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Letter, 20 April 1864. Accession 50594.
Letter, 20 April 1864, from B. [-----], hospital, 2nd Corps, Army of Northern Virginia, in Louisa County, Virginia, to his wife, possibly in North Carolina, regarding his work in the 2nd Corps hospital in Louisa County, noting one patient with smallpox, and commenting that the overall number of sick in the hospital is down. He wonders when fighting between the armies might commence.
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He asks about his children and adds that he has not received any letters from his wife. [-----], Frank. Letter, 8 June 1862. Accession 51181.
Letter, 8 June 1862, from Frank [-----], a Massachusetts soldier, to his brother, informing his brother that he is headed to the hospital in Washington D.C.; commenting on rumors of the death of Confederate General Joseph Johnston at the battle of Seven Pines (Fair Oaks); noting that the Confederates have improved in their treatment of Union wounded and prisoners; and complaining about an address given by Massachusetts Governor John Andrews, stating that Massachusetts men are fighting for the Union, not to abolish slavery. [-----], George. Letter, 1 January 1864.
Accession 38864b. Letter, 1 January 1864, from George [-----] serving in Company B, 6th United States Cavalry to his parents stating that his regiment along with much of the Army of the Potomac is currently at Brandy Station, Virginia; and adding that little campaigning has been done because of the wet, cold weather and muddy conditions, but that some Union cavalry is operating in the Shenandoah Valley.
There is also a transcript of the letter. [-----], Henry.
Letters, 1864. Accession 42201. Letters, 30 November-23 December 1864, written by a Confederate soldier named Henry [-----], in the Army of Northern Virginia likely in Chesterfield Couny, Virginia, near the Jame River, to his brother Tom commenting on Henry's homesickness and longing for the war's end, his sense of satisfaction at the sight of Northern dead, a Union ironclad assault on the Howlett Line, the general expectation of an impending attack by General Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885), attempts led by General Benjamin F. Butler (1818-1893) to construct a canal at Dutch Gap, thoughts on General William T.
Sherman's (1822-1885) ongoing march to the coast, sounds of nearby shelling at Signal Hill, and his frustration at a recent order by General James Longstreet (1821-1904) regarding hair and beard length. [-----], Nellie. Letter, May 1864. Accession 40630. Letter, 5-11 May 1864, from a soldier in the 33rd Battery New York Battery Light Artillery, 3rd Division, 10th Army Corps, who was sailing up the James River on the ship Rip Van Winkle and subsequently fighting between Petersburg and Richmond.
Contains descriptions of the number of soldiers aboard ship, the James River and the shoreline along the James River, food and living conditions aboard ship, and participation in military operations south of the James River between Petersburg and Richmond. Sent to his wife (?) Nellie [-----] at an undetermined location. [-----], Rob. Letter, 19 December 1861. Accession 38476.
Letter, 19 December 1861, from Rob [-----], a soldier in the Confederate cavalry camp at Centreville, Virginia, discussing Union General George B. McClellan’s (1826-1885) reluctance or fear to move the Union army and fight, reporting a rumor about England’s outrage over the removal of the Confederate emissaries Mason and Slidell in the Trent Affair, and commenting on camp life including the types of tents and building, the camp food, and personal gossip about people he and his sister know. [-----], Robert. Letter, 12 January 1866[?] Accession 50327. Letter, 12 January 1866[?] from Robert [-----] to his brother John about serving as a member of the provost guard for Winchester, Virginia. Robert comments that he is suffering from jaundice, but is getting better; notes that the guard arrested some cavalrymen for a disturbance in a barber shop; states that citizens seeking passes must take the oath of allegiance; and asks for a pair of boots. He provides a list of prices for goods in Winchester.
[-----], Thomas W. Letter, 20 April 1862. Accession 38838. Letter, 20 April 1862, from Thomas W. [-----] of the United States Navy to his mother describing a run his flotilla made to Fredericksburg, Virginia, to try to prevent Confederate forces from burning some vessels. The Navy had received information from runaway slaves, but the Navy was too late to prevent the burning, and that Confederate forces had burned other vessels and some bridges during a retreat.
Thomas adds that the flotilla had captured other vessels on the Rappahannock River, and that Union troops, under General Irvin McDowell had arrived in Fredericksburg. He comments that the girls of Fredericksburg are very pretty and he regrets that the flotilla is returning to the Potomac River. [Confederate States of America. Virginia Infantry Regiment, 17th.] Extract from mss.
History of the 17th Virginia regiment detailing the movements of the regiment in campaigns of 1863 and 1864. Accession 41008, Miscellaneous reel 5228. Extracts from a history, December 1864, of the 17th Virginia Infantry, detailing the movements of the unit during the period 14 February 1863 to 25 June 1864. Entries describe the regiment’s marches through Fredericksburg, Petersburg, Ivor Station, Suffolk, Chesterfield County, Caroline County, Culpeper Court House, Winchester, Front Royal, and Washington County, Virginia, and into Tennessee and North Carolina. Topics covered include the weather, picket duty, skirmishes with the enemy, building fortifications, taking prisoners, and various battles in which the unit participated in at Suffolk, Glade Springs, New Bern, and Drewry’s Bluff. [Confederate States of America. Records of the Virginia Forces, 1861.
Accession 29226. Records of Virginia Forces, 1861, consisting of fourteen volumes of letters sent, registers of letters received, general and special orders, morning reports of troops around Richmond, Virginia, and unbound letters and telegrams received. Records concern raising and organizing troops in Virginia and Maryland, appointment of officers, construction of fortifications, dispatching of troops and supplies, the military use and defense of railroads, the capture and removal of machinery at the Harper’s Ferry arsenal, and efforts to defend Richmond and Manassas Junction. [Robertson, George].
Roster, 1861-1865. Accession 25316.
Photostats (negatives). Typescript roster containing the names of former Confederate soldiers from Petersburg, Virginia. Included are rosters from Company K, 12th Virginia Infantry Regiment; Company E, 41st Virginia Infantry Regiment; Wise’s Brigade; and Captain Edward Graham’s Battery of Horse Artillery (Petersburg Artillery). The collection also includes histories on Company K, 12th Virginia Infantry Regiment, and Graham’s Battery of Horse Artillery, written in 1909 by George Robertson. [United States.
War Department]. Selected records of the War Department relating to Confederate prisoners of war, 1862-1865.
Accession 32800, Miscellaneous reel 1029-1033. Registers of deaths of Confederate prisoners, 1862-1865, compiled by the Office of the Commissary General of Prisoners (reel 1029-1030); and registers of death of Confederate prisoners, 1862-1865, compiled by the Surgeon General’s Office (reel 1031-1033). Information provided includes name, rank, regiment, company, where and when captured, date of death, cause, and location of grave. A list of Confederate States officers who are prisoners, held by federal authority, on Morris Island, S.C., under Confederate fire, from Sept. Accession 41008, Miscellaneous reel 5249.
Register, 1864, of Confederate officers held as prisoners on Morris Island, South Carolina. It is organized by state, and then lists each individual’s name, rank, command, place of capture, and residence. There are also sections on prisoners sent to the hospital, those sent from Hilton Head to Beaufort, South Carolina, those that died on Morris Island, and those who were exchanged. Virginia banks collection, 1841-1879.
Accession 41008, Miscellaneous reels 4592-4595. Business correspondence and documents, 1841-1879, from various Virginia regional banks, consisting of correspondence and documents related to the Clarksville branch of the Exchange Bank of Virginia; correspondence of Savings Institution of Richmond (1828- 1841), Pittsylvania Savings Bank (1861-1864), William M. Sutton & Company (1863- 1869), First National Bank (1865-1875), Merchants’ National Bank (1870-1872), Lancaster & Company (1874), Davenport and Company (1876-1879), and others. There are items relating to the Civil War, including financing of the Confederate army, civilian relief, and blockade-runners. Also contains William M. Sutton letters, including letter from William M.
Read of the 1st Virginia Artillery describing earlier stages of the Gettysburg campaign. Also includes letters relating to the New York State Bank (Albany, N.Y.) and the First and the Second Banks of the United States, especially their Virginia branches, as well as applications to the First and Second Banks of the United States for branches in Fredericksburg and Lynchburg, Virginia.
Clippings, no date. Accession 23476bb. Clipping, undated, containing transcripts of letters, 1861-1862, between General Robert E. Lee, General Stonewall Jackson, and Governor John Letcher. Entitled 'Letters from Generals Lee and Jackson, Heretofore Withheld from Publication. [From the Richmond Whig].' Note states that the clipping was received at the Archives office from General M.
Wright, 21 June 1879. Wright served as an agent for the United States War Department for collecting Confederate military records. Letters, 1861-1862. Accession 51501. Letters, 1861-1862, of E. 1864) of Company B, 10th Pennsylvania Reserves (39th Pennsylvania Infantry), at Camp Pierpont in Fairfax County, Virginia, to his family describing skirmishing with the Confederate army and noting that some New York soldiers were captured while shucking corn.
He provides a list of names of men from the company wounded at the battle of Dranesville. Ague states that he thinks the war will be short and the Reserves will return home. Albemarle County (Va.). Circuit Court. Military and Pension Records, 1785-1919. Accession Local Government Records, Albemarle County.
2.45 cubic feet. Albemarle County, Virginia, Military and Pension Records, 1785-1921, containing military and pension records documenting the military service of African Americans in Albemarle County from 1785 to 1921. Many of the records include personal information about individuals who served in the military, such as date and place of birth and names of family members. Albemarle County (Va.). Circuit Court.
Reports of Indigent Soldiers' Families, 1863-1865. Accession Local Government Records, Albemarle County..01 cubic feet. Albemarle County, Virginia, Reports of Indigent Soldiers’ families, 1863-1865, consisting of reports of agents providing support to the families of indigent soldiers. Also includes orders appointing agents to purchase supplies for the families. Reports record that funds were to be used for the purchase of corn and outline problems that the agents faced in procuring supplies and concerns about supplies getting to the the families in need rather than being used by the military. Albemarle Minute Men. Papers, 1863.
Accession 18355. Papers, 1863, of the Albemarle Minute Men consisting of a letter, 28 June 1863, from four Albemarle County, Virginia, residents to Captain William Dinwiddie requesting that he call out his local defense company to help defend the town of Gordonsville from a Union attack.
Letter was written in response to a request from the Confederate Secretary of War. Papers also contain a roster listing the names of Albemarle County residents, including Dinwiddie, who were part of a local defense force organized in June 1863 and identified as the Albemarle Minute Men. Alden, Seth H. Letters, 1862-1863. Accession 42689.
11 leaves and 12 pages. Letters, 1862-1863, from Seth H. Alden of the 16th Maine Infantry serving in Virginia, to his family in Turner, Maine, including his father, Azel, sister Eunice, and cousin Losania C. Topics include troop movements, casualties, weather and landscape in Virginia, camp life and conditions, paychecks and supply costs. Alden also asks about home life and crops. Includes transcripts and partial transcripts for some of the letters.
Alderman, John P. Carroll County Civil War soldiers records, 1861-1865. Accession 28455. Carroll County, Virginia, Civil War soldiers records, 1861-1865, compiled by John P. Alderman consisting of typescripts of Confederate service records of soldiers from Carroll County. Many of the entries also contain additional biographical information gleaned from a number of sources.
The entries cover “BA-BO.” The typescripts were copied from records in the National Archives. Alderman, John P. Carroll County Civil War soldiers records, 1861-1865. Accession 28475. Carroll County, Virginia, Civil War soldiers records, 1861-1865, compiled by John P. Alderman consisting of typescripts of Confederate service records of soldiers from Carroll County. Many of the entries also contain additional biographical information gleaned from a number of sources.
The entries cover “BR-BY.” The typescripts were copied from records in the National Archives. Alderman, John P. 24th Virginia Infantry abstracts. Accession 28479.
Abstracts of the 24th Virginia Infantry compiled by John P. Alderman containing an introduction and abstracts from the regimental records in the National Archives. The introduction contains information on the regiment’s formation, regimental officers, brigades under which it fought, and the campaigns in which it participated. Abstracts of the regimental records consists of a list of officers, a chronological record of events, and abstracts of individual service records arranged alphabetically as they appear on the microfilm. These service records include a muster date where available and a brief summary of the soldier’s service. Only a fraction of the data in the service records has been abstracted.
Letter, 7 August 1862. Accession 38841. Letter, 7 August 1862, from A. 1840) of Company I, 42nd Ohio Infantry, at the Cumberland Gap, Lee County, Virginia, to his father William Allen (1811-1892) of Madison County, Ohio.
Allen details his regiment’s fighting in southwestern Virginia as part of the 26th Brigade, 7th Division, Army of the Ohio. He describes a campaign to Tazewell, Claiborne County, Tennessee, 26 July 1862, and the fighting during the Cumberland Gap campaign from 2 August to 6 August 1862. He also discusses the civilian reaction to the fighting. Allen’s regiment, the 42nd Ohio, was commanded by James A. Garfield (1831-1881). Allen, John Harvey Reminiscences of Civil War service, 1913. Accession 32238.
Transcript of reminiscences, 1913, of John Harvey Allen (1838-1913) recalling his Civil War service aboard the CSS Alabama from 13 November 1863 to 19 June 1864, when it was sunk by the USS Kearsarge in the English Channel off Cherburg, France. Reminiscences include descriptions of various members of the crew, life aboard ship, the sinking of the USS Hatteras by the Alabama, and an account of the Alabama's final battle with the Kearsarge. Also includes portraits of Allen and Rachel Murray Thompson (1846-1912). Allen, Littlebury Woodson. Diary, 1863-1864. Accession 41008, Miscellaneous reel 5228.
Diary, 18 November 1863-17 March 1864, of Littlebury Woodson Allen (1803-1871), while a prisoner of war at Johnson’s Island, Ohio, and Point Lookout, Maryland. Allen writes about the justness of the Confederate cause, his patriotism, family news, reasons for joining the army, prison conditions, lack of rations and water, mail deliveries, weather observations, illnesses and deaths of fellow prisoners, battle news and Confederate victories, preaching to fellow inmates, his opinions of various army officers, prison administrators, and Presidents Davis and Lincoln, attempted prison escapes, news from Union newspapers he reads, and rumors of prisoner exchanges. Allen also provides descriptions of the layout of both prisons. There is also a plan of escape written by him following the diary, as well as some letters written by his wife Ann Martin Allen. Allison, William H.
Papers, 1861-1864. Accession 23305b.
Papers, 1861-1864, of Captain William H. Allison (1838-1904) of Richmond, Virginia, consisting of passes, furlough papers, medical certificates and notices, courts martial, transfer papers, receipts, and other items concerning personnel of Company H, 25th Virginia Infantry Battalion. Also includes a note, 1896, with names for a possible reunion, an envelope, 1900, with addresses, and a typewritten list of locations of Confederate hospitals in Richmond, Virginia, in 1863. Lindsay Address 4 February 1961. Accession WRVA - 228. 1 sound disc: digital; 4 3/4 in.
Address, 4 February 1961, by Governor J. Lindsay Almond, at ceremonies commemorating the 100th anniversary of the peace conference held in Washington, D.C. In 1861, sponsored by the Richmond Civil War Centennial Commission and the Virginia Civil War Centennial Commission. The ceremonies took place at the State Capitol, and marked the opening of the Civil War Centennial observances in Richmond.
Almond discusses the history of events leading up to the peace conference, gives information about the delegates from Virginia and their positions, and offers his suggestions as to why the conference failed. Alton, Benjamin. Letter, 2 December 1864. Accession 44834. Letter, 2 December 1864, from Benjamin Alton to Alonzo (1828-1878) and Marilla King (1832-1878) of DeKalb County, Indiana, concerning his enlistment into the 13th Indiana Regiment as a hired substitute, description of camp life and camp fortifications, and a report of the capture of a railroad south of Richmond, Virginia, by Union troops. In his letter, Alton directs mail to be sent to him in Company D, but the roster of Indiana soldiers states he served in Company A. Amelia County (Va.) Militia.
Militia Enrollment Records and Unidentified Cash Account Ledger, 1816-1817, 1864. Accession Local Government Records, Amelia County.
1 volume (84 pages). Amelia County Militia enrollment records and unidentified cash account ledger, 1816-1817, 1864, contains a militia enrollment ledger, 1864, containing enrollment lists of persons eligible for militia service, including persons who applied for exemption from militia duty, persons applied to be detailed, persons exempt from militia duty on the basis of number of slaves owned or occupation, list of conscripts in Amelia County, and a list of free negroes. Lists include date of enrollment, name, age, occupation, birth place, height, eye color, hair color, skin complexion, and how disposed i.e, whether exemption was approved or disapproved, reason for exemption, whether detailed or not. Also recorded was a list of deserters and absentees in Amelia County, list of persons forwarded to Camp Lee in Petersburg; monthly reports providing lists of conscripts, persons exempt, and deserters. Loose papers include circulars requesting full accounts of all male free blacks, of all slaves impressed in the county; and a request to post notices as soon as possible. Also a list of names with numbers beside them, possibly indicating number of slaves owned. First 10 pages of the volume is a business ledger, 1816-1817, possibly of Benjamin Bragg of Amelia County.
Anable, Gloria H. Miscellaneous receipts, 1770-1783. Accession 42663.
Collection of Gloria Hollister Anable containing of several receipts signed by prominent Virginia statesmen of the 18th century which were collected by Union Chaplain Reverend Philander Hatch Hollister of the 29th Connecticut Infantry following the Confederate evacuation of Richmond. According to a note by the donor, Gloria Hollister Anable, her paternal grandfather found the signatures in receipt books in the Virginia State House and sent them back home to Stamford, Connecticut. Included are certificates signed by the following individuals: John Randolph, Charles Tompkins, Thomas Jefferson, John Montgomery, John Marshall, William Wirt, James Monroe, B[olling] Stark, Edward Carrington, Robert Vance, John Washington, and Richard Lee. Most of the receipts relate to wages received in the House of Burgesses, House of Delegates, Privy Council, etc.
Includes a black and white photograph of Reverend Hollister and a photograph of the original framed receipts collected by him. Ancell family. Papers, 1788-1909. Accession 38783..225 cubic feet. Papers, 1788-1909, of the Ancell family and related families of Fluvanna County, Virginia; and Ohio, containing accounts, articles of agreement, Bible records, a military commission, deeds, genealogical notes, letters, military orders, a plat, promissory notes, and receipts.
Correspondence principally concerns Ancell, Pettit and Winn family matters and business transactions and the Civil War. Includes the Civil War letters, 1862-1865, of John J. Ancell (1831-1894) received from and sent to family members, friends, and other soldiers and concerning family matters, camp conditions, troop movements, and the weather.; and military orders written for John J. Ancell and a military commission from Governor Henry A. Wise to John J.
Collection contains Ancell family correspondence, 1840-1885, concerning family matters and family health and illness. There is also correspondence concerning John J. Ancell's duties as an officer of the Freemasons fraternal organization; deeds and articles of agreement, 1788-1837 for the purchase of land and slaves; a plat for land in Flouvanna County; receipts, promissory notes, and accounts, 1853-1861, of the Ancell, Pettit and Winn families; and trustee accounts of William B. Pettit for Mary E. Pettit (1796-1859). Collection also contains Bible records and genealogical notes for the for the Bugg-Shores, Ancell, and Winn families.
Andrews, John T. Letters, 1864-1865.
Accession 51571. Letters, 1864-1865, written by John T. Andrews (1842-1916) to his family in Schuyler County, New York, while he was serving with the 179th New York Infantry in Dinwiddie County, Petersburg, and Alexandria, Virginia. Topics include a detailed account of the Battle of Boydton Plank Road, troop movements, skirmishes, constructing breastworks, and the bravery of the United States Colored Troops.
He also writes about his court-martial for disobeying orders, the interference of Colonel William M. Gregg (1820-1881) on his behalf, and his eventual promotion to second lieutenant.
Other subjects include the siege of Petersburg, witnessing explosions at Fort Stedman, Confederate advances, and his unit's readiness in the event of attack. There is one post-war letter written where Andrews invites his father and uncle to visit him while he is stationed in Alexandria, and he writes about the eagerness of the troops to return home.
Anthony family. Papers, 1861-1870. Accession 21606..10 cubic feet. Papers, 1861-1870, of the Anthony family of Bedford County, Virginia, including letters from Charles Lewis Anthony (1837-1922), who served in Company B, 10th Heavy Battalion, of Virginia Artillery, to his father Abner Anthony (1790-1884), his mother Almira Anthony (1820-1893), brother Pinkney Anthony (1843-1936), and sister Bettie Banks Anthony (1839-1914).
Also includes letters from Pinkney Anthony, Charles Lewis Anthony’s brother and also a member of the same unit, to his father, mother, and sister. Letters give detailed accounts of military life, including a tour of duty at Jamestown, Virginia. Also contains letters from James Lewis Arthur (1834-1893) and Milton C. Arthur (1838-1864), brothers of Almira Anthony, who served in the 58th Virginia Infantry.
Other letters are to or from other members of the Anthony family in Bedford County, and discuss personal and religious matters during the Civil War and Reconstruction. Anthony family. Papers, 1785-1952. Accession 35647 and 35648. 4.95 cubic feet Papers, 1785-1952, of the Anthony family of Campbell County, Virginia, containing letters, accounts and receipts, estate papers, and subject files.
Letters are primarily to Charles Anthony (1793-1884), his daughter Callie J. Brandon (1839-1886), and his granddaughter Charles Anthony (1883-1966) and discuss family news, births, marriages, and deaths in the community, farming, travel, health, and the Civil War.
Of particular note is a letter, 8 May 1862, concerning the Monitor-Merrimac battle. Estate papers include information on the administrations of the estates of William Black, Achilles M. Douglas, John L.
Douglas, William Frazier, Charles Terrell, Christopher Urquhart, and John West, Sr. Subject files contain affidavits, bonds, commissions, and oaths, contracts and agreements, deeds, diplomas and certificates, depositions, an 1835 muster roll, obituaries, plats and surveys, poetry and lyrics, post office drafts, powers of attorney, promissory notes, genealogical information, school exercises, miscellaneous suit papers, summonses, and a copy of the will, 1801, of Elizabeth Anthony. Apperson, John S. Apperson and Black diaries, 1847-1865. Accession 28992, Miscellaneous reel 535-536.
Diary, 1861-1865, of John S. Apperson (1837-1908) detailing his Civil War experiences as a hospital steward in the Stonewall Brigade, transcribed by Dr. Bean (1891-1974); and diary, 1847 and 1849, of Dr. Harvey Black (1827-1888), describing Black’s military service in Virginia and Mexico in 1847 and a private journey through (West) Virginia, Ohio, and Wisconsin in 1849.
Arlington County (Va.). Circuit Court. Courts Martial Book, Military District of Alexandria, 1864-1865. Accession Local Government Records, Arlington County. 1 volume and 2 microfilm reels.
Arlington County (Va.) Courts Martial Book, Military District of Alexandria, 1864-1865, contains general orders convening the court martial, lists of the detail for the court, special orders appointing new or additional members, and lists of the soldiers who appeared before the court. Information recorded for each soldier includes name, company, regiment, witnesses, summons sent to appear, date case commenced, date case finished, and date case sent to headquarters.
The soldiers are all from Union or United States army units. Volume also includes [Census of the Black Population of Alexandria County], Surnames Q-Y and B only, 1865, recording name, color (black, mulatto, quadroon, octoroon), sex, age, status, occupation, and number of district; as well as summaries and estimates by district numbers 1-8 and 'outside city' of the numbers of persons in each of these categories. Arlington County (Va.). Circuit Court. Book of Records Containing the Marriages and Deaths That Have Occurred Within the Official Jurisdiction of Rev.
Gladwin Together With Any Biographical or Other Reminiscences That May Be Collected, 1863-1869. Accession Local Government Records, Arlington County. (143 pages) and 1 microfilm reel. Arlington County (Va.) Book of Records Containing the Marriages and Deaths That Have Occurred Within the Official Jurisdiction of Rev. Gladwin Together With Any Biographical or Other Reminiscences That May Be Collected, 1863-1869, is a marriage and death register kept by the Superintendents of Contrabands in Alexandria, Virginia, during and directly after the Civil War. Reverend Albert Gladwin was the first Superintendent of Contrabands and his successors kept up the register after his departure. The book records death, burial, and marriage information about freedmen and free blacks in the Alexandria area.
Arter family. Letters, 1864,1919. Accession 33913. Ashby-Thornton-Dickerson family. Genealogical notes. Accession 32179.
1 volume (111 pages) and 87 leaves. In part photocopies.
Genealogical notes of the Ashby, Thornton, and Dickerson families of Virginia, and includes information on the Camp, Fitzhugh, and Strother families. Collection consists of a volume compiled by Mary Ashby Camp (d. 1930) containing clippings, genealogical notes, a biographical sketch of Captain John Ashby (1740-1815), abstracts of letters and Bible records, and anecdotes concerning the American Revolution; clippings; a pamphlet concerning the death of Confederate Brigadier General Turner Ashby (1828-1862) written by Thomas D. Ranson (1843-1918); material related to Covenant Presbyterian Church, Petersburg, Virginia; and a fictional story by Alice Ashby Coghill entitled “Twice Captured,” concerning Culpeper County, Virginia, during the Civil War. Geographic areas in which the families lived include Culpeper and Stafford Counties and Petersburg, Virginia, and England. Aspinwall, S. Letters, 1862 Accession 44034.
1 leaf and 3 pages. Letters, 14 March 1862 and 13 October 1862, from S.
Aspinwall, a Union soldier, to his sister. Aspinwall’s first letter describes his trip to Alexandria, Virginia, where his brigade relieved General Oliver O. Howard’s men, and the building of a bridge near Alexandria and discusses encountering fugitive slaves from Manassas, one of whom acted as a scout for Union forces.
Aspinwall’s second letter describes the weather at Camp Parole, Annapolis, Maryland, and his boredom with waiting to be returned to his regiment after being held as a prisoner of war by Confederate forces. Atkinson, Neville Lemmon.
Reminiscences, 1978. Accession 29947.
Reminiscences, 1978, of Neville Lemmon Atkinson (1888-1988) of Fauquier County, Virginia, concerning trips from her home in Baltimore, Maryland to to her grandfather Richard Henry Dulany’s (1820-1906) house “Welbourne” in Loudoun County, Virginia. She describes life there and in adjoining Fauquier County, comments on family visits and horse rides, and relates some of her grandfather’s anecdotes about the Civil War when he was colonel of the 7th Virginia Cavalry. Report, 17 March 1863. Accession 50128. Report, 17 March 1863, titled 'Geological Memoir with Practical Details on the Brines and Licks of Virginia' written by W. Atkinson, lieutenant in the Engineer Corps of the Confederate Army. The report discusses salt deposits in Virginia, including the counties of Amherst, Bedford, Botetourt, Lee, Mecklenburg, Montgomery, Pittsylvania, and Roanoke, and in what would become West Virginia, including the counties of Mercer and Monroe.
Atwood, White and Company (Philadelphia, Pa.). Letter, 1 February 1861. Accession 41114. Letter, 1 February 1861, from Atwood, White and Company, dry goods merchants in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, to D. Hopkins in Lexington, Kentucky, referring to some business matters but principally concerning the view of Pennsylvanians for Virginians at the start of the Civil War.
The author writes of the friendly regard of Pennsylvanians toward their border states and their irritation toward states further from Pennsylvania. He also writes his opinions on the Fugitive Slave Laws and the Republican Party, and the arrest of the Harper’s Ferry perpetrators in Pennsylvania. Augusta County (Va.) Circuit Court. Volume of Free Negro and Slave Records, 1866. Accession Local Government Records, Augusta County.
Augusta County, Virginia, Volume of Free Negro and Slave Records, 1866, contains three separate records in one volume. The first is a List of Quarter Masters Stores etc., at Wisewell Barracks and Hospital (1865), the second is a register of former slaves registering their marriages and their children as provided for by the change to Virginia's marriage law (1866), and the final a list of indentures of minor freed children (1866). Avent, Tamlin. Letter, 9 March 1869. Accession 33618. 4 leaves Photocopy.
Letter, 9 March 1869, from Tamlin Avent (b. 1800) of Greensville County, Virginia, to Mary Jane Greenway Avery Smith of Warren County, Mississippi, discussing how things have changed in Greensville County since she moved away, and commenting on a plantation she still owns in the county. He also writes about the effects of the Civil War on his family, his plantation, and Greensville County. There is also a typescript copy of the letter.
Babcock, Horace G. Letters, 11 October and 20 December 1861.
Accession 51503. Letters, 11 October and 2 December 1861, from Horace G. 1836-1865) of Company I, 13th Pennsylvania Reserves (42nd Pennsylvania Infantry), in Fairfax County, Virginia, to Charlotte 'Lottie' Lasher of McKean County, Pennsylvania. Babcock describes military life and combat with the enemy, including nearly being wounded; worries that there are cowards in his regiment; comments on flooding back in McKean County; and states that he saw General George B. McClellan (1826-1885). Babcock mentions a house was taken over by the military for its use. Bagby, George W.
Letters, 1865-1872. Accession 43577. Letters, 1865-1872, to George W. Bagby, Tappahannock, Virginia, from family, friends, and business associates. Include a letter, June 1865, from his nephew, Lewis R. Boswell, prisoner at Fort Delaware, regarding his ill health, diet, and asking for help in obtaining his release and that of Jarold D. Topics of other letters include health, the estate of Nancy Radford, family, death of a family member in the war, and insurance.
Bahlmann, William F. Down in the ranks. Accession 25783. Memoirs of William F.
Bahlmann entitled 'Down in the ranks' detailing Bahlmann's exploits while serving as captain of Company K, 22nd Virginia Infantry. Topics include Bahlmann’s military appointments and elections, company movements and relocations, troop engagements, and a brief history of the company. Bahlmann offers a comprehensive view of the life of the soldier in the Civil War through his description of camp life, food and supplies, death of comrades, interaction of Union and Confederate soldiers, health and medical care, and the battle of Droop Mountain.
Includes a description of Bahlmann’s capture and imprisonment at Camp Chase, Ohio, June - July 1862. Record is a typed transcript. In 1970 the memoirs were published in the Journal of the Greenbrier Historical Society. The collection also includes a copy of the pamphlet, “The Battle of Droop Mountain” by Dallas B.
Baker, Joseph D. Letter, 9 July 1862. Accession 51502. Letter, 9 July 1862, from Joseph D. Baker (1839-1864), Company F, 57th Pennsylvania Infantry, in camp near Harrison's Landing, Charles City County, Virginia, to his brother James Baker (b.
1846), Mercer County, Pennsylvania, commenting on the Seven Days' Battles and the shift of the Army of the Potomac to Harrison's Landing at the end of the Peninsular Campaign. Baker comments on the regiment's casualties and captured. He asks his brother to get John Albin to write him and tells his brother that he should not enlist, but stay home. Baker comments on the commanders of the regiment. Civil War letters, 1861-1864. Accession 28705, Miscellaneous reel 223. Typescript copies of letters, 1861-1864, from A.
How Much Money Can You Make PACcoin PAC Mining. Tedford Barclay (1844-1915) to his mother and sister discussing the activities of his unit in the Valley of Virginia and engagements around Staunton, Winchester, Stone Bridge, Manassas, Front Royal, Chancellorsville, Hogenstown, and Brandy Station. Barclay comments on camp life and conditions and on the death of General Stonewall Jackson and the changes in organization as a result and upon the assumption of command of the Union army by Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885). Barker, Moses. Letters, 1861-1865.
Accession 29385. Letters, 1861-1865, of Moses Barker (1825-1865) of Company A, 38th Virginia Infantry, to his wife Sarah (Sallie) J. 1829-1885) of Pittsylvania County, Virginia, discussing camp life, religion, his children, family news, and personal news.
Barker describes picket duties, rations he receives, and religious services he attends. He discusses news of acquaintances in the army and asks after family and friends in Pittsylvania County. Barker offers advice concerning the education and upbringing of his children. He also mentions the battle of Big Bethel and fighting around Petersburg, Virginia. Collection includes a letter from Barker to his daughters Martha J. And Tabitha A.
Barker providing fatherly advice. Many of the letters are nearly illegible. Bartlett, Chauncey Leroy. Letter, 14 September 1862.
Accession 41803. Letter, 14 September 1862, from Chauncey Leroy Bartlett (b. 1827), 6th Ohio Cavalry, to an unidentified individual. Bartlett writes about troop movements through Virginia, including through White Sulphur Springs and Manassas to Bull Run, burning enemy wagons and taking prisoners, skirmishes fought, and he gives his opinions concerning General Franz Sigel (1824-1902), slavery and abolition, and Southern independence.
Bates, James Allen. Papers, 1864-1868. Accession 41008, Miscellaneous reel 4343. Papers, 1864-1868, of James Allen Bates of the 166th Company, 2nd Battalion, Veteran Reserve Corps, stationed at Hammond General Hospital at Point Lookout, Maryland, and of the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen, and Abandoned Lands in Richmond, Virginia, containing letters, returnes, passes, orders, and rolls. Correspondence, orders, passes, returns, and rolls concern the Veteran Reserve Corps at Hammond General Hospital, including the 166th Company. Papers also detail Bates’ service in Virginia as part of the Freemen’s Bureau, and concern the administrative operations of the agency. There is also correspondence regarding Bates’ brevet promotions, efforts for a regular army assignment, and his order, while captain of the 43rd infantry stationed at Fort Wayne, Michigan, for Virginia bacon.
Battlefield Markers Association (Richmond, Va.). Records, 1924-1956. (bulk: 1924-1930) Accession 24520..45 cubic feet. Photocopies, carbon copies, photographs, and photonegative.
Baugh, William Fielding. Letters home, 1861-1865 Accession 41091. 1 volume (120 pages). Volume of the transcribed letters, 1861-1865, of Lieutenant William Fielding Baugh, Company G, 61st Virginia Infantry. Letters are principally to his wife Mary Frances “Pinkie” Coker Baugh of Dinwiddie County and concern family matters, battles, casualties, military life, camp conditions, troop movement and placement, and the weather.
Transcribed by Roy N. Cain in 2003. Includes a brief biography in the prologue, a few copies of letters and envelopes, and a photograph of his tombstone in Dinwiddie County, Virginia.
Transcriptions published as Letters Home: Letters of Lt. Baugh CSA Co. Infantry, 1861-1865 and also titled Letters Home: Presenting the Surviving Correspondence of Lt. Baugh CSA Co.
G 61st Virginia Infantry ANV., 3rd printing. There is an updated 5th printing which contains more letters than located in this collection. Baugh, William Fielding.
Papers, 1861-1905 (bulk: 1861-1865). Accession 45019..4 cubic feet. In part photocopies. Papers, 1861-1905, of William Fielding Baugh of Company G, 61st Virginia Infantry, consisting of letters to his wife Mary Frances “Pinkie” Coker Baugh (b. 1842) and to his mother Amanda Caroline Rose Baugh (b. 1816) detailing Baugh’s life as an officer in the 61st Virginia including descriptions of the battles of Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Bristoe Station, and the Crater. Baugh records camp news, discusses family matters, and notes efforts to get leaves of absence.
He comments on clothing, food, and supplies. Collection include some letters written by family members to Baugh. Most letters are published in Letters Home: Letters of Lt. Infantry 1861-1865 also titled Letters Home: Presenting the Surviving Correspondence of Lt. Baugh CSA Co. G 61st Virginia Infantry ANV transcribed by Roy N. Cain (5th printing).
The following letters are not in the published volume: Amanda C. Baugh to William F. Baugh, 25 March 1861; Amanda C. Baugh to William F. Baugh, 15 January 1862; William F.
Baugh to Mary Frances “Pinkie” Coker, [28 March 1862?]; William F. Baugh to Amanda C.
Baugh, 19 December 1863; Virginius N. Baugh to William F. Baugh, 12 April 1864; H. Reid to William F. Baugh, 3 October 1903.
The original of one of the letters dated 4 December 1905 is located at the Eleanor S. Brockenbrough Library, the Museum of the Confederacy, Richmond, Virginia. Papers, 1862-1883.
Accession 24868. Photostats (negative). Papers, 1862-1883, of W. Baylor (1825-1894) of Petersburg, Virginia, consistiong of: a commission, 5 February 1862, as assistant surgeon in the Confederate army from Secretary of War Judah P. Benjamin (1811-1884); oath of allegiance, 6 April 1865, of W. Baylor; two letters, 7 September 1866 and 8 November 1866, from George A.
Otis (1830-1881), assistant surgeon-general, to Baylor transmitting abstracts of cases treated at the Confederate hospital in Petersburg during October 1863 and June 1864; and a letter, 20 April 1883, from Charles H. Crane (1825-1883), surgeon-general, sending Baylor a copy of the Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion, part III, volume 2. Beall, John Bramblett. Letters, 1861-1862.
Accession 43209. 50 pages and 2 photographs. Letters, 1861-1862, of John Bramblett Beall (1833-1917) of Paulding County, Georgia, and the 19th Georgia Infantry, to his future wife Mary Jane Merrell (1841-1922), written while he was encamped near Lynchburg, Manassas, and Occoquan, Virginia. Subjects include his health, opinions of the war and leadership of the Confederate army, loneliness, homesickness, the sick and wounded men under his command, the disruption in mail service, future troop movements and engagements, and women’s aid in the war effort. He also gives a description of Lynchburg, and writes about his duties as an officer, lack of clothing and supplies, and visits with friends and news of fellow soldiers.
He requests Merrell to write more, encloses poetry to her, and reminiscences about their time together. Also included is a 1904 letter concerning genealogy on the Beall family, as well as an unidentified tintype and a photograph of Beall when he was in his later years.
Bean, Thomas. Reminiscences, no date. Accession 40404. Reminiscences, no date, of Thomas Bean (b.
1833) of Easton, Massachusetts detailing his capture and imprisonment during the Civil War while serving with the 39th Massachusetts Volunteers. These reminiscences were apparently dictated to, and written by, an unknown individual. They begin with his capture by Confederate soldiers during the Battle of Weldon Railroad in August 1864, and detail his subsequent imprisonment at Belle Isle and Libby Prisons in Richmond, as well as the military prison at Salisbury, North Carolina.
They include details of the searches to which the prisoners were subjected, rations allowed, descriptions of the buildings and grounds, and the conditions which they endured. A hand-drawn map of Belle Isle prison is also included. Beard, Eveline Medora Yeager Recollections, 4 November 1926. Accession 30381. 6 leaves Photocopies.
Recollections, 4 November 1926, of Eveline Medora Yeager Beard (1852-1934) of Pocahontas County, West Virginia, describing her family’s life in Pocahontas County, West Virginia, during the Civil War, including details of the battle of Allegheny Mountain (Camp Allegheny) 13 December 1861 fought on the family farm, visits with Confederate troops encamped there, and encounters with Union forces operating in the area. Beard also provides information on her family during this time, stating that two brothers served in Company G, 31st Virginia Infantry. These recollections first appeared as an article in the Pocahontas Times 4 November 1926. Beard, William M. Essays, 26 July 1952. Accession 50647.
Essays, 26 July 1952, written by William M. Beard (1888-1976), Commander-in-Chief of the Sons of Confederate Veterans, and an unidentified author, on religion in the Confederacy. The essays were written in commemoration of the 91st Manassas Battlefield celebration. Topics include support of the Confederacy by various denominations, the suffering endured by their congregations, destruction to their churches, the clergy's loyal oratory and their service in the Confederate army, the spirit of piety in its troops, and the work of Archbishop Jean-Marie Odin (1800-1870), as well as the American Bible Society. Beauregard, G. Papers, 1862-1863.
Accession 21324. Photostats (negative).
File copies of letters and telegrams, 1862-1863, of General G. Beauregard (1818-1893) of Louisiana discussing the strategic importance of Corinth, Mississippi; his replacement in command of the western army by General Braxton Bragg (1817-1876); the military situation in the western Confederacy; Beauregard’s health; Beauregard’s comments on the defense of Mobile, Alabama, and Charleston, South Carolina; and his review on the possibility of retaking New Orleans, Louisiana, from the Union army; defects of Confederate iron clads. Also includes an invoice of ordnance and orndance stores. Beauregard, G. Papers, 1862-1863. Accession 22054. 3 leaves and 25 pages.
File copies of letters and telegrams, 1862-1863, of General G. Beauregard (1818-1893) of Louisiana discussing the strategic importance of Corinth, Mississippi; his replacement in command of the western army by General Braxton Bragg (1817-1876); the military situation in the western Confederacy; Beauregard’s health; Beauregard’s comments on the defense of Mobile, Alabama, and Charleston, South Carolina; and his review on the possibility of retaking New Orleans, Louisiana, from the Union army; and defects of Confederate iron clads View the. Beckley, Alfred. Papers, 1862.
Accession 38223..25 cubic feet. In part photocopies. Papers, 1862, of Alfred Beckley of Beckley, West Virginia, including a bible, diary, and parole. Diary, January- December 1862, includes information about Beckley’s resignation from the Confederate Army, his arrest and imprisonment at Camp Chase, Ohio, names of others confined with him in prison, his attempts to obtain a parole, his release into the custody of David Tod, Governor of Ohio, and then his return home. Diary also notes some of the battles that were raging in Richmond, Virginia, Fayette and Raleigh Counties, West Virginia, and includes some personal financial information. Collection also includes a transcript of the diary and Beckley’s prison parole, 18 June 1862.
Bell, Miller G. Letter, 3 May 1864. Accession 50833. Letter, 3 May 1864, from Miller G. 1841-1880), Company E, 3rd New Jersey Cavalry, in Washington D.C., to his mother Rebecca T. 1815) of Hunterdon County, New Jersey, sending news about himself and the regiment, including new of family and friends; asking for family news; discussing military life, including having to have his horse shot and being a body guard for General Ambrose Burnside; and speculating on his company's next movements. Bennett, Edgar B.
Letter, 13 November 1864. Accession 50673. Letter, 13 November 1864, from Edgar B. Bennett (1842-1918) of the 1st Connecticut Heavy Artillery to Mary E.
'Minnie' Marsh (Bennett) (b. 1849) of Connecticut describing the conditions in the lines in front of Petersburg, Virginia. He also notes that General William Sherman has captured Atlanta, Georgia, and is moving towards Charleston, South Carolina, and adds that it is the job of the army in front of Petersburg to occupy Robert E. Lee's army so that it cannot move against Sherman. He adds that he is disappointed in the presidential election. Includes ribbon bits.
Berkeley family. Papers, 1811-1897. Accession 36355, Miscellaneous Reel 2. Papers, 1811-1897, of the Berkeley family of Aldie, Loudoun County, Virginia, containing correspondence pertaining to the following members of the Berkeley family: Lewis Berkeley, his sons, Edmund and William N. Berkeley, and Francis L. Other correspondents include Thomas Griffin, A.D. Smith, George G.
Thompson, P.M. Thompson, Beverley Tucker, and William Waller.
The letters are mostly of a personal nature, discusssing college life, family news, farming, politics, and the Civil War. Contains bi-monthly reports from the College of William and Mary, Virginia, for Edmund and William N. Berlin, Ira, editor.
Records of southern plantations from emancipation to the great migration. Series A, Selections from the Rare Book, Manuscript, and Special Collections Library, Duke University, Part 2, North Carolina and Virginia plantations, 2001. Accession 40490, Miscellaneous reels 2720-2745. Collection consists of papers and records of postbellum tobacco and cotton plantations in North Carolina and Virginia, dating 1863-1915 and containing personal and family correspondence, store account books, rental account books, farm ledgers, legal records, cash books, and a diary. Contains information on the credit system that developed following the war, postbellum store owners and the accounts of freedmen, the Freedmen's Bureau, the southern labor system including African American wage labor, sharecroppers, the African American experience following the Civil War, African American politicians, slavery, abolitionism and abolitionists, and Civil War, Reconstruction and New South politics. Bernard, George S. Papers, 1861, no date.
Accession 31760. 7 leaves and 29 pages.
Papers, 1861 and no date, of George S. Bernard of Petersburg, Virginia, consisting of letters, 1861, from Pattie B. Cowles (1843-1885) of Petersburg to Bernard while serving in the Petersburg Rifles (later Company E, 12th Virginia Infantry) stationed in Norfolk, Virginia, describing life in Petersburg in the early days of the Civil War; providing social and family news and gossip; declaring the devotion of the women of Petersburg to the cause and to the men who have left to fight; commenting on Alabama and South Carolina troops which have passed through Petersburg; and stating that President Jefferson Davis (1808-1889) passed through Petersburg. Papers also include an undated speech praising the men and women of the Confederacy and their continuing contributions. It is addressed to “General and Confederate veterans” and was delivered probably to a group of Confederate veterans meeting in Charleston, South Carolina. Beverley, Jane Eliza Carter.
Reminiscences, 1907. Accession 34725. Reminscences, 1907, of Jane Eliza Carter Beverley (1821-1915) concerning her childhood at Kinloch, in Fauquier County, Virginia and adult life at Avenel, also in Fauquier County, Virginia. Includes information on Civil War action in the surrounding area, and her personal recollections of General Robert E. Lee (1807-1870). These reminiscences were transcribed by Robert Beverley Herbert (b. 1879) in 1907.
Beville, Ella. Notebook, 1861-1862.
Accession 30187. Notebook, 1861-1862, of Ella Beville (1847-1932) of Dinwiddie County, Virginia, containing an essay on the cause of the Civil War; obituaries for Anna Maria Beville (1842-1862) of Dinwiddie County and James T. 1862) of Lowndes County, Mississippi; poems written to Anna Beville from friends at Mount Liberty Female Seminary in Dinwiddie County; poems to Anna Beville written by Ella; and a list of names. Bidgood, Joseph Virginius. Letters, 1910-1911.
Accession 21445. Photostats (negative) Letter, 5 April 1910, from Joseph Virginius Bidgood (1841-1921), Secretary of the Virginia Military Records Office, to May C. Black (Amrhein) (1885-1957) of Richmond, Virginia, concerning the Civil War military record of Bernard James Black (1835-1892) of Petersburg and Richmond.
Also, letter, 19 October 1911, from Adjutant General’s Office, Washington D.C. Black concerning the War of 1812 military record of Obadiah Hawkins (ca. 1770-1828) of Prince Edward and Nottoway Counties.
Billingsly, Joseph. Letters, December 1862.
Accession 38567. Letters, 25 and 26 December 1862, from Private Joseph Billingsly (1844-1913) of Company F, 137th Pennsylvania Infantry, stationed at Camp Eaton, Aquia Creek, Virginia, to his sister, Sarah Ann Billingsly (1841-1891) in Butler County, Pennsylvania. Billingsly outlines his military duties, describes the condition of his winter quarters, and discusses the weather. Billingsly also tells of washing clothes on Christmas Day and asks about his family.
Bills, George. Letter, 27 April 1862. Accession 38825. 1 leaf and 4 pages. Letter, 27 April 1862, from George Bills (d.
1862) of Company C, 6th Vermont Infantry, camped near Yorktown, Virginia, to his friend Calvin in Vermont, commenting on camplife and soldiering. He states that the army is raising breastworks and that sharpshooters fire at anyone who shows his head. Bills writes that soldiers often talk about when they will be heading home and that he expects they will be paid soon.
Bills also sends Calvin a power of attorney and some apple tree seeds. He asks Calvin to send a fine comb because of lice and ticks. There is also a transcript. Binns family.
Papers, 1763-1867. Accession 21485. In part, photostats. Papers, 1763-1867, of the Binns family pertaining to Thomas Binns of New Kent County, Virginia, and his descendants. Papers include birth and marriage information; a list of slaves owned by various family members; a letter from Charles H. Binns, Jr., a Confederate soldier in Captain A.
Jones’ Company, Virginia Artillery Regiment, who was imprisoned at Point Lookout, Maryland; and a letter from Annie Binns concerning a Confederate Memorial Day service she participated in as a student at Virginia Female Institute (later known as Stuart Hall) in Staunton, Virginia, in 1867. Birdsong, James C. Reminiscences of Civil War service, no date. Accession 31918. 8 leaves Photocopies. Reminiscences of Civil War service by James C. Birdsong (1843-1918) of Petersburg, Virginia, and Raleigh, North Carolina, relating his enlistment in Company B, 12th Virginia Infantry, and his service in Norfolk, Virginia, where he witnessed the battle between the Monitor and the Merrimac, and in the battles of Malvern Hill, Second Manassas, Chancellorsville, Spotsylvania Court House, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, and the surrender at Appomattox Court House.
Birdsong also mentions his being a prisoner of war.
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