Morris, Wilmor W., fl. 1861-1862 to: "Much Esteemed Friend."

GLC06451.047

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GLC#
GLC06451.047-View header record
Type
Letters
Date
1862/05/01
Author/Creator
Morris, Wilmor W., fl. 1861-1862
Title
to: "Much Esteemed Friend."
Place Written
Yorktown, Virginia
Pagination
3 p. :
Primary time period
Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861-1877
Sub-Era
The American Civil War

Wilmor reports that "Niggerdom is a question that is talked over in camp verry much." The men think Congress had better find a way to pay the soldiers at the appointed times. He describes their line of defense, which is within a mile of the Confederates, on "the same ground that Washington had his armey on before the sur[r]ender of Cornwallis." He thinks the Confederates will be surprised when the Union cannons "open the[i]r mouthes an[d] begin to bark at them think of 2000 ball[s] an[d] shells per minut[e]" flying through the air.
Written at Camp Winfield Scott.

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