If you have experienced all this, you can sympathize with me to-night

Joseph Culver Letter, July 10, 1863, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Quarters, Co. “A” 129th Regt. Ills. Vols.
Gallatin, Tenn., July 10th 1863

My Dear Wife

If you have ever anticipated without presuming to doubt the arrival of glad tidings & being delayed day after day with bright hopes for the morrow (when anticipated pleasure brings but blank disappointment & you are left in doubt & uncertainty with great fears for the result). If you have experienced all this, you can sympathize with me to-night. Continue reading

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Another day has passed without any mail, with the usual promise that it will come to-morrow

Joseph Culver Letter, July 9, 1863, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Quarters, Co. “A” 129th Regt. Ills.
Gallatin, Tenn., July 9th 1863

My Dear Wife

Another day has passed without any mail, with the usual promise that it will come to-morrow. Morgan has gone with a portion of his command to Indiana. Should he venture any considerable distance his capture is certain. ((Morgan and his division after crossing the Ohio had struck northward into Indiana, and on the 9th passed through Croydon. J.F.C.’s forecast was correct. Morgan’s raid north of the Ohio caused thousands of militia to turn out, and with the Ohio and other rivers and streams of the region at or near flood stage, it made a recrossing of the  Ohio  problematical.)) Reports still confirm of the fall of Vicksburg & the rout of Lee’s Army in Penna., but we scarcely believe it all.

By the time we get reliable news, great changes will doubtless have been effected. It looks to me much like the last struggle before their [the Confederates] final overthrow. ((Most Union leaders would have echoed J.F.C.’s estimate of the situation. The Confederates, however, fought on and the war continued until the spring of 1865.)) Some 5000 deserters from Bragg’s Army have come into Rosecrans’ Camp. ((The figure (5,000) given by J.F.C. as the number of Confederates who had abandoned the fight and had surrendered to Rosecrans’ army during the Middle Tennessee Campaign (June 24-July 7), is greatly exaggerated. During this period, 1,634 Confederates were captured, of whom 616 claimed “to have delivered themselves” voluntarily, being “conscripts or tired of the war.” O. R., Ser. I, Vol. XXIII, pt. I, p. 425.)) They are rapidly evacuating Tennessee. ((General Bragg’s Army of Tennessee had evacuated Middle Tennessee, crossing to the south bank of the Tennessee River at Shellmount and Kelly’s Ford on July 6-7. General Rosecrans now halted his pursuit to bring up supplies and consolidate his gains, preparatory to advancing on Chattanooga. O. R., Ser. I, Vol. XXIII, pt. II, pp. 900-902.))

We may look for stirring times where small detachments are stationed. We are expecting reinforcements here daily of an entire brigade, even now within striking distance of the place, so that our duties if we remain here will have lighter duties to perform. ((On July 7 Rosecrans directed Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger, commander of his reserve corps, to send one or two regiments to strengthen the force at Gallatin. This was in response to General Paine’s plea for reinforcements. Ibid., p. 518.))

Our health is still good. Russell is rapidly improving & is able to be about most of the time. I have nothing new to communicate. How I wish for some word from you. Kiss Frankie for me.

May God bless my Dear Wife

Your Affect. Husband
J. F. Culver

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I wrote a long letter on Friday evening, but the train & mail was captured so that someone else will peruse it than my wife

Joseph Culver Letter, July 8, 1863, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Quarters, Co. “A”, 129th Regt. Ills. Vols.
Gallatin, Tenn., July 8th 1863

My Dear Wife

As communication is not yet open, I have received no letters from you, & I presume none of mine have reached you. I wrote a long letter on Friday evening [the 3d], but the train & mail was captured so that someone else will peruse it than my wife. I hope it may do them good. Some of the men of this Regiment were captured with the train, but I have not yet learned who. ((The train had been captured at Bardstown Junction on the 6th. After destroying the mail and robbing the express company safe and a number of passengers, Morgan released the train and sent it back to Elizabethtown. O. R., Ser. I, Vol. XXIII, pt. I, pp. 659, 702.)) If the train coming South was captured, which is probable, Daniel Graff is likely among the number, as he was to have returned by it. ((Daniel Graff, a 33-year-old farmer, was mustered into service on Sept. 8, 1862, as a private in Company A, 129th Illinois. Graff was promoted to corporal on May 9, 1863, and was mustered out at Washington, D.C., June 8, 1865. Compiled Service Records of Union Soldiers, NA.)) Continue reading

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The news reached us of a glorious victory in Pennsylvania

Joseph Culver Letter, July 6, 1863, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Quarters, Co. “A”, 129th Regt. Ills.
Gallatin, Tenn., July 6th 1863

My Dear Wife

We have had no train through yet & consequently no word from you. The news reached us, however, of a glorious victory in Pennsylvania. ((In a 3-day battle at Gettysburg, July 1-3, the Union Army of the Potomac defeated General Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. On the night of July 4, Lee’s army commenced its retreat to Virginia.)) Longstreet & Hill killed, Lee seriously wounded & 20,000 prisoners. ((Confederate losses in the battle, the bloodiest of the Civil War, were 2,592 killed, 12,709 wounded, and 5,150 missing or prisoners. Although five Confederate generals were killed or mortally wounded in the struggle, Lt. Gens. James Longstreet and A. P. Hill were not among the slain. The story that General Lee had been seriously wounded was unfounded.)) It is almost too much to believe, with the entire Rebel Army in full retreat. I hope it is all true, however. Continue reading

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By the arrival of Bro. Gaff this evening, I received news of your departure for New York

Joseph Culver Letter, July 2, 1863, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Quarters, Co. “A”, 129th Ills.
Gallatin, Tenn., July 2nd 1863

My Dear Wife

By the arrival of Bro. Gaff this evening, I received news of your departure for New York, where I presume this letter will find you, I hope, safe & well. I have filled your proposition on my part quite well as I have written almost every day since you left. I think surely there must be some letters that I have not received, as only two short notes have reached me, one in pencil on your arrival & one written on Monday following.

I was very anxious to learn the news from Pontiac. I have succeeded in gathering some things from Sergt. Gaff. I am glad your trunks have arrived safe, & am much obliged for the “Initial G.”

I am unable to learn anything about the condition of our property, as Gaff was not there. I received a letter from Bro. Remick containing Statement of the disposition of monies in his hands. All very satisfactory. Mrs. Remick is very dangerously ill.

What disposition did you make of the articles Laurence wished to buy? & what condition did you find the property in? Please give me all the information you can, & I can suggest such changes as may be necessary.

I hope you have a delightful trip on the lakes. ((Mary Culver was traveling to New Hartford by way of Chicago, Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo. She and her mother had booked passage on a steamboat between Detroit and Buffalo.)) I should like to have been with you very much. Why has Bro. Thomas not written. ((Thomas Murphy, Mary Culver’s oldest brother, was a Cleveland, Ohio machinist and boat builder.)) Is he in want of money; if so, I earnestly hope you will inform me, as I think I can procure the amount at anytime if he needs it. I have only deferred because I thought he would as soon have it out at 10 per ct as not if he feels secure.

I received a letter from Bro. Sammy this evening. He acknowledges the receipt of a letter from Bro. John but does not say where he is. ((Brother Johnny Murphy’s unit (Company M, 1st Illinois Light Artillery) was currently assigned to the First Division, Reserve Corps, Army of the Cumberland. The battery had participated in Rosecrans’ Middle Tennessee Campaign and was posted at Shelbyville, Tenn., from June 29-September 6, 1863. Report of the Adjutant General of Illinois. Vol. VIII, p. 665.)) I also recd. a letter from Henry Greenebaum in which he says he has a cap for Frankie. I presume he has received it.

I have in the several letters I wrote to you at Pontiac mentioned matters of business which I cannot call to mind just now. I have sent at least 6 or 8 letters. I shall have time to-morrow, however, to think them up & will write soon again.

Did you get your shawl? I sent it by Mr. Earnheart a few days after you left. I shall be on duty to-morrow & have no opportunity to write. Among other items of interest from Pontiac. I am informed that a report is in circulation that I have been drinking hard & gambling heavy. How much credence has it claimed?

You have not told me how Mother [Murphy] received you. Is she with you? Give many messages of Love to our friends in New York.

I do not remember whether I ever answered Mary & Sarah Williams’ letters, & yet it seems to me I did but when I do not recollect.

I preached to a large congregation on Sunday night from Isaiah, 26th Chap. & 4th verse, a lengthy account of which I have written in a former letter.

Late advices from Carlisle report Lee’s entire Army there, & it is very probable it will soon witness one of the most terrible battles of the war. ((Two divisions of General Ewell’s II Corps of Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia had occupied Carlisle from June 27-30. J.F.C.’s forecast of “a most terrible battle” was correct. On July 1 at Gettysburg, 30 miles south of Carlisle, commenced the bloodiest three-day battle of the Civil War.)) I tremble for the result. I greatly fear Father’s health will not stand the shock. I have no word from them & all communication is cut off. I shall write soon to Harrisburg & perhaps may get advices by private sources.

Write soon & give me all the news. I hope you will have a very pleasant visit. I came nearer being homesick since you left than any time since I have been in the service.

The cloud that overhangs the Country is growing darker. The news from Port Hudson to-night is the repulse of Banks’ entire army and the loss of 8000 prisoners. ((Maj. Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks’ Army of the Gulf on May 23 had invested a small Confederate army led by Maj. Gen. Franklin Gardner at Port Hudson, La. Banks’ troops on May 27 and again on June 14 had attempted to storm this stronghold on the Mississippi, 250 river-miles south of Vicksburg. In these assaults Banks lost 3,800 in killed, wounded, and missing. There was no truth to the report that Banks had lost 8,000 prisoners. Edward Cunningham, The Port Hudson Campaign: 1862-1863 (Baton Rouge, 1963), pp. 43-93.)) At Vicksburg I see no advance; heavy losses to our Army are reported. ((General Grant’s Army of the Tennessee, after being checkmated during the winter of 1862-63 on the western approaches to Vicksburg, had crossed the Mississippi at Bruinsburg on April 30. Striking northeastward and then wheeling his army to the west, Grant, in an 18-day campaign that earned him recognition as one of the “Great Captains of History,” defeated the Confederate armies of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston and Lt. Gen. John C. Pemberton. Pemberton’s army had been invested in Vicksburg. On May 19 and 22, Grant’s heretofore victorious troops had charged the Vicksburg earthworks to be hurled back with more than 4,100 casualties. Siege operations had commenced on May 25 and dragged on through June into the first week of July. Francis V. Greene, The Mississippi (New York, 1882), pp. 135-192.)) Harry McDowell recd. intelligence this morning of the death of his Bro. James in the army at Vicksburg. ((William H. H. McDowell, a 21-year-old farmer, was mustered into service on Sept. 8, 1862, as sergeant major of the 129th Illinois Infantry, and was commissioned 2d lieutenant of Company E on April 17, 1863. On Feb. 22, 1864, he was detached and sent to Illinois on recruiting duty, rejoining the regiment on May 29. Lieutenant McDowell on Nov. 13, 1864, was detailed to the brigade ambulance corps, and was mustered out near Washington, June 8, 1865. Compiled Service Records of Union Soldiers, NA.)) Nothing cheering from the East. Rosecrans army is in motion; several hundred prisoners were sent to Nashville from the front yesterday. ((Goaded by the War Department, General Rosecrans had put his Army of the Cumberland in motion on June 24. Soldiers of Maj. Gen. Alexander McD. McCook’s XX Corps drove the Confederates from Liberty Gap, while Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas’ XIV Corps cleared the Rebels out of Hoover Gap. Heavy rains slowed the bluecoats, as their long columns pushed deep into Middle Tennessee. Cist, The Army of the Cumberland, pp. 154-156.)) He is within 2 miles of Talahoma & finds a large army entrenched there & there is heavy fighting in progress. ((General Bragg, his army weakened by the detachment of five infantry brigades and a cavalry division to Mississippi in a futile effort by the Confederates to relieve Vicksburg, permitted himself to be outmaneuvered by Rosecrans. The Federals, after forcing the gaps, had advanced on Manchester. Finding that his right had been outflanked, Bragg was compelled to abandon his fortified position at Tullahoma without firing a shot. Reports that the enemy was evacuating Tullahoma had reached General Thomas on July 1, and he ordered a forced reconnaissance. Feeling its way forward, a reinforced brigade entered Tullahoma and found the Confederates gone. Ibid., pp. 156-166.))

A party of 60 guerillas made an attack on a mounted force of the 106th Ohio at Richland day before yesterday; killed one Lieut, two men & took several prisoners. Col. Case, Capts. Hoskins & Perry & Lieuts. Smith & McKnight started for Richland with over 100 mounted men last night to capture them if possible. I learn that they sent in 7 prisoners this evening, & five captured by the troop stationed there this morning. ((Colonel Case filed no report, so J.F.C.’s letter constitutes the only information we have about this patrol. Regimental Papers, 129th Illinois, NA.)) The Union people are all fleeing. I saw Carrie Rodomore’s brother on the train this evening on his way to Nashville. ((Carrie (Caroline) Rodamore was the 21-year-old daughter of Ann Rodamore, a Gallatin widow. Carrie’s brother, Jacob, was a conductor on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad. Eighth Census, Sumner County, State of Tennessee, NA.)) He is afraid to remain at home longer. He reports the family all well, but their house sacked & everything destroyed by the Rebels. All the Union families are suffering, but I think our force will drive out the invaders.

Our duties are growing heavier. A Negro Regiment is being raised here. ((Early in 1863 the Lincoln administration adopted as its policy the organization of black regiments to be officered by whites. Adjutant General Lorenzo Thomas was sent to the Western armies to explain and rally support for this policy. In 1862, prior to President Lincoln’s preliminary Emancipation Proclamation, the administration had discouraged efforts of several departmental commanders to organize black units. J. G. Randall, The Civil War and Reconstruction (Boston, 1953), pp. 503-505. The 13th U.S. Colored Infantry (2d U.S. Infantry Regiment [Colored]) was organized in July 1863 from laborers in the staff departments at Gallatin, Clarksville, Murfreesboro, etc. Tennesseans in the Civil War. . . 2 parts (Nashville, 1964), pt. I, p. 398.)) Tom, Henry & Joe have enlisted so we are again without a cook, also Col. Case and Lt. Col. Cropsey. ((Tom, Henry, and Joe were former slaves freed by the Emancipation Proclamation, employed by officers of Company A to cook for them and to keep their quarters policed. A special order had been issued by Rosecrans’ headquarters permitting each regiment in the Department of the Cumberland to employ for use by the government about 40 blacks as teamsters, cooks, etc. Regimental Papers, 129th Illinois, NA.))

Ed Maples is on a visit to Troy, New York, & Bill [Russell] did not get home the 4th. I presume you have gone to New Hartford, & I will direct [my mail] in care of J. H. Case, Esq. as I do not know Mr. Williams’ name. ((J. H. Case was a prosperous New Hartford farmer. In 1860, the 41-year-old Case was living with his wife, Charlotte, and their 5-year-old son Herbert. It has been impossible to further identify Mr. Williams, as there were a number of families with that surname in and around New Hartford. Eighth Census, Oneida County, State of New York, NA.))

Remember me kindly to all. May God bless & prosper you; Give you all good health & a warm reception.

Should that other event you anticipate not transpire, I shall try & make a visit to Father’s with you before you return if I can possibly get leave of absence. ((J.F.C. refers to the possibility that his wife was pregnant; if she were, she would give birth to a second child in January 1864.)) But should you be compelled to hasten home, you [might] prefer that I should be in Pontiac in January. I cannot expect to go twice. Tell me which you wish me to do & whether I will be required to furnish the new dress. I must have some notice beforehand.

Kiss Frankie for me & as many of the others as you desire or would desire me to kiss were I there. Did you stop in Cleveland?

With an earnest prayer for you, my dear wife & our Boy, I remain,

Your Affect. Husband
J. F. Culver

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An old adage says that disappointments never come single handed

Joseph Culver Letter, July 1, 1863, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Quarters, Co. “A” 129th Ills.
Gallatin, Tenn., July 1st 1863

Dear Wife

An old adage says that disappointments never come single handed, & so it has proven as three or four mails from the North have been distributed & no letter for me. I presume now I shall receive none until the arrival of Sergt. Gaff when I anticipate a long one.

As it is quite late to-night, I shall not write at any great length. I was out all of last night on a scout, & it was too warm to sleep to-day so that I feel somewhat sleepy. I have failed from the amount of duty to write to the County Pic-Nic. Continue reading

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Sunday has passed

Joseph Culver Letter, June 28, 1863, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Quarters, Co. “A”, 129th Ills. Vol. Infty.
Gallatin, Tenn., June 28th 1863

Dear Wife

Sunday has passed. I hoped to have time to write to the S. S. Pic Nic to-day, but was disappointed. After being relieved from guard it was time for church, & after church I found some blanks on my desk waiting for me. I made them out & spent a short time looking up a sermon & then Dress Parade. ((Beginning on Tuesday, June 23, the regiment fell out for reveille at 4 A.M., guard mount at 7:30 A.M., dinner at 12 noon, retreat at 7 P.M., and tattoo at 8 P.M. Dress parades were held twice a week, on Saturdays and Sundays, at 6:30 P.M. There were two weekly battalion drills, held from 4:30 to 6 P.M. on Mondays and Fridays. Regimental Papers, 129th Illinois, NA.)) Continue reading

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I greatly fear the shock will be too great for Father to bear

Joseph Culver Letter, June 27, 1863, Letter 2, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Quarters, Co. “A”, 129th Ills.
Gallatin, Tenn., June 27th 1863

Dear Mary

I have been on duty to-day & am to-night. I see by the papers this evening that Carlisle is in possession of the Rebels, ((In the first week of May 1863, General Lee and his Army of Northern Virginia had defeated the Army of the Potomac at Chancellorsville. To capitalize on this success. General Lee in the second week of June put his columns in motion toward Pennsylvania. Lee’s II Corps, sweeping up the Shenandoah Valley, defeated the Federals at Winchester on June 14-15, crossed the Potomac at Williamsport, and, advancing by way of Chambersburg, entered Carlisle on June 27. Wilbur S. Nye, Here Come the Rebels (Baton Rouge, 1965), pp. 301-310.)) & I greatly fear the shock will be too great for Father to bear. ((Joseph Culver, J.F.C.’s father, was 72 years old. He was a retired farmer, living in Carlisle’s East Ward, and in 1860 valued his real estate at $25,000 and his personal property at $5,000. Eighth Census, Cumberland County, State of Pennsylvania, NA.)) I feel very anxious to hear from home which at present is impossible. Continue reading

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I hope you will give yourself no uneasiness about your trunks

Joseph Culver Letter, June 27, 1863, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Quarters, Co. “A”, 129th Ills. Vol.
Gallatin, Tenn., June 27th 1863.

My dear Wife

I recd. your letter of Monday last night. ((Mary Culver’s letter of June 22, along with others written between June 22 and Aug. 6, 1863, are missing from the Culver Collection.)) I hope you will give yourself no uneasiness about your trunks. I think they will get through all safe. ((On her return from Gallatin to Pontiac, Mary Culver’s trunks had gone astray.)) I telegraphed to Louisville & Jeffersonville last evening, &, if they are not found there, I will telegraph to Indianapolis & Chicago to-day. ((As the trunks traveled separately, J.F.C. correctly deduced that they had been misdirected at one of the transfer points. Louisville was the terminus of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, while Jeffersonville, Indianapolis, and Chicago were other transfer points on the route by which Mary Culver had returned to Pontiac.)) I will order them forward[ed] by Express when they are found. Continue reading

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Just as I was preparing to go to church I received orders to go on a Scout

Joseph Culver Letter, June 22, 1863, Page 1[google-map-v3 width=”400″ height=”300″ zoom=”12″ maptype=”hybrid” mapalign=”right” directionhint=”false” language=”default” poweredby=”false” maptypecontrol=”false” pancontrol=”false” zoomcontrol=”true” scalecontrol=”falso” streetviewcontrol=”false” scrollwheelcontrol=”false”  addmarkermashupbubble=”false” addmarkerlist=”36.381389; -86.451389{}1-default.png” bubbleautopan=”true” showbike=”false” showtraffic=”false” showpanoramio=”false”]

Head Qurs., Co. “A”, 129th Ills. Vol. Infty.
Gallatin, Tenn., June 22nd 1863

Dear Mary

I delayed writing all day Saturday [the 20th] thinking that on Sunday I would write you a long letter, but just as I was preparing to go to church I received orders to go on a Scout. I was in the saddle all day & thus had no opportunity to write. This morning I am detailed as Judge Advocate on a Board of Commission which meets at 9 o’clock. ((The “Board of Commission” referred to was the one to which J.F.C. had been appointed on Dec. 18, 1862. It was charged with examining and auditing claims of loyal citizens against the United States. Regimental Papers, 129th Illinois, NA.)) My health is good. Your shawl & a letter from Maggie [Utley] arrived on Thursday, so I presume I heard the news of the birth of the great heir before you did. ((A second child, their first son, had been born to Leander and Margaret Utley. Culver, “Robert Murphy and Some of His Descendants,” p. 99.)) They say he looks like Frankie, so he must be a wonderful boy. You will please give my hearty congratulations & a kiss to Maggie. (I wonder if she gets a new dress.) Continue reading

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