Camp Warren, Sept. 15th, 1861
It is now a little
more than a week since I was with you, Although it is but a short time It seems
to me about a month. I have seen so many strange and new things in moveing
about and liveing as I have that although I am not homesick the time when I
look back upon it seems long. You may think strange my writing with a ledpencil
but it is so much handier as I am siting on the ground with a board on my lap.
I had a letter written to send home, when John3 came down to
Davenport and as I did not know when we would leave there and I thought John
could carry all the news I did not send it, I suppose John told you all about
our camp at Davenport, well it is much better than it is here for here we have
nothing but tents. They are smaller than the one we had [illegible], and
Thirteen have to mess and sleep in two of them. The first thing may be you
would like to know is about my traveling after I left home &s (I did not
have time to tell John much) About one oclock I left Lyons4 and
after a pleasant trip of five hours arrived at Davenport or Camp McClellan5
which as John will tell you is very pleasantly situated. There was preaching at
Camp Mc.C. evry Sunday I attended and heard a good discourse by Bishop Lee6
first Sunday after I left home, I bought me a Bible and some medicine at D. The
morning after John stayed with us we were ordered to get ready to move from
camp in one hour. We were told it was to go to Burlington In less than half
that time every one was ready to march for the boat, We were taken in front of
the Burtis House7 at Davenport and sworn in servise of U. S. I
beleive John was there in time to see us, After takeing the Boat we had a
pleasant trip one hundred miles down the great river We had dinner and supper
at Leefingwells8 expence I was told, We arrived at Burlington about
10 oclock P. M. Was marched through the dust to Camp Warren a distance of 1½ mile
from town, we were met by Isaac's9 company and after many hearty
cheers went in quarters with them for the night. This camp is very comfortable
although they are nothing but shanties most of the boys sleep on the ground
because they did not know how hard it would be in wet times Friday first day in
Camp Warren it rained all day so we had to stay where we could untill we could
get and put up our tents. friday night it rained very hard and about midnight I
found my self swiming in water, with a number of others. I concluded to take
quarters on a table where I took a wet but a good sleep
Saturday we put up our tents and dug ditches around them so they are water
proofe. Sunday today is comparatively quiet though I hear the Band play a part
of the time as the guards have to be changed. I have not been to preaching to
day but they say that next Sunday there will be preaching on the ground. We
have plenty to eat here and can trade Pork and Beef for all the nicnacks we
want. We draw as rations Pork Beef Rice Potatoes Bread sugar Coffee tea
molasses vinegar Soap & candles Salt Pepper &c not all at once but all
we need as evry other day for a change we have a good mess the Best one in the
crowd to my notion. [illegible] myself and 3 other Carpenters one Telegraph
operator 3 Mt. Vernon students Fred Wilkes10 one stone mason besides
two other common laborers, mess together We are all well suited and all good
cooks Tell Peter11 that Gorum [Josiah Gorhem] the wagon maker at
Clinton is in our mess. There is now a full Regiment of Cavalry here a
great many of them want horses sadles and equipments besides us, they get them
as soon as can be, but no telling when Isaac's Company with some others look
well when mounted, as they have theyr saddles.
That money you sent me I thought I would not nead it so I
sent it back with John, I also sent you some apples and peaches half what John
brought home, I sent them because I new they would come good and becaus I could.
I would have sent something more but I did not know that we would have to go to
Burlington so soon.
_______________
3 John Schuyler was the oldest son of Peter and
Lorrette Schuyler and therefore was William's nephew although he was about the
same age. He later enlisted and died in camp.
4 Lyons is a town of about 6000 population, two
and one-half miles directly north of Clinton, Iowa. Here Company B of the First
Iowa Cavalry was organized about May 1, 1861, under the leadership of Judge
William E. Leffingwell of Lyons, its first captain. Samuel S. Burdett of
DeWitt, 1st lieutenant, was later promoted to captain. —Lothrop's A History
of the First Regiment Iowa Cavalry Veteran Volunteers (Lyons,
Ia., Beers and Eaton, 1890), p. 20.
5 Camp McClellan, at Davenport, served as a
concentration point for the additional companies permitted by an Act of
Congress of July 29, 1861. This act increased the number of companies
constituting a cavalry regiment from ten to twelve. This permitted the addition
to the First Cavalry of Company L, mustered into the service on September 23rd;
and Company M, which went into quarters at Camp McClellan on September 2nd and
was sworn into service on September 12th.
6 Henry W. Lee, of Davenport, was bishop of the
Episcopal diocese of Iowa from 1854 until his death in 1874. He was
instrumental in the founding at Davenport of Griswold College and the building
of Trinity Cathedral. He also carried to a successful conclusion a
money-raising campaign which made possible the purchase of 6000 acres of land
by the Iowa diocese.— Downer's History of Davenport and Scott County (Chicago,
S. J. Clark, 1910), Vol. I, p. 590.
7 The Burtis Opera House, 413 Perry St.,
Davenport, Iowa.
8 Captain (Judge) William E. Leffingwell
organized Company B, First Iowa Cavalry, under the name of the "Hawkeye
Rangers". This was the first full company of equipped cavalry in the
State. It numbered 98 officers and men, according to the Lyons City Advocate of
July 27, 1861. It is significant that Capt. Leffingwell raised this company and
procured its equipment without aid either from the State or Federal government.
At different times before and after the war Leffingwell was a Presidential
Elector, Judge of the Eastern Iowa District Court, and President of the Iowa
State Senate. He was an able lawyer, and was distinguished for his scholarly
attainments.
9 Isaac Gulick of Company B, a cousin.
He re-enlisted in 1864 and survived the war. He afterwards moved with his
parents to State Center, Marshall County, Iowa, and according to latest
reports, he is still living there.
10 Fred Wilkes (Frederick R. Wilkes) also of
Company M was William Gulick's most intimate friend and "buddy"
until the death of the latter in September, 1863. He had come to Clinton County
from Indiana before the war, and joined Company M with the original enlistment
in September, 1861. He re-enlisted in 1864 and served out the war.
11 Peter Schuyler, a brother-in-law
to Gulick, had married Lorrette, William's oldest sister.
SOURCE: Benjamin F.
Shambaugh, The Iowa Journal of History
and Politics, vol. 28 (1930), pp. 201-4