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Tag Archives: winter
13 January 1865: “nothing at all to bother us except the mud”
Item Description: Letter dated 13 January 1865 written by James A. Graham to his mother. Graham, a native of Hillsborough, N.C., served as an officer in Company G (Orange Guards), 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, Confederate States of America. Item … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, Danville, Danville Railroad, furlough, James A. Graham, James Augustus Graham, music, Navy, snow, weather, Weldon (N.C.), Weldon Railroad, winter
Comments Off on 13 January 1865: “nothing at all to bother us except the mud”
30 December 1864: “Our expedition so far has been attended with the most complete success. The Rebels having lost Savannah…”
Item Description: Letter dated 30 December 1864 from Jonathan L. Whitaker to his wife Julia A. Wells Whitaker. Jonathan L. Whitaker was a physician from Orange County, N.Y. He served as a United States Army surgeon at a hospital at … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 26th United States Colored Troops, African American soldiers, African Americans, Jonathan Lewis Whitaker, Orange County (NY), plantations, Pocotaligo (SC), religion, religious beliefs, Savannah, winter
Comments Off on 30 December 1864: “Our expedition so far has been attended with the most complete success. The Rebels having lost Savannah…”
16 November 1864: “This is the day set apart by President Davis as a day of public worship”
Item Description: A letter from James Graham to his mother. James Augustus Graham was an officer stationed in Virginia and South Carolina during the war. In this letter he requests items for his troops. It reveals a lot about what the soldiers … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged Civil War, Confederate Army, food, gloves, Petersburg, Richmond, socks, supplies, winter
Comments Off on 16 November 1864: “This is the day set apart by President Davis as a day of public worship”
7 January 1864: “I wish our Ladies Solidiers Aid Society in Hillsboro would make about fifty prs of gloves for our Company as very few of the men have gloves and they would be very acceptable such weather as this especially on picket.”
Item description: Letter, dated 7 January 1864, from James A. Graham to his mother. Item citation: From the James A. Graham Papers #00283, Southern Historical Collection,The Wilson Library, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Item transcription: Camp 27th No. Ca. Inf’y near … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 27th North Carolina Infantry Regiment, clothes, Hillsborough (N.C.), James A. Graham, ladies' relief societies, substitutes, weather, winter, winter quarters
Comments Off on 7 January 1864: “I wish our Ladies Solidiers Aid Society in Hillsboro would make about fifty prs of gloves for our Company as very few of the men have gloves and they would be very acceptable such weather as this especially on picket.”
4 January 1864: “There was a most horrid murder perpetrated in Monroe the other day; Mr. Baker’s little son, only seven years old was riding through town attended by a negro boy when he was shot through the head and instantly killed…”
Item description: Entry, dated 4 January 1864, from the diary of Sarah Lois Wadley, which includes details about the murder of a young boy in Monroe, La., by a Mexican member of a Texas regiment. More about Sarah Lois Wadley: Sarah Lois … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged diaries, Louisiana, murder, Sarah Lois Wadley, weather, winter
Comments Off on 4 January 1864: “There was a most horrid murder perpetrated in Monroe the other day; Mr. Baker’s little son, only seven years old was riding through town attended by a negro boy when he was shot through the head and instantly killed…”
15 December 1863: “she does not want him hired at the same place next year. he writes her poor fellow that they have given him no clothes & he is much in need & begs to have his place exchanged.”
Item description: Letter, dated 15 December 1863, from Eliza Ann DeRosset to her sister (believed to be her sister Mary Jane DeRosset Curtis of Hillsborough, N.C.). The letter discusses supplies needed by various members of the family, particularly clothing. DeRosset also … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged clothes, clothing, DeRosset family, Eliza Ann DeRosset, food, hiring out of slaves, homespun, Mary Jane DeRosset Curtis, North Carolina, Osmyn, slavery, slaves, supplies, winter
Comments Off on 15 December 1863: “she does not want him hired at the same place next year. he writes her poor fellow that they have given him no clothes & he is much in need & begs to have his place exchanged.”
16 January 1863: “Allen informs me that himself and his family have not, as yet, received all the clothing due them for the past year.”
Item description: Letter, 16 January 1863, from William S. Pettigrew to Dr. A. Palmer regarding the hire of a family of Pettigrew’s slaves. Item Citation: From folder 261 of the Pettigrew Family Papers #592, Southern Historical Collection, Wilson Library, University … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged clothing, hiring out of slaves, Pettigrew family, slavery, slaves, William S. Pettigrew, winter
Comments Off on 16 January 1863: “Allen informs me that himself and his family have not, as yet, received all the clothing due them for the past year.”
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”!
27 October 1861: “The sins most commonly committed are profaneness & gambling, both of which to a man of nice breeding offer no attraction at all, & are offensive to the taste of a gentleman.”
Item description: Letter, dated 27 October 1861, from Charles Woodward Hutson to his mother. Hutson details articles of clothing and other provisions that he would like sent from home (in order to prepare for the coming winter). He also writes … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged Charles Woodward Hutson, clothing, Hampton's Legion, provisions, religious beliefs, supplies, winter
Comments Off on 27 October 1861: “The sins most commonly committed are profaneness & gambling, both of which to a man of nice breeding offer no attraction at all, & are offensive to the taste of a gentleman.”
19 August 1861: “If we are to winter near the Potomac, I think I will certainly need flannel drawers, but not until the winter-season fairly sets in.”
Item description: In this letter of 19 August 1861 to his family, Charles Woodward Hutson comments on the large number of cases of typhoid fever and other ailments plaguing his fellow soldiers, noting, “too many suffer from a disease still … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged Army of the Potomac, Books, care packages, Charles Woodward Hutson, home front, illness, Maginn's Miscellanies, socks, stationery, supplies, thyphoid fever, William Maginn, winter
Comments Off on 19 August 1861: “If we are to winter near the Potomac, I think I will certainly need flannel drawers, but not until the winter-season fairly sets in.”