Sivut kuvina
PDF
ePub

Plan for the providing and issuing of Military Supplies.

The business of providing shall constitute one distinct branch of service; that of issuing, another.

The Purveyor shall be charged with the procuring of all supplies, except those for which contracts are made directly by the chiefs of the Treasury or War Departments.

The Superintendent of Military Stores shall superintend the issues of all supplies.

The Purveyor shall have near him three assistants, by whatsoever denominations; one, in relation to the supplies, which, according to past practice, fall within the department of Quartermaster-General, including the means of transportation; another, in relation to the supplies, which, according to past practice, fall within the department of Commissary of Provisions, with the addition of medical and hospital stores; a third, in relation to the supplies, which, according to past practice, fall within the department of Commissary of Military Stores, with the addition of clothing. The person who now resides at the seat of government, in quality of Quartermaster-General, may perform the duty of the first-mentioned assistant.

The Superintendent of Military Stores shall have near him three principal clerks, each of whom particularly to superintend the issues in one of the above-mentioned branches, aided by as many storekeepers as may be necessary.

The Purveyor shall have with each army a deputy, to be charged with the procuring of all supplies necessary to be procured with the army.

The Superintendent shall have with each army a deputy, who shall have under him three assistants; one, to superintend the issues of Quartermaster's stores; another, to superintend the issues of provisions; a third, to superintend the issues of other military stores and clothing.

The Purveyor and his deputies shall deliver over all that they provide to the Superintendent and his deputies. The actual custody and issuing of articles to be with the storekeepers, pur

suant to the written orders of the Superintendent and his deputies.

The Quartermaster-General, with the main army, and the Deputy Quartermaster-General, with each separate army, shall have the superintendence of the deputies of the Purveyor, with the respective armies; to see that they do their duty according to their instructions from the heads of their respective branches and the order of the commander of the army.

The Inspector-General with the main army, and the deputy Inspector-General with each separate army, shall have a like charge of the deputies of the Superintendent of Military Stores.

These officers to serve as checks upon the respective deputies, and points of union between the military and civil authorities.

The Paymaster-General shall reside at the seat of government, and be the fountain of all issues of money for the pay, bounty, &c., of the troops. He shall have a deputy with each army, who shall be charged with the issuing of all moneys to the Regimental Paymasters.

The Quartermaster of each division shall be charged with the procuring of all supplies, which may be occasionally necessary for such division, in addition to the general supplies.

The Quartermaster of each brigade shall be charged with the like duty, when the brigade is detached only; and always with the superintendence of the issues for such brigade, and consequently with the direction of all brigade officers having the custody of supplies.

Each brigade shall have a Commissary of Forage, and another of Provisions; to be charged respectively with the issues of those articles.

The Regimental Quartermaster shall receive and issue all supplies for the regiment, except of money and clothing.

The Regimental Paymaster shall issue moneys for the recruiting service to the company officers charged with that service, pursuant to warrants from the commanding officer of the regi ment, or from the superintending officer of the recruiting service for such regiment, taking from each an accountable receipt.

Whenever it is practicable, he will himself pay the officers, non-commissioned officers, and privates of his regiment, individually; when, by reason of distant detachments, this cannot be done, he will deliver the money to the officers commanding companies, or to the officers commanding parts of companies, at stations too distant for the agency of the commanders of companies; taking from each an accountable receipt. The money must, in each case, be paid and issued, pursuant to pay rolls signed by such commanding officers; and, wherever it is practicable, accompanied by the warrants of the commanding officers of the regiments, or of battalions when detached.

For all moneys which shall be issued to officers, to be disbursed by them, they shall account monthly with the Regimental Paymaster, producing to him the requisite vouchers. Upon every such accounting, he shall give a certificate of the substance thereof to the officers with whom such accounting shall be, specifying therein the vouchers which shall have been produced and left with him. This accounting shall be provisional only, and liable to the revision and control of the proper officer of the War Department, to whom the accounts and vouchers must be forwarded.

The same regulations, as nearly as the subject will admit, shall be observed in respect to the issuing of clothing and other articles (provisions excepted), which shall be issued to the noncommissioned officers and soldiers, and in respect to the accounting for the same.

Every receipt for pay, bounty, or other matter, from a noncommissioned officer or private who cannot write, shall be certified by a commissioned officer, who, wherever it shall be practicable, shall be other than the person for whom it is to serve as a voucher.

All documents or returns, upon which issues of money or other articles are to be made, must be countersigned by the chief officer of the regiment or other particular corps for which the same is to be issued.

The accounts of Regimental Paymasters and Quartermasters shall, previous to their transmission to the War Department, be

presented to the commanders of regiments, or of battalions when detached, and to the persons from whom respectively they shall have received the objects for which they are accountable, who shall summarily examine them, and certify their opinion respectively.

persons who may

The above regulations shall apply to all as substitutes for the officers to whom they relate.

act

All returns and requisitions for obtaining supplies from the Department of War, shall go from the Deputy Superintendent of Military Stores with each army to the said Superintendent.

Estimates of supplies shall be reported by the Deputy Quartermaster-General with each army to the commander of such army, and shall be by him transmitted to the Secretary of War, with his opinion.

Each deputy shall send a duplicate of every estimate to the Quartermaster-General, who shall report to the Commander-inChief general estimates for all the troops of the United States, illustrated by the particular estimates, which general estimates shall be transmitted by the Commander-in-Chief to the Secretary of War, with his opinion.

WASHINGTON TO HAMILTON.

(PRIVATE.)

MY DEAR SIR:

MOUNT VERNON, April 10th, 1799.

I have received your letter of the 27th ult., inclosing a design of dividing the State of Virginia into divisions and subdivisions for the head-quarters of the rendezvouses in each, asking my opinion of the proper distribution of them, for the convenience of the recruiting service.

The grand division of the State I conceive to be well allotted, and, with the following alterations, the subdivision of it may be so likewise; but of the latter, I can speak with no precision, be

cause of the number of new counties which have been established, the situation of which I know not, and even the names of some were unknown to me before.

The alterations I propose, are as follow:

1st. To make Hobb's Hole, instead of the Bolling Green, the 8th rendezvous (referring to the plan you sent me), because, as you will perceive by the map of Virginia, Caroline county is the uppermost in that sub-district, and the Bolling Green lies at the upper corner of the said county.

2d. Let Fairfax and Loudon counties (which were formerly one) form a subdivision in place of Fairfax and Fauquier, which are separated by other counties. Alexandria or Leesburgh may be the head-quarters of that rendezvous. The first is (comparatively) large and populous, and on navigation; the other is 40 miles above navigation, and a small village; both are healthy, and well supplied with provisions, &c.

3d. Prince William and Fauquier ought to be annexed, instead of Prince William and Loudon, which join at the extreme corners only. Dumfries in Prince William or Fauquier Court House might be the rendezvous. The first is on navigation; the latter, 40 miles above, and more central.

4th. Yorktown is more in the centre of the 6th subdivision than Williamsburgh; and,

5th. Northumberland. Court House is too low for the 9th subdivision; either Westmoreland or Richmond Court Houses, in point of centrality, would be more eligible.

General Lee's absence from home, canvassing for the ensuing election of representatives to Congress, and an indisposition with which he has (as I have lately heard) been seized, has been, I presume, the cause of your not having received an answer to your letter; for I am certain Mr. Bushrod Washington would have left it at his house as he returned home, agreeably to his promise to me.

Your letters to Colonels Parker and Bently I have forwarded by the post-the first, under cover to General Morgan, to whom Parker is a neighbor; the other, to Colonel Carrington, who will be able to give it a safe conveyance to Richmond-to the postoffice in which it must have proceeded.

« EdellinenJatka »