Keiri
Sergeant
- Joined
- Aug 11, 2015
That's not going to be true in hospital, though, is it? At the very least, the men of each company will not have any first sergeant present.In the ACW, the respective Colonel would not be receiving anyone's pay other than his own. The Federal Army had Paymasters... Confederate Army had Quartermaster Officers that were detailed for the duty. Pay was done by them direct to the soldiers in question, which each had to sign (or give their mark) for on several copies of pay vouchers as record, after being properly identified by their First Sgt of each company in turn as he stood by at the table alongside...
That's not going to be true in hospital, though, is it? At the very least, the men of each company will not have any first sergeant present.
We've gone through this before, Keiri. What one was immune to varied with where one was from. Just for an example, troops from Pennsylvania may well have been immune from measles while troops from Illinois were not.Doran resigned in December, 1862. This document was signed as of December 10, 1862. By then, by my count, 116 men had died in the unit since they left for Pittsburgh landing. That includes those wounded or killed in Corinth, of course, but that was about 6 of them, 10 if you count those who died from wounds. The rest died from typhoid, chronic diarrhea, or other sicknesses like them.
I think what you seem to be suggesting is even more unlikely, which is that someone who was a specialist in the procedures and paperwork of the era, and actually lived then, would accuse someone in a way that got everything wrong (which surely the people he was writing to would notice) while you, from this distance of time and limited by modern research, get all the details right.Allegation is the key word there. Thanks for the detailed info - but I still don't quite get it. As of December 1862 (Doran resigned Nov 25 '62), this adjutant claims that:
1. There are 91 men absent sick in hospital
2. Most of them are doubtless (so he says) already discharged by Grant but the papers have been suppressed by Doran
3. When he resigned, Doran handed over discharge papers of many poor fellows now in their graves... these discharges predated their decease
I have questions, not least of which is why should anyone believe the adjutant?
a. Men absent sick in hospital cannot be discharged until they are better and out of hospital or perhaps they die. A colonel cannot order men out of hospital treatment just to tell 'em to bugger off
b. What on earth is "General Grant" doing issuing discharges to anyone?
c. Were any of these 91 men now in hospital actually discharged and if so, which ones?
d. Why were any of them discharged - none had fulfilled their term of service?
e. Who were the "many poor fellows" and did they die in hospital with a discharge pending (see a. above)
As I stated before, Doran seems to be a bad apple one way or another but is this particular allegation logical, believable and true?