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Invoice of ordnance and ordnance stores
28 November 1865
Smith, John, fl. 1865
Includes a list of contents transferred by Captain John Smith to First Lieutenant Heber Painter.
GLC02016.138
1 January 1866
Clay, Cecil, fl. 1842-1866
Invoice for 625 rounds of EB cartridges turned over to Heber Painter by Colonel Cecil Clay.
GLC02016.139.01
29 November 1865
Stevens, Charles L., fl. 1836-1865
Invoice for contents turned over to Heber Painter by Captain Charles Stevens. The invoice includes saddles, blankets, curb bridles, halters and straps, combs and horse brushes. Written at the Hanover Court House
GLC02016.139.02
January 13, 1866
Invoice for contents turned over to Heber Painter by Colonel Cecil Clay.
GLC02016.140
Monthly return of clothing, camp and garrison equipage
30 September 1865
Painter, Heber, 1841-1900
Monthly return for the month ending September 30, 1865.
GLC02016.141
Monthly return of quartermaster's stores
January 23, 1866
Partially printed document monthly return of stores issued at City Point, Virginia.
GLC02016.142
Quarterly return of ordnance and ordnance stores
30 June 1865
Includes returns for the second quarter, ending June 30, 1865, for Company I, 58th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, commanded by 1st Lieutenant Heber Painter. Written in Manchester neighborhood of Richmond
GLC02016.143
Includes returns for the third quarter, ending September 10, 1865, for Company I, 58th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, commanded by 1st Lieutenant Heber Painter.
GLC02016.144
1861-1865
Includes returns for the fourth quarter for Company I, 58th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, commanded by 1st Lieutenant Heber Painter.
GLC02016.145
December 1865
Includes returns for the fourth quarter ending in December 1865 for Company I, 58th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, commanded by 1st Lieutenant Heber Painter.
GLC02016.146
December 1865 - January 1866
Includes returns for "part of" the quarter ending on January 28, 1866 for Company I, 58th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, commanded by 1st Lieutenant Heber Painter.
GLC02016.147
Quarterly returns of ordnance and ordnance stores
January 28, 1866
Includes returns for I Company 58th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry for the first quarter, 1866.
GLC02016.148
Abstract of articles
December 31, 1865
Includes articles received from officers at Louisa Court House, Virginia in the month ending December 1865 by Heber Painter. The docket indicates that the document was retained.
GLC02016.149.01
Includes articles expended, lost, destroyed, in public service, and sold at Louisa Court House, Virginia in the month ending December 1865 by Heber Painter.
GLC02016.149.02
January 31, 1866
Includes articles transferred to Border Colonel George B. Cadwallader at Richmond, Virginia in the month ending on the 31 January,1866, by Lieutenant Heber Painter, Appointed Provost Marshal.
GLC02016.150
Abstract of materials
Includes materials expended or consumed in I Company, 58th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry during the second quarter, 1865.
GLC02016.151
Includes materials expended or consumed in I Company, 58th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry during the third quarter, 1865.
GLC02016.152
Includes materials expended or consumed in I Company, 58th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry during the fourth quarter, 1865.
GLC02016.153
Includes materials expended or consumed in I Company, 58th Regiment, Pennsylvania Infantry during the first quarter, 1866.
GLC02016.154
Receipt for issues to Major Robert Redmond
15 June 1865
Redmond, Robert, fl. 1865
Includes issues for Springfield rifles, bayonnets, cartridges, and waste belts among other items. Written in Manchester neighborhood of Richmond
GLC02016.158
Receipt for issues
January 20, 1866
Includes issues for Springfield rifles, bayonnets, cartridges, and waist belts among other items.
GLC02016.159
January 27, 1866
Ramsay, George Douglas, 1802-1882
Includes issues for muskets, cartridges, and waist belts among other items. Written at Camp Cadwalader.
GLC02016.160
January 29, 1866
Includes issues for saddles and bridles. Written at Camp Cadwalader.
GLC02016.161
[Receipt for clothing issued]
Includes clothes issued to I Company, 58th Pennsylvania Volunteers commanded by 1st Lieutenant Heber Painter. Witnessed by William H. Blair, 1st Sergeant. Lists specific articles of clothing recieved. Docket outlines the allowance of clothing given...
GLC02016.162
List of quartermaster's stores
2 October 1865
Hested, Joseph, fl. 1865
Partially printed document. includes a list of quartermaster's stores received from Lieutenant Heber Painter by Joseph Hested.
GLC02016.163
to unknown
1 October 1849
Marsh, R., fl. 1849
Note regarding the value of a property. Includes a response signed by R.S. Moody.
GLC02016.164
January 17, 1866
Cadwalader, George, 1806-1879
Partially printed document including a list of stores received by George Cadwallder from Heber Painter.
GLC02016.165
January 19, 1866
Partially printed document including a list of stores received by George Cadwallader from Heber Painter. It appears that Cadwallader mistakenly writes received of "Heber Daniels" instead of "Heber Painter" in the lower portion of the document.
GLC02016.166
List of clothing, camp and garrison equipage
January 22, 1866
Partially printed document. The list includes such items as flannel shirts, drawers, one haversack, and camp kettles amongst other items.
GLC02016.167
Partially printed document of quartermaster's stores received of Heber Painter to George Cadwallader.
GLC02016.168
GLC02016.169
to his brother-in-law, parents and sister
30 June 1864
Wheeler, Lysander, 1837-1917
Written at the Camp of the 105th Illinois regiment. He reports that he is in good health and still in the same location. He writes that his regiment has been relieved from the front lines and are now in the third line. He has washed his clothes and...
GLC07460.084
5 July 1864 - 6 July 1864
Written at the Camp of the 105th Illinois regiment. States that he is in good health and that his division is near the 23rd Corps. The 1st and 2nd divisions of his Corps is on the front lines where the Confederates are making a stand near Marietta...
GLC07460.085
15 July 1864
Written at the Camp of the 105th Illinois regiment near the Chattahoochee River in Georgia. A friend of the family - a colonel in the Union Army- will be visiting his family soon if he has not called on them already. He has sent his watch home with...
GLC07460.086
18 July 1864
Written at the Camp of the 105th Illinois south of the Chattahoochee River in Georgia. His Corps. has crossed the river on a pontoon bridge. Soon afterward his regiment was sent on picket duty. To his left he has heard the sound of musketry. The 3rd...
GLC07460.087
21 July 1864
He writes that his regiment played an important role in the Battle of Atlanta. They marched to within two miles of Atlanta, 22 July, 1864, Georgia and formed two lines of battle in an open valley on the hill to their front. The pickets kept up a...
GLC07460.088
to a family member
8 January 1865
Houghton, M., fl. 1865
"[Nashville is] under the control of our guns from the forts and batteries...I saw 3 or 4 dead Rebs still lying on the ground unburied and some that had been buried with some parts still visible above the ground...the point B.F. is where the greatest...
GLC09139
to Secretary of War James Seddon and various Confederate generals
December 1862
Smith, Gustavus Woodson, 1821-1896
Seven retained telegrams to Union General John G. Foster's expedition towards Goldsboro, NC. "I have no cavalry with a view to the navigation of the Mississippi from New Orleans upwards, sails to-day from the North River, near the State Prison, to...
GLC09140
to George R. Gilman, Governor of Georgia
4 September 1839
Noble, Patrick, fl. 1839
Letter about the crisis over fugitive slaves and the landmark Supreme Court case, Prigg vs. Pennsylvania, which determined that states were not required to enforce slave laws of other states. From South Carolina Gov. Patrick Noble to Gov. of Georgia...
GLC09141.01
to John W. Frughs
27 July 1872
Wilson, Henry, 1812-1875
Writes shortly after being nominated as Grant's Vice President. "I find your note and the Platform of 'The Young Men's Continental League' ...I have long hoped and believed that the people inhabiting the North American Continent will be united under...
GLC09142
to James M. Shute
February 19, 1869
Garfield, James A. (James Abram), 1831-1881
"I almost despair of securing any financial legislation this season, thought we shall try to pass a bill legalizing Gold Contracts and also declaring the 5.20 Bonds and greenbacks are ultimately payable in Gold...The late decision of the Supreme...
GLC09143
Gazette of the United States [Marbury vs. Madison]
4 March 1803
Landmark Supreme Court decision reported in the Gazette of the United States. "The Chief Justice this day declared the opinion of the court...on the motion of Mr. G. Lee for a rule to shew cause why a Madamus should not issue to compel James Madison...
GLC09144
to Mrs. J. Sargent Murray
22 May 1815
Pickering, Timothy, 1745-1829
"By glancing my eye on a passage or two in your brother's history of his use, in multitude of instances during two years, of the 'eau medicinale' d'Husson, I noticed the precision of description which I should expect from Govr. Sargent, and which is...
GLC09145
Orders
March 20, 1864
Breese, Kidder Randolph, 1831-1881
Ordering the "officer in charge of Picket Tug" to relay Porter's order to the fleet: "Keep the tug as close to the falls as possible and a bright lookout for anything up the bend. Blow one whistle if you see a vessel coming down. Examine all...
GLC09146
10 June 1861
Wayne, Henry C., fl. 1861
About a Union rally by Baptists and Methodists. "The leaders of these two systems, are either designing demagogues, or ignorant enthusiasts...The President [Jefferson Davis] has proclaimed next Thursday as a day of fasting, humiliation, and prayer...
GLC09147
to David D. Porter
circa 1862
Sherman, William T. (William Tecumseh), 1820-1891
During Arkansas expedition. "admiral Porter As soon as General Steele reports in the Continental, will fire a Gun and run down the Gaines's Landing at the rate of ten miles the hour Sherman."
GLC09148
to Darwin C. Pavey
February 24, 1893
Smith, Edmund Kirby, 1824-1893
"Fitz John Porter was my classmate and has always been and is one of my dearest friends. He was always faithful and true in his allegiance and devotion of his country and I place him amongst the very best of your Generals...a born soldier and leader...
GLC09149
Civil War recruiting broadside
29 July 1862
Partially printed recruiting poster for Captain Pierce's company of Monroe County Regiment, headed "War!" above an eagle bearing slogan, "Stand up for the Old flat, Now or Never!" A. Strong & Co., Rochester. 14 x 20 inches.
GLC09150
The Pennsylvania Mercury and Universal Advertiser
29 April 1788
Letter from "A Free Negro" printed in the Pennsylvania Mercury and Universal Advertiser. "I am one of that unfortunate race of men who are distinguished from the rest of the human species by black skin and woolly hair, disadvantages of very little...
GLC09151
to Jacob Brinkeroff
January 19, 1845
Stanton, Edwin M. (Edwin McMasters), 1814-1869
"I cannot refrain from explaining the satisfaction with which I have read your speech on the Texas question. It would have delighted me to have been able to hear you deliver it, but the effect will tell upon the public mind as "A wood in season.'...
GLC09152
Escape of 'contrabands' from Col. Avery's estate near Petersburg Virginia
circa 1864
Pencil sketch signed "S.H.S." The siege of Petersburg lasted from 15 June 1864 to 25 March 1865.
GLC09153
to Robert E. Lee
24 May 1863
Hill, Ambrose P., 1825-1865
"If a judicious appointment of Major General is not made, I fear that all this will be lost... Gen. Pender has fought with the Divisions in every battle, he has been four times wounded and never left the field, he has risen by death and wounds from...
GLC09154
to LaSalle Corbett Pickett
4 July 1864
Pickett, George Edward, 1825-1875
To "Sallie." "Does not your husband wish, pray and sigh to be with his Sallie, his only only love...You know...how much I detest outward show, and manifestations of religion...but to offer up you silent prayer with a truthful heart, and an entrusting...
GLC09155
to George Pickett
11 April 1865
Pickett, Charles F., fl. 1865
"Last Return of Pickett's Division as surrendered on April 9, 1865." Grid shows troops, listed by brigade, with officers and enlisted men counted separately. Just 987 men appear on the return. Also signed secretarially for his brother General George...
GLC09156
to Emily S.B. Brune
29 May 1864
Johnson, Edward, fl. 1864
"I thank you for the box you and my other friends must not send me any more clothing...as I am taxing your genorosity too much. I am now well supplied with almost everything..." Emily S. B. Brune, "the Angel of Fort Delaware."
GLC09157
List of clothing transferred
December 30, 1865
List of clothing transferred by Lietenant Jospeh Hester to Heber Painter. The list includes coats, trousers, flannel shirts, drawers, boots, forage caps, blankets, and stockings.
GLC02016.115.02
to his sister and all at home
23 October 1864
Written near the Chattahoochee River in Georgia. He has yet to received the package his family sent him. Mr. Wells is going home tomorrow. Asks for some things and suggests they can mail it to him or send them with Mr. Wells when he returns. He was...
GLC07460.104
to his parents, brother-in-law, and sister
2 November 1864 - 3 November 1864
Written near the Chattahoochee River in Georgia. He writes that the weather has been poor as it continues to rain. Assumes that by the time his family receives the letter the army will have moved from their currently location to an unknown...
GLC07460.105
7 November 1864
Written near the Chattahoochee Bridge in Georgia. The mail has been delayed by four or five days because of the army's movements. He does not think the army will stay long at its present location and he has heard that the limit of their stay in the...
GLC07460.106
9 November 1864
Written near Chattahoochee Bridge in Georgia. He has recently received his family's letter of 30 October and is glad to hear that everyone at home is doing well. Writes that the army is going to leave their camp tomorrow morning. He reports that as...
GLC07460.107
December 18, 1864
Writes that he is alright and has survived the march. General William T. Sherman's army is in front of Savannah, Georgia. The army has captured Fort McAllister at the mouth of the Ogeechee River. This allows the Union forces to have communication...
GLC07460.108
23 December 1864
Writes that the mail is becoming somewhat regular as more has come in today and is being sent out as well. He is happy to report that their camp situation has improved from when he last wrote. The regiment has advanced into the trenches around...
GLC07460.109
December 30, 1864 - January 4, 1865
Writes about those who have died during the past year and the sacrifice they made for their country. General William T. Sherman reviewed the 20th Corps. today. General Ulysses Grant was supposed to review the men as well but he failed to show up. A...
GLC07460.110
January 22, 1865
It is almost impossible to receive or sent out any mail, the last letter he received from home was from 25 December. They are about 23 miles from Savannah, Georgia. It has been raining so hard for the past few days that it was nearly impossible to...
GLC07460.111
January 26, 1865
Writes that he is not in camp and is feeling much better. His diarrhea has gone away thanks to some of the berries he ate. The weather has been very bad, there is a lot of mud which will prevent the army from moving very far. The Union scouts found...
GLC07460.112
February 1, 1865
Writes that he and most of the men of the company are doing well. The wood they have been using for their fire turns everything black including their faces. They are camped about 25 [18 miles from Hardeeville, South Carolina to another site then...
GLC07460.113
12 March 1865
The Union 14th Corps. captured Fayetteville, North Carolina yesterday. They are now encamped there along with the 20th, 15th, and 17th Corps. On 2 February his regiment had a "brisk" skirmish with Confederates near Lawtonville, South Carolina. They...
GLC07460.114
Carte-de-visite of General Andrew Humphreys
1860s ca.
Brady, Mathew B., 1823-1896
Signed. Standing 3/4 figure portrait of the general. Brady imprint on mount and verso. Inscription on verso reads "Commander, 2nd Div., 3 A.C. Gettysburg 579F."
GLC09166
to Reverend Putnam
29 November 1866
Garrison, William Lloyd, 1805-1879
"All that you said of Massachusetts...was true to the letter...she has always been the foremost state of the Union. How intensely has South Carolina - - slavery cursed, degraded, barbarous South Carolina - - hated her from the beginning!"
GLC09167
to Lt. Col. F. A. Walker
February 6, 1864
Warren, Gouverner K., 1830-1882
Requesting information about casualties from Battle of Morton's Ford: "Will you please tell me how many officers killed? how many wounded? how many missing?
GLC09168
to My Dear Sir
6 April 1863
Burnside, Ambrose Everett, 1824-1881
Railing against Confederate General Simon B. Buckner over a land dispute. "I can give no proof, but my own word that if the property is conveyed to me that I will convey it direct to the son of the late Col. Kingsbury subject to him of indebtedness...
GLC09169
to William M. Sherry
18 September 1874
Wills, David, fl. 1874
Lincoln's Gettysburg host writes Hon. William M. Sherry. "I have heard Republicans & Democrats here discussing the probabilities of your election in this Congressional District if you were an independent candidate for Congress and received the...
GLC09170
to William T. Sherman [Decimalized .01- .09]
1878
Beale, James, fl. 1878
Nine letters to William T. Sherman about Gettysburg, in response to inquiries made by Hooker regarding Col. Batchelder's published "isometric view" of the battlefield. "Whether Batchelder's 'sold out' to Howard I know not, but importing a whole...
GLC09171
to Jefferson Davis
15 September 1862
Burnett, Henry C., fl. 1862
" You will pleasure me for again calling your attention to the fact that General Breckinridge has not been ordered to Kenty. His presence at this particular juncture in any state, I regard of the highest importance; our friends in that state have in...
GLC09172
To a Judge
9 March 1861
Cobb, Thomas Read Rootes, 1823-1862
References the Confederate constitution he helped draft: "You will see by the papers that the Convention authorized us to make the necessary changes in the code - Now for work let us go ahead!"
GLC09173
[Dispatches and telegrams]
16 December 1862
Woodson, Gustavus, fl. 1862
Series of short dispatches and telegrams from his command at Goldsboro, North Carolina written in a secretarial hand, with three messages signed.
GLC09174
to Earl Shaftesbury
3 October 1862
Slidell, John, 1793-1871
Attempting to secure diplomatic recognition for the South. "two governments were now considering our question & that our recognition would very probably soon be announced...The advance of Lee in force across the Potomac had a double object, one...
GLC09175
Instructions for Field Artillery, by a Board of Artillery Officers
19 September 1860
Heintzelman, Samuel P., 1805-1880
Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott & Co. Inscribed "S.P. Heintzelman Major U.S. Army." 88 plates.
GLC09176
[Army of the Potomac Circular Orders] [Decimalized .01- .12]
1863-1865
Thirteen circular orders issued between June 13, 1863 and April 4, 1865. Carbon copies of orders issued from 2nd Corps and General Meade's headquarters for battles of Gettysburg, Spotsylvania, North Anna River, Cold Harbor, Petersburg, and pursuit...
GLC09177
Requisition for Forage for Public Horses
15 October 1862
O'Rorke, Henry, fl. 1862
For the 140th Regiment New York. Colonel O'Rorke fell at Gettysburg carrying his regimental colors, on Little Round Top.
GLC09178
[Orders to besiege Vicksburg]
25 June 1862
Farragut, David E., fl. 1862
Manuscript copy of his orders of his orders to besiege Vicksburg, including order to open fire on the hospital at 4 AM.
GLC09179
to M. Cauley
23 June 1863
Boyle, William H., fl. 1863
Lead up to Gettysburg. "They have taken an immense number of horses out of this country...all the help engaged scadaddled. If they occupy this county a week longer it will be ruined as much as if a famine and blight had passed over it...it is no...
GLC09180.01
to Isaac H. McCauley
5 July 1863
Gettysburg's aftermath. "the rebs have stripped this valley of everything...there is not enough left for the people to live on for two weeks. Both railroads are destroyed. All the new depot buildings are down. Many farms are destroyed by roads...
GLC09180.02
[Printing of laws.]
2 January 1875
McPherson, Edward, fl. 1875
Printing of laws.
GLC09180.03
[Contracting the raising of a monument]
circa 1895-1910
56th Pennsylvania volunteers
Contracting the Bureau Brothers to erect a bronze monument, with a scale architectural rendering.
GLC09180.04
Manuscript map of Gettysburg battlefield
July 1863
With annotations describing the battle and its aftermath. "Perfect desolation everything shot away dead reables [sic] & horse trees bushes & fence & posts all gone a perfect valley of death."
GLC09181
Collection of 16 Union army soldiers' letters[Decimalized .01- .17]
1863
Various
Content includes detailed descriptions of camp life, provisions, Battle of Rappahannock Station, etc. With four original transmittal covers. Letter from Emerson Opdycke dated 30 April 1862: "We expect an immense fight down there [Corinth] which I...
GLC09182
[Special Order providing for safe passage of Confederate troops through Union lines]
10 April 1865
Mahone, William, 1826-1895
Personal copy. "All officers and men of the Confederate service paroled at Appomattox C. Ho. Va. who to reach their homes are compelled to pass through the lines of the Union Armies will be allowed to do so and to pass free on all Government...
GLC09183
[Parole of General Joseph Johnston's personal escort during the Carolina Campaign]
1 May 1865
Also the surrender to William T. Sherman. "Private Felix P. Webster of Genl. Johnston's escort has given his solemn obligation not to take up arms against the Government of the United States...and is permitted to return to his home..." Signed by...
GLC09184
Army of Shenandoah parole of William Bowman, 12th Virginia Cavalry
4 May 1865
Confederate army.
GLC09185
[Field orders for General Joseph Wheeler's Cavalry harassing Sherman near Atlanta]
12 June 1864
Confederate army. "When marching, or arriving at a fork of the road, or any point where it is possible for a command to mistake the route, the commanding officer of each regiment, will leave a courier to inform the commanding officer who follows...
GLC09186
Journal
Journal with signatures, poems, and notes written by Johnson's Island prisoners of war. Including poem, "The Prison on Lake Erie."
GLC09187
[Corn cob black doll]
circa 1860s
With black dyed muslin head and hands, printed cotton dress, belt, and scarf.
GLC09188
to Mother
20 December 1863
Smith, Martin, fl. 1863
A Southerner writing about "Divine Institution of Negro Slavery" and "old Abe and his abolition crew."
GLC09189
[Slavery related collection] [Decimalized .01- .10]
Collection of 7 abolitionist and slavery related autograph letter signed and one John Brown carte-de-visite. Autograph letter signed dated 25 June 1861 from H. Giles, "If this war continues, we can not now even imagine our worst days - nor, do I...
GLC09190
[Telegram announcing Abraham Lincoln's death]
15 April 1865
Early telegraphed notice of his death, sent by American Telegraph Company executive George Milliken to his wife at 8:30 AM. "President Lincoln died at twenty-two minutes after seven. J. Wilkes Booth was the Assassin. This is official."
GLC09191
[Set of 6 carte-de-visites of Mary Todd Lincoln]
circa 1861-1864
GLC09192
to Brigadier General Irvin, Prisoner on Parole
17 September 1780
Winslow, John, fl. 1811
From British Deputy Commissary of Prisoners at Flat Bush, NY. "Three of your officers having been taken last Night to make their Escape, His Excellency Lieutenant General [James] Robertson wishes to see you...on this matter..." Likely to James...
GLC09193
March 27, 1865
Writes that he is doing well and that the regiment is starting to receive a regular mail service. Since leaving Fayetteville, North Carolina there have been some hard fights. On 16 March their division and the First Division of the Corps. bore the...
GLC07460.115
Official price list of clothing
1 January 1863
Thomas, Lorenzo, 1804-1875
Includes detailed charts of clothing, camp and garrison equipage prices. Also notes that volunteers are given an allowance of $3.50 a month for clothing or $42 a year. Notation in pencil on verso reads "Auditor for the War Department, Washington DC...
GLC02016.178
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