Showing posts with label 3rd MI CAV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 3rd MI CAV. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 26, 2017

1st Lieutenant Charles Wright Wills: Sunday, July 27, 1862

Headquarters, 1st Brigade Cavalry Division,
Tuscumbia, Ala., July 27, 1862 (Sunday).

We received orders for our brigade to march on the 19th, and started the 21st. We only made Jacinto that night, when the colonel and myself stayed with Gen. Jeff. C. Davis, who is a very approachable, pleasant and perfectly soldier-like man. There is a strong sprinkling in him, though, of the Regular Army and West Point. Next day we rejoined the command and marched 15 miles, camped at Bear Creek, 22 miles west of this place and just on the Mississippi and Alabama line. Thursday we joined General Morgan's division and that night the brigade camped within four miles of Tuscumbia, and the headquarters came on into town. This is a perfect little Eden. Houses for 2,200 people with only 1,200 living here at present. We stayed at the hotel Thursday night, and the old negro who lighted me to my room amused me considerably with his account of General Turchin's proceedings here. Turchin brought the first federal force across the Tennessee in Alabama, and I guess he “went it loosely.” The old Negro said that he only had 1,200 men and brought no luggage, knapsacks or anything else with him, but went away with 300 wagons, and everything there was in the country worth taking. That his men made the white women (wouldn't let the colored women) do their cooking and washing, and that although they only brought one suit of clothes, they put on a new one every morning and always looked as though they had just stepped from a bandbox. People here hate General Mitchell's whole command as they do the d---1, and many of them more. Well, we've settled once more, and I'll be contented if allowed to stay here for sometime. We're guarding about 100 miles of railroad from Iuka to Decatur, and it promises to be pretty rough work. Day before yesterday a guerilla party swooped down on a station 24 miles east of here where General Thomas had 160 men and captured all but 20 of them. We are relieving General Thomas' command from duty here, but the Rebels saved us the trouble of relieving that party. We sent out a force yesterday of three companies and the Rebels surprised and killed and captured 20 of them. I have just heard that there has been a fight eight miles south of here to-day, between our cavalry and the Rebels, no particulars yet. 'Tis the 3d Michigan that has suffered so far. The 7th Illinois are out now after the party that surprised the Michiganders yesterday, but have not heard of them since they started yesterday p. m. We are quartered in the house of a right good secesh, and are enjoying his property hugely. His pigs will be ripe within a week, and we'll guard them after our style. The old fashion is played out as far as this brigade is concerned. We take what is necessary and give vouchers, which say the property will be paid for at the close of the war, on proof of loyalty. This valley is 60 or 80 miles long, 15 miles wide and the most beautiful country imaginable. It is now one vast cornfield. The residences in this town are superb, and the grounds most beautifully ornamented and filled with shrubbery. There is a spring here that throws out 17,000 cubic feet of water each minute. It supplies the town. General Thomas, whom we relieved, has gone to Huntsville to join Buell. I think they are going to Chattanooga then. People are intensely secesh here, and whine most mournfully when compelled to take the oath, or even to give their parole of honor not to give information to the enemy. Our headquarters is a mile from any troops, just for the quiet of the thing. Peaches are just in season now, and there are oceans of them here. Blackberries are still to be found, and we have plenty of apples.

The weather is beautiful, not too warm and still require my double blanket every night, and often cool at that. We have information that Hardee with a force is marching on this place, and it is the most probable rumor that I have heard since the evacuation. Time will tell.

SOURCE: Charles Wright Wills, Army Life of an Illinois Soldier, p. 117-9

Thursday, June 15, 2017

1st Lieutenant Charles Wright Wills: March 6, 1862

Near New Madrid, Mo., March 6, 1862.

What oceans of fun we are having here. Here goes for all of it to date, and I'll be lucky if I'm able to tell you the finale. We went down to Commerce the 26th of February. Troops were scattered everywhere over the town and vicinity for 15 miles about. Could form no idea of the number there, but it was variously estimated at from 15,000 to 45,000. On the 28th we started, our regiment in advance, and camped that night at Hunter's farm, the same place we stopped last fall when going to Bloomfield under Oglesby. We reached Hunter's at 2 o'clock p. m., and at 11 the same morning Jeff Thompson had been there waiting for us with six pieces of cannon. He skedaddled, but still kept in the neighboring swamps. The next morning we again started in advance and after a ride of five miles heard firing about the same distance ahead. We let the horses go and in a very short time were within the limits of the muss. We came up with a company of cavalry from Bird's Point standing in line at the end of a lane, about a mile down which we could see Thompson's forces drawn up with his artillery “in battery.” He saw us about as quick as we got up, and limbered up in double quick and scooted. Then the fun commenced. We chased him for 15 miles over a splendid straight, wide, level road, which he strewed With blankets, guns, hats, and at last dropped his artillery. A dozen of our boys kept up the chase until within a half mile of New Madrid, where they captured a wagon load of grain and a nigger, and returned at leisure. We caught a captain, 1st. lieutenant and some privates. Next day, the 2d of March, our regiment went down to New Madrid to reconnoiter. A regular colonel went along to draw a map of the country. We went it blind right into the edge of town, where we ran onto a lot of infantry. As fighting wasn't the object, we filed off to the left into a cornfield to get a new view of town. We were going slowly down on the town in line of battle, when a battery opened on us right, smartly. We got out of that, but in good order. Only one shell touched us and that burst right under a horse's nose. One piece bruised the horse a little and knocked the rider off, but did not hurt the man at all, and the horse is now fit for duty again. Almost miraculous, wasn't it? There were lots of shell and balls fell around us. On the 3d the whole army got here and we again marched on the burg. The gunboats opened on us and we had to draw back. That day three 64-pound shells burst within 30 yards of me. We have been lying, since then, about two miles from town. They throw a shell over here occasionally but haven't hurt any body yet at this distance. To-day the cavalry have been out again to see if the gunboats have left, (that's all that keeps us from taking the town). The boats were still there and again shelled us, killing one man and a horse in the Michigan 3d. They killed one man on the 3d in the 39th Ohio, and the same shell wounded several others. Yesterday 2,000 or 3,000 men went around New Madrid down the river ten miles to Point Pleasant, but were kept off by the damned gunboats, just like we are here. If two or three of our gunboats could only slip down far enough to see their gunboats (two of them) and steamboats coming and going with their secesh flags flying. They have burned a half dozen houses in town since we came here. Don't know what for. Brigadier General Pope who is in command here has been made a major general. The colonel has just come from his quarters, and reports that Foote will be here with his gunboats day after to-morrow at farthest. We have been scouting all afternoon and I'm blamed tired. I took four men and went it alone. Had a good time but got lost and didn't get back until 8 p. m. Captured a lot of ginger snaps, and had a good talk with a handsome widow, while the boats were firing at the Michigan cavalry on our left. These shells don't scare a fellow half as much as the thoughts of them do. Why you really don't mind it at all. I don't like the idea of those musket balls, but maybe that is also worse than the reality.

SOURCE: Charles Wright Wills, Army Life of an Illinois Soldier, p. 63-5

Sunday, March 4, 2012

Cairo Items

CAIRO, Feb. 19. – The Chicago Committee and Surgeons have been assigned, some to Mound City and some to Paducah.  There is no great necessity for nurses, and there is as many here now as can profitably be employed.

Another consignment of rebels will reach here to-night or to-morrow.

There is nothing later form Donelson.

The Michigan 3d Cavalry arrived here this evening from St. Louis.

From recent investigations we are enabled to state that the whole number of killed, on the part of the Federals, at the recent battle of Donelson is about [300], and in killed wounded, prisoners and missing, the number will reach 1,000.  This is reliable.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 22, 1862, p. 3

Sunday, April 10, 2011

From Cairo

CAIRO, Feb. 19.

The Chicago committee and surgeons have been assigned some to Paducah and some to Mound City.  There is no great necessity for nurses, as many being now here as can profitably be employed.

Another consignment of rebels will reach here to-night or to-morrow.

Nothing new from Ft. Donelson.

The Michigan 3d Cavalry arrived her to-night from St. Louis.

From recent investigations we are enabled to state that the whole number of killed on the part of the Federals at the recent battle of Fort Donelson, is about 300.  The killed, wounded, prisoners and missing will reach 1,000.  This is reliable.

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Friday Morning, February 21, 1862, p. 1

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Medical View Of The Condition Of The Iowa Troops At St. Louis

(By D. L. McGugin, M. D., Surgeon and Medical Inspector, Benton Barracks.)

( Concluded. )

The mumps came among the men to assert their right to inflict pain and suffering and as if to cap the climax of eruptive diseases, there have been a number of cases of small pox and varioloid. From this last the regiments from Iowa have escaped thus far, and as they have all been vaccinated it is hoped they are fully protected.

It is a subject of wonder to me that so many aft attained to their majority without having contracted the measles. It is curious to observe that an equal proportion of each regiment have taken the disease, which leads me to the conclusion that vital statistics would show a certain per cent, greater than is supposed, who have never suffered from the disease, in every community.

In my desire to afford all the satisfaction in my power, I have been compelled to resort to some medical terms, the better to convey the information so much desired on the part of the people of the State. Almost every intelligent individual is, or ought to be informed in some degree of the anatomy and physiology of the lungs and of respiration and therefore will pardon me if I may not have expressed myself as plainly as I could have done. In looking over what I have written I do not see that I could have resorted to simpler terms that would have been as expressive on the conditions, with all the particular circumstances.

Such then were the chief agents in the production of so much disease and death among the soldiers, and which has startled and surprised the friends, relatives and neighbors of those who have enlisted and are now in the service. If you will but obtain a record of the sick and then compare the mortality, the latter will not appear so startling after all. For instance, in the 3d Michigan there are in quarters in one day reported to me 265 sick and in Hospital 50, and that regiment has averaged 250 in all during the past month. I have not at hand the statistics, but when they come to be examined it will be found that the result will not prove so startling after all.

And yet it is sad to witness even the amount we have had and I am free to believe that it could not be averted. The regimental hospitals, some of which are in private dwellings which were the property, in some instances, of rebel sympathizers and aiders and abettors of treason, were not calculated for hospitals, although large and fine residences. They could not be regulated very well, and it was very difficult to get the nurses to understand their duty and to perform it even when they knew it. Men nurses are not as neat nor as thoughtful as the females, either in keeping the apartments or apparel clean, or in preparing food properly for the patients. And yet, after much care and instruction they are now in such a condition as to call forth the highest encomiums from the President of the Sanitary Commission of St. Louis as regards their condition.

I have enumerated some of the diseases which in their several forms have seized upon the soldiers and have carried many of them to their silent tombs. I have seen a number stricken down with disease and die, who had fought bravely upon the battle field and escaped the balls and shot of the enemy. I witnessed a touching spectacle in which the hospital of the 7th Iowa Infantry, (Col. Lauman’s,) which had covered itself all over with the glory in the bloody struggle of Belmont. Two brave young men had languished for some weeks with pneumonia, and upon my daily visits I was particularly interested in them. They appeared to be about twenty years of age, but their countenances, although changed by disease, still wore an expression of intelligence and refinement. One day I left them without hope of recovery for them, although Surgeon Witter had exerted every effort in their behalf. Their youthful vigor had made a strong stand against disease, but they were drawn down lower and lower, until finally the great conqueror Death triumphed. Upon my visit next morning I found they had both died within an hour of each other, and their comrades were performing the sad duty of preparing them for their place in the silent sand. There they lay; their lungs had ceased to breath – the heart to propel the vital current, and all was still and death quiet and stony stillness marked their finely moulded forms: for despite their lingering illness, they still preserved more or less of the fineness of outline and symmetry of proportion which characterizes the form of youth in healthful vigor. I thought, as I looked with admiration upon their lifeless forms, what retribution was in reservation for those who had caused the necessity for such multiplied and great sacrifices. Poor fellows; I thought, too, of their mothers, sisters and friends; what great sacrifices they had made for their country, in giving these youths that our country and its institutions may be restored and perpetuated.

“They now sleep their last sleep – they have fought their last battle. No sound can awake them to glory again.”

From the spirit of the synopsis of the lecture of the reverend Gentleman, I was led to the inference that he thought a reformation was needed among the officers in the matter of caring for the men. In this I may be in error; but, if not, I deem it my duty to say that our officers displayed a most commendable interest in the well being of the men, from the lowest to the highest in command. But it was impossible for them to avoid the silent and intangible agents, which have been so potent and active in predisposing and exciting disease. – My opportunities for observation are equal to those of any other in the cantonment; and I cannot now see when I look back how these silent agencies for mischief could have been thwarted, unless the commanders of regiments had disobeyed orders, and taken their men upon some knoll, and there pitched their tents, and thus to suffer a violation of general orders making them liable to be put under arrest and tried by a court martial. Those that were sent from these barracks to the field, and the parts of regiments that had leave to erect their tents and take their quarters in them, have comparatively escaped disease, proving clearly and conclusively the correctness of my opinion, some time since embodied in a report to headquarters. Men in time of war must obey their superior officers. The Colonel has his power; the Brigadier General controls and commands him; the Major General holds the reins upon him again; while he again is subject to supreme command. It is a little despotism from beginning to end, and it is necessary that it should be so, otherwise all would be commanders and all would be leaders.

Another fact must be observed and considered, and that is, that this government has done more in the same space of time to raise, equip, and supply an army of its immense size than any nation has ever done; and that, too, under the most embarrassing circumstances. The magnitude of this work would not allow it to provide such comforts and accommodations as the majority of the men who compose it find at home. I am proud to know that the government has been able to accomplish so much, and carry out so grand a scheme. Where its management had to be entrusted to men inexperienced in military matters and the wants of the soldiers, it could not be very reasonably expected that every part would be perfect, or that every defect would be foreseen by those who are wanting in experience, for by this we learn facts which cannot be gained by any other means.

I therefore think it unfair for those who have little to do in the labor, toil, and responsibilities of so great an undertaking, to find fault when they themselves do not suffer any of the discomforts, and speak disparagingly of the conduct of others, when they know so little of the circumstances by which they are surrounded and the difficulties which they encounter. Persons enjoying the comforts of a happy home, with every blessing around them, a blazing cheerful fire in the winter’s cold to defend against the howling blasts which are provoked into “angry soughs” because they are not permitted to enter in; who sleep upon soft beds or couches of ease; who have every delicacy, and enjoy the liberty of going and coming at all hours without interruption, whose actions are free and untrammeled; who are enjoying the security purchased and preserved by the sacrifices of those in the service of their country; it is quite an easy matter for these to find fault, exaggerate, and misrepresent. – Look at the soldier! He is out early in the morning whether it rains or shines, whether it is calm or stormy, whether it is wet or dry, he must be abroad, and whatever betide he must endure it. He tramps, tramps, tramps, whether the mud be knee deep, whether it be frozen and therefore rough – whether it be a glare of sleet or ice, he must endure it until the hour comes when he is allowed to prepare his dinner, without the show of silver plate, china, fine steel knives and three pronged silver forks with napkins and their rings to boot. Tin cups and tin plates, pot-metal knives and forks, accompanied with iron spoons are refinements in the army. The sound of the bugle or the roll of the drum calls them out again, and it is drill again. The night may be passed on guard, and no matter how pitiless the storm, they must endure it, because the sleepless guardians of the night. At nine the “taps” put out the few lights, and they retire to sleep upon their hard bunks, or if in tents, upon the ground, to rise again at dawn of day to partake of their crude food, and then to drill or parade again. And yet these men complain less than those at home, and find less fault, because they know more about everything and readily understand the whole ponderous machinery.

Some of the papers in our state have belched forth invectives against the officers connected with the regiments, and in a particular manner the medical officers. I do not deny that there as some medical men in the service who dishonor it and their profession. The reason is, that they are very often selected by men who are not always competent to judge of medical acquirements. But in the main, the medical men in this cantonment will compare favorably with those in any department of the service; and most certainly they have been attentive faithful and laborious in their application to duty. I have had opportunities afforded me with their efforts, their constancy and fidelity to the trusts imposed upon them. The people should know that the surgeon of a regiment, if he [does] his duty faithfully and well, has the heaviest responsibility imposed upon him of all the officers in the army. The commander may lead his men into battle and win a victory, and have his name inscribed high in the lists of fame, yet not a word is said of the surgeon who has dressed the wounds and saved the flickering spark of life as it was fast oozing out of some torn artery or large vein. These mangled limbs, these mutilated forms have purchased the victory and paid the highest price ever paid for the fame and renown of their leader; and yet he who saves to life, the world, and their families, these precious materials, although maimed and deformed, rests from his labors and his name is not even mentioned. – “The Surgeons were busy with the wounded” is the alpha and omega of all that is said of them. They are a class of men desirable only from necessity. Officers high in command, will here their suggestions and adopt what their own limited conception of the sanitary laws may appear to them as necessary. And yet the secular world are too prone to reflect upon those who, on the one hand has to contend against a secret, and intangible enemy, who only shows that he is abroad by the number of victims shown by the way, and on the other, their hands are tied while making the attempt.

To defend the commanding officers and surgeons, and to show what causes existed for so much sickness and mortality, that the people may know and understand; have been the motives which have dictated this communication, which I regret is quite too long. I have been sure that the people did not comprehend the reason because they had been taught to know that these barracks have cost such large sums of money, and per consequence the comforts were in proportion. This should have and might have been, and yet not one officer in all these barracks had a finger in their construction.

I trust your lecturer has recounted these facts, and if he have not, because it was not in the immediate sphere of his duties, you will please give this to the people through your columns, and you will satisfy those who may confide in the views and the conclusions, and oblige.

Yours very respectfully,

D. L. McGUGIN

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Friday Morning, February 14, 1862, p. 2

NOTE: This is the second of a two part article. For its first part, please click HERE.

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Medical View Of The Condition Of The Iowa Troops At St. Louis

(By. D. L. McGugin, M.D., Surgeon and Medical Inspector, Benton Barracks.)

BENTON BARRACKS, Feb. 2, 1862.

EDITOR OF GAZETTE:– Dear Sir:– A commanding officer of the 14th Regt. Of Iowa Infantry handed me a copy of your paper in which there is an editorial article, highly, and no doubt, justly commendatory of a lecture delivered by the Rev. gentlemen of the State Sanitary Board.

While I am gratified beyond measure by the display of interest in the part of the people, in the welfare of the soldiers, yet I am very sure that they are not fully advised as to the causes and their nature, which have produced so much affliction among the soldiery composing the regiments from our State. The Reverend lecturer may have adverted to them, and yet I am very well assured that to understand them fully it would require a much longer visit than any member of the Sanitary board favored us with.

In view of these facts and in order to afford all the satisfaction in my power to the people of Iowa, who have sent into the field so many brave soldiers to suffer and many of them to die, I will endeavor to do so by describing some of the circumstances and phenomena which have been the subject of investigation, and which I believe to lie at the bottom, as active predisposing agencies of the diseases and of giving power to their malignancy. The fatal termination of so many cases has been as much deplored here as their enumeration was startling to the good people of Iowa and elsewhere.

My position has given me advantages of general observation, while at the same time its responsibilities would tend to bestir me to investigation. From these considerations it becomes me to state in detail the results of these inquiries and observations which is incumbent upon me, because it is due to the people, the friends of those who have fallen sacrifices, and to myself, because my sympathies and interests have been intimately blended with the State.

First then in the list of causes and which exerted great power, was the unfortunate selection of this place for a cantonment. A just apology may be found for its projectors in the fact, that at first it was meant only for a small barracks – for a kind of encampment for those who were to be sent into the field and who were awaiting equipments and stores, before being sent into active service. It was made a school of instruction, for these that their time might be profitably occupied in perfecting their drill and discipline and no one dreamed that it would attain to its present magnitude and proportions, being that of the largest encampment on the continent.

The ground on which it is located is flat – a kind of basin, and when dry is certainly a beautiful parade ground. The soil is black loam, composed of vegetable matters partially decomposed. It is surrounded on the southwest side by numerous basins or lakes of water, and from this direction the winds generally prevail. From the surfaces and surrounding of these, evaporations take place, so great a degree that this whole cantonment has been overhung until 10 o’clock A.M., with a misty fog or vapor, rendering the atmosphere murky, damp, cold, and chilling. That it might be made a better parade ground, on which to display their forces on dress parade, drill and inspection, the surface which was rendered somewhat uneven by the existence of numerous little tumuli, regarded by some as Indian mounds, was leveled down and made even. Every intelligent observer has observed the unfortunate results which usually flow from upturning, for the first time a large prairie. Malarious diseases will occur to those living upon or contiguous to it in autumn, and during the winter pneumonias of a low, lingering type. I might refer to facts connected with the spread of cholera, and to numerous other circumstances, but it is not necessary, as it is so well known as to become an undoubted fact. This surface was still more thoroughly and frequently exposed and disturbed by the tread of so many horses, by the construction of drains and culverts, of streets, avenues and numerous buildings.

In the winter season, in a climate like this, where the humidity is not frozen as fast as it rises, and therefore the air kept pure and clear as in the far North, so much moisture evolved must prove highly detrimental to health and vigor of constitution even under the most favorable circumstances, and with all the means of comfort and capacities for protection.

Again:– The vast aggregation of human beings upon a plot of ground, not more than three square miles, to the number at one time of near twenty thousand souls within this area, beside half that number of horses.

Had I time I would show the great consumption of atmospheric air by each individual, by which that element is deprived of its healthful properties. Not this only but at every expiration there is a large amount of poisonous matter thrown off. Beside this, there are exhalations from the skin, of a large amount of impurities, which contribute to the unhealthiness of the air. The vital elements of the atmospheric air in large cities are stolen away and their place supplied by that which is deleterious, and hence in these densely populated cities there is more sickness and a physical degradation when compared to the physical vigor displayed in the rural districts. It is true that conjoined with this are the habits of life – the indulgence in luxurious ease, and the unrestrained and unlicensed gratification of the animal appetites.

And again, these barrack buildings were also at first intended for temporary purposes, but have been from time to time added to until the camp has grown into its present immense proportions. The first nucleus being defective it was not altered and improved, but others of like structure and proportions were added, so as to preserve the type and symmetry. The laws and rules of health were not considered, and rather than change the plan and improve on the model, they grew on until they have extended to their present length. They are lightless almost, and as airless and gloomy within the apartments. Their floors are laid flat upon the carbonaceous loam or soil, and are actually lower then the surrounding surface in a large proportion of them, and therefore no currents of air are admitted beneath to drive out the poisonous breath uprising from the moist soil beneath, but is actually invited into these apartments by the partial vacui produced by a central stove heated up to red-heat by the soldiers, to protect themselves from the cold moist air obtruding itself through every cranny and crick in the floor. Those who huddle and crowd about these stoves will hold their places until compelled to yield to others and go back, with every pore of the skin pouring out its moisture, into the same distant corner to breathe the cold, damp, and poisonous air, and their perspiration suddenly arrested and the surface made cold. If it is evening and the “taps” sends them to bed they remain chilled through the night and wake up in the morning with a cough, sore throat, &c., &c. They might almost as well sleep in a cold, damp, dark cellar. Who so wanting in common intelligence cannot see that if these causes do not actually and immediately excite disease in some form, they would assuredly become potent predisposing agencies for future mischief.

This is still not all. These barracks were so laid off as to allow one apartment for a company of the usual number; but the troops came pouring in at one time so numerously that there was a clamorous demand for more room. To meet this unlooked for exigency two companies were crowded into one of these apartments in which there was no surplus room after one had pre-occupied it. The laws of hygiene were outraged by this packing process, and regarding this as the climax of imprudence she commenced the work of thinning them out of this cruel aggregation and unfortunately for the work was but to promptly, and unfortunately for the men and the service, as thoroughly, performed. This crowding was neither foreseen nor originally intended, but was at the time the work of necessity, and it is but just to say that no one was especially to blame for it. Under the most favorable conditions and situations, man is but the creature of circumstances, and in no sense is this postulate so well comprehended and understood as in a time of war.

Experience has abundantly proved that infectious diseases seek crowded communities, and the more especially if filth be the concomitant of this backing, which in a large majority of instances is the case. Indeed, under such circumstances, some form of eruptions will be engendered, in my opinion – even those which will subsequently contact, actually to reproduce them in others. But should it be conveyed into communities where cleanliness has not been observed, and where the people have been laboring under such predisposing agencies as the want of pure air and light, an infectious malady, when once introduced; will run like fire in the dry grass of the prairies. Under such circumstances, the measles, which had been lurking in some of the regiments during six months, made its advent into those regiments which has but recently come into the barracks, and soon spread with rapidity, and soon the hospitals, which are established in connection with the barracks, were full to overflowing, and the cases presented a character for malignancy which I had never before observed in any epidemic visitation in a practice of thirty-six years.

You will pardon me while I go a step or two farther, and endeavor to explain to the reader a fact or two in the nature of this disease, so that he can better understand why it was followed by the untoward and fatal results in so many cases. From what has been said, he would infer that any form of disease, which would be introduced among those exposed to the predisposing causes above enumerated, would assume a formidable character. He would also infer that of whatever character or type it would assume a low form, because all the circumstances preceding were calculated to reduce the stamina forces. Every one knows that in measles the skin is changed from a healthy to a diseased state; but every one does not know that the skin continues into the cavity of the mouth and lining it, and even into the stomach and bowels and the air passage of the lungs. As found here it is modified from that which covers the exterior body, and is called the mucus membrane. Now, in measles the skin is not alone affected, but it also attacks these mucous linings; and hence the constant hoarse and distressing cough on the one hand, and the irritation of the stomach and very often of the bowels on the other. I have seen cases of dysentery of a most distressing character in these hospitals, as one of the sequels of measles. Any one looking at the abundant eruption upon the skin, and refleet that these mucous membranes are in a like condition of inflammation and vascular congestion, will not wonder at these distressing symptoms and phenomena. Now, the outer skin, in a few days of this eruptive state, would begin to scale off or desquamate like bran. This is the derma, or outer skin. This old dead skin has been replaced by the new, which has been formed and which has displaced the old. That which has been so recently formed is tender, and highly sensitive to impressions from cold applied, and the circulation thus recently established is feeble and easily interrupted.

Pneumonia, (lung fever) followed in a large majority of the cases of measles, and for reasons, which will be very readily perceived. The circulation in the skin furnishes a large amount of blood, and this is necessary to the performance of its functions. If it be not in the skin it is still in the body somewhere and this somewhere is just where it ought not to be – perhaps encroaching upon some vital organ. It is most likely to take the direction to some organ already in a state of irritation at the time. If the liver or kidneys, or stomach, or lungs, or brain – any one of these is in a state of disease already, it will be invited in that direction, by the irritation then and there existing. Now because the lungs are compelled to carry on the office of function of respiration, the very air they breathe coming in contact with the mucous lining of the pulmonary air passages perpetuates the irritation there, and when cold is applied to the surface so as to drive the circulation inward, it is invited to the lungs and hence we have had pulmonary diseases to follow more frequently then any other form of disease.

Under this twofold power, namely, intropulsion from the skin and the strong attraction on the part of the irritation upon the air tubes, the momentum of rush is great for it is usually sudden, as it is terrible. In ordinary pneumonia, as every medical man knows, one tube of a lung only is diseased, and this the lower one on the side affected. The other lobe or lobes of that side and the other entire lung are left to carry on respiration, and thereby life is perpetuated until the disease is controlled, or it subsides. But in the epidemic of measles as it prevailed in this cantonment, those that relapsed and were sent to the hospitals, very often came in with all the lobes of one side congested and sometimes both lungs. Of course these cases very soon became asphyxiated unless the general circulation was speedily restored. The more mild forms at the beginning would linger on and sink into a low state of depression, and because of the physical degradation arising out of their mode of life prior to the attack of measles, it was very difficult to sustain the vital powers until the morbid state would pass away. Many of these cases would be complicated with erysipalatous inflammations, and so frequently did I observe this upon my daily round among the hospitals, that I became satisfied that a majority of the cases of pneumonitis following measles showed that the character of the inflammation was strictly of that type. The low form of the inflammation, the character of the discharge throw from the lungs and then the supervention of erysipelas upon the skin usually confined to the face, where circumstances which arrested my attention. If the vital forces had not been too far expended, the appearance of erysipelas upon the surface was usually hailed as a harbinger of good, by coming to the relief by transference to the surface of the disease upon the lungs. In this view I was sustained by Prof. Johnson of St. Louis, a very eminent and worthy gentleman.

There was still a more formidable disease than even the pneumonia which very often followed measles and which was Capillary Bronchitis. It was of this disease that the 12th Iowa infantry lost a most valuable officer and worthy gentleman, Capt. Tupper, of Decorah. I was called to see him, in consultation with his surgeon, two days before his death, and found that his was a case of this character. The disease in question consists in the blacking, with thick, tenacious mucus, of the fine, indeed the finest air tubes of the lungs. They are called capillary brochis because not larger than a hair (capillus), and these communicate directly with the air cells. Now, if the air does not reach to these cells, the blood is not revivified or aerated, and as the way to these cells, or in a large majority of them, is closed because these fine, hair-like tubes are blocked up, the oxygen does not reach the blood, nor can the poisonous material which is in the blood when it is sent to the lungs, and which here escapes, be allowed to do so, for the very reason that the oxygen cannot enter. It is in the residual air in the cells, but is re-absorbed into the system to add to the poison rapidly accumulating. Hence, there is a death like lividity of the countenance, intensely upon the lips and about the eyes; the tongue, and even the gums, become of that death blue aspect. The hands and the feet are blue and mottled, and, in extreme cases it extends to the knee. The breathing is most labored, and in the language must expressive, of my friend, Surgeon Andrews of the 3d Michigan cavalry, they become “tight” – a term which misled me at first, but it was so expressive of the condition of the respiration when he used it, that I preferred it. It is distressing to witness the efforts made to breathe, and the various positions they assume, if they have strength to do so. These cases prove fatal in one or two days, or they may live a fortnight, depending upon the number of the air tubes blocked up, for the gravity of the case mainly depended upon this. The surface was cool, unnaturally so, the pulse from 110 to 140 – stupor and great exhaustion. In some cases there was free expectoration of bubbling mucus, which was also highly tenacious; in a majority of cases, however, there was very little discharged. The sheet-anchor was in the use of alcoholic stimulants and tonics, with stimulating expectorants. Nauseating expectorants were contra-indicated because too depressing to the little of life left. It is difficult, nay, almost impossible, to contend against a disease when, as one of its consequences, and increasing as it progressed, the system is continually generating its own poison and accumulating materials for its own destruction. The air cannot get behind those barriers to free admission into the cells, and therefore these obstructions not expelled by expectoration. Examinations of those cases of the diphrite variety in children exhibit shreds or filaments which entirely fill up these fine air tubes, and are moulded and fashioned into their size and form.

Again: the measles leave other consequences in their train. Ophthalmia some times succeeds to it, and there is also the inflammation and suppuration of the glands of the ear, accompanied, in all cases, with dullness of hearing, and in some instances, complete deafness. A chronic disease of the larynx, or vocal-box, remains for some time so that the patient cannot raise his voice in a tone above that of a whisper. - As one of the Medical Board for the examination of those who may apply for discharges from the service, I have seen and examined numerous cases of those different affections in soldiers claiming disability. – There were very many cases of enlargement of the glands about the neck and beneath the jaw.

(Concluded to-morrow.)

– Published in The Davenport Daily Gazette, Davenport, Iowa, Thursday Morning, February 13, 1862, p. 2


NOTE: This is the first of a two part article. For its second part, please click HERE.

Friday, January 15, 2010

Brigadier-General W. L. Elliott

FIRST COLONEL, SECOND CAVALRY.

Washington L. Elliott was the first regular army officer appointed to the colonelcy of an Iowa regiment. In the early history of the war, it was the opinion of Governor Kirkwood, and of a majority of the people, that none but men of military education could be safely entrusted with the command of a regiment of volunteers; but it was all a mistake.

The place of General Elliott's nativity, and the date of his birth, I have been unable to learn; but in May, 1846, he was appointed from Pennsylvania to a second lieutenancy of mounted rifles, and served in the Mexican War. At the close of that war he served in New Mexico, and, in 1854, was promoted to a captaincy. In the fall of 1858, he distinguished himself in conflicts with the Navajoes, and, in the following year, was placed in command of Fort Bliss, Texas.

Captain Elliott was commissioned colonel of the 2d Iowa Cavalry on the 14th day of September, 1861, and by his energy and military ability soon made for himself and his regiment a most enviable reputation. Indeed, it has often been claimed as regards the Iowa troops that the 2d Infantry, the 2d Cavalry, and the 2d Battery, are the star troops of their respective arms of service; but this claim is certainly not founded in justice; though it may be conceded that the 2d Iowa Cavalry has done as much hard fighting as any other Iowa cavalry regiment.

On the 19th of February, 1862, which is the date of the commencement of their field-service, the 2d Iowa Cavalry arrived at Bird's Point, Missouri. Having watched the movements of the enemy for several days in the direction of Belmont and Columbus, the regiment started on the 27th instant in pursuit of Jeff. Thompson towards New Madrid, and after a march of thirteen days through the almost impassable swamps that here border the Mississippi, reached that place in time join the forces of General Pope in its capture. After the capture of Island No. 10, in which a detachment of the 2d, under Lieutenant Schnitger, took a conspicuous part, the regiment sailed for Hamburg Landing on the Tennessee River.

The services of the 2d Iowa and the 2d Michigan Cavalry regiments before Corinth, in the spring of 1862, gave to the 2d Brigade of General Pope's Cavalry Division a national reputation. From the 29th of April, the date of the capture and burning of the enemy's camp at Monterey, Mississippi, till the 30th of the following May, the 2d Iowa Cavalry took part in five distinct expeditions, and not less than ten skirmishes and engagements; and, in nearly all these operations, were joined by the 2d Michigan Cavalry, under the gallant Colonel Philip H. Sheridan. The most noteworthy of these expeditions is that which under Colonel Elliott in command of the 2d Brigade, left its camp near Farmington for Boonville, Mississippi, at one o'clock on the morning of the 27th of May, 1862. Connected with Colonel Elliott's exit from camp, is a laughable incident which I can not forbear relating. A new regiment, which had just come to the front, had its camp near the road over which Colonel Elliott passed. Its camp-guard was commanded by a lieutenant – an able lawyer, but at that time a green soldier. Soon after mid-night, hearing the heavy tramp of twenty-three hundred cavalry on a hard-beaten road, he supposed the enemy were upon him and, rushing to the tent of his Colonel, he broke through its fastenings, and thus reported:

"For God's sake, colonel get up: the enemy with ten thousand cavalry are upon us; and we are within half a mile of h—1!"

It was this Boonville Expedition of Colonel Elliott, which afforded General Pope the chief material for his celebrated report, of date, I think, the 3d of June, 1862; and it was really a most important affair. Moving from Farmington in a southerly direction, and crossing the Memphis and Charleston Railroad about ten miles west of Iuka. Colonel Elliott, from this point, marched in a south-westerly direction and, passing through the country intersected by the Tombigbee swamps, arrived before Boonville on the morning of the 30th of May, before day-light. The surprise was complete. Some two thousand prisoners were captured, the majority of them, however, being sick or convalescent. But the amount of rebel property destroyed was of chief importance. Beside three hundred kegs and barrels of powder, and large quantities of commissary-stores, ten thousand stand of arms and equipments to correspond, were destroyed. For his successes here, Colonel Elliot, was most highly complimented by General Pope.

The most gallant achievement of the 2d Iowa Cavalry, while under Colonel Elliott, was its charge on the rebel battery at Farmington, Mississippi, on the morning of the 9th of May, 1862. On the afternoon of the 8th of May, the divisions of Stanley and Payne, by order of General Pope, made an important reconnoissance in the direction of Corinth and Rienzi, surprising the enemy and driving them through and beyond the little village of Farmington. Then, the Federal forces fell back to the east side of the village and bivouacked for the night, Colonel Loomis' Brigade in advance. Thus things stood on the morning of the 9th when the guns of our sentinels gave notice of the advance of the enemy. Chafed by the surprise of the day before, which lost them their advance-line, they were moving in force to restore it; but Pope was resolved on maintaining his advanced position, and hastily dispatched General Plummer's Brigade to take position to the right, and somewhat in advance of Colonel Loomis. But these dispositions were not completed when the enemy were seen advancing in column by division. Soon two regiments of Plummer's Brigade broke in confusion, and fled to the swamps in their rear, when his two remaining regiments had to be withdrawn from the field.

Having hastily formed their line of battle just in rear of the large white house in the north-east portion of the town, and, where General Pope the day before had made his headquarters, they threw forward their batteries, and commenced shelling the position of Colonel Loomis. And now comes the gallant charge of the 2d Iowa, which had already arrived at the front:

"Moving the column to the top of the hill, I ordered Major Coon, with Companies H. G, C, and part of A, of the 2d Battalion, and Major Love's 3d Battalion, to charge the battery on our left in echelons of squadrons. Deploying the columns to the right and left when we had passed our infantry lines, we attacked the skirmishers and supports of the enemy, driving them in and killing and wounding some. The fire from the battery on our left, near the Farmington road, was very severe, but on account of the ground being impracticable, and the battery and supports protected by a fence, this could not be reached; yet the enemy's gunners evidently alarmed at the charge, ceased working their guns. Major Coon's Battalion, led by him, gallantly attacked the battery near the building known as the cotton-mill (the centre battery). Lieutenant Reily, commanding Company F of 3d Battalion, attacked and carried two guns in battery on our extreme right. The centre battery was fairly carried, the gunners driven from their guns, the enemy limbering up his guns without taking them off the field. Finding our horses badly blown from a long charge over rough ground, and the infantry of the enemy in great force, I under a heavy fire ordered all companies on my right to retreat to the right and rear, forming on the swamp-road, and those on my left to join the regiment in this road. I ordered Major Hepburn to move to the rear, retaining Major Coon with two companies to pick up the wounded and scattered. My orders were carried out better than I could have expected. My chief bugler's bugle was rendered useless in the charge. Four of my orderlies had their horses killed, and two of the orderlies were shot out of their saddles while transmitting orders.

"The conduct of officers and men was in every way commendable. Captains Lundy and Egbert, and Lieutenant Owen, were wounded near the enemy's guns; and Lieutenants Horton, Moore and Schnitger, all had horses killed under them. Captain D. J. Crocker, and Lieutenant Moore, of Company H; Captain McConnell, and Lieutenant Foster, of Company M; Captain Kendrick, of Company E; Captain Eaton, and Lieutenant Bilden, of Company L, all of the 1st Battalion, led in the finest manner by Major Hepburn, rode through the hottest fire, and were rallied by Major Hepburn on the right when retiring in fine style, forming in good order in rear of the swamp, to await orders. Major Coon, Captain H. Egbert, Captain William Lundy, Lieutenants Owen and Horton, of the L Battalion, led the charge on the right in the finest manner, riding boldly in advance of their commands, and in advance of the entire regiment. The daring of Lieutenant Queal, commanding Company B, was conspicuous, cheering his men to the very muzzles of the enemy's guns. Captain Bishop, of Company I, and Captain Graves, of Company D, obeyed my orders promptly, under a heavy fire. Lieutenant Schnitger, acting regimental-adjutant, and Lieutenant Metcalf, battalion-adjutant, did their duty to my entire satisfaction. Before, and at the time of the charge, Captain Freeman and Lieutenant Eystra, with detachments of Companies A, G and H, dismounted as skirmishers, did excellent service in the swamps on our left, holding the enemy's skirmishers in check. There were about four hundred men in the charge. Our loss will scarcely exceed fifty killed and wounded, fifty horses killed, and fifty rendered unserviceable from wounds."

Immediately after the 2d Cavalry had retired, the enemy advanced his infantry when, after a sharp fight between them and the brigade of Colonel Loomis, General Pope ordered his troops to withdraw to the east side of the creek. The enemy pursued no further. In this engagement, not only the Iowa troops, but, with the exceptions already mentioned, those from Illinois, Wisconsin and Missouri, distinguished themselves.

Dr. M. K. Taylor, afterward the able and courteous surgeon in charge of the United States General Hospital at Keokuk, was at the time surgeon of the 26th Illinois, Colonel Loomis, and was conspicuous in his efforts to rescue the wounded. He was among the last to leave the field, in charge of the dead and wounded.

The 17th Iowa arrived at the front that evening, and bivouacked near the camp of the 2d Iowa Cavalry. That night we first saw the bodies of dead men killed in battle, and for the first time heard the piteous groans of the wounded, and witnessed their unmitigable agonies.

For his promptness, and for his soldierly qualities discovered during the siege of Corinth and before, Colonel Elliott was promoted to brigadier-general, his commission dating the 11th of June, 1862. He was soon after made Chief of Cavalry to General Pope, and not long after, accompanied that general to Washington, and served with him in his unfortunate campaign on the Potomac. After General Pope was relieved of his command in the East, General Elliott accompanied him to St. Paul, Minnesota, where he remained till the winter of 1862-3. He was then transferred to the Army of the Cumberland, and made chief of Cavalry to General Thomas.

General Elliott is a smallish man, with stooping shoulders, sharp features and gray eyes. He is a man of great energy, and has the reputation of being a splendid cavalry officer.

SOURCE: Addison A. Stuart, Iowa Colonels and Regiments, p. 565-70

Monday, October 19, 2009

COLONEL NICHOLAS PERCZEL

FIRST COLONEL, TENTH INFANTRY.

Nicholas Perczel is a native of Hungary, where he was born in the year 1813. He has a military education, and passed a number of years in active service, before coming to this country. For several years, he has been a resident of Davenport, Iowa, where he has been engaged in the business of merchant and trader. He was made colonel of the 10th Iowa Infantry, on the 1st day of September, 1861, and held that position till the 1st of November, 1862, when he resigned his commission.

Authority to recruit the 10th Iowa Infantry was granted by the War Department to J. C. Bennett, in July, 1861. Mr. Bennett was afterward major of the regiment. He, aided by F. M. Mills, Esq., of Des Moines, a brother of the late Colonel Mills of the 2d Iowa, had nearly completed the regiment's enlistment, when it was ordered to rendezvous at Iowa City. The manner in which the regiment was officered created considerable dissatisfaction; but this will not be matter of interest, either to the old members of the regiment, or to the public.

Colonel Perczel first served with the 10th Iowa in Missouri. He was engaged in the skirmish near Charleston, on the morning of the 6th of January, 1862, his loss being eight killed, and sixteen wounded. These were the first men the 10th Iowa lost in battle. The colonel was also present at the capture of New Madrid, and Island No. 10; and with his regiment formed a part of the force which, at Tiptonville, captured five thousand of the enemy. After operations were completed in this direction, the 10th Iowa sailed with the command of General Pope to Hamburg Landing, on the Tennessee, and served with that general during the siege of Corinth, on the left of the besieging army.

Colonel Perczel commanded a brigade before Corinth, two regiments of which were his own and the 17th Iowa; and during the siege of that city was engaged in two important reconnoissances and skirmishes. The first of these was made on the afternoon of the 26th of May, with a force consisting of the 10th Iowa, and four pieces of artillery. With the enemy, this skirmish assumed the importance of an engagement; for, saying nothing of his wounded, he admitted a loss of one hundred and twenty-five in killed. The 10th Iowa, the only troops on our side that suffered loss, had only eight men wounded. The losses were so disproportionate as to give the above statement an air of improbability; but its truth is well vouched for.

On the morning of the 28th of May, two days later, the 17th Iowa and the 10th Missouri of the same brigade had a skirmish with the enemy, in which the losses were nearly as disproportionate. These troops were sent out under the immediate command of Colonel Holmes of the 10th Missouri; and moving against the enemy's extreme right, which was held by the commands of Price and Van Dorn, came within musket-range of the two strong forts on the hills to the south of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad. The enemy supposed they were being attacked in force, and came swarming out of their works and down the steep hills to oppose the advance; while their pickets, skirmishers and reserves, hurried with greater haste in the opposite direction. Corinth was evacuated that night, and, on passing over the ground the next morning, where the skirmish took place, ninety-three new graves were counted. The Union loss in this encounter was about thirty in killed and wounded.

On the fall of Corinth and the hasty retreat of the enemy, the division of General Schuyler Hamilton, to which Colonel Perczel's Brigade was attached, followed in pursuit, and marched as far south as Boonville, on the Mobile and Ohio Railroad. The route from Corinth lay through the heavily timbered swamps, which form the head-waters of the Tombigbee River, and which would be, at any season of the year, difficult of passage to a large army with baggage-trains and artillery. There was but little fighting; but, one day of the march it rained incessantly, which rendered the corduroy roads almost impassable. Add to this the fact that the army had for a long time been lying before Corinth inactive, and the hardships and fatigue of the march can be imagined. One scene on the road, at a point some six miles north of Boonville, will never be forgotten by those troops who, on the night of the 2d of June, ascended from the swamps to the up-lands, near mid-night. On an open, even, but gradually-sloping field, containing not less than two thousand acres, and facing the Corinth road to the north-east, just in front of where it rises from the bottom-lands and turns to the left, were encamped nearly two entire divisions. The previous afternoon had been rainy, and the soldiers, cold and wet, had built large and brilliant camp-fires throughout their entire encampment. The sky was still hung with dark, heavy clouds, which, as viewed from the point in the road above mentioned, formed the background of this magnificent scenery — the grandest I ever witnessed. It was literally a city of fire, and was ample compensation for the slippery, hazardous, mid-night-march over the never-to-be-forgotten one-mile-of corduroy.

Pursuit was made to a few miles south of Boonville; but the enemy, with the exception of some hundreds of stragglers and deserters, had made good his escape with his shattered legions. To pursue further would so extend the line of communications as to imperil a safe return; and a "right about" was therefore ordered to Corinth. Returning to the vicinity of Corinth, the 10th Iowa went into camp at Clear Springs, a place three and a half miles south of Corinth, and so called from the beautiful, translucent springs which gush out from the foot of the hills, on which the camp was made. The regiment remained here and at Jacinto, the county-seat of Tishamingo county, and some twenty miles south of Corinth, till the 18th of the following September; when, with the balance of General Rosecrans' command, it was ordered out to engage the forces of General Price, then supposed to be intrenching [sic] themselves near Iuka. In this heedless, blundering fight, the 10th Iowa held the left of its brigade, and, like the other regiments of its brigade, suffered severely.

The pursuit of the enemy in his hasty retreat on the morning of the 20th, and the bloody battle at Corinth on the 3d and 4th of the following October, and subsequent pursuit of the rebel forces to and beyond the Hatchie, form the next chapter in the history of this regiment. With the close of these operations also closed the colonelcy of Nicholas Perczel; for, as has already been stated, he resigned his commission on the first of the following November.

He had in the meantime been recommended for promotion to brigadier-general, but for some reason was not appointed by the President.

Among the officers of the 10th Iowa with whom I became acquainted early in the regiment's history, were Major, afterwards Lieutenant-Colonel Nathaniel McCalla, Captain Albert Stoddard and Lieutenant and Adjutant John Delahoyd; and I hope that, in giving their names special mention, I shall do no injustice to other officers of the regiment equally deserving. I never met Major McCalla without thinking of an old Roman lieutenant. He is rough in exterior and in manners, and as gallant and generous as rough. Captain Stoddard is a handsome and most genial fellow, and was, in the spring and summer of 1863, Judge-Advocate of the old 7th Division. In the hour of battle, and at the convivial board, he always took his place in the front. Lieutenant John Delahoyd was one of the most reckless aids and adjutant-generals that ever carried a dispatch in the face of the enemy. He distinguished himself at Corinth. Having ridden out with the 17th Iowa to assign it a position, he put the regiment under a terrific fire of grape and canister, and then, directing it to lie down, sat and watched the enemy from his horse. Whenever the enemy were about to fire, he would say: "Lay low, Seventeenth." It is a wonder how he escaped being killed. He was General Sullivan's adjutant-general, and was one of the most popular officers of the brigade.

During the siege of Corinth, (I believe it was on the 22d of May) and while his brigade was encamped near Farmington, an incident occurred which the colonel will never forget. That morning a company of the 3d Michigan Cavalry, which, like all the troops before Corinth, had seen but little service, was stationed beyond the picket-line, as vedettes on the extreme left. And I should add further that, an attack from this direction was being anticipated, and the extreme left wing, by reliefs, was engaged in digging rifle-pits, and in cutting the timber which would form a cover for the approach of the enemy, and obstruct the range of the artillery. All was quiet, and the work was steadily progressing, until about two o'clock in the afternoon, when, instantly, a cry of alarm was heard in the direction of the enemy, and, turning the eye down the road, a cavalry-man was seen coming at the top of his speed, standing upright in his saddle, and whirling his drawn sword about his head in the wildest manner. In an instant he had passed, shouting in a frantic, broken voice, "The enemy are coming against the left in force! The enemy are coming against the left in force!" All were instantly under arms, and, with breathless determination, stood waiting the approach of the enemy. The guns of the 6th Wisconsin Battery, hurriedly charged with canister, were turned in the direction of the threatened attack, when Colonel Perczel, riding down the road and out through a large, open field to the right, suddenly saw — that he was sold. The captain of the 3d Michigan Cavalry had been frightened at the approach of one of our own scouting parties. Colonel Perczel was chief in command, and felt the sell most keenly; but he only said: "Whare es dat cap'n ob de Third (?) Mee-che-gan Cabalry, wat run widout firing one gun?"

Colonel Perczel is about six feet in hight [sic], and both slender and erect. He has a lively, gray eye, and, in the service, wore a long, heavy, gray beard. Naturally he is excitable, but in danger was cool and brave, and was greatly loved by his command. He knew his merit as a military man, and was chagrined at being placed under the command of officers who were not only his inferiors in military knowledge, but who would get beastly drunk on duty. To escape this unpleasant situation, I am advised, was the chief cause of his leaving the service. The general, whom he most despised, died late in 1862, at Corinth, of mania apotu.

SOURCE: Addison A. Stuart, Iowa Colonels and Regiments, p. 215-20