Tuesday, May 7, 2013

The Plan Of The Campaign

From the New York Evening Post.

There is throughout the whole Union north of the cotton states, an eager expectation of some decisive movements of the mighty host of armed men whom we have brought into the field, and who have hitherto been engaged only in a war of skirmishes.  With a considerable part of our population in the Atlantic states this exception has been heightened into impatience, while in the western states both the volunteers and the people are in a fever of what can hardly be called anything less than discontent and chafe, like caged tigers, at the delay.  Everybody feels that there is much to do and that the time is short.  Knowing and feeling this, as we all do, it is but just to those who are entrusted with the administration of public affairs to take for granted that they are as sensible of it as we can be, and as anxious to hasten, by every safe method, the decision of a controversy which has been referred to the dreadful arbitrament of war.

Those, however, who are looking for an advance of our army from Washington, we are confident, look to the wrong quarter.  Washington is no proper base of military operations against the southern states.  The true policy of those who conduct the war is to penetrate the centre of the enemy’s territory by the most direct mode of access.  The attempt to reach it by the lines of march from Washington would be as absurd as if a combatant with a small sword should attempt to pierce his antagonist’s heart through his shoulder.

The lines of march from Washington are difficult – obstructed by the exceeding foulness of the ways at this season and by the strong posts of the enemy.  Suppose these difficulties happily overcome – suppose the rebel forces at Manassas, strong as their position is, beaten from the ground and forced to retire.  They would make their way to the South and the Southwest, tearing up the railways, their army from Richmond our further advance in that quarter would end and we should be met by their army assembled on a new northern frontier.

We think it is agreed by those who understand these matters far better than we can pretend to do, that the true military policy of our government is to break up, divide, and scatter the forces of the enemy, instead of compelling them to collect in a compact body – to oblige them to defend against us the different parts of the territory they occupy, by different fragments of their army separated in such a manner as to have no possible communication with each other and wholly unable to form a junction.  To effect this the base of operations should be far south of Washington, on the flank of the insurgent region, at some point chosen as near as possible to the heart of the country possessed by obstructing the routes they take in every possible manner ravaging the country consuming and carrying off its supplies, and leaving behind them a solitude in which the pursuing army could find no means of subsistence.

What then would be gained by such a victory?  Little more than the credit of a successful engagement.  We should have before us a waste which it would be of no advantage to us to occupy.  The rebel forces in retiring would concentrate themselves within a smaller compass, and there would be no essential [diminution] of their power of resistance.  All the communications between the different divisions of their army and the different parts of the country held by them would still remain open, and would have the advantage of being considerably shortened.  We should have gained possession of no point of which we could say that its occupation was at all decisive of the event of the war. – With the retreat of the enemy, and from which the access to their most exposed parts would be least difficult.  Our great river, the Mississippi, and the communication which we have opened, through Western Virginia with Kentucky, fortunately place such a base of operations in our power, without any previous fighting.  A powerful central force might thus be planted in the midst of the enemy’s territory rendering it wholly impossible to concentrate their forces, prepared to annihilate the separate divisions of their army one after another, and ready to strike immediately and with effect at any point which it may become desirable to occupy.

Inasmuch as it is wholly impossible to do this from Washington, we hold that it is absurd to attribute to the government or to the commanding officer of our army the idea of ordering and advance from Washington.  They must see, even more clearly than anybody else the advantages of such a plan as that of which we have spoke, they must feel the importance of carrying it into effect before the cold season has passed, they must be aware that the longer we delay our preparations the better prepared will the rebels be for resistance.  We cannot suppose that they who are not admitted to the councils of war in which the plan of winter campaign is decided upon, are the only ones who possess the gift of common sense, and with this reflection in our minds we may, we think, confidently look for an early and decisive blow to be struck at the vital parts of the southern rebellion.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Zollicoffer's Defeat

Vivid Description of the Battle Field.

(Correspondence Cincinnati Commercial.)

A Ride to the Battle – The Battle Ground – Scenes on the Battle Field – Pursuit of the Enemy – The Rebel Camp – The Property Taken – One Hundred and Ninety Rebels Buried.

Having seen many accounts of the battle of Webb’s Cross Roads, (variously called the battle of Fishing Creek, Old Fields, Somerset, and Mill Springs,) it would seem hardly necessary to chronicle any further relative to it.  But as this is the first battle field I visited before the dead and wounded were removed, I feel disposed to make a note of some of my experiences connected with it.

During two weeks prior to the engagement, I was at Somerset, attending to some business matters for the Twelfth Kentucky Regiment. – All this time, much anxiety was felt by the forces under General Thomas, so that an advance could be made upon the fortified position of Zollicoffer, at Mill Springs.  The welcome tidings finally reached us Friday morning, Jan. 17th, that Gen. Thomas was at Webb’s Cross Roads, seven and a half miles west, or south west of Somerset, with 6,000 men and, before 11 o’clock a. m., Schoepff’s brigade was under way to join them.  The difficulties of that march through rain and mud, have been better described by those who were in it than I can do it.  That Zollicoffer would come out of his entrenchments and attack our forces was entirely unexpected – consequently no battle was looked for this side of his position at Mill Springs.

Early on Sunday morning, January 19th, we heard the roar of cannon beyond fishing creek, which betokened a battle.  Like many younger men I felt “eager for the fray.”  Lieut. Colonel Howard, of the Kentucky 12th, being confined to his bed by sickness, I mounted his well known charger, “Nelly Gray,” and went to fill his place, or rather to try.  The distance from Somerset to the Salt works on Fishing Creek, where we crossed, is five miles.  The mud, a kind of reddish clay and very soft, was from six inches to half as many feet in depth.  I fell in with a squadron of Wolford’s Cavalry, escorting six caissons of ammunition, each caisson being drawn by eight horses, driven by for riders.  There were also in the company thirty six relief horses in harness, for Standart’s Battery, which was already on the ground.  To see this train in motion while the horses were pressed to the top of their speed, could be compared to nothing better than a wild tornado, accompanied by a halt a dozen whirlwinds playing with the mud as though it were the chaff of a threshing floor, obscuring at times the caissons, horses and riders.  The cavalcade reached the high bank overlooking Fishing Creek, in about twenty minutes from Somerset, and came to a halt.  The Creek was so high that it was said it could not be forded or at least the ammunition would be spoiled in passing through.  In addition to this a frightened wagon-master reported that Zollicoffer’s forces had got between our army and the Creek and thus cut off supplies and reinforcements from Somerset.  During these few moments of suspense, and while the fire of artillery seemed to be increasing I rode down the long steep hill to the water’s edge, determined to cross at all hazards.

While calculating my chances in one of the strongest currents I ever saw forded, a gentle man upon a powerful strong-limbed horse rode up and gave it as his opinion that the creek could be forded.  Being more excited that I was he plunged into the stream.  Without waiting to see how he “came out,” and knowing that mortal horse could not do more than “Nelly Gray,” I followed.  We made the opposite shore in safety.  By this time the whole cavalcade (excepting caissons) had reached the creek, and in a few minutes passed safely over.  We halted with the cavalry in front of widow Campbell’s house (secesh), and sent forward a reconnoitering party.  Soon one of the party returned and reported the road clear.  The distance from Fishing Creek to Webb’s Cross Roads, where our forces had bivouacked the night before the battle, is two and a half miles.  We had made about two miles of this distance, when the artillery ceased firing and soon after we met a man riding furiously down the hill. – When we succeeded in bringing him to a halt, he told us Zollicoffer was dead and his army in full retreat.  This man was hardly recognized by his old acquaintances, for his naked, sparkling eye balls seemed to be the only two spots about him not covered with mud.  It was Dr. Hale.  When he had told us his story, on he flew to tell it to other persecuted Union men.  Zollicoffer is slain, his forces are overthrown, scattered and destroyed!  We are again free!  Men, women and children shouted and even wept for joy.  At that moment I did not wait to moralize for while Dr. Hale was spreading the glad tidings in one direction, Nelly Gray had anticipated the cavalcade in the other, and was first on the battle field.  My first inquiry was for the Kentucky 12th, but no one could tell me where they were, or what party they had taken in the action.  Only one dead man had been brought in.  The body laid upon the ground in front of one of the Minnesota tents surrounded by some twenty soldiers.  It had been stripped of all clothing except the pants and two soldiers were busy in washing off the mud with which it had been covered.  It was almost as white and transparent as the most delicate wax work.  The fatal wound was in the breast, and was evidently made with a pistol ball as it could be easily covered with the end of my finger.  There was another wound upon the inside of his right arm, above the elbow, and still another glancing wound a little above his hip.  This was Zollicoffer!  He whose name had so long been a terror to men who loved their country on the banks of the Cumberland.  With some doubts at the time in my mind as to whether this was really the body of the rebel chief, I turned away to visit the field of battle.

The hospital tents had been hastily pitched in a small open field at the cross roads and along the edge of the woods skirting the south side of this field were the first marks of the storm of destruction which had waged so fearfully an hour before.  Nearly through the middle of the field is the road leading to Mill Springs, in a south or southwesterly direction.  I entered the woods on the east side of this road.  All along the edge of the open field lay the bodies of four or five of our men.  As I advanced into the woods the marks of cannon shot could be seen on every side, but I saw none of these marks nearer than twenty feet from the ground nor did I see a dead or wounded man who had been struck with a cannon shot, Dr. Cliffe, Zollicoffer’s brigade surgeon, afterwards told me that among all their wounded, so far as they had come in, only one had been injured by artillery and he had lost his arm.  Passing through the woods from the first open field, a distance of nearly half a mile, we reached another open, half cleared field on the left of the road.  In this field there stands some deadened timber, many large stumps and trees, some of the latter having been cut down, and some fallen from decay.  In this field the ground is quite steep, with a southern descent to near the center of the field, and then rises as rapidly till you reach the woods on the south.  In the eastern part of this field is a log house and a barn and an apple orchard.  Eighty five dead rebels lay in this field, which by way of distinction, I will call the “old field.”  Further on and to the right of the road is the cornfield where the brave Indiana 10th suffered so severely.  In the woods and along the road the scene was dreadful. – One body was placed in a sitting posture with the back leaning against a tree, the hands crossed in his lap, his eyes partially open and lips slightly parted.  The ball had entered his left breast just above the region of the heart.  Another laid upon his side with the head and arms thrown back, the ball had cut away a part of his skull over his left eye.

Among a score or more of our own noble dead, I saw not one badly mangled body, like those which I saw at Vienna.  And I loved, also, to fancy at least, that I saw clearly stamped upon each cold face a clam and holy satisfaction in pouring out their blood in a noble cause – to save from ruin the land of our fathers.  There are mothers, wives and sisters, who would gladly have braved the leaden hailstorm of the battle field, to minister to the dying soldier.  Let such console themselves – that death is a common lot, and far more preferable in any form, to life in a land of despotism and anarchy.  The cause in which your husband, brothers and sons have fallen is not a cause of wickedness and oppression, but of truth, freedom and right.  The fields of Kentucky have been freshly watered with hallowed blood, and the pirates are being hunted from her borders.  My own brave boy was either among the slain or pursuing the flying foe.  In which of these positions I might find him, I know not.  I could possibly enjoy no higher honor than in the sacrifice of all I held dear, for the salvation of my country.  With all the anxieties common to parents, I searched for his well known countenance among the slain.  So close was the resemblance in many cases that my pulse quickened and my brain began to reel.  I remembered that he wore a pair of boots of peculiar make, and before I dared to let my eyes rest upon the face, there was a mark –  not on his.  I passed on in haste, but suddenly felt compelled to stop once more, against a tree, leaned back in the more classic composure was the fairest and most beautiful countenance I ever saw in death.  No female complexion could be more spotless.  The silky locks of wavy auburn hair fell in rich profusion, upon fair temples and a faultless forehead.  Some friendly hand had parted his garments, bearing his breast, from which the read current of life flowed out, and had bathed his temples, which were still warm but had ceased to throb forever.  O, ye winds, bear these tidings softly to the loved ones at home.

Among the wounded of our men, it was really comforting to see with what patient heroism they bore their pains.  I said to one poor fellow, with a shattered leg, “you must be in great pain, can I do anything for you?”  He said, “There are others worse off than me, when they are carried in, you can tell them where I am if you please.”  Another man had a ball through his right hand, breaking two of the bones.  He had done it up himself with a wet bandage and with his other hand was carrying one corner of a stretcher, with a wounded man, carrying another corner of the same stretcher, was a man with his head and face covered with blood.  He said he was not hurt at all, he had only lost a large piece of his hat and a small piece of his scalp.

In the “old fields” among the rebels some of the scenes were horrid and revolting in the extreme.  A large number of the dead were shot in the head.  One was shot directly in the eye and the brain was oozing from the wound.  Five dead and one wounded lay behind one log, all but the wounded one were shot in the head.  One rebel had a ball through his neck which destroyed the power of speech – though I don’t think his wound was mortal.  Several of the dead were old and gray headed men.  A dark complexioned man with a heavy black beard, who said he was from Mississippi was lying on the ground with a broken thigh.  He was stern and sullen – he had only one favor to ask – that was that some one of us would kill him.  I said to him we will soon take you to the surgeon and do all we can to relieve you for we are satisfied you have been deceived by wicked men, and do not know what you have been doing.  To which he meekly replied – that is possible.  A younger man, quite a boy, begged me not to let the Lincolnites kill him.  An elderly man sat with his back against a stump with a ball directly through the center of the head at the base of the brain.  There was a ghastly grin upon his countenance, his eyes were stretched widely open and staring wildly into vacancy while his breath was rapid, deep and heavy.  His was a living death for he was senseless.  A lad of fourteen with a mashed ankle, protested his innocence and begged to be taken care of.  He said he had never fired a gun at a Union man and never would.  Numbers of rebels made in effect the same declaration.

I left these fields of human suffering with feelings such as I never before experienced. – The freshness of death seemed to fill the whole atmosphere.  It was a scene which a man needs only to look upon once in his life time in order to occupy all his power of reflection.  Following the wake of our victorious and pursuing army the road, adjoining the fields and woods, were strewn with blankets, knapsacks, haversacks, hats, boots, shoes, guns, cartridge boxes, broken wagons, &c., as perfect a scene of destruction as can well be imagined.

When I left on Thursday evening Col. Hoskins told me the captured horses and mules would probably reach 2,000.  Prisoners were being brought in in little squads, and Capt. Alexander, of Wolford’s cavalry reported that he had 200 penned up in the rocks two miles below their camp.  Crittenden’s entire force (except himself) consisting of about 2,000 men, are supposed to be on this side of the river.

I returned from the rebel camp in company with Dr. Straw and his prisoner, Dr. D. B. Cliffe, of Franklin, Tenn., Zollicoffer’s brigade Surgeon.  Dr. Cliffe seems much of a gentleman and claims to be a Union man.  He says he had to enlist or quit the country, but he had never taken the oath of allegiance to the Southern Confederacy.  He confirmed the news of the death of Zollicoffer, and cut several sticks and limbs, as mementoes from near the place where he fell.  Besides Dr. Cliffe, I saw several other prisoners who seem to be gentlemen, but the mass of them were rough hard unpolished subjects – just such a set as one would be likely to judge “fit for treason, stratagem and spoils.”

I have only noted such items as came under my own observation and comparatively only a few of them.  The order of battle and acts of personal bravery will be better told by those who witnessed them.  Lieut. E. G. Jacobs told me he saw a Minnesotian coolly advance from the ranks some distance, and placing his rifle by the side of a tree take a long and deliberate aim toward the old log house, when a rebel head which had been peering from behind the corner of the house was suddenly discovered to have a body attached to it by its pitching at full length from the end of the house.  I found seven dead bodies in this old building who must have been killed by close shooting between the logs.  When I left 190 rebels had been buried in the old field, and many more still in the woods.  Thirty eight of our own men had been buried in the first field near the tents.

C. T.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Diary of Alexander G. Downing: Tuesday, July 15, 1862

No news from Richmond.

Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B., Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 57

The mints of the United States have . . .


. . . coined since they commenced operations – a period of less than twenty years – the large amount of $800,000,000 – about one fifth of the whole metallic currency of the world.  Of this amount $520,000,000 were derived from the mines of the United states.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Deaf and Dumb Asylum

The fourth Biennial Report of this Institution contains many interesting matters and we therefore extract largely from it.  The three Asylums, for the Insane, for the blind, and for the deaf and dumb are a credit and an honor to our State, and all will be glad to hear that they were in a prosperous and healthy condition.

We extract from the Report of the Board of Trustees:

During the last two years, the condition of this Institution has been one of unbroken prosperity – a prosperity limited only by the measure of our circumstances.  Quietly but surely has this out-growth of public charity and the rights of the needy pursued its course of humble usefulness dispensing to scores of impoverished minds the wealth of knowledge.

Teachers and scholars have cheerfully united to promote the great end of the Institution – the elevation of an unfortunate class.  And here let it be remembered, that this Institution is strictly and only educational in its character and therefore is not designed to be a mere Asylum for paupers or a Hospital for medical experiments upon the diseased or dead organ of hearing. – The end proposed is the education of the deaf and the means employed contemplate no other object.  We here use the term education in its widest sense, as embracing the harmonious cultivation of all the physical, mental and moral powers.

Few are aware how great is the difficulty of fully educating an uneducated mute, the difficulty being enhanced by the absence of that mental discipline and knowledge enjoyed on youth by those who possess all their senses.  And in this respect the Blind are less unfortunate than the Deaf, for the former can make large acquisitions of knowledge at home before attending school, whilst the Deaf are usually if not necessarily wholly dependent upon their Institutions for all they know.  The fact is stated to show how important such Institutions are, and how wise as well as generous has been public charity, out of which have grown so many efforts for the relief of the afflicted class.

Our school opens at 9 o’clock, a. m.  Our first exercise is a lecture in the natural and expressive language of signs.  This lecture is generally upon some moral or religious subject, and the occasion is taken to convey a knowledge of the common properties and duties of life.  No difficulty is found in imparting to even our youngest scholars abstract and spiritual ideas, although such ideas have no place in their minds whilst in an uneducated state.  The Bible, with its sublime utterances and solemn truths, is, indeed, a revelation to them, bringing as it does “life and immortality to light,” and opening to their vision a boundless world of thought.

The school is divided into three classes.  The advanced class is taught by the principal.  The second class is taught by his brother, and the primary class by the older pupils, under the direction of the principal.  This is our present arrangement, and although the classification is imperfect and another teacher needed, still we must yield to the requirements of economy, and adapt ourselves to circumstances.

We aim to give a knowledge of the English language together with the essentials of those branches of Science deemed most practical, and waste little time in efforts designed to surprise the public rather than benefit the pupil.

An effort has been made to keep our expenses within the specified sum, and the effort has been successful, but to do this we have been obliged to contract the usefulness of the Institution, by refusing admission to quite a number, and by dispensing with advantages which we otherwise might have enjoyed.

The census places the total number of mutes in the State at about three hundred.  But it is probable the census is incorrect, for already the Institution has given instruction to almost one hundred mutes, and the number in the State is doubtless near four hundred, for we have reliable data for the statement, that at least twenty five per cent. of this class might at any time be under instruction, the remainder being unfitted by age, disease, or other causes.

At present the principal has only one assistant teacher, the primary class being taught by the monitress and older pupils under the direction of the principal.

During the last two years, other teachers have been employed, but they have been discharged for the sake of economy.

The principal has never yet been able to secure the assistance of experienced teachers, as such command higher salaries than our means have allowed us to afford, and thus we have been unable, in this respect, to compete with other Institutions.

The law provides that the principal, shall, when deemed proper, make tours throughout the State in company with a number of his pupils, in order to excite an interest and call in a greater number of scholars, but necessity has required the opposite course, for from an apprehension that the Institution might be over crowded or embarrassed with applications for admission, no special effort has been deemed advisable, and indeed the general rule has been that an effort has been needed rather to limit than to enlarge our school, so as at all times to live within our means and do justice to those already admitted.

We feel that the prospect for a permanent building is not encouraging and, indeed, we do not expect the State at this time to consider that question.  We fear the day is now distant when the mutes of this State might look with pride and joy upon their own Asylum, complete in all its appointments, capacious enough to receive every worthy applicant, and standing in architectural grandeur as another perpetual monument of Iowa’s intelligent charity.

We now point with feelings of honorable pride to our magnificent Home for the Insane, and know, that when our national sky is once more clear, and these great States once more and forever united, as united they must be, then will the triumphs of peace appear in Iowa, and all our educational and charitable institutions pulsate with new life.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Monday, May 6, 2013

Reported Capture of Jeff. Thompson

CAIRO, Jan. 27. – Rumors are rife in the streets, that the expedition which left Bird’s Point on Saturday has had a fight with Jeff. Thompson, and that the guerilla chieftain is now a prisoner under Col. Wallace.

It is also reported that three Tennessee regiments have been intercepted on their march to Sykeston.

A cavalry force was dispatched to Price’s Landing in quest of the parties who fired on the steamer January, and succeeded in capturing three who were concerned in the firing.  Various parties of notoriety are said to have been killed and captured, but no credit is given to these reports.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Zollicoffer’s Defeat -- The Rebels “See it.”

FORTRESS MONROE, Jan. 27. – The Richmond Dispatch of Friday shows that the rebels are much perplexed at their defeat in Kentucky. – The Dispatch says: “ We regret to say that the report of the Federal victory in Kentucky, conveyed to us on Wednesday night from Northern sources, is more than confirmed by intelligence received here at the War Department.  It appears that our defeat was more decisive than even the Northern accounts had led us to believe.”

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

From the South

BALTIMORE, Jan. 27. – The Richmond Dispatch says:

“The disaster in Kentucky, and the apprehension it has caused for the safety of our connection with the Southwest through Virginia and Tennessee, by the East Tennessee and Virginia Railroad, and the possible interruptions of our intercourse with the South via the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad by Burnside’s expedition directs attention to the vital importance of completing the connection between the Richmond and Danville and the North Carolina Railroad.”

Augusta, Ga., Jan 23. – A private letter received from Charleston S. C. this morning says that five stone vessels were sunk in the channel yesterday.

The Savannah Republican of this morning says the statement that Federal vessels and gone up Broad river is incorrect.

The Dispatch contains a statement that the report had reached Baltimore of the loss of five of Burnside’s fleet in Pamlico Sound, and that a large steamboat, probably the Louisiana, had been burnt.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

The Rebels taking a gloomy View of their Situation

The following significant article from the Richmond Examiner of the 16th inst., shows that the rebels are uncomfortably oppressed by the view of their present situation:

* * * “While the political leaders of the South have been reposing in dreams of approaching peace and while our accomplished captains of engineers have been expending their remarkable scientific ingenuity in the erection of works as wonderful, and almost as extensive and quite as valuable as the Chinese wall to resist invading forces from a given direction, the enemy have gradually and at leisure gathered up their immense resources and concentrated their tremendous energies to envelope the Confederacy with their armies and fleets and to penetrate the interior from some one of many alternate points.  Although they can now do nothing, they have their general programme in perfect order for execution when the weather changes in the ordinary course of the earth around the sun and it this moment we find ourselves in the face of superior forces wherever we look whether to the North, the East, or the West, or the South itself.  General Sydney [sic] Johnston has to strain every nerve to prevent the military as well as the geographical heart of the country from slipping out of his grasp.  Generals Joseph Johnson [sic] and Beauregard are held by McClellan on the Potomac as in a vice.  A gigantic armament is ready to attempt the descent of the Mississippi, and their fleet on the Atlantic seacoast and the Gulf are too freshly before the attention to require remembrance.  Such are the fruits of a policy purely defensive.  Without even the hesitancy which would come of a possible interruption, the enemy have thus surrounded the Southern Confederacy, and if permitted to repeat as often as may be desired their efforts to penetrate its heart, they will necessarily attain the place and the time where success awaits them.

“There is now but one chance of success from the net that has been coolly drawn around us. – it is to concentrate our energy on one point, and cut it through, to convert our defensive into an offensive war, and transfer the scene of at least part of these hostilities to the enemy’s own country.  Situated as we are it is only possible at one point – and that is Kentucky.  If the forces that we are dispersing to the four corners of the continent every day to meet the new menaces were collected under the hand of General Sydney Johnson [sic] till a column was formed sufficient to enable him to manoeuvre with some possibility of success over the plains of that region he might hurl back the army in front of him, at present, and penetrate the State of Ohio.  The attainment of the object would render worthless all the plans of the enemy.  The circle of armies would be in the condition of the constrictor whose back has been broken, the scene of war would be transferred to his own territory, and everyone who has witnessed the ravages of armies in any of the invaded districts of Virginia knows what a precious blessing is designated in that brief phrase.  He would be attacked beyond his defences.  The alarm and confusion of the United States would paralyze its Government and its Generals, and the entire arrangement by which we suffer now and dread great disasters in future would be immediately reversed.

“At present Gen. Johnson confronts superior forces of the enemy under Buell, one of the most cautious painstaking and able Generals on the other side.  General Buell has now; immediately in front of Johnson, an army of seventy six thousand men (Yes, 110, men – Eps) and can bring to bear on us, and other given points, thirty thousand more.  What the Confederate commander has may not be stated, but it is probably enough to hold his present strong position against any numbers that might attack him there or pass him on either side, get to his rear and cut off his supplies.  This he can do by leaving a sufficient army in front of Gen. Johnson while he can still send upon the right or left flank a force as large as he leaves behind.  That this is the plan of Buell is now no longer doubtful.  He has placed a force of 8,000 men at Glasgow, thirty miles to the eastward of Bowling Green threatening the rear of Gen. Johnson while it is within easy supporting distance of two other posts held in strong force by the enemy.  If the plan of Buell is successful it may result in a great disaster.  To defeat him it is absolutely necessary that more men should at once be sent to Bowling Green.  Gen. Johnson must have a force sufficient to attack Buell in front with a good chance of success and by so doing will not only defeat his scheme on the centre of the Confederacy, but immediately transfer the war to the State of Ohio, and thus save the whole South from the great danger of being overrun in the first fine weather of the coming spring.

“We are satisfied that, beyond the flattering possibilities of a foreign intervention, the only rational hope we can entertain of a speedy termination of this war, is to be found in an offensive campaign across the Ohio, from the point that Gen. Johnson now defends.  The best line of advance imaginable to strike at the vitals of the North which are the Lake States, is that through Kentucky.  The country is a plain, the people are not actively hostile, supplies without stint and the great resources of the North are beyond.  The enemy understand this and are making tremendous efforts to secure Kentucky to them without the possibility of escape.  This season of inaction, from the inclemency of the skies, is a precious boon of Providence to us, we can now determine on a plan, and prepare for its execution in a short time, that will render naught and abortive all the costly and complicated devices of the adversary.”

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Diary of Alexander G. Downing: Monday, July 14, 1862

The weather is very warm; it is sweltering. I was detailed with a squad of men from our regiment under command of the quartermaster to go out with the trains to get some corn and fodder for the mules and horses. The Government has adopted the policy of paying for all material taken on a foraging expedition. But this is upon one condition only, viz.; the quartermaster issues a requisition on the Secretary of War for all material taken, and then if the owner of the property can prove his loyalty to the Government, he will get his pay for the same; if he cannot prove it, he will be classed as a rebel and will get nothing.

Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B., Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 57

Sunday, May 5, 2013

Fort Donelson: Life at Fort Donelson


Soldiers and slaves built over 400 log huts as winter quarters for the soldiers garrisoning and working on the fort.  In addition to government rations of flour, fresh and cured meat, sugar, and coffee, every boat brought boxes from home filled with all kinds of things a farm or store could provide.  Off-duty soldiers from the local area hunted and fished in the same locations they had frequented just months before as civilians.  Some time after the surrender, Federals burned the cabins because of a measles outbreak.

SOURCE:  Tour Stop 3, 2010 National Park Service Brochure for Fort Donelson National Battlefield.

We lived luxuriously in comfortable tents and log huts,” one Fort Donelson soldier wrote in the more tranquil days before cold weather set in and the armies clashed.  Besides rations of flour, fresh and cured meats, sugar, and coffee, every boat brought boxes from home filled with things a farm or store could provide, including uniforms and clothing.  The reconstructed log hut represents the approximately 500 huts built for the fort’s garrison by soldiers and slave laborers as living quarters, some 100 of them inside the 15-acre fort.  When winter came, these crude huts with their canvas roofs made from tents and their fireplaces made from stone, stick and mud, warded off the wind, rain and snow, and kept many Confederates from freezing to death.  Most of the thousands of soldiers who arrived shortly before the battle were housed in tents or slept beneath a blanket on the ground, and suffered terribly in the bitter February cold.



No one knows exactly what the cabins at Fort Donelson looked like, but they probably didn’t differ much from those pictured here, built by confederate soldiers at Centreville, Virginia in the winter of 1861-61.



The only known contemporary illustration of the Confederate encampment within Fort Donelson appeared in the March 17 [sic], 1862, issue of Harper’s Weekly.  The view is from the area occupied today by the National Cemetery.


Fort Donelson’s de-fenders wore a wide variety of clothing, as this photograph of captured Fort Donelson soldiers shows.  Few had uniforms, most wore citizens’ clothes.  Many of the officers had the regular gray uniform, while others wore U. S. Army blue.







SOURCE:  New Wayside Exhibit at tour stop 3, Fort Donelson National Battlefield (pictured at left).



Quarters For The Troops

On the hillside before you, inside the fort walls, stood some 100 log huts, part of 400 built in the area to house the confederate garrison.  The activity of hundreds of men probably created acres of mud during winter snows and spring rains.  After the battle Union forces occupied the fort.  They later burned the cabins because of a measles epidemic and abandoned this position in favor of a new fort built where the National Cemetery is today.


SOURCE:  NPS Historical Marker Placed in front of the log hut, Fort Donelson National Battlefield (pictured above and to the right.  This marker has since been removed and replaced with the new wayside exhibit pictured above.)

  • Originally posted: April 1, 2011,12:52 AM.
  • Revised: May 5, 2013, 6:33 PM

The Troops at Mill Spring Fight

The 10th Indiana, Col. Manson, who bore so noble a share in the Mill Spring battle were recruited in the vicinity of Lafayette, Indiana, and the intelligence that seventy five of the regiment are killed creates a profound sensation in that community.  The citizens of Lafayette have dispatched special messengers to the scene of battle.  The Courier says in passing along the railroad crowds of people flocked to the cars, in the hope of learning some additional particulars of the great battle at Somerset.  Many and eager were the inquiries.  An old man and his wife, who had walked five miles to the station asked in trembling tones for a copy of the Courier containing a list of the killed and wounded.  We were not surprised to learn that this venerable couple had two sons, a son in law and a nephew in the gallant Tenth.

Col. McCook of the 9th Ohio regiment who was wounded at the battle near Somerset, is the honored commander of one of the best regiments in the service.  It is composed in part of German veterans, all of whom have seen service in Europe.  They were in the three months campaign in Western Virginia, and are the same who, the day previous to the battle of Rich Mountain, while lying in front of the Rebel entrenchments at Laurel Hill, sent a formal request to Gen. McClellan for a permission to storm the breastworks at the point of the bayonet, assuring the General that they could do the work in a very short time.

Standart’s, Wetmore’s and Kinney’s Batteries were among the reinforcements that came into the fight near Somerset.  Standart’s Battery has been stationed at Somerset, Kenney’s Battery has lately been at Lebanon, Wetmore’s Battery has lately been at Danville but they all came up in time to take part in the fight. – The Batteries are all Northern Ohio Batteries.  Capt. Standart is of Cleveland, Capt. Kinney is of Geneva, Ashtabula county, and Captain Wetmore of Cuyahoga Falls, Summit county.  These batteries belong to Col. Barnett’s Regiment.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Affairs at St. Louis -- Vigorous Measures of Gen. Halleck

ST. LOUIS, Jan. 24. – Several of the Secessionists of this city who were recently assessed for the benefit of the South western fugitives by order of Gen. Halleck, having failed to pay their assessments, their property has been seized within a day or two past, under execution to satisfy the assessment with 25 per cent additional, according to General Order No. 24.

Samuel Eugler a prominent merchant and one of the assessed had a writ replevin  served on the Provost Marshal General for property seized from him, whereupon he and his Attorney, Nathaniel Cox, were arrested and lodged in the military prison.  To-day Gen. Halleck issued an order directing the Provost Marshal General to send the said Eugler beyond the limits of the department of Missouri and notify him not to return without permission from the Commanding General, under the penalty of being punished according to the laws of war.  Gen. Halleck also adds: Martial Law having been declared in this city by authority of the President of the United States all civil authorities of whatsoever name or office are hereby notified that any attempt on their part to interfere with the execution of any order served from these head quarters or impede, molest or trouble any officer duly appointed to carry such order into effect, will be regarded as a military offense and punished accordingly.  The Provost Marshal General will arrest each and every person of whatever rank or office, who attempts in any way to prevent or interfere with the execution of any order issued from these Head Quarters.  He will call upon the Commanding Officer of the Department of St. Louis for any military assistance he may require.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Diary of Alexander G. Downing: Sunday, July 13, 1862

No news of importance. Some of the men occasionally get into religious discussions. There are two of them rather strong in the Universalist doctrine. One of them who reads the Bible a good bit got into a discussion today with some of the men. While some of the boys are church members in their homes, there are a good many who are not.

Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B., Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 57

Saturday, May 4, 2013

Embalming the dead rebels -- Correction

LOUISVILLE, Jan. 24. – The remains of Zollicoffer and Baillie Peyton Jr. are in prosess of embalming at Somerset.

CORRECTION. – In second section of last night’s report for learns and contradicts, read learns and credits.

All quiet below.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Flood in the Potomac

FREDERICK, Md., Jan 23. – Officers from Hancock yesterday report the Potomac as having risen nearly twenty five feet within the past few days.  There is no possibility of crossing at present.

Jackson is supposed to be still at Romney.

Lander has fallen back to the mouth of Patterson creek near Cumberland.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

What Gen. Sturgis Says

PITTSBURGH, Jan. 24. – Gen. S. D. Sturgis passed through this city for Washington via Philadelphia and gives hopeful accounts of the affairs in the West.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

From Fortress Monroe

Nothing heard of the Burnside Expedition – Rebel Account of the Defeat in Kentucky.

FORTRESS MONROE, Jan. 25. – The storm is now over.  Several rebel officers from Baltimore went by flag of truce to Craney Island.

A dispatch from Knoxville says that General Crittenden retired to and will make a stand at Monticello.

The Norfolk Day Book of Saturday has not a word about the Burnside expedition.  An extract is given from the Newbern Progress of Thursday last, which says, up to yesterday (Wednesday) we are not sure there is or has been a single Yankee gunboat over the swash at Hatteras.

The defeat in Kentucky is at last admitted.  The Day Book has a heading, “Further Particulars from Somerset.  Disaster not so bad as first reported.”  “Six hundred Confederates attack 14,000 Federals!”

The Petersburg Express sends us the following: –

General Crittenden began the attack on the enemy, supposed to number 1,500 afterwards found to be 14,000.  Zollicoffer was killed early in action.  Crittenden was wounded.  Colonel [Corral] took command and recrossed the Cumberland.  Our loss, 300, enemy’s 400 or 500.  Rutledge’s and McClerny’s batteries left on the field.  The enemy repulsed three times and then fled back to their fortification.  They then outflanked us.  We lost all our horses, tents, equipments, and eleven guns spiked or thrown into the river.  Colonels Powell, Battie, Stahn and Cummings wounded.  Major Fobb wounded in hip.  Our forces numbered 6,000.

It was reported in Norlfolk that the Federal steamer Louisiana was lost.

The Day Book has an article from the Charleston Mercury giving the particulars of the capture of Cedar Key.  Three schooners and five fishing smacks were loading with lumber and turpentine at the time.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Fort Donelson

Fort Donelson

Wayside Exhibit                         Historical Marker

Washington Specials

NEW YORK, Jan. 26. – Washington specials state that Assistant Secretary Fox feels confident the Burnside Expedition has ere this struck a blow which with Gen. Buell’s advance into Tennessee will cut off all rebel communication with Virginia and States South.

Gen. McClellan says if the expedition failed we should have heard of it through the rebels ere this.

The steamer Karnak from Nassau 20th, arrived this morning.  The steamer Kate arrived at Nassau on the 18th, 48 hours from Charleston with 800 bales of cotton, 8 passengers and flying the rebel flag.  The gunboat Flambeau left immediately.  The cotton culture has been commenced at Grand Bahamas.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Foreign News

HALIFAX, Jan. 26. – The Europa from Liverpool 11th, Queenstown 12th, arrived last night.

A Cadiz telegram says the American Consul has received orders to protest against the admission of the Sumter.

It was said Spain would protect the prisoners brought by the Sumter.

RUSSIA. – It is reported that Russia has sent an embarrassing ultimatum to Rome that if the Pope don’t condemn the conduct of the Polish Clergy Russia will recognize the Kingdom of Italy.

CHINA. – A new regency has been established at [Peam] under the 2d Empresses.

FRANCE. – The pacific termination of the Trent affair caused a rise in the Bourse of 1 per cent.

The Moniteur says the feeling of profound regret and indignation has been aroused in England and France by the vindictive act of destroying the port of Charleston.  Rentes firm – 68f 60s.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Diary of Alexander G. Downing: Saturday, July 12, 1862

We had company inspection again as usual. A good many negroes are coming into camp. Some of the men who are strong enough to work and who want to be free are given work on the fortifications. A number of the officers are adopting negro boys as servants, and some of the most intelligent boys are being sent North to be educated.

Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B., Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 57

Friday, May 3, 2013

Requested to Resign

BALTIMORE, Jan. 26. – Resolutions were introduced into the Maryland Legislature Saturday requesting Senators Pearce and Kennedy to resign.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Another Successful Expedition

ST. LOUIS, Jan. 26. – Official despatches from Cape Girardeau state that an expedition which left that place a few days since for Benton and Bloomfield have returned having Captured Lieut. Col. Farmer and 11 other officers and sixty-eight privates of Jeff. Thompson’s command.  Also, quite a number of arms, horses, saddles &c.

A telegraphic line is to be immediately constructed from Rolla westward.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

After the St. Louis Rebels, Male and Female

ST. LOUIS, Jan. 26 – The following special Order will be issued in the morning:


HEADQUARTERS, Department of Missouri.

1.  The President, Secretary, Librarian, Directors or other officers of the Mercantile association, President, Secretary and Directors or other officers of the Chambers of Commerce of this city, are requested to take the oath of allegiance prescribed by Article 6, State Ordinance of October 16, 1861.  Any of the above officers who shall neglect to file in the office of the Provost Marshal General within 10 days of the date of this order the oath so subscribed, will be deemed to have resigned and any one who, after neglecting so to file his oath of allegiance within the time prescribed, shall attempt to exercise the functions of such an office, will be arrested for contempt of this order and punished according to the laws of war.

2.  It is officially reported that carriages bearing the enemy’s flag are in the habit of driving to the vicinity of the military prison in McDowell’s College.  The Commanding officer of the Prison Guard will seize and take possession of any carriage bearing the enemy’s flag, and the horses, carriage and harness to be confiscated.

3.  It is officially reported that certain women are in the habit of approaching the vicinity of the military prison, and waving hostile flags for the purpose of inciting our troops and carrying on communication with the prisoners of war.  The commanding officers of the Prison Guard will arrest and place in confinement all women so offending.

4.  Any carriage or other vehicle bearing a hostile flag in the city, will be seized and confiscated.  The City Police and Patrol Guards are directed to arrest persons in vehicles under such flags, also persons wearing or displaying a hostile flag in the city.

By command of Major Gen. Halleck,

N. H. McLEAN, Ass’t. Adjt. Gen.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Diary of Alexander G. Downing: Friday, July 11, 1862

Nothing of importance today. The weather is very warm. The entire army is engaged on the fortifications and in felling trees, and besides picket duty we have to keep the camp clean and our accouterments polished. Every man has his rifle in readiness.

Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B., Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 57

Fire In New York

NEW YORK, Jan. 26. – The Fulton Bank and other buildings, [corner] Fulton and Pearl streets, were burned this morning. Loss about half a million dollars.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Thursday, May 2, 2013

More Rebels Captured

WASHINGTON, Jan. 26. – The War Department received dispatches to-night from Gen. Halleck, saying that an expedition sent out from Cape Girardeau to Benton and Bloomfield was very successful, capturing 68 privates, a quantity of arms, &c.  Most of the rebel officers were captured in ball rooms.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

NEW YORK, Jan. 27 [1862].

The fire on Fulton and Pearl streets was completely extinguished this morning.  The Fulton Bank building was completely gutted, but the entire contents of its vault were in perfect condition.  The amount of specie is stated at $200,000.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Iowa Legislature

(Special to the Hawk-Eye.)

– Des Moines, Jan. 24.

Nothing important in the Senate.


HOUSE. – A resolution was introduced requesting Adjutant General Baker to furnish the House with the names of all the members of the Governor’s staff – compensation of each, and from what funds paid.  Adopted.

Mr. LANE, of Scott, presented a resolution instructing the Committee on Ways and Means to inquire into the expediency of transferring the School Fund monies to the State as a loan, and provides that the State shall pay the annual interest thereon.

Mr. HARDIE, of Dubuque, tried to get up the tabled resolution instructing the committee to report a license law.  Negatived, 77 to 15.

The vote on the special order of 2 P. M. for assuming the Federal tax, vote in favor of the bill stood, ayes 90, nays 2. Kellogg, [of] Decatur and Hardie, of Dubuque, voting against the bill.  The bill provides for the collection of $450,000 each year for the years 1862 and 1863.

The House adopted the bill making the issues of the State Bank of Iowa and Us demand notes receivable of taxes – ayes 71, nays 19.

A provision was also adopted that the bill expires by its on limitation February 1st, 1864.  A good day’s work.


(Special to Burlington Hawk-Eye.)

DES MOINES, Jan. 24, 1862.

Hon. C. C. Carpenter, of Ft. Dodge, has received the appointment of Brigadier Quarter-Master under Brigadier General McKean, in Missouri, secured through the influence of Hon. James W. Grimes.
T. H. S.


DES MOINES, Jan. 25.

HOUSE. – A communication from the Governor in answer to the resolution of the House asking how regimental officers were appointed, was received and read.  The paper is an able one, citing the law of Congress on the subject, and fully justifying the course.  Ordered to be printed.

Also, a resolution of the House, asking how many acres of Railroad land had been certified to the Secretary of the Interior showing there has been seven hundred and twenty sections certified to the Dubuque and Pacific Railroad, by the Governor and his predecessor, and the same amount to the Mississippi and Missouri Railroad.  He has no official notice of the length of the Burlington and Missouri Railroad, and has certified no land to that company.  Passed.


SENATE. – A resolution was presented asking the attention of Congress to the neglected condition of Iowa troops and their want of more surgeons, nurses and hospital stores.

Mr. HARDIE of Dubuque presented a petition forty feet long asking the repeal of the prohibitory and establish a license law.

The Military Committee reported back Mr. Delavey’s resolution asking a reduction of the salaries of commissioned officers, abolishing sutlers, and all except one band to each Brigade.  It will pass.

The Senate spent most of the Session discussing the Post Master question for the Assembly.

The Ways and Means Committee reported back Senator Gue’s bill fixing juror’s fees at one dollar and twenty five cents, and collecting six dollars cost to be paid by the losing party.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Diary of Alexander G. Downing: Thursday, July 10, 1862

The regiment returned from picket this morning at 8 o’clock, the Thirteenth coming out to relieve us. The roads are becoming very dusty and a regiment of men with a few mules can kick up a big dust. The soil is a sandy loam, and so fine and of such a color as to look like smoke from even a short distance.

Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B., Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 57

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

In The Review Queue: Allegany to Appomattox


By Valgene Dunham

On September 7, 1864, William Whitlock, aged thirty-five, left his wife and four children in Allegany, New York, to join the Union army in battle. More than 100 years later, his unpublished letters to his wife were found in the attic of a family home. These letters serve as the foundation for Allegany to Appomattox, giving readers a vivid glimpse into the environment and political atmosphere that surrounded the Civil War from the perspective of a northern farmer and lumberman.Ni

Whitlock's observations tell of exhausting marches, limited rations, and grueling combat. In plainspoken language, the letters also reveal a desperate homesickness, consistently expressing concern for the family's health and financial situation and requesting news from home. Dunham's detailed descriptions of the war's progress and specific battles provide a rich context for Whitlock's letters, orienting readers to both the broad narrative of the Civil War and the intimate chronicle of one soldier's impressions.


About the Author

Valgene Dunham is Distinguished Professor Emeritus in the College of Science at Coastal Carolina University in Conway, South Carolina. He is the author and coauthor of numerous books, chapters, and journal articles.

ISBN 978-0815610113, Syracuse University Press, © 2013, Hardcover, 264 pages, Maps, Photographs, Illustrations, Footnotes, Appendices, References & Index. $29.95.  To purchase this book click HERE.

First Session -- 37th Congress

WASHINGTON, Jan. 24. – HOUSE. – The House considered the Senate amendments to the diplomatic appropriation bill and [then] concurred in those including Florence among Consul Generalships, and striking out Hayti, Liberia &c.  The bill will be returned to the Senate.  House adjourned.


SENATE. – The Bright expulsion case was continued.  Several Senators speaking for and against expulsion.  The subject was concluded.  After Executive session, the Senate adjourned till Monday.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

About the Gunboats

CAIRO, Jan. 24. – The two gunboats sent up the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers, as well as the two boats off Forts Holt and Jefferson in the Mississippi, are doing good service.  The Conestoga, Lieut. Phelps commanding, and Lexington, Lieut. Shirks commanding, have been [spelling] in turn in the river within the past week.  The Lexington chased the rebel gunboat under the guns of Fort Henry.

The remaining gunboats are nearly completed at Cairo, and as soon as men are supplied, we may expect to hear a good account of the fleet under the command of flag officer H. H. Foote, wherever it is directed.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Later From California

The Rains continue -- Water again Rising.

SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 1. – During the past thirty hours it has rained hard almost incessantly.  The storm still continues.  Yesterday noon the water at Sacramento commenced rising in, and a complete inundation of that city is unavoidable.  The area of land now overflowed in the State is 20 miles broad and 250 long, covering upwards of three millions acres, mostly arable land, a considerable portion being fenced and tilled.

It is estimated that forty five hundred cattle and sheep have been drowned since winter commenced.

The unprecedented succession of tremendous storms have washed the mining regions, where the ground was previously upturned and dug over, producing great changes, rendering a probable increase of gold product, from the placer diggings during the ensuing season.


SALT LAKE CITY, Jan 23. – Delegates assembled at Great Salt Lake City Jan. 22d and drew up a State Constitution, to be submitted to Congress.  Utah demands admission into the Union.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Diary of Alexander G. Downing: Wednesday, July 9, 1862

Nothing of importance today. Our regiment went out on picket again. Our picket line and reserve post are both in heavy timber and so we do not have to be in the hot sun while on duty.

Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B., Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 56

Great Gale

TROY, Jan. 25. – A tremendous gale prevailed all through western Vermont, this morning.  As the train, which left Troy for Rutland at 7:15 A. M., was five or six miles above Bennington in the town of Shaftsbury, Vt., it encountered the gale, while passing an embankment about thirty feet high one of the cars was broken from its coupling and thrown by the force of the wind down the bank.  Dr. H. Wright, of Boston, a passenger, was instantly killed.  John Robinson, the Road Master, was severely injured and will not survive.  One other man and two ladies were slightly injured.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Southern Items

The Montgomery Advertiser, of the 5th estimates the number of troops in the Rebel army from Alabama, at 17,000.  Governor Moore, in his October message, puts it at 30,000.  Which statement is true?

The Quincy (Fla.) Dispatch of the 8th instant says the British steamer Gladiator, which recently ran the Federal blockade, is safely moored in a Florida port.  Her cargo of arms is valued at two millions of dollars.

The Pensacola Observer, of the 9th, says that about one dozen slaves recently escaped to Fort Pickens.

The Marshall (Texas) Republican of the 14th inst., leans of large mortality among the Texas troops on the Potomac.

The Richmond Dispatch, of the 15th inst., has advises from New Mexico, from private sources, dated from the 19th ult., stating that General Sibley had taken possession, by proclamation , of New Mexico and Arizona, and declared martial law therein.

We here from New Orleans that the French residents in that city are anxious to escape, that they have held a meeting to take measures to effect this and that they have put themselves in communication with the Union troops at Ship Island.

– Published in The Burlington Weekly Hawk-Eye, Burlington, Iowa, Saturday, February 1, 1862, p. 4

Diary of Alexander G. Downing: Tuesday, July 8, 1862

The rebels in this locality are not making much of an effort to retake Corinth. The report in camp is that they have sent the greater part of their forces east to reinforce their army in and around Richmond. News came this evening that General McClellan has been whipped and is now retreating from Richmond.

Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B., Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 56