Lynde was, by direction of the President of the United States, dropped from the rolls cf the Army, November 25, 1861, for the offense alluded to in the resolution. It is believed that no other officer of the command was in any way involved in the suspicion of complicity in the offense, and the commanding officer, Major Lynde, was the only person on whom the responsibility could rest.

The resolution is herewith respectfully returned, together with a copy – of General Orders, No. 102.

Respectfully submitted.

A djutant- General.

The Hon. SECRETARY OF WAR.

(Subinclosures. ] In the House of Representatives, December 4, 1861.

Mr. Watts submitted the following, which was adopted:

J Whereas, in July, 1861, at Fort Fillmore, in New Mexico, Maj. Isaac Lynde, U.S. A.,

Editor's Notes
From: Operations in South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, 1861. Location: Washington. Summary: L. Thomas reports to the Secretary of War that Major Isaac Lynde was dismissed from the Army for surrendering U.S. troops in New Mexico to inferior Texas forces, with no other officers implicated.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 4 View original source ↗