Letter

Unknown to P.G.T. Beauregard, October 30, 1861

RicuHmMonD, V. A.

General G. T. BEAUREGARD:

Sir: Yesterday my attention was called to various newspaper publications, purporting to have been sent from Manassas, and to be a synopsis of your report of the battle of July 21 last, and in which it is represented that you had been overruled by me in your plan for a battle with the enemy south of the Potomac, for the capture of Baltimore and Washington, and the liberation of Maryland. I inquired for your longexpected report, and it has to-day been submitted to my inspection. It appears, by official indorsement, to have been received by the Adjutant General on October 15, though it is dated August 26, 1861. With much surprise I found that the newspaper statements were sustained by the text of your report. I was surprised, because, if we did differ in opinion as to the measures and purposes of contemplated campaigns, such fact could have no appropriate place in the report of a battle. Further, because it seemed to be an attempt to exalt yourself at my expense, and especially because no such plan as that described was submitted tome. It is true that some time before it was ordered you expressed a desire for the junction of General Johnston’s army with your own. The movement was postponed until the operations of the enemy rendered it necessary, and until it became thereby practicable to make it, with safety, to the valley of Virginia; hence I believe was secured the success by which it was attended. If you have retained a copy of the plan of campaign which, you say, was submitted to me, through Colonel Chesnut, allow me to request that you will furnish me with a duplicate of it.

Very respectfully, yours, &c., é

*Not found.
Richmond, V. A., October 30, 1861.
My DEAR Sir: I beg that you will as promptly as possible send me
a statement of a communication made to me by yourself on or about
July 13 last, as aide of General Beauregard, in relation to any proposed
plan of battle or campaign. I ask this because I have had my attention
directed to a synopsis in the newspapers of General Beauregard's report
so entirely at variance with the facts as they occurred that I think it
Editor's Notes
From: Operations in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, 1861. Location: RicuHmMonD, V. A.. Summary: An unidentified author challenges General Beauregard's published battle report for inaccurately claiming a thwarted plan to capture Baltimore and Washington, accusing him of self-promotion and misrepresentation.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 2 View original source ↗