Sunday, August 10, 2014

General Pierre G. T. Beauregard to General John Bell Hood, November 17, 1864

HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE WEST,
Tuscumbia, Ala., November 17, 1864.
General J. B. HOOD,
Commanding Army of Tennessee, &c.:

GENERAL: General Beauregard directs me to say that he desires you will take the offensive at the earliest practicable moment and deal the enemy rapid and vigorous blows, striking him while thus dispersed, and by this means distract Sherman's advance into Georgia. To relieve you from any embarrassment whilst operating in North Alabama and Middle Tennessee, he authorizes you to issue all such orders in General Taylor's department as you may deem necessary to secure the efficient and successful administration and operation of your army, sending General Taylor, or whoever may be in command, copies of all orders. He wishes you to send forthwith to Major-General Wheeler one brigade of cavalry of Jackson's division, and the balance of that division as soon as it can be spared, should Sherman advance into Georgia, and also to advise General Wheeler that in such case Clanton's brigade is subject to his orders. The headquarters of this military division will be removed in the morning from this place to Montgomery, Ala.

1 am, general, respectfully, your obedient servant,
 GEORGE WM. BRENT,
 Colonel and Assistant Adjutant-General.

SOURCES: The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 45, Part 1 (Serial No. 93), p. 1215; John Bell Hood, Advance and Retreat, p. 277

John Brown to his Children, September 24, 1853

Akron, Ohio, Sept. 24, 1853.

Dear Children, — We received Henry's letter of the 16th August in due time, and when it came I intended to reply at once; but not being very stout, and having many things to look after, it has been put off until now. We were very glad of that letter, and of the information it gave of your health and prosperity, as well as your future calculations. We have some nice turkeys and chickens fattening, to be ready by the time you come on to Akron. Father and Jason were both here this morning. Father is quite well. Jason, Ellen, Owen, and Fred have all been having the ague more or less since I wrote before. Other friends are in usual health, I believe. We have done part of our sowing, got our fine crop of corn all secured against frosts yesterday, and are digging potatoes to-day. The season has been thus far one of great temporal blessing; and I would fain hope that the Spirit of God has not done striving in our hard hearts. I sometimes feel encouraged to hope that my sons will give up their miserable delusions and believe in God and in his Son our Saviour. I think the family are more and more decided in favor of returning to Essex, and seem all disposed to be making little preparations for it as we suppose the time draws near. Our county fair comes off on the 12th and 13th October, but we suppose we can hardly expect you so soon. Should be much pleased to have you here then. . . .

SOURCE: Franklin B. Sanborn, The Life and Letters of John Brown, p. 154-5

Major Rutherford B. Hayes to Lucy Webb Hayes, July 30, 1861

Camp On West Fork Of Monongahela
River, Weston, Virginia, Tuesday, P. M.,
July 30, 1861.

Dearest: — We are in the loveliest spot for a camp you ever saw — no, lovelier than that; nothing in Ohio can equal it. It needs a mountainous region for these beauties. We do not know how long we shall stay, but we suppose it will be three or four days. We have had two days of marching — not severe marching at all; but I saw enough to show me how easily raw troops are used up by an injudicious march. Luckily we are not likely to suffer in that way. We are probably aiming for Gauley Bridge on the Kanawha where Wise is said to be fortified. General Rosecrans is engaged in putting troops so as to hold the principal routes leading to the point.

The people here are divided. Many of the leading ladies are Secessionists. We meet many good Union men; the other men are prudently quiet. Our troops behave well.

We have had one of those distressing accidents which occur so frequently in volunteer regiments. You may remember that a son of H. J. Jewett, of Zanesville, President of [the] Central Ohio Railroad, was on the request of his father appointed a first-lieutenant in Captain Canby's company. He joined us at Grafton in company with his father. He had served in Colonel's regiment of three-months men in all the affairs in western Virginia and is very promising. A loaded gun was thrown down from a stack by a careless sentinel discharging a Minie ball through young Jewett's foot. I was with him in a moment. It is a painful and severe wound, perhaps dangerous. There is a hope he may not be crippled. He bears it well. One of his exclamations was, “Oh, if it had only been a secession ball I wouldn't have cared. Do you think you can save my leg,” etc., etc. The ball after passing through his foot passed through three of McIlrath's tents, one full of men lying down. It cut the vest of one over his breast as he lay on his back and stirred the hair of another; finally passed clean through a knapsack and struck a man on the leg barely making a slight bruise and dropping down. Dr. Joe has the flattened bullet now to give to Jewett.

My horse came over the hills in good style. Pshaw! I wish you were here; this is a camp. The field officers' tents are on a high greensward hill, the other tents spreading below it in the sweetest way. As I write I can turn my head and from the entrance of the tent see the loveliest scene you can imagine. . . .

Affectionately,
R. B. Hayes.
Mrs. Hayes.

SOURCE: Charles Richard Williams, editor, Diary and Letters of Rutherford Birchard Hayes, Volume 2, p. 49-50

Major-General Thomas J. Jackson to Mary Anna Morrison Jackson, January 17, 1863

January 17th.

Yesterday I had the pleasure of receiving a letter from my esposita four days after it was written. Doesn't it look as if Confederate mails are better than United States mails? Don't you remember how long it took for letters to come from Charlotte to Lexington under the old regime? I derive an additional pleasure in reading a letter from the conviction that it has not travelled on the Sabbath. How delightful will be our heavenly home, where everything is sanctified!  . . . I am gratified at hearing that you have commenced disciplining the baby. Now be careful, and don't let her conquer you. She must not be permitted to have that will of her own, of which you speak. How I would love to see the little darling, whom I love so tenderly, though I have never seen her; and if the war were only over, I tell you, I would hurry down to North Carolina to see my wife and baby. I have much work to do. Lieutenant-Colonel Faulkner is of great service to me in making out my reports. Since he is my senior adjutant-general, Pendleton is promoted to a majority, and is the junior adjutant-general. Major Bier, my chief of ordnance, has been ordered to Charleston, and Captain William Allan, of Winchester, is his successor. Colonel Smeade is my inspector-general, so you must not complain of my not writing to you about my staff. I regret to see our Winchester friends again in the hands of the enemy. I trust that, in answer to prayer, our country will soon be blessed with peace. If we were only that obedient people that we should be, I would, with increased confidence, look for a speedy termination of hostilities. Let us pray more and live more to the glory of God.  . . . I am still thinking and thinking about that baby, and do want to see her. Can't you send her to me by express? There is an express line all the way to Guiney's. I am glad to hear that she sleeps well at night, and doesn't disturb her mother. But it would be better not to call her a cherub; no earthly being is such. I am also gratified that Hetty is doing well. Remember me to her, and tell her that, as I didn't give her a present last Christmas, I intend giving her two next.  . . . Don't you accuse my baby of not being brave. I do hope she will get over her fear of strangers. If, before strangers take her, you would give them something to please her, and thus make her have pleasant associations with them, and seeing them frequently, I trust she would lose her timidity. It is gratifying that she is growing so well, and I am thankful she is so bright and knowing. I do wish I could see her funny little ways, and hear her “squeal out with delight” at seeing the little chickens. I am sometimes afraid that you will make such an idol of that baby that God will take her from us. Are you not afraid of it? Kiss her for her father.

I have this morning received two presents — a pair of gauntlets from near the Potomac, and another beautiful pair from Mrs. Preston Trotter, of Brownsburg. A kind gentleman, Mr. Stephens, of Nelson County, sent me a barrel of select pippins.

SOURCE: Mary Anna Jackson, Life and Letters of General Thomas J. Jackson (Stonewall Jackson), p. 413-4

Major-General George G. Meade to Margaretta Sergeant Mead, November 3, 1863

Headquarters Army Of The Potomac, November 3, 1863.

There is no doubt my failure to engage Lee in battle during his recent advance created great disappointment, in which feeling I fully shared. I have seen and heard of no indications of absolute dissatisfaction, though this may have existed without its being manifested. The General in Chief did telegraph me I had better fight instead of running away, but as he did not explain how I could fight to advantage, I paid no attention to the very rough manner in which he expressed his views, except to inform him that, if my judgment was not approved, I ought to be and deserved to be relieved; to which I received no reply beyond a disclaiming of any intention to give offence. Now I have clearly indicated what I thought feasible and practicable and my plan is disapproved. I think under these circumstances justice to me and the true interests of the country justify their selecting some one else to command.

SOURCE: George Meade, The Life and Letters of George Gordon Meade, Vol. 2, p. 155

Brigadier-General Thomas Kilby Smith to Elizabeth Budd Smith, February 2, 1863

Headquarters First Brigade,
Fourth Div., Seventeenth Army Corps,
Hebron, Miss., Feb. 2, 1863.
My Dear Wife:

We broke camp yesterday and are now on the march.


SOURCE: Walter George Smith, Life and letters of Thomas Kilby Smith, p. 354

Congressman James A. Garfield to Corydon E. Fuller, February 9, 1864

House Of Representatives,
Washington, D. C, Feb. 9, 1864.

My Dear Corydon: —Yours of the 31st came duly to hand. I should be glad to be as prompt and punctual as in other days in answering your letters, but the crush of work in which I constantly find myself involved will not give me a solid moment that I can call my own. I grow weary, very weary, at the prospect of a life spent as I have been spending mine for the past five or six years. I have lived at home less than one year in the last three and a half, and it seems now as if my future gave no promise of home and rest this side the grave. I can not tell you how much I long to be once more free, and feel that a few days are my own to give to my own heart and to friendship; but it does not now look as though that time would ever come. The revolutionary times in which we are living will probably keep the whole of your life and mine in a whirl.

Your suggestions in reference to the excise law seem to be good and just. I will try to get them before the committee on that subject. There are no copies of Boutwell's book now left for distribution, but I may be able to find some of the old members who have a spare copy. If so, I will send it to you.

Give my love to Mary, and do excuse hasty and unworthy letters. I have sent you a copy of my speech on Confiscation.

Ever your brother,
J. A. Garfield.

SOURCE: Corydon Eustathius Fuller, Reminiscences of James A. Garfield: With Notes Preliminary and Collateral, p. 354

Diary of Alexander G. Downing: Sunday, October 11, 1863

We left this morning according to orders and marched fifteen miles, when we stopped to eat dinner. We then continued our march about five miles farther, and at 4 o'clock we reached the Black river bridge, just ten miles out from Vicksburg, thus making a circuit of twenty miles to reach this important point.

Source: Alexander G. Downing, Edited by Olynthus B., Clark, Downing’s Civil War Diary, p. 147

Diary of Charles H. Lynch: June 14, 1863

Last night our position was changed from the south to the east side of the town, on the Berryville road. The night was a very dark, stormy one, with severe lightning and thunder. We were wet through. Not allowed fires as it might draw the enemy's fire. Passed a very uncomfortable night. This morning, at daylight, our position was again changed, extending our lines further towards the north, under fire from the enemy as we attempted to enter the rifle pits. In the movement Lieutenant Merwin commanding our company was wounded in the foot.

The enemy had possession of a large brick house a short distance in front of our position in the pits. Their sharpshooters made it hot for us. A charge on the house was ordered. The enemy ran, but we captured a few prisoners. Later in the day the rebs again took possession of the house making it hot for us in the pits. We had to lie low or zip would come a bullet, and at times many of them. Colonel ordered a section of a battery. Two guns putting a few shells through the house, the enemy left it. No more trouble came from that point, the house was ruined. About 6 P. M. General Milroy called in all his forces and formed them around the Star Fort, the largest fort. A fierce battle came on. It was a hot place. The roaring of the big guns, explosion of shells, rattling of musketry, was something fearful. The charging of both sides was hot work. We drove the enemy back and they also forced our lines back. Darkness put an end to the carnage and I had passed through the battle unharmed. The end of the second day. The casualties were great as I could not help seeing. It gave me an opportunity to see what a horrible thing war really was. We were fighting Jackson's old corps, now commanded by General Ewell, reported to number forty thousand.

SOURCE: Charles H. Lynch, The Civil War Diary, 1862-1865, of Charles H. Lynch 18th Conn. Vol's, p. 19-20

166th Ohio Infantry

Organized at Camp Cleveland, Ohio, and mustered in May 13, 1864. Left State for Washington, D.C., May 15. Attached to 2nd Brigade, DeRussy's Division, 22nd Army Corps, to July, 1864. 3rd Brigade, DeRussy's Division, 22nd Army Corps, to August, 1864. Assigned to duty as garrison at Forts Richardson, Barnard, Raynalds, Ward and Worth (Headquarters at Fort Richardson), Defences of Washington south of the Potomac, till September. Repulse of Early's attack on Washington July 11-12. Mustered out September 9, 1864.

Regiment lost during service 39 Enlisted men by disease.

SOURCE: Frederick H. Dyer, A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, Part 3, p. 1552

167th Ohio Infantry

Organized at Hamilton, Ohio, and mustered in May 14, 1864. Left State for Charleston, W. Va., May 18. Six Companies moved to Camp Platt May 22, and four Companies to Gauley Bridge. Duty at these points guarding supply trains and stores till September. Mustered out September 8, 1864.

Regiment lost during service 5 Enlisted men by disease.

SOURCE: Frederick H. Dyer, A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, Part 3, p. 1552

168th Ohio Infantry

Organized at Camp Dennison, Ohio, and mustered in May 19, 1864. Moved to Covington, Ky., May 19. Detachments stationed at Falmouth and Cynthiana guarding railroad and bridges. Operations against Morgan May 31-June 20. Action at Cynthiana June 9 (Detachment captured). Keller's Bridge, near Cynthiana, June 11. Duty in Kentucky till July 10. Moved to Camp Dennison July 11. Guard duty there and at Cincinnati, Ohio, till September 8. Mustered out September 8, 1864.

Regiment lost during service 11 Enlisted men killed and mortally wounded and 8 Enlisted men by disease. Total 19.

SOURCE: Frederick H. Dyer, A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, Part 3, p. 1552

169th Ohio Infantry

Organized at Camp Taylor, Cleveland, Ohio, and mustered in May 13, 1864. Left State for Washington, D. C., May 19. Attached to 1st Brigade, DeRussy's Division, 22nd Army Corps, to July, 1864. 2nd Brigade, DeRussy's Division, 22nd Army Corps, to August, 1864. Assigned to duty in the Defences of Washington south of the Potomac as garrison at Fort Ethan Allen and in fortifications south of the Potomac till September. Repulse of Early's attack on Washington July 11-12. Mustered out September 4, 1864.

Regiment lost during service 41 Enlisted men by disease.

SOURCE: Frederick H. Dyer, A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, Part 3, p. 1553

170th Ohio Infantry

Organized at Bellaire, Ohio, and mustered in May 13, 1864. Left State for Washington, D.C., May 17. Attached to 2nd Brigade, Haskins' Division, 22nd Army Corps, to July, 1864, and assigned to duty as garrison at Forts Simmons, Bayard, Mansfield, Gaines and Battery Vermont, Defences of Washington, till July 4. Moved to Sandy Hook, Md., July 4, and duty in the Defences of Maryland Heights till July 15. Attached to Reserve Division, Dept. of West Virginia. Operations in the Shenandoah Valley July 15-August 24. Expedition to Snicker's Ford July 17-18. Rocky Ford July 18. Battle of Kernstown, Winchester, July 24. Martinsburg July 25. Moved to Frederick, Md., July 30; thence guard supply trains to Harper's Ferry and duty there till August 24. Mustered out September 10, 1864.

Regiment lost during service 4 Enlisted men killed and mortally wounded and 1 Officer and 19 Enlisted men by disease. Total 24.

SOURCE: Frederick H. Dyer, A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, Part 3, p. 1553

Saturday, August 9, 2014

Francis Lieber to Samuel Tyler, April 14, 1861

New York, April 14, 1861.

My Dear Friend, — When your letters arrived I was busy writing out some lectures, the contents of which differ in many respects from what you seem to think right and true in our history and public affairs. I felt thus indisposed to write, and have now sent you a copy, — I beg you to be assured, — not to discuss things or challenge dispute, but simply and exclusively because not sending it to an old friend would have appeared to me unfriendly and cold. I take it for granted that you believe each word I have said to have come from my soul. You disagree; be it so. I am obliged to take far severer things. Oh, it is sad indeed to know a son in arms, and not to be able to pray for God's blessing on his arms, — to know that victory on his side is victory on the side of wrong. Let us not discuss these things. I have no ambition to bring you over to my side; there is no chance for you of bringing mo over to your side.

You complain of the bad grammar of President Lincoln's Message. We have to look at other things, just now, than grammar. For aught I know, the last resolution of the South Carolina Convention may have been worded in sufficiently good grammar, but it is an attempt, unique in its disgracefulness, to whitewash an act of the dirtiest infamy. Let us leave grammar alone in these days of shame, and rather ask whether people act according to the first and simplest rules of morals and of honor.

I had an idea of spending the summer vacation in Europe, but I believe I shall give up the trip. I feel ashamed and would be worried by constant talk about this wanton, criminal Rebellion. Good-by. No one wishes you more heartily the choicest blessings of heaven than I do.

SOURCE: Thomas Sergeant Perry, Editor, The Life and Letters of Francis Lieber, p. 317-8

Review: 1863, Lincoln’s Pivotal Year

1863: Lincoln's Pivotal Year
Edited by Harold Holzer and Sara Vaughn Gabbard

On January 1, 1863 after spending a few hours welcoming visitors and shaking hundreds of hands, Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation which declared all enslaved people in areas where an active rebellion against to Government of the United States was in progress would be thence forward and forever free.  It was a momentous beginning for 1863, the second full year of the war, and what would prove to be a pivotal year for Abraham Lincoln and the divided nation.

Lincoln scholars Harold Holzer and Sara Vaughn Gabbard have edited a volume of essays by notable historians and scholars which examine the events during the twelve months between January 1st and December 31st, 1863 and titled it “1863: Lincoln’s Pivotal Year.”

The Remembrance of a Dream” written by the book’s co-editor, Harold Holzer, introduces the volume is and is followed by ten essays which cover the events, developments and personalities that dominated the headlines in 1863:

In “The Day of Jubilee” Edna Green Medford covers the reactions of Northerners and Southerners, both black and white, to the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation.

Frank J. Williams tackles Lincoln’s use of his Constitutional war powers to suspend the writ of habeas corpus and his trying of insurrectionists by a military tribunal in “Under Cover of Liberty.”

As the author of “Lincoln and his Admirals” Craig L. Symonds justifiably handles the joint operations of the Army and Navy during the Vicksburg Campaign, as well as Admiral Samuel F. Du Pont’s failed attempted to shell and capture Charleston, South Carolina in “Lincoln at Sea.”

Military Drafts, Civilian Riots” is Barnet Schecter’s essay on the first military draft issued by the United States Government and its resulting reaction of the New York City Draft Riots.

The Lincoln family during 1863 is the focus of Catherine Clinton’s essay, “The Fiery Furnace of Affliction.”

In “And the War Goes On” John F. Marzalek and Michael B. Ballard discuss how the twin victories of the Union Forces at Gettysburg and Vicksburg, dealt the hand of ultimate defeat to the Confederates, and yet the war continued on for another two years.

Bob Zeller discusses Civil War photography in his essay, “Picturing the War.”

The General Tide” by William C. Davis paints the big picture of the war in 1863.

The Gettysburg Address Revisited” by Orville Vernon Burton, need I say more.

Harold Holzer’s essay “Seldom Twice Alike: The Changing Faces of History” closes out the volume with a discussion about the use of Abraham Lincoln’s image and its effect on his supporters and those who opposed him.

The essays work as stand-alone pieces allowing the reader to easily read an essay in a sitting, and collectively as a whole while relating the events of 1863.  Each essay is well written and easily read with end notes after each chapter.  I’m confident the average Civil War student with a bit more knowledge of the war than the average casual reader would have no problem reading this book.

ISBN 978-0809332465, Southern Illinois University Press, © 2013, Hardcover, 216 pages, Photograph & Illustrations, End Notes at the end of each essay, Appendices & Index. $32.95.  To purchase a copy of this book click HERE.

Tenn. September 22, 1862

[Missing Text] [T]enn. Sept 22nd 1862

[Missing Text]is distance from the centre of information, [illegible] [Head] Quarters of the army of West Tennessee, added to the difficulty of direct communication with the separate and separated Divisions of said Army, it is not to be supposed that your correspondent can, as a general thing, give your news from the South in “advance of the mail,” as Newspaper men say, and still less likely in advance of the telegraph.  However I may inform you of matters pertaining to the war and this Army, which though OLD as far as news are concerned, may interest your numerous readers, and moreover, my pen is not a Government monopoly, therefore not to be controlled, as certain institutions not of, by Cliques, or parties having their own aggrandizement in view.

The first matter of importance that I think of is one in which all western people have an interest, and worded positively, in original language – it is this – “All quiet on the Mississippi!”  And why should this not be the condition of things?  We are holding our individual breathe to hear the result of the fighting in the East.  We are prepared for any tidings, good, bad, or indifferent.  We are as ready to believe that Gen. McClellan has bagged the body of the enemy, and that they are now on their way to hospitable confinement in the North as we are to believe the enemy are in the possession of Washington and have burnt the Capitol, which has so long literally bled this Union in more ways than one.  I do not wish you to understand from this last observation that I am opposed to improvement of human progression.  I am, however, opposed to any further programs of the rebels in the direction of Mason and Dixon’s line.  It is to be hoped that Gen. McClellan has caught the spirit of our soldiers, and [illegible & missing text] in regard to the “conduct of the war?”  [Missing text] will be prosecuted with all that [missing text] that a powerful people and [missing text] capable of.  Our army of the [missing text] table.  Let us hope that [missing text] to lead it and direct [missing text].

Gen. W. [missing text] has [missing text, the rest of the article is missing.]

– Published in The Union Sentinel, Osceola, Iowa, Saturday, October 17, 1862, p. 1.  There is a small hole in the top of this article, and the bottom was torn from the lower left to the upper right.

Robert Gould Shaw to Sarah Blake Sturgis Shaw, August 12, 1862

near Culpepeb Court-house, Virginia, August 12, 1862.

Dearest Mother, — . . . I was in different parts of the field with General Gordon, who finally sent me back to get some artillery through the woods. It was impossible to do it, because the brush was so thick, and besides, I hadn't been gone five minutes before the enemy got us under a cross-fire, and our brigade had to retreat. They advanced so close to the Second before the latter gave way, that it was easy to distinguish all their features. I think our regiment lost most at this time; they also inflicted a heavy loss on the regiments opposed to them. So from what I can gather, I was saved from the hottest fire by being ordered to look for the artillery. There were four hundred and seventy-four enlisted men taken into action in the Second. Of these one hundred and twenty were killed and wounded, and thirty-seven missing. They were not under fire more than thirty minutes. Twenty-two officers went in, and eight came out; five were killed, five wounded, four captured, three of whom are thought to be wounded.

We hear to-day that the enemy have retired to some distance. If true, we may soon hear more of our missing. Goodwin, Cary, Choate, and Stephen Perkins were all quite ill, but would not stay away from the fight. Choate was the only one of the four not killed. Goodwin couldn't keep up with the regiment; but I saw him toiling up the hill at some distance behind, with the assistance of his servant . He hardly reached the front when he was killed. All our officers behaved nobly. Those who ought to have stayed away didn't. It was splendid to see those sick fellows walk straight up into the shower of bullets, as if it were so much rain; men, who until this year, had lived lives of perfect ease and luxury. O, it is hard to believe that we shall never see them again, after having been constantly together for more than a year. I don't remember a single quarrel of any importance among our officers during all that time.

Yesterday I went over the battle-field with the General. The first man I recognized was Cary. He was lying on his back with his head on a piece of wood. He looked calm and peaceful, as if he were merely sleeping; his face was beautiful, and I could have stood and looked at it a long while. Captain Williams we found next. Then Goodwin, Abbott, and Perkins. They had all probably been killed instantly, while Cary lived until two o'clock, P. M., of the next day. His First Sergeant was shot in the leg, and lay by his side all the time. He says he was very quiet; spoke little, and didn't seem to suffer. We found a dipper with water, which some Rebel soldier had brought. They took everything from him after he died, but returned a ring and locket with his wife's miniature to the sergeant . His was the only dead body I have ever seen that it was pleasant to look at, and it was beautiful. I saw it again in Culpeper late that night. All these five were superior men; every one in the regiment was their friend. It was a sad day for us, when they were brought in dead, and they cannot be replaced.

The bodies were taken to town, and Lieutenant Francis and I had them packed in charcoal to go to Washington, where they will be put in metallic coffins. I took a lock of hair from each one to send to their friends. It took almost all night to get them ready for transportation.

SOURCE: Thomas Wentworth Higginson, Editor, Harvard Memorial Biographies, Volume 2, p. 197-9

First Lieutenant Andrew G. Henderson to his Family, December 22, 1863

Stevenson, Alabama
December 22, 1863
My Dear Ones,

Our regiment reached here yesterday evening having started from our camp at Bridgeport yesterday morning. The distance is only 12 miles and the regiment got into camp by 2 P.M., but some of our teams did not get in until 2 this morning on account of the bad roads. The team that my blankets were in, however, did get in by 10½ so that I had a pretty good night's sleep. We all slept in the open air, of course, without any tents, and this morning the ground was frozen so that it would carry heavily loaded teams. In Iowa, you would think such usage would kill one, but here we do not think anything of it. I slept very comfortable.

We are now on our road back to Larkinsville, Jackson County, Alabama, where I presume we shall winter. It is 25 miles from here and is quite a pleasant place. We will start again, I presume, tomorrow morning.

My health is first rate and my appetite such as I would be ashamed of if I was at home. We have plenty to eat and little to do, and I am afraid I shall be very lazy when I get home. Some days ago, Lt. Amos started for Maquoketa, and he will give you particulars of our situation &c. I want to get another letter from you very much. I do not want you to play another trick on me by not writing for two weeks. Don't you do it again!

I write this letter in Capt. W. A. Warren's office in this town. He is Post Quartermaster here and Frank Bettis is his head clerk. They are both old acquaintances from Bellevue. Col. Jenkins is in the office with me at the present time. His health is first rate.

I hope you will have a pleasant Christmas and New Year's. God bless you, my dear ones. May God watch over and protect you. Let me know whether Santa Claus visits the children on Christmas Eve or not.

My respects to all enquiring friends. Who is dead or married lately? Write as often as you possibly can.

Your affectionate husband and father,
A. G. Henderson


P.S. Have you sold any of them gold pens and pencil holders yet?
A. G. H.






















SOURCE: This letter was up for auction on Ebay, accessed August 9, 2014.

Colonel George W. Brent to General John Bell Hood, November 17, 1864

HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE WEST,
Tuscumbia, Ala., November 17, 1864.
General J. B. HOOD,
Commanding, &c.:

GENERAL: General Beauregard instructs me to say that a bridge about three miles from Tuscumbia, on road to Cherokee, is now being constructed, and that, for want of workmen, it cannot be completed in less than five or six days, and that at this point the road is almost impassable. There are also other points on the road which will become impassable should the rain continue. He thinks it important that a proper force should be sent to complete the improvement as early as possible.

Respectfully, your obedient servant,
 GEORGE WM. BRENT,
 Colonel and Assistant Adjutant-General.

SOURCES: The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume 45, Part 1 (Serial No. 93), p. 1216; John Bell Hood, Advance and Retreat, p. 276