Skip to content
Skip to main content

I intended to write on Saturday night, but I was called out on the Picket line

Joseph Culver Letter, September 7, 1863, Letter 2, Page 1

Head Qrs. Co. “A” 129th Ills. Vol. Infty.
Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 7th 1863

My Dear Wife

I intended to write on Saturday night [the 5th], but before I got fairly seated was called out on the Picket line & did not get in until 10 o’clock A.M. of yesterday. Immediately on my return, I started for church & afterward hoped to be able to find Sabbath School somewhere in the city but failed.

Last night I went to church again, making the first Sabbath at church since I have been in the Service. I am sorry to say that I did not realize the pleasure I anticipated. The feeling existing still in the hearts of the people manifests itself in all their actions, and but a few minutes sufficed to satisfy me that my presence was not wanted & that my appearance destroyed the pleasure of others. In the evening I had the most positive evidence of their ill feeling: Noses turned up in scorn & I was left in undisputed possession of several feet of space on all sides.

I hoped to receive a letter from you this morning but was disappointed. My health is quite good. Our duties are very heavy at present. Capt. Hoskins started to Alabama this morning. We furnish two train guards each day, & my turn will return very soon. Our daily details amount to about 180, almost as heavy as our first month at Gallatin.1

Lieut. Smith is due here on Thursday. All furloughs & Leaves of Absence are stopped here, so that the hopes we entertained of visiting home must be indefinitely deferred. The health of the Regt. is good. The man in Co. “K” whose wife & child have been here all summer lost their child last week. I did not learn what disease. Nelson’s youngest child is very ill & not expected to live.

The weather is almost insufferably warm to-day & was yesterday. The nights, however, are very cool & comfortable.

I have not yet had an opportunity of answering Sarah Williams’ letter. I wrote to Mother [Murphy] a few days ago, directing to Pontiac. No late news from any source has reached me.

I hope you are enjoying yourself among our friends. I hope you will be punctual in reporting progress. You need not be surprised at Sister Jennie’s success after your own fears.2 I believe I gave you due warning that you had married into a prolific family, did I not?

The hour for Battalion Drill has arrived, &, as the mail leaves before I return, I must close.3 I earnestly hope to hear from you soon. Kiss Frankie for me. Give my love to all the family. Write to me very often. May God Bless & keep you both in the enjoyment of health. I shall write again very soon. Farewell,

Your Affect Husband
J. F. Culver

  1. J.F.C. overstated the number of men required for these details. The number of men detailed daily was four officers, “11 noncommissioned officers, and 117 privates, a total of 132.” Speed to Case, Sept. 1, 1863, Regimental Papers, 129th Illinois, NA.
  2. Reference is to the expected birth of a child to Jennie and H. C. Cheston in November. Mary Culver to J.F.C., Aug. 28, 1863, Culver Collection.
  3. Battalion drill was held from 4:30 to 6 P.M. twice a week on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Brigade drill was held at 3:30 P.M. three times a week on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, in a field to the right of the Granny White Pike. Ward to Case, Sept. 17, 1863, Regimental Papers, 129th Illinois, NA.

EBSCOhost eBook Academic Collection – Trial ends 9 Dec 2013

eBook Academic Collection contains a large selection of multidisciplinary eBook titles representing a broad range of academic subject matter. There are nearly 120,000 eBooks in this package, including titles from leading university presses such as Oxford University Press, State University of New York Press, Cambridge University Press, University of California Press, MIT Press, Harvard University Press and many others. Additional academic publishers include Elsevier Ltd.; Brill Academic Publishers; Taylor & Francis Ltd; Sage Publications, Ltd. and John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Please send additional comments to Michael Wright.

Anatomy.tv now available online from Hardin Library

AnatomyTV Launch PageHardin Library for the Health Sciences is excited to announce that Anatomy.tv is now available for our patrons!

Anatomy.tv is an internet-based anatomy tool provided by Stat!Ref which includes a complete set of 3D human models.

Anatomy.tv allows for manipulation and 360-degree rotation of virtual models, as well as filtering different layers of anatomical structure. Additionally, Anatomy.tv links to relevant text, clinical images, diagrams, scans, and videos. Supplementary information such as quizzes, MCQs, and patient information are all available for download.

To begin using Anatomy.tv, simply go to the Hardin Library website and select the tool from the Health Sciences Resources A-Z list.  Direct access is also available at http://purl.lib.uiowa.edu/AnatomyTV.

Please note that access to Anatomy.tv is limited to a set number of users, so if you encounter problems using this resource please feel free to contact Hardin Reference staff at 319-335-9151 or lib-hardin@uiowa.edu and we will provide assistance.

I went to church to day with Hanna & Wes’ wife

Joseph Culver Letter, September 6, 1863, Page 1Carlisle Iowa Sept 6 1863

My Dear Husband

I received no saturday letter yesterday I expect it will come tomorrow. I went to church to day with Hanna & Wes’ wife It was communion service & I enjoyed it very much The minister Mr. Brock reminds me very much of Mr. Pierce of Pontiac He was assisted by an aged local preacher I have forgotten his name but I presume you know him he lives in this place I did not get out this evening Hanna says there were four probationers received into the church tonight I saw Charlotte & Mary Postlewaite but was not introduced to them something seemed to please Mary exceedingly she laughed & whispered a great deal It is rumored that they are both to be married, Charlotte to a gentleman from Baltimore at the Holidays & Mary to some one who lives here in town I have forgotten his name but he is a cripple was injured by the cars & his lower limbs are perfectly helpless I saw him today he was wheeling himself about in a chair made for the purpose Hanna says he is a smart man but doubts much the report Did you know that Lucy Dunmire was married? Hanna says she wrote you about it last April but I think she must be mistaken as I heard nothing of it Fathers health continues about the same he has been quite easy tonight I hope it may continue [Beckie?] & her baby were down today. She is well. Mrs Calwell & Mrs Lynch were here last night I belive you have known them a long time Mrs Calwell is here on a visit expects to go back to California next month Jennie was telling me last night that among the rebels who made the raid into Cumberland Vally, was the gentleman to whom Kate was once engaged to be married. He was Chaplain of a Regiment Kate had a letter from Little Joe last week I think he is in North Carolina. Did Hudson bring your shirts I send you a Photograph It was taken just after I was able to get about & being very weary the expression of my countenance is anything intilligent I could do nothing with Frankie. He has lost his reputation entirely of being a goodnatured baby since he came to Carlisle Some days I hardly know what to do with him His mouth is very sore & I do not wonder that he is cross I wrote you a few days ago of the death of Mr Chestons [Brother?] His bride refused to be comforted & has lost her reason They think she will have to be removed to an asylum She has attempted to take her life several times You never told me if Luther Van Dorans body was recovered, Have you heard any thing from P. lately I think it strange you have not received a letter from Sarah yet

Good night
May God of Love watch o’er thee

Accept Love & kisses from wife & baby

Yours Ever
Mary M. Culver

Plant-Based Foods – A Tricky PubMed Search

By Eric Rumsey and Janna Lawrence

As discussed in an earlier article, searching for Food-Diet-Nutrition in PubMed is difficult because the subject is spread around in several different places in the MeSH classification system. In another article, we provide a way around this, which provides a broad set of search terms that can be used to search for the subject. An aspect of the subject, however, that cannot be put in a “package” that makes it possible to search together as a group is plant-based foods.

The Food cluster-explosion contains many specific foods, as MeSH headings, including some plant-based foods. A large proportion of all plant-based foods, however, are not in the Food cluster-explosion, but are only in Plants, and not in Food. These, of course, will not be retrieved by searching for “Food.” Adding to the confusion, some vegetables (but no fruits) are in both categories. Here are some examples:

Sweet potato is put under the MeSH term Ipomoea batatas. Its only place in the MeSH tree is in the Plants explosion:

Plants
   Angiosperms
      Convulvulaceae
         Ipomoea
            Ipomoea batatas

As noted above, this will not be retrieved by searching for “food.”

Kale (MeSH term Brassica), on the other hand, is included in both Plants and Food and so it will be retrieved by searching for “food”:

Plants
   Angiosperms
      Brassicaceae
         Brassica
Food
   Vegetables
      Brassica

The examples for sweet potato and kale bring to light another point of confusion, which is that terms in the Plants explosion are usually botanical names that are not recognizable to most people. A few examples (all of which are only in the Plants explosion but not in the Food explosion):

Grapes is Vitis
Strawberry is Fragaria
Okra is Abelmoschus
Kidney Beans is Phaseolus
Chocolate is Cacao
Turmeric is Curcuma

This is usually not a problem when searching for specific food plants, because when searching for a common name, it’s mapped to the botanical MeSH term (e.g. if you search for Grapes, it maps to Vitis). The problem comes if you want to browse the Plants cluster to pick out the edible plants from the many plants that are not edible, because only the botanical names are listed. The Rose family (Rosaceae) of plants, for example, has several edible species within it. There are 19 genera listed in MeSH in the family, and 6 of them have edible species. But to find them, you have to be able to pick out the genera with edible species (e.g. Malus, Prunus) from the others (e.g. Agrimonia, Alchemilla).

A caveat: There is an exploded MeSH term Plants, Edible, which might seem to be a good place to search for plant-based foods. Unfortunately, however, it’s of limited usefulness – The explosion contains only grain plants and a relatively small number of vegetables, and the term Plants, Edible itself is mostly used to index articles that are on the general concept rather than articles on specific types of edible plants.

A qualification: What we say here about the difficulty of doing comprehensive PubMed searches that include all specific plant-based foods applies to a lesser degree to other types of foods also. Looking, for example, at Meat in the MeSH classification of Food, there are no headings for specific types of meat (e.g. beef, pork), so they’re all indexed under the broader term Meat. The reason the problem is so much more complicated for plant-based foods is because there are so many of them, and also because the line between plant-based foods and plant-based medicines is often fuzzy.

Advice on searching for plant-based foods

Consider combining Plants with your subject – The Plants explosion in MeSH is very large, containing hundreds of plant species. It’s organized by taxonomic relationships, which makes it hard for a non-botanist to browse. But it’s useful to combine with other subjects in searching, because it’s so comprehensive. The main drawback in searching it is that in addition to plant-based foods, it also has many plant-based drugs, which you’ll have to sift out from the food articles.

If you want to restrict your search to plant-based foods, instead of foods in general, you can combine the Plants explosion AND the Food-Diet-Nutrition hedge search discussed in a previous article.

If you combine your subject with the hedge in the previous article and it misses articles on particular plant-based food, search specifically for those. If you do a search for food and migraine, for example, and your search doesn’t pick up specific foods that you know have been associated with migraine (e.g. chocolate), combine those foods specifically with migraine.

 

Bon Voyage, Christine!

We in Digital Research & Publishing sadly bid fond farewell to Christine Tade. Christine’s involvement in DRP extends back almost to the beginning of the department, to a 2006 professional development internship, where Christine learned the ins-and-outs of applying descriptive metadata to Iowa Digital Library materials. Afterward, Christine was the point person for digital collection metadata in the Cataloging department, training and supervising staff there, finding ways to bend the software to her will and making more archival collections usable online.

"A thoroughbred" 1907

Christine officially joined Digital Research & Publishing in 2012, six months after the launch of DIYHistory, the Libraries crowdsourcing transcriptions project. While continuing her digital collection work, Christine transitioned into the role of chief correspondent with transcribing participants, answering questions and also transcribing and reviewing many manuscripts herself. In July, DIYHistory reached a major milestonetemp, 35,000 pages transcribed.


Automobile crossing a bridge on a dirt road, Iowa, 1922

Christine has contributed greatly to the success of many projects and collection initiatives. We wish her the very best in her retirement!

Frankie has four teeth & a half

Joseph Culver Letter, September 4, 1863, Page 1Carlisle Sept 4th 1863

Dearest Husband

Your of August 30th I received to night It was welcomed as all your letters are with joy & gladness Frankie is entirely well of his Diarrhea but still so fretful. I discovered a larg ulcer on one of his gums today & I presume that is the cause of it. He has four teeth & a half. He does not try to talk much yet I think he tries to say Dag & Who, to a little horse which runs on wheels that [?] Williams gave him. He said Mama first & Papa quite often. He can walk some & runs from one person to another quite dextrously, seemingly very proud of his feats. I am quite well & enjoying myself very much, next week I spend with Jennie. They live on the street on which the College Chapel stands, a few doors above. Mothers time is wholly occupied with father. He was suffering a great deal this morning, but is better this afternoon, & walked out doors a few minutes. A new difficuly has arisen You probably know he has a rupture & has worn a Truss for the last ten years. The one he has been wearing does not help him now, & thus far they have found none which does him any good, Mother is alarmed about it.

Kate has been telling me incidents of her life & that of her brothers & sister. She says, Two boys were at the wood pile one says, “Wes I like to chop wood better than do any other kind of work dont you?” The reply “No sir I like Tomato pie a great deal better” Hanna has a great deal too much work to do for such a little body There are seven of a family beside so much company It makes me feel miserable to see her work so hard knowing that I add to her cares & not able to assist her any I hope though to have more time now if Frankie remains well Kate might help her but dont seem inclined She is a strange genius I forgot to tell you I was out to Daytown one day this week I must close now but will write again tomorrow & sunday The family all wish to be remembered to you Ever pray for your wife & baby I thank God always for giving me so true & noble a heart to lean upon May infinite Love & Mercy ever surround you in times of trial & danger I hear the band from the Barracks It sounds splendidly & reminds me of days gone by Good night

Ever your loving Wife
M M Culver

Library 101 Workshop

Do you need a brief overview of the resources and services available at the Sciences Library? Do you have a question about the library or it’s resources that you’ve never had the chance to ask? Then join us for the first Lunch @ the Sciences Library workshop of the semester! Wednesday, September 4th at 12:30pm – 1:20pm in the Sciences Library classroom (102SL).

In this workshop, you will learn:

  • How to view your library account to renew materials or see what you have checked out;
  • How to search for books, videos, journals and articles using the library catalog and popular databases;
  • How to get materials from other libraries (interlibrary loan);
  • How to get library materials delivered to your office or favorite branch library;
  • How to get help when you need it.

There’s no need to register, just show up if you’re interested. Bring your lunch if you wish. Free coffee will be provided. If you have any questions or concerns, please contact Sara Scheib at (319) 335-3024 or sara-scheib@uiowa.edu.

Yours of Aug. 28th reached me this morning, informing me of your tedious & unpleasant journey, also of your safe arrival in Carlisle

Joseph Culver Letter, September 3, 1863, Page 1

Head Qrs. Co. “A” 129th Ills. Vol.
Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 3rd 1863

My Dear Wife

Yours of Aug. 28th, dated at Carlisle, reached me this morning, informing me of your tedious & unpleasant journey, also of your safe arrival in Carlisle.1 I have not written since Sunday as I have been absent & without opportunity to write. I found on my return two letters from you & one from Sarah Williams; a very long & interesting one, indeed. If I don’t forget it, I will send it to you when answered.2

You will be happy to know that Bro. Johnie [Murphy] spent last night with me & is in good health. My letter will explain itself, as I think the incidents connected with a long journey into Dixie will prove interesting.

I left this place on Monday morning [the 21st] at 6:30 A.M., as Military Conductor of Freight Train loaded with commissary stores, with 25 men as train guard.3 About 9 o’clock A.M. we were stopped by the wreck of two cars of the train preceeding us, and lay there about 7 hours. We got to Christiana at about 7 o’clock & found ourselves out of water, & none to be had. We ran on a side track & put up for the night.4

We had lain there but a short time, when our ears were greeted with the sound of music. So the Conductor of the train & myself took a lantern & set out to find from whence it came. In a grove a few hundred yards from the Rail Road, we found a very handsome cottage from which the music proceeded. We cast about us to devise some way to introduce ourselves & finally hit upon the happy expedient of seeking lodging for the night. We went boldly to the door & knocked, not knowing what fate might have decreed, and asked for the Gentleman of the house. The darkies not knowing what our business might be, at first refused to listen to us & was about to close the door on us, when a little girl about 8 years old happened to come into the hall. With her we were more successful, & soon a gentleman made his appearance.

We made known our wishes & was referred to the Mistress of the cottage, who soon made her appearance & invited us in. After making ourselves known, we were duly introduced into the parlor, where we found a very old lady, three young ladies, a gentleman, a piano & melodeon. We found during our conversation that the family were originally from New York & latterly from Pennsylvania & have been residing in Tennessee for the past eight years. Two of the ladies were of the ages of 14 & 15, the beauties of the house, & the other perhaps 18 several years ago & exceedingly anxious for a BEAUX.5 She found out I was married, I presume, as she made a furious onsett after the Conductor & almost annihilated him.

In the meantime I succeeded in getting the two young ladies to the melodeon, & we sang & played till midnight, & then retired to a very handsomely furnished room & bed. I cannot boast of a very excellent night’s rest for the feather bed, as usual, prevented my resting well. I believe I much prefer a floor & carpet. We got a good breakfast in the morning, and, after repeated invitations to call again, we bid them adieu & departed.

I sent a note the night before to Jack Lothrop, military operator at Wartrace, to telegraph to Bro. Johnnie to meet me on Wednesday [Sept. 2] at that place.6

We got started from Christiana at 7 o’clock, & about 81/2 o’clock A.M. were again stopped by the wreck of two cars of a train that passed us during the night. We got off at about 11 A.M. and passed over the battle field of Stone River about noon. It would be impossible to give an accurate description of it from the hasty glance I got of the place. There are a large number of fortifications, some of them very extensive. There are but few troops there.7

We arrived at Wartrace about 2 o’clock P.M. & laid there about one hour. I found that Lothrop, in addition to the dispatch, had written to Johnie & also to the officer commanding the Battery. Shelbyville is eight miles from Wartrace on a branch road, one section of the Battery is at Wartrace & the balance at Shelbyville.8

We passed on out of Tennessee into Alabama. I was not very favorably impressed with the appearance of the country. It is much more devastated than any place north of Nashville, vast numbers of houses destroyed, & all the mills, factories & manufactories. The soil looks very sterile & what little produce has been raised looks stunted and imperfect. The most prepossessing aspects are the groves, many of which are beautiful. Tallahoma, the first place of note after leaving Wartrace, was a short time ago the front of our Army.9 There are a few troops only left, & the country bears trace of the presence of a large Army.

About half way between Tallahoma & Cowan we stopped in a forest for wood.10 There I saw a sight that I hope I may never behold again. I have read many accounts of the destitution of the poor whites of the South, but never even conceived their real condition. I have seen on this trip many families who scarcely seemed to possess intelligence above the brutes & scarcely were their equals in instinct & self preservation. In a little hovel, a few feet from the wood yard, live one young man, three women, and several children. One of the women is a raving maniac & lay upon the floor amid all kinds of filth, tossing about & making a very hideous noise. Outside of the hut sat another woman, afflicted with disease & looking the picture of misery. The younger, a woman of about twenty-five to thirty, & the mother, I should judge, of the children, was very pregnant, & the whole party almost entirely naked; the mother without a husband & never had any, & all the children fatherless. It was a horrid sight, & I hope I may never behold the like again.

At Decherd I saw the first armed negro soldiers I have ever seen, an entire Brigade drilling. They made a fine appearance & had a beautiful camp. There was but few white troops.11

At Cowan the Army had just left a few weeks, and the camp equippage was being removed. At this place we commenced the ascent of the Cumberland mountains. The grade is very heavy & with the assistance of an additional engine, we got along at a good speed. There is a tunnel on the mountain 2800 feet long, & the descent on the other side is steep and long. At various points through the mountains, detachments of troops are posted, but it would be a small task to get on the cliffs beyond the reach of the guns & roll rocks sufficient to crush a train & escape without harm.12 I am surprised that it has not often been done.

At Anderson at the foot of the mountains, there was two divisions of troops, Genl. Rousseau’s division and a large number of Regulars.13 The first named Division were making preparations to leave the next day.

We arrived at Stevenson, Alabama, at about 8 o’clock, the end of our journey, making 113 miles in two days. After the train stopped, I looked around for something to eat, my rations being all consumed by our delay on the route, & finally found a tent in which meals were served. I succeeded in getting a couple of eggs, a little piece of meat, some bread, butter & a cup of coffee, for which I was charged the moderate sum of 75 cents.

After supper, I took a guard & started for General Rosecrans’ Head Quarters to report myself. It is about a mile south of Stevenson in the direction of the [Tennessee] river. General Negley’s & Sheridan’s Divisions were marching on Chattanooga, & the men were singing, laughing & hallooing, seeming to be very lively.14 You could scarcely conceive of the noise & confusion occasioned by the moving of 15 or 20,000 troops.

Two Divisions crossed the river last week, & part of the Army is in Chattanooga.15 The Rebels fled without making any attempt to defend the place & have fallen back to Atlanta.16 I must request that the present positions of our Army are not made public. I do not know whether the news are contraband or not, but, having seen nothing in the papers, I am somewhat suspicious. In fact many of the papers have denied that our Army have possession of Chattanooga.

A large number of deserters from the Rebel Army have been brought over the river, & will average, I am told, from 50 to 100 per day.17 Many days they amount to 2 or 300. The Rebel Army is badly scattered. Burnside’s Army is at Knoxville & pressing steadily East.18

I arrived at Hd. Qrs. at 10 P.M. & after transacting my business returned to Stevenson, succeeded in buying some rations, & after waking up the guards to cook their breakfast, I lay down on a little bench in the car & slept about 2 hours. At 4 A.M. of Wednesday [the 2d] we left Stevenson for home, & arrived at Wartrace at about 11 o’clock.

I found Bro. Johnie just arrived. He came from Shelbyville on horseback & came aboard the train with us. He is enjoying better health than at any time since he has been in the service & looks well. He is in good spirits & enjoys himself very well. Shelbyville has more Union families than any part of the South, and they are generally very kind. We had a pleasant time. He says he recd. a letter from you a short time ago which he answered. He has had no letters from Pontiac for two months. I am sorry his stay was so limited; he returned this morning. There is to be an election for Lieutenant in the Battery in a few days, & he is busy engineering for the position.19 One of the sergeants that I met in Wartrace tells me that his chances are very flattering; I earnestly hope he may succeed.

I have some idea of the difficulties you had to encounter in your travels, & wish very much I could have been with you to relieve you of your burden. I am happy to learn that no accident befell you & hope you have ere this recovered from the effects of your journey & are enjoying your visit. I fear I shall not be able to answer your letter to-night; it is very late, but as I cannot get my letter off before 2 o’clock to-morrow, I will try & write in the morning. If I should fail, I will write again to-morrow night. May God help you, dearest, & keep both Frankie & you in perfect health. Good night.

Morning 5-1/2 o’clock; Dear Mary. The first thing that proposed itself to my mind this morning was the finishing of my letter, for by walking to the Depot, about 2 miles, I can get my letter off to-day; otherwise it must wait until to-morrow &, believing that you will be happy to hear from me, I will try & make the trip. I will not attempt to answer in full.

I cannot perceive any reason to be alarmed in your letter, yet I have trembled for fear you might not enjoy yourself.20 I hope you will not feel diffident nor hesitate to enter into the full enjoyment of every pleasure afforded. Recollect I went among your friends in New York once, a perfect stranger, & made a very happy visit.

I feel kindly for the man though he is black who had gallantry enough to offer his seat. May his shadow never grow less & the smiles of the one he loves best ever be sweet & abundant.21

I am surprised to learn of Jennie’s fix, but it will be some little consolation to YOU. It ought to make you friends forever.22 I never was in the room you occupy. I spent two nights in the little room in the south east corner of the building fronting toward Carlisle Barracks.23 You will find the heighth of the mountains increases as you near them, & very rapidly if you commence to ascend them.24 I believe I could enjoy a cup of cider very much if I were with you.25

I never learned why Mother [Murphy] returned home & certainly never received the letter you allude to as informing me. I shall write to her to-day.

Lt. Smith & his wife started for Pontiac on Tuesday [the 1st], & I presume are there by this time. Alf Huetson has returned. He was sick all the time he was home. He informs me that his wife was thrown from her horse last spring & lost her babe from the injury. He never knew that he was about to be a FATHER until he went home. He walks about six feet 4 in. now. Christ Yetter & Johnie [Murphy] had a long talk about Jennie Gutherie. I had forgotten that they both corresponded with her.

I must close. Give my love to all the family. Write to me very often & take notes of all that you find interesting. Kiss Frankie for me. He must be growing into a large boy. What did grandfather & grandmother think of him?

Remember me kindly to all our friends. I will write soon again. May God give you health & happiness & your visit prove very pleasant. I shall be so happy to know that you enjoy yourself & that nothing mars your happiness. Until I hear from you again, Farewell,

Your Affect Husband,
J. F. Culver

  1. Mary Culver had written, “I reached this place [Carlisle] safely and in health yesterday afternoon [the 27th]. I had rather a tedious journey and do not think I shall ever travel this road again alone, with a baby. I would tell you of a host of troubles, I had on the way, but
    I    think would occupy too much time and space to enumerate. Suffice to say I had to
    change cars five times and get my baggage checked as many, and with one exception the
    only attention or politness I received from a man was from a black who got up and offered
    me his narrow front seat rather than see me stand up with a baby in my arms, while his
    white brethren comfortably kept their seats. I sat down and cried. I could not help it, I
    believe they thought I was a bad woman, as they would not have treated me so.
    “I found no one at the [Carlisle] Depot, who knew me, so sent a boy with my card to the house, and Hannah and Charlie came right down after me. I had written them when I would come, but they have never received the letter.
    “Mrs. Zug was at the Depot when the cars came but there was so great a crowd she did not see me, or if she did, failed to recognize me.” Mary Culver to J.F.C., Aug. 28, 1863, Culver Collection.
  2. Sarah Williams was a New Hartford friend of Joseph and Mary Culver.
  3. To supply his army as it thrust deep into the Confederacy, General Rosecrans employed the Nashville & Chattanooga Railroad. By August 31, the railroad had been reopened to traffic as far as Stevenson, Alabama. To protect supplies while in transit to forward depots General Robert Granger called upon commanders of units stationed in and around Nashville for necessary manpower.
    During September and October, the 129th Illinois was ordered to provide daily two officers and 50 enlisted men for duty as train guards; two officers, nine noncommissioned officers, and 50 enlisted men as pickets; one noncommissioned officer and 12 enlisted men for extra duty; and one noncommissioned officer and five enlisted men for fatigue details. Speed to Case, Sept. 1, 1863, Regimental Papers, 129th Illinois, NA.
  4. Christiana was a station on the Nashville & Chattanooga Railroad, 12 miles south of Murfreesboro.
  5. The family visited by J.F.C. near Christiana may have been that of J. H. Grant, an engineer. Grant, a native of Maine, had lived in New York and Pennsylvania before moving to Rutherford County, Tenn. In 1860, Grant was living with his wife and three daughters (Mary, Sophia, and Emma) and two sons. Eighth Census, Rutherford County, State of Tennessee, NA.
  6. John P. Lothrop of Pontiac had been mustered into service on Sept. 8, 1862, as commissary sergeant of the 129th Illinois. Lothrop had been reduced to private and had been transferred to the military telegraph service. Compiled Service Records of Union Soldiers, NA.
  7. The train would have passed the Stones River battlefield on the previous day as the site of that bloody battle, fought December 31, 1862, and January 1-2, 1863, is several miles northwest of Murfreesboro. In the months following the battle and before resuming the offensive in the fourth week of June, General Rosecrans’ troops had erected a number of earthworks. These fortifications, centering on the Stones River railroad bridge, were known as Fortress Rosecrans.
  8. John Murphy’s unit (Company M, 1st Illinois Light Artillery) had been headquartered at Shelbyville since June 29. The battery commander at this time was 2d Lt. Thomas Burton. Adjutant General’s Report, State of Illinois, Vol. VIII, p. 665.
  9. General Bragg’s Army of Tennessee had evacuated Tullahoma on June 30, and the town had been occupied by Rosecrans’ soldiers the next day. Rosecrans’ columns had pushed on, and during the period August 29-September 4 crossed the Tennessee River at four points. Cist, Army of the Cumberland, pp. 179-180.
  10. The stop for wood was made near Elk River Bridge.
  11. One white regiment (the 69th Ohio) from General Thomas’ XIV Corps had been detached and detailed to guard the depots at Decherd and Cowan, the tunnel, and the bridge across Boiling Fork. O.R., Ser. I, Vol. XXX, pt. Ill, pp. 35, 268.
    The 12th U.S. Colored Infantry Regiment commanded by Col. Charles R. Thompson had been organized in July and August and was posted at Elk River Bridge. Tennesseans in the Civil War, Vol. I, p. 397.
  12. The 69th Ohio, reinforced by 650 casuals, guarded the railroad between Elk River Bridge and Anderson. On September 1 orders were issued for General Gordon Granger to relieve the Ohioans with a regiment from Fayetteville, so they could rejoin their brigade. O.R., Ser. I, Vol. XXX, pt. III, pp. 289-290.
  13. Brig. Gen. Absalom Baird on August 23 had assumed command of the division of the XIV Corps formerly led by Maj. Gen. Lovell H. Rousseau. Included in Baird’s First Division was Brig. Gen. John H. King’s brigade of regulars. There were one, not two, divisions camped along the railroad between Anderson and Stevenson.
    General Thomas on the 1st had issued orders for Baird’s division to march from Anderson to Taylor’s Store, crossing the Tennessee River at Bridgeport. Ibid., pp. 132, 267-268, 282.
  14. Maj. Gen. James S. Negley’s division of Thomas’ XIV Corps had crossed the
    Tennessee River at Caperton’s Ferry during the afternoon. Maj. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan’s division of McCook’s XX Corps was at Bridgeport. It would cross the Tennessee River as soon as the engineers had completed the pontoon bridge. Ibid., pp. 282, 285-286.
  15. Although General Bragg was pulling his troops and supplies out of Chattanooga, the Federals had not occupied that key transportation center. It was September 9 before units of General Crittenden’s XXI Corps crossed the Tennessee River and occupied Chattanooga. Cist, The Army of the Cumberland, p. 183.
  16. Stories that the Confederate Army of Tennessee was abandoning the region and falling back on Atlanta had been spread by “deserters” sent into the Union lines. Bragg and his generals hoped that Rosecrans would be taken in by these stories and lunge into the rugged hills and hollows of northwest Georgia. Rosecrans on September 9 telegraphed General in Chief Halleck, “The army has retreated to Rome. If we pursue vigorously they will not stop short of Atlanta.” Horn, Army of Tennessee, p. 248.
  17. The number of Rebel deserters is exaggerated. Between September 1 and October 7 the number of deserters tabulated by Rosecrans’ provost marshal was 750. O.R., Ser. I, Vol. XXX, pt. I, p. 232.
  18. General Burnside’s vanguard had reached Montgomery, Tennessee, on August 30, and the next day found his cavalry skirmishing with Confederate horse-soldiers on the Knoxville and Kingston roads, 14 miles east of Montgomery. Knoxville, which had been evacuated, was occupied by units from Burnside’s XXIII Corps on September 3. O.R., Ser. I, Vol. XXX, pt. III, pp. 267, 333.
  19. Commissary Sergeant John Murphy was campaigning for the vacant 2d lieutenancy created by promotion of Thomas Burton from 2d lieutenant to 1st lieutenant on August 5, 1863. Adjutant General’s Report, State of Illinois, Vol. VIII, p. 653.
  20. Mary Culver had written, “I was very kindly received by the whole family, and think I shall love them very much and enjoy my visit exceedingly.” Mary Culver to J.F.C., Aug. 28, 1863, Culver Collection.
  21. On the roundabout ride from New Hartford to Carlisle, a black man had given up his seat to Mrs. Culver and her baby. See note 1.
  22. J.F.C.’s sister, Jennie Cheston, was pregnant and would give birth to another child in November. On October 24, 1862, she had given birth to twins, both of whom had since died. Mary Culver to J.F.C., Aug. 28, 1863, Culver Collection.
  23. Mary Culver had written, “I occupy the room over the sitting room. I believe I am turned around for I cannot tell whether it is East or West.” Ibid.
  24. The “Cumberland valley,” Mary Culver had written, is “very beautiful … so different from the monotonous scenery of our Prairie State.” Ibid.
  25. Father Culver was making cider from apples blown during a recent hail storm. Ibid.