Today in History:

991 Series I Volume XXIV-III Serial 38 - Vicksburg Part III

Page 991 Chapter XXXVI. CORRESPONDENCE, ETC. -CONFEDERATE.

but with as much energy and dispatch as is at all compatible with its harmonious accomplishment. You will at once forward a copy of this circular to all the commissaries and agents of this bureau in your State, and obtain from them immediately all the information necessary to enable you properly to divide your State into districts, and make your nominations for chief commissaries and agents, and report the same to this bureau as soon as practicable. You will also require from the said commissaries and agents of this bureau in your State (a list of which commissaries, with their respective posts, is herein inclosed; the address of the agents you can obtain from these commissaries), full reports of their present and contemplated operations, the prices they are paving, quantity and description of the supplies being obtained, and the promise for the future. As soon as you can get this system inaugurated, you require from each chief district commissary or agent (who will require the same from their sub-commissaries and agents) a report of supplies on hand, every ten days, with probable future accumulations and issues. These reports, when received (and they must be required by you promptly, beginning on the last day of the earliest calendar month at which circumstances will permit you to require them), you will consolidate, and send to Major S. B. French, Commissary of Subsistence, Richmond, Va., with the utmost dispatch. You will also report the places in your State deemed by you most suitable for main depots, or rather reservoirs, to and from which supplies may be best collected and distributed. It may be well, also, to have auxiliary depots to these reservoirs, both in the collection and distribution. These selections must be made with due regard both to safety of position and convenience in relation to transportation. It must ever be remembered that transportation should be husbanded in every manner possible, and, therefore, that under no circumstances which care, prudence, and foresight can provide against, must supplies be twice transported over the same road, nor any article of subsistence transported in opposite directions. When this system is thoroughly organized and worked, there will be no portion of the Confederacy which is not thoroughly drained, and, therefore, whenever our armies move, all the supplies of our country will be tributary to their use, and then application will be made to prevent army commissaries from competing with this bureau's commissaries or agents, and the chief commissary of each army directed to supply his wants by application to such chief State commissary of this bureau as may be indicated by the Commissary-General, giving notice of requirements ahead of his actual wants and the points at which his supplies will be needed; and whenever the commissaries in one State or district need supplies which cannot be obtained in their State or district, they will draw them from the most convenient commissaries or agents from in other States or districts. It may very frequently occur that some article of subsistence ought not to be purchased in some States or districts, because of very high prices. Whenever this occurs, the same rule will prevail.

It is impossible to give in a circular all the detailed directions which might be desired; much must, of necessity, be left to your discretion and judgment; but enough has been said to let you understand the system that is to be inaugurated, and great reliance is placed upon your judgment and energy in establishing it at an early day.

Very respectfully,

L. B. NORTHROP,

Commissary -General of Subsistence, C. S. Army.

Approved .

J. A. SEDDON.


Page 991 Chapter XXXVI. CORRESPONDENCE, ETC. -CONFEDERATE.