Letter

R. EK. Lee to Bureau Of Subsistence, February 8, 1864

February 8, 1864.

February 8, 1864. Hon. JAMES A. SEDDON, Secretary of War, Richmond, Va.:

Str: The present decision of the Department on the provisions of the act of Congress approved April 16, 1862, section 10, seems to be that an officer or private can only be promoted for valor and skill to a vacancy in his own company. ‘This limits the promotions for valor and skill to such an extent that it renders the law almost a dead letter. I would earnestly recommend that if this is the true interpretation of the law that it be modified so as to permit promotions on this account to any company or regiment from the same State, or at least to any company in the regiment to which the private or officer belongs. It is very important to increase the number of these promotions and to render them more certain. In the coming campaign we should use every incentive to acts of daring and skillful and brave conduct on the part of officers and men.

very respectfully, your obedient servant,

General.

February 8, 1864.

Secretary of War:

SIR: The letters of Messrs. Isaac Shelby and Charles F. Johnson,

dated 22d of January, in which they propose to exchange meat for

Editor's Notes
From: Operations in Missouri, Arkansas, Kansas, Indian Territory, 1861. Summary: General R. E. K. Lee requests modifying promotion rules to allow valor-based advancements across companies or regiments within the same state to encourage bravery and skill in the Confederate army.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 3 View original source ↗