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Smith, William, fl. 1863 to Mary E. Townsend

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Gilder Lehrman Collection #: GLC08989 Author/Creator: Smith, William, fl. 1863 Place Written: Falmouth, Virginia Type: Autograph letter signed Date: February 11, 1863 Pagination: 3 p. : envelope Height: 17 cm, Width: 12.5 cm Order a Copy

Expresses strong dislike of the Emancipation Proclamation, and does not want to fight for blacks. A soldier from the One Hundred and Sixteenth Pennsylvania Volunteers, part of the Irish Brigade, writing to his sister. "You asked me how I like the Niggers Bussiness I tell you wat I think of It in shorte wordes to hell with the Niggers I did not come out to fight for Niggers I come to fight for the flag and for the Union Insted of going to free Niggers and down at Fort Royle they think a Nigger is better than a white man and I donte thinq mutch of that for I would shoote one as quick as wink if he give me any sass and would not now wate to hurt him and I would not think nothing of it. Well I got a letter from Frank the other day and he said that the Nigger Regt is thought of more than the whites." Written one month after the Emancipation Proclimation.

Smith, William A., fl. 1863
Townsend, Mary E., fl. 1863

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