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re: 150 years ago this day...

Posted on 6/8/15 at 7:33 pm to
Posted by BadLeroyDawg
Member since Aug 2013
848 posts
Posted on 6/8/15 at 7:33 pm to
Friday, 9 June 1865

President Andrew Johnson, upon receiving word that Indians in the New Mexico Territory had been captured by United States Army troops and placed into slavery, issues an Executive Order forbidding the practice in the future.

Another reportedly, unintentional "accidental explosion" of the ammunition stored in the Confederate ordnance building occurs at Chattanooga, Tennessee, when the depot is set afire by a locomotive on a nearby siding. The blast and ensuing fire causes approximately 10 casualties. The commanding officer then orders the arrest of the ordnance officer for dereliction of duty.

Major General Peter J. Osterhaus, USA, assumes the command of the Department of Mississippi.

Union Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles orders that the East Gulf and the West Gulf Squadrons be combined and re-designated as the Gulf Squadron. He directs Rear Admiral Henry Knox Thatcher to relieve Rear Admiral Cornelius Kinchiloe Stribling and assume command of the newly formed Squadron with his headquarters at Pensacola.

Welles also instructs that the North and South Atlantic squadrons be combined and re-designated the Atlantic Squadron. At the same time he orders Rear Admiral John Adolphus Bernard Dahlgren to return to Washington, DC, and Rear Admiral William Radford to assume command of the squadron. Dahlgren will record in his diary under the date of 17 June: "And so ends a command of two years of one of the largest fleets ever assembled under American colors--as many as 96 at one time."

The C.S.S. Ajax, commanded by Lieutenant John Low, arrives at Liverpool, England, this afternoon from Bermuda. The Ajax had been detained at Bermuda by the British Governor after Low had made an unsuccessful attempt to arm his ship under the guise of taking a shipment of guns to Havana, Cuba. The vessel was released after the news reached Bermuda that the American War Between the States had ended in the capitulation of the Confederacy. Upon his arrival at Liverpool, Low turned the ship over to the local port authorities. The former lieutenant of the C.S.S. Alabama chose to remain in England rather than return to his homeland. He established his residence in Liverpool where he subsequently became a prosperous shipping and cotton mill executive. Years later Low was presented the Alabama's pennant by a Frenchman who had witnessed the Confederate cruiser's sea battle with the U.S.S. Kearsarge from a yacht, and had salvaged her pennant. Today, this pennant, seventy-five feet in length and bearing twenty-seven white stars on a blue field, with a red and white tail, is in the possession of John Low's grandson.
Posted by BadLeroyDawg
Member since Aug 2013
848 posts
Posted on 6/9/15 at 9:22 pm to
Saturday, 10 June 1865

Brigadier General John Newton, command­ing the District of Key West and Tortugas, acknowl­edges receipt of the report from Major Edmund C. Weeks, Second Florida Cavalry, dated 30 May 1865, in which he announced the occupation of Tampa on 27 May and the surrender of Confederate military forces at Bronson, Bay Port, and Cedar Key. According to General Newton: "The surrender of the forces spoken of...comprise all armed bodies of Rebels on the West Coast of Florida."

Confederate General John C. Breckinridge, Colonel John Taylor Wood, and their remaining fleeing Southern party sailed through the worst part of the Gulf Stream this morning and have sighted the Double Headed Shot Cays--a group of elongated cays that extend northeastward from the Elbow Cays, incorporating the Water Cays and all islets and reefs up to the Deadman Cay--off the coast of Cuba on the northwest edge of Salt Key Bank. They are now safely out of the jurisdiction of the United States.

Colonel John D. Allen, 15th Union Missouri Cavalry, assumes the command of the District of Southwest Missouri.

After examining several witnesses today, the trial of the Lincoln conspirators adjourns until Monday.

Ward Hill Lamon, the United States Marshal for the District of Columbia and a close personal friend of slain United States President Abraham Lincoln, tenders his resignation this morning to President Andrew Johnson, effective on Monday.
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