Letter

Unknown to Colonel L. Tomas, February 22, 1861

HEADQUARTERS OF THE’ ARMY,

[Col. L. Tomas, A. A. G. :]

Sir: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your confidential letter of the 21st instant, conveying instructions of the General-inChief. Ihave already taken steps towards executing those instructions, by conferring with Captain Ward, of the Navy, and the quartermaster and commissary of subsistence on duty in this city. I shall see Major ‘ Thornton to-morrow. Captain Ward will not be able to take any bales of hay for bedding purposes, and at his suggestion I propose to. send mattresses to Fort Sumter instead, unless objected to by the General-in

Hall’s memorandum calls for. In relation to clothing, am unable to make out what the memorandum requires. Instead, therefore, of writing myself to Philadelphia, I beg that the necessary orders may be given from Washington to the clothing officers in Philadelphia to send to Colonel Tompkins here the clothing required by the memorandum, and the garrison flag and cord for lanyards on this same memorandum. T shall see that everything else on the memorandum is provided here, including such groceries as might be for sale to officers, &c. The clothing should be put up in small bales, so that it may be distributed among the vessels. Colonel Tompkins will attend to its proper marking after its arrival here. Please let me know as soon as you give the – Cuar. I] “CORRESPONDENCE, ETC.—UNION.

order to the clothing department. I saw Commodore Bruce, who will do all that he can, but hopes to receive instructions.

Very respectfully, your obedient servant,

P. S.—I have arranged with Captain Ward to send all the stores, &c.,
on board the North Carolina, addressed to him. He will attend to
their distribution among his vessels.
H. L. 8., Liewtenant-Colonel.
{
No. 52.] \ Forr Sumrnr, §. ©., February 22, 1861. ° t COLONEL: I have the honor to report that they are forming three
embrasures in the work near the bomb-proof battery. We are, as I
write (12 mn.), firing a national salute from our battery in honor of the
Editor's Notes
From: Operations on the Pacific Coast, Pt. 1. Location: New York. Summary: A military officer coordinates logistics and supply arrangements, including mattresses for Fort Sumter and clothing orders, following confidential instructions from the General-in-Chief in early 1861.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 50, Part 1 View original source ↗