Davis Mills, Miss. Reached the Battery about 10 A. M., it being situated one mile south of Davis Mills in an open field; church and cemetery hard by.
SOURCE: Jenkin Lloyd Jones, An Artilleryman's Diary, p. 12
Davis Mills, Miss. Reached the Battery about 10 A. M., it being situated one mile south of Davis Mills in an open field; church and cemetery hard by.
SOURCE: Jenkin Lloyd Jones, An Artilleryman's Diary, p. 12
Davis Mills. Heard from home. Received two letters, from John and Thomas, which eased my anxiety. Listened to the first sermon [in camp].
SOURCE: Jenkin Lloyd Jones, An Artilleryman's Diary, p. 12
I have for some time
had as mess-mates Surgeon J—— V—— and his two sons. I find him a most estimable
Quaker gentleman, and he is by his courteous and affable manner, doing very
much to smooth down the asperities of the rough road over which I am now
traveling. Since the removal of camp, the sickness is abating rapidly. The
list, which two weeks ago numbered over two hundred, is now less than sixty,
and every day diminishing. I have much trouble in getting my assistant to
perform his duties, which, with the constant interference of military officers,
greatly embarrasses me in my course. We have to pass some trying scenes. Last
week a private in our regiment, a lawyer from ———, heard of the sickness of his
daughter. He asked a furlough of thirty days to visit her. The officers here
granted it, but when it reached General McClellan he cut it down to fifteen
days, which would but give him time to go and return. He declined to go on it,
and yesterday intelligence of his daughter's death reached him. Oh, how much I
thought of this, and thought if it were my case! 'Tis very sad to think of.
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, pp. 49-50
On the third of
September we stopped at Camp Advance, near Chain Bridge, on our way to
Richmond. That was nearly ten weeks ago. We are now about four miles nearer to
Richmond than we were then. Three weeks to a mile! When shall we close this
war? Could we only move once a week, even though it were but a mile at a time,
it would keep up an excitement, and contribute largely to the preservation of
both health and subordination. There is much talk amongst the soldiers of going
into winter quarters here, but I do not believe it. McClellan will hardly dare
risk his popularity on such a stake. He must go forward.
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, p. 50
Night before last
was made hideous by the yells and drunken orgies of officers, who, in obedience
to the order that no work should be done on the Sabbath, omitted all duty, but
to make amends, employed the day in getting beastly drunk, and the night in howling
themselves sober. It is with deep regret that I notice the rapid increase of
drunkenness in the army.
One day last week
Colonel ———, of the — Regiment ——— Volunteers, appeared on drill, took Hardee's
tactics from his pocket, and read aloud, in commanding voice, his drill orders.
I took a little stroll the day after, and came upon a squad of the 43d New York
Regiment, armed with sticks and corn stalks, with a quasi Colonel, reading
orders from an old almanac. To my question what they were at, they replied "only
playing ——— ———.”
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, p. 50
This morning, as I
passed through the camp giving directions about cleaning and ventilating tents,
whilst the regiment was on parade, my Colonel, seeing me so engaged, gave
orders that no directions of mine need be obeyed till he sanctioned them. A
very strange order; but as it releases me from responsibility for the health of
the regiment, I shall henceforward leave the police regulations of the camp to
him, and stay at the hospital. I think it will take but a short time to
convince him of his mistake, and that he knows nothing of the sanitary wants of
a camp.
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, pp. 50-1
The Regiment
received two months' pay to-day, and to-night are all busy as bees making up
express packages, to be sent to fathers, mothers, sisters, sweethearts and
wives. To-morrow, all who can get passes to go, will be in Washington buying
presents and sitting before a camera to "stain the glass" with
reflections from their faces, all to be sent to friends at home. As man, in the
mass, can be, in no condition, however bright, which will exempt him from
cares, fears and apprehensions, so there is none so dark as to exclude hopes
and anticipations of better things. Even here we have our joys and our
aspirations, and these are of them. We preach that man should study to be
contented. What! man in his imperfect condition, contented, that he, as an individual,
or as a part of a great whole, should remain forever, as he is! It is opposed
to all God's plans. Discontent is the only stairway to progress. Through the
discontent of Israel, Egyptian bondage was broken. The discontent of Russia
brought war, which more than compensated for its ravages and its horrors, by
the introduction of her people to a knowledge of liberal ideas. Czarism was
shaken, and already the Goddess of Liberty waves her cap over the downfall of
serfdom. The seceder's discontent in England was the Genesis of a mighty
nation. Elijah cast off the cloak, too small for his growing aspirations,
whilst his followers eagerly grasped its folds to aid their progression. The
discontent of an Almighty God substituted Noah for Adam—Christ for Diana—Eternity
for Time. And is the discontent which occasioned this great war, with all its
horrors, its butcheries, its temporary demoralization, to have no great result?
Is it a bare interlude of the parties engaged, taking advantage of the time
when "God sleepeth;" or is it a spark emitted from the great restless
spirit of Jehovah, destined to ignite into a "pillar of fire," and to
light us on in the journey of universal progress?"
"Hope springs eternal—"
I have to-day seen a
"speck of war," with another touch of Vandalism. I have, for the
first time, seen an army in drill. Fifteen to twenty
thousand men, a thousand horses, and one hundred artillery wagons, on parade.
To me, who had never seen anything of the kind, it was grand, and looked like
war. I note here an extract of a letter written to a friend to-day, attempting
a description of part of it: "It was, indeed, a magnificent sight, to see
six hundred horses harnessed to a hundred wagons, in full run, in line, like a
regiment of infantry, and at a word of command, to become so instantly and
inconcievably mixed that you would think a universal smash inevitable, appear
in another instant dashing across the vast plain without a wagon attached. Turn
your eyes to see the wrecks, and you will be surprised to see the carriages in
four straight lines, forming a hollow square, with the mouth
of every gun pointing outwardly, and a laughing expression of "Surround me
if you dare!" An other look will show you that the carriages are so close
together that the horses can not pass between them, yet the wagon poles to
which the horses had been hitched are all inside of the square.
How did the six hundred horses get out? The cannon at once
open their hundred mouths and are enveloped in smoke. The horses return,
disappear for a moment in the dense smoke, and seemingly without their stopping
long enough to be hitched to, the four lines straighten out into column, and
the cavalcade is again dashing across the plain. In less than forty rods, the
jumble is repeated, the square formed, the horses gone, and the hundred cannons
again open. When did they reload?" The vandalism: The
finest orchard I have seen in Virginia, was cut down today, and in one hour
converted into a brush-heap; and for no other purpose than to give the infantry
a chance to "show off" in an hour's parade. The fruit trees were in
the way, and were cut down! It will take forty years to replace that orchard.
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, pp. 51-3
This morning our
Brigade Surgeon ordered me to leave the hospital for a few days, on account of
my fatigue and prostration. He said that a regard for my health demanded it,
and I must go where I pleased. I rode to Arlington, the headquarters of General
King. The Arlington house, I believe, is (unless confiscated) the property of
Gen. Lee. It is a magnificent mansion, overlooking Georgetown, Washington,
Alexandria, and miles of the beautiful Potomac. In a room of this house, said
to have been a favorite room of General Washington, I found my old friend
Surgeon ———,badly broken by the fatigue and excitement of the campaign. I
called on him, in company with Doctor A——, and after talking of his illness for
half an hour, Doctor A. proposed to him to have my advice, to which he replied
"Yes! if he will not medicate me too much." I said, "Doctor, I
will prescribe for you, and with a single dose will medicate every fibre of
your body, and by a healthy shock, restore you to health at once." With a
look as if he thought me a hyena, he asked: "What do you mean to do with
me?" "To take you out of this place and put you for thirty days under
the care of your wife and family." The poor suffering man grasped my hand,
burst into tears and sobbed aloud, "My Colonel won't consent to it."
For a moment, forgetting his religion, and not having the fear of military
commanders before my eyes, "Your Colonel may go to the d-vil, and you
shall have a furlough." I rode immediately to medical headquarters in
Washington, procured him the promise of a furlough as soon as his papers could
be sent in, returned, informed him of it, and had the pleasure on my long night
ride back to camp, of feeling that I had contributed something to the happines,
and, perhaps, had saved the life of a good and worthy man. How easy for any
man, however humble his position, to find opportunities of doing good, if he
will only wear the "spectacles of benevolence."
After the vandalism
I have witnessed in the destruction of property, in and about the houses of
rebels and elsewhere, it was a pleasurable relief to find here, that General
King, in the goodness of his always good heart, had enforced respect for the
property and furniture. The garden, with its fences, is preserved, and the
walls of almost every room in this immense old building, are covered with the
rich paintings and old family pictures, left hanging when this favorite of
rebeldom left his home. The garden is fine, but I think does not compare with
that of Kalorama. The antique bureaus and [s]ide-boards calling up impressions
of generations long passed away, are still tenants of the building; and the
halls recall Scott's fine description of the Halls of the Douglass, where the
arms of the hunters, and the trophies of the hunt, mingled with the trappings
of the warrior, constituted the attractive features of the chieftain's forest
home. Over the halls, and at every angle in the stairs, were the antlers of the
elk and the red-deer fastened to the walls and nearly interlocking their
branches over my head as I walked through. They were hung, too, with the arms
of the hunter and the warrior. So perfectly does this position command
Washington, that had the rebels there secretly collected a dozen mortars, they
might have fired the city before a gun could have been brought to bear on them.
Everybody is talking of a prospect of a move within three days, but the origin
of the reports I know not; perhaps in the impatience of the army to be led forward.
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, pp. 53-5
It is blustering
weather, and my cat is beside me, lying on her head, by the fire in
my little tent. Everybody says that is "a sign" of cold weather. Let
it come, if it will only drive us forward.
The Surgeon General
and the Brigade Surgeon have both been urging me, to-day, to accept a Brigade
Surgeonship. I decline, for two reasons: 1st. It would retain me as a Surgeon,
whilst it would exclude me from the immediate care of the sick. 'Twould be to
me like Hamlet, with Hamlet left out; and, 2d. It would greatly add to my
responsibilities, without advance in rank or increase in pay. I shall remain
where I am.
Glorious news just
received; the morning paper is just here. Mason and Slidell—both prisoners.
They should be hung.
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, p. 55
This morning we
received marching orders to Bailey's, to have a grand review of the whole army.
Very few had any confidence in that part of the order announcing the purpose—a
review. All believed it was to take Fairfax, and then perhaps to move forward
on Centreville and Manassas; but all were disappointed. It was a "Grand
review,”—a very grand one—such as I doubt whether this continent ever witnessed
before. It may never witness the like again.
There were about one
hundred thousand men in battle array; not in one long line stretching far
beyond the reach of vision, and leaving the imagination to picture what we
could not see, but all in sight at once, on an immense plain, in squares and
columns, marching and countermarching, charging and retreating. The President
was there; General McClellan and the Prince de Joinville were there; all the
elite were there. But to the poor soldiers it was a very hard day. They marched
heavy, with knapsacks and all the equipments of a soldier. They started early,
marched ten miles, were then several hours under review, and then marched back
to camp. Many gave out, and were left by the way side, to come up when they
can; the rest of us are back in camp to-night, worn out and heartily tired of
grand reviews. I hope that the crowding of my hospital is not to be one of the
result of the overwork.
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, pp. 55-6
Since the order of
the early part of this month, that my directions in reference to the sanitary
measures could be disregarded, I have not visited the camp, or given any
directions in regard to cleaning, ventilating, &c., and though it is now
but three weeks since that order was made, the sick list, which had decreased
in two weeks from about two hundred to thirty-nine, has suddenly run up again
to one hundred and sixty, and the diseases are assuming a low typhoid type. So
foul are the tents that if a soldier, with simple intermittent, remains three
days in his quarters, he is sent to hospital in a condition approximating
ship-fever. The seeds of disease are now sown in our regiment, which, in
despite of the greatest care, will not fail to yield rich harvests of sickness
all winter. Our Governor has been in camp to-day. He has no doubt seen the
effect of this military interference, for he has called on me to know if something
cannot be done to arrest the trouble. I have laid the whole matter fully before
him, and I have no doubt that what is in his power to do, will be done to avert
the evil.
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, pp. 56-7
It is a great relief
to my feelings that the difficulties heretofore existing between the Military
and Medical Departments in our Regiment are to-day adjusted, and I hope removed
by the rescinding the order of the 9th inst., that my directions about the
sanitary police of the camps need not be obeyed, and by a substitution of a
public order from which this is an extract: "The condition of the health
of the regiment requires more than ordinary care. The sanitary regulations of
the camp must be entrusted to the Surgeon of the regiment." I have good
reason to hope, too, that all personal feelings of an unpleasant character,
which have grown out of this unhappy difference of opinion as to official
rights, are removed, and that in future the relations of the two departments
may be pleasant to the parties, and beneficial to the sick. I now determined
that more than ever will I devote my energies to the removal of the causes of
the recent severe sickness, and to counteract their results.
SOURCE: Alfred L.
Castleman, The Army of the Potomac. Behind the Scenes. A Diary of
Unwritten History; From the Organization of the Army, by General George B.
McClellan, to the close of the Campaign in Virginia about the First Day
January, 1863, p. 57
WASHINGTON, Feb. 10, 1852.
MY DEAR DOWNER, -
There is nothing of much moment transpiring here. Cabell of Florida, in the
House, a few days ago laid down the Southern Whig platform, that no man should
be supported for President who was not sound on the slavery question; and
added, that though Scott, for every other reason, would be his first choice,
yet he had not come out in favor of slavery to this time, and he feared it was
even now too late. He was determined (Cabell) never to be caught by another
Taylor. Murphy, from Georgia, followed on the Democratic side, and prescribed
very much the same creed for the Democrats that Cabell had for the Whigs. So
you see the bold stand the South is taking. June, they will act up
to it. succumb?
They will talk up
to it now. Next
Will not both
parties at the North
Dismy of Ohio, in
the same debate, on being taunted for voting against the Fugitive-slave Law,
said he did it because it was not stringent enough!
SOURCE: Mary Tyler
Peabody Mann, Life of Horace Mann, pp. 356-7
DANSVILLE, N. Y., 1852.
I have seen only the
most meagre account of D——'s and R——'s speeches. I do not see how D—— can come
out without being battered and shattered to pieces. Nor ought he to. I think he
has been false to great principles, though with such palliations as apostates
always find. I think posterity does not look at crimes as the traitors
themselves do. With the latter it may not be unmitigated and untempted crime.
They have their excuses, their subterfuges, and their casuistry. Görgey
doubtless disguised his treason to himself under some plea of benefit to his
nation. It is a known fact, that Arnold stoutly contended that he desired to confer
a benefit on his country as the motive of his treachery. Judas probably made
himself believe that the interests of religion demanded the surrender of his
Master. Even Mr. Webster talks to this day as if, in sacrificing the immortal
principles of liberty, he had only the good of the Union in view. But when the
occasion has passed by, when the event is far removed into the past, then the
palliations and the pretexts are lost sight of; and only the black, fatal,
damning guilt remains for the detestation and abhorrence of men.
SOURCE: Mary Tyler
Peabody Mann, Life of Horace Mann, p. 357
It was with a
bounding heart, brimful of gratitude to God, that I stepped on board the Dakota
and bade farewell to Haines Bluff on the second day of August. We have three
hundred sick and wounded on this boat and are short of help. Quite a number who
started as nurses are sick. Four men died the first night. We ran the boat
ashore, dug a grave large enough for all, and laid them in it, side by side.
Our Chaplain read the burial service, and we hastened on board to repeat the
ceremony, the next morning, for some one else. It seems hard—even cruel—but it
is the most solemn burial service I ever witnessed. Nine have died since we
started, and one threw himself overboard in the frenzy of delirium and was
drowned. We kill a beef every evening. Two nights in succession the best part
of a hindquarter has been stolen. The boat hands were questioned, and a huge
Irishman acknowledged the theft. He was court martialed and sentenced to be
"banked." The boat was stopped opposite a wilderness. No human
habitation was in sight. He was forced to pack his bundle, take to the woods
and run his chance with hunger and the Rebels.
As we were running
leisurely along, about 3 o'clock in the afternoon of yesterday, my
curiosity was aroused by our boat running suddenly against the shore and
sticking there. All hands were called, and, with the aid of soldiers, she was
soon shoved off, and on we went again. A Sergeant asked the Mate why we landed
there. His reply was, "Something wrong in the wheel house." One of
our boys asked a darkey the same question. "Well, boss, I 'specs dey see a
rabbit ober dere, an' t'ink dey kotch 'im." Soon after, as two comrades
and myself were sitting in the bow enjoying the cool breeze, my attention was
attracted by the glassy stillness of the water in front of us. Pointing to the
right, I said, "Yonder is the safe place to sail." The words had
scarcely left my mouth when we felt a sudden shock, the bow of the boat was
lifted about two feet, a full head of steam was turned on, which carried us
over the obstruction. We had "struck a snag." Soon after, we anchored
for the night, as the pilot was "too sick" to run the boat.
The sick from our
regiment are doing well. I never saw wounded men do so nicely. Of five who came
as nurses, four are on the sick list. As for myself, I have not been so well in
years.
SOURCE: David Lane,
A Soldier's Diary: The Story of a Volunteer, 1862-1865, pp. 74-5
Louisville, Ky.
Again in Louisville—eleven hundred miles nearer home than one week ago and yet
how far. Still, it is joy to feel I am comparatively near. We reached Cairo on
the evening of the seventh, took on fresh supplies, and left next day at noon
for Cincinnati, which place we expect to reach some time tomorrow. We are now—3
p. m. taking on coal, and will start in a few minutes.
The Ohio is very
low-in places not more than three feet deep. We have brought up against sand
bars and been forced to back off perhaps fifty times since leaving Cairo. From
this place to Cincinnati, I am told, there are no obstructions. The most
difficult part of our way was from New Albany to Louisville. We were six hours
in making three miles last night. It was nothing but "Back 'er and try
again" for about a mile, and then we had a canal with three locks to pass
through.
We have had no
deaths since the seventh, and our sick and wounded boys are doing nicely. These
fresh northern breezes are more exhilerating than wine, and the hope that they
may be sent to their homes to recruit their health is more healing than
medicine.
SOURCE: David Lane,
A Soldier's Diary: The Story of a Volunteer, 1862-1865, pp. 75-6
Cincinnati, Ohio. We
arrived here at 9:30 this morning. My day's work is, at last, completed, at 9
p. m. This has been a busy day. In fact, I have not been idle or had much rest,
by day or night, since July fourth, and yet I am fresh and vigorous as in days
of old. The sick and wounded all removed the worst cases to the General
Hospital in this city, the convalescents to Camp Denison, eighteen miles out,
while a few return to their regiments.
The Seventeenth
passed through here today, and is now in camp near Covington, on the opposite
bank of the river.
I expect to join
them in the morning, and look for a handful of letters.
People call the
weather here very hot, but it is not Mississippi heat, and I enjoy it. The
mornings and evenings are delightfully cool, while there it is constant,
relentless heat both day and night. Here a coat is comfortable in the morning—there
one needs no cover day or night.
SOURCE: David Lane,
A Soldier's Diary: The Story of a Volunteer, 1862-1865, pp. 76-7
Camp near Hickman's
Bridge, Ky. I did not join the regiment as soon as I expected, owing to the
negligence of the Medical Director, whose duty it was to furnish me
transportation. As I had no money, I was forced to await his pleasure. The
regiment took cars for this place the day they crossed over, so I was left in
Cincinnati until Friday evening to live as best I might. I crossed the river on
Friday, and next morning took cars for Nicholasville, fourteen miles beyond
Lexington, and one hundred fifteen miles from Cincinnati. I was just in time to
get two months' pay. I should have drawn for two months more, but there was a
mistake in the pay rolls, which cannot be corrected until next muster. The
Paymaster says he is going to pay us again next month, and the next time muster
us out of the service.
We have a very
pleasant camp, in a shady grove, and an abundance of pure, sparkling water,
which I appreciate now as I never did before.
SOURCE: David Lane,
A Soldier's Diary: The Story of a Volunteer, 1862-1865, p. 77