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to Horatio G. Wright
April 18, 1859
Beauregard, Pierre Gustave Toutant, 1818-1893
Discussing the poor health of a "promising...young officer" and possibility of "another such terrible epidemic" as had recently hit the men.
GLC03499
Joseph M. Maitland
22 October 1864
Lafferty, Samuel, fl. 1840-1908
Writes from Camp Reynolds in Pennsylvania. States his company is getting so small they may consolidate with another company in the regiment. Hopes they will winter in Camp Reynolds. Expresses concern about small pox in his hometown. Mentions a letter...
GLC03523.10.139
to Joseph M. Maitland
4 December 1864
Cherry, Lydia, fl. 1864
Addresses the letter "Dear Cousin Jo's." Reports there are a few cases of small pox in the neighborhood. Replies to his inquiry about Bell, "I think she is a real good girl and knows how to do any kind of work, she will make a good wife..." Reports...
GLC03523.10.146
to Bell Wharton
23 December 1864
Maitland, Joseph M., 1836-1918
Complains about the lack of letters from home, "...I thought I was forgotten by them at home and you too." Says he doesn't like the tone of her recent letter, "...your speaking of the love you had for me you said it in such a light way, that there...
GLC03523.10.150
to Maria Damuth
February 6, 1863
Damuth, Dolphus, fl. 1839-1913
Worried that his sister is sick with diphtheria. Many of the men in camp are sick, and the first man in Damuth's company has died. Damuth's friend Jesse has been vaccinated for small pox and complains of feeling unwell. Comments on a black servant...
GLC03523.14.12
to William C. Clark re: death of son, Robert, 6 days after death by typhus
1843/11/30
Pierce, Franklin, 1804-1869
GLC04456
to his father Tobias Gibson
16 September 1858
Gibson, Randall Lee, 1832-1892
Discussing the impact of the weather on crops at Live Oaks and Greenwood plantations, an order for "gas fixtures," and the incidence of fever in the vicinities. Tobias Gibson's family owned three plantations in Louisiana.
In part: "The health of the...
GLC04501.003
To his wife
19 July 1862
Tillotson, George W., 1830-1918
Still in hospital. Family: "...how I do wish Dear Lib that I was at home to share your troubles, anxiety, sorrows, and to relieve you in some of your phisical [sic] labors.... How I tremble to think how near Georgiana also had been to the brink of...
GLC04558.032
February 5, 1863
Continued February 6. With small greeting card. Worries about family succumbing to scarlet fever, commenting on his patriotism: "...I am not the only one in these digins whose patriotism has cooled down so that we can look at the matter as it...
GLC04558.066
To George Tillotson
February 15, 1862
Tillotson, Louisa, fl. 1861-1898
Worried that her brother was in Battle of Roanoke Island. Scarlet Fever breaks out in the Tillotson's school district.
GLC04558.186
to Sally Ker
31 October 1817
Ker, David, fl. 1817
Updates his sister in Greenville, Mississippi about the condition of their brother who was suffering from a fever but is now recovering. Describes his medical treatments including taking tincture of bark and being rubbed with mercurial ointment....
GLC04601.08
to George Andrews
11 March 1820
Andrews, Edmund, fl. 1820
Writes to his uncle in Dover, New Hampshire and relays that the southwestern part of the country is suffering from a yellow fever epidemic. Informs him which family members have fallen ill and who has recovered. Updates him on the travels and...
GLC04601.10
[to the Chairman of the Board of Health]
12 September 1820
McComas, J.H., fl. 1820
Informs that he has received orders from the Commander in Chief to detail the necessary companies of infantry and artillery to assist the civil authority in enforcing the quarantine regulations for the city of Natchez. Signed as Brigadier General.
GLC04601.11
to Nathaniel Wordin
27 April 1835
Krepp, B., fl. 1835
Describes the area where he lives in Mississippi as a clearing in the middle of an immense forest with a few houses and about 1600 inhabitants, half of them slaves. Reports that they have a Methodist and a Presbyterian church and a temperance...
GLC04601.13
1864 Diary
1864
Cook, Henry, fl. 1862-1864
In this diary, dated from January through November, 1864, Henry Cook documents life in the US Signal Corps. Stationed near New Bern, NC, Cook writes of matters of daily life--meals, rations, guard duty, trips to town, construction projects--and of...
GLC03958.03
to Elizabeth Smith and children
1863/1/10
Smith, David V.M., 1823-1863
The army is still in the same location and is in a state of suspense concerning what will happen next. General Burnside announced a Grand Review which was canceled due to rain. One man in the regiment contracted small pox. The doctors isolated him...
GLC04189.23
[Collection of G. W. Buntly, A company, 41st regiment, Tennessee, infantry] [Decimalized .01-.11]
1862-1864
Buntly, G.W., fl. 1862-1864
The George W. Buntly collection of Civil War correspondence is primarily composed of letters written by Confederate infantryman Buntly to his brothers, William and Jacob. For most of the war both brothers are located in Lincoln County, Tennessee, but...
GLC04190
to William Buntly
January 13, 1863
Discusses fighting at Vicksburg and smallpox in his regiment.
GLC04190.03
to Jacob Buntly
January 26, 1863
Predicts a battle soon at Port Hudson, Louisiana. Mentions smallpox.
GLC04190.04
to Mary Moore
30 December 1847
Moore, John B., fl. 1847
He wonders if he was missed at Christmas. They had a ball the night before Christmas with dancing. He wonders if Richard picked up his coat, and hopes she will send some new shirts. He has heard about certain deaths due to smallpox.
GLC04191.17
15 December 1848
Moore, John, 1826-1907
He describes the students in his class, less wild than he expected. He reports a recent Catholic fair to benefit an orphan asylum, doing more for the relief of the destitute than any other denomination. M. Fitzsimmons, an Irish refugee and leader in...
GLC04191.29
[Collection of John B. Moore letters and a 37-page travel diary] [Decimalized .01- .06]
1849-1852
Covers the first few years of Moore's medical career before joining the army. Medical references, including a cholera epidemic in Laconia, Indiana (1) and diseases and medical treatments in England and Ireland (2, 5, 6). Written from Indiana, New...
GLC04192
To Richard
18 July 1848
Excerpts: 18 July 1848: "I am still quite well notwithstanding I have for two or three weeks undergone much fatigue and have been broken of my regular sleeping hours. The health of the country does not seem to improve in the least. Cholera is still...
GLC04192.01
to Mary Moore Kelly
21 September 1863
He has received a letter from Hyde about his investment with the Tolland County Bank in Connecticut. They have passed through the season without a yellow fever epidemic. The dismissal of the Surgeon General may affect his own orders. Dr. William A...
GLC04195.20
August 24, 1866
A cholera epidemic has hit the soldiers and has kept him busy in the hospital. He remarks about their brother Robert and his poor condition since remaining in the South to practice medicine, marry, etc. Written on letterhead for the Headquarters...
GLC04195.43
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