You are currently browsing the daily archive for March 29th, 2007.

David L. McNees was from Lawrence County, PA when he enlisted on 10/12/61, mustering in to Company H., 78th PA Infantry. He was discharged for disability on 7/11/64.  He died August 21, 1864.

He wrote the following letter:

29 March 1863
Murfreesboro Tenn., [while the regiment was engaged in provost duty]

a mildly cold morning – everything is in full bloom.  There has been no move in this army yet – General Rosecrans reviewed General Negleys Division this week. There is almost daily skirmishing going on handy here, some thinks that the rebels is going to attack us.  There is also good deal of talk about the rebels invading Kentucky.


********

In Jan., 1863, the Army of the Cumberland, under Gen. Rosecrans, was divided into three corps, the 14th, 20th and 21st, and the 78th was assigned to the 3rd brigade (Col. Miller), 2nd division (Gen. Negley), 14th corps (Gen. Thomas).  It was engaged in provost duty at Murfreesboro until April, and in June shared in Rosecrans, campaign from Murfreesboro to Tullahoma.  It then encamped at Decherd until Aug. 15, when it moved with the army in pursuit of Bragg.
Source: The Union Army, vol. 1

********

Source: Nate Sanders auction

Follow us on Twitter

We tweet several times a week. Follow the Civil War Gazette on Twitter.

The September CWG Poll

Browse categories

Click on a day to see that post

March 2007
M T W T F S S
« Feb   Apr »
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031  

Popular articles

Accessed over 2,300 times

Accessed over 5,200 times

Accessed over 500 times

Accessed over 800 times

About CWG

The Civil War Gazette (CWG) is published by Kraig McNutt, Director of The Center for the Study of the American Civil War. The CWG was first launched on to the World-wide Web in 1995.

The Civil War Gazette allows the first-hand participants - both common soldier and civilian - to tell the story of their experience of the Civil War from their perspective; through letters, diaries, newspapers articles, and other authentic first-hand accounts.

Many items posted to The Civil War Gazette often corresponds to the exact day the item was originally written during the Civil War. Think of The Civil War Gazette as the daily newspaper for all-things Civil War with accounts from those who experienced this great war as participants.

What can one find on the CWG?

  • Many original letters from soldiers, their loved ones, and excerpts from diaries and journals.
  • Excerpts and selections from period newspapers and popular print resources.
  • Poems and literary excerpts, many authored by the soldiers themselves.
  • Excerpts from original documents and Official Reports.
  • Authentic pictures. photos, drawings, sketches and artwork of Civil War soldiers, camps, battlefields, buildings, etc.
  • Book reviews, web site reviews, reviews of software, multimedia, pop culture resources like movies, documentaries and even music.