A Traveling Exhibition Coming in 2013

Category: Fighting for Liberty

1863 (Fighting for Liberty) Taylor Brothers

Taylor Brothers (National Park Service)

On July 2, 1863 at 5:40AM Isaac Taylor recorded in his diary that his regiment, the 1st Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment, had arrived at Gettysburg. “Order from Gen. [John] Gibbon read to us in which he says this is to be the great battle of the war & that any soldier leaving ranks without leave will be instantly put to death,” as Taylor noted. By the end of the day 215 of the 262 soldiers in the regiment had been killed or wounded. While Isaac had died, his brother, Patrick Henry Taylor, apparently made it out of the battle without injury. Patrick added the final entry to the diary, which explained that Isaac had been “killed by a shell about sunset” and was “buried…[about] a mile South of Gettysburg.”

Life & Family
While both Isaac and Patrick Henry (family and friends called him “Henry” or “P. H.”) were born in Rowe, Massachusetts, their family moved to a farm in Fulton County, Illinois in the early 1850s. After they graduated from a school in Prairie City, Illinois, they went to Burlington University in Burlington, Iowa. Both became teachers after college – Isaac in Fulton and Henry in Morrison County, Minnesota. In 1861 Henry joined the First Minnesota in late May while Isaac followed several months later in August. Isaac’s diary covers his Civil War experience between January 1862 and his death at Gettysburg on July 2, 1863. Henry also kept a diary, which was published in the Cass County Democrat in 1933. After the Civil War, Henry went back to Fulton County, Illinois to teach. In 1867 Henry moved to Missouri, when he continued to teach and work on his farm. He died in Harrisonville, Missouri on Dec 20, 1907. While it is unclear when he married, Mary Ann, Henry’s first wife ,died on May 8, 1866. Henry married Harriet R Thomas in Greenbush, Illinois, on Aug 29, 1867 and had seven children.

Isaac Taylor, whose parents were Johnathan Hastings Taylor Alvira Johnson, had twelve siblings. Four other Taylor brothers also served in the Union army during the Civil War. While Jonathan (Second Minnesota Battery of Light Artillery), Danford (Twelfth Illinois Cavalry), and Samuel (102nd Illinois Infantry) survived the war, Judson was with Company K of the Eleventh Illinois Cavalry when he died at Vicksburg on December 1, 1864.

Sources
The Minnesota History Magazine published Isaac’s Taylor’s diary in 4 sections, which you can download as PDF files: Part 1 ; Part 2 ; Part 3 ; Part 4. The Richard Moe Collection at the Minnesota Historical Society also has material related to the Taylor brothers, including obituaries, letters, a photograph of Henry and Isaac Taylor, a transcript of Patrick Henry Taylor’s diary. They apparently do not have the original copy of Isaac Taylor’s diary. As noted in Part 1 of the diary (see footnote 2 page 11), Miss Emma R. Taylor of Avon, Illinois owns other materials related to the Taylor family.

Letters and diaries about the Battle of Gettysburg written by other members of the First Minnesota are available on this page. In addition, you can read another account of the regiment’s actions in James A. Wright’s No More Gallant a Deed: a Civil War Memoir of the First Minnesota Volunteers (2001). Several historians have studied the First Minnesota Volunteer Infantry, including John Quinn Imholte’s The First Volunteers; History of the First Minnesota Volunteer Regiment, 1861-1865 (1963),  Richard Moe’s Last Full Measure: The Life and Death of the First Minnesota Volunteers (1993), and Brian Leehan’s Pale Horse at Plum Run: The First Minnesota at Gettysburg (2004).

Places to Visit
The Minnesota Historical Society in St. Paul has collections that contain material on the Taylor Brothers. You can learn more about their current exhibits on this page. In addition, the First Minnesota Infantry’s monument at Gettysburg National Military Park is located at Hancock Avenue and Humphreys Avenue. See this page to learn more about the monument.

Artifacts
The Minnesota Historical Society has this First Minnesota Regimental Battle Flag that was at the Battle of Gettysburg. In addition, Private Marshall Sherman of Company Company C (First Minnesota) captured this 28th Virginia Battle Flag during Pickett’s Charge on July 3, 1863. Other items available at the Minnesota Historical Society include this Canteen, Bayonet Sheath, a Frock Coat, different kinds of drums, a kerosene army stove, and a badge from the First Minnesota reunion at Gettysburg in 1897.

Images
A photograph of Patrick H. Taylor and Issac Taylor from 1863 is available from http://www.1stminnesota.net/. While they cite the US Army Military History Institute, we are still searching their records. It does not appear to be in their digital Civil War Photograph collection. The Minnesota Historical Society’s Virtual Resources Database also has other images related to the First Minnesota,  including:

Officers of the 1st Minnesota Volunteers standing in front of the commandant’s quarters

Company D, 1st Minnesota Regiment posed at the southeast corner of Nicollet Avenue and First Street, Minneapolis.”

Dedication of monument to First Minnesota Regiment at Gettysburg.” (July 2, 1897)

Survivors of the 1st Minnesota at Gettysburg. (1913)

Reunion of 1st Minnesota Volunteers at the Minnesota Soldiers Home” (1921)

 

1864 (Fighting for Liberty) Harriet L. Whiteside

Harriet Whiteside (House Divided)

Sources
This short profile of Harriet L. Whiteside is in volume 6 of A History of Tennessee and Tennesseans (1913).

Places to Visit
Whiteside lived in Chattanooga, Tennessee. It is unclear whether their house still stands today.

Images
You can find a photograph of their house in Chattanooga, Tennessee in volume 6 of A History of Tennessee and Tennesseans (1913).

1864 (Fighting for Liberty) John Taylor Cuddy

Narrative
John Taylor Cuddy was born in Carlisle, Pennsylvania on October 17, 1844. His schooling was limited since he worked in the family business. In the late spring of 1861, like tens of thousands of his fellow Pennsylvanians, he was caught up in the excitement of the Civil War and President Lincoln’s call for volunteers. Carlisle and its surrounding area quickly brought together four companies of volunteers during April 1861. One of these, the Carlisle Fencibles under Captain Robert Henderson, took into its ranks the young Cuddy, who added a year to his age to avoid possible complications with his enlistment. This unit subsequently became Company A, 36th Regiment, 7th Pennsylvania Reserve Corps, and John Taylor Cuddy was mustered into this regiment as a private on June 5, 1861.

The 36th, after training at Camp Wayne near Philadelphia, joined the defense of Washington and spent some relatively quiet months before being engaged in the battles around Gaines Mill and Mechanicsville in June 1862. Cuddy’s response in letters home was one of relief and confidence that if he could survive three heavy encounters, he could come home unscathed. Action at the late summer 1862 Battle of Antietam followed for the 36th, although Cuddy may have been on leave when it was fought. As events balanced out the unit’s earlier inaction, the regiment fought bravely and well in the losing cause at Fredericksburg in December 1862.

Cuddy’s letters in the new year of 1863 reflect the exhaustion of men already counting down the days of their three-year enlistment. Cuddy’s own words are reflective of much of the popular response in the North to President Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation (January 1, 1863). In scathing tone, the teenager predicted a long war now that “the rebels is fighting for ther rites.” In the same letter he hopes strongly that the division will go home to recruit replacements, hinting that many of the early enlistees, including Cuddy himself, were weary of war and would not return from any home assignment. A long period of relative inactivity protecting the national capital did not improve morale. Cuddy and his parents tried to arrange a home leave, enlisting the help of Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin. Though granted, permission for the furlough was forgotten in the turmoil of the Confederate invasion of Pennsylvania in June 1863. Cuddy and the 36th remained in Washington, reduced to anxious letters home to find news of the course of Lee’s advance. In April 1864, Cuddy and his companions were tantalizingly close to their final days as soldiers when the 36th was ordered to join Grant’s attack towards Richmond. During the confusion of the first and second day of the Battle of the Wilderness, the 36th suffered disaster when it was cut off and forced to surrender all its 272 officers and men. There were no more letters home from the teenaged veteran, who when captured had just one month before the end of its enlistment. Cuddy was among those who were entrained and then marched to the notorious Andersonville Prison in Georgia. Sixty-seven men of the 36th perished in the horrendous conditions of the open camp. John Cuddy survived Andersonville, but when he and others in his company were transferred to another equally harsh camp in Florence, South Carolina, his shattered health gave way to the ravages of five months in captivity. There he died of illness and malnutrition on September 29, 1864, eighteen days before his twentieth birthday.

Family
John Cuddy was one of five surviving sons of John and Agnes Cuddy. The Cuddy family owned and operated a distillery in the town. John Taylor also had a sister, Maggie, and two brothers who died as young children.

Sources
Cuddy’s letters from the Civil War are online at Dickinson College’s Their Own Words. You can learn more about these letters in this short essay. In addition, you can read  this interactive essay on House Divided’s Journal Divided.

Places to Visit
You can visit the National Park Service’s Andersonville Prison (Camp Sumter), which is located near Andersonville, Georgia. After a tour the historic prison site, visitors can see the the National Prisoner of War Museum and the Andersonville National Cemetery. You can also visit the Florence Stockade and the Florence National Cemetery in Florence, South Carolina.

Images

1864 (Fighting for Liberty) William Edgeworth Bird

“Pennsylvania has burning homesteads and desolate wives.  The beautiful town of Chambersburg is a black, charred mass.  There is retribution at last….All will yet be well… Every advance is peril to Sherman; our head men will yet devise a plan to crush him.”

-Captain William Edgeworth Bird, 15th Georgia Infantry, Summer 1864

Sources
An important primary source is John Rozier’s The Granite Farm Letters: The Civil War Correspondence of Edgeworth and Sallie Bird (1988). In addition, a letter from a chaplain who served in the 15th Georgia Infantry, Atticus G. Haygood, is in John Wesley Brinsfield’s The Spirit Divided: Memoirs of Civil War Chaplains: The Confederacy (2006). Important secondary sources include Dave Dameron’s Benning’s Brigade: A History and Roster of the Fifteenth Georgia (1997) and John Rigdon’s The Fighting Fifteenth: A Regimental History, Georgia Fifteenth Infantry Regiment (1998).

Places to Visit
William Bird participated in the Gettysburg campaign in the summer of 1863. While in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania you can visit the Gettysburg National Military Park Museum and Visitor Center. Bird is buried in Oconee Hill Cemetery, which is located in Athens, Georgia.

Artifacts
The Georgia Archives has the 15th Georgia Infantry Regiment flag.

1865 (Fighting for Liberty) James Monroe Trotter

James Monroe Trotter

Sources
Several letters that James Trotter wrote while serving in the 55th Massachusetts are in Noah Andre Trudeau’s Voices of the 55th: Letters from the 55th Massachusetts Volunteers, 1861-1865 (1996). In addition, editor Richard M. Reid cites Trotter several times in Practicing Medicine in a Black Regiment: The Civil War Diary of Burt G. Wilder, 55th Massachusetts (2010) – for example, see page 33 and page 37. After the Civil War, Trotter published Music and Some Highly Musical People in 1886. As for primary sources on James’ son, Boston University has a collection of William Monroe Trotter’s papers that contain material about William’s involvement with organizations like the National Equal Rights League, the NAACP, and the Pullmans Association. In addition, the W. E. B. Du Bois papers at the University of Massachusetts includes correspondence with William Trotter. For example, in one letter William invited Du Bois to deliver a speech in Boston about Reconstruction. Important secondary sources include Stephen B. Fox’s The Guardian of Boston: William Monroe Trotter (1970), Charles W. Puttkammer and Ruth Worthy’s “William Monroe Trotter, 1872-1934,” Journal of Negro History 43 (1958): 298-316, and Robert Stevenson’s “America’s First Black Music Historian,” Journal of the American Musicological Society 26 (1973): 383-404. You can also read James Trotter’s profile at the Ohio History Center.

Places to Visit
Trotter was wounded on November 30, 1864 during the Battle of Honey Hill, which took place near Ridgeland in Jasper County, South Carolina. This battle was part of General William T. Sherman’s March to the Sea. In Boston you can find historical markers for the James Monroe Trotter House (68 Neponset Avenue) and the William Monroe Trotter House (97 Sawyer Avenue).

Images
House Divided has an image of James Trotter as well as a 1915 image of his son William Monroe Trotter. In addition, the Burt Green Wilder Collection at Cornell University has a photograph of James Trotter in uniform. A 1922 photograph of William Trotter is online at the NYPL Digital Gallery.

Page 2 of 2

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén