“It
is one thing to think of dead men in the aggregate, but
something else again to consider them as individuals, whether
Yank or Reb. When one knows something of the real person, a
degree of sympathy sometimes develops.”
"Letters
written in moments of leisure are probably the best source
material for the Civil War historian who wants to know what the
soldier did and thought."
“The
history of a country is best told in a record of the lives of
its people.”
“The
past presents itself before the eyes of those who know how to
see it.”
A news
article said “there were 16 million men and women in the
armed forces of the United States during World War II. Don’t you
think that each one of them had a story?
The same can be said of the Civil War. In 1885, Samuel Kirkwood,
Iowa’s wartime Governor, implored veterans to preserve their
wartime memories. “Write out these stories you so love to
tell and to hear,” he said,
“and place them in our State
Historical Society for preservation . . . that in the distant
future will excite the smiles of those now unborn.”
It’s these stories of
real people of whom I now write - soldiers at war, far from
home, who suffered hardship, disease, wounds and homesickness -
wives and parents and children who struggled to survive and, too
often, learned their soldier would not be coming home.
Whether known as the Civil War, the War Between the States, the
War of Attempted Secession to Walt Whitman, the War of the
Rebellion to Congress, the War of Yankee Aggression, the War of
Southern Independence, the War of 1861, the War for the
Suppression of the Rebellion of the Seceded States, the Scorpion
War, the “late unpleasantness” or any of its many other
names, America's great internal war was, if nothing else, an
interlude, a devastating four year interlude, in the history of
a country and the lives of its citizens. It has been chronicled
by participants, archivists and historians. It has been
dissected and analyzed and debated for more than a century and a
half. The memoirs and actions of its Presidents, political
leaders and commanding officers have been well-documented. Major
battles have been examined, maps have been drawn, films have
been made. Diaries and letters, often well-written, emotional
and patriotic, have been published.
For almost forty years, I
have read many previous works and reviewed thousands of pages of
records, personal letters, diaries, newspapers and reels of
microfilm. Included were military records of 444 members of the
regiment and pension records for 200, all purchased from the
National Archives, the original or transcribed journals kept by
six members of the regiment, and a total of 206 letters by
thirty members of the regiment (including 134 original letters
by Jim Bethard). I have visited numerous cemeteries, talked to
hundreds of people and followed routes used by Union infantry in
the Trans-Mississippi. From all of this, I was most affected by
the personal lives and trials and concerns of the enlisted
volunteers and their families.
These were the men in the
trenches who died by the thousands and left wives and families
at home while they followed what most saw as their patriotic
calling. Only a few years earlier they had been young boys. They
went to school, played together and helped their parents. They
became friends without any premonition of what lay ahead but,
when their Presidents called, they went to war.
History books are replete with statistics of how many were
killed in battle. Others were maimed for life and graphic
photographs show piles of corpses and amputated limbs. The story
less told has been the personal one - men doing their duty as
they saw it while also worrying about friends and family and
crops at home - wives who cared for children, ran households and
businesses, entered the classroom and "followed the plow"
- relatives who grieved for distant soldiers - civilians who
died while sons, husbands and fathers were gone - the awful
routine of death.
Men in Northern regiments
were not always outfitted in pretty blue uniforms with shiny
buttons. Thousands of Confederates never saw the grey uniforms
with which they are commonly associated. For much of the war,
Grant did not command the North and Lee did not command the
South. Rarely mentioned are the large numbers of immigrants from
England, Ireland, Scotland, Canada, Germany, Austria and
elsewhere who willingly went to war for their adopted country.
Magnificent battles, daring charges and personal bravery are
extolled, but not every battle was a turning point. Brief
skirmishes, guerrilla raids and sniping by sharpshooters were a
daily occurrence. Of more than 10,000 engagements, only a few
have names that are recognizable.
Not every charge was
glorious and heroic. Men died, often in great pain, armless,
legless, thirsting for water, ravaged by disease. Not all were
noble and brave. Desertions were sometimes rampant, the draft
was frequently evaded, bounty jumpers were not uncommon and
loyalties wavered. They were, after all, human. Mentioned far
less than popular battles with dashing cavalry and shining
sabers is the low, debilitating death from illness. Many more
died from disease than from battle, especially in the west.
Rarely mentioned are the long, tedious marches, months between
engagements, the frustration and boredom of inactivity. There
are too few accounts of what happened to these men after the
war, what lives they returned to, how they continued to suffer
and die from war-related illness, wounds and injuries, and how
they fought new battles for meager pensions. Perhaps this
account will fill a void.
Iowa was young and
predominantly agricultural when the war began and only a small
percentage of those who enlisted from the state were native
born. The state’s 21st infantry joined the war during its second
year when James and Caroline Bethard were working a rented farm
along a small stream in the northeastern part of the state. Jim,
his brother, an uncle and a cousin enlisted while Cal saw not
only her husband, but also four brothers and five cousins
enroll.
Jim entered the war as a
private and was discharged as a private. His name is in no
history books, but he exemplifies the infantrymen who carried
the muskets, did what they were told and fought the good fight.
In his letters to Cal, he mentions numerous other people - their
daughter Nellie, his father Alexander, his brother Jonathan, his
sisters and aunts and uncles, and his inlaws, Joel and Sarah
Rice. He discusses Union and Confederate officers and enlisted
men from his own regiment to the Ohio regiments of his boyhood
friends. Most of these people have been identified; only a few
remain unknown. While the focus is on Jim’s regiment,
contemporaneous reference will be made to friends and relatives
serving elsewhere. This may temporarily break the continuity,
but only a chronological discussion can keep their respective
movements in proper perspective.
Figures given for troop
strength and casualties were usually estimates that varied
greatly depending on who gave them. Names, spellings, dates and
other details were frequently wrong even in well known works by
respected authors. Men sometimes spelled their own names
differently from one day to the next. One person attributes an
incident to one date, another to a different date. First person
letters and diaries written by men sharing the same tent give
irreconcilably different accounts of the same event. Apparently
reliable public records, personal documents, family Bibles,
government records, obituaries, death certificates, birth
certificates and gravestones differ regarding dates of births
and deaths. Days of the week do not always correspond with the
dates given for those days; was the day correct, or the date, or
neither? Sometimes differences can be reconciled, mistakes
corrected or reasonable assumptions made; other times they
cannot.
Jim’s letters and letters
by others are presented verbatim. Where capitals or punctuation
were omitted by the writers, they have not been added.
Misspellings remain. Where words were missing, they are still
missing. Where words were repeated, the repetitions remain. The
reader can make the corrections as well as I. In addition to
Jim's letters, comments of others are liberally quoted, some
with attribution, some without, but all believed accurate and
all directly related to the incident portrayed although some of
these are from transcriptions and appear to have had corrections
made.
In the
words of Colin Powell, we "all are the products of our time"
and I hope readers will not be offended by the vernacular of the
time or any of Jim's comments. Sometimes writing with a dry
sense of humor, his letters exhibit the formality common of the
era. He loved his wife but Caroline was "Dear wife." His
father-in-law was "father" or
"uncle Joel." A "smutty"
poem might be sent to Caroline's brother, but never to her. From
a family of abolitionists, Jim's frustration at the pace of the
war becomes evident as he is taken farther and farther from home
and wishes "all the niggers were back in Africa."
Offensive and demeaning today, "nigger" and "negro"
were terms of the times; he should not be blamed for their use.
Similarly, it was an age for clear separation of the sexes. What
man today would tell his wife he would not let her cut her hair?
What man would tell her, in writing no less, that she looked
fat?
Men
who thought they would win a war and be back with their families
in a few months were gone for years. They suffered from uncommon
illness, often had little food, slept on the ground and saw
friends suffer and die with regularity. Frustrations surfaced,
sometimes verbally, sometimes violently. Furloughs and leaves of
absence were stretched from weeks to months. Some men deserted.
Stragglers tarried. Some died "from homesickness," some
wrote sentimental or patriotic poetry and others wrote letters
expressing love and yearning for wives and children. However
worded, feelings were always expressed with strict propriety.
Men cared strongly for their dying comrades, but accepted
suffering stoically. Dwelling on death could be
self-destructive.
My
personal interest does not end with this account and I welcome
comments, corrections and additional information. Due to the
extent and detail of the material included, errors are likely
and I will welcome assistance in correcting the record. The
function of a preface is, after all,
“to ingratiate the
author with the reader in a naive effort to forestall criticism
by a show of modesty.”
Where information was conflicting, I either omitted it
completely or utilized what appeared most likely to be accurate.
In most instances, I have omitted considerably more information
and documentation than space permits me to include. If readers
recognize relatives or familiar names or have their interest
otherwise piqued, they should feel free to contact me. My
telephone number is listed.
I ask little of the
reader, merely that you try to experience the lives of these
participants, understand their changing emotions and appreciate
their feelings and frustrations. See how their lives and the
lives of their families were affected during and after the war.
Feel it. Share in their joys and sorrows. It was a very long,
difficult and destructive war. And, sometime, stop at a roadside
cemetery and visit a veteran or members of his family. I’ve
placed flowers on the graves of Julia and Ida Purdy, Margaret
Drummond and Elizabeth Allen whose stores follow and visited the
graves of dozens of soldiers who served in the regiment. Each
has a story and each deserves our remembrance.
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Carl F.
Ingwalson, Jr.
San Diego,
California
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