Not! or at least, not all, not yet.
Some more evidence that Confederate government wasn’t supplying enough blankets for its troops in the field. From the Richmond Daily Dispatch December 17, 1863:
To the patriotic.
–As numbers of the soldiers of Hays’s Louisiana brigade are in the field without blankets, it is hoped that the patriotic will come to their assistance and supply the want. –Blankets sent to the care of the Matron of the 6th Louisiana regiment, at W T Lindsey’s feed store, corner Marshall and 5th sts, will be thankfully received and duly forwarded.
Virginia had to seem real cold for Hays’s “Louisiana Tiger” Brigade
As if the blanket shortage wasn’t bad enough, here’s a Richmond editorial opposing a levy en masse – round up the deserters, don’t draft newspaper editors.
From the Richmond Daily Dispatch December 17, 1863:
Stragglers, deserters, and absentees.
The Secretary of War, referring to these characters in his report, says that the effective force of the army is but little over half or two-thirds of the men whose names are on the muster rolls.
An astounding state of things, indeed.–What are we to think of the discipline of the army? What are we to expect in the future, if such evils are to remain unchecked? And some members of Congress talk of extending the conscript age, and making a levy en masse of the people, (when the present number of exempts cannot provide food for the remainder,) in order to make up the deficiencies arising from the straggling, absenteeism, and desertion of men whose presence in the army would make it large enough for all practical purposes?
Is not the obvious remedy to bring back the stragglers, absentees, and deserters, and make them perform their duty, instead of enlarging the limits of conscription, only to engender a fresh batch of stragglers, absentees, and deserters more numerous than the last? If military discipline cannot keep men of the present military age in the army, how is it to keep those who are not half so fit for service? We should be sorry indeed to believe that the present evil cannot be remedied, for it is an evil that will increase instead of diminish, by putting men in the army whose prime of life has past, and whose home ties are stronger and more pressing than those of younger men who have no one dependent on their exertions.–For our own part, we believe that if Congress will devote a very moderate degree of attention to the maturing of measures for the return of stragglers, deserters, and absentees to the army, it will accomplish a hundred-fold more for the efficiency of our army and the success of our cause than it ever could by a levy en masse of the people.
The crime of straggling, absenteeism, and desertion from the Southern army, are in finitely more scandalous and infamous than the same officers in the Yankee army. They are invaders; we defending all that man holds dear. Such crimes against society, against honor, against their own faithful comrades, are past all endurance. That the valiant and loyal heroes, who, for nearly three long years, have stood firmly at their posts, many of them never once seeing their Homes, should be forsaken in this way by those whose interests are as great as their own in the success of our cause, is, in itself, an abomination which deserves the severest scourge of the civil and military laws.
Let Congress, and the whole nation, rise up at once and compel every soldier absent from the army to go back at once, join his comrades, and help to save his country.