Today in History:

681 Series I Volume X-I Serial 10 - Shiloh Part I

Page 681 Chapter XXII. SIEGE OF CORINTH, MISS.

with rifled cannon. The division took up its position on the rising ground, and remained till orders were received from headquarters.

I send you a rebel flag, taken with the prisoners.

Very respectfully, your obedient servant,

WM. NELSON,

Brigadier-General.

Colonel J. B. FRY,

Chief of Staff.

[Indorsement.]

JUNE 2, 1862.

Respectfully forwarded.

To General Nelson's division first and General McCook's very soon after belong whatever credit attaches to the discovery that the enemy had evacuated Corinth and of first occupying his intrenchments.

D. C. BUELL,

Major-General, Commanding.


HDQRS. FOURTH DIVISION, ARMY OF THE OHIO,
Bivouac at Smith's Cross-Roads, June 7, 1862.

SIR: The newspapers which have during the last three days arrived in the camps of the armies assembled here contain numerous telegraphic accounts of the occupation of Corinth. Whatever merit there is, if any, in that movement is claimed particularly for the troops under the command of Major-General Pope and partially for the troops of Major-General Sherman.

These dispatches, which cannot fail to attract your eye if you look at the newspapers, are prominently put forth, and as newspaper reporters are not permitted in camp and dispatches proceed from some military headquarters, they are received as official. These dispatches, it is true, nowhere have dared to state in so many words that the troops of either of the above-mentioned generals entered Corinth before the division I have the honor to command, but it is the evident intention to convey that idea to the public, which seems to have been successfully done.

I have to request that you will lay before General Halleck this my declaration that the Fourth Division of the Army of the Ohio, under my command, was in possession of Corinth more than half an hour before any troops of General Pope or General Sherman entered the enemy's works. I do not attach extraordinary importance to this circumstance, but a systematic attempt to give prominence to an act will unavoidably give to it in the minds of the public the character of merit or demerit, and thus a stigma or an honor may be as effectually fixed as though an unworthy action had been denounced or a worthy one claimed. In this manner precisely injustice has been done to my division, and I complain that the official telegraph has been made the medium of the wrong.

Very respectfully,

WM. NELSON,

Commanding Fourth Division, Army of the Ohio.

Colonel KELTON,

Assistant Adjutant-General.


Page 681 Chapter XXII. SIEGE OF CORINTH, MISS.