NP, WJ 1/8/1864

From the Wilmington Journal
 
January 8, 1864
 
To the Senate and House of Representatives of the Confederate States:
   The propositions pending before the Houses of Congress at its present session, to conscribe for military service the mechanics, agents and employees of Railroad Companies without exception, will, if executed, inevitably produce consequences which must prove most disastrous to the military operations of the Confederacy. It is well known to all persons tolerably well informed on such subjects, that from the commencement of this war, the supply of mechanics in the Confederate States have been wholly inadequate to the wants of the country, even for military purposes. A large portion of the mechanics in the Southern States -- probably much the larger portion of them -- were always Northern men by birth and education.  Of these very great numbers, on the breaking out of the war, at once returned to the Northern States, leaving still further destitute of mechanical labor and skill the Southern States, who, even with their aid had imported so much the largest portion of the machinery and mechanical products used by it from the Northern States. Few can be wholly ignorant of he fact that, throughout this war, the greatest difficulties with which our armies have had to contend, have resulted from the total want, or inadequate supply of the products of mechanical skill and labor, and of the means of rapid and efficient transportation. Fewer still are aware of the extent to which those difficulties have been felt, and of their effect upon military operations. It is scarcely any exaggeration to say, that one good and efficient mechanic or experienced Railroad officer or agent is worth to our armies a platoon, if not a company of soldiers. How many admirable plans have failed -- how many campaigns have been lost, for want of adequate supplies of clothing, ammunition, railroad machinery and means of transportation. But the country is now menaced with a further depletion of these necessary classes of labor by an attempt to transfer men to the ranks who are ten-fold more useful to the army where they are. To a very considerable extent this effort will certainly fail. These men, whether natives of the North, of the South, or of Europe, feel that their services are of ten-fold more value to the army in the positions they occupy, than they would be in the army; and that, having for this reason been heretofore by the Government exempted from military service, they have lost the advantage they would otherwise have had by an earlier enlistment, in selecting their associates in arms, and in opportunities for promotion and command, and must now be thrust as privates, into any service which the Government may assign to them. Never to have been exempted many esteem a less hardship. Influenced by considerations such as these, many of these men will leave the country, rather than be exposed to the exercise of what they so deeply feel to be an unwise, unnecessary, and to them, unjust measure. Nor can their exodus be prevented by any precautions which our authorities can take. Our frontier is too extensive to be effectually guarded by any police or picket force which can be employed, so as to prevent the escape of one out of ten attempting it. Daily experience proves this. These men are encumbered with little property, and that they would secretly convert into specie, producing a further injury to the country by its exportation. All this has been done already by a very considerable number of mechanics in the Confederacy. Every encouragement and facility has been and will be extended to them by the enemy, who know but too well, however blind to the important fact our own authorities may be, that they inflict upon the Confederacy the most vital blow, by depriving it of any of its mechanical force. Gen. Grant is said to have shown his appreciation of this efficient means of weakening our army, by enticing from Atlanta or Memphis a considerable number of valuable and skilful mechanics. So far from restricting, a wise and safe policy would expand the scope of exemptions of mechanics and railroad men commensurately with the extension of the conscription. When the conscription was most limited, it was scarcely possible to obtain a sufficient number of men to conduct efficiently our railroad, which are so essential to our military success. How then can they be possibly procured, when the conscription is extended over all those, who had been with great difficulty obtained without the pale of the former conscription.
   It is the idle dream of theorists and declaimers to substitute disabled soldiers or others incapable of military service for men educated for, and employed in, these pursuits. The simplest of them requires far more peculiar skill and experience than the inexperienced can be made to understand. And nothing is more certain than that men unfit for military service, are wholly unfit for the employment on railroads. Actual experience has established this beyond doubt. This blind zeal to put every male in the army can only increase the number to be fed, armed and clothed, while it destroys the only resources for transporting troops, food, arms or clothes for them -- already inadequate for the armies of the field. At this time, with existing laws and military regulations, the efficiency and capacity of every railroad in the Confederacy is very greatly diminished for want of suitable men to operate and keep them in repair. The employment of inexperienced men produces confusion, and multiplies collisions and accidents, while the want of mechanics keeps a large portion of machinery and cars useless for want of repairs. Take any considerable number of railroad employees remaining, and the operations of the railroads MUST CEASE. Let the Government undertake to carry them on with disabled soldiers, boys or old men, without experience or skill, and but a few months or weeks will suffice to show the last train run on the last railroad in the Confederacy. No agencies have been more efficient and necessary in carrying on this war than the railroad companies. Adopt the measures proposed, and not only will you inflict widespread loss on stockholders, (many of them soldiers in the army,) but you will put an end to railroad transportation. What substitute can be had? It requires one thousand wagons and drivers, and four thousand horses, to transport in five days what a Railroad train can in one, or five tines that number to do it in one day. Where are these to come from, when enough for other wants of the army cannot be had?
   With those best acquainted with the condition and resources of our Railroads, including the officers of government having special charge of Railroad transportation, it has been long a subject of most anxious consideration by what means these agencies can be maintained in operation with every fostering care and aid which the Government can bestow on them; and all are oppressed with the apprehension that not a few of them must be abandoned with each successive year of the war. What then must be the result, and how soon must it occur, when the Government, instead of fostering, still further cripples and destroys them? Already the Government has a Bureau of the War Department superintending Railroad transportation. Let the officers of that Bureau be consulted as to the effect of the proposed measure. They are impartial, and they are informed on this subject. But is not a blind zeal for swelling the numbers of the army, or a prejudice against Railroad companies, (who were the first to sustain this Government by offering to perform its transportation at half rates of tool, and relative payment in Government bonds and notes when they had no market value,) precipitate the country and its armies into irretrievable disaster.
P. V. Daniel, Jr.
Pres. R. F. & P. R. R. Co.   {Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac RR}
Charles Ellis
Pres. R. & P. R. R. Co.   {Richmond & Petersburg RR}
 
   The undersigned endorse fully the foregoing address to Congress, believing the statements set therein to be facts, our experience fully demonstrating them to be so.
S. D. Wallace
Pres't. W. & W. R. R.   {Wilmington & Weldon RR}
S. L. Fremont
Ch'f Eng & Supt W. & W. R.   
Thos. D. Walker
Pres't W. & M. R. R.   {Wilmington & Manchester RR}
Henry M. Drane
Gen'l Sup't. W. & M. R. R.

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