[226982] in SIPB-AFS-requests

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Reliable, Guaranteed, Timeshare Exit

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (BeFreeOfYourTimeshare)
Fri Apr 18 10:30:24 2025

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Date: Fri, 18 Apr 2025 16:17:19 +0200
From: "BeFreeOfYourTimeshare" <BeFreeOfYourTimeshare@translatorenence.click>
Reply-To: "BeFreeOfYourTimeshare" <BeFreeOfYourTimeshare@translatorenence.click>
Subject: Reliable, Guaranteed, Timeshare Exit
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Reliable, Guaranteed, Timeshare Exit


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http://translatorenence.click/Uw8Ntbcp6ZILPj8fo9XBj3m4sko61notgsOs68SZS_0wyP8n6A


il 16, Steele learned that 5,000 bushels of corn were located about 15 miles (24 km) from Camden, on the road to Washington. Steele tasked his quartermaster, Captain Charles A. Henry, with capturing the cache. Command of the foraging expedition went to Colonel James M. Williams, commander of the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry Regiment. Williams was informed by Thayer that forage was reportedly plentiful in the area around White Oak Creek. The 1st Kansas Colored was a unit of African-American soldiers, most of whom were formerly enslaved in Arkansas and Missouri. Most Confederate soldiers strongly resented the use of African-American troops, viewing it as a form of servile insurrection. Also, most Confederates did not view the African-American troops as parties to the rules of war. Confederate Lieutenant General E. Kirby Smith, the commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department, had earlier stated that his officers should give "no quarter to armed negroes and their officers". The Confederates had a special dislike for Kansas troops in general, as the soldiers from that state had a reputation for excessive pillaging and destruction.

Black and white photograph of a bearded man seated in a chair facing the camera
Brigadier General Samuel Bell Maxey, the Confederate commander
Early on the morning of April 17, Williams set out from Camden with 198 wagons. The wagon escort included 438 soldiers from the 1st Kansas Colored, as well as 195 cavalrymen taken from the 2nd Kansas Cavalry Regiment, 6th Kansas Cavalry Regiment, and 14th Kansas Cavalry Regiment, along with tw

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<p style="color:#FFFFFF;">il 16, Steele learned that 5,000 bushels of corn were located about 15 miles (24 km) from Camden, on the road to Washington. Steele tasked his quartermaster, Captain Charles A. Henry, with capturing the cache. Command of the foraging expedition went to Colonel James M. Williams, commander of the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry Regiment. Williams was informed by Thayer that forage was reportedly plentiful in the area around White Oak Creek. The 1st Kansas Colored was a unit of African-American soldiers, most of whom were formerly enslaved in Arkansas and Missouri. Most Confederate soldiers strongly resented the use of African-American troops, viewing it as a form of servile insurrection. Also, most Confederates did not view the African-American troops as parties to the rules of war. Confederate Lieutenant General E. Kirby Smith, the commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department, had earlier stated that his officers should give &quot;no quarter to armed negroes and their officers&quot;. The Confederates had a special dislike for Kansas troops in general, as the soldiers from that state had a reputation for excessive pillaging and destruction. Black and white photograph of a bearded man seated in a chair facing the camera Brigadier General Samuel Bell Maxey, the Confederate commander Early on the morning of April 17, Williams set out from Camden with 198 wagons. The wagon escort included 438 soldiers from the 1st Kansas Colored, as well as 195 cavalrymen taken from the 2nd Kansas Cavalry Regiment, 6th Kansas Cavalry Regiment, and 14th Kansas Cavalry Regiment, along with tw</p>
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