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Tag Archives: prisoners-of-war
8 July 1863: “Like all the rest I am getting tired of this side of the Potomac…”
Item description: Letter, 8 July 1863, from William Hope Peek, assistant surgeon with the 2nd Virginia Cavalry, to his sister, Maria Peek, who was at the family’s home in Hampton, Va. William died less than two weeks later on 19 … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged Battle of Gettysburg, Pickett's Charge, prisoners-of-war, surgeons
Comments Off on 8 July 1863: “Like all the rest I am getting tired of this side of the Potomac…”
26 June 1863: “We can do nothing but keep in doors and kill time as well as we can.”
Item description: In this diary entry, 26 June 1863, Scott Peters, who served with Company A, Third Missouri Cavalry Regiment, Confederate Army, described the monotony of prison life. Peters was wounded and captured at the Battle of Champion Hill on … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged Battle of Champion Hill, Fort Delaware, prisoners-of-war, Scott Peters, Third Missouri Cavalry Regiment
Comments Off on 26 June 1863: “We can do nothing but keep in doors and kill time as well as we can.”
18 May 1863: “We shall look for further news from that quarter with much interest.”
Item: editorials and advertisements, The Daily Journal (Wilmington, N. C.), 18 May 1863, page 2, columns 1 and 2. Notes: 1) The Siege of Vicksburg began on 18 May 1863. 2) Colonel Thomas Purdie, of the 18th North Carolina Regiment, … Continue reading
Posted in North Carolina Collection
Tagged Abraham Lincoln, Clement Vallandigham, CSS Emma, CSS Eugenie, education, Gen. Stonewall Jackson, home industry, homespun, Jefferson Davis, Major General Evans, Matthew Fontaine Maury, newspapers, political advertiement, prisoners-of-war, text books, Thomas Purdie, Union Leagues, William J. Houston, Wilmington (N.C.) Daily Journal
Comments Off on 18 May 1863: “We shall look for further news from that quarter with much interest.”
16 May 1863: “one thing I can say I was not in the least scart and filled up my pipe and had a good smoke while the bullets were fling pretty nimbly.”
Item Description: Letter, 16 May 1863, from George Washington Baker to his sister describing the Battle of Chancellorsville. Baker hailed from Washington County, N.Y., and served with Company K, 123rd New York Volunteers in the Civil War. The collection includes letters … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 123rd New York Volunteers, amputations, apples, Battle of Chancellorsville, environment, George Washington Baker, Peaches, prisoners-of-war, United States Army
Comments Off on 16 May 1863: “one thing I can say I was not in the least scart and filled up my pipe and had a good smoke while the bullets were fling pretty nimbly.”
15 May 1863: “I am sorry to inform you that I unfortunately fell into the hands of the enemy on Sunday the 3rd inst.”
Item description: Letter, 15 May 1863, from Corporal Andrew J. Proffit to his father, William Proffit of Wilkes County, N.C., in which the son described his unsuccessful attempt to protect the North Carolina 18th Regiment’s colors (and himself) from capture … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 18th Regiment North Carolina Troops, 1st North Carolina Infantry Regiment, Alfred N. Proffit, Andrew J. Proffit, Battle of Chancellorsville, Camp Lee, Gen. Stonewall Jackson, prisoners-of-war, William H. Proffit
Comments Off on 15 May 1863: “I am sorry to inform you that I unfortunately fell into the hands of the enemy on Sunday the 3rd inst.”
24 September 1862: “The fight continued all day with heavy loss on both sides.”
Item description: The Weekly Raleigh Register of 24 September 1862 included this update, which is dated 20 September 1862, of action at Harper’s Ferry and the Battle of Antietam (Sharpsburg). Item citation: The Weekly Raleigh Register. 24 September 1862. Raleigh, … Continue reading
Posted in North Carolina Collection
Tagged Antietam, battle, Battle of Sharpsburg, D.H. Hill, Gen. George McClellan, Harper's Ferry, Maryland, newspapers, prisoners-of-war, Raleigh Register
Comments Off on 24 September 1862: “The fight continued all day with heavy loss on both sides.”
26 July 1862: “…started this morning & marched about 5 miles when the advance surprised a Picket Headquarters & drove them off..”
Item description: Newton Wallace, Company I, 27th Massachusetts Infantry, comments on his company’s movements while in eastern North Carolina, near New Bern. The march was a part of the Union Army’s expedition from New Bern to Trenton and Pollocksville. See … Continue reading
Posted in North Carolina Collection
Tagged 27th Infantry (Massachusetts), diaries, New Bern, Newton Wallace, North Carolina, Pollocksville, prisoners-of-war, skirmishes, soldier conditions, Trenton, Union occupation, Union soldiers
Comments Off on 26 July 1862: “…started this morning & marched about 5 miles when the advance surprised a Picket Headquarters & drove them off..”
9 June 1862: “On Duty from 7 AM till 12 1/2 P.M. was pretty busy 162 prisoners of war came in on the cars from Strasbourg”
Item description: Entry from the diary of Newton Wallace, Company I, 27th Massachusetts Volunteers, describing Confederate prisoners of war coming in on a train from “Strasbourg” (presumably, this is Strasburg, Virginia) while on duty in Virginia. Wallace’s entry from 10 … Continue reading
Posted in North Carolina Collection
Tagged 27th Infantry (Massachusetts), Newton Wallace, prisoners, prisoners-of-war, prisons, Union occupation, Union soldiers, United States Army, Virginia
Comments Off on 9 June 1862: “On Duty from 7 AM till 12 1/2 P.M. was pretty busy 162 prisoners of war came in on the cars from Strasbourg”
5 January 1862: “…we are not Barbarians, if we are “Rebels”!
Item description: Letter, 5 January 1862, from Jeremy Francis Gilmer, a Major of Engineers in the Confederate States of America Army, to his wife “Loulie,” Louisa Fredericka Alexander Gilmer. Gilmer wrote of the wintry weather and the relative softness and scratchiness … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged Bowling Green, Jeremy Francis Gilmer, Kentucky, prisoners-of-war, undergarments, winter, wounded soldiers
Comments Off on 5 January 1862: “…we are not Barbarians, if we are “Rebels”!
20 November 1861: Raising the Black Flag, “Such an event must fill every thoughtful mind with the gloomiest forebodings.”
Item description: newspaper article, “The Black Flag,” Weekly Standard (Raleigh), 20 November 1861, page 1, column 4. Item transcription: The Black Flag. In modern times, the black flag has never been raised, except as the ensign of the pirate—the heartless … Continue reading
Posted in North Carolina Collection
Tagged Abraham Lincoln, black flag, Georgia, newspapers, prisoners-of-war, South Carolina
Comments Off on 20 November 1861: Raising the Black Flag, “Such an event must fill every thoughtful mind with the gloomiest forebodings.”