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Letter, Bennett, Robert to mother (assembly at Indianapolis, getting uniforms, will send home miniature portrait) Indianapolis, IN, Aug. 15, 1861

 File — Box: 1, Folder: 1

Scope and Content of the Collection

From the Collection:

Robert Bennett’s correspondence from Aug. 15, 1861 through Dec. 12, 1863, written to his father, mother and sisters, as well as two letters addressed to Bennett from his cousins Nicholas and William, along with one letter written to Bennett’s father from another soldier in Company D. Correspondence consists of two identical sets of typed transcriptions (no originals).

The bulk of the letters are addressed to Bennett’s father, which contain descriptions of camp life, Bennett’s impressions of “Dixie,” and his actions with the regiment. The letters to his mother are similar but much briefer, and those to his sisters Martha (“Mat”) and Mary focus on home life. Among his tasks as a soldier, Bennett writes often about foraging, confiscating local property (such as horses, food and tobacco), and pillaging local crops. In a Feb. 12, 1863 letter, he writes: “We have quit garden [guarding] rebel property and take what we want of it.” Starting in March 1863, the 72nd Indiana became a mounted regiment, and Bennett writes several times about the company’s horses and his preference for riding scout missions over staying in camp. In a November 1863 letter Bennett notes the great number of black soldiers enlisting in the army. Bennett’s impressions of the southern landscape are generally bleak, and he occasionally notes the effect of Union pillaging on the environment. Matters of hygiene come up often, including water supply, disposal of dead horses, and the prevalence of “graybacks” or body lice. Several letters refer to Northern “sympathizers” for the Confederacy, and one describes an uncle who has “turen [turned] traitor to his country.” Another anecdote involves a deserter who was shaved, branded with a letter ‘D’ on his face, and drummed out of the regiment. The letters written in December 1863 contain the longest descriptions of battle, specifically the Union defeat at the Battle of Hartsville; in a letter dated Dec. 12, 1863 Bennett describes his work on burial detail after the battle.

Bennett talks about several Boone County soldiers serving with the 72nd Indiana, most often Lt. Lewis B. Garrett and Pvt. John M. Fall. Also mentioned are Pvts. Joseph M. Handlen, Morgan C. Frazier, George Flinn, and John Carter, along with Lt. Bob M. Sims and Capt. Arius U. Craven. All survived the war except for Carter, who died at Murfreesboro in April 1863.

The five letters from Aug. 15, 1861 through Sept. 9, 1861 might be misdated, although the transcription is probably correct. Bennett’s regiment was not mustered until August 1862, and the datelines of the letters (Indianapolis, Camp Lucy Carson, Lebanon) correspond to where the regiment was in 1862, not 1861. If the five letters were written in 1862, the collection likely begins with the letter dated Nov. 6, 1861 and sent to Bennett from his cousin William.

The transcription tries to retain the form of the originals. No punctuation or capitalization has been added. Where the original letter bore a stamp or insignia, it is described.

Dates

  • Creation: Aug. 15, 1861

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

The Robert W. Bennett Letters are open for research in the Special Collections Reading Room; 1 box at a time (Priority III).

Repository Details

Part of the The Newberry Library - Modern Manuscripts and Archives Repository

Contact:
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Chicago Illinois 60610 United States
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