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Civil War
Manuscripts Project
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_____, Maria Hartford Civilian, Female 1865 April 10 1 Item Letter to sister Rhoda, 4 pp. Describes local
celebrations in Hartford upon receiving the news of
General Robert E. Lees surrender of the Army of
Northern Virginia. |
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_____, Richard Unknown Residence Civilian, Male 1860 December 7 1 Item Letter from Washington, DC, to cousin Lizzie C.
Griswold, 4 pp. Describes an excursion of the Putnam
Phalanx to Mount Vernon and to Washington, DC, where the
group was received at the White House; relates talk of
dissolution and secession; mentions the resignation of
George Sydney Hawkins (Florida) from the House of
Representatives. |
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Corporal East Windsor Sixteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company G 1864 January 1-October 20 1 Volume Diary. Adams was taken prisoner at Plymouth,
NC, on 20 April 1864 and died in captivity at Florence,
SC, on 20 October 1864. He was initially held in
Andersonville and was subsequently moved to Charleston
and then to Florence. Adams, an unmarried mechanic,
enlisted 8 August 1862 and was mustered-in a Private. He was wounded during the
battle of Antietam and was promoted to Corporal on
Christmas day 1862. Adams was reduced to the ranks on 5
March 1863. His diary contains an otherwise unidentified
and unauthenticated Confederate twenty-dollar note. A
newspaper clipping notes the diary spent eight years in
New York City before coming to The Connecticut Historical
Society. |
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Acting Assistant Paymaster Wethersfield U. S. Navy 1832-1901 1 Box Correspondence and papers; approximately 264 of
383 items relate to the Civil War. Adams officially
enlisted on 10 November 1862 (though he reported for duty
in March 1862) and was assigned Acting Assistant
Paymaster of the gunboat U. S. S. Somerset. He
resigned from the Navy on 11 October 1864. The collection
includes his record book, 1862-1863, and papers and
correspondence (156 items) pertaining to his service as
Acting Assistant Paymaster aboard the Somerset,
1862-1864; among the papers are returns, provisions
surveys, invoices, vouchers, requisitions, summaries of
courts martial proceedings (May 1863 and May 1864), and
transfer accounts. Names mentioned in the record book
include Earl English, A. F. Crossman, William E.
Dennison, William A. Arthur, Jonas S. Higbee, Thomas
Chatfield, and Edward Healy. The collection also contains
papers and correspondence (57 items) pertaining to
Adamss tenure as Secretary of the Soldiers
and Sailors Monument Committee, 1882-1894, and/or
as Chairman of the Park Commission in Hartford. Also
included in the collection are papers and correspondence
relating to the Naval Veterans Association of
Connecticut, 1885-1891, and eight apparently confiscated
letters written to Confederate officer, M. Whit Smith, in
Florida. |
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Aiken, William Appleton (b.1833) Norwich Civilian, Male 1867 December 23 1 Item Letter from Norwich to Samuel Giles Buckingham
(1812-1898) in two hands, 14 leaves. The letter recounts
the mission of General Aiken to Washington in late-April
of 1861 on behalf of Connecticut Governor William
Alfred Buckingham (1804-1875), to reassure President
Abraham Lincoln of Connecticuts support. Leaf 3 of
an original total of 15 leaves is missing; pages 1-10 are
in a different hand from that on pages 11-15. William
Appleton Aiken was the husband of Governor
Buckinghams daughter Eliza Coit Buckingham. Samuel
Giles Buckingham was the brother of Governor Buckingham.
The manuscript is badly water-damaged and large portions
are virtually illegible. Fortunately, the majority of the
narrative was published in W. A. Croffut and John M.
Morris, The Military and Civil History of Connecticut
During the War of 1861-65 (New York: Ledyard Bill,
1869), pp. 840-841, and in Samuel Giles Buckinghams
The Life of William A. Buckingham (Springfield,
Mass.: W. F. Adams, 1894), pp. 145-148. |
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Private East Hartford Tenth Connecticut Infantry, Company E 1863 January 15 1 Item Letter from New Bern, NC, to Edwin Forbes in
East Hartford, 4 pp. Allen describes the battle of
Kinston, NC. Patriotic envelope included. Allen, an unmarried wheelwright, enlisted
9 September 1861, was mustered-in a Private on 30
September 1861 and died 3 October 1863. |
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Hartford First Connecticut Infantry, Rifle Company A, Private Sixteenth United States Infantry, Brevet Major 1861 June 19-1865 August 10 10 Items Letters to his father, Timothy Mather Allyn
(1800-1882) in Hartford, from Camp Wood, KY, Camp Tyler
at Falls Church, VA, and Lookout Mountain, GA. Allyn
originally enlisted in the First Connecticut Infantry on
25 April 1861 and was mustered-in Rifle Company A as a
Private. He was promoted to 1st Lieutenant, Sixteenth
United States Infantry on 14 May 1861. He was breveted
Captain on 31 December 1861, receiving the full rank of a
Captain in the Regular Army on 24 June 1864. Allyn earned
the brevet rank of Major on 13 March 1865 and remained in
the Army until 30 April 1880. The 16th U. S. Infantry was
assigned to the Army of the Cumberland during much of
Allyns correspondence. Allyn menions his brothers,
A. H. Allyn, Joseph P. Allyn, and Robert Allyn, as well
as his sister Nora Allyn. |
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Private Wolcott Ninth Connecticut Infantry, Company I 1862 March 9 1 Item Letter to his brother and sister from Ship
Island, MS. Andrews, an unmarried farmer, enlisted 17 August 1861 and was
mustered-in a Private on 16 October 1861. He was
discharged 4 September 1862. The Ninth Connecticut was
predominantly composed of Irish recruits. |
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Anonymous Hartford Civilian, Female 1861 August 29 -1865 April 16 1 Item Notebook diary of social and war-related welfare
activities; also includes a letter from the
compilers son Richard from New York dated 16 April
1865 which discusses the tragic death of Abraham Lincoln
and reports the City in mourning. This Hartford
socialite visits Watch Hill, RI, meets Henry Ward Beecher
in Philadelphia where she had gone to visit the Volunteer
Refreshment Saloon and Hospital and attends a dinner
party hosted by Samuel Colt. The pages devoted to her
Philadelphia trip render an interesting description of
the "Cooper Shop." Names mentioned include
Henry Clay Trumbull, Mrs. Buckingham of Norwich, Joseph
R. Hawley, Alfred Terry, William A. Aiken, Harriet
Putnam, Richard Cheney, Mr. and Mrs. Plitt, and John
Olmstead. The diary also documents General
Winfield Scotts resignation, the military
engagement at Balls Bluff, VA, and Mason and
Slidells capture aboard a British mail packet by
Captain Charles Wilkes. The compiler was much
involved with soldiers aid work and narrates
several interesting anecdotes pertaining to Abraham
Lincoln and Captain Wilkes. The unidentified compiler has
brothers named Richard and Henry (of New Haven, married
to Annie, with a three-year-old son Willie and a daughter
named Hattie) and a sister named Mary. |
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Wilbraham, MA and Bridgeport, CT Sixth Connecticut Infantry 1862 1 Item Diary of an unidentified student attending
Wilbraham (MA) Academy who returned home to Bridgeport in
June 1862 to assist with recruiting for the Sixth
Connecticut Infantry. The writer was apparently mustered
into the service on 29 August 1862 and, from August
through December 1862, served as clerk to Adjutant
Redfield Duryée and Colonel John Chatfield. |
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Anonymous Unknown Residence 1862 September[?] 1 Item Letter, 3 pp., to cousin Lucie F. Hanson,
regarding the death of Augustus Upton, Company A, 21st
Massachusetts Infantry. Augustus Upton was from
Templeton, MA, and was killed at the battle of Chantilly,
VA, on 1 September 1862, while guarding a baggage train.
The letter reads as if copied from a newspaper notice of
Uptons death. |
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Unknown Residence Eighteenth Connecticut Infantry 1863 1 Item Diary written in letter format, 24 pp. An
unidentified soldier of the 18th Connecticut Infantry
describes events following his capture at the battle of
Winchester, VA, on 15 June 1863, including his journey by
railroad to and imprisonment in Libby Prison (until 24
June) and at Belle Isle (24 June-6 July), both in
Richmond, VA. The author mentions seeing Lt. Carpenter of
the 18th Connecticut while boarding the train at
Staunton, VA, for transport to Richmond. The narrative
renders a good description of Belle Isle, located on an
island in the middle of the James River where reportedly
4,000 men were crowded onto 2 1/2 acres. The writer
describes the lice, dirty water, lack of shelter and poor
food. The manuscript includes a pencil sketch of an
unidentified railroad tunnel through hills. |
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Woodstock Eighteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company B 1863 June-July 1 Item Reminiscences, 62 pp. The writer describes his
captivity and confinement at Libby Prison and Belle Isle,
both in Richmond, VA. He gives an account of cooking
rations, wet shelters, and the effect of music on weary
marchers. Names mentioned include Corporal Henry Paine
and Edwin Wood, both of Woodstock; L. Buck of Putnam; E.
C. Buck of Thompson; Mr. Cook; and Corporal Day. The
soldier, who was evidently a Private, was probably among
those members of the Eighteenth Connecticut captured 15
June 1863 at Winchester, VA. He was paroled 22 July 1863.
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Unknown Residence Eighteenth Connecticut Infantry 1860-1880 1 Volume Scrapbook of newspaper clippings, many of
which pertain to the activities and actions of the 18th
Connecticut Infantry. Other materials include poetry,
anecdotes, advice and cartoons. Subject matter of the
clippings includes G. A. Custer and the 7th Cavalry at
Little Big Horn, baseball, African Americans, first-aid,
marriage, and Irish Americans. Other military units
documented in the scrapbook hailed from Texas, Kansas,
Vermont and Michigan. One item relates the death of
Bentley Shaw of the 18th Connecticut. Shaw was captured
and taken to Andersonville where malnutrition and illness
during his imprisonment resulted in death shortly after
reaching home in Connecticut. The scrapbook also includes
a manuscript poem entitled "Arlington." |
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Autographs, Albert Lee Butler Collection 18th and 19th Century 3 Volumes Only those materials pertaining to the Civil
War were examined. Among the autographs represented are
Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson, Clara Louise Kellogg,
Simon Cameron, William Seward, Gideon Welles, William
Alfred Buckingham, Horace Greeley, David Tod, Louis
Goldsborough, David Dixon Porter, A. E. Burnside, W. S.
Rosecrans, George McClellan, etc. Many of the autographs
are accompanied by photographs. Collection also contains
samples of Confederate scrip and tokens. |
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Autographs, Hoadley Collection 17th-20th Century 15 Boxes Letters, autographs, documents, account books, journals, correspondence and other papers compiled by Charles Jeremy Hoadley (b.1828). Only those materials pertaining to the Civil War were analyzed. Box 4, Folder 34125 holds the majority of the Civil War items. Collection includes letters or signatures of both Union and Confederate officers and politicians, including Generals W. T. Sherman, John E. Wool, Robert E. Lee, William B. Franklin, Oliver O. Howard, Ambrose E. Burnside, George Meade and many others. An inventory of autographs by category is filed before Box One of the collection in the manuscript stacks. |
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Autographs, Gilbert A. Tracy Collection Various Dates 1 Box Only those autographs not listed individually
are examined here. The collection contains a letter, 1
p., dated 23 June 1865, from Major General Q. A.
Gillmore, Hilton Head, SC, to Colonel C. W. Foster
regarding the promotion of Captain D. S. Leslie. Also
includes a letter, 1p., dated 21 March 1866, from Robert
E. Lee, Lexington, VA, to an unnamed party regarding a
gift of photographs sent him. Gilbert A. Tracy was a
resident of Putnam, CT. |
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B |
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Babcock, A. M. Providence, RI Civilian, Male 1864 December 3 1 Item Letter, 4 pp., from Providence, RI, to Sgt.
Jerome B. Baldwin of Mansfield, then a member of the 21st
Connecticut Infantry, Company D, who had been wounded 16
June 1864 at Petersburg, VA. The letter discusses
President Lincolns reelection and Shermans
march and also mentions the death of Lt. Henry A. Lincoln
(unidentified unit), a mutual acquaintance. |
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Lieutenant Colonel New Haven Fifth New York Cavalry and Captain New Haven Assistant Adjutant General, First Cavalry Division, General John Buford's Staff 1861-1864 61 Items Civil War papers and newspaper clippings
pertaining to and collected by the Bacon brothers.
Theodore was appointed Assistant Adjutant General, with
the rank of Captain, on the staff of General John Buford
in November or December 1862. He was discharged on 12 September 1864. Theodores papers
include various retained, signed copies of General
Bufords official reports: 1) Engagement between
Beverly Ford on the Rappahannock and Brandy Station, VA,
9 June 1863 (dated 13 June), with list of Right Wing
casualties, 2) Operation of the Regular Cavalry Brigade
during the raid into Virginia, May 1863 (dated 15 May),
3) Engagement near Upperville, VA, 21 June 1863 (dated 23
June), 4) Operation and engagements of the First Cavalry
Division, Cavalry Corps, Army of the Potomac, during the
month of July 1863 (dated 2 August). Williams
papers include a Record of [Daily] Movements of the Fifth
New York Cavalry, July 1861-December 1863; List of
officers, Fifth New York Cavalry, dated 3 May 1863;
Annual Return, Alterations and Casualties, during 1862;
Ordnance Returns, Fifth New York Cavalry, 1864
March-September. Other items within this collection
include a copy of Sir Percy Wyndhams European
military record in the hand of General George Stoneman,
dated 14 January 1862; Request for fifteen days leave of
absence from Colonel Alfred Gibbs, First New York
Dragoons, then commanding Cavalry Reserve Brigade, dated
1 February 1864; Confederate pass allowing Private A. J.
Wilson, 13th Virginia Cavalry, Company C, to return home
to procure a horse, dated 12 September 1863; and a notice
taken by William Bacon from a shop door in the Luray
Valley, signed by George Summers. Newspaper clippings
discuss the battle of First Bull Run (21 July 1861);
Colonel Dahlgrens raid on Richmond (1 March 1864);
and outline of the 5th New York Cavalrys actions
during the Civil War. The Bacon collection contains
considerable detail in regard to dates, actions,
locations and names. |
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Private Hartford Seventh Connecticut Infantry, Company F 1862-1864 13 Items Civil War letters from Beaufort and Morris Island, SC,
Fernandina, FL, and Washington, DC.
Bailey enlisted and was mustered-in a Private on 23
August 1862. He was transferred to the Sixth Regiment,
Veteran Reserve Corps, Company A, on 27 January 1864 and
was discharged 3 December 1864. |
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Sergeant Haddam, CT, and Agawam, MA Sixteenth Pennsylvania Cavalry, Company L 1862 October 12-1864 December 23 3 Volumes Civil War journals. First journal, 1862
October 12-1863 May 3; second journal, 1863 May
3-November 16; third journal, 1864 July 11-December 23.
There is no existing journal in the collection for the
period 1863 November 17-1864 July 10. On 28 October 1862
Ball notes that "much of the talk is PA Dutch."
He mentions J. E. B. Stuarts raid on the picket
line at Hartwood Church, VA, wherein 30 men were
captured; an engagement at Kellys Ford, VA, 17
March 1863; a review by President Lincoln on 6 April
1863; reports 34 casualties were sustained on 27 October
1864; notes a skirmish at Stony Creek Station, VA, on 1
December 1864, wherein his unit sustained 3 or 4
casualties; and an "Apple Jack" raid on 12
December 1864. |
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Ball Family Alabama, Connecticut, Pennsylvania 1831-1887 1 Box Correspondence between members of the Timothy
Ball (1783-1869) and James Lynch families located in
Tuscaloosa, AL, Philadelphia, PA, and Waterbury, CT,
including letters pertaining to the 23rd Pennsylvania
Infantry, the 106th Pennsylvania Infantry and the 183rd
Pennsylvania Infantry. The majority of the Civil War era
materials are encompassed by the correspondence of Betsy
Finette Ball Lynch (1807-1885) and her four sons, all of
whom were in service and all of whom would survive the
war: Lt. Col. James C. (106th Pennsylvania and 183rd
Pennsylvania), Capt. Francis A. (23rd Pennsylvania), and
Lt. Bennet B. and Maj. Augustine Timothy (both of the
183rd Pennsylvania). Many of the letters were written to
Betsys father Timothy Ball, brother Bennet and
sister-in-law Ann Ball of Philadelphia, and nephew Angus
Ball. Though the collection contains little detail
regarding Civil War military engagements or actions, it
is nevertheless an interesting account of one family
during the war. A folder index (there are 13 folders) is
filed with the collection. |
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Private Hartford Twelfth Connecticut Infantry, Company C 1862 October-1863 April 6 Items Final statement, discharge papers and four
letters from friends. Barbour, a married clerk, enlisted on 2 November 1861
and was mustered-in a Private on 4 December 1861. He
developed a hernia and was discharged on 20 October 1862.
Letter, 4 November 1862, from Thomas M. Smith
(unidentified unit) describes Harpers Ferry and a
tour of Philadelphia. The writer also mentions having
seen the 14th Connecticut Infantry. Three letters from
Henry E. Blakeslee (of Hartford, then a Corporal serving
with the 12th Connecticut Infantry, Company C): 1) 15
December 1862, mentions foraging in Louisiana; 2) 6
February 1863, also from Louisiana, notes "Billy
Coats and others gave an Ethiopian Concert at Thibodaux
[sic] last evening." Among names mentioned in this
letter are: Lt. Jim Francis, Lawyer Preston, Henry Clapp,
Colonel Deming, Captain Lewis, Lt. Rogers, Charles Green,
Lt. Taintor, Lt. Harmount, the "two Twitchels,"
John Moore, Sgt. McGann, and Billy Adams. Blakeslee notes
the 13th Connecticut were then at Baton Rouge, LA, and
mentions the death of Fred Dart; 3) 24 April 1863
(Blakeslee was at this time First Lieutenant, Company K,
76th United States Colored Infantry), from Baton Rouge,
LA, mentions building fortifications at Fort Williams,
First Lieutenant Bob Rogers, and notes that Ed Peck was
under arrest for drunkenness. |
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Barnes, George (1818-1904) Roxbury Civilian, Male 1862 1 Item Draft notice from the selectmen of Roxbury
dated 20 January 1862 requires proof that Barnes is not
able to perform military duty. Barnes was a drover. There
is no evidence that he ever served in the military. The
entire collection, the majority of which does not relate
to the Civil War, ranges from 1862 to 1883 and consists
of 46 items. |
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Hartford First Connecticut Infantry, Infantry Company A, Private Sixteenth Connecticut Infantry, Companies B and H, Captain 1864 January 1-March 19 1 Volume Diary. Barnum, a married printer, originally served in Infantry
Company A, First Connecticut Infantry. He enlisted in the
16th Connecticut on 11 August 1861 and was mustered-in as
First Lieutenant, Company B. He was promoted to Captain
of Company H on 20 September 1862 but resigned on 13
February 1863. He was re-mustered, Captain, Company H, 12
May 1863 and served until his muster-out on 24 June 1865.
According to references found in the diaries and letters
of other members of the 16th Connecticut, Barnum was a
rather unpopular officer. The final date of this diary
coincides with the date he was found guilty by Court
Martial of neglect of duty to the prejudice of good order
and military discipline. His arrest seems to have been
due to his actions or inactions on 21 January 1864. See
next entry for further information. Barnums diary
is enlightening as to the personality of its owner. He
keeps careful count of letters sent to and received from
his wife. There are many cryptic references to activities
which may be sexual in nature. Baseball was documented as
a popular pastime in February 1864.
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Hartford First Connecticut Infantry, Infantry Company A, Private Sixteenth Connecticut Volunteers, Companies B and H, Captain 1858-1875 4 Boxes Very large collection of correspondence and
official papers, mainly retained copies, as First
Lieutenant, Company B and as Captain, Company H, 16th
Connecticut Infantry, as well as personal correspondence,
receipted bills and account books. Barnums obituary
appears in the Mary Morris Scrapbooks, MS, Library of The
Connecticut Historical Society. Also see previous entry. |
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First Lieutenant New London Fourteenth Connecticut Infantry, Companies G, H and I 1862 October 29-1865 February 2 14 Items Letters to his mother Caroline Bartholomew as
well as letters written by comrades to his mother
regarding Perkinss death. Bartholomew, an unmarried clerk, enlisted 24
July 1862 and was mustered-in a Corporal, Company H, on
23 August 1862. He was promoted to Sergeant on 10
November 1862 and to First Sergeant on 26 November 1863.
On 30 March 1864, Bartholomew was promoted to Second
Lieutenant, Company G, and on 26 June 1864 to First
Lieutenant, Company I. On 15 October 1864 he wrote, the
"...majority of our regiment will vote for
McClellan, but as for me I would vote for Abe..."
Lieutenant Bartholomew was mortally wounded in action on
the Boydton Plank Road on 27 October 1864 and died nine
hours later on 28 October 1864. The collection includes a
small remnant of the 14th Connecticuts regimental
flag and a resolution drawn-up upon his death and signed
by twelve fellow officers. Letters to Caroline
Bartholomew were posted upon her sons death by
Adjutant William B. Hinks, Horace Brown (Company H),
Frank [?] A. Dudley, and Captain Simpson.
Bartholomews remains were not recovered from behind
enemy lines. He was buried by Confederates by the side of
the Boydton Plank Road. |
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Sprague and Stafford Second Connecticut Infantry, Company C , Private Tenth Connecticut Infantry, Companies D, F and H , Captain 1861 February 4-1866 December 4 and Stafford and Willington Twenty-Fifth Connecticut Infantry, Company D, Private Tenth Connecticut Infantry, Company F, Private 1863-1865 26 Items Letters from two brothers to their mother and
sisters. John Bartlett, a married mechanic, served originally in the Second
Connecticut Infantry, Company C. He enlisted 18 September
1861 and was mustered-in a Private, Company F, Tenth
Connecticut Infantry, on 1 October 1861. He was promoted to
Corporal on 1 January 1862 and to Sergeant, Company F, on
21 January 1864. He was promoted to First Lieutenant,
Company H, on 19 November 1864 and to Captain, Company D,
on 20 December 1864. John Bartlett was mustered-out 25
August 1865. Letter of 13 February 1862 mentions Georgia Governor
Henry Wises son was taken prisoner,
then shot and killed while attempting to run away. His
letters are characterized by his usage of the expression,
"all unercount of." Johns brother Samuel
Bartlett, an unmarried farmer, enlisted 29 August 1862 and was mustered-in a
Private, Company D, 25th Connecticut Infantry, on 11 November
1862. He was mustered-out of this nine-months regiment on
26 August 1863 and enlisted 29 February 1864, in Company
F, Tenth Connecticut Infantry, mustering-in as a Private. Samuel
was wounded at Deep Bottom, VA, on 14 August 1864 and
again at Fort Gregg, VA, on 2 April 1865. He was granted
a disability discharge on 21 September 1865. The
collection also includes a letter from sister Louisa
Bartlett relating to her brother John the town news.
Three letters written by Samuel Bartlett were directed to
sister Hannah. Letter, 21 December 1863, mentions Lt.
George Root (Company D, 25th Connecticut) and letter, 15
May 1865, from Fortress Monroe, where Samuel was
recovering from a second wound, mentions the death of
Abraham Lincoln. |
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Private New Britain Thirteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company A 1859-1875 1 Box Letters and other papers describe experiences in
the 13th Connecticut Infantry and in the U. S. Military
Telegraph Service in Louisiana including the surrender
of Port Hudson and the lack of aseptic medical
facilities; Bassett also discusses the social condition
of African Americans and attitudes towards their
suffrage; renders wonderful descriptions of the natural
habitat of Louisianas Southwest Passage in 1863.
The collection includes a phrenological evaluation of
Bassett by Orson Squire Fowler (1809-1887). Also included
is other Bassett family correspondence and deeds. A typed
transcription of the Civil War letters by Mrs. Willard
Butler Clary and a folder index is included with the
collection. Bassett, an unmarried student, enlisted 14 September 1861 and was
mustered-in a Private on 22 December 1861. Beginning to
study the operation of the telegraph in New Orleans in
July of 1862, Bassett accepted a discharge from the army
to assume a position with the U. S. Military Telegraph
Service on 28 August 1863. He remained with the Telegraph
Service until 31 January 1866. Among other service,
Bassett operated the U. S. Military Telegraph lines in
the field with Brevet Major General J. H. Wilson from
February 1-28, 1865. He became Chief Cipher Clerk and
Manager of the U. S. Military Telegraph in Montgomery,
AL, 1865 July 13-1866 January 31. His letters
provide detailed descriptions of the places and people he
encountered during the war and in the post-war south. The
collection also contains genealogical information on the
Bassett family. |
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Beddoe, Warren Charlestown, MA [?] Unidentified Massachusetts Unit 1862 April 1 1 Item Letter from Hampton, VA, to his mother Harriet
J. Beddoe in Charlestown, MA. The letter includes a small
pencil sketch of the Monitor and provides a good
description of Hampton, VA, and the African American
population there. |
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Private Rocky Hill Sixteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company C 1862 August 19-1864 January 3 2 Volumes Diaries. Volume 1, 1862 August 19-1863 June
8, and volume 2, 1863 June 22-1864 January 3. Belden, an unmarried farmer,
enlisted 11 August 1862 and was mustered-in 24 August
1862. He was captured 20 April 1864 at Plymouth, NC, and
died in captivity at Florence, SC, on 2 November 1864. |
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| Bellows, Henry W.
(1814-1882) New York City Civilian, Male 1863 August 20 1 Item Letter to General Lorenzo Thomas, Washington,
DC (?), recommending George H. Bellows for a Major's or
Captain's commission in an African American regiment. Dr.
Bellows established the United States Sanitary Commission
in April 1861. |
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Sergeant Burlington First Connecticut Heavy Artillery, Company K 1864 January 22 1 Item Letter, 1 p., from Fort Richardson, to Mary E.
Marsh in Burlington, Bennetts "Dearest
Love," whom he later married on 9 April 1865. The
letter is accompanied by sketches of various artillery
pieces. Bennett enlisted and was mustered-in a Corporal
on 23 May 1861. Though he was reduced to the ranks on 24
June 1862, he was again promoted to Corporal on 10
October 1863. He was promoted Sergeant on 28 May 1864,
was taken prisoner 25 March 1865 in front of Petersburg,
VA, was taken to Libby Prison and was paroled 30 March
1865. Bennett was mustered-out on 25 September 1865. |
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Bidwell Family Undated 1 Volume Scrapbook family history including programs,
postcards and copies of newsletters of Bidwell family
reunions which contain biographies and photoprints of
ancestors and narratives regarding the service of various
Bidwell family members in the American Revolution, the
War of 1812, the American Civil War and World War I.
Includes photograph and biographical sketch of Emory
Smith Bidwell (born 1841, Starksboro, VT), of Middlebury,
VT, who enlisted on 24 August 1861 and was mustered-in a
Private, Company B, 5th Vermont Infantry. Bidwell was
wounded on 5 May 1864, and was captured while on picket
and hung by guerrillas on 7 October 1864. Also contains
photographs of Brigadier General Daniel Davidson Bidwell
of Buffalo, NY, who began his Civil War service as
Colonel of the 49th New York Infantry and was
subsequently killed during the battle of Cedar Creek, VA,
on 19 October 1864. Includes text of an address delivered
at the dedication of a monument to General Bidwell at
Buffalo, NY, as well as a photograph of the monument in
the notes of the 5th Bidwell family reunion in 1914. Also
contains a photograph and brief biography of Dr. Edwin
Curtis Bidwell, Surgeon, 31st Massachusetts Infantry,
1862-1865. |
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Bill, Frederick (1833-1920) Cleveland, OH Civilian, Male 1864 August 2 1 Item Letter, 2 pp., to Hiram C. Holmes regarding
prices paid for military substitutes and laws restricting
their interstate transportation. Bill seems to have been
engaged in the business of supplying substitutes. |
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New Britain Twenty-Second Connecticut Infantry, Company F, Private U. S. Navy, Surgeon's Steward 1863 October 19-1865 February 1 Volume Journal/logbook of Surgeons Steward
aboard the gunboat U .S. S. Penobscot, Western
Gulf Blockading Squadron. Birge, an unmarried laborer, had formerly served as a
Private in Company F, 22nd Connecticut Infantry, a
nine-months unit, and was discharged 7 July 1863. The Penobscot
spent much of its time stationed off Galveston, TX. |
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Norwich First Connecticut Heavy Artillery , Major Thirteenth Connecticut Infantry , Brevet Major General 1861 September 9-1864 November 17 11 Items Letters to his uncle, Governor William Alfred
Buckingham (1804-1875). Birge discusses the
qualifications of men holding or appointed to various
military positions in the 13th Connecticut. Collection
includes a copy of a letter from Henry Champion Deming
(1815-1872) to Edwin M. Stanton recommending Birges
promotion. Birge sends his uncle confiscated confederate
articles as gifts. Henry Birge, a married merchant, enlisted and was
mustered-in the First Connecticut Heavy Artillery as
Major on 22 May 1861. He was promoted to Colonel of the
13th Connecticut Infantry on 5 November 1861 and to
Brigadier General on 6 October 1863. Birge was breveted
Major General on 25 February 1865 and resigned the
service on 18 October 1865. For further correspondence
between Governor Buckingham and Birge, see entry for Buckingham below.
This latter collection also contains photocopies of
Birges compiled military service record and
biographical information on both Buckingham and Birge. |
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Bissell, H. C. Carlowville [?], SC Civilian, Male 1861 February 28 1 Item Letter to an unidentified cousin. Bissell
explains that he has been a southerner for thirty-five
years, that his property is all in slaves and land, and,
though once a Yankee, will go with South Carolina if war
results. Bissell also includes a discussion of crops. |
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Major New Haven Fifth Connecticut Infantry 1861 September 24-1865 August 15 2 Volumes Two loose-leaf volumes of correspondence and
papers, including correspondence and hand-drawn maps
relative to Major Blakes death at the battle of
Cedar Mountain, VA, on 9 August 1862. Blake enlisted and
was mustered-in as Adjutant on 7 October 1861 and was
promoted to Major on 12 June 1862. Also included
are papers (4 items, June and August 1861) confiscated
from the home of James M. Mason in Winchester, VA, by
Blake in March of 1862. An article written by Walter L. Powell, "'Heaven Alone Can Soothe Hearts': A New Haven Family's Search for its Missing Son, Major Edward F. Blake," was published in the Spring 1983 (Volume 48, Number 2) issue of The Connecticut Historical Society Bulletin, pp.52-71. Contact Jill
Padelford for ordering information. |
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Sergeant Killingly Eighteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company B and Killingly Sixth Connecticut Infantry, Company A , First Lieutenant Eighteenth Connecticut Infantry, Companies B and G , Captain 1854-1866 2 Boxes Large collection of correspondence between the
Blanchard brothers and their family in Killingly. Caleb
Blanchard, a married carpenter, enlisted 18 July 1862 and was mustered-in a
Sergeant, Company B, on 18 August 1862. He was discharged 20 May
1865. Many of Calebs letters were written to his
wife Martha Preston Blanchard ("Mattie").
Horatio Blanchard, an unmarried mechanic, first enlisted in the Sixth Connecticut
on 21 August 1861 and was mustered-in Second Lieutenant
of Company A on 3 September 1861. He was promoted to
First Lieutenant, Company G, on 4 November 1861, but was
not mustered and later resigned on 1 March 1862. He
enlisted 1 August 1862 in the Eighteenth Connecticut, and
was mustered-in First Lieutenant, Company B. Horatio
Blanchard was subsequently promoted to Captain, Company
G, on 6 February 1865 and was mustered-out on 27 June
1865. |
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Sergeant New Haven, CT, and Bernardston, MA Fifteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company E 1862 August 12-1864 September 17 42 Items Letters from New Haven, CT, Suffolk, VA, and
New Bern, NC, to his parents and sisters, Grace and
Annie, in Bernardston, MA. Collection also includes two
hand-drawn maps of North Carolina locations where Boyle
was stationed and two newspaper clippings concerning the
15th Connecticut Infantry, one dated 28 September 1863
from South Mills, NC, and one dated 24 October 1863 from
Portsmouth, VA. Charles Boyle, an unmarried painter, enlisted 12 August 1862 and
was mustered-in a Private on 25 August 1862. He was
promoted to Sergeant on 1 February 1864 and died at New
Bern, NC, on 10 October 1864, during a yellow fever
epidemic. Boyles letters provide extraordinary
detail in regard to military units, actions, movements
and events. He speaks frequently about the interaction
between officers and their men and relates several
incidents involving African Americans. |
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Bradley, Caroline Conklin Salisbury Civilian, Female 1862-1863 1 Volume Diary. Within a Leet & Lane Ore Bed
record book, 1853-1864, which includes the labor accounts
of a mining company in West Stockbridge, MA, is the diary
of Mrs. Bradley in Salisbury beginning as her husband
enlists as Quartermaster in the 28th Connecticut Infantry
in 1862. The Bradleys were married in 1841. Milton
Bradley, Jr. (b.1822), enlisted 1 September 1862 and was
mustered-in on 15 November 1862. He resigned on 14 March
1863. The record book also contains Milton Bradley's
"Amount of Money paid out Soldiering," a sum of
$73.25. Caroline's diary begins on 15 September 1862,
though her husband would not leave the New Haven
rendezvous with his unit until mid-November, "I went
to the shop for the first time in my life to get a horse
shod." The account is full of trouble with her hired
hand, John Runnells. On 18 September, "John drunk in
the barn"; on 19 September, "John drunk again
to day," and the story was much the same the
following day. On 13 February 1863, "I made
stockings a very lonely evening thought much of my Dear
Husband." By the third week in February Caroline was
trying to hire a man for the summer. On 21 February she
wrote, "I have had a lonely day," and on 25
February, "I missed my husband much." Finally,
on 26 February 1863, Caroline notes, "Went to see if
I could hire a man. I shed many tears to day."
According to the official record, Milton Bradley resigned
on 14 March 1863; however, when Caroline's diary ends on
12 April 1863, he had not yet returned home." |
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Second Lieutenant Preston First Connecticut Cavalry, Company C 1865 February 27-May 24 3 Items Diary (1865 February 27-May), muster roll (7
January 1865), and certificate of appraisement of
captured horse (28 April 1865). Bradley enlisted 11
October 1861 and was mustered-in a Private on 26 October
1861. He was promoted Sergeant on 10 June 1864 and Second
Lieutenant 18 October 1864 (date of muster 7 January
1865). He was mustered-out on 2 August 1865.
Bradleys diary contains interesting, albeit very
brief, accounts of the many engagements during the month
preceding Lees surrender of his army at Appomattox
Court House, VA. On 8 April 1865: "Ordered to escort
Gen Grant to Sheridans HQ." On 9 April 1865:
"great cheering in both armies.... Gen Custer
received the first flag of truce & went into the reb
lines with a white hankerchief on his hat." On 17
April 1865: "went foraging...found corn & a
weeping woman but our horses must be fed so the woman
found no pity." Unfortunately the diary is written
in pencil which has become badly blurred and faded over
time. |
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Private Haddam Twenty-First Connecticut Infantry, Company H 1863 April 26-1865 January 6 9 Items Five letters written to his sister Lucy from
Suffolk, VA; Knightsbridge General Hospital in
Washington, DC; and Point of Rocks Hospital, VA. The
collection also includes a 20 pp. history of the 21st
Connecticut, August 1862 to July 1863, written in
November and December 1864 for publication in the
Washington Evening Star. Most of the letters were
penned while convalescing in various hospitals. Brainerd, an unmarried farmer,
enlisted 19 August 1862 and was mustered-in a Private on
5 September 1862. He was wounded 3 June 1864 at Cold
Harbor, VA, and was mustered-out 16 June 1865. Later in
life (ca.1872), Brainerd established a homestead in
Sibley, IA. |
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First Sergeant Bridgeport Eighth Connecticut Infantry, Company A 1864-1898 One Envelope Diary, 1864 February 16-May 31, and
various papers. Albion Brooks enlisted at Annapolis, MD,
26 November 1861 and was mustered-in a Private. He was
promoted Corporal on 28 March 1862 and to Sergeant on 17
September 1862. Brooks was again promoted, to First
Sergeant, on 25 September 1862 and was mortally wounded in action
at Cold Harbor, VA, on 2 June 1864 and died the next day.
|
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Residence Unknown Thirty-Third Illinois Infantry 1862 May 6 1 Item Letter, 4 pp., to his brother from Big Black
River, AR. Browns regiment was then serving in the
Army of the West. The letter mentions "The Brain
Regiment," which may have been a reference to his
own unit. |
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Corporal Huntington Twenty-Third Connecticut Infantry, Company D 1863 January 1-September 2 1 Item Typescript transcription, 19 leaves, of
Brownsons 1863 diary completed by E. B. Brownson in
1974. Brownson, an unmarried mechanic, describes activities near New
Orleans and Brashear City, LA, including references to
the court-martial of Charles E. Plumb, to attending an
African American prayer meeting and to mosquito bars.
Brownson, who was 58" tall and 24-years-old,
went by the name of Byron. He enlisted on 25
August 1862 and was mustered-in on 14 November 1862. He
was mustered-out of his nine-months unit on 31 August
1863. He notes on March 11 that all the non-commissioned
officers of his company had been given letters from
Colonel Holmes charging them with disrespect, a charge
Brownson felt unmerited. The next day he wrote,
"Every thing quiet except now and then a darkey
comes into camp with his head cut open." On 29 March
Brownson noted, "The Steamer Diana was captured
yesterday by rebels up above Brasher Co A of the 12th
Conn was mostly killed" [actually Company A
reported seven casualties]. On 3 April Brownson mentioned
that he "Went to a Catholic funeral and see them
burn the evil spirits out." A note on the back page
of the diary reads, "See here my boy you must keep
your diary better. -- father." |
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Corporal East Hartford Twenty-First Connecticut Infantry, Company A 1862-1888 8 Items Collection consists of Bryants military
commission and pension papers. William Bryant, a married painter, enlisted on
11 August 1862 and was mustered-in a Corporal on 5
September 1862. He received a disability discharge on 5
December 1862. Collection also contains his disability
discharge certificate, received at age 35, and pension
correspondence dating from 1865 to 1888, some of which
pertains to his wifes, Sarah E. Bryants,
efforts to secure a widows pension. |
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Buckingham, William Alfred (1804-1875) Norwich Governor of Connecticut, 1858-1866 1863 August 26-September 12 5 Items Collection consists of letters recommending
the promotion to Brigadier General of Buckinghams
nephew, Colonel Henry Warner Birge (1825-1888), 13th
Connecticut Infantry. Collection includes: 1) Copy of a
letter from General Godfrey Weitzel, 26 August 1863; 2)
Copy of a letter from General Nathaniel Prentiss Banks,
27 August 1863; 3) Copy of a letter from Colonel George
B. Bissell, 25th Connecticut Infantry, 31 August 1863, in
which Bissell writes, "...and when he fights,
[Birge] fights for a funeral."; 4)
Letter from General Robert Ogden Tyler, 11 September
1863; and, 5) Letter from Governor Buckingham, Hartford,
to Edwin McMasters Stanton (1814-1869), Secretary of War,
Washington, DC, 12 September 1863. Also see entry for
Henry W. Birge, a collection which contains a letter from
Colonel Henry C. Deming, 12th Connecticut Infantry, to
the same purpose and which Governor Buckingham mentions
in his letter to Stanton. |
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| Buckingham, William Alfred (1804-1875) Norwich Governor of Connecticut, 1858-1866 1861 August 12 1 Item Letter, 2 pp., to Daniel Putnam Tyler
(1799-1882). Governor Buckingham asks Tyler to recommend
several energetic men from Windham County whose character
and habits would qualify them to be officers of the three
regiments of volunteers he was planning to call for soon.
A typed transcription is filed with the letter. |
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| Buckingham, William Alfred (1804-1875) Norwich Governor of Connecticut, 1858-1866 1861-1865 12 Items Papers, 1858-1874. Correspondence, 1861-1865,
contains information on conveying General Nathaniel
Lyon's body to Connecticut (30 August 1861), on various
appointments of regimental officers (30 September 1861;
26 and 31 December 1863; 7 February 1864 regarding Rev.
Jacob Eaton's appointment as Chaplain, 7th Connecticut
Infantry; and 14 April 1864 regarding Col. Redfield
Duryee) and regarding the draft and town quotas (6 August
1863). |
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| Bulkeley,
Morgan Gardner (1837-1922) Hartford [?] Governor of Connecticut 1881-1892 1 Volume Scrapbook containing proclamations issued by
Governor Bulkeley, invitations to the dedications of the
soldiers' and sailors' monuments in Hartford, New Haven
and Brooklyn, CT, and of the Grand Army of the Republic
(GAR) in St. Louis, MO, in 1887 (21st National
Encampment) and of the testimonial banquet to American
baseball in 1889. Also includes a notice of the meeting
of the Court of Common Council, 14 July 1885, to take
action regarding the death of Ulysses S. Grant, at which
time Bulkeley was Mayor of Hartford. Contains a program
for the dedication of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Memorial
Arch in Hartford, 17 September 1886, and the acceptance
speech of General Joseph R. Hawley. Includes the roll of
the GAR's 21st National Encampment at St. Louis, 28-30
September 1887, as well as a souvenir "Poem of
Welcome," and the menu of a banquet given in honor
of the delegates on 30 September 1887. Scrapbook also
holds a copy of the Memorial Day address delivered by
William Edgar Simonds at Hartford on 30 May 1887,
"The Eternal Purpose in our Civil War." The
dedication of the Soldiers' and Sailors' monument in New
Haven took place on 17 June 1887 and that of the
Soldiers' monument in Brooklyn, CT, on 14 June 1888. Also
includes a program for the latter dedication. Morgan
Gardner Bulkeley was the brother of William Henry
Bulkeley (See entry for W. H. Bulkeley). |
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Bulkeley, William Henry (1840-1902) Hartford Thirteenth New York National Guard, Company G , Private Fifty-Sixth New York National Guard, Company C , Captain 1861-1863 13 Items Collection consists of letters from Annapolis
and Baltimore, MD, and Harrisburg, PA, to his mother,
Lydia Bulkeley, and sister, Mary Jerusha Bulkeley, in
Hartford, describing daily life as a member of the State
Militia. The collection also includes one letter from his
brother, Morgan Gardner Bulkeley, a future Governor of
Connecticut. Several letters are on patriotic stationery.
Bulkeley was mustered-in a Private, 13th New York
National Guard (Brooklyn City Guard), on 23 April 1861
[?] and was mustered-out on 6 August 1861. He was
commissioned Captain, Company C, 56th New York National
Guard (Gettysburg Alarm) on 18 June 1863 and was
mustered-out on 24 July 1863. Bulkeleys letters
mention guard duty, reenlisting and the desirability of a
commission, the dimensions of and sleeping arrangements
within army tents, and General Dixs request shortly
after the battle of Gettysburg that the 56th New York
remain in service an additional week. No date is
necessary to discern the following was written early in
the war: on 8 June 1861 Bulkeley wrote home from
Annapolis during a spell of very hot weather, "we
find our havelocks very comfortable." |
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Private Hartford Tenth Connecticut Infantry, Company E 1864 September 29 1 Item "Eagle" discharge certificate, 1 p.
Bullock, a married cook, enlisted 6 September 1861 and was mustered-in a
Private on 30 September 1861. He was wounded at Kinston,
NC, on 14 December 1862 and was subsequently transferred
to the 13th Regiment Veteran Reserve Corps, Company H, on
30 September 1863. His discharge is dated 29 September
1864. |
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Private Windsor Twenty-Second Connecticut Infantry, Company A 1862 November 4 1 Item Letter, 4 pp., from near Falls Church, VA, to
Timothy L. Loomis of Windsor. Bumstead, an unmarried brickmaker, enlisted on 19
August 1862 and was mustered-in a Private on 20 September
1862. He was mustered-out of his nine-months regiment on
7 July 1863. The letter mentions Henry Camp (22nd
Connecticut, Company B) and Norris Griswold (of Windsor).
|
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Corporal Hartford Tenth Connecticut Infantry, Company E 1863 November 16 1 Item Letter, 4 pp., from St. Augustine, FL, to an
unnamed recipient who would seem to have been a former
fellow worker in a Hartford shop. Burnett enlisted on 21
September 1861 and was mustered-in a Private on 30
September 1861. He was promoted Corporal on 1 November
1862 but was reduced to the ranks on 1 September 1863. He
was mustered-out 25 August 1865. The 10th Connecticut was
serving in the Department of the South at the time the
letter was posted. Burnett mentions that the
regiments flour for soft bread was "full of
skippers or little black insects."
Burnett also felt his Captains accountability for
the company fund left much to be desired; in fact, the
entire letter is pervaded with a general resentment of
officers privileges. |
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Corporal Enfield Eighth Connecticut Infantry, Companies B and C 1863-1865 4 Items Diary (1864 January-1865 July),
Corporals commission and discharge papers. Byrne
enlisted and was mustered-in a Private, Company C, on 14
October 1861. He was transferred to Company B on 26
December 1863 and was promoted to Corporal on 1 July
1865. He was mustered-out on 12 December 1865. Byrne
provides interesting, if terse, descriptions of the
fighting around Petersburg during the summer of 1864,
mentioning the names of several comrades who were killed
in action. According to Byrnes discharge papers
(December 1863 and December 1865), he was born in
Ireland. On 13 April 1864 Byrne was present at the
execution of a member of the 10th New Hampshire Infantry
at Gettys Station. |
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