thousand first-rate mules. As to horses, Kilpatrick
collected all his remounts, and it looks to me, in
riding along our columns, as though every officer
had three or four led horses, and each regiment seems
to be followed by at least fifty negroes and foot-sore
soldiers, riding on horses and mules. The custom
was for each brigade to send out daily a foraging-party
of about fifty men, on foot, who invariably returned
mounted, with several wagons loaded with poultry,
potatoes,
etc., and as the army is composed of
about forty brigades, you can estimate approximately
the number of horses collected. Great numbers
of these were shot by my order, because of the disorganizing
effect on our infantry of having too many idlers mounted.
General Euston is now engaged in collecting statistics
on this subject, but I know the Government will never
receive full accounts of our captures, although the
result aimed at was fully attained,
viz., to
deprive our enemy of them. All these animals
I will have sent to Port Royal, or collected behind
Fort McAllister, to be used by General Saxton in his
farming operations, or by the Quartermaster’s
Department, after they are systematically accounted
for. While General Easton is collecting transportation
for my troops to James River, I will throw to Port
Royal Island all our means of transportation I can,
and collect the rest near Fort McAllister, covered
by the Ogeeehee River and intrenchments to be erected,
and for which Captain Poe, my chief-engineer, is now
reconnoitring the ground, but in the mean time will
act as I have begun, as though the city of Savannah
were my objective: namely, the troops will continue
to invest Savannah closely, making attacks and feints
wherever we have fair ground to stand upon, and I will
place some thirty-pound Parrotts, which I have got
from General Foster, in position, near enough to reach
the centre of the city, and then will demand its surrender.
If General Hardee is alarmed, or fears starvation,
he may surrender; otherwise I will bombard the city,
but not risk the lives of our men by assaults across
the narrow causeways, by which alone I can now reach
it.
If I had time, Savannah, with all its dependent fortifications,
would surely fall into our possession, for we hold
all its avenues of supply.
The enemy has made two desperate efforts to get boats
from above to the city, in both of which he has been
foiled-General Slocum (whose left flank rests on the
river) capturing and burning the first boat, and in
the second instance driving back two gunboats and
capturing the steamer Resolute, with seven naval officers
and a crew of twenty-five seamen. General Slocum
occupies Argyle Island and the upper end of Hutchinson
Inland, and has a brigade on the South Carolina shore
opposite, and is very urgent to pass one of his corps
over to that shore. But, in view of the change
of plan made necessary by your order of the 6th, I
will maintain things in statu quo till I have got