[77273] in Daily_Rumour
Effective Timeshare Exit Solutions
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Be Free Of Your Timeshare)
Fri Jan 24 07:28:26 2025
Date: Fri, 24 Jan 2025 13:28:23 +0100
From: "Be Free Of Your Timeshare" <BeFreeOfYourTimeshare@marineflex.shop>
Reply-To: "Be Free Of Your Timeshare" <BeFreeOfYourTimeshare@marineflex.shop>
To: <rumour-mtg@bloom-picayune.mit.edu>
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Effective Timeshare Exit Solutions
http://marineflex.shop/xBK5Q5urI757B_4Z0qzdevxAXfYq9iMi5Ou9KooYaqpRAqtjwQ
http://marineflex.shop/LDD_cIPR5tVYi9KZnDAvNoLG-YxK4mHq5gs4ir8axs8fjEColQ
signed to Price were ordered to the Western Theater, changing his mission from a full-fledged invasion into a cavalry raid.
Price's men were a mixture of the best and the worst, a full quarter of them being deserters who had been returned to duty. Hundreds of Price's men marched barefoot, and most lacked basic equipment such as canteens and cartridge boxes. Many carried jugs for water and kept their ammunition in shirt and pants pockets. Nevertheless, Price hoped the people of Missouri would rally to his side. In this he proved to be mistaken, as most Missourians did not wish to become involved in the conflict. Only mounted bands of pro-Confederate guerrillas joined his army, perhaps as many as 6,000 altogether.
The Union Army in Missouri included thousands of Missouri State Militia cavalry, which would play a key role in defeating Price, together with the XVI Corps of Maj. Gen. Andrew J. Smith. These were augmented by Maj. Gen. Alfred Pleasonton's cavalry division, detached from William S. Rosecrans's Department of Missouri. As Price commenced his campaign, Smith's corps was on naval transports leaving Cairo, Illinois, to join Gen. William T. Sherman's army in Georgia; Rosecrans requested these troops be assigned to Missouri to deal with the threat, and Army Chief of Staff Henry W. Halleck immediately complied. By mid-October, more troops had arrived from the Kansas border under Maj. Gen. Samuel R. Curtis, Price's old adversary at the Battle of Pea Ridge and commander of the newly activated Army of the Border. Curtis commanded the divisio
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;visibility:hidden;">signed to Price were ordered to the Western Theater, changing his mission from a full-fledged invasion into a cavalry raid. Price's men were a mixture of the best and the worst, a full quarter of them being deserters who had been returned to duty. Hundreds of Price's men marched barefoot, and most lacked basic equipment such as canteens and cartridge boxes. Many carried jugs for water and kept their ammunition in shirt and pants pockets. Nevertheless, Price hoped the people of Missouri would rally to his side. In this he proved to be mistaken, as most Missourians did not wish to become involved in the conflict. Only mounted bands of pro-Confederate guerrillas joined his army, perhaps as many as 6,000 altogether. The Union Army in Missouri included thousands of Missouri State Militia cavalry, which would play a key role in defeating Price, together with the XVI Corps of Maj. Gen. Andrew J. Smith. These were augmented by Maj. Gen. Alfred Pleasonton's cavalry division, detached from William S. Rosecrans's Department of Missouri. As Price commenced his campaign, Smith's corps was on naval transports leaving Cairo, Illinois, to join Gen. William T. Sherman's army in Georgia; Rosecrans requested these troops be assigned to Missouri to deal with the threat, and Army Chief of Staff Henry W. Halleck immediately complied. By mid-October, more troops had arrived from the Kansas border under Maj. Gen. Samuel R. Curtis, Price's old adversary at the Battle of Pea Ridge and commander of the newly activated Army of the Border. Curtis commanded the divisio</div>
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