George Perhamus was born in Muncy, Pennsylvania, in
1835 or 1836. Mary Elizabeth “Elis” Hitesman was born in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on January 2, 1835. On March 23, 1857,
they were married in Muncy. From there they moved to Dyersville
where, on July 22, 1858, a daughter, Adda Viola Perhamus, was
born, but looming ominously was “the great moral question of
slavery.” Only four months earlier a South Carolina Senator had
bragged, "without firing a gun, without drawing a sword, should
the North make war on us, we could bring the whole world to our
feet.
In 1860 Abraham Lincoln was elected President and,
on February 11, 1861, he left Illinois for his inauguration.
Passing through Pittsburgh, he remarked that "there really is no
crisis except an artificial one.... If the great American people
will only keep their temper, on both sides of the line, the
troubles will come to an end.” Three days later, Florence Amelia
Perhamus was born to George and Mary in Dyersville and the Clayton
County Journal, convinced that war was imminent, editorialized:
"A few months ago we, in common with the
mass of the people of the whole North, scouted the idea of
the disruption of the Union. We thought it impossible and
believed that if such an attempt were made it could at once
be subdued. But things are changed now. Nine [sic] States
are out of the Union, our forts and arsenals are in the
hands of the Disunionists, the United States Mint at New
Orleans is wrested from us, the Mississippi River is
blockaded so that no Northern vessel can go into New
Orleans. Vessel after vessel belonging to us is captured by
the South and - war is at our doors!” |
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Fort Sumter was attacked in April, the war
escalated and by the summer of 1862 it was clear that the war
would not end soon. On July 9, 1862, Iowa’s Governor Kirkwood
received a telegram asking him to raise five regiments in addition
to those already in the field. On August 21st, George enlisted in
what would be Company E of the state’s 21st Infantry. He was
described as being 5' 5" tall with blue eyes, dark hair and a fair
complexion. His age was listed as twenty-six and his occupation as
mechanic.
Training was at Camp Franklin in
Dubuque where, on September 9, 1862, ten companies with a total of
985 men were mustered into service. On a rainy September 16th,
crowded on board the sidewheel steamer Henry Clay and two
barges tied alongside, they started down the Mississippi. After
one night at Rock Island and a subsequent transfer to the
Hawkeye State, they reached St. Louis about 10:00 a.m. on
September 20th, spent a night at Benton Barracks and, about
midnight on the 21st, boarded a train for Rolla.
The next several months of their service were in
Missouri and George was marked “present” when bimonthly muster
rolls were prepared at Salem on October 31st and Houston on
December 31st. While there, word was received that a Confederate
force was approaching Springfield. Volunteers, twenty-five from
each company, joined a similar number from an Illinois regiment
and, with supportive artillery, rushed in that direction. On
January 11, 1863, George was one of the volunteers who
participated in a one-day battle at Hartville during which three
of his comrades were killed in action, two more were fatally
wounded and at least thirteen had wounds that were less severe.
Later that month they walked south to West Plains.
Many thought they would continue into Arkansas but, instead, they
moved northeast to Thomasville, Eminence, Ironton, Iron Mountain
and, on March 11th, into the old French town of Ste. Genevieve.
Camped on a ridge north of town, their stay was pleasant, but the
next month they were transported down-river to Milliken’s Bend
where General Grant was organizing a large, three-corps, army to
capture Vicksburg. George was present with his regiment as they
started a march south along roads, through swamps and across
bayous west of the Mississippi. On April 30th, they crossed to the
Bruinsburg landing on the east bank and started inland with Iowa’s
21st Infantry as the point regiment for the entire army. An
advance patrol met Confederate pickets near the Shaifer house
about midnight but, unable to see each other, both sides soon
rested.
The next day, George Perhamus participated with his
regiment in the one-day Battle of Port Gibson. On May 16th he was
present during the Battle of Champion’s Hill when the regiment was
held in reserve by General McClernand and on the 17th he
participated in an assault on entrenched Confederates at the Big
Black River. He remained with the regiment through the ensuing
siege of Vicksburg that ended on July 4, 1863. That was followed
immediately by an expedition to and siege of the capital at
Jackson, but there’s no indication that George participated. On
the 27th, he was one of several who were granted furloughs and
started north.
He rejoined the regiment in Louisiana, but was then
assigned to unspecified “detached duty.” On November 12, 1863,
while the regiment was stationed at Berwick, a general order was
issued detailing George as a regimental blacksmith. For the next
several months he was noted as “absent” and on detached duty with
the “teams,” but returned and was present by the end of April. On
July 31, 1864, he was hospitalized in New Orleans and on August
18th, at Morganza, he was granted another furlough. This time he
did not return. About 3:00 p.m. on October 31, 1864, still at
home, he died from an enlarged liver. Mary was twenty-nine, Adda
six and Florence only three. George is buried in Mount Hope
Cemetery, Dyersville.
Widows and children of union veterans were entitled
to pensions and Mary applied. She secured an affidavit from Rev.
George Drake, formerly Rector of St. James Church in Muncy, who
said he had performed their wedding ceremony. The regiment’s
surgeon, William Orr, said George had become sick at Terrebonne
Station in Louisiana with “acute inflammation of the Liver which
became so serious that it was found necessary to send him north.”
The furlough was granted “on my certificate, that a change of
climate was necessary to save life.” Another affidavit was from
Dr. Redkey in Dyersville who had treated George “during the month
of October 1864" for “disease of the liver.”
In her own affidavit of September 28, 1865, in
which she said her “post Office address is Muncy in the State of
Pennsylvania,” Mary swore to their marriage, the birth of the
girls and that she had not remarried or been divorced. The
following February, the Adjutant General’s office confirmed
George’s service, but the application stalled and, still in Muncy,
Mary signed another affidavit regarding the girls. Fanny Stallard
and Lavina Bagley said they “were present and officiated at the
accouchement” of Mary when Adda was born and Fanny said she was
the only other person present when Mary gave birth to Florence.
Mary moved back to Dyersville and, exasperated by the delay and
lack of information from her attorney, hired another attorney. On
May 1, 1869, a certificate was issued providing Mary with $8.00
monthly retroactive to the date of George’s death plus $2.00 per
month for each of the girls until their sixteenth birthdays.
Mary and the girls stayed in Dyersville until 1888
when they moved to Storm Lake in Buena Vista County. Mary died at
eighty-seven years of age on May 24, 1922, and was buried in Storm
Lake Cemetery. Florence married twice and died on March 12, 1939,
at age seventy-eight. Adda also married twice. She was
eighty-eight when she died on April 15, 1947. Both girls, like
their mother, are buried in Storm Lake Cemetery.
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