Archibald H. Stuart was
born in the historic city of Perth in central Scotland in about
1835. On June 24, 1857, Archibald and Fannie A. Flowers were
married in Hudson, Wisconsin.
On
August 12, 1862, he was enrolled in the Union Army at Millville by
McGregor postmaster Willard Benton. On the 22nd, at Dubuque’s Camp
Franklin, Archibald was mustered into Company G and, on September
9th, ten companies were mustered in as the state’s 21st Regiment
of volunteer infantry. On a rainy September 16th they marched
through town and, at the foot of Jones Street, boarded the steamer
Henry Clay and two barges lashed alongside and headed
downstream. They spent one night on Rock Island, later transferred
to the Hawkeye State and reached St. Louis on the 20th.
After an overnight stay at
Benton Barracks, they traveled by rail to Rolla and then, on
October 18, 1862, left Rolla for Salem. Most men walked, but those
suffering from a variety of ailments were often able to ride in
wagons and ambulances. From Salem they went to Houston and then
Hartville. On November 24, 1862 a wagon train bringing supplies
from Rolla was attacked and, on January 11, 1863, 262 men from the
regiment fought a one-day battle at Hartville.
On January 26, 1863, they
left Houston, discovered they were on the wrong road and returned
to Houston. On the 27th, a miserable day of sleet and snow, the
regiment headed south on the correct road to West Plains while
Archibald was promoted two ranks to 1st Sergeant.
They spent eight days in
West Plains where the post was commanded by Brigadier General John
Wynn Davidson. Also present was the 22nd Iowa Infantry under the
command of Colonel William Stone (Iowa Governor 1864-1868). On
February 6, 1863, Davidson wired Major General Curtis:
“I found Stone a
ready soldier and a gentleman, and I put the Iowa people in
one brigade, the ‘Iowa Brigade,’ under him, and he manages
everything, to my great relief.” |
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On February 8th they left
West Plains, but not towards Arkansas as most expected. Instead,
they started a long walk to the northeast - to Thomasville,
Ironton, Pilot Knob and Iron Mountain. At Iron Mountain, on March
9th, Archibald was granted a furlough while the regiment continued
its march. They went into camp at Ste. Genevieve while Archibald
boarded a northbound steamer. By the end of the month he had
returned and was marked “present” on a special muster taken April
10, 1863, by which time the regiment had moved farther south to
Milliken’s Bend where General Ulysses Grant was organizing a
massive army of three corps in preparation for a campaign to
capture Vicksburg.
The army started to cross
the Mississippi from Disharoon’s Plantation on the west bank to
the Bruinsburg landing on the east bank on April 30th, but
Archibald had become ill and was sent to a hospital in New
Carthage. Two weeks later he caught up near Bolton Station,
Mississippi. He was present on May 16, 1863, when the regiment was
held in reserve during the Battle of Champion’s Hill, participated
in an assault at the Big Black River on May 17th and participated
in an assault at Vicksburg on May 22nd.
John Craig had been serving
as the company’s 2nd Lieutenant since they were mustered into
service but, effective May 27, 1863, he was promoted to 1st
Lieutenant while Archibald Stuart was promoted to take his place
as 2nd Lieutenant of Company G. He continued with the regiment
during the siege of Vicksburg and a subsequent expedition to and
siege of Jackson, Mississippi. Effective July 27, 1863 there was
another round of promotions. John Dolson resigned as Captain, John
Craig was promoted from 1st Lieutenant to Captain and Archibald
Stuart was promoted from 2nd Lieutenant to 1st Lieutenant.
By the end of September,
the regiment was at Berwick Bay, Louisiana, and Archibald was
suffering from shortness of breath, lung problems and “congestive
chills.” He was admitted to the Convalescent Camp in Carrollton,
Louisiana, and, while there, was placed in command of the 2nd
Company of the 1st Division of Convalescents. He was later
transferred to a New Orleans army hospital that was housed in the
Levee Steam Cotton Press building that, before being occupied by
the army a year earlier, had operated the largest cotton press in
the world.
After
rejoining his comrades at Indianola, Texas, on February 14, 1864,
Archibald was with the regiment during its remaining service in
Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee and Alabama where it participated in
the campaign to occupy the city of Mobile. Original enlistees
still on the rolls were mustered out at Baton Rouge on July 15,
1865. Tents and equipment were turned in and, the next morning,
they boarded the steamer Lady Gay, built only a few months
earlier in Cincinnati for the Atlantic & Mississippi Steamship
Company, and started upstream. Traveling against the current,
progress was slow, but they reached Cairo and debarked on the
morning of the 19th. After a good meal at the “soldier’s rest,”
they boarded cars of the Illinois Central Railroad and continued
north. On the 21st they reached Clinton and camped outside of
town. On July 24th, according to Myron Knight, "our regiment
marched down to town at 1PM and received our final discharge and
payment.”
Archibald returned to his
wife and family in Dubuque where he worked as an attorney and
frequently represented soldiers making claims for federal
pensions. Among them from his own regiment were George Hess,
William McCarty, Alfred Kephart, Joseph Carter, Loring Knaebel and
William Schwaegler. On September 16, 1869, he signed an
application for his own invalid pension citing the problems that
led to his hospitalization six years earlier in Louisiana.
The War Department verified
his service, but the Surgeon General’s Office could find no record
of his hospitalization in either Carrollton or New Orleans, the
regiment’s hospital records were not on file and the Dubuque
doctor who treated him after the war had died. As a result, it was
not easy for Archibald to convince the pension office that he was
still suffering from a war-related disability. Salue Van Anda,
formerly a Lieutenant Colonel in the regiment recalled Archibald’s
congestive chills, shortness of breath and lung problems at
Berwick Bay. Dubuque resident H. F. Rice said Archibald was still
suffering from the same problems, but Dr. William Watson thought
it was merely a cold with no respiratory problems or lung disease.
Well-respected Dubuque doctors gave their opinions. Dr. Staples
said Archibald had lung disease and general debility of
long-standing and couldn’t perform “any considerable physical
labor or exertion.” Dr. Belden said Archibald’s health was feeble.
Josiah Fulmer said Archibald returned from the war greatly
debilitated with shortness of breath and constant coughing. Dr.
Kittoe, of Galena, Illinois, said there was considerable bronchial
irritation and Archibald’s breathing was difficult when “mounting
the stairs to my office.” On November 11, 1871, a certificate was
issued entitling Archibald to $4.25 monthly retroactive to July
16, 1865.
In 1872, Archibald attended
the regiment’s first reunion. Held in Dubuque, the two-day meeting
started on September 16th, ten years to the day from when they had
started south from the same city. In the ensuing years, he applied
seven times for increases to his pension. Each application was
followed by medical examinations, supportive affidavits and an
analysis by legal and medical reviewers in the Pension Office.
Sometimes increases were granted and sometimes not. He was
receiving $30.00 monthly when he died from the effects of “double
valvular disease of the heart” and “chronic bronchitis” on August
1, 1890, at his home, 837 Locust Street, Dubuque. He was buried in
the city’s Linwood Cemetery where, three years later, thousands
would gather to “witness the unveiling of the soldiers' monument.”
On September 2, 1890,
Fannie applied for a pension for herself and their two children
who were still under sixteen years of age: Margaret born August
24, 1875, and Bessie born December 16, 1877. Witnesses swore to
the marriage and births of the two girls, that Archibald and
Fannie had lived as husband and wife and that Fannie had not
remarried. A pension of $8.00 monthly was granted, plus $2.00 for
each of the girls until their sixteenth birthdays. Fannie died on
September 12, 1894, and was buried in Linwood Cemetery where her
stone erroneously gives her name as “Fanny.”
In addition to Bessie and
Margaret, another daughter, Elizabeth M. Stuart was born in
February 1864. Other children named in an online website include
Hastie A. Stuart (born 1857), Charles Stuart (born 1862), James
Stuart (born 1868) and Lizzie Stuart (born 1872), but independent
verification has not been found.
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