Letter

Unknown to William S. Rosecrans, October 21, 1862

October 21, 1862.

October 21, 1862. Maj. Gen. W. S. ROSECRANS, Corinth, Miss. :

Colonel Dickey, accredited by General Grant as chief of cavalry, represented the regiments to whom I telegraphed you the carbines were assigned, as those who had done all the cavalry service in the department. If you will telegraph immediately how many men you have in each of the regiments you mention without carbines, I will do all I can to supply them promptly.

P. H. WATSON, Assistant Secretary of War.

CoRINTH, MIss., October 21, 1862. Hon. P. H. WATSON, Assistant Secretary of War:

Your dispatch received. Not one of the cavalry command to which you have sent arms has done any real fighting. The Third Michigan, the Second Iowa, the Seventh Kansas, and the Seventh Illinois, who have been in continued combats, say more than fifty fights, this summer, and are the only cavalry that have been massed and managed go as to have power to cow and scourge the rebels effectuilly, are entirely overlooked in the allotment of arms. They are under my command.

W. S. ROSECRANS, Major-General.

HEADQUARTERS First DIvIsIon, Memphis, October 21, 1862. Maj. JoHN A. RAWLINS, Assis‘ant Adjutant-General, Jackson, Tenn. :

Sir: Sinve my last, some attacks have been made on the boats navigating the Mississippi River, but in no case have the guerrillas succeeded in getting a boat. They came near firing the Gladiator, but the captain ee) got her off-shore and brought her to Memphis with two dead and many wounded on board. The conduct of the guerrillas was fiendish in the extreme. I ordered parties to Island 21, also to the point where the Catahoula was fired into. At the latter place the officer in command, Colonel Walcutt, Forty-sixth Ohio, found much evidence of complicity with the guerrillas, and he burned their places. 1 shall compel ten families to leave for every boat fired on, and let them try whether they prefer to live with their own people or with ours. 1 know from their actions that it is not agreeable, but it is not to be expected that we should feed and clothe the families of men who are engaged in firing upon boats engaged in peaceful commerce. To-morrow I dispatch all my cavalry to Colliersville, then north to Rising Sun, and thence west to Randolph, cleaning up the country of guerrillas. wish to break up all parties north of Wolf River. At the same time an infantry regiment will march to Raleigh and Union Depot in concert. I will have boats at Randolph to bring them down. [I find it difficult to hire regular spies, but I get full information from others who come to Memphis on various pretexts.

Price and Van Dorn are at Holly Springs in force; have received reenforcements from the south; Ruggles, with less than 4,000, and some reorganized exchanged prisoners, about 3,000. I have never heard a word about any from Virginia. Pemberton was expected yesterday, but I have not heard that he is yet there.

Bowen’s brigade is at Coldwater, 55 miles out toward Memphis from Holly Springs. General Jackson, with the cavalry, some 2,000, are at Coldwater, 6 miles north of Holly Springs.

Blythe, with quite a force of irregular guerrillas, is at Horn Lake Depot, about 17 miles southeast of Memphis. Al] other parties of which I hear are small and inconsiderable. They have evidently within a week increased their vigilance, so that less news can be had than heretofore. Now is the time to strike at the Yazoo and Mississippi Central roads, all the troops being north of the Tallahatchie.

My division is now in good health, well equipped, and in good drill. The regiments are small, and I would much like to have some 2,000 recruits for them.

The Thirteenth Infantry has never got to me, though one officer from it has reported to me from Cincinnati via Alton, being ordered to report to his battalion here.

A deserter this moment in confirms the accounts from Holly Springs. Pemberton arrived last Friday with no troops; none even spoken of from Virginia. There was a camp rumor that 9,000 were to come from Arkansas to Mississippi. Confederates expecting you to attack them; some intrenchments near the town. Price’s division, with the reorganized prisoners of war, were about to move to Davis’ Mill, below Grand Junction. Reorganized prisoners supposed to be 5,000. Deserter knows nothing of Ruggles. Lovell’s division on the road out from Holly Springs toward Mount Vernon. Bowen’s brigade at Byhalia; Coldwater their line. Nobody at Colliersville or Moscow. No regular troops north of Woli River. Deserter did not see Pemberton, but heard the boys say

he was in town; did not know if Van Dorn was to remain in a subordinate position or go elsewhere. He estimated the aggregate forces at 40,000, but when he attempted to sum up could not make 20,000. My opinion is that Price and Pemberton have not at this time a force larger than attacked Rosecrans. One attack from the river toward Grenada would draw them out of Holly Springs quick. If ever you design to attack, remember La Grange is an admirable place; then Davis’ Mill.

I will continue to report as often as I get definite news. 1 know that Jackson’s cavalry is at our old camp at Roberts’, 6 miles north of Holly Springs, and that Brown is at Byhalia, and Blythe at Horn Lake Depot.

All very quiet with us on our picket lines, and all town people begin to respect our power. The defeat at Corinth has had a most salutary effect.

Yours, Ww. T. SHERMAN, Major-General, Commanding.

Editor's Notes
From: Operations in West Tennessee and Mississippi, Pt. 1. Summary: Major General Rosecrans requests the War Department to reallocate carbines to his actively engaged cavalry regiments, highlighting their extensive combat experience and exclusion from prior arms distribution.
Sources
The War of the Rebellion: Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 17, Part 1 View original source ↗