History of Kershaw's Brigade by D. Augustus Dickert
page 93 of 798 (11%)
page 93 of 798 (11%)
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citizens of the thinly settled country. Meat was plentiful, but no
bread, and any one who has ever felt the tortures of bread hunger may imagine the sufferings of the men. For want of bread the meats became nauseating and repulsive. The whole fault lay in having too many bosses and red tape in the Department at Richmond. By order of these officials, all commissary supplies, even gathered in sight of the camps, had to be first sent to Richmond and issued out only on requisitions to the head of the departments. The railroad facilities were bad, irregular, and blocked, while our wagons and teams were limited to one for each one hundred men for all purposes. General Beauregard, now second in command, and directly in command of the First Army Corps of the Army of the Potomac, of which our brigade formed a part, wishing to concentrate his troops, ordered all to Flint Hill, three miles west of Fairfax Court House. General Johnston, Commander-in-Chief, directed the movements of the whole army, but more directly the Second Army Corps, or the Army of the Shenandoah. The army up to this time had not been put into divisions, commanded by Major Generals, nor corps, by Lieutenant Generals, but the two commanders divided nominally the army into two corps, each commanded by a full General--Brigadier General Beauregard having been raised to the rank of full General the day after his signal victory at Manassas by President Davis. [Illustration: Brig. Gen. James Connor Adjt.] [Illustration: Y.J. Pope, Acting Asst. Adjt. Genl. of Kershaw's Brigade] [Illustration: Brig. Gen. John D. Kennedy.] |
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