Greensborough Patriot
November 27, 1862
Page 2
Resignation of Col. D. K. McRae
This
officer has tendered to the Adjutant General of the Confederate States the
resignation of his commission, received from the Governor of North Carolina, as
Colonel of the Fifth Regiment.
In
his letter to Gov. Vance, setting forth the reasons which prompt him to this
step, he states facts which have too long been suffered to pass unnoticed by
the brave and gallant soldiers of this State.
When fighting, hard fighting, is to be done, the North Carolina boys are
in brisk demand; their blood has flowed freely on every field, and the prowess
of their own arms has changed the fortunes of many a doubtful day. Yet, we have heard of but few instances of
her gallant sons receiving that meed of praise, even
in an official report, which they had so justly earned, and which was so richly
their due. The treatment of our
officers, too, in regard to appointments and promotions, has been positively
shameful. Col. McRae complains that in several
instances he has been compelled to see junior officers promoted over
him—officers who had not, and who have not yet, seen a battle. His complaint that Col. Iverson, of Georgia,
his junior, and who has been under his own command for two months, has been
appointed Brigadier in his brigade, is not without cause, and we cheerfully
commend the following paragraph which we extract from his letter to the
Governor:
But,
severe as is the trespass upon the individual pride of North Carolina officers
who have lately been obliged to submit to the promotion, in several instances,
of citizens of other States, to the command of brigades exclusively North
Carolinian, the slur upon the State is broader, and demands the resentment of
her sons in the only mode they can manifest it.
In the spirit of an earnest protest against this injustice, individual,
and to my State, I resign my commission.
The
matter of which Col. McRae so justly complains is alluded to by Governor Vance,
in his Message to the Legislature, with the recommendation that something shall
be done to prevent this gross neglect of entirely ignoring North Carolina
merit, and we sincerely trust that the abuse may be speedily corrected. The idea of appointing offices from other
States to command North Carolinians, when we have men among ourselves capable
and worthy, is outrageous, and the practice is becoming intolerable.
[Transcribed by Sharon Strout]