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WAR HISTORY
If there is any one thing more than another
of which the people of the Northern States have reason
to be proud, it is of the record they made during the dark
and bloody days of the war of the rebellion. When the war
was forced upon the country, the people were quietly pursuing
the even tenor of their ways, doing whatever their hands
found to do—making farms or cultivating those already
made, erecting homes, founding cities and towns, building
shops and manufactories—in short, the country was
alive with industry and hopes for the future. The country
was just recovering from the depression and losses incident
to the financial panic of 1857. The future looked bright
and promising, and the industrious and patriotic sons and
daughters of the Free States were buoyant with hope—and,
looking forward to the perfecting of new plans for the
ensurement of comfort and competence in their declining
years, they little heeded the mutterings and threatenings
of treason's children in the Slave States of the South.
True sons and descendants of the heroes of the "times
that tried men's souls"—the struggle for American
independence—they never dreamed that there was even
on so base as to attempt the destruction of the Union of
their fathers—a government baptized with the best
blood the world ever knew. While immediately surrounded
with peace and tranquility, they paid but little attention
to rumored plots and plans of those who lived and grew
rich from the sweat and toil, blood and flesh of others—aye,
even by trafficking in the offspring of their own loins.
Nevertheless, the war came with all its attendant horrors.
April 12, 1861, Fort Sumter, at Charleston,
South Carolina, Major Anderson, U. S. A. Commandant, was
fire[ed] upon by rebels in arms. Although basest treason,
this first act in the bloody reality that followed was
looked upon as mere bravado of a few hot-heads—the
act of a few fire-eaters whose sectional bias and hatred
of freedom was crazed by excessive indulgence in intoxicating
potations. When, a day later, the news was borne along
the telegraph wires that Major Anderson had been forced
to surrender to what had at first been regarded as a drunken
mob, the patriotic people of the North were startled from
their dreams of the future—from undertakings half
completed—and made to realize that behind that mob
there was a dark, deep and well-organized purpose to destroy
the Government, rend the Union in twain, and out of its
ruins erect a slave oligarchy, wherein no would dare question
their right to hold in bondage the sons and daughters of
men whose skins were black, or who, perchance, through
practices of lustful natures, were half or three-quarters
removed from the color that God, for His own purposes,
had given them. But

436
they "reckoned without their host." Their
dreams of the future—their plans for the establishment
of an independent confederacy were doomed, from their inception,
to sad and bitter disappointment.
Immediately upon the surrender
of Fort Sumter, Abraham Lincoln, America's martyr President,
who, but a few short weeks before, had taken the oath of
office as the nation's chief executive, issued a proclamation
calling for 75,000 volunteers for three months. The last
word of that proclamation had scarcely been taken from
the electric wires, before the call was filled. Men and
money were counted out by hundreds and thousands.
The people who loved their whole government
could not give enough. Patriotism thrilled and vibrated
and pulsated through every heart. The farm, the workshop,
the office, the pulpit, the bar, the bench, the college,
the schoolhouse—every calling offered its best men,
their lives and foutunes [fortunes] in defense of the Government's
honor and unity. Party lines were, for the time, ignored.
Bitter words, spoken in moments of political heat, were
forgotten and forgiven, and, joining hands in a common
cause, the masses of the people repeated the oath of America's
soldier statesman: "By the Eternal, the Union
must and shall be preserved."
The gauntlet thrown down by the traitors
of the South in their attack upon Fort Sumter was accepted,
not, however, in the spirit with which insolence meets
insolence, but wit a firm, determined spirit of patriotism
and love of country. The duty of the President was plain
under the Constitution and laws, and above and beyond all,
the masses of the people from whom all political power
is derived, demanded the suppression of the rebellion,
and stood ready to sustain the authority of their representatives
and executive officers.
April 14, A. D. 1861, Abraham Lincoln,
President of the United States, issued the following
PROCLAMATION
WHEREAS,
The laws of the United States have been and now are violently
opposed in several States, by combinations too powerful
to be suppressed in the ordinary way; I therefore call
for the militia of the several States of the Union, to
the aggregate number of 75,000, to suppress said combinations
and execute the laws. I appeal to all loyal citizens
to facilitate and aid in this effort to maintain the
laws, the integrity and the perpetuity of the popular
government, and redress wrongs long enough endured. The
first service assigned to the forces, probably, will
be to repossess the forts, places and property which
have been seized from the Union. Let the utmost care
be taken, consistent with the object, to avoid devastation,
destruction or interference with the property of peaceful
citizens in any part of the country; and I hereby command
persons composing the aforesaid combination to disperse
within twenty days from the date.
I
hereby convene both Houses of Congress for the 4th day
of July next, to determine upon measures for public
safety which the interest of the subject demands.
ABRAHAM LINCOLN,
President of the United States.
WM. H. SEWARD, Secretary
of State.
Seventy-five thousand men were not enough
to subdue the rebellion. Nor were ten times that number.
The war went on and call followed call, until it began
to look as if there would not be men enough in all the
Free States to crush out and subdue the monstrous war traitors
had inaugurated. But to every call for either men or money,
there was a willing and a ready response. And it is a boast
of the people that, had the supply of men fallen short,
there were women brave enough, daring enough, patriotic
enough, to have offered themselves as sacrifices on their
country's altar. Such were the impulses, motives and actions
of the patriotic men of the North, among whom the sons
of Jefferson made a conspicuous and praiseworthy record.
The readiness with which the first call
was filled, together with the embarrassments that surrounded
President Lincoln in the absence of sufficient laws to

437
authorize him to meet the unholy, unlooked-for
and unexpected emergency—an emergency that had never
been anticipated by the wisest and best of America's statesmen—together
with an underestimate of the magnitude of the rebellion,
and a general belief that the war could not and would not
last more than three months, checked rather than encouraged
the patriotic ardor of the people. But very few of the
men, comparatively speaking, who volunteered in response
to President Lincoln's call for 75,000 for three months,
were accepted. But the time soon came when there was a
place and musket for every man. Call followed call in quick
succession, until the number reached the grand total of
3,339,748, as follows:
| April 16, 1861, for three months |
75,000 |
| May 4, 1861, for five years |
64,748 |
| July, 1861, for three years |
500,000 |
| July 18, 1862, for three years |
300,000 |
| August 4, 1862, for nine months |
300,000 |
| June, 1863, for three years |
300,000 |
| October 17, 1863, for three years |
300,000 |
| February 18, 1864, for three years |
500,000 |
| July 10, 1864, for three years |
200,000 |
| July 16, 1864, for one, two and three
years |
500,000 |
| December 24, 1865, for three years |
300,000 |
| |
3,339,748 |
The tocsin of war was sounded, and meetings
were held over the North to consider the situation and
devise ways and means to meet the President's call.
The first war-meeting in Jefferson County
was held in Fairfield on Wednesday, April 17, 1861. Mayor
Stubbs was chosen President, Ward
Lamson and Dr. S. W.
Taylor, Vice Presidents, and W. W. Junkin, Secretary, of
the meeting.
At the reading of the call for volunteers,
there was a ready response from those of the required age,
and one hundred names were soon enrolled. The paper signed
by the volunteers was headed by the following:
We, the undersigned, able-bodied men between
the ages of eighteen and forty years, hereby tender our
services to Gov. Kirkwood, and obligate ourselves to be
in readiness to march in defense of our country as occasion
may require, subject only to such regulations as may hereafter
be enacted by the Government for the regulation of volunteers.
NAMES
| George Strong |
Moses A. McCoid |
David B. Wilson |
| Henry A. Millen |
Robert Lock |
George Balding |
| W. T. Killough |
J. G. Kirkpatrick |
Bill Hampsen |
| George H. Case |
William Scott |
Daniel W. Brown |
| G. H. Myers |
A. K. Updegraph |
C. A. Miller |
| W. F. SMith |
J. M. Hughes |
R. M. Rhamey |
| Daniel Smith |
David P. Long |
George W. Hill |
| John Swanson |
Isaac Olds |
George W. Fetter |
| John T. McCullough |
D. B. Johnson |
John Locke |
| Manford Hall |
Thomas Hoffman |
John R. McEldary |
| Charles J. Reed |
N. Howard Ward |
David Jones |
| William H. Cusick |
Jacob Fox |
J. A. Whitley |
| W. C. Hendersen |
Owen Bromley |
Samuel B. Woods |
| William Hill |
Brainerd Kerr |
James F. Crawford |
| John J. Payton |
R. P. Moore |
Jacob Young |
| Harry Patrick |
W. S. Moore |
William Leith |
| H. G. Ross |
Matt Hilbert |
W. T. Hendricks |
| McDnald Parshall |
Sol. D.B. Welch |
William H. Baker |
| J. W. Workman (drum) |
James Ross |
David Pierson |
| Samuel Turner |
George Heaton |
William W. Maxwell |
| John T. Russell |
A. R. Wilson |
James M. Dudley |
| Reuben Coop |
John J. McKee |
Wesley Summers |
| Silas Pearson |
Samuel H. Simms |
J. W. Robinson |

438
| Elijah Newby |
Benjamin Mikesall |
Ostin Sebrin |
| D. W. Garber |
Lester Daley |
R. G. Foregrave |
| Wiley S. Simms |
John C. Duncan |
Daniel Moore |
| Steven D. Gorsuch |
Jackson Hefner |
Henry T. Harris |
| William Pattison |
U. M. Davis |
J. W. Messick |
| W. Bauder |
Frederick F. Metzler |
J. L. Thompson |
| M. Page |
A. P. Heaton |
William F. Lowery |
| Mark F. Carter |
Timothy W. Austin |
Robert Stam |
| G. W. Hammond |
J. S. Longary |
L. D. Boone |
| W. H. Pierson |
Marion York |
J. H. Forgrave |
| James Young |
R. B. Partridge |
La Torry Webster |
Remarks of a patriotic character were then
made by C. W. Slagle, J. C. Kirkpatrick, Robert
Brown, George Strong, and others.
The following resolution was unanimously
adopted:
Resolved, That all true men will stand by
the Government in its hour of need, and any man who will
not lend such support is unworthy of its protection.
By a unanimous vote of those who volunteered,
their services were at once tendered to the Governor, and
a committee of five, consisting of R. C. Brown,
S. W. Taylor, D. Young, R. Gaines and J.
H. Allender, was appointed to
procure the signatures of those who were willing to assist
the families of those volunteers who went into the service
of the United States.
After ordering the proceedings to be published,
the meeting adjourned with three rousing cheers for the
Union, the Constitution and the enforcement of the laws.
The proceedings of this meeting were signed by D.
P. Stubbs,
President, and W. W. Junkin, Secretary.
This, the first company of volunteers raised
in Jefferson County, was enrolled on the 6th of May, 1871,
and mustered into the United States service by Maj. Lauman.
It was the original intention that it should be made a
part of the First Regiment of Iowa Volunteers, but failing
to be
ready in time to leave the State with that regiment, the
company eventually became Company E of the Second Iowa.
The company was at first organized with Frederick
F. Metzler,
Captain; George Strong, First Lieutenant,
and Stephen
D. Gorsuch, Second Lieutenant. Shortly afterward,
however,
John T. McCullough was commissioned Captain, D.
B. Wilson,
First Lieutenant, and S. B. Woods, Second
Lieutenant.
On Friday, the 24th day of May, the day
on which the company started for Keokuk, a beautiful silk
flag, the work of the fair hands of the patriotic ladies
of Fairfield, was presented to the company composed of
their husbands, brothers, lovers and friends, who were
so soon
to become familiar with the manifold horrors of the tented
field.
The presentation speech was made, on behalf
of the ladies, by Miss Helen E. Pelletreau,
a very estimable young lady of Fairfield. The company,
with the Fairfield
Guards and the Home Guards, surrounded by a large assemblage
of citizens, who had gathered to witness the presentation,
was drawn up in the park, facing an elevated platform,
when Miss Pelletreau arose and delivered
an appropriate and impressive address. Her voice was clear,
full and distinct,
and her manner that of one fully impressed with the gravity
of the occasion, and the critical condition of the country.
She spoke as follows:
CITIZEN SOLDIERS: You have
enlisted at the call of your country to defend our rights.
We honor you for so doing, and rejoice in being able to
manifest our approval of your hearty response to that call
by presenting you this flag. These are the same stars and
stripes under which our fathers fought and bled—"The
Star Spangled Banner"—which has been to all
nations an emblem of our devotion to liberty and freedom.
Take the gift, guard it well. Bear it to the very front
of battle, and fight valiantly under its folds until victory
is yours. Then, and not till then, we charge you to return
it to us unstained by dishonor, and you shall be welcomed
home with hearts full of gratitude.

439
This is a proud day for us
and for you. For us, that we can freely give up our husbands,
brothers and sons for the sake of our country; for you,
that you can sever the ties that bind you to home and friends
and go forth "armed with the panoply of war" to
fight for our liberties.
May the same spirit which actuated
our forfathers inspire you with zeal and undaunted courage
in the great and glorious cause which you have espoused.
Be assured our prayers will follow you through all the
privations, toils and dangers you may encounter, and we
believe that that God who protected and sustained Washington
in the hour of his greatest need, will be with you and
nerve your arms to strike a death-blow to the foes of the
"Flag of our Union."
During Miss Pelletreau's remarks,
many an eye was wet with tears and sobbings were heard
in many portions of the assemblage. When she had concluded
her address, the flag was received by Lieut. Strong, who
had been appointed by the company for that purpose. This
officer responded in a few appropriate remarks, and other
members of the company also spoke pertinent to the occasion.
A few feeling words by Capt. Metzler concluded the ceremonies,
after which the company marched to the scene of departure,
and were soon en route for Keokuk.
This beautiful momento of
home and friends, the presentation, of which is described
above, was destined to have a very eventful history, carried
as it was throughout the entire four years of conflict.
It was with Company E through the bloody, hard-fought fields
of Donelson, Shiloh, Corinth, Bear Creek, Resaca, Atlanta
and other engagements equally bloody. It accompanied them
with Sherman on his victorious march to the sea, and was,
for a time, carried as the colors of the regiment, but
throughout all its vicissitudes the silken emblem was never
stained with dishonor. This relic of the days of strife,
tattered and torn with time and exposure, is still preserved
at Fairfield, in the law office of Mr. Moses McCoid, one
of the original members of the company.
For one month after their
departure, the ladies of Fairfield plied themselves most
assiduously to making one hundred suits of clothes, one
for each member. The garments were in due time completed
and sent to the boys, but scarcely had they got them well
fitted to their persons before an order came from the War
Department that every regiment in the service should be
clothed in the regular blue, which subsequently became
so familiar to all throughout the length and breadth of
the land. These suits prepared on this occasion by the
Fairfield ladies were of gray, such as were provided for
the soldiers during the first three months of the war.
As a matter of course, the new habiliments were at once
discarded, which was a great disappointment to the ladies
who had labored so assiduously in their work of patriotism
and love.
The same spirit of patriotism
pervaded the other townships of Jefferson County.
Union meetings were held at
all the principal points in the county, and an account
of the proceedings of one held March 26, in Black Hawk
Township, may not prove uninteresting.
Union Hall was well filled.
Moses Dudley was called to the chair and A.
Defrance appointed
Secretary, after which the Chairman stated the object of
the meeting. Mr. Bleakmore was then introduced
and made an able and eloquent Union speech. He was followed
by R.
Gaines, E. Davis and Moses Dudley.
A committee, consisting of Messrs. Gaines, Davis and Bleakmore,
was appointed to draft resolutions setting forth the sense
and feeling of
the meeting. This committee reported as follows, the report
being adopted without a dissenting voice.
WHEREAS, These United States
are now involved in civil war, actual hostilities having
been commenced by the bombardment of Fort Sumter; and
WHEREAS, Our national capital
is threatened with invasion and our Government with overthrow;
therefore, Resolved,

440
1. That we are unalterably
attached to the American Union, and we deplore and condemn
the attempts to dissolve it;
2. That we are, as heretofore,
on the side of our country now and forever, and that we
will obey, maintain and support the Constitution and laws
of the United States and of the State of Iowa;
3. That Abraham Lincoln has
been constitutionally and legally elected and inaugurated
as President of the United States, and that our very loyalty
to the Constitution binds us to protect and defend the
Government (of which the Administration wields the executive
power) from insult, invasion and overthrow;
4. That, as many persons present
in this meeting have condemned, and still do condemn, continuance,
and as history also denounces the still more unpatriotic
opposition to the war of 1812, so strongly manifested in
other States of the Union, so do we now discountenance
opposition, for the sake of opposition, to the policy of
the Administration; especially do we advise against such
opposition as may induce those who have taken up arms against
the Constitution and the Union to suppose they have friends
and supporters in the loyal State;
5. That the Administration
and the Republican party, and all other parties, should
and will be hereafter severally held to strict account
for any errors they may have committed, or may in future
commit, in regard to the secession movement;
6. That we are not Abolitionists,
and that we make no war upon the slave property of the
Southern States;
7. That civil war has no charms
for us, and that we hope and pray for its speedy and happy
termination, without an attack upon Washington City, and
without further devastation and bloodshed; but come what
may, we abide by the Constitution and the flag of our Union;
8. That, if the storm must
rage without, we should have peace and union at home, and
we do strenuously advise courtesy, toleration and forbearance
among our own citizens toward each other; we condemn the
use of abusive epithets, such as "traitors" and "secessionists,"
as applied to men, all of whom are loyal to their country
and her flag; and we are not in favor of the revival of
the sedition laws of John Adams, nor of the enactment here
of the treason laws of Henry the Eighth, of England, which
not only put men to death for their deeds, but also for
their words; and not only for their words, but also for
their thoughts.
The meeting then organized
a "Home Guard," of which the following were enrolled at
that meeting as members:
| Richard Gaines |
J. H. Baker |
C. Defrance |
| Perry Summers |
Zach Baker |
John Neff |
| William Summers |
John Davis |
S. L. Statkup |
| W. B. Houdersheldt |
W. D. Alston |
George J. Fee |
| R. M. Moyer |
J. P. Wray |
Daniel Harter |
| Eleazer Morgan |
James Defrance |
Joseph Summers |
| W. S. McKey |
George Eyerly |
A. K. Hite |
| A. Defrance |
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The proceedings of this meeting were ordered
published in the Fairfield Ledger and the Burlington Hawk-Eye.
In Penn Township, a meeting was held at
Miller's schoolhouse, April 27, for the purpose of forming
a military company for home protection, and a Home Guard
was organized, the roll of which was signed on this occasion
by twenty-nine citizens of that township.
At Abingdon, in Polk Township, on May 27,
a Home Guard was formed, consisting of eighty members,
and officered as follows: Captain, P. W. Wilcox; First
Lieutenant, M. M. Campbell; Second Lieutenant, Joshua
Wright;
Color Sergeant, J. J. Sperry. This company was banded together
for the purpose of repelling invasion, protecting their
homes, and, if called upon by the President, to tender
their services to go out of the State and assist in maintaining
the honor of the American flag. Companies of Home Guards
were also organized in Liberty and Round Prairie Townships.
An old Mexican war soldier of this county,
who knew how it was himself, animated by a humanitarian
spirit and a fatherly solicitude for the comfort and general
welfare of the young and inexperienced volunteers who were
about to start for the sea of war, and dare the untried
dangers of the march, the camp and the battle-field, offered
the following timely suggestions, the observation of

441
which by the soldiers of the county, added
greatly to their general health and comfort:
1. Remember, That in a campaign
more men die from sickness than by the bullet.
2. Line your blankets with
one thickness of brown drilling. This adds but four ounces
in weight, and doubles the warmth.
3. Buy a small India rubber
blanket (only $1.50) to lay on the ground or to throw over
your shoulder when on guard duty during a rainstorm. Most
of the Eastern troops are provided with these. Straw to
lay upon is not always to be had.
4. The best military hat in
use is the light-colored soft felt, the crown being sufficiently
high to allow space for the air over the brain. You can
fasten it up as a Continental in fair weather, or turn
it down when it is wet or very sunny.
5. Let your beard grow, so
as to protect the throat and lungs.
6. Keep your entire person
clean. This prevents fevers and bowel complaints in warm
climates. Was your body, if possible. Avoid strong coffee
and oily meat. Gen. Scott said the too frequent use of
these, together with neglect in keeping the skin clean,
cost many a solider his life in Mexico.
7. A check of perspirations
by chilly night air often causes fever and death. When
thus exposed, do not forget your blanket.
In the latter part of May,
a meeting of the officers of the various organized military
companies of Jefferson County was held at Fairfield, of
which W. S. Linch was Chairman, and J.
H. Winder, Secretary,
the object of which, as stated to the meeting by W.
M. Clark, was to arrange the preliminaries for
a grand military parade. In order to preserve some record
of the number
of companies then in the county, a list is here given of
those represented on that occasion:
- Fairfield Home Guards, by W. M. Clark, Captain.
- Black Hawk Home Guards, by R. Gaines, Captain. Drill
at James H. Baker's.
- Pen Township Home Guards, by O. J. Westenhaver, Captain.
Drill at W. C. Coop's.
- Salina Home Guards, by J. H. Allender, Captain. Drill
at Salina.
- Prairie Home Guards, by J. H. Strong,
First Lieutenant. Drill in Round Prairie Township.
- Prairie Home Guards, horse company, by H. Gaylord, Captain.
Drill at Glasgow.
- Jefferson Home Guards, by P. Walker, Captain. Drill at
Libertyville.
- Fairfield Guards, by W. K. Alexander, First Lieutenant.
Drill at Fairfield.
It was decided that the companies should
all meet for general drill at Fairfield, June 1, at 10
o'clock. The officers of the day, as appointed for the
occasion, were W. P. Huyett, Colonel; P.
Walker, Lieutenant Colonel; J. H. Allender,
Major. Saturday, the 1st of June, came, and with it the
heaviest shower
of rain of the season, which threw a wet blanket over the
proceedings, spoiling all the beauty and drowning all the
fun out of the parade. The military organizations were
on hand in the morning, as well as a large concourse of
people from other portions of the county. The troops were
marched to the depot grounds, where they were formed and
brought into town, and dispersed again until 1 o'clock,
at which hour the companies assembled around the Park
and were getting into order, when the windows of heaven
were again opened and the floods descended, causing considerable
marching in "double quick" time.
The Board of Supervisors of Jefferson County,
realizing that as the natural protectors of many families
of the county were absent in the army, several were beginning
to want for the necessaries of life, ordered a special
meeting of the Board on Saturday, June 8, to consider the
situation. At this meeting, the following resolution was
adopted:
Resolved, That the Board of Supervisors
of Jefferson County, Iowa, do hereby appropriate the sum
of $1,000 for the relief of families of citizens of said
county enlisted in the service of the Government, to be
disbursed by William K. Alexander, William Long and George
Acheson, they to render a statement of the disbursements
at the next regular session of the Board, and authorizing
the Clerk to draw warrants on the treasury for the amounts.

442
October 8, 1861, the Board
of Supervisors being in session, it was
Ordered, That the Board of
Supervisors do hereby appropriate out of the county funds
of this county the additional sum of $500, for the support
of families of those persons who have volunteered and are
in the actual military service of either the United States
or the State of Iowa, who are in destitute circumstances,
and whose families resided in this county at the time of
their enlistments and whose families still reside in this
county.
In addition to these appropriations
by the County Board, a paper began to circulate when enlistments
first commenced, for voluntary subscriptions for the benefit
of the families of the volunteers. No man refused to contribute
something, and in this way over $2,000 were provided for
the purpose named. It was money cheerfully given, and was
the means of carrying gladness to the heart of many a wife
and mother at home and husband and father on the tented
field.
A systematic plan was adopted
for disbursing these amounts, and, be it said to the credit
of the people of Jefferson County who remained at home
during the war, that not one of any of the soldiers' families
was left to suffer when it was known, or could be known,
that they were in need of food, fuel, clothing, shelter
or medical assistance.
In the charges on Fort Donelson,
the Second Iowa Regiment lost over two-thirds of its members,
and the report reached Fairfield that Company E was included
among those who had suffered the most severely. The sorrowful
news of this battle brought mourning into the households
of all those who had friends and relatives in the Second
Regiment, and no one among them knew how soon the probability
that some dear one was either killed, wounded or taken
prisoner—on the arrival of more definite information—would
be converted into a certainty.
In the midst of these harrowing
doubts, a number of the citizens of Fairfield met together
for mutual condolence and to devise some plan for sending
assistance to the victims of the carnage before Fort Donelson.
At this meeting, Dr. C. S. Clark proposed
that he would himself go to the scene of the late battle,
which proposition
met with general approbation. Mrs. M. E. Woods immediately
proposed that she would accompany the Doctor on his mission
of mercy to the wounded and dying, which she also received
the assent of the meeting. It was finally decided, however,
that Dr. Clark should first go as far
as Cairo and ascertain definitely just what was the situation,
and what was needed
in the way of nurses and sanitary supplies. The report
came back from Dr. Clark that there was
a crying need for competent nurses, and that the sanitary
supplies were low.
It was then arranged for Mrs.
Woods to procure the necessary credentials as
Sanitary Agent and Nurse, and the papers for transportation,
which
she did accordingly. On the 3d of April, 1862, she made
her first visit to Keokuk with a supply of sanitary stores,
and entered heart and should upon that mission to the sick
and wounded who came within her department, in the faithful
fulfillment of which she eventually became so distinguished.
After distributing the sanitary supplies sent in her care,
Mrs. Woods remained for some time in Keokuk,
nursing and caring for the sick and wounded, and then returned
home,
but only remained long enough for another supply of stores
to be collected, with which she started, in November, for
Springfield, Mo., where the Nineteenth Iowa was quartered.
Returning to her home in Fairfield
for a short time, in the month of March, 1863, Mrs.
Woods started with another extensive supply of stores for Pilot
Knob, Mo., where the Third Regiment of Iowa Cavalry was
quartered. In the latter part of March, she went from Pilot
Knob to Helena with supplies

443
that were much needed by the Fourth Iowa
Cavalry, which at that time was stationed there. She then
proceeded on her first trip down the river en route for
Milliken's Bend and Vicksburg, arriving at the former place
about the 1st of April. Mrs. Woods was
in the rear of Vicksburg with the Union army during the
bombardment of that city
by Gen. Grant's forces, when the gunboats on the Mississippi
succeeded in running the blockades, and for a time herself
was under fire when the shot and shell from the enemy's
guns were falling so thick and fast that she was obliged
to keep up an active movement in order to avoid the range
of the exploding shells, which, with the blazing guns,
so illuminated all things in that vicinity at night that
one could readily see to read by the light they made, and
even see to pick up a pin on the deck of a gunboat.
This energetic and patriotic
woman made nine trips to the seat of conflict and the various
military stations with supplies for the soldiers in amounts
varying in bulk from ten to thirty-five tons each time,
and continued her ministrations throughout the entire war.
During the time Mrs. Woods was engaged
in this good work, the Government and all with whom she
came in contact, and
on all occasions, reposed in her the most implicit confidence,
and many is the wounded, suffering soldier that has occasion
to remember her more as a ministering angel than as a woman.
The following letter of acknowledgment
is inserted here as one of many of like character received
by Mrs. Woods, showing the appreciation in which her services
were held by that portion of the army with which she had
communication as Nurse and Sanitary Agent.
HEADQUARTERS 15TH ARMY CORPS,
SCOTTSBOROUGH, December 31, 1863.}
MRS. WOODS, Headquarters First
Division, Madam: Maj. Gen. Logan desires to express his
hearty appreciation of your kindness in bearing us in mind
on the approach of the New Year. Allow me, madam, on his
part and for the entire staff, to tender you our thanks.
The bearer will bring the articles
you intend for us, and in "doing them justice" we will
not fail to remember you and the noble women who, with
you, have done so much to smooth the rough and stormy paths
of a soldier's life.
Wishing you, madam, a happy
New Year, and many of them.
I am very truly your obedient
servant,
J. H. HAMMOND,
Adjutant General and Chief of Staff 15th Army Corps.
Not all the credit is due
to Mrs. Woods for this good work—for the gladness
and comfort carried to Jefferson's "Boys in Blue," as they
languished in hospitals or stood exposed on the outposts
of duty. Behind her were the wives, and mothers, and sisters,
and daughters, who had watched their soldier-husbands,
sons and brothers march away to meet, repel and conquer
a rebellious foe. They provided, and Mrs. Woods was the
trusted agent whom they commissioned to deliver to their
representative soldiery what they prepared. Nobly, bravely,
fearlessly did Mrs. Woods discharge that duty. Faithfully,
lovingly did the noble patriotic daughters of Jefferson
do theirs. Fairs and festivals were held in almost every
schoolhouse in the county. Speeches were interdicted. Work,
not talk, was the purpose. On occasions of fairs and festivals,
the walls of the buildings were adorned with wreaths of
evergreens and mottoes like these: Ladies' Aid Society,
The Soldier's Friend, "The Love of Country Guides Us,"
"Where Liberty Dwells, There is My Country," "He Who Gives
Promptly, Gives Twice as Much."
The ladies of Jefferson County
caught the spirit of the hour in a manner that showed them
to be imbued with the noblest ambitions of American women;
and from the hour when those who were near and dear to
them first were called to the field, their patriotism never
wavered, nor did they allow their interest in

444
the cause to flag, until the victorious troops,
"came marching home with glad and gallant tread."
While the women were almost
constantly employed in gathering supplies and hurrying
them to the soldiers already in the field, others were
enlisting and joining companies and regiments to which
they were assigned. Many pages could be written of the
patriotic offerings made by the people of Jefferson County
during the years involved in the great and final struggle
between freedom and slavery, but those offerings were recorded
in deeds more sacred and lasting than words. Out of a population
of 15,038, in 1860, as shown by the United States census
for that decade, this county furnished over one thousand
six hundred soldiers—a record unequaled by any
other county of the same population in the United States.
The Adjutant General's report for 1866 shows 966 enlistments
from this county, but, as many citizens of the county entered
the army at other points, it has been ascertained that
the total number who fought in the war of the great rebellion
will approximate 1,600.
Many of these men sleep in
unmarked graves, far away from home and kindred, but their
names and their memories live in the hearts of a grateful
people. We can offer a no more fitting tribute to their
patriotic valor than a full and complete record, so far
as it is possible to make it, they will embrace the names,
the terms of enlistments, the battles in which they engaged,
etc. It will be a wreath of glory encircling every brow,
and a memento which each and every one of them earned in
defense of their country's honor, integrity and unity.
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Volunteer Roster - part one
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