Tag Archives: 16th OVI

Vicksburg Campaign Starts: Erasmus Anderson Letter #10

Letter from E. Anderson, April 8, Richmond Louisiana

Dear Wife: …If I can only have good health I don’t care.  My health is what I am afraid of and not the rebels.

“Happy is the man that to him the future is a sealed book.”  From The Story of a Common Soldier by Leander Stillwell, a Union soldier from Illinois.

Since the last dated letter we have from Erasmus (February 17) the 16th Ohio Volunteer Infantry has moved twice, and received paychecks twice.  It seems obvious there is a letter missing, but the more I think about it, the more I doubt that missing letter is the last one I published.

A great deal has transpired that Erasmus does not mention, or only alludes to.

  • Col. DeCourcey resigns, believing he has been ill treated. DeCourcey, a career military British citizen, had volunteered to fight for the Union. His colorful career included returning to the Union army, then being arrested because he angered General Burnside, and fighting in Mexico with Maximilian.
  • General George W. Morgan also resigns because of mistreatment by superior officers.
  • The Regiment’s Chaplain resigns.
  • Cpt. Robert W. Leggett of Company B. “by some indiscretion incurred the displeasure of the war department and was dismissed from service,” Says Cpl. Worbach. Erasmus apparently knows Leggett personally, as he tells Suzi that he is sending some money to her by way of Leggett. After the dismissed Cpt. returned to Ohio and asked the Governor to help him, he went to Washington D.C. and met with Lincoln personally. He was exonerated and given an important command, advancing eventually to Col.

On March 11, the 16th had taken boats from the miserable, muddy Young’s Point to a much better camp about  ten miles upstream at Millikin’s Bend. They are camped on the Louisiana side of the river, but not far from Vicksburg on the Mississippi side. They are now part of General McClerland’s 13th Corps under General Ulysses S. Grant, part of the Vicksburg campaign.

Vicksburg Offensive

Map of the move by river from Young’s Point to Milliken’s Bend. From mkwe.com

Surely everyone knew the battle was about to begin, because Wolbach reports that they the army “was stripped of everything that was not absolutely necessary for campaigning.”

Cpl. Wolback reports in Camp and Field that when they broke camp in March, “The air was mild and the men relished the change and worked cheerfully.” Erasmus is not as irascible in this letter as in some others.  They have a better camp, they have received pay checks, and after a very long period of waiting, it appears they are on the move.

After nearly a month camped at Miliken’s Bend, waiting for the spring flood tide to recede on the Mississippi so the Union can start the Vicksburg campaign, the troops are ordered to break camp on April 5 and they march  away from the river, to Richmond, Louisiana on Willow Bayou.

Erasmus speculates on what will happen next.

We have moved as you will see in the country from the river about 15 miles but I don’t think we will stay here long.  We don’t know where we are going.  Some say to Carthage on the river below Vicksburg and some say to Natches and some think we will stay here for a while but I don’t know nor does anyone else.
Vicksburg Campaign

The route of Grant’s army from Milliken’s Bend, Louisiana, south to Richmond. This map also provides a picture of Grant’s entire campaign against Vicksburg during the spring and summer of 1863. The 16th Ohio was part of Grant’s route the entire way (dark blue line). Map from www.mkwe.com

In fact, the Vicksburg campaign has begun, and they are marching south in order to circle around Vicksburg as part of General Grant’s overall plan of attack. There will be spots of Southern resistance along the way.  Wolbach says:

“The enemy in numbers unknown to us, were occupying the little town of Richmond, capital of Madison Parish, on the Bayou Vidale, fourteen miles back from the river, and their scouting parties several times came in sight of our camp but always ‘dug out’ in haste when some of our mounted men got after them.”

Erasmus’ letter follows his usual pattern. He describes his surroundings and his personal situation, then answers Suzi’s questions and talks about fellow soldiers, and then things about the farm.

We are camped in a beautiful country but the destroying angels have come worse than the Seven Plagues of Egypt.  We are camped by a big bayou.  It is some wider than Killbuck [Creek that runs through the valley in Holmes County, Ohio] and six times as deep.  Has fish as large as a man but can’t catch them.  There are big alligators in it and it is good to keep the boys from going in and getting drowned.
alligator in bayou

alligator in bayou

After telling Suzi that he will be sending her $20 express and has sent $45 with Captain LIggett, E. goes back to talking about Ephraim Cellars–adding some detail to the information he wrote back in February. Since many men were sick, he had to be on duty more than usual, and for the first time, we learn that Erasmus also was sick.

I was not very well myself to go when not on duty.  I saw him the day before he died. I did not think he would die so soon.

Apparently Ephraim’s family wants to go to where he is buried and move his body, but Erasmus discourages that.

When he died we did not get word till I suppose he was buried without any coffin box as all the soldiers was that was buried down there.  I think it would be of no use for them to come after him now and they could not find him and I don’t think they could raise him now anyhow besides nobody can get transportation unless he is on government business.

Sadly, although Erasmus had previously reported that Ephraim had talked to him of going home, he now says, “he was not in his right mind part of the time and I could have but little to say to him.”

Then he moves on to Albert, that troublemaker who seems to dominate the conversations between Erasmus and his wife.

You wanted to know if Albert had the dropsy.  He has been grunting around since he came into the service.  I cannot tell what ails him but I know he wants a discharge for the one thing.  We left him back at the hospital.

Albert never did get to get out of the service because of illness. Instead he was killed in battle at Vicksburg.

Erasmus reports that Cpt. Tanneyhill has heard where the prisoners are. They have traveled down to New Orleans, and are returning north via the Atlantic Ocean. (Perhaps by now, Erasmus knows that his brother is among those prisoners who were captured back in December at Chickasaw Bayou.)

John Christopher, another neighbor has died of his wounds, Erasmus reports. Christopher 42, left a wife and six children behind on his Killbuck farm.

And Erasmus turns from the Vicksburg campaign to the inevitable instructions to Susie about the farm.

This is locust year in Ohio. I want you to raise lots of little roosters and when I get home I will show you how to strip their bones. E. Anderson

To see the previous letter, #9 In the Dark Woods of the Mississippi, read here.
The Next letter: #11: Water Water Everywhere

Notes: Besides the transcriptions of his Civil War letters  which I use with the permission of a descendant of Erasmus’ widow and her second husband, sources include:

  • A site devoted to the 16th OVI that is a real treasure trove of information about Ohio’s soldiers in the Civil War. That site is the source for Cpl. Wolbach’s “Camp and Field” report which was published in the 1880s.
  • Ancestry.com where I find birth, census death, military and other records of my ancestors and the people that Erasmus mentions.
  • A first-hand account of the war, The Story of a Common Soldier 1861-1865, by Leander Stillwell.

The Civil War Wounded: Erasmus Anderson Letter #6

From the Mississippi River, January 5, 1863

My opinion is this war began dishonorable and it will end so.  I don’t believe we can whip them for from all accounts we are getting worsted everywhere.  

Erasmus is despondent. The smell of gun powder, sweat and blood haunt him. His ears are probably still ringing from the barrage of guns. Friends are wounded and dying on a hospital ship on the river that tends the Civil War wounded. His company has, for the first time, been engaged in a full fledged battle with the enemy, forced to retreat, and he’s ready to throw in the towel.

..we have all went through what we don’t want to see again…There is no use in  me giving you any particulars of it for you can see it in Jim’s letters.

Note: I have not determined for sure who “Jim” is as there were many men named James in the regiment.

The 16th Ohio, part of General Sherman’s forces, engaged in a vicious battle at Chickasaw Bayou. Since Erasmus concentrates in his letter on the aftermath, here is an outline of what his life has been like since his last letter home from Memphis in December.

Civil War Steamship

Steamship supposed to be Fanny Bullitt, used to transport Union soldiers of the OVI 16th Regiment during the Civil War. Photo from web site of Michael K. Wood

On December the 16th, the 16th O.V.I. board a side wheeler steamboat called Fanny Bullitt and join a flotilla of 60 boats on the Mississippi sailing south from Memphis. What a sight that must have been! On December 22, they reached the mouth of the Yazoo River and proceeded up that river. According to Cpl. Theodore Wolbach’s Camp and Field, published in the 1980s, Yazoo in “the Indian language” means River of Death.

There are no thoughts of Christmas as they alight from the boats on the 25th and 26th in daunting swampland and a forest of fallen timber. A book by a man who fought in the battle, A History of the Organization and Services of That Regiment In the War of the Rebellion 1876 by F.H. Mason described the surroundings as “quagmire of varying width and unknown depth.” And Wolbach does some of his most vivid reporting. (To read these accounts and more, go to the Michael Wood’s excellent web page. )  Now from Wolbach:

 The 16th stacked arms in a large turnip field near the edge of the road that (ran) along the (Chickasaw) Bayou. Across from us was the gloomy, vine-tangled forest. From the branches of the trees hung the gray Spanish Moss in abundance.” Wolbach.

Civil War Chickasaw Battle Map

Chickasaw Battle Map, showing 16th Regiment in advance and their movements across swamp and fallen timber.

Mason says that their 3-4 day delay at the mouth of the Yazoo allowed the South to bring in reinforcements. Col. DeCourcey, the experienced British soldier who was leading the 165th OVI, argued that the mission was impossible. However, General Sherman surveyed the land and was not happy, but reportedly sent a message, “Tell Morgan that I wish him to give the signal for the assault; that we will lose 5,000 men taking Vicksburg and may as well lose them now.”

The battle routes superimposed on today’s terrain as shown by Google Maps and illustrated on Michael K. Wood’s website. The Mississippi changed its course about twenty years later, and the Corps of Engineers changed the course of the Yazoo River.

Civil War terrain of Chickasaw Bluffs battle

A Chickaswa Bluffs terrain map showing the route of the 16th OVI overlaid on today’s terrain. Thanks to Michael K. Wood website. Michael says, “I have outlined the current route of Chickasaw Bayou in blue and show the route taken by the 16th and DeCourcey’s brigade in red from Dec. 26 thru the morning of the 29th (I have not shown the locations of the many other units on the field that day).”

See many more maps and narratives of the battle at the 16th OVI website.

The 16th O.V.I. regiment was in the front of their brigade–1500 Union men all together in the brigade, as they crossed a narrow bridge. Another brigade of 2000 men paralleled their movements. They fought on the 27th, 28th and 29th.

“The next morning, the 30th, found the 16th lifting their chilled and benumbed bodies from a muddy bivouac in an old cornfield. When we were in ranks, in column of Companies, the havoc of the fight was painfully visible. One Company, (K,) had only fifteen men present all told. Some of the Companies had no officers.” Wolbach

On the 30th, the Union officers requested a truce so they could remove their dead, and the Civil War wounded, but the Southern commanders refused. Finally on the 31st, the Union troops put up a white flag. On January 1, they get back on the boats and head toward Millikin’s Bend as the officers plan an attack on Arkansas Post.

Civil War commander DeCourcey

Col. John DeCourcey

Col. DeCourcey, the commander of the 16th, lost 580 men. So many men were lost that they reorganized from ten companies to six.

“The days that immediately succeeded the Yazoo expedition were dismal ones to the 16th boys, but they soon recovered their buoyant spirits and those that were left were as good as ever. ” Wolbach

Typically, Erasmus does not go along with Wolbach’s optimistic outlook.

“Our regiment is half gone and the rest will leave as soon as they get the chance.  They are the worst dishearted set of men I ever saw in my life.”

As Erasmus writes his letter to his wife, he is still trying to absorb the horrors of the previous week.  He is back on the Fanny Bullitt steamship, and headed, he probably suspects, for another battle.  What we see in this letter, though, is his compassion for his friends.

He hopes that Will (his brother) is prisoner, and indeed that is what happened. A very large number of Union men were pinned down by fire and then taken prisoner. Some were released within a few weeks and others held for several months.  Erasmus’ main concern is for Ephraim Cellars, an he tells and interesting story about trying to get on the hospital boat to check on friends.

I was awful afraid of _____ for awhile but I have hopes of his recovery now.  If I could get to stay with him and take care of him I would like it but we are not allowed to go on the boat where the wounded is at all.  I think it is pretty hard but I can’t help it.  The day the charge was made a wounded friend of mine sent word for me to come in the hospital and take care of him but when I came to the door the guard asked me if I was wounded.  I was lame from a burn but I told him no and he said I could not go in.

(I have included pictures of that very boat and more information about the care of the Civil War wounded in the next post. See it here.)

We never learn how badly Erasmus was actually burned–whether he is making little of it in order not to worry his wife, or whether it really is not serious. At any rate, he, who is an upright and honest person, has learned he may have to dissemble a bit.

After a little I heard Ephriam was in there wounded and I was determined to go in and when asked this time if I was wounded I told him slightly and I passed in and I went in all through and looked at every man, but his wound had been dressed and took to the boat as they all were as fast as they could.

This seems to indicate that he went looking for Ephraim on the 30th, the day after the big charge, and in fact Ephraim was wounded on the 29th.  Apparently the army had a building where they first treated the wounded before moving them to the hospital ship.

Erasmus is so determined to see Ephraim that he tries everything he can think of.

I could not go to the boat without a pass from the doctor.  I got leave from the captain but I could get no pass.  I thought I would try another plan.  I took a knapsack belonging to the wounded man but that would not do so I got in a covered wagon and hid myself and got through the guard line to the boat with my knapsack and the persuasions of a friend on the boat I succeeded in getting on to see him.

He goes on to say that he thought he (Ephraim) would die, but has now heard reports he was better.  Erasmus is concerned about Ephraim’s father, “Uncle Joe”, and how the family would take the news.

He has mentioned Ephraim Cellars before, and the soldier’s father, “Uncle Joe”. I am still trying to piece together the relationship, but apparently there is a tie between the Cellars family and Erasmus’ wife, Susan/Susanna Frazer Anderson.  Ephraim was drafted at the age of 18 in August 1862. He is the only boy in a family with five girls.

Sadly, Erasmus does not yet know that Ephraim, wounded on December 29, died on January 1–four days before Erasmus sat on the Fanny Bullitt writing to Suzi.

Erasmus  is longing for some news from home, but says he has not heard from Suzi since before they left Memphis, and she is “not doing right.”  He closes with

I would like to know how you and them little boys is getting along this cold weather.  No more, but may God protect you.

E. Anderson

Notes: Besides the Civil War letters which I use with the permission of a descendant of Erasmus’ widow and her second husband, sources here include:

  • A site devoted to the 16th OVI that is a real treasure trove of information about Ohio’s soldiers in the Civil War. That site is the source for Cpl. Wolbach’s “Camp and Field” report which was published in the 1880s.
  • Other sources are linked in the text.
  • Ancestry.com where I find birth, census death, military and other records of my ancestors and the people that Erasmus mentions.
  • All photos and the maps in today’s post come from the Michael K Wood site devoted to 16th OVI, and the photos are linked to that site.
  • General Sherman wrote a memoir that included an account of the battle which is angrily disputed by Wolbach.  If you want to see more about the shifting of blame to DeCourcey, read Wolbach’s account here.

If you happen to know more about Ephraim Cellars and his family, or any of the other men who served in OVI 16th, particularly companies E and B, please share below in the comments.

See Erasmus Letter #5: December in Memphis, here

The next letter, #7,Civil War Deserters, is here

December in Memphis-Erasmus Anderson Letter #5: Laying in Camp

Memphis, Tennessee.

Sudy, we have a kind of breeze today coming down from your way which is rather cool and it is snowing a kind of a soft snow which is not a very common thing here.

Erasmus Anderson Civil War Letter

December in Memphis, letter  from Erasmus Anderson to his wife “Suzi” 1862

The person who transcribed this read the first word as ‘Sudy,’ but it doesn’t look like that to me. What do you think? Is ‘Sudy’ a nickname for Susanne? What is that fancy first letter?

I am including this photo so you can see that even when he is in camp, and not entirely happy, E. manages to write beautifully, and orderly script.

On November 13, 1862, after a three-day march to the Ohio River and another march to Cincinnati, the Union soldiers of the 16th O.V.I. boarded boats and headed over to the Mississippi River and south to Memphis, Tennessee. The 16th occupied two boats–the Key West and the Mamora. Although this letter is not dated, it is clear that Erasmus wrote it after they had alighted from the boats on November 26, and before they had an inkling they would get back on boats again on December 20 to sail toward Vicksburg. They were to spend most of December in Memphis.

A boat probably similar to one Erasmus rode December Memphis

A transport boat probably similar to the one Erasmus rode on. Matthew Brady photo of The Lookout on the Tennessee River . From the National Archives.

Along the way, as they marched back up the Kanawha Valley to the Ohio River, and traveled by boat down the Mississippi, they saw reminders of previous battles, for as Cpl. Theodore Wolbach tells us in “Camp and Field”,

From the beginning of the war, Ohio soldiers had operated in West Virginia.  The historian tints the face of war with glory, but the soldier sees the ghastiliness of the background where his comrades sleep in the mysterious shadows.

This particular letter interests me as much for what it does not say as for what it does. A large portion of the letter shows that E’s mind is back on the farm. He opens with an evaluation of the land of Tennessee.

The people are busy here gathering in their cotton.  The weather is always nice and warm here only when it is storming and it is a nice beautiful country and I think a good country for a poor man to live in, niggers and all.  A good cotton picker can make ten dollars a day.  A man can get a dollar a cord for cutting wood and boarded and a man can get from 2 to 3 dollars and board for all kinds of work.

The pay, overdue by 4 months, finally arrived while the men were on the river, according to Wolbach, and that has led to all kinds of trouble with illegal purchases leading to inebriation leading to arrests and to desertions.  But it also means the men have been able to buy things they have been deprived of and peddlars did a good business in guns, boots and even counterfeit Southern money when the army stopped briefly at Cincinnati. Now they are in Memphis, everything is for sale–but expensive, as Erasmus notes in his discussion of sweet potatoes.

sweet potatoes

Everything we can buy is 3 prices except sweet potatoes which we think cheap at $1.00 a bushel.  They are so big and good. I want you to save some seed if you can and if I don’t get home in time you can put them to sprout for I want to have some if I am at home next fall.

E. is longing to know about the farm, rather than talk about his experiences in the army. Between the lines, he is surely saying “Do you miss me? Am I needed on the farm?”

I want you to write and tell me all about everything, tell me how you get along for wood.  If you had a wood machine and whose you had and how they sawed and where they got it and how you are getting along with your corn and how the sheep is getting along.  It will pay you to shear sheep next spring, but the pasture was all burnt up so I don’t expect they will do very well this winter.

When he does talk about his present experience, he doesn’t tell us anything about the 12-day trip on the rivers.  That surprises me, since one would think such an observant fellow would have found a lot of new things to see.  If you want to learn some of the intresting sights and experiences, you’ll have to read Wolbach’s “Camp and Field” pages 46 to 49.  As for Erasmus, he didn’t like the experience, but doesn’t seem to be doing a sightseeing around Memphis, either.

December in Memphis-pre war

Memphis before the Civil War. By Boyd Jones on Flickr.

There is a good deal of sickness in the regiment now, and I will not tell you about them you don’t know.  We were kept huddled up on the boat too long for the good of men.  Only think of 4 or 5 hundred men all on one little boat, all cooking on one bit of a box stove and you may have some idea of the confusion there is in such a place.  Then another thing is eating trash that they are not used to and it takes but little hurt them then.

Wolbach has an interesting story about “eating trash”.

..peddlars selling Washington pie–soft sweet filling like gingerbread, “was popular with the boys until it was discovered that the refuse being carried away from camp by the slop-gatherers contributed to the making of the pie.” 

Erasmus didn’t know about that, or didn’t care to mention it, now that he is back on land, He even gets a bit humorous.

We have the best times here we have seen yet.  We draw good bread and part of the time fresh beef which goes mighty good and most of the times warm [weather] which makes us feel as good as snakes in a spring sunny day… We are having good times here now for if a soldier ever had good times it is when he is laying camp, for it is not while marching, that is sure.

Erasmus mentions people whom Suzi knows, and I am trying to track down if they are neighbors or relatives (any help gratefully accepted).  In this letter, he mentions “Jake”–last name illegible “has had his trial but has not his sentence yet.” Although the name on the written copy of the letter does not look like Korn, there is a Jacob Korn in the company that was released on habeus corpus in December 1962.

E. also mentions that John has sent a letter to Julia, and he once again mentions E. [Ephraim] Cellars who has come to his regiment.

And, typically for Erasmus, he is thinking about how the war is going and when it will end.  He tells Suzi not to bother with sending newspapers–but he does not mention, as Wolbach does that there are newspapers peddled on the streets of Memphis which the soldiers avidly read.

It is hard to tell when this war will end but I think if we can’t whip them between this and spring, I think England and France would be perfectly justified in putting a stop to this wholesale butchery….[and later he adds]I don’t know how long we will have to stay but the boys all think it will be over by next summer. I know they all want it over…Hoping the time will not be long till I can return to them I hold dearer than my own life.

E. Anderson

See Letter #4: November in Charleston.

And Letter #6: Civil War Wounded

Notes: I apologize if you are upset by Erasmus’ language, but it is the language that he used and I think it is important to be true to his own expression, and the times he lived in. I do not believe there is any particular malice intended, although I believe it demonstrates that he is not fighting to free the slaves. He is not here as an abolitionist, but as a patriot who does not want the country divided.

Besides the Civil War letters which I use with the permission of a descendant of Erasmus’ widow and her second husband,, sources here include:

  • A site devoted to the 16th OVI that is a real treasure trove of information about Ohio’s soldiers in the Civil War. That site is the source for Cpl. Wolbach’s “Camp and Field” report which was published in the 1880s.
  • Ancestry.com where I find birth, census death, military and other records of my ancestors.
  • The Matthew Brady photograph of a river transport ship comes from WIkipedia, and I suggest you click on the photo to learn more about it, and restrictions on its reuse. Sweet potatoes and Memphis photos are from Flickr, used with a Creative Commons license.