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Cincinnati , OH 45232
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With offices in Cincinnati, Cleveland and Denver, Cowan’s holds over 40 auctions each year, with annual sales exceeding $16M. We reach buyers around the globe, and take pride in our reputation for integrity, customer service and great results. A full-service house, Cowan’s Auctions specializes in Am...Read more
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Jun 25, 2021
Patriotic stationery and envelope. First with Ellsworth with quote from the last letter to his parents; cover with someone in “Liberty cap,” “ We’ll give ‘em JESSIE yet.” Second page of letter also patriotic with man standing with bayonet fixed on rifle, “Our Union defenders.” Camp Coile Rolla, Jan 24th 1862. 8pp. To parents, siblings, friends from Joe. About half-way through he gives a list of what is in their knapsacks – with one days’ rations, “by that time we have over 70 lbs to carry how far we have to march a day I do not no [sic].” “…our camp is in sight of the burying ground &they bury from 2 to eight every day our regt. is the healthiest around there is only about 75 sick in all 30 have died since we left St. Louis….it would not kill us if we had to use a chamber [pot] to drink coffee out of for we have drinked water that wasn’t eny better.”
Patriotic stationery and envelope. First with couple, him in uniform, she appears to be in tears to see him leave; cover with portrait of Major General Buell. Camp at ??? August 13 (?), 62. 7pp. To sister from George Clever(?). Very difficult reading.
Levi Yantz:
Helena, Ark. Oct 4th 62. 3pp. Levi to parents. Mentions that this location is a healthy one and there are few sick in the company. “A rebble flag of truce came in to day with 80 of our boys that they took while they wee after corn the colonel took them up to the quartermaster & gave them rations enough to last them back to littlerock. I think that is using the rebbles very well if I had my way they would get rations of lead that would last them further than little rock.” He suggests that the rebels come in whenever they are hungry to get some rations. In the morning they drilled with the 4th Indiana. There were 5 other Iowa regiments and the 25th Wisconsin, also. “One colonel has taken about 4000 Cavalry & gone back towards Jacksonsport to rout out the rebbles he left day before yesterday & said that he would have a fight with them if he had to follow them to little rock. We haven’t heard of him yet deserters are coming in every day they say that the rebbles are starving to death…. Well I don’t know what to say about Martha & the n____r …but if I was there I would kill that black devil of a n_____r before I slept. It makes me so mad to think that a n____r will try to get around a white girl…” Levi does not seem to be very sympathetic to the African American and slavery cause.
Isaac Kittinger to Julia Herron (a Yantz sister):
[Incomplete, missing the first pages, he addresses a Jacob in the text] Signed Isaac Kittinger, “your cousin soldier down in Tennessee or the Land called Dixie.” Cover addressed to Julia Herron. 4pp. He wonders how “such men” can ever go back to a normal existence working their land. Some day they will remember the sorrow they caused others. “Oh my god how sor[r]y I feel that there are such men as Copperheads… Rebels worse then the enemy in front, they are the rebels in the rear, and should stand in the same position of the rebels in the south I am very shure that 3 millions of slaves will be Liberated if the war is carried to its designed de[s]tination. The war is just fairly commenced now you must not look for an end yet by any means for we are just about ready now to doo something.” He mentions that there are six thousand six in Nashville hospitals; just think how many there are in the entire army! “It is astonishing what sorrow this war brings on.”
Raleigh, NC, April 29 / 65, 2pp, Pete Herron to brother John Herron – mostly personal, but he is trying to meet up with his brother in Washington if they get there at the same time.
Philip M. Randall, 144th NY Vols.:
Group of 3 letters from P[hilip] M. Randall, Co. I, 144th NY Vols.; enlisted 8.15.62, mustered out 6.25.65 at Hilton Head. All addressed to John (or Friend John).
- Camp Bliss, Nov. 18,1862 – short 1p. note, they are getting ready to march and are to take 5 days’ rations, but they don’t know where they are going, they think to join Burnside.
- Camp California, April 13, 1863, 3pp. – There are a number of units named in G.O. No 53 – 40th Mass, 22nd Connt., 141st, 142nd, 143rd, 144th and 127th NY Vols., 9th Mass battery and 17th NY battery. They are to take ninety rounds of ammunition & seven days’ rations each, leaving the next morning, again, no one knows where to.
Suffolk, Virginia, April 28th, 1863 – He has seen Secretary Seward riding through town in a carriage escorted by about 500 cavalry.
Robert Wells, 24th NY Cav.:
3 letters from Robert Wells, Co. G, 24th NY Cav, DOD 4.11.65 at Columbia Gen. Hosp., Washington, DC. All to “Friend Baker” or “Mr. Baker”
- Camp Stoneman, April 9th 1864, 4pp. – “I don’t think we shall leave this place very soon for we have not drawn our horses yet… there is other reg. that is a head of us and they will draw horses before we do. This is the head quarters here for all the US States cav and we will be ful[l]y equified before we leave.”
- Va. Sept. 25th /64, 3+ pp. – “we have been doing fatigue duty for the last four weeks. We have built some strong works to protect our rear. I think if the rebs come round here they will get [????fied] …. We are not mounted yet but we are in hopes we will be soon."
- Camp Stoneman, March 24, 1864 – a somewhat disjointed letter, asking for some money since they have not been paid yet.
Miscellaneous
Georgia, Jun 7th 1864, 2pp 5.5 x.6.5 in. from David Howard, no addressee. Talks about having another Seven Days fight. Unit unknown.
Manuscript discharge 65 x 7.5 in., for Horace Hill, N. Franklin, Dec. 1st 1858. 27th Regiment.
Homefront:
3 letters from Cordelia (2) and Charlotte(1) M. They reference men in service, but there is not enough information to track them down. The letters are to a mother and grandmother. One of the men is possibly in the 24th NY State Vols.
Feeding Hills (Mass), July 9, 1865, 4pp., Electa Liswell to Aunt Harmony Baker - she gives the people currently living in her household. “I have my sons little girl with me she will be five come November….Seth he inlisted [sic] about the beginning of the war for 3 years, did not serve his time out before he reinlisted for 3 years more he came home on a furlough for 30 days it is one year las Jan. when he came home we received two letters from him after he went back & his picture. He was taken prisoner year ago last may & caried to Andersonvill[e] we have not heard from him since, until the soldiers began to come home & then we heard he was dead (Poor boy) he was starved to death in that awful prison, with nothing but a rag to put around him we do not know the exact time when he died but some time last Dec.” She goes on to describe her son’s wife’s addiction to laudanum and how she started stealing to get the money to buy more. She finally was caught and sent to prison, which is why her daughter is with Electa.
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