|
Home Page
Visiting
Pilgrim Hall
Calendar
of Events
Join!
Museum
Shop
The Pilgrim
Story
Thanksgiving
Beyond the
Pilgrim Story
New
Exhibits
Collections
Learning
To Our Friends
Links
|
|
THANKSGIVING
"OVER THERE" |
*** |
Civil War
Voices from the Front |
|
1861 account printed in Plymouth's Old
Colony Memorial newspaper
"Camp Butler, Newport News, Va., Nov. 17, 1861
Mr. Editor : -- It may be interesting to the folks at home to know how the soldiers from
Plymouth passed Thanksgiving, and how they enjoyed themselves. I cannot answer for
Plymouth volunteers in other places, but certainly those who are quartered here, spent the
day as pleasantly as could be expected, under the circumstances.
Last Sunday night Gov. Andrew's proclamation was read to the Battalion, and also
the order recommending that all Massachusetts men every where should, as far as
practicable observe the day. Accordingly, some patriotic member of the company
conceived the idea of having a Thanksgiving dinner for as many of the company as chose to
partake thereof. Mr. W. C. Barnes undertook to arrange matters, and have everything
in readiness. A goodly number of names were obtained, and at noon,
on Thursday, twenty-eight men fell in, and marched to the hall on the shore. I
wish you could have seen that hall. It is a long, low building, unfinished inside.
It is a long time since we have seen such a table as that, or indeed, a table of
any kind; nevertheless, we managed to wait patiently until the Captain arrived. As
we sat there waiting, every one seemed to be thinking of home, and many thoughts were
uttered about the friends at home, and many were the conjectures as to what they were
doing at that particular time.
When the Captain made his appearance, word was given to 'go in.' We actually sat
down to a table with a white cloth, loaded with all manner of good things, and handled
knives, forks and spoons, like civilized men. Moreover, those who wanted it, drank
cider out of a tumbler. The men ate heartily, and yet seemed to remember that too
great a change of diet would be injurious. Turkey, chicken pie, and pudding
disappeared, and our host seemed to enjoy it as well as ourselves."
1861 letter from [probably] Harlow Vail, Co. A 124th
Illinois Infantry from Kewanee (Henry County), Illinois
Camp Nevin, Ky, Dec 9, 61
Dear Sisters Tirzah & Sarah
I have read your kind letter Friday morn. This morn we martched 13 miles towards the
enemys camp & we have had a good time martching today. The weather was beautiful &
warm more like summer than like winter. The suney South is beautiful & I think that I
should like to live here very mutch, who would not like to live in a land of sun shine. I
would, were it not for the rebels that abound, not the kind you speak about. You ask how I
spent Thanksgiving well I had -- a bully dinner hard bread salt pork or bacon as we call
it & coffee. That was the extent of my thanksgiving dinner, during the day I thought
of you at home having your nice dinners & wishing mabe that you might present a plate
to some of us soldiers filled with some of your own goodies...
there is a lady in Chicago that says to me when you write to the Vaill girls give my love
to them & send as mutch of your own as you are a mind so well [ ] I presume that you
would like to know her name well if I must tell, why Nettie Worth. My love
is put in here somewhere & you will have to look sharp to find it. I know that it is
in here & I send you a sprig of a ceder tree that I broke of from a tree in
Elizabethtown. I sent Nettie B flowers the other day, they were very pretty before I
pressed them. One thing about this sprig it was picked in the town where Abraham Lincoln
was born in. I did intend to get a piece of the house but now I am away from there 13
miles. & I do not know when I shall be permitted to be there again. One day last week
& by accident came acrost some of my old school mates they were in the Wisconsin 1st
& we had a good visit of about two hours & one of the Boys took dinner with me we
had a splendid dinner coffee hard bread cheese, soda crackers & butter, & for
desert salt bacon.
Last eve I was on guard & after I came off from my relief I wrote till ½ pt 12 to
finish two letters one to Nettie & the other was to Netties sister in N.Y. I get
good long letters from her. She is real good to me she writes often to me, & gives me
good advice & what is the best of all she remembers me in her prayers. I am in a
rather comical position as I am writing laying with my face downwards my shoes off &
my feet sticking up against the front pole of our tent...
Well I shall have to haste & write as I begin to hear the drummers call to reville
will sound in a minute & in a short time we will have taps & then to bed all must
go to sleep. No more this time. HBV
1861 letter from Zebina Y. Bickford, Private in the 6th Vermont Infantry, Company D to
Miss Emily Bickford, Barton Landing (Orleans County), Vermont. Zebina enlisted on
October 15, 1861. This letter was written on November 28, 1861 from Camp Griffin,
Virginia. Zebina died on April 30, 1862. This letter is extremely long but
beautifully detailed.
It is Thanksgiving Day and I have not much to do but write and thinking
perhaps you did not hear from Virginia any oftener than you wished to I thought perhaps a
few lines from some of us cousins would be very acceptable. If not do not answer this, if
so answer it if you will. It is just about the time that Vermonters are taking their
thanksgiving supper and I have no doubt you are enjoying it first rate. Well so are we
soldier boys. You may think that we are home sick today but it is not so, not with me at
any rate for we received a box of clothing and a few nicknacks consisting of eatables,
from Glover last night and that makes a very good thanksgiving for us. The clothing is the
best part of it however. It came just the right time we were all wishing it would come the
night before thanksgiving. Our company are gone out on picket guard that is all the well
ones and if I had been able I should have gone with them, but I have been sick with the
measles and was not able to go. The people in Vermont all seemed to think that we came
here in the most healthy season of the year but that the third came in the most unhealthy
season, but I would rather have come when the third reg't came than to have come when we
did. The third reg't has lost only seven men by disease although they came here in the
hottest season of the year, that in the month of July. While the sixth that came out here
only six weeks ago has lost six men and has about three hundred more on the sick list. In
our company there are eighty two privates and there are forty five of them on the sick
list. Only one dangerously sick. I think that if those who have died here had had proper
care they might have lived and returned to their friends at home or at least sold their
lives on the battle field. One poor fellow that died while I was in the hospital while he
was dying said to a friend who was standing by tell my father & mother that if I had
had good care I should have lived to have seen them again. Our boys had good care but it
was our tent boys that took care of us, often have I heard those in the hospital say that
if they had the care that company D boys had they would not be so sick. There has not been
a single death in our company yet for all there are so many sick. Supper is ready so I
can't write any more now.
Part second six oclock Thursday eve
Thanksgiving supper is over you cant imagine what a lot of fine things we had for supper,
so I must tell you. In the first place we had a piece of sour bread and salt pork. This is
what we usually have although the bread is not always sour. We generally have good bread
and of late enough of it, but when we first came here we were kept pretty hungry we did
not have half enough to eat and our meat a part of the time was not cooked at all. Well I
almost forgot I was telling you what I had for supper. After the bread and meat I had some
of mother's cookies and doughnuts that came in our box. They tasted a good deal like
Vermont victuals. Well you must wait a few moments until I can read a couple letters that
have just come in. I have got my letters read and I will now continue my writing. One of
my letters was from Sarah & Alice. They gave me a very cordial to come and spend
Thanksgiving with them but the letter was one day to late for Thanksgiving day is passed
and evening has come. Therefore I shall have to wait until next year before I accept their
invitation. The other letter was from home. They were all well there when they wrote.
Charley Refford is passing around his cake that was sent him from home and I must stop
once more and help them eat the cake. It was first rate cake I tell you a good deal better
than we get here everyday. I suppose you have had a good sleigh ride before this time. I
have not had one yet nor do I expect one while we stay in Va. We have not had any snow
here yet that stayed on the ground all day. It snowed a little one night but it melted
away before noon the next day. The days are very warm here but the nights are very cold.
It has been the warmest thanksgiving day I ever saw it as warm as it is in Vermont in
September. Last night when we were on dress parade the Colonel read the proclamation of
the Governor of Vermont and requested us to keep the day as Vermonters should. After dress
parade was over our first Lieutenant told us that those who did not go on picket might get
up just as good a supper as the circumstances would permit of we might have baked turkey
chicken pie or anything else we chose, but nothing of the kind could be purchased here
with love or money. Three were of us went out this forenoon to try and get something for
supper but we could not find anything that we wanted so we concluded to let it go till
next year when we hope to be at home it does not seem as though this war could last more
than a year longer but perhaps it will there is no one knows how long we shall have to
stay here I suppose we have got good leaders and those who are capable of managing our
army. I hope so at least.
Part fourth
Remember friends that are far away. Write as soon as you get this and do not fail to write
over half a dozen sheets for I have nothing to do now but read letters. My love to all.
Write soon. Write soon. Write soon. Write soon. Write soon and often. This from Zebina
1862 letter from Sergeant W. A. Slocum (?), 9th Maine
Regiment
"Camp of 9th Me. Regt, Nov. 26, 11862.
Friend Lizzie,
Yours of the 5th ult came at hand in due time. And was much pleased to hear from
you. You say in your letter you shall always be happy to hear from me, if my wife
will have no objections. Lizzie! If I thought I was not doing right in writing
a friendly letter to you I would not do it. I do not wish to do anything that is not
proper, but I do not see anything that is improper to a married man to write a friendly
letter to any of his friends, either male or female. I have but a very few
correspondents to what I use to have before I was married. I believe you are all the
young lady correspondent that I have that is not relative to me. Your letters has
always been very interesting indeed and I have thought a great deal of them. Such
letters are a great comfort to a soldier and should miss your letters much, for I receive
but a very few letters from young ladies besides my wife. I dropped a number of my
correspondents when I came out this last time on this account. And I miss their
letters very much. An interesting correspondent is a great comfort to a soldier,
friend Lizzie! Mr. Sands belongs in [-----]. Now I would not be so unkind as
to get you a rogue for a correspondent. William Sands as far as I know is a good
man, he is one that likes to enjoy himself but as for being anything bad about him I don't
think there is. Lizzie I would like to be a good country lad about this time
and be at-home. Pumpkin pies is what I love. And as for the paregoric, I will
save that for my family.
Well Lizzie, Thanksgiving is over with and I expect the young folks had a grand time at
home. We did not get ours until last night. We rec'd 4 turkeys, 6 chickens and
3 ducks which made us a very good supper, but don't you think I lost all of mine. I
was taken sick in the night.
I suppose you have heard of my new position. I have been appointed Orderly Sergt. of
Co. E and I have had my hands full since I camt to the company. It is impossible for
me to make my letter interesting so you will have to excuse it. I will close with
many good wishes to you. Write again soon.
You friend,
Sergt. W. A. Slocum(?)."
1862 letter from Horace B. Ensworth, 81st NYSV
"York Town Va, Nov. the 27, 1862
Dear father and sister
I now seat myself to wright you A few lines once more to tell the honest truth of the
matter I havent herd from you since the 13 of Nov only as you have writen to other folks
in the regt I have writen some five letters to you myself and am a getting discurage about
hearing from home and I wrote to Lucy. Wall I cant wright enymore for this is the
last of them stamps that you sent milett and me I dont know as the letter that I have
[wrote] have gone through.
Well father I supose that you want to know how that I am a getting a longe. I will
tell you all about it. I feel as well as I ever did in my life all but my knees, let
me walk up a steep hill and it ters my legs some but that is nothing. I will soon
get over that. I shall go to the Company to morrow but won't have to doe duty for a
spell. I under stand that you are a coming down to see me. I would like to see
you but don't like the price you will have to pay, the captain says it will cost a
hundread to a hundread and fifty dolars and they talk of giving furloughs before longe and
then I can see you all, if I was very sick yet it would make a diferance, a citersun cant
travle for nothing in this country. We live first rate hear. I eat more than
before I was taken sick. The sutler Mr. Buel keeps beer in bottles, it is the real
old stock they cant no one get it, the Comishnd officer the Captain let me have a bitte
and I shoed it to the doctor and he sed it would doe more god to strength me than his
medersen so the Captain gets it for me. That is what has done the buisness up.
Well father I wish you and the rest of the folks a happy Thanksgivin for I am a getting
one my self of rost turkey, chicken pie and oyster pie and everything good, the officers
are having a feast to day. The doctor saved us a good meel of it, they is 7 in the
Hospittle. Wall I dont think of any thing more to wright, give my herty respects to
all. Wright soon and often, direct your letters to NB Ens. I will bring this
to a close by biding you all good days, yours in haste from an absent son."
1863 letter from A. Mason, Lieutenant 38th Massachusetts
in Baton Rouge, Louisiana to Captain Charles C. Doten
"...The dinner passed off in grand style and no
one got drunk though many toasts were given with a will none more heartily drank than the
health of Capt. C.C. Doten. Our appetites had been sharpened by a very pleasant ride
of some three hours and we did full justice to the entire list. The 'right wing
mess' observed the occasion in due form by a dinner composed of the prescribed elements
and had a party at a house near by in the evening. The 'left wing mess' had an
assembly at a neighbors to eat roast turkey but did not celebrate so zealously as the
others. Most of the companies had some extra dish for Dinner and on the whole
thanksgiving in the 38th was well marked."
Return to Thanksgiving
"Over There" |