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Field name | Value |
---|---|
Collection Reference Number | GLC09273.37 |
From Archive Folder | Collection of 50 letters of Horace J. Hammond, a soldier in the 189th regiment New York volunteers |
Title | Letter from Horace J. Hammond to Eleanor Hammond asking if she received the money he sent and delivers news of a possible march tomorrow |
Date | 28 March 1865 |
Author | Hammond, Horace J. |
Recipient | Hammond, Eleanor |
Document Type | Correspondence |
Content Description | Is "tip top;" hopes she is too. Wants to know if she has received all of the money he has sent her. Is eating really well. Decided to turn in his gun to the quartermaster, so "all I will carry will be my knapsack." Expects to begin marching somewhere starting tomorrow morning. Believes he is going to North Carolina. About 135,000 infantry and 30,000 cavalry are going to be on the move. Would rather move than stay at camp any longer. Only 5 months until he will be home. Prays every day. "I think the war will soon be used up." Would like to see her and Oscar; looks at her likeness very often. Put another $5 in this letter. By the time all of the money he has sent her is gone, he will have more money to send. Must stop writing, because he has to be ready to march starting at 1:45 AM. |
Subjects | Soldier's Letter Union Forces Military History Injury or Wound Marriage Union Soldier's Letter Civil War Health and Medical Soldier's Pay Diet and Nutrition Military Provisions Military Rations Weaponry Infantry Cavalry Religion Photography Children and Family |
People | Hammond, Horace J. (fl. 1864-1865) |
Place written | Hatcher's Run, Virginia |
Theme | The American Civil War; Women in American History; Health & Medicine; Religion; Children & Family |
Sub-collection | Papers and Images of the American Civil War |
Additional Information | Hammond enlisted on August 17, 1864 at Avoca, NY as a Private. He served largely at City Point, Virginia, the headquarters for General Ulysses S. Grant. While at City Point, he was injured when a fellow soldier's rifle discharged and the bullet became lodged in his leg. Doctors removed the bullet and Hammond recovered without having his leg amputated. Hammond was discharged on May 30, 1865. |
Copyright | The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History |
Module | Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945 |
Civil War: Recipient Relationship | Wife |
Civil War: Theater of War | Main Eastern Theater |
Civil War: Unit | 189th New York Vols., "G" Company |