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Civil War
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Private Hartford Twenty-Second Connecticut Infantry, Company B 1863 April 8 1 Item Letter, 3 pp., from Arlington Heights, VA, to
his cousin Timothy L. Loomis. Camp, an unmarried bookbinder, enlisted 25 August
1862 and was mustered-in a Private on 20 September 1862.
He was mustered-out with his nine-months unit on 7 July
1863. "Henry" proclaims himself for the Union
and writes that he does not wish to return home to
Connecticut if Thomas H. Seymour is elected Governor. |
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Carr, William Henry [?] (b.1837) New York City Civilian, Male [?] 1863 May 24 1 Item Letter, 1 p., from New York City, to his
sister: "Glorious News. Vicksburg is ours. Great
Excitement in the Hall." Identification of writer is
tentative and based on a signature very difficult to
discern. This is a puzzling letter as the siege of
Vicksburg was yet in its infancy. |
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Quartermaster Sergeant Winchester Second Connecticut Heavy Artillery, Company E 1849-1881 197 Items Correspondence of the Carrington family. A series of two articles regarding the Marsh-Carrington correspondence by William Lamson Warren was published in the October 1977 (Volume 42, Number 4; pp.114-128) and January 1978 (Volume 43, Number 1; pp.22-32) issues of The Connecticut Historical Society Bulletin. Contact Jill Padelford for ordering information.
Letter of 19 July 1863 to sister Louise contains a sketch
of his quarters as well as the grounds of Arlington
House, VA. Family letters occasionally mention Sergeant
Hugh B. Brockway of Lyme, then serving in the 1st
Connecticut Cavalry and a Mrs. Brewster, formerly of
Goshen, who had a son serving in an unidentified unit as
an officer. Letter of 6 October 1864 [?] speaks
sympathetically of southerners who support the union and
a letter dated only 23 July mentions the Christian
Commission. Some of the letters written to Louise
Carrington (Edwards sister) by various friends note
Connecticut regiments and their personnel as they were
recruited, mustered, departed from and returned to the
State; also mentioned is news of meetings and other
efforts of the various soldiers welfare societies.
Edward Carrington, an unmarried bookkeeper, enlisted 28 July 1862 and was
mustered-in a Private on 11 September 1862. He was
appointed Q. M. Sergeant on 7 March 1864 and was
discharged on 7 July 1865. |
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Case, Anson Miles (b.1840) Canton Center Civilian, Male 1863 1 Volume Diary of a cobbler and farmer who worked in
Collinsville for the Collins Company during the winter
months making army and cavalry "picks" and
filing bayonets. Mr. Case gave violin lessons as well. He
kept very careful track of general weather conditions,
war news, local marriages and deaths and church services.
Case was a staunch Democrat opposed to the policies of
Governor Buckingham and to conscription. He was married
in May 1862. On 1 January 1863, the day the Emancipation
Proclamation went into effect, he wrote, "Go it
Niggers now you are free . . ." The next day he
noted, "The Emancipation Proclamation is out. Hurah
for the Nigger." Those soldiers furloughed home to
vote in the State elections Case referred to as
"Buck Soldiers." He referred to soldiers in the
service as "Woolies." On 6 May 1863 he notes,
"Howard Hale . . . of the 25 is dead from wounds
received in battle." Case involuntarily enrolled in
the draft on 27 May 1863. On that date he wrote,
"Hen. Hawley came & enrolled me today as 1 of
Uncle Sams boys." Case celebrated his 23rd birthday
on 31 May 1863. He gives a listing of local men who had
been drafted on 21 August 1863 noting, " [they] did
not draft me." On 31 October 1863 Case noted that he
had "filed bayonets" that day. |
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| Case, James Royal,
author ca.1935 1 Item Typescript, 11 pp., "The Tercentenary of
Connecticut Artillery." Case describes the use of
artillery in the State of Connecticut from 1635 to 1935.
He writes, "In 1865 the Connecticut National Guard
first came into being as such. . ." In his essay he
writes briefly of Connecticuts three Civil War Light
Batteries and the 1st and 2nd Connecticut Heavy Artillery
Regiments. He notes, "[T]here were three light
batteries from this state usually attached to Conn.
brigades of infantry. . ." The author gives
a more than cursory analysis of the 1st Connecticut
Heavy Artillery writing, "The 4th Conn. Volunteer
Inf. was organized as the first three years regiment, but
was converted into the 1st Conn Heavy Art. under the
command of Col. Robert O. Tyler. It expanded to a
strength of about 1800 men and served in the first
peninsular campaign of 1862, where their armament was
made up of 71 pieces of different type heavy siege guns.
It concluded its glorious career at the siege of
Petersburg. On the grounds of the State Capitol at
Hartford there has been mounted one of the 13 inch
mortars used by this regiment and christened the
'Petersburg Express.'" Case also notes, "The
19th Conn Vol. Inf was also converted into artillery and
served as the 2nd Heavies, but as the occasion required
were used as infantry freely. This reg- was at Cold
Harbor, Cedar Creek and Petersburg." |
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Monson, Massachusetts [?] U. S. Horse Artillery [?] 1863 [?] June 9 2 Items Letter from Camp Sheridan, MD, to his mother
Amelia M. Root in Monson, MA, on Christian Commission
letterhead. Following Chamberlins signature he
writes "alias Root." In regard to his
tentatively identified regimental affiliation, Chamberlin
writes, "I belong to U. S. Regular Brigade of Horse
Artillery no Corps or Division nor we dont belong to the
Army of the Potomac." Collection also contains an
IOU dated 6 March 1865. |
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Private Stafford Sixteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company I 1863 November 25 1 Item Letter probably written to Samuel Bartlett [see
entry for Bartlett]
which yields little information as to its writer or his
current situation. Champlin, an unmarried mechanic, enlisted 2 August 1862 and
was mustered-in a Private on 24 August 1862. He was
captured at Plymouth, NC, on 20 April 1864, was paroled
on 10 December 1864, and subsequently drowned in the
Potomac River on 20 April 1865. |
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Private East Windsor Sixteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company A 1863 November 29-1864 March 19 5 Items Letters to his brother, Gilbert W. Chapin in
Enfield, and mother, Amelia P. Chapin, at Warehouse Point
(Enfield). Chapin, an unmarried farmer, enlisted on 25 July 1862 and was
mustered-in a Private on 24 August 1862. He was
transferred to the Third Regiment Veteran Reserve Corps,
Company F, on 13 July 1863, but was transferred back to
the 16th Connecticut on 30 August 1863. Chapin was
captured at Plymouth, NC, on 20 April 1864 and died in
Andersonville on 21 July 1864. Chapin is an articulate,
often colorful writer; in his narrative, bullets become
"pills" and "cards." On 14 February
1864 he wrote, "I am hungry for news [from home], a
craving for something for my heart to feed upon."
Also see following entry and entry for David Conklin.
Family papers from Somers, Enfield, and Suffield, CT,
and Newport, NH. Collection includes 12 photocopied
letters from Leander Chapin, 1861 May 31-1863 October 4.
See previous entry for Chapins record of service.
On 7 February 1863 he wrote, "William was broke
(reduced to the ranks)." Leander spends a great deal
of his time trying to reassure his family of his good
health. On 18 March 1863 he wrote his mother, "I
know you exercise a Mothers feelings but like
Methodist ministers you overdo the thing entirely."
He remarks that Colonel Beach is liked by the men but Lt.
Colonel Burnham is not held in high esteem. In a letter
from John Porter of Glastonbury to Chapin on 14 September
1863, Porter describes Leanders brother Gilbert
thus, ". . . he is a fine fellow more soul in his
face than in most faces." |
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Lieutenant Colonel Hartford Sixteenth Connecticut Infantry 1894 1 Envelope Collection consists of memorabilia of an
Antietam veterans battlefield excursion in October
1894. This was a joint excursion of the 8th, 11th, 14th
and 16th Connecticut Infantry arranged for the dedication
of their various regimental monuments on the Antietam
battlefield. The units also visited Gettysburg,
Harpers Ferry and Washington, DC. Cheney, an unmarried silk manufacturer, enlisted
15 August 1862 and was mustered-in Lieutenant Colonel on
24 August 1862. He was wounded in the left arm at the
battle of Antietam on 17 September 1862 which forced his
resignation on 24 December 1862. Collection includes a
program of activities; an excursion ribbon, 16th
Connecticut Infantry; pencil notations perhaps made in
preparation for Cheneys speech at the dedication
ceremonies; pencil notations regarding various Corps
badges; and pencil notations on the disposition of
Confederate troops at the battle of First Bull Run, 21
July 1861, reportedly taken from General
Beauregards official after-action report. The
Museum of The Connecticut Historical Society owns
Cheney's frock coat, trousers, shirt and kepi. |
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Cheney, Jane (1811-1885) Manchester Civilian, Female 1852-1873 1 Volume Scrapbook containing letters, pencil
sketches, swatches of fabric, printed materials (such as
broadsides) and compositions (many completed for
Christmas 1862) by Jane Cheney's young pupils at the
Cheney School in Manchester. Topics included are Ednah
Cheney's description of Harriet Tubman's role in the
Underground Railroad, the Fugitive Slave Law, the Wide
Awakes, the Civil War and Civil War era politics,
Virginia, the temperance Band of Hope from Bolton, CT,
manners and social activities. Also included are
students' letters to soldiers, a list of battles or
military engagements, and written material on the New
York draft riots and Fort Sumter. Also relates visits to
the School from soldiers and letters from the pupils to
soldiers in the field. A letter from a schoolgirl dated
17 February 1864 to the brothers of a Mr. Black who had
been through many battles reads, "Dear Soldier . . .
Last Sat. I went to Hartford and saw many soldiers of the
12th Regt. . . . The ladies of S. M. [South Manchester]
meet at the Cheney's Hall every Thursday afternoon and
sew for the soldiers." |
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Civil War Covers Various Dates Two Boxes Two boxes, approximately 1,700 items, of
Civil War and Spanish-American War envelopes arranged in
broad topical categories. The illustrated envelopes bear
cartoons, caricatures, and patriotic and political
vignettes and mottoes (such as a set of crossed American
flags bearing the motto, "These Colors won't
run"). Some of the topics covered are: Colonel Elmer
Ellsworth, battle commemoratives, blockade, Great
Britain, the Southern Confederacy, Confederate generals,
politicians, and states, Connecticut, cotton, Union army
and navy, Union generals, Virginia, Washington and women.
The covers from both wars are interfiled. The collection
also contains a Charles Lindbergh cover. |
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Private Milford Twenty-Seventh Connecticut Infantry, Company C Undated 1 Item Hand-written account, 5 leaves, of the 27th
Connecticut at the battle of Gettysburg. Clark, an unmarried farmer, enlisted
on 10 September 1862, was mustered-in a Private on 4
October 1862, and was mustered-out with his nine-months
unit on 27 July 1863. Of the action on 2 July 1863, Clark
writes, "The 27th was stationed a little north of
Little Round Top our Brigade [Brookss Fourth
Brigade], being the left of the 2nd Corp. in the
afternoon with the rest of the Brigade started for the
wheatfield." The 27th Connecticut Infantry lost
one-half its fighting force in its advanced position that
day. Of 3 July 1863, with the 27th Connecticut then
stationed on Cemetery Hill, Clark writes, "On the
morning of the third we mustered but fifteen all
told..." Clark was very proud to relate that,
despite the devastating losses sustained, the 27th
Connecticut Infantry still retained its regimental flag.
Typescript essay, 8 pp., "The 27th regiment
Connecticut Volunteers - from the time it started on the
march to Gettysburg - from my diary." This is a more
detailed account of the 27th Connecticut Infantrys
role in the battle of Gettysburg than the preceding entry
[please refer to previous entry for Clarks record
of service]. On 1 July 1863 the 27th Connecticut was 3 to
4 miles from Gettysburg. By 2 July 1863 the regiment was
stationed north of Little Round Top on Cemetery Ridge.
Here, apparently paying little heed to timing or
circumstance, the paymaster arrived to pay the regiment.
At about 4 PM on 2 July 1863 the 27th Connecticut
advanced to the wheatfield, experiencing heavy fighting
there during which their regimental commander, Colonel
Merwin, was killed. More than one-half of their fighting
force was reportedly lost that day. On 3 July 1863, from
Cemetery Hill, the 27th Connecticut witnessed the
one-hour cannonade which preceded Picketts charge.
Clark noted that General Hancock took advantage of a lull
in the artillery barrage to inspect his lines: "when
standing near us his attention was called to the remnant
of the 27th, when he complimented us on the good work we
had done the day before, and said to us, Stand well
to your duty now, and in a few days you will carry with
you to your homes the honor of the greatest battle ever
fought on this continent." |
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Randolph, MA Thirty-Fifth Massachusetts Infantry 1863 February 27 and 1864 February 10 2 Items Photocopies of letters to his wife from
Newport News, VA (1863), and Knoxville, TN (1864). Few
details or insights are revealed in the letters except
for the fact that the Clarks had two daughters. |
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Private Southington Seventh Connecticut Infantry, Company A 1862 December 10 1 Item Transcript of excerpts from letter, 5 pp., from
Beaufort, SC. Clark was born 5 May 1840 and died 18 May
1895. At the time of the letter, Clark reported weighing
150 lbs. He also writes of having his hair cut into
"what is termed here, 'a fighting cut': the hair on
the head cut very close and my whiskers shaved all but a
little on my chin. One of the fellows, as I went into the
Hospital one day, remarked, 'How badly you are tanned.'
My whiskers often occasion remarks." Salmon Clark, an unmarried machinist,
enlisted on 21 August 1861 and was mustered-in on 5
September 1861. He was wounded at Fort Wagner, SC, on 11
July 1863 and was discharged on 12 September 1864. |
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Surgeon Hartford Thirteenth Connecticut Infantry 1843-1881 245 Items Letters, documents and three diaries,
1863-1865. Among other topics, Clary discusses American
politics, local news in Hartford and the treatment of
African Americans in the south. Included in the
collection is Clarys military discharge. Dr. Clary, unmarried,
enlisted 9 November 1861 and was mustered-in Assistant
Surgeon on 18 February 1862. He was promoted to Surgeon
on 31 July 1863 and was mustered-out on 25 April 1866.
This is an extensive, interesting and detailed collection
of materials. Dr. Clary receives high marks for bravery
in a letter written by his Colonel, Henry W. Birge, on 3
July 1863 [See entry for Birge]. Clarys letter of 9
February 1862 is written on illustrated "13th
Regiment Connecticut Volunteers" letterhead. A typed
transcription of many of Clarys Civil War letters
is included with the collection. A folder index is also
available. The Mary Morris Scrapbooks, MS, Library of The
Connecticut Historical Society, contain obituary
information on Dr. Clary. |
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| Collamer, Jacob
(1792-1865) Vermont Politician 1863 April 13 1 Item Letter, 1 p., to Secretary of War E. M. Stanton
in Washington, DC. Collamer recommends Albert Clark, a
lawyer, then serving with the 13th Vermont Infantry, for
a field officer's commission in one of the proposed
African American regiments. |
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| Colt, Samuel
(1814-1862) Hartford Civilian, Male 1856 July 14-1864 February 22 52 Items Correspondence and papers of the Connecticut
inventor and arms manufacturer including a permit for
passage to Berlin and St. Petersburg and letters
pertaining to the presidential campaign of 1860. Also
includes letters, prospectuses and circulars from
headquarters of the Northern Ohio Sanitary Fair (to open
22 February 1864) in Cleveland to Mrs. Elizabeth Jarvis
Colt requesting donations (11 items): circular from the
Committee on War Memorials, Relics and Curiosities
soliciting objects for exhibition; circular from the
Committee on Machinery and Manufactures soliciting a
contribution of items for either sale or exhibition; and
a circular from the Committee on Produce soliciting
contributions of flour, grain, horses, cattle, sheep,
hogs, fruit, poultry, etc. The collection also contains
four passports issued to Samuel Colt. |
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Colvin, Leslie, author 1986 June 11 1 Item Typescript photocopy, 39 leaves, "A
Reminder in Brownstone: the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial
Arch," a Trinity College, Hartford, Graduate-level
paper. Describes the evolution, design and dedication of
the Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Arch in Hartford and
the publics reaction to it. The Memorial's designer was
George Keller and the paper contains a brief biography of
this well-known Connecticut Architect. Upon his death,
Keller's ashes were interred in the east tower of the
Arch. Samuel Kitson executed the frieze on the north side
of the Arch, while that on the south side was the work of
Caspar Buberl. The Arch was dedicated on 17 September
1886. Colvin reports the first Civil War soldiers
monument was that placed in the Congregational Churchyard
in Kensington which honored sixteen volunteer soldiers
from that parish. This monument was dedicated 28 July
1863. Author also mentions Horace Bushnell's oration,
"Our Obligations to the Dead," [July 1865] and
the monument at Cramptons Gap, MD, dedicated to the
memory of the Civil Wars news correspondents and artists
on 23 September 1886. General Joseph R. Hawley was among
those offering dedication speeches at this latter
dedication and the 23 September 1886 issue of the
Hartford Courant published the text of the speech.
Colvin's paper contains a useful and interesting
bibliography. |
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Commissions and Discharges 1686-1928 4 Boxes Military documents. Box number 4 contains
commissions bearing Civil War dates. An alphabetical list
of those receiving commissions is available in Box number
1. Only Civil War military commissions (as opposed to
Governor's Foot Guard, etc.) were examined. Those named
therein are: Daniel G. Francis (Second Lieutenant,
Company A, 1st Connecticut Infantry), 1 May 1861 and
(Captain, Company A, 7th Connecticut Infantry), 10
September 1861; David F. Lane (Captain, Company D, 5th
Connecticut Infantry), 3 July 1861 and (Major, 5th
Connecticut Infantry), 27 February 1863; Charles Burton
(Captain, Company K, 7th Connecticut Infantry), 10
September 1861; William H. Higgs (Corporal, Company A,
4th Connecticut Infantry, later the 1st Connecticut Heavy
Artillery), 19 October 1861 and (Sergeant, Company A, 1st
Connecticut Heavy Artillery), 1 April 1863 and discharge
(Sergeant, Company A, 1st Connecticut Heavy Artillery),
25 November 1863 and (Second Lieutenant, 1st Connecticut
Heavy Artillery), 7 June 1865 and discharge (Second
Lieutenant, Company F, 1st Connecticut Heavy Artillery),
25 September 1865 and discharge (Sergeant, Company A, 1st
Connecticut Heavy Artillery), 14 June 1865; Elisha H.
Kellogg (Major, 1st Connecticut Heavy Artillery), 22
March 1862; Griffin A. Stedman, Jr. (Lieutenant Colonel,
11th Connecticut Infantry), 25 June 1862; George Kies
(Second Lieutenant, 18th Connecticut Infantry), 19 August
1862 and (First Lieutenant, 18th Connecticut Infantry),
28 October 1862; John H. Wilson (Second Lieutenant,
Company B, 7th Connecticut Infantry), 30 August 1862;
William H. Wright (Sergeant, Company B, 21st Connecticut
Infantry, 1 September 1862; John A. Rockwell (citizen
resident of Connecticut), pass to visit the army, 2
November 1864; and Timothy Parker (Commissary Sergeant,
18th Connecticut Infantry), 26 February 1864 and
(Corporal, Company A, 18th Connecticut Infantry), 27
February 1864. |
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Conklin, David Unknown Residence One Hundred Twenty-Seventh Regiment [State unknown], Company H 1863 September 18 1 Item Letter to Leander Chapin from Folly Island, SC.
Little detail as to either military situation or personal
circumstances is revealed. See also entry for Leander Chapin. |
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Confederate States of America Vermillionville, [LA?] 1863 August 1-11 1 Item Document. Requisition for forage for public
animals in the service of the Government Salt Works for
12 days, 1-11 August 1863, at Vermillionville, [LA?].
This document was printed on the back of a sheet of
wallpaper. |
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Connecticut Adjutant General 1862-1864 1 Folder Documents. Circulars, forms, and General and
Special Orders (includes General Orders Numbers 103, 26
August 1862, and 99, 13 August 1862) to town selectmen
and other authorities regarding bounties, draft and
enrollment, town quotas, commutation tax, underage
consent form, substitute consent form and a copy of the
new Militia Law, approved 10 July 1862 and published 1
August 1862, regarding the enlistment of colored troops.
A circular regarding Civil War widows pensions states
that a widow claiming a pension under State of
Connecticut Act of 27 June 1890 must provide evidence
that her husband served as a Union soldier, sailor or
marine, during the Civil War for a period of at least 90
days and that he was honorably discharged. |
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First Regiment 1862-1865 10 Items Papers. Collection includes muster rolls for
Companies F and E, 1864 August 31-October 31; General
Orders No. 102 from headquarters Department of the South
dated 27 June 1864 which states that Captain William E.
Morris, Company D, and others, were dismissed from
service; disability certificate and pay account for
Private Charles E. Gilbert, Company D, dated 6
February 1863; discharge certificate for Private Joseph
Cranker, Company C, dated 17 March 1862; letter from
Perry Tomlinson, Company E, dated 27 December 1864,
claiming his wife was not receiving pecuniary assistance;
voucher from Lt. E. M. Neville for pay, clothing, forage,
and subsistence, dated 4 October 1864; arrears of pay and
bounty certificate for Private William S. Painter,
Company B, dated 5 September 1865; and voucher from
Captain E. W. Whitaker, Company E, for pay, clothing,
forage and subsistence, dated 5 August 1864. |
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1874 August 19 3 Items Cover letter from Hartford to Sylvanus
Franklin Cone (1814-1879) enclosing illuminated
testimonial expressing the Association's gratitude for
extending the free use of his grounds and grove for the
Association's 7th Annual Reunion on 18 August 1874. Along
with the certificate of appreciation, the letter also
presents Case with a cloth reunion badge listing battles
in which the 1st Connecticut Cavalry participated, dated
30 July 1874. Louis Nathaniel Middlebrook (1825-1908),
George Simon Smith (b.1843) and William F. Clark sign the
testimonial. Middlebrook, of Bridgeport, enlisted 2
October 1861 and was mustered in Captain, Company D, on
21 November 1862. Smith, of Norwich, enlisted and was
mustered-in a Private, Company C, on 27 June 1863. He was
promoted to Q. M. Sergeant on 23 November 1864 and was
mustered-out on 2 August 1865. Clark, whose name
sometimes appears as Clarke, of Hartford, enlisted on 17
September 1862 and was mustered-in a Private, Company A,
on 30 September 1862. He was wounded at Reams' Station,
VA, on 28 June 1864 and again the next day at Stoney
Creek, VA. Clark was captured 30 June 1864 at Cabin
Point, VA, and was reportedly shot 15 times by the enemy
while an unarmed prisoner. He escaped on 3 July 1864 and
was granted a disability discharge on 29 May 1865. |
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Connecticut Civil War Veterans 1897-1899 1 Volume Large folio register, possibly a record book
belonging to an unidentified pension claims agent or
attorney, noting veteran applicant's name, address,
service, claim date, status of claim, certificate number,
and record of fees. The volume contains approximately 200
names. |
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First Regiment 1863-1864,1868 5 Items Papers. Manuscript copy, ca.40 pp.,
"Consolidated Report of operations of Grants
campaign against Richmond and Petersburg, 1st Conn. Vol.
Hvy Arty, Army of the Potomac," dated 1 December
1864 and signed by Walter F. Sage, Orderly Officer, Siege
Artillery, who remarks, "The War Dept alone has a
copy of this." Sage, of Berlin, enlisted and was
mustered-in a Private, Company G, on 22 May 1861 and was
mustered-out on 25 September 1865. Also included is the
brevet Captains commission for William G. Fitch,
Company A, dated 8 October 1868, "for gallant and
meritorious services at the battle of Hanover Court
House," to date from 13 March 1865. Collection also
contains the official notice sent to Major L. G.
Hemingway (of Hartford, enlisted 11 May 1861 and was
mustered-in Captain, Company A, on 22 May 1861. He was
promoted Major on 30 November 1861 and was discharged on
17 August 1864) from 3rd Brigade headquarters which
states that Private Henry C. Locke, Independent Company
Pennsylvania Engineers, had been sent to the convalescent
camp, dated 26 August 1863. Finally, also included is a
discharge certificate for Sergeant George W. Gorham,
Company E, dated 7 January 1862, and his pay voucher
dated 8 January 1862. This unit was originally designated
the 4th Connecticut Infantry. |
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Second Regiment 1863-1865 1 Folder Documents; mainly retained copies belonging
to Lt. William L. Twiss, Companies B and F. Clothing
allocation rosters for Company B, 1864 October 12,
November 30, December 31 and for Company F, 1864 November
30 and December, and 1865 January; document relieving Lt.
William L. Twiss, Company F, of accountability for
ordnance and ordnance stores under his command, dated 16
June 1865; list of quartermaster's stores issued to Lt.
Twiss, dated 1864 November 30 and December; monthly
returns of clothing, camp and garrison equipage for Lt.
Twiss, dated 1864 October, November and December; Special
Order discharging First Sergeant William L. Twiss, dated
1864 May 1, enabling him to accept a commission; muster
roll recording the promotion of Second Lieutenant Twiss,
Company F, to First Lieutenant, Company F, replacing
First Lieutenant Wilbur W. Birge, who was discharged,
dated 1864 December 20; request for a twenty-days
furlough for Corporal Thomas B. Spencer to return home to
Colebrook, CT, submitted by Lt. Twiss to Lt. Col. James
Hubbard, dated 1864 November 21; roll of 32 men of the
2nd Connecticut Heavy Artillery, listing name, rank, age,
date and place of enlistment, and information on pay
received, 1863-1864; roll of 89 men of the 2nd
Connecticut Heavy Artillery relaying the same
information, 1863-1864; and descriptive book of enlisted
men of Company F, May 1864, listing name, rank, hair and
eye color, complexion, height, place of birth,
occupation, when, where and by whom enrolled, when, where
and by whom mustered, date last paid, bounty, and
enlistment period. |
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Fifth Regiment 1861-1894 6 Items Papers. Collection includes pay voucher for
Private Lewis N. Cone, Company F, dated 21 March 1862 and
discharge certificate dated 16 February 1862; voucher for
clothing, pay and subsistence from Lt. James Stewart
dated 18 March 1865; discharge certificate for Private
Lafayette Johnson, Company F, dated 26 December 1861;
final statement of accounts for Sergeant Samuel Hoyt,
Company E, dated June 28, 1865; and pension papers from
the widow of Major David F. Lane dated 1894. |
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Sixth Regiment 1861, 1863 2 Items Papers. Collection includes muster roll for
Company A, 1863 June 30-August 31 and discharge
certificate for Paulus Ernst, Company H, dated 24
December 1861.
Records, 435 items. Collection contains retained
copies of regimental papers kept by Quartermaster William
H. H. Wooster (b.1841). Wooster enlisted 23 August 1861
and was mustered-in as First Lieutenant, Company E, on 4
September 1861. He resigned on 23 March 1862. He was
re-mustered a Private, Company E, on 28 February 1864 and
was promoted to Second Lieutenant on 8 April 1864. He was
appointed Regimental Quartermaster on 31 October 1864 and
was mustered-out on 21 August 1865. The collection also
contains approximately a dozen personal papers and
commissions belonging to Wooster. A folder index is
available with the collection. |
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Seventh Regiment 1862 December 30 1 Item Pay voucher for wagoner John R. Fisher, Company
A, dated 30 December 1862.
Collection includes record book of reunions; also
contains tabulated statistics of the regiment; roster of
Company A, its engagements, honorary members, history of
the regiment and necrology with index. Included in
the collection is a 15 November 1862 issue of The new [sic]
South (Volume 1, Number 13) reporting on the
Pocotaligo expedition; maps of Fort Pulaski (1862), of
the defenses of Charleston city and harbor (1863) and of
the battlegrounds of Pocotaligo and Coosawatchie
(undated). The record book was kept by Stephen Walkley
from 1873 to 1912. Also included is a letter, 2 pp., from
General Joseph Roswell Hawley (1826-1905) then residing
at Woodmont (Milford) dated 9 July 1896 to Stephen
Walkley in Southington. Hawley regrets that he
will be unable to attend the reunion of the Seventh
Connecticut Infantry (Item 2, Folder 2). A letter is also
enclosed from Edith Hawley, dated 17 July 1904, stating
that it is better for Hawleys comrades to remember
their commander in his strength and power. Stephen
Walkley enlisted on 21 August 1861 and was mustered-in on
5 September 1861. He was discharged on 12 September 1864.
This collection contains much personal history of the
members of Company A and a letter from Walkley to A. P.
Sloan (Corporal, Company A), 7 July 1914, which describes
the role of Col. Strawbridge, 76th Pennsylvania Infantry,
in the failure of the assault on Ft. Wagner, SC. |
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Eighth Regiment 1863-1865 8 Items Papers. Discharge certificate for Private John
Hallso, Company E, dated 9 January 1863 and pay voucher
dated 12 January 1863 (Hallso was British); pay voucher
for Private William H. Hawley, Company I, dated 12
January 1863; pay voucher for Private Theodore Smith,
Company A, dated 4 February 1863 and his discharge
certificate dated 3 February 1863; pay, clothing, food
and subsistence voucher for Colonel John E. Ward dated 24
February 1865; and final statement and pay voucher for
Sergeant Heber Ives, Company K, dated 28 October 1864. |
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Ninth Regiment 1863 July 10 1 Item Pay, clothing, food and subsistence voucher for
Captain S. W. Sawyer, Company H, dated 10 July 1863. The
9th Connecticut Infantry was composed primarily of Irish
recruits. |
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Tenth Regiment 1863 2 Items Papers. Muster roll, Company H, 1863 June
30-August 31, and a roster of the original members of
Company A, a post-war manuscript document. |
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Eleventh Regiment 1862-1864 4 Items Papers. Discharge certificate for teamster
Sylvanus Wight, Company H, dated 8 January 1863; pay
voucher for musician Henry Irving, Company F, dated 1 May
1862; pay voucher for Private D. D. Greggs, Company I,
dated 24 June 1862; and pay voucher for wagoner John B.
Willard, Company D, dated 9 February 1864. |
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Twelfth Regiment 1864-1865 4 Items Papers. Ordnance return for the fourth quarter
of 1861; Special Orders No. 164 declaring Captain James
E. Smith was relieved from duty as Provost Marshal,
Sub-district of Ogeechee, Savannah, GA, and was to return
to his regiment, dated 8 August 1865; ordnance receipt
dated 30 July 1865 and signed by Captain James E. Smith
and Lt. Henry Gibbons; and pay, clothing, subsistence and
food voucher for Lt. Henry J. Fletcher dated 28 October
1864.
Manuscript notes in several unidentified hands
regarding the 12th Connecticut, many of which seem to
have been elicited from the Connecticut War Record
(monthly; J. M. Morris, ed. New Haven: Peck, White &
Peck, 1863-1865) and History of Battle Flag Day,
September 17, 1879 (Hartford: Lockwood & Merritt,
1880). Topics include the history of the unit, 1863-1865;
the siege of Port Hudson (42 days) and list of
casualties; the capture of the gunboat Cotton in
January 1863; engagements at Donaldsonville and New
Iberia, LA; a record of long marches; loyal Louisiana men
enlisting in the regiment including the regimental
bandleader, James Heartman, who hailed from New Orleans;
and abstracts of speeches delivered in Hartford and New
Haven upon the regiments return to Connecticut. |
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Thirteenth Regiment 1862, 1865 5 Items Papers. Discharge certificate for Private John
Carpenter, Company C, dated 31 May 1864; final statement
for Sergeant Herbert Baldwin, Company C, dated 11 January
1865; final statement for Sergeant Charles H. Gaylord
dated 11 January 1865; final statement for Sergeant
Samuel Taylor, Company B, dated 10 January 1865; and
final statement for Sergeant William B. Tooker, Company
B, dated 10 January 1865. |
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Fourteenth Regiment 1862-1863, 1961 7 Items Papers and photograph. Pay voucher for Private
Joseph A. Leete, Company I, dated 10 January 1863 and
final statement dated 9 January 1863; final statement for
Corporal George J. Hall, Company I, dated 13 December
1862 and pay voucher dated 15 December 1862; pay voucher
and final statement for musician Luther E. Higby, Company
I, dated 6 February 1863. Collection also includes
a photograph of an identification tag belonging to Sgt.
William A. Rice, Company C, which was apparently found by
a relic hunter on the battlefield in May 1961. Rice was
killed at the battle of the Wilderness, 6 May 1864. The
fate of the tag itself is unknown. |
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Fifteenth Regiment 1862, 1864-1865 5 Items Final statement for Private William H. Allen,
Company A, dated 16 December 1862 and pay voucher dated
17 December 1862; final statement for Sergeant Major
Charles F. Harwood dated 31 December 1864; final
statement for Sergeant Henry G. Marshall, Company C,
dated 10 February 1864; and final statement for Private
Daniel Schmidt, Company E, dated 1 January 1865.
Papers relating to the 15th Connecticut including
regimental correspondence, most of which is directed to
Colonel Dexter R. Wright, and a copy of the official
after-action report by Lt. Colonel Samuel Tolles
describing the 15ths part in the battle of
Fredericksburg dated 17 December 1862 and including names
of casualties. |
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Sixteenth Regiment 1862 5 Items Final statement for Private William H. Lee,
Company B, dated 13 December 1862 and pay voucher dated
15 December 1862; final statement for Private Marshall E.
Sherman, Company C, dated 24 December 1862; final
statement for Private George Long, Company D, dated 8
December 1862; muster-in roll for Company I dated 24
August 1862. |
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Twenty-First Regiment 1863-1864 2 Items Pay voucher for Private Zachariah Whitehead,
Company K, dated 14 January 1863 and final statement for
Private Joseph N. Taylor, Company H, dated 28 February
1864. |
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Twenty-Second Regiment 1863 July 7 1 Item Document. Discharge for Private John Steiner,
Company A. Steiner, who was born in Germany, was a
twenty-three-year-old farmer. |
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Twenty-Third Regiment 1863 1 Item Discharge for Private John D. Smith, Company H,
dated 31 August 1863. |
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Twenty-Fifth Regiment 1863 3 Items Papers. Special Orders No. 16, headquarters
Department of the Gulf, New Orleans, dated 16 January
1863, states that the following resignations had been
tendered and accepted: Lt. Edward Pinney, Company E; Lt.
B. E. Buck, Company H; and Lt. Colonel D. H. Stevens;
pay, clothing, food and subsistence voucher for Second
Lt. Edward Pinney, Company E, dated 11 February 1863;
descriptive list for Pinney dated 27 January 1863. |
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Twenty-Sixth Regiment 1862-1863 3 Items Pay, clothing, food and subsistence voucher
for Assistant Surgeon N. H. Wright dated 8 July 1863 and
muster roll fragments for the period December 1862-June
1863. |
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Twenty-Seventh Regiment 1862 2 Items Final statement for Private William W. Church,
Company C, dated 29 December 1862 and pay voucher dated
30 December 1862. |
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Twenty-Ninth Regiment (Colored) 1864 2 Items Muster roll, Company A, 1864 October
31-December 31 and clothing statement for Company A,
dated September 4, 1864 [?]. |
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Connecticut Militia First Brigade, Third Regiment, Artillery Company A 1836-1861 1 Volume Orderly book. The book contains Governor
William Buckinghams General Orders No. 227, dated
17 January 1861, urging the militia to fill their ranks,
inspect their equipment and arms and to drill and
discipline their men due to the recent "Spirit of
disloyalty to our National Union..." Also contains
muster rolls and company orders for the period
January-July 1861. It appears this company was not
mustered-in as a cohesive unit, though many of the
individuals served in other Connecticut regiments. This
militia unit underwent several pre-war evolutions in
designation over time, apparently identified at various
periods as 1st Company, 1st Battery, Light Artillery and
as 2nd Company, 1st Regiment, Light Artillery. |
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Connecticut Paymaster General 1863 August and 1864 February 4 Items Correspondence with the State Comptroller
regarding the payment of bounties for volunteers. One
item, August 1863, and three items, February 1864. |
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Connecticut Soldiers Relief Association Washington, DC 1862 [?] 1 Item Circular Number 2 explains the Associations
objectives and organizational structure and also
lists articles needed for the soldiers. On the reverse of
the circular is a letter dated 5 December 1862, from
Willards Hotel, Washington, DC, to "Dear
Folks," describing a visit to the White House, the
Capitol, the Patent Office, etc. The signature may read
R. D. H. Allen. |
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Cook, Doris E., author. Seventh Connecticut Infantry Undated 1 Item "Chaplain Jacob Eaton and Mrs. Hawley: a
Civil War Episode," 5 pp., typescript. Recounts
Harriet Ward Foote Hawleys (1831-1886) request to
Chaplain Jacob Eaton (d.1865) to deliver a Testament to
John Rowley (d.1864), a Private in the 7th Connecticut,
who was to be hung in September of 1864 for murdering a
comrade, Jerome Dupoy, during the battle of Olustee, FL.
Harriet Hawley was the wife of General Joseph R. Hawley.
Chaplain Eaton, of Meriden, had seen prior service with
the 8th Connecticut Infantry. He was wounded at the
battle of Antietam and resigned on 27 October 1862. He
enlisted in the 7th Connecticut on 29 March 1864 and was
mustered-in on 20 May 1864. He died 20 March 1865. John
Rowley, a substitute from Ridgefield, was mustered-in 2
November 1863 and was executed 3 September 1864 by
sentence of General Court Martial at Petersburg, VA.
Apparently while in action at the battle of Olustee (20
February 1864), Rowley intentionally shot Dupoy, also a
substitute, in the head. Harriet Hawley, of Guilford, was
often with her husband during his service with the 7th
Connecticut. She played an active role in the health,
education and spiritual well-being of the soldiers of the
regiment. Also see entry for Harriet Hawley. |
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| Cooper, A. Waterford 1862 [?] 1 Volume Text, 17 pp., of a speech, "The war
& our duty in reference to it," delivered by
Rev. Dr. A. Cooper at Jordan (a section of Waterford). A
part of the speech was written 16 July [1862?]. Cooper
writes, "The principles therefore of this
belligerent [sic] party are the results of the system of
slavery. They fatten today upon this system . . . . This
is a war of extermination, not of races, but of
principles. . . . When the sacrifice is not your money
& your blood only, but the Constitution of your
fathers." The speech appears in an account book,
1802-1829, once owned by Elisha Beckwith (b.1761). |
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Private Cornwall Second Connecticut Heavy Artillery, Company G 1862-1865 75 Items Correspondence and miscellaneous family
papers, 1741-1900. Corban enlisted 4 August 1862 and was
mustered-in on 11 September 1862. He was captured at
Snickers Gap, VA, on 24 July 1864 and was paroled
on 21 February 1865. He received a disability discharge
on 11 May 1865. Corbans unit was originally formed
as the 19th Connecticut Infantry. Corban, a farmer, writes
frequently to his wife Lydia, his daughter Julia E. and
his son George W. Corban. |
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Guilford [?] Forty-Fourth New York Infantry, Company D 1863 March 10 Letter, 4 pp., to "Lottie,"
from a hospital near Falmouth, VA. The recovering soldier
mentions Guilford and, it would seem, had lost his wife
shortly before the war. He may have later been appointed
Chaplain in this or in another unit. His personal
experience of battle, disease, death, long marches,
inclement weather, boredom, drill and discipline is
obvious in the following quotation: "I know
something of soldiering in most of its phases. I can
assure you it takes a heapof patriotism to
carry one through." |
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Private Glastonbury Sixteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company G 1863 [?] November 5 1 Item Letter from near Portsmouth, VA. Creighton, a married weaver,
enlisted 29 July 1862 and was mustered-in on 24 August
1862. He was wounded in the side at the battle of
Antietam, 17 September 1862 and was later captured at
Plymouth, NC, on 20 April 1864. The official Adjutant
Generals report states that Creighton was paroled
on 11 December 1864 and that no further record of this
soldier exists. His granddaughter writes that he died in
Andersonville. From the evidence that exists, it seems
likely that rather than being paroled on 11 December
1864, Creighton actually died on that date. The letter
contains little information as to military situation or
personal circumstances. Creighton left behind at least
two daughters, Mary and Ellen. |
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Captain Bethel Twenty-Third Connecticut Infantry, Company G 1982 1 Item Typescript transcription, 56 pp., "A
Connecticut Yankee as a Civil War Prisoner in Texas,
1863-1864," written by Burton Lape Crofut in 1982,
based on the 1863 June 19-November 22 diary of Crofut.
According to the transcriber, Crofuts diary becomes
illegible after 22 November 1863. Crofut, a married hatter, enlisted on 2
September 1862 and was mustered-in on 14 November 1862.
He was captured at Brashear City, LA, on 23 June 1863 and
was released on 22 July 1864. Crofut was discharged on 9
August 1864. Collection also contains a photocopied
photograph of Captain Crofut. |
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Crofut, Sidney Winter (d.1935) Hartford Civilian, Male 1862, 1869 5 Volumes Scrapbooks containing clippings of vignettes
and portraits from patriotic stationery; for example,
"Remember Ellsworth!" Sidney Crofut compiled
four volumes in 1862 and G. Clement Crofut compiled one
volume of like material in 1869. Collection also includes
two Civil War covers or envelopes with color depictions
of the battle of New Bern, NC, and of the siege and
capture of Fort Donelson. |
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Second Lieutenant Middletown Twenty-Fourth Connecticut Infantry, Companies D and H 1862 December 8-1863 August 30; 1882-1883 32 Items Letters written to his wife, Abby J. Crosby;
discharge and muster papers; several later documents,
1863-1885, including minutes of a meeting of the 24th
Connecticut veterans in New Haven in 1868 and documents
regarding his wifes attempts to secure a
widows pension, 1882-1883. Crosby enlisted on 8
September 1862 and was mustered-in as First Sergeant,
Company D, on 18 November 1862. He was promoted to Second
Lieutenant, Company H, on 6 April 1863 and mustered-out
with his nine-months unit on 30 September 1863. At the
time of his enlistment, Crosby was a 38-year-old barber.
Lt. Crosby wrote very detailed and interesting letters. |
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Corporal Norwich Eighteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company C 1863 June 29 1 Item Letter to his mother from "Bloody
Creek," PA. Cross, an unmarried mason, enlisted 6 August 1862 and was
mustered-in a Private on 18 August 1862. He was promoted
Corporal on 20 May 1864 and was mustered-out on 27 June
1865. Cross gives an interesting account of the battle of
Winchester, 13-15 June 1863, and his escape on horseback.
|
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Sergeant Griswold Twenty-Ninth Connecticut Infantry (Colored), Company H 1864 October 4-1865 May 27 10 Items Letters from an African American soldier to
his wife, Abby Simons Cross. Cross enlisted on 31
December 1863 and was mustered-in a Private on 8 March
1864. He was promoted Corporal on 30 April 1864 and to
Sergeant on 1 January 1865. He was mustered-out on 24
October 1865. This very rare collection of letters, along
with a brief biography of Cross, was recently published
in The Connecticut Historical Society Bulletin,
Vol. 60, Nos. 3-4. Contact Jill Padelford for
ordering information. |
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Crowley, Ella Roseada Wilcox (1872-1957) Unknown Residence 1929-1930 1 Volume Record book containing postcards and
newspaper clippings as well as notes made during an auto
trip with her son Lisle from Connecticut to Virginia and
North Carolina in September 1929. Crowley describes her
drive through the Shenandoah Valley and visits to
historic sites of the Civil War and includes several
references to the social conditions of African Americans
in the south. Her grandfather, Horace H. Messenger, was a
soldier in Company I, 7th Connecticut Infantry (see entry
for Horace Messenger). Included are postcards and/or
ephemera from Gettysburg National Cemetery, a tunnel at
Harper's Ferry, the Barbara Fritchie House and Museum and
the "Last Capitol of the Confederacy," in
Danville, VA. On 17 September she writes, "Arriving
in Gettysburg we were beseiged [sic] by men in uniform
wanting to shew us the sights for only $1.50."
Crowley and her son skillfully evade these guides. She
continues, "Wishing to take away a souvenir I picked
up a small stone of redish hue and have since been told
it was petrified flesh?" They also visit Frederick,
MD, Harper's Ferry, WV, and Winchester, Staunton,
Lexington, Groveton and Manassas, VA. Also included is a
photograph of the Fisk Jubilee Singers. On the same page,
other African Americans are depicted with Crowley's note,
"Some of the younger generation are almost good
looking." At Martinsville, NC, "We ran into a
Coon wedding all in gorgeous array." Scrapbook holds
a clipping regarding Charles Lockwood, reportedly the
last survivor of the 1st Minnesota Infantry, dated 22
July 1930. |
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Curtin, Andrew Gregg (1817-1894) Governor of Pennsylvania 1863 April 27 1 Item Letter, 1 p., from Harrisburg, PA, to Edwin M.
Stanton, Secretary of War, Washington, DC. Curtin
recommends Capt. Espington [?], 7th Pennsylvania Cavalry,
to raise a regiment of African American soldiers. |
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Curtis, George William Staten Island, NY Civilian, Male 1863 December 25 1 Item Letter to Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton in
Washington, DC, recommending Sergeant John Habberton, 1st
New York Mounted Rifles, for a commission in an African
American regiment. George Curtis was the brother-in-law
of Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, 54th Massachusetts Infantry
(Colored). |
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Curtis, Samuel Ryan (1805-1866) 1864 December 12 1 Item Letter, 1 p., from Fort Leavenworth,
Headquarters, Department of Kansas, to Major General
Winfield Scott Hancock, Washington, DC, recommending
Captain H. G. Loring for a position in Hancock's Corps. |
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| Curtiss, Joseph B. Bridgeport Civilian, Male 1863 October 22 1 Item Document. Receipt (Certificate Number 123) for
$50.00 from the Bridgeport Committee of Citizens for the
Relief of Drafted Men. The payment entitled Curtiss,
should he be drafted, to the benefits of the Committee's
funds. |
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Private Hartford Sixteenth Connecticut Infantry, Company B 1862-1926 1 Envelope Letters and papers; printed poem,
"When the Sixteenth Marched Away," by "a
Daughter of the Regiment;" circulars for various
Antietam reunions (1909, 1910, 1926); printed poem,
"The Song of Union Prisoners, From Dixies
Sunny Land," to be sung to the air, "Twenty
Years Ago;" clippings of various advertisements and
articles from The Review of Reviews; manuscript
music and lyrics to "Yankee Doodle Dandy Oh!";
notes compiled by Cuzners daughter, Jennie Cuzner
Sperry, from her fathers letters and papers and a
transcription of Cuzners Civil War letters also by
Mrs. Sperry; and various genealogical notes regarding the
Cuzner family. John Cuzner was an 18-year-old mechanic when he
enlisted on 15 August 1862. He was mustered-in on 24
August 1862 and was captured at Plymouth, NC, on 20 April
1864. He was paroled on 16 December 1864, weighing 80
pounds, and received his discharge on 19 June 1865. His
letters provide excellent descriptions of Andersonville
and the various sufferings of its inhabitants. His
flirtatious letters to his fiancee, Ellen (whom he would
later marry), are quite charming. Following his parole,
Cuzner spent the rest of his term of service at Camp
Parole in Annapolis. |
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