A Civil War Captain and His Lady: Love, Courtship, and Combat From Fort Donelson through the Vicksburg Campaign

A Civil War Captain and His Lady: Love, Courtship, and Combat From Fort Donelson through the Vicksburg Campaign

by Gene Barr
A Civil War Captain and His Lady: Love, Courtship, and Combat From Fort Donelson through the Vicksburg Campaign

A Civil War Captain and His Lady: Love, Courtship, and Combat From Fort Donelson through the Vicksburg Campaign

by Gene Barr

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Overview

A Civil War Captain and His Lady is a true “Cold Mountain” love story from the Northern perspective.

More than 150 years ago, 27-year-old Irish immigrant Josiah Moore met 19-year-old Jennie Lindsay, a member of one of Peoria, Illinois’s most prominent families. The Civil War had just begun, Josiah was the captain of the 17th Illinois Infantry, and his war would be a long and bloody one. Their courtship and romance, which came to light in a rare and unpublished series of letters, forms the basis of Gene Barr’s memorable A Civil War Captain and His Lady: Love, Courtship, and Combat from Fort Donelson through the Vicksburg Campaign.

The story of Josiah, Jennie, the men of the 17th and their families tracks the toll on our nation during the war and allows us to explore the often difficult recovery after the last gun sounded in 1865.

Josiah’s and Jennie’s letters shed significant light on the important role played by a soldier’s sweetheart on the home front, and a warrior’s observations from the war front. Josiah’s letters offer a deeply personal glimpse into army life, how he dealt with the loss of many close to him, and the effects of war on a man’s physical, spiritual, and moral well-being. Jennie’s letters show a young woman mature beyond her age dealing with the difficulties on the home front while her brother and her new love struggle through the travails of war. Her encouragement to keep his faith in God strong and remain morally upright gave Josiah the strength to lead his men through the horrors of the Civil War. Politics also thread their way through the letters and include the evolution of Jennie’s father’s view of the conflict. A leader in the Peoria community and former member of the Illinois state house, he engages in his own political wars when he shifts his affiliation from the Whig Party to the new Republican Party, and is finally elected to the Illinois Senate as a Peace Democrat and becomes one of the state’s more notorious Copperheads.

In addition to this deeply moving and often riveting correspondence, Barr includes additional previously unpublished material on the 17th Illinois and the war’s Western Theater, including Fort Donelson, Shiloh, Vicksburg, and the lesser known Meridian Campaign—actions that have historically received much less attention than similar battles in the Eastern Theater. The result is a rich, complete, and satisfying story of love, danger, politics, and warfare, and it is one you won’t soon forget.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611214437
Publisher: Savas Beatie
Publication date: 10/12/2019
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 360
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Gene Barr is the president and CEO of the Pennsylvania Chamber of Business and Industry, the largest broad-based business advocacy group in Pennsylvania. He has spent more than forty years in the political and government affairs world, including more than twelve years with a Fortune 100 energy company. Barr is a board member and former chair of the National Civil War Museum in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and spent many years engaged in Civil War living history events. He has a bachelor’s degree in political science from St. Joseph’s University in Philadelphia and lives in Mechanicsburg with his wife Mary.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

1861

One Man Moore

Residents of the small town of Monmouth, Illinois, crowded into the Warren County Courthouse on April 20, 1861. They had been attracted by an article in the previous day's edition of the local paper, the Atlas. "Freemen! Do You Hear the Call!" blared the headline. The article announced a meeting to form a military company in answer to President Abraham Lincoln's call for militia to put down the young rebellion. Many at the meeting were from Monmouth College, a Presbyterian institution that had been in the town since 1853. The school, which charged between $15 and $25 a year for tuition, was noteworthy in that it admitted females on the same term as males.

The same wave of excitement that pulsed throughout the North after the firing on Fort Sumter also coursed through Monmouth, a town of just 2,500 people in west central Illinois about 25 miles from the Mississippi River. Eighty men of the town had already answered Lincoln's call. During the meeting, 19 more agreed to serve, leaving the new organization just one enlistee shy of the full company complement of 100. The secretary of the committee appointed to raise the company and oversee the welfare of the families who would leave behind called out that he needed "just one man more." One of the Monmouth students, Josiah Moore, slowly lifted his six-foot, four-inch frame from his seat, stood for a moment, and then strode confidently to the front. "I am that man Moore," he proclaimed.

According to local legend, Moore staged the dramatic moment by telling others in the room to wait until 99 men had enlisted so he could make his grand statement. Whether Moore possessed great timing or a tremendous sense of theatrics, his dramatic announcement had a significant impact on the other recruits. They elected Moore as captain of the company.

Given the patriotic fervor of the times, it was difficult for the able bodied young men of the North to resist the urge to participate in what many believed would be a short adventure against an out-manned enemy. The almost festive atmosphere of the opening days of the war was, in the words of one historian "something grotesque, almost poignant" when viewed against the slaughter of the next four years. "Very well, let's go it while we're young," wrote one journalist. "We never had a civil war before, you know ... and now we've got one we're going to show the world that we can beat it at that as well as every thing else."

In those early days of the conflict, both sides tossed out boastful and bellicose statements. The New York Times promised that Confederate president Jefferson Davis and his cohorts "will be hung before the 4th of July," while Confederate Secretary of War Leroy Walker predicted the Rebel flag would "fly atop the Capitol in Washington before the first of May." The prevailing opinion on both sides was that the war would end quickly.

The Civil War would be fought overwhelmingly with volunteers like those from Monmouth. Since Colonial days, Americans had distrusted the idea of a large standing army, viewing large military forces as more appropriate for monarchs. Horace Greeley, the influential editor of the New York Tribune, wrote that "we have no more need of a Standing Army than of an order of nobility." At the outbreak of the Civil War, the U.S. Regular Army comprised just over 16,000 men, including fewer than 1,100 officers. Previous military conflicts had relied on volunteers, sometimes drawn from state militias and often bodies of citizens with no military experience of any kind. Greeley and many others in the North firmly believed that these state militias would do just fine in the current war.

What made these men from Monmouth, as well as others in the North, join the fight? Some enlisted for the promise of adventure. Some believed fervently that the war was necessary to end the evil of slavery (although other soldiers were both anti-abolitionist and strongly prejudiced against blacks). Most, though, joined because they believed "the Union" meant democracy, liberty, and free labor. It was, as one modern historian argued, "a bulwark against the forces of oligarchy personified in the American context by proud aristocrats from the slaveholding states." The commitment to the Union, he wrote, "functioned as a bonding agent among Americans who believed, as a citizenry and a nation under the Constitution, they were destined for greatness on the world stage." For those in the antebellum North, this view of American nationalism and Union "was bound up with the ideals of human betterment." By rebelling, the Southern states threatened this great and shining ideal. According to this view, the people in the South did not value free labor (even though many of the Union soldiers did not view blacks as citizens), and exploited poor whites.

Frank Peats, a 27-year-old from Rockford, Illinois, who would rise to the rank of major in the 17th Illinois Infantry and become one of Josiah Moore's friends and colleagues, explained his main reason for going to war when he wrote to a female acquaintance, Betsey (Bessie) Tew, in April 1861. His choice was a difficult one "between his love of kindred and duty to our country. You must not forget Bessie I claim the high prerogative, the title of an American citizen. Shall I not by remaining inactive render myself unworthy of so high a position?" In a valuable recollection written after the war, Peats asserted that nearly everyone in the North, "Republican and Democrat, Protestant and Catholic, worshiped at the one common altar of country." For men like Peats, preserving the Union meant preserving the concepts for which their forefathers had died during the American Revolution. "We fight because we love our government," explained one Yankee soldier, "and they [the South] fight because they hate it."

To be sure, there were men who fought from a desire to destroy the institution of slavery and free those in bondage, although they were in a distinct minority, especially during the war's early years. This relatively small group shared a moral opposition to the forced servitude of human beings. Others opposed slavery from self-interest, believing the expansion of slavery into new territories limited their ability to acquire their share of those lands. Although there is widespread evidence that many Union soldiers realized the war was about slavery — that is, they believed the South was willing to destroy the Union to protect that institution — most were not enlisting to fight to end slavery, free the slave, or even improve the lot of blacks.

At the time, only 7,600 blacks lived in Illinois out of a population of 1.7 million, with the largest concentration residing in Chicago. As a result, many men of the 17th Illinois had little, if any, exposure to them. Prejudice against blacks, a feeling that they were second-class citizens at best, was a common sentiment in Northern armies. Even those opposed to the institution of slavery blamed both slaves and abolitionists for bringing on the war. According to one historian, "[T]he hostility of the average Union volunteer towards anti-slavery sentiment should not be exaggerated. If he had no love for trouble-making abolitionists and much antipathy towards blacks, he also had no fondness for slavery." Oliver O. Howard, who would become a senior commander in the Union armies (and the head of the Freedmen's Bureau after the war), proclaimed that hostility to abolition was "bitter and unmeasured."

Among Yankee troops, even those born in other lands felt the desire to fight for "Union." "[T]his is my country as much as the man that was born on the soil," announced one Irish-born recruit, "and so it is with every man who comes to this country and becomes a citizen." To this immigrant, a Union loss meant "the hopes of millions fall and ... the old cry will be sent from the aristocrats of Europe that such is the common end of all republics." During the four years of the war, 500,000 immigrants put on a blue uniform; 150,000 were Irish. For many of them, the Union "was synonymous with the republic — America's unique experiment in self-rule 'by the people'" that carried with it "a transcendent, mystical quality as the object of their patriotic devotion and civil religion." Failure of America's "Grand Experiment" meant, for men like the Irish recruit, a potential return to the tyranny and despotism from which they had fled Europe and other lands.

The concerns of the young Irishman about the failure of the American experiment were more than just speculation. Henry John Temple, the prime minister of Britain and an aristocrat known as Lord Palmerston, believed the American struggle demonstrated the problems inherent in a democracy. "Power in the Hands of the Masses throws the Scum of the Community to the Surface and that Truth and Justice are Soon banished from the Land," he wrote. "[I]t seems your Republic is going to pieces," crowed a French official to a visitor from the United States, and predicted "a reign of terror, and then two or three monarchies" for the American republic. Another French official rejoiced at the news of war and hoped that both North and South would be "irretrievably ruined." The war, declared members of Germany's elite, was a "natural consequence of unlimited freedom."

Many in Europe viewed the American nation as the height of hypocrisy. Early in the nineteenth century, Englishman Sydney Smith sneered at the idea of the United States calling itself a democracy. "Under which of the old tyrannical governments of Europe is every sixth man a slave, whom his fellow-creatures may buy and sell and torture?" he asked.

Southerners had their own view of the causes of the war. They believed that God ordained slavery, and therefore any attack upon it had to be opposed. Many whites in the South spoke of the North's "tyranny" and claimed their Northern brethren were motivated by greed and desire. Like those in the North, Southerners claimed the mantles of both patriotism and religion. They believed they were the ones really fighting for liberty and independence, and compared themselves to the people of Israel who sought to leave Egypt. Both sides felt justified in claiming the moral high ground.

Unfortunately, nothing in any of Josiah's writings explicitly states why he enlisted. Interestingly, while attending preparatory school at Westminster (now Westminster College) in 1859 in New Wilmington, Pennsylvania, Josiah wrote a poem entitled "The Murder of John Brown." It was published in the December 1859 student newspaper. Brown was a strident abolitionist who led a bloody raid on the Federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia (now West Virginia) in October 1859 with the aim of sparking a slave insurrection. A contingent of U. S. Marines under the command of Robert E. Lee retook the facility and captured Brown, who was hanged in December of that year. Josiah's poem was a scathing indictment of those involved with Brown's imprisonment and hanging. In his ode to Brown — a man detested throughout the South but hailed as a martyr by the anti-slavery movement — Josiah called him a "hero" whose life was taken by "cowards." In the same edition of the paper, the editors, while acknowledging "the sin of slavery" and advocating "all right means for the removal of this incubus," excoriated many in the abolitionist movement as people looking to simply "make political capital" while demonstrating "no real desire or intention of benefitting the slave." The editors labeled these people "insane enthusiasts." Despite his ode to Brown, Josiah displayed no significant level of abolitionist sentiment as the war progressed. Perhaps his ardor for the movement had cooled by 1861.

The slavery question that had split the country also created schisms in other institutions, including organized religion. Despite a reluctance on the part of many Presbyterian clergy to enter a debate on an issue they believed could harm their overall evangelization mission, a segment of the church that came to be known as "New School Presbyterians" began to talk more openly about abolition by the 1850s. Many in the New School remained hesitant to agitate too much, for they recognized the issue's real threat to the Union. Things came to a head in May 1861 when the Presbyterian General Assembly met in Philadelphia shortly after war began. New School adherents attempted to press the issue against slavery. Southern church members, anticipating the conflict, largely avoided the meeting. The Old School members admitted the war was over slavery, but cited biblical passages to mean God supported the practice, and so insisted the North had no right to interfere. Being a Presbyterian institution, Monmouth College was roiled by the conflicts within the church.

The morning after the rally in the courthouse, the new recruits filed into Claycomb Hall, a large, imposing brick structure that still stands on the Monmouth square, to hear patriotic speeches. One of the speakers was David Wallace, the president of Monmouth College. He was anti-slavery but not outspokenly so, perhaps to avoid controversy at the school given the great divide in the Presbyterian Church at the time. Wallace took the opportunity to address his former students who had joined the Union Army, and "invoked the God of battles to be with them, to protect and assist them" in their upcoming campaigns.

Of the 100 men who had volunteered for the company from Monmouth, 20 were students at the college. In 1861 the school had only 220 students, of whom 137 were male. By the end of the war, 232 Monmouth students had joined Union armies, including 81 of the 137 male students attending in 1861. Included in that number were 41 commissioned officers and one brigadier general. By 1863, not a single male of military age remained on campus. One out of eight of those who served died either in battle or from disease, a much more common killer of the Civil War soldier.

The company's original muster sheet lists 105 men who volunteered for service. Many were later rejected for medical and other reasons. Because of the government ban on blacks serving in the military, all of the enlistees were white. The youngest was 18, and the oldest 45. Eight of the men were 30 or older. Nineteen of the original enlistees were six feet or taller. The shortest was 5 foot, 3 inches and the tallest, Josiah, stood 6 foot, 4 inches. Eight were married and just 15 listed their birthplace as Illinois. One of those was Josiah, who perhaps avoided noting his Irish birth due to the era's nativist tendencies. The recruits listed numerous occupations, with farmer being the most common (in fact, about half of all Union enlistees everywhere were farmers). There were accountants, laborers, teachers, blacksmiths, and one pugilist — Murry Claycomb, the nephew of the man responsible for Claycomb Hall. Only 14 men noted they were students, although some who were enrolled at Monmouth listed different occupations. One of them was future sergeant Robert Duncan, who stated he was a farmer. The enlistees also included one of the town physicians, John B. Stephenson, who joined as second sergeant at the age of 29.

Another young man who joined was 19-year-old James Earp, who described himself as "five feet, eight inches tall with fair complexion and blue eyes" and his occupation as "coach driver." Earp was born in Kentucky and lived for a time in Monmouth before leaving for Iowa with his family. His father, Nicholas, had served with a Monmouth volunteer unit during the Mexican War, and James returned to Monmouth to enlist in the Civil War. His brother Virgil served with the 83rd Illinois, and a half-brother, Newton, joined the 4th Iowa Cavalry. Two other brothers, Wyatt and Morgan, were too young for service in 1861. Both brothers would see their share of gunplay years later.

Moore, the anointed captain of this new military organization, was a 27-year-old college junior who had enrolled at Monmouth in September 1860. The company's muster sheet describes him as having light hair, blue eyes, and a fair complexion. It's likely that few of the men in his company knew him. Until enrolling at the college, he had been a resident of Hanover, Illinois, a town to the northwest. He was born to Charles and Hannah Moore in 1833 in Ballybay, Ireland, in the county of Monaghan in the north-central part of the country. Ballybay, a Gaelic name that translates to "At the Mouth of the Ford of the Birches," was the center of a thriving linen industry that had fallen on hard times by the time of Josiah's birth. The Moore family left Ireland in 1834, fully a decade before the potato blight caused the death of a million Irish through disease and starvation and the emigration of a similar number. The Moores sailed from Ireland to Liverpool, and from there took the Edwin to Baltimore, where they arrived on August 20 that same year. From Baltimore, the family journeyed by wagon on the National Road to Washington County in western Pennsylvania. They lived there with friends until 1836, when they moved by water to Illinois to join Charles, who had left the previous fall to prepare land he had purchased. A log cabin 12 miles outside Galena, Illinois, was the Moore family's new home. At the time, Illinois sat on the western frontier of the young nation. American Indians were frequent visitors to the Moore home and farm.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "A Civil War Captain and His Lady"
by .
Copyright © 2016 Gene Barr.
Excerpted by permission of Savas Beatie LLC.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments viii

Prologue xiv

Chapter 1 One Man Moore 1

Chapter 2 Students to Soldiers 15

Chapter 3 "Little Egypt" 26

Chapter 4 First Blood 37

Chapter 5 "I Was Looking for You Every Day" 51

Chapter 6 "Your Noble Boy is No More" 60

Chapter 7 "Place of Peace" 84

Chapter 8 Bloody Sunday 91

Chapter 9 "Land of Barbarism" 114

Chapter 10 "Let Us Get Vicksburg" 142

Chapter 11 "A Vast Cemetery" 154

Chapter 12 An Army on the Move 191

Chapter 13 "A Miserable Business" 203

Chapter 14 The Death of a "Worthy Son" 212

Chapter 15 "We Enjoyed Our Fourth of July Hugely" 231

Chapter 16 "O Such Destruction" 263

Chapter 17 Home 291

Epilogue: Thereafter 296

Appendix 1 An Interview with Author Gene Barr 317

Bibliography 322

Index 329

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