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Personal Memoirs-2 [59]

By Root 630 0
and the morning of April 10 my

cavalry began its march to Petersburg, the men anticipating that they

would soon be mustered out and returned to their homes. At Nottoway

Court House I heard of the assassination of the President. The first

news came to us the night after the dastardly deed, the telegraph

operator having taken it from the wires while in transmission to

General Meade. The despatch ran that Mr. Lincoln had been, shot at

10 o'clock that morning at Willard's Hotel, but as I could conceive

of nothing to take the President there I set the story down as a

canard, and went to bed without giving it further thought. Next

morning, however, an official telegram confirmed the fact of the

assassination, though eliminating the distorted circumstances that

had been communicated the night before.



When we reached Petersburg my column was halted, and instructions

given me to march the cavalry and the Sixth Corps to Greensboro',

North Carolina, for the purpose of aiding General Sherman (the

surrender of General Johnston having not yet been effected), so I

made the necessary preparations and moved on the 24th of April,

arriving at South Boston, on the Dan River, the 28th, the Sixth Corps

having reached Danville meanwhile. At South Boston I received a

despatch from General Halleck, who immediately after Lee's surrender

had been assigned to command at Richmond, informing me that General

Johnston had been brought to terms. The necessity for going farther

south being thus obviated we retraced our steps to Petersburg, from

which place I proceeded by steamer to Washington, leaving, the

cavalry to be marched thither by easy stages.



The day after my arrival in Washington an important order was sent

me, accompanied by the following letter of instructions, transferring

me to a new field of operations:





"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES.

"Washington, D. C., May 17, 1865.



"GENERAL : Under the orders relieving you from the command of the

Middle Military Division and assigning you to command west of the

Mississippi, you will proceed without delay to the West to arrange

all preliminaries for your new field of duties.



"Your duty is to restore Texas, and that part of Louisiana held by

the enemy, to the Union in the shortest practicable time, in a way

most effectual for securing permanent peace.



"To do this, you will be given all the troops that can be spared

by Major-General Canby, probably twenty-five thousand men of

all arms; the troops with Major-General J. J. Reynolds, in Arkansas,

say twelve thousand, Reynolds to command; the Fourth

Army Corps, now at Nashville, Tennessee, awaiting orders; and

the Twenty-Fifth Army Corps, now at City Point, Virginia, ready

to embark.



"I do not wish to trammel you with instructions; I will state,

however, that if Smith holds out, without even an ostensible

government to receive orders from or to report to, he and his men are

not entitled to the considerations due to an acknowledged

belligerent. Theirs are the conditions of outlaws, making war

against the only Government having an existence over the territory

where war is now being waged.



"You may notify the rebel commander west of the Mississippi--holding

intercourse with him in person, or through such officers of the rank

of major-general as you may select--that he will be allowed to

surrender all his forces on the same terms as were accorded to Lee

and Johnston. If he accedes, proceed to garrison the Red River as

high up as Shreveport, the seaboard at Galveston, Malagorda Bay,

Corpus Christi, and mouth of the Rio Grande.



"Place a strong force on the Rio Grande, holding it at least to a

point opposite Camargo, and above that if supplies can be procured.



"In case of an active campaign (a hostile one) I think a heavy force

should be put on the Rio Grande as a first preliminary. Troops for

this might be started at
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