Born on June 5, 1844, in Allegheny County, Pennsylvania,
Robert Strane was the fourth of thirteen
children born to James and Elizabeth (Aber) Strane. When
Confederate guns fired on Fort Sumter, the family was living in
Iowa.
On September
4, 1861, the oldest of the siblings, twenty-three-year-old
Williams A. Strane, enlisted in Iowa’s 2nd Cavalry. Two months
later they left Davenport for St. Louis where they went into
quarters at Benton Barracks before pursuing expeditions in
Missouri and Mississippi. By the following fall the war had
escalated significantly and President Lincoln called for 300,000
volunteers with Iowa to provide five regiments. If not raised by
August 15th, a draft was possible. Robert, the fourth of the
thirteen children, enlisted on August 11th and John, the second of
the children, enlisted on August 18th, both in what would be
Company F of the state’s 21st regiment of volunteer infantry. At
5' 9" Robert was of average height and was described as having
grey eyes, light hair and a fair complexion, residence Buncombe (a
town that ceased to exist after its post office was closed).
Company F was ordered into quarters at Dubuque’s Camp Franklin on
the 22nd and mustered into service the same day. On September 9th
ten companies were mustered in as a regiment. On a miserable rainy
morning, September 16, 1862, those who weren’t ill left Camp
Franklin at 10:00 a.m. and marched through town while families,
friends and local residents watched. Women sent cakes and cheese
and others tossed apples. From the levee at the foot of Jones
Street, "packing ourselves like sardines in a box," the soldiers
boarded an overly crowded Henry Clay and two open barges tied
alongside and left for war. They spent one night at Rock Island,
encountered low water at Montrose, traveled by train to Keokuk,
boarded the Hawkeye State and arrived in St. Louis on the 20th
where they, like Williams before them, went into quarters at
Benton Barracks. The regiment’s early service was in Missouri -
Rolla, Salem, Houston, Hartville and, after a wagon train was
attacked on November 24th, back to Houston.
On January 9,
1863, word was received that a Confederate force was moving north
towards a Union base in Springfield and a hastily organized relief
force including twenty-five volunteers from each company left
Houston. Robert was one of the volunteers from Company F and was
with it when it engaged in a one-day battle at Hartville on the
11th before returning to Houston. He then continued with the
regiment as it moved south to West Plains and then northeast to
Thomasville, Ironton, Iron Mountain and on March 11th into the old
French town of St. Genevieve where it camped on a ridge north of
town. Two days later Robert wrote to his older sister, Elizabeth
(“Eliza”), that “John is on guard today down at town on patrol
guard that is to go round through the town and arest all soldiers
that haven’t passes. . . . John is well and in good spirits. him
and i washed and our clothes are dry and they look pretty clean.”
From St.
Genevieve they were transported down the Mississippi to Milliken’s
Bend where they were assigned to a corps led by General John
McClernand as part of any army organized by General Grant to
capture Vicksburg. Robert was present as they moved slowly south
along the west side of the river until April 30th when they
crossed to the east bank at Bruinsburg. The 21st Iowa was
designated as the point regiment when the army moved inland and,
on May 1st, fought the enemy in the Battle of Port Gibson. Robert
received a wound on his right side, but was able to continue with
the regiment. On the 16th they were present but held out of action
during the Battle of Champion’s Hill. On the 17th, with the 23d
Iowa, they led an assault on Confederates entrenched near the
railroad bridge over the Big Black River although there’s no
indication whether Robert was able to participate.
After burying
their dead and caring for the wounded while other regiments
crossed the river, they rejoined the army and took a position on
the Union line around the rear of Vicksburg. An assault on the
19th had been repulsed, but General Grant thought another assault
might prove successful. On May 22nd, along the entire line, his
army attacked but again was unsuccessful and thirty-five members
of the regiment were killed or received fatal wounds. Another
forty-eight received less severe wounds. Among the dead was
Robert’s brother, John Strane. A stone, likely a cenotaph, bearing
his name now stands in Zwingle’s Bethel Cemetery.
Robert
participated in the siege of Vicksburg that ended with its
surrender on July 4th, moved south with it to Carrollton and
participated with the regiment during subsequent activities in
southwestern Louisiana. From Brashear City on September 12th he
wrote to his father, “I have not got a letter for a week from
Wms,” but another member of their company had heard from his
brother that Williams’ regiment had moved to Memphis.
After service
in Louisiana, they were transported on the Corinthian and St.
Mary’s to Texas where they served for more than six months along
the Gulf coast and, from Indianola on January 19, 1864, Robert
wrote to his “sisters” and again said, “I have not had a letter
from Wms. for a long time.” On March 23rd he wrote to Hugh, his
eighteen-year-old brother, and this time was able to say, “I
received a letter from brother Wms. yesterday - he was well. He
said they had been on another very rough Scout and had some
fighting - none of the acquaintances was hurt.” Robert continued
with the regiment when it returned to Louisiana and was marked
“present” on bimonthly company muster rolls at Terrebonne Station
on June 30th and Morganza on August 31st.
On October 3,
1864, Williams, with his enlistment having come to an end, was
mustered out of the 2nd Cavalry at Davenport and started north to
rejoin the family in Zwingle. Robert was at St. Charles, Arkansas,
on the 3rd and continued on duty as they moved to Memphis and from
there to Alabama where they engaged in their final campaign of the
war, a successful campaign to occupy the city of Mobile. After
entering the city, they camped at nearby Spring Hill where Robert
was treated for “hepatitis” for two days and “intermittent fever.”
He continued to be treated for fever until July 10th when they
were in Baton Rouge. Five days later they were mustered out of
service. They hadn’t been paid since February 28th and, like most
of his comrades, Robert elected to have his account debited $6.00
so he could retain his musket and accouterments. On the 16th they
started a long trip up the Mississippi and, at Clinton, Iowa, on
the 24th the regiment was disbanded.
Before leaving
for his home 160 miles away in Waverly, Flavius Patterson who had
served with Robert in Company F took time to buy a “Sute of
Clothes & trunk for 48 dollars,” take the Charles Cheever to
Dubuque where he “was introduced to Miss Margret Timmons,
afterwards my wife,” and, on August 1st, “went up to Mr. Stranes
near Buncomb took dinner with Robert” before leaving for Waverly
the next day.
Robert
remained in Zwingle and worked as a farmer. He and his wife, Mary
Elizabeth Wallace, had twelve children: Grace (1878), James
(1880), Margaret (1882), Floyd (1884), Myrtle (1887), Jennie Ida
(1889), Leila (1892), William, Archibald (1896), Harold (1898),
Wallace and Kyle (1905).
On September
15th and 16th, 1887, Robert was one of 156 members of the
regiment, including eleven from Company F, who attended a reunion
in Manchester. The city was “gaily decorated in honor of the
‘boys’” who “marched through the principal streets, led by the
Merry drum corps, and after roll call at the hall, Capt. McDonald
and Rev. James Hill of Cascade, made some eloquent and impressive
remarks.” The afternoon “was devoted to social intercourse and
renewing the memories of ‘the time that tried men’s souls.’ This,
to the veterans, was the chief and best part of the re-union.” In
1902, at fifty-eight years of age, Robert applied for an “invalid
pension” under a law enacted in 1890 that required ninety days’
service, an honorable discharge and ratable medical issues “not
due to vicious habits.” On April 20, 1903, he was approved for a
monthly pension of $6.00 (later increased to $12.00) payable
quarterly through the Des Moines Agency.
Mary died in
1907 and Robert in 1912. They’re buried in Bethel Cemetery as are
Robert’s parents, at least five of his children and four of his
siblings, including Williams.
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