Letter

Lieutenant-Colonel TOWNSEND to Robert Patterson, June 4, 1861

Washington

Gen. R. PATTERSON, Chambersburg, Pa. : General Scott says do not make a move forward until you are joined by a battery of the Fourth Artillery and a battalion of five companies Third U.S. Infantry, to leave here the 6th instant for Carlisle. Company F, Fourth Artillery, is the one to be mounted. Orders have been given to purchase horses and collect the guns, equipments, “e., as soon as possible, at Carlisle. It will require some days, but the General considers this addition to your force indispensable. If two Ohio regiments come to you, retain them. Also halt the first two regiments that may pass through Harrisburg from the North to this city, and add them to your force. You will receive a letter from the General before you move. E. D. TOWNSEND, Assistant Adjutant-General. WAR DEPARTMENT, June 5, 1861. Governor ANDREW, Boston, Mass. : Send to this place, via Easton and Harrisburg, all your three years’ regiments as soon as organized. Please report the number. SIMON CAMERON, Secretary of War. °

ARLINGTON, June 5, 1861.

Lieutenant-Colonel TOWNSEND :
The following information is respectfully forwarded.
General McDowell is temporarily absent.
Editor's Notes
From: Operations in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, 1861. Location: Washington. Summary: Lieutenant-Colonel Townsend instructs General Patterson to delay advancing until reinforced by artillery and infantry units, while Secretary Cameron orders Massachusetts regiments to be sent to Washington amid early Civil War troop movements.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 2 View original source ↗