inadequate; still it was none of my business.
I took the oath of office, and was furnished with
a list of officers, appointed to my regiment, which
was still, incomplete. I reported in person to
General Scott, at his office on Seventeenth Street,
opposite the War Department, and applied for authority
to return West, and raise my regiment at Jefferson
Barracks, but the general said my lieutenant-colonel,
Burbank, was fully qualified to superintend the enlistment,
and that he wanted me there; and he at once dictated
an order for me to report to him in person for inspection
duty.
Satisfied that I would not be permitted to return to St. Louis, I instructed Mrs. Sherman to pack up, return to Lancaster, and trust to the fate of war.
I also resigned my place as president of the Fifth Street Railroad, to take effect at the end of May, so that in fact I received pay from that road for only two months’ service, and then began my new army career.