A letter from General Custer:_________________________________________________________
HEADQUARTERS THIRD CAVALRY DIVISION Appomattox Court-House, Va. April 9,1865 Soldiers of the Third Cavalry Division: With profound gratitude toward the God of battles, by whose blessings our
enemies have been humbled and our arms rendered triumphant, your commanding
general avails himself of this his first opportunity to express to you his
admiration for the heroic manner in which you have passed through the series of
battles which today resulted in the surrender of the enemy's entire army. The
record established by your indomitable courage is unparalleled in the annals of
war. Your prowess has won for you even the respect and admiration of your
enemies. During the past six months, although in most instances confronted by
superior numbers, you have captured from the enemy in open battle 111 pieces of
field artillery, 65 battle-flags, and upward of 10,000 prisoners of war,
including 7 general officers. Within the past ten days, and included in the
above, you have captured 46 pieces of field artillery and 37 battle-flags. You
have never lost a gun, never lost a color, and have never been defeated, and
notwithstanding the numerous engagements in which you have borne a prominent
part, including those memorable battles of the Shenandoah, you have captured
every piece of artillery which the enemy has dared to open upon you. The near approach of peace renders it improbable that you will again be
called upon to undergo the fatigues of the toilsome march, or the exposure of
the battlefield, but should the assistance of keen blades, wielded by your
sturdy arms, be required to hasten the coming of that glorious peace for which
we have been long contending, the general commanding is proudly confident that
in the future, as in the past, every demand will meet with a hearty and willing
response. Let us hope that our work is done, and that, blessed with the comforts
of peace, we may soon be permitted to enjoy the pleasures of home and friends. For our comrades who have fallen, let us ever cherish a grateful remembrance. To the wounded and to those who languish in Southern prisons, let our heart felt sympathies be tendered. And now, speaking for myself alone, when the war is ended and the task of
the historian begins; when those deeds of daring which have rendered the name
and fame of the Third Cavalry Division imperishable, are inscribed upon the
bright pages of our country's history, I only ask that my name be written as
that of the commander of the Third Cavalry Division. G. A. Custer Brevet Major General |
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