登陆注册
20314400000219

第219章 CHAPTER VII.(10)

And now about the Hall carbines, as to which the gentlemen on this committee tell their tale with an evident delight in the richness of its incidents which at once puts all their readers in accord with them. There were altogether some five thousand of these, all of which the government sold to a Mr. Eastman in June, 1861, for 14s.

each, as perfectly useless, and afterward bought in August for 4l.

8s. each, about 4s. a carbine having been expended in their repair in the mean time. But as regards 790 of these now famous weapons, it must be explained they had been sold by the government as perfectly useless, and at a nominal price, previously to this second sale made by the government to Mr. Eastman. They had been so sold, and then, in April, 1861, they had been bought again for the government by the indefatigable Cummings for 3l. each. Then they were again sold as useless for 14s. each to Eastman, and instantly rebought on behalf of the government for 4l. 8s. each! Useless for war purposes they may have been, but as articles of commerce it must be confessed that they were very serviceable.

This last purchase was made by a man named Stevens on behalf of General Fremont, who at that time commanded the army of the United States in Missouri. Stevens had been employed by General Fremont as an agent on the behalf of government, as is shown with clearness in the report, and on hearing of these muskets telegraphed to the general at once: "I have 5000 Hall's rifled cast-steel muskets, breach-loading, new, at 22 dollars." General Fremont telegraphed back instantly: "I will take the whole 5000 carbines. . . . I will pay all extra charges." . . . . And so the purchase was made. The muskets, it seems, were not absolutely useless even as weapons of war. "Considering the emergency of the times?" a competent witness considered them to be worth "10 or 12 dollars." The government had been as much cheated in selling them as it had in buying them. But the nature of the latter transaction is shown by the facts that Stevens was employed, though irresponsibly employed, as a government agent by General Fremont; that he bought the muskets in that character himself, making on the transaction 1l. 18s. on each musket; and that the same man afterward appeared as an aid-de-camp on General Fremont's staff. General Fremont had no authority himself to make such a purchase, and when the money was paid for the first installment of the arms, it was so paid by the special order of General Fremont himself out of moneys intended to be applied to other purposes. The money was actually paid to a gentleman known at Fremont's headquarters as his special friend, and was then paid in that irregular way because this friend desired that that special bill should receive immediate payment. After that, who can believe that Stevens was himself allowed to pocket the whole amount of the plunder?

There is a nice little story of a clergyman in New York who sold, for 40l. and certain further contingencies, the right to furnish 200cavalry horses; but I should make this too long if I told all the nice little stories. As the frauds at St. Louis were, if not in fact the most monstrous, at any rate the most monstrous which have as yet been brought to the light, I cannot finish this account without explaining something of what was going on at that Western Paradise in those halcyon days of General Fremont.

General Fremont, soon after reaching St. Louis, undertook to build ten forts for the protection of that city. These forts have since been pronounced as useless, and the whole measure has been treated with derision by officers of his own army. But the judgment displayed in the matter is a military question with which I do not presume to meddle. Even if a general be wrong in such a matter, his character as a man is not disgraced by such error. But the manner of building them was the affair with which Mr. Van Wyck's Committee had to deal. It seems that five of the forts, the five largest, were made under the orders of a certain Major Kappner, at a cost of 12,000l., and that the other five could have been built at least for the same sum. Major Kappner seems to have been a good and honest public servant, and therefore quite unfit for the superintendence of such work at St. Louis. The other five smaller forts were also in progress, the works on them having been continued from 1st of September to 25th of September, 1861; but on the 25th of September General Fremont himself gave special orders that a contract should be made with a man named Beard, a Californian, who had followed him from California to St. Louis. This contract is dated the 25th of September. But nevertheless the work specified in that contract was done previous to that date, and most of the money paid was paid previous to that date. The contract did not specify any lump sum, but agreed that the work should be paid for by the yard and by the square foot. No less a sum was paid to Beard for this work--the cormorant Beard, as the report calls him--than 24,200l., the last payment only, amounting to 4000l., having been made subsequent to the date of the contract. Twenty thousand two hundred pounds was paid to Beard before the date of the contract! The amounts were paid at five times, and the last four payments were made on the personal order of General Fremont. This Beard was under no bond, and none of the officers of the government knew anything of the terms under which he was working. On the 14th of October General Fremont was ordered to discontinue these works, and to abstain from making any further payments on their account. But, disobeying this order, he directed his quartermaster to pay a further sum of 4000l.

to Beard out of the first sums he should receive from Washington, he then being out of money. This, however, was not paid. "It must be understood," says the report, "that every dollar ordered to be paid by General Fremont on account of these works was diverted from a fund specially appropriated for another purpose." And then again:

同类推荐
  • 范村梅谱

    范村梅谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Gilded Age

    The Gilded Age

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 大方广三戒经卷上

    大方广三戒经卷上

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 旧五代史

    旧五代史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 元始洞真慈善孝子报恩成道经

    元始洞真慈善孝子报恩成道经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 超级护卫

    超级护卫

    逃是不可能了,只有战斗才有生机。他以迅雷不及掩耳之势,发挥“闪电勾拳”之威力,十秒之内,打倒了最为嚣张的三人。其余人见他如此强悍,不敢妄动。他,中国武警退役,纯真、正义,屡遭无情打击。吉人天佑。
  • 若果世界哭泣的话

    若果世界哭泣的话

    七年已經過去,當天純真的少女已不再天真,為了當天的仇恨,賭上一生也不在乎。
  • 问题学姐恋上我

    问题学姐恋上我

    第一次遇到学姐的时候,我惊为天人,视她为女神。后来与她同居,我才发现……我建了个群,群号码:484028936,欢迎大家加入其中。
  • 正邪天下(全集)

    正邪天下(全集)

    一段师门恩怨引出一场天下动乱。武林之争始于绝世奇人空灵子所创“天平六术”。空灵子六位逆徒横行江湖,扰起一场血腥风雨。两位神秘少年便在这风雨江湖中同时崛起,各凭绝世智谋在武林中卷起一股狂潮,心怀圣意者,却魔缘不断,而心怀邪念者,却机缘连连,更统一邪道与正道相持不下,然而,自古正邪不两立,他们终因不同的信念而决战武林。
  • 视听风暴

    视听风暴

    重生穿越到了韩国,而且还是韩国三大电视台MBC的继承人。从一个宅男到贵公子的飞跃,李泽成适应了,并且开始利用自己来自未来的优势,发掘起一个个新的项目:韩剧吗?你们知道什么,那一个经典的韩剧不是我李泽成写(剽窃?!)的!综艺?脱口秀,什么,你们竟然告诉我不知道!那么,我就告诉你们,脱口秀节目是什么!还有什么?MBC音乐大赏!星际游戏频道,OSL,MSL星际联赛!哈哈,现在是2001年,一切,才刚刚开始!
  • 冰雪瞳仁之邪王追妻

    冰雪瞳仁之邪王追妻

    一朝穿越,只因被无情渣男抛弃。重生之后,无敌师傅寻上门来,只为收她为徒。七年之约,学精归来偶遇前世渣男狗女。“夏倩,我许你皇后之位”渣男说。“哼,你那皇后本姑娘不稀罕”夏倩回道。“既然不要他,那就跟本王走吧。”不知名的邪王发话。“你是谁”夏倩眯眼。“我?我是你三世夫君!”邪王笑眯眯回道。“你……”夏倩气结。打不过,我还不能跑么。
  • 众神之争:美男大大来撩我

    众神之争:美男大大来撩我

    一位自认为是平凡少女的高中女学生。拥有者一群强大的“狐朋狗友”,从此变身为不良少女,抽烟喝酒打架无所不能。唯一的哥哥还对她宠溺到底,你以为这有什么不可能的呢?爱慕者都能绕世界一圈了好不好?还搞穿越?穿越了老娘也是最强!
  • 天命贵女

    天命贵女

    一朝穿越,一世不凡。她前世本是一名杀手,如今却成了相府傻子嫡女。是命运还是算计?他,只是个笨蛋。傻子,笨蛋?惊天计划?不对,还有......
  • 星空中的一只灿

    星空中的一只灿

    林灿柠,前世娱乐圈话题女王,被人陷害。重生后,身世,背景,实力都有了,何不重新开始?!励志成为新一代“国民女神”!呐~在成功的路上,积累了友情,收获了爱情...(第一次发,都是二灿原创。如有相似之处,应属巧合,请看发表日期,侵权必删~~~~)
  • 山妹

    山妹

    《山妹》收集了作者多年来发表于省内外报刊上,表现故乡的山、故乡的水、故乡的人、故乡的事的数十篇散文作品,这些来自生活底层的、原汁原味的、带着鲜活血丝的作品,犹如一股从山涧流出的潺潺清泉。