Mobile Register
June 18, 1861
Page 1
MARION
MEN—The most effective fighters in a war of defence
are guerrillas, after the fashion of
the “Marion Men” of the South Carolina revolutionary era and the Texas Rangers
of the present day. In every rural
district in every part of the South, companies of these “free fighters” should
be organized and trained. One hundred
bold and dashing brave men, well-mounted and trained, and skilled to use their
arms on foot or horseback, at rest or at speed, hovering on the rear or flanks
of an invading army, would be a greater terror to the enemy and a greater help
to the Southern cause than five times their number in regular army
organization.
We
are glad to learn that the spirit of the Marion lives among and his example is
being imitated by the South Carolinians in the present war. Capt. G. B. Lartigue
is raising a force in this place, and four companies have already applied for
the service. The force will be variously
armed, some with the Navy Colt pistols and a saber-pike, some with rifle and
saber bayonet, and one company with double-barrelled
guns as most effective fighting in the dark.
“The
general duties of the command will be to act as scouts, as advance guards, to
attack and drive in outposts, to harass the camps, to attack an advancing army
in the flank, to make ambuscades, and to annoy the enemy in every manner
consistent with the usages of war.
The
field of action would be the one assigned us by the Commander-in-Chief of the
Confederate forces. That field being
sought by them always where the foe could be found—whether on the border, in
our own State, or in the enemy’s
country.”
We
commend this example to the imitation of the young men in the interior. Every youth who owns and rides a horse could
join such a company. We are engaged in a
war in which there must be no such word as “fail.” Every rider of sound mind and body must make
ready to join the fight.
[Transcribed by Sharon Strout]