Letter

Robert Williams to E.D. Townsend, June 17, 1861

HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT OF ANNAPOLIS,

Col. E. D. TOWNSEND, Asst. Adjt. Gen. U. 8S. Army:

Sir: Major-General Banks, commanding the Department of Annapolis, directs me to state, for the information of the General-in-Chief, that he has moved the Thirteenth Regiment New York State troops, of light artillery, Massachusetts volunteers, from the Relay House, and the Twenty-second Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers, Col. Turner G. Morehead commanding, from Patterson Park, Baltimore, to a camp in the outskirts of Baltimore, near the Washin eton and Baltimore Railroad. He thinks that the partial concentration of the troops in the vicinity of Baltimore will exercise an important moral effect upon the disaffected inhabitants of the city, besides giving him the opportunity of promptly forwarding any of his command who may in future be needed in the Department of Washington.

Very respectfully, your obedient servant

ROBERT WILLIAMS,
Assistant Adjutant-General.
= es
we) 4
WAR DEPARTMENT, June 18, 1861.
Hasten on the troops. Send all you can. I have telegraphed to
Quartermaster Tompkins to send as many as he can by the New Jersey
Central Railroad. Let him use freight cars if they have not enough
Editor's Notes
From: Operations in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, 1861. Location: Fort McHenry, Md..
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 2 View original source ↗