“Very respectfully, your obedient servant,
“M. Slaughter,
“Mayor.”
To this General Sumner responded the same day,—
“Mayor and Common Council of Fredericksburg, VA.:
“Your letter of this afternoon is at hand, and, in consideration of your pledges that the acts complained of shall cease, and that your town shall not be occupied by any of the enemy’s forces, and your assertion that a lack of transportation renders it impossible to remove the women, children, sick, wounded, and aged, I am authorized to say to you that our batteries will not open upon your town at the hour designated.
“General Patrick will meet a committee or representative from your town to-morrow morning, at nine o’clock, at the Lacy House.
“Very respectfully, your obedient servant,
“E. V. Sumner,
“Brevet Major-General, U. S. Army, Commanding Division.”
As the inference from the correspondence was that the shelling was only postponed, the people were advised to move with their valuables to some place of safety as soon as possible. Without complaint, those who could, packed their precious effects and moved beyond reach of the threatened storm, but many preferred to remain and encounter the dangers rather than to leave their homes and valuables. The fortitude with which they bore their trials quickened the minds of the soldiers who were there to defend them. One train leaving with women and children was fired upon, making some confusion and dismay among them, but the two or three shells did no other mischief, and the firing ceased.