Leander Stillwell - The Story of a Common Soldier of Army Life in the Civil War, 1861-1865
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Title: The Story of a Common Soldier of Army Life in the Civil War, 1861-1865
Author: Leander Stillwell
Release Date: September 8, 2008 [eBook #26561]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF A COMMON SOLDIER OF ARMY LIFE IN THE CIVIL WAR, 1861-1865***
and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team
(http://www.pgdp.net)
Judge Leander Stillwell
December, 1909.
Late of Co. D, 61st Illinois Infantry
1920
Leander Stillwell
DEDICATED TO MY YOUNGEST SON,
JEREMIAH E. STILLWELL.
Dear Jerry:
You have earnestly asked me to write something in the nature of an extended account of my career as a soldier in the Union army during the Civil War. It will be a rather strenuous undertaking for a man of my age. I shall be seventy-three years old in about three months, and the truth is, I am now becoming somewhat indolent, and averse to labor of any kind, either mental or physical. But I have concluded to comply with your request, and undertake the work. Whether I shall complete it, or not, I cannot now positively say, but I will do the best I can. And I will also say, for whatever you may think it worth, that YOU are the only person, now living, whose request could induce me to undertake the sketch that you desire.
L. STILLWELL.
Erie, Kansas,
July 3, 1916.
CONTENTS.
PAGE |
Chapter I. The Beginning of the War. Life at Camp Carrollton, January and February, 1862 |
Chapter II. Benton Barracks. St. Louis, March, 1862 |
Chapter III. Off for the Seat of War. The Battle of Shiloh. March and April, 1862 |
Chapter IV. Some Incidents of the Battle of Shiloh |
Chapter V. The Siege of Corinth. In Camp at Owl Creek. April and May, 1862 |
Chapter VI. Bethel. Jackson. June and July, 1862 |
Chapter VII. Bolivar. July, August, and September, 1862 |
Chapter VIII. Bolivar. The Movement to the Vicinity of Iuka, Mississippi. September-December, 1862 |
Chapter IX. The Affair at Salem Cemetery. Jackson, Carroll Station. December, 1862, January, 1863. Bolivar. February-May, 1863 |
Chapter X. The Siege of Vicksburg. June and July, 1863 |
Chapter XI. Helena, Arkansas. Life in a Hospital. August, 1863 |
Chapter XII. Devall's Bluff. Little Rock. August-October, 1863 |
Chapter XIII. Little Rock, October, 1863. Granted a Furlough. Chaplain B. B. Hamilton. The Journey on Furlough from Little Rock to Jersey County, Illinois. Return to Regiment, November, 1863 |
Chapter XIV. Little Rock. Winter of 1863-4. Re-enlist for Three Years More |
Chapter XV. Little Rock. Expeditions to Augusta and Springfield. March, April, and May, 1864 |
Chapter XVI. Devall's Bluff; The Clarendon Expedition. June and July, 1864 |
Chapter XVII. Devall's Bluff Grand Reviews and Inspections. Surgeon J. P. Anthony. Private Press Allender. June and July, 1864 |
Chapter XVIII. The Regiment Goes Home on Veteran Furlough. Interview with General W. T. Sherman After the War. A Short Tour of Soldiering at Chester, Illinois. August, September, and October, 1864 |
Chapter XIX. Expedition to North Missouri. Back in Tennessee Once More. Murfreesboro. October and November, 1864 |
Chapter XX. The Affair at Overall's Creek. Murfreesboro. December, 1864 |
Chapter XXI. The Battle of Wilkinson's Pike. December 7, 1864 |
Chapter XXII. The Fight on the Railroad Near Murfreesboro, December 15, 1864 |
Chapter XXIII. Murfreesboro. Winter of 1864-1865. Franklin. Spring and Summer of 1865 |
Chapter XXIV. The Soldier's Pay; Rations; Allusions to Some of the Useful Lessons Learned by Service in the Army in Time of War; Courage in Battle |
Chapter XXV. Franklin, Summer of 1865. Mustered Out, September 8, 1865. Receive Final Payment at Springfield, Illinois, September 27, 1865. The Regiment "Breaks Ranks" Forever |
PREFACE.
When I began writing these reminiscences it did not occur to me that anything in the nature of a preface was necessary. It was thought that the dedication to my son Jerry contained sufficient explanation. But I have now finished writing these recollections, and in view of all that they set forth, I believe that a few brief prefatory remarks may now be appropriate. In the first place it will be said that when I began the work it was only to gratify my son, and without any thought or expectation that it would ever be published. I don't know yet that such will be done, but it may happen. The thought occurred to me after I had written some part of it, and it is possible that about at that point some change began to take place in the style, and phraseology, and which perhaps may be observed. So much for that. Next I will say that all statements of fact herein made, based upon my own knowledge, can be relied on as absolutely true. My mother most carefully preserved the letters I wrote home from the army to her and to my father. She died on February 6, 1894, and thereafter my father (who survived her only about three years) gave back to me these old letters. In writing to my parents I wrote, as a rule, a letter every week when the opportunity was afforded, and now in this undertaking with these letters before me it was easy to follow the regiment every mile of its way from Camp Carrollton in January, 1862, to Camp Butler, in September, 1865. Furthermore, on June 1, 1863, at Memphis, Tennessee, as we passed through there on our way to join Grant's army at Vicksburg, I bought a little blank book about four inches long, three inches wide, and half an inch thick. From that time until we were mustered out, I kept a sort of very brief diary in this little book, and have it yet. The old letters and this book have been invaluable to me in writing my recollections, and having been written at or near the time of the happening of the events they mention, can be relied on as accurate and truthful.
Though I attained the rank of a commissioned officer while in the service, yet that did not occur until near the end of my time, and after the war was over. So it is submitted that the title given these sketches, "The Story of a Common Soldier," is warranted by the facts.
If this manuscript should ever be published, it will go to the world without any apology or commendation from me whatever. It is, though, only fair to say that I make no pretensions to being a "literary" man. This is simply the story of a common soldier who served in the army during the great war, and who faithfully tried to do his duty.
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