In 1861 at the age of eighteen, Edward Woolsey Bacon, a Yale student and son of well-known abolitionist minister Leonard Bacon, left his home in New Haven, Connecticut, to fight for the United States. Over the next four years Bacon served in both the Union navy and army, which gave him a sweeping view of the Civil War. His postings included being a captain’s clerk on the USS Iroquois, a hospital clerk in his hometown, a captain in the 29th Connecticut Infantry (Colored), and a major in the 117th U.S. Colored Infantry, and he described these experiences in vibrant letters to his friends and family. Historian George S. Burkhardt has compiled these letters, as well as Bacon’s diary in the impressive Double Duty in the Civil War: The Letters of Sailor and Soldier Edward W. Bacon. Bacon tells of hunting Confederate commerce raiders on the high seas, enduring the tedium of blockade duty, and taking part in riverine warfare on the Mississippi. He recalls sweating in South Carolina as an infantry officer during drill and picket duty, suffering constant danger in the battlefield trenches of Virginia, marching victoriously on fallen Richmond, and tolerating the boredom of occupation duty in Texas. His highly entertaining letters shed new light on naval affairs and reveal a close-knit family life. The narrative of his duty with black troops is especially valuable, since few first-hand accounts from white officers of the U.S. Colored Troops exist. Furthermore, his beliefs about race, slavery, and the Union cause were unconventional for the time and stand in contrast to those held by many of his contemporaries. Double Duty in the Civil War is filled with lively descriptions of the men Bacon met and the events he experienced. With Burkhardt’s careful editing and useful annotations, Bacon’s letters and diary excerpts give rare insight into areas of the Civil War that have been neglected because of a lack of available sources. Given the scarcity of eyewitness testimonies to navy life and life in African American regiments, this book is a rarity indeed.
A History of the Regular Army in the Civil War Clayton R. Newell, Charles R. Shrader ... Schofield, John M. Forty-six Years in the Army. ... Swanson, Clifford L. The Sixth United States Infantry Regiment, 1855 to Reconstruction.
... 1864, Adriance Memorial Library, Poughkeepsie, NY; T. Kern to Mother, Apr. 2, 1864, T. Kern Papers (#2526), UNC, ... OR g9, 1:172, 176, 179, 181—82, 186, 197—98, 21g, 216, 22g; Hancock, Diary, 282; Henry M. Austin to Toledo Blade, ...
It was really pleasing to see the cordial greeting of friends after so long a separation , ” Robbins noted . From them , Robbins learned that his own regiment was about three quarters of a mile farther toward the river .
This idea was beautifully summed up by Ely Parker, a Union officer (and Seneca Indian) who worked on General Grant's staff. Back at that meeting at Appomattox—the one where Lee surrendered his army to Grant—Grant introduced Lee to the ...
So he would never have said to the Jollies, as he does in the film, that they should contact their congressman (the mythical “Beanpole Burton”) and tell him to support the measure for the sake of “military necessity.
The carbine Powell had pointed at his chest a few minutes before rested on the floor astride his body. A neighbor informed that Powell was “destitute” and “had no money to buy food.” The 15 cents found in his pocket and.
Dimmock, “Lovejoy: Hero and Martyr,” 374; Harold Holzer, Lincoln and the Power of the Press (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2014), 35–36. 7. Hoffman, “'If I Fall,'” 19–20; Brown, Lecture, 8–9; J. Thomas Scharf, History of St. Louis City ...
... William L., 205 Sharp, Samuel, 99 Shaw, Robert Gould, 125–27, 172–73 Shepherd, William T., 64, 85 Sherman, John, ... 220 Sturtevant, Edward Lewis, 73 Summers, Mark Wahlgren, 198, 215, 219 Sykes, James, 191 Taylor, Zachary, 18–19, ...
As a result, the pine needed for the deck and hull of the two armorclads had to be ordered from points as much as 104 miles away. As soon as it could be loaded, it would be shipped in by railroad and ox team. Unhappily, we do not know ...
The United States Civil War touched the lives of every American North and South at that time. This informative book makes extensive use of journals, newspapers, and diaries to bring...