Greensborough Patriot
January 8, 1863
Page 2
A
friend writing from Hamptonville says:
“There
is an outrage being perpetrated in our neighboring County of Wilkes. Some 390 famished cavalry horses, in charge
of some 40 men from Virginia,
are pressing and eating out the Valley of the Yadkin. Corn is so scarce there that $3 per bushel is
the current price, yet these men are pressing it at $1.50, and depriving the
soldiers’ families of bread.”
We
learn that Gov. Vance has very promptly, and properly
instructed the Colonels of the militia in Wilkes to this stop impressments of
corn, and to use force, if necessary, to stop it. The seizing of corn to support an army in the
field, and in the presence of the enemy, is a very different thing from seizing
it, at half price, to feed famished cavalry horses not actually in
service. As long as there is a grain of
corn in the country, or a pound of meat, let the families of absent soldiers
come in for their share.
--Raleigh Standard—
If
it is necessary to send these cavalry horses away from the army to be wintered,
why, in the name of common sense, are they not sent to sections of the country
where grain is cheap and plenty, and not to sections where there is hardly
grain enough to keep alive the women and children? In the Eastern part of the State corn in
plenty and cheap, and there horses, if properly manned, could be cheaply wintered and at the same time be of great
advantage in protecting the citizens of that section from the raids of small
Yankee parties who come out from Nowhere to murder, plunder and steal.
[Transcribed by Sharon Strout]