. Autobiography and personal reminiscences of Major-General Benj. F. Butler; Butler's book . r thereexcept my little headquarters yacht, the Saxon, and the Mississippi,with a five-inch hole in her nose. This also stared me in the face : I had sent down food and neces-saries for a three months stay. These were rapidly being had left orders with my quartermaster and commissary that after Jhad been two months away from Boston they should send meprovisions for -ninety days more. But before the time arrived forthem to act, they were deprived of their commissions, their appoint-ments bein


. Autobiography and personal reminiscences of Major-General Benj. F. Butler; Butler's book . r thereexcept my little headquarters yacht, the Saxon, and the Mississippi,with a five-inch hole in her nose. This also stared me in the face : I had sent down food and neces-saries for a three months stay. These were rapidly being had left orders with my quartermaster and commissary that after Jhad been two months away from Boston they should send meprovisions for -ninety days more. But before the time arrived forthem to act, they were deprived of their commissions, their appoint-ments being rejected by the Senate. This was done by the influenceand the malignity of Governor Andrew and his crew of patriots simplyupon political grounds. Although I made requisition for a newquartermaster and commissary to be sent to me as soon as it could bedone, they did not get to me until after I had been in New Orleansmore than thirty days. Thus I was left without the services of a quartermaster and com-missary who knew anything about the details of the expedition or its BUTLERS BOOK. 357. Map of Lower Mississippi River. 358 BUTLERS BOOK. provisions. I should have had no notice of what had happened or of thedifficulty I was in, for none was given me, had not my brother takenpassage in a sailing vessel and come down, giving me the had also, upon his personal responsibility, shipped provisions enoughto carry me along, and had given notice to Mr. Stanton that provisionsmust be sent. These came in due time ; otherwise a starving armywould have landed in a starving captured city. Again: I hoped to have been at the island two months earlier. Ihad brought with me more than one hundred Massachusetts mechanicsto build boats with which to get through the bayous, lagoons, andmorasses in the rear of Fort Jackson or St. Philip, as the case mightbe, and to construct scaling ladders with which to assault the parapets,rafts on which field artillery could be transported to aid us


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