Camp-Fire and Cotton-Field eBook

Thomas W. Knox
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 458 pages of information about Camp-Fire and Cotton-Field.

Camp-Fire and Cotton-Field eBook

Thomas W. Knox
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 458 pages of information about Camp-Fire and Cotton-Field.

The following is the order which General Grant issued:—­

HEAD-QUARTERS THIRTEENTH ARMY CORPS,
DEPARTMENT OF THE TENNESSEE,
LAGRANGE, TENNESSEE, November 14, 1862.

SPECIAL FIELD ORDER, NO. 4.

I. Chaplain J. Eaton, Jr., of the Twenty-seventh Ohio Volunteers, is hereby appointed to take charge of all fugitive slaves that are now, or may from time to time come, within the military lines of the advancing army in this vicinity, not employed and registered in accordance with General Orders, No. 72, from head-quarters District of West Tennessee, and will open a camp for them at Grand Junction, where they will be suitably cared for, and organized into companies, and set to work, picking, ginning, and baling all cotton now outstanding in fields.

II.  Commanding officers of all troops will send all fugitives that come within the lines, together with such teams, cooking utensils, and other baggage as they may bring with them, to Chaplain J. Eaton, Jr., at Grand Junction.

III.  One regiment of infantry from Brigadier-General McArthur’s Division will be temporarily detailed as guard in charge of such contrabands, and the surgeon of said regiment will be charged with the care of the sick.

IV.  Commissaries of subsistence will issue, on the requisitions of Chaplain Eaton, omitting the coffee ration, and substituting rye.  By order of Major-General U.S.  Grant.  JNO.  A. RAWLINS, A.A.G.

Chaplain Eaton entered immediately upon the discharge of his duties.  Many division and brigade commanders threw obstacles in his way, and were very slow to comply with General Grant’s order.  Some of the officers of the Commissary Department made every possible delay in filling Chaplain Eaton’s requisitions.  The people of the vicinity laughed at the experiment, and prophesied speedy and complete failure.  They endeavored to insure a failure by stealing the horses and mules, and disabling the machinery which Chaplain Eaton was using.  Failing in this, they organized guerrilla parties, and attempted to frighten the negroes from working in the field.  They only desisted from this enterprise when some of their number were killed.

All the negroes that came into the army lines were gathered at Grand Junction and organized, in compliance with the order.  There were many fields of cotton fully ripened, that required immediate attention.  Cotton-picking commenced, and was extensively prosecuted.

The experiment proved a success.  The cotton, in the immediate vicinity of Grand Junction and Lagrange was gathered, baled, and made ready for market.  For once, the labors of the negro in the Southwest were bringing an actual return to the Government.

The following year saw the system enlarged, as our armies took possession of new districts.  In 1863, large quantities of cotton were gathered from fields in the vicinity of Lake Providence and Milliken’s Bend, and the cultivation of plantations was commenced.  In 1864, this last enterprise was still further prosecuted.  Chaplain Eaton became Colonel Eaton, and the humble beginning at Grand Junction grew into a great scheme for demonstrating the practicability of free labor, and benefiting the negroes who-had been left without support by reason of the flight of their owners.

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Camp-Fire and Cotton-Field from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.