EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT,
Milledgeville, Ga., November
29, 1862.
General G. T. BEAUREGARD,
Comdg. Dept. of S.C., Ga., and Fla., Charleston, S.C.:
GENERAL: The General Assembly of this State has just passed an act authorizing
me to place obstructions in the navigable streams of this State against
incursions of the enemy and to hire or impress slaves to perform the necessary
labor. As I desire to preserve and cultivate the most cordial relations between
yourself as the commander of the military department in which Georgia is
embraced and myself in carrying out the provisions of said act, I propose to
furnish the laborers by hiring or impressing them as contemplated in the act,
and putting them under officers and engineers detailed by you for that duty, and
to give the whole planning, supervision, control, and execution of the work to
such officers and engineers as you may order on
such duty. I make this proposition, as it may be difficult for me to procure the
services of competent engineers, and to avoid any conflict which might ensue in
having the obstructions put in the rivers between State and Confederate officers
or any other conflicting interests. Should you take charge of and execute the
work I will cause all the laborers to be furnished at such points as you may
designate, and will expect the Confederate Government to pay the expense of the
slaves, including hire, subsistence, transportation, &c., on terms somewhat
similar to those on which the laborers are furnished to General Mercer to finish
the fortifications at Savannah, in obedience to his requisition made on the
State for laborers. Be pleased to communicate with me on the subject.
The places in the streams where obstructions shall be placed
will be selected by your engineers or officers.
I have the honor to be, very respectfully, your obedient
servant,
JOSEPH E. BROWN.
SOURCE: United States War Department. THE WAR OF THE REBELLION: A
Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies.
Washington: Government Printing Office, 1880-1901.
[CIVIL
WAR - CSA LETTERS]
[CIVIL
WAR]