Friday, March 31, 2023

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March 31st. This morning at six o’clock, got under way and steamed down the river, followed by the Albatross, and ram Switzerland; at eight-thirty A. M. we all came to anchor; sent boats on shore for fresh provisions; unfortunately but very little could be obtained; at six-thirty P. M. got under way again, and proceeded [...]

Cruise of the U.S. Flag-Ship Hartford -Wm. C. Holton

“The 6th boys deserve infinite credit for their fighting, and their colonel, a rope for his carelessness.”–Army Life of an Illinois Soldier, Charles Wright Wills.

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The following material contains wording that may be  offensive to many in the world of today. However, the work is provided unedited for its historical content and context. Camp 103d Illinois Infantry, Lagrange, Tenn., March 31, 1863. I have lost my negro, Bob. The cavalry have been indulging in a pretty rough fight near here, [...]

Army Life of an Illinois Soldier, Charles Wright Wills, (8th Illinois Infantry)

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1860s newsprint

March 31, 1863, Peoria Morning Mail (Illinois) The signs of the times clearly indicate that the people of the Northern States are moving, and that we are in the midst of a great conservative, political revolution, which is destined to sweep every vestige of republicanism into oblivion.The movement which was inaugurated last fall, in the [...]

News of the Day

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1860s newsprint

March 31, 1863, New Orleans Bee The United States steamer Honduras arrived here on Sunday from the Rio Grande, having two hundred and sixty refugees from Texas.The Era learns the following from Lieutenant Colonel Stancel: On the morning of the 15th a force of Confederates of about one hundred and fifty men crossed the Rio [...]

News of the Day

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March 31, 1863, The Charleston Mercury It is the part of the truly brave seldom to make an undue estimate of the dangers or difficulties before them, but to see things as they are, because passions are not permitted to pervert judgment. Their hopes and expectations are not beyond the warrant of events, and fears [...]

News of the Day

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1860s newsprint

March 31, 1863, Nashville Dispatch Yesterday afternoon six or seven of Uncle Sam’s four-in-hands drove up to the Recorder’s office, laden down with a lot of contrabands, varying in age from d’enfant to second childhood, except the strong middle-aged, whom the officer in charge was about to consign to the care of the Recorder, when [...]

News of the Day

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March 31, 1863, The New York Herald The United States steam transport New Brunswick, Captain Winchester, from New Orleans 23d inst., arrived here yesterday morning. Advices per the New Brunswick report the return of Gen. Grover’s forces to the vicinity of Baton Rouge. Three hundred and fifty bales of cotton, twelve to fifteen hundred hogsheads [...]

News of the Day

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March 31, 1863, The New York Herald An attack by the rebel cavalry, one hundred strong, was made yesterday on our cavalry patrol on the telegraph road, between Dumfries and the Occaquan. Eight of our men were captured. An expedition from General Hooker’s army, under colonel Fairchild, which was sent out recently to Northern Neck, [...]

News of the Day

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March 31, 1863, The Charleston Mercury Reports reached the city last evening, by the Savannah train, to the effect that, on Sunday afternoon, two regiments of the enemy landed upon John’s Island and drove in our pickets. In the skirmishing which ensured, three of the enemy are said to have been made prisoners. It is [...]

News of the Day

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1860s newsprint

March 31, 1863, Nashville Dispatch Before the Chief of Army Police, Nashville, March 30, 1863.– . . . Mrs. John Trainor was arrested under a charge of being associated with her husband in his extensive smuggling operations.She was arrested in Louisville, Ky., and brought to this place. C. Tavel, a druggist of Louisville, Ky., was [...]

News of the Day

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1860s newsprint

March 31, 1863, Weekly Columbus Enquirer (Georgia) Fifteen or twenty women, the leader of whom carried a revolver, in Atlanta, on Wednesday, went around to a number of grocery stores, seizing bacon, meal and vegetables, paying such prices as they thought proper. They were dispersed by the police. The Confederacy says the women were only [...]

News of the Day

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March 31, 1863, The New York Herald UNITED STATES SLOOP-OF-WAR RICHMOND, OFF PROPHET ISLAND, MISSISSIPPI RIVER, March 15, 1863. Port Hudson, the rebel stronghold on the Mississippi, was attacked by the Union fleet, under command of Admiral Farragut, last night. The result was a partial success, as the flagship Hartford and the gunboat Albatross succeeded [...]

News of the Day

“The thread by which I hold my life is brittle, indeed, and may be severed any day.”–Letters from Elisha Franklin Paxton.

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Camp Winder, March 31, 1863. You will have, in your troubles on the farm, much to try your patience. My advice to you is to bear it all in good temper, to know all that is going on; and by devoting your mind to it you will find that you succeed much better than you [...]

Elisha Franklin Paxton – Letters from camp and field while an officer in the Confederate Army