[105] For lumber up the St. Mary's River, which separates Georgia from Florida.
[107] The history of the Department had been defined as "a military picnic."
[108] A paper published at Beaufort.
[109] Haunt of the drum-fish.
[110] The War Department ordered the sales to go forward, leaving the restrictions to be arranged by Hunter, Saxton, and the Commissioners in charge. See p. [165].
[111] Brigadier-General Edward E. Potter, Foster's Chief of Staff.
[112] That is, hoed over again and new furrows made for the next crop.
[113] Brigadier-General Thomas G. Stevenson, originally colonel of the Twenty-Fourth Massachusetts, was arrested by General Hunter and soon after released.
[114] The immediate cause of this trouble was a disagreement about the extent of Hunter's authority over Foster and his command while they were in the Department of the South, but the underlying difficulty was that Foster and his officers distrusted Hunter as an anti-slavery zealot.