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Collection Reference Number GLC06107.21
From Archive Folder Collection of Union Occupation Newspapers 
Title Soldier's News-Letter
Date 17 May 1862
Author Eastman, A. W. (fl. 1862)  
Document Type Newspapers and Magazines
Content Description Edited by Eastman with editorial assistance by Charles Giles of Belfast, Maine. Soldiers' newspaper (Vol. 1, No. 2). Front page and part of 4th page contains a proclamation from 1 May 1862 by Major General Benjamin Butler which says "it has been found necessary to preserve order and maintain quiet by the administration of law Martial." Says the commanding general of occupying troops will govern the town until municipal authority is reinstated. Goes on to list rules involving such areas as public and private property, foreigners, and the keepers of coffee houses and saloons. Other miscellaneous news tidbits throughout. Includes an account from the "New York Times" that says "Secretary Stanton will propose to enlist negroes four months to do garrison duty in forts and other places where the yellow fever may be expected to come. His theory is stated to be that the blacks, being acclimated, will be safe from the risks of climates, besides being placed in situations where the laws of order will restrain them from excesses the Southern people fear as the result of negro freedom." Ends with news on the 13th Maine regiment and a letter to the editor with an update on the 8th New Hampshire regiment. Editorial note claims the newspaper is "not a local institution. Our next issue may come from the Crescent City, and we hope still to travel on in company with the brave men with whom we have formed so brief and pleasant an acquaintance."
Subjects Civil War  Military History  Union Forces  Union General  Confederate States of America  Military Law  Habeas Corpus  African American History  African American Troops  Yellow Fever  Epidemic  Health and Medical  Lincoln's Cabinet  
Place written Ship Island, Mississippi
Theme The American Civil War; African Americans
Sub-collection American Civil War Newspapers and Magazines
Copyright The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
Module Civil War, Reconstruction and the Modern Era: 1860-1945