Saturday, December 31, 2022

December 31, 1942 - Thursday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner - USS Fullam: 

John was on duty at his new destroyer, the USS Fullam, at the Charlestown Navy Yard in Boston. 
 
Solomon Islands

The contest for Guadalcanal continued throughout December, with the Marines, after 4 months on the island, being mostly replaced by Army troops.  The Japanese continued to supply their troops by destroyer, and as time went on, more so by submarine, as some of the destroyers were lost.  More PT boats were present, and harassed any Japanese ships approaching.

The Japanese command had about this time, quietly decided that Guadalcanal must be abandoned, although the troops were not informed and continued to fight the Americans.  It would be a full month before their evacuation took place. 

 

More Information:

  • Official Navy Chronology, pp. 292-293.
  • The Struggle for Guadalcanal, Samuel Eliot Morison, pp. 316-337.
  • The Darkest Year, The American Home Front, 1941-1942, William K. Klingaman

 

NEXT POST:  JANUARY 4TH

December 31, 1862 - Wednesday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Crittenden's Corps - Wood's Division - Wagner's Brigade 

Battle of Stones River (Part 1)

As of the 29th, the 40th Indiana, with the rest of Wagner's brigade, had moved to within about two and a half miles of Murfreesboro, near a small wood known as the Round Forest.  The 30th passed quietly as the right and center wings were moving into their final positions before the battle.  Both Generals Bragg and Rosecrans had planned for their left wings to attack the other army's right on the morning of the 31st.  

The Union right wing, anticipating a slow day as the action was expected to be on the Union left, was unprepared for the Confederate assault on the morning of the 31st.  Division after division was routed and fell back toward the Nashville Pike.  The Union attack on the left was called off, and several divisions were sent to help stop the collapse.  Only a desperate regrouping, and the exhaustion of the Confederate troops, stabilized the right wing.

Early on the 31st, the 40th Indiana could hear the intense fighting on the Union right, and was moved several times due to other divisions being diverted to stop the Confederate advance.  The 40th's movements were being executed slowly and sloppily; it was found that the commanding officer of the regiment, Colonel Blake, was intoxicated and in no shape to command.  He was relieved and arrested, replaced by Lieutenant-Colonel Neff.

The 40th Indiana was now needed at the front.  Here is an excerpt of the regimental report from Major Henry Leaming, who ended up commanding the 40th at the end of the day:

...In a few minutes another order came from Colonel Wagner, directing the regiment to the support of General Hascall's brigade, which was now engaging the enemy and occupying the ground which we had been resting on in the morning.

The regiment was reported to General Hascall, and was by him ordered to take a position, with the right resting at the old house near the toll-gate, and the left extending across the railroad, which struck the line about the colors, and lie down.  This ground being elevated several feet above that occupied by the front line, placed the regiment in a position very much exposed to the fire of the enemy, which was at this time very heave, both artillery and musketry.  Many of our men were wounded here, 1 mortally, and 3 were killed outright.

It was while lying here that I was advised that Lieutenant-Colonel Neff.was severely wounded in the arm, and had quit the field in consequence thereof.  After having laid about three-fourths of an hour on this spot, we were ordered to relieve the Fifty-eighth Indiana, which occupied the advance line in our front.  I called up the regiment and advanced at once, notifying the officer commanding the Fifty-eighth of my purpose.  The Fifty-eighth was withdrawn, and the Fortieth took their place.

The 40th drove back an attack by one regiment, and remained in position for the evening.

 

Here is a recent picture of the area where the 40th Indiana was fighting during the 31st.  As the battle was at the end of the year, the trees would be mostly bare.  The railroad drops down in the distance, showing the higher ground that the Union forces occupied during this engagement.  On the right is a monument to Union troops in the Stones River National Battlefield.


More Information:

 

NEXT POST: JANUARY 4TH


Friday, December 30, 2022

December 27, 1942 - Sunday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner - USS Fullam: 

John was on duty at his new destroyer, the USS Fullam, at the Charlestown Navy Yard in Boston. 
 
Christmas in Boston

Boston had a very subdued Christmas in 1942.  Blackouts had been instituted in the summer, and thus the city was very dark for the most part.  The number of items rationed was increasing, with gasoline being the latest item.  Coupon books were used for purchases of rationed items.

Below is an article that shows the shopping ads for various Boston stores, and the article also covers the conditions in Boston as well.

Boston’s Bittersweet Christmas of 1942

Also noted is the terrible fire in late November at the Cocoanut Grove, that resulted in 492 deaths.  It was a popular night spot for residents and visitors alike.  Mary McLaughlin had never been to the club, but knew some people who had been there.  I don't think she knew anyone killed in the fire.

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More Information:

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 31ST

 

Wednesday, December 28, 2022

December 27, 1862 - Saturday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Crittenden's Corps - Wood's Division - Wagner's Brigade 

By the 27th, General Rosecrans has completed his plan for attacking the Confederate army gathering at Murfreesboro.  Crittenden's corps, on the army's left, is to approach the town on the Nashville Pike, which is the main road between the two cities (this pike is parallel to the current US 41 highway).  Wood's Division is designated to capture intact the bridge over Stewart's Creek, just south of Smyrna, TN.  Although roads were very bad elsewhere, Wood's division was able to advance quickly and surprise the Confederate defenders.

Troops from another division are able to capture the bridge while jettisoning the timbers hastily fired by the retreating Confederates.  The left and center wings are meeting resistance and also struggling to move along muddy roads.  Rosecrans holds Crittenden from advancing until the 29th, when they advance to about 2 miles from Murfreesboro.

More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XX, Chapter XXXII, Part II, Correspondence,  pp. 218-252.
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 91.
  • Shelby Foote: The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1I, Fredericksburg to Meridian, pp. 81-84. 
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol 3. The Tide Shifts, pp, 600-605.
  • Peter Cozzens, No Better Place to Die: The Battle of Stones River, pp. 41-60.

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 31ST

 

Friday, December 23, 2022

December 23, 1942 - Wednesday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner - USS Fullam: 

John had by now made his way to the Boston area, to pick up his new destroyer, the USS FullamFullam was a Fletcher-class destroyer that had been launched in April, and was being outfitted as it approached its commissioning in March of 1943.  Here are some pages about launching and commissioning ships:
 
 
In this article -  The Boston Navy Yard during World War II - is the history of the Charlestown Navy Yard and the ships that were built there.  There are two pictures of John's old ship (O'Brien, DD-415) in different stages of construction.

John would have reported to the ship and had duties involved in fitting out, provisioning and conducting preliminary sea trials.  As the ship was mostly in port during the weeks before commissioning, there would also have been time for shore leave. 

Boston had been under blackout for several months, but the USO had many events nearby at the Charlestown YMCA (see last blog entry), so the sailors had some things to do when they could get off the ship and into town.

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More Information:

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 27TH

December 23, 1862 - Tuesday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Crittenden's Corps - Wood's Division - Wagner's Brigade 

Little has changed with the Army of the Cumberland as of the 23rd, but dispatches show that General Rosecrans is slowly moving parts of the army into position for an advance.  Detailed planning still remains to be done.  Crittenden is ordered to move north to try to encircle Confederate cavalry thought to be at Bledsoe Creek, near Gallatin.  It seems that nothing came of this.

--------------------------

President Lincoln is struggling to hold his cabinet together - Secretary of State Seward and Secretary of the Treasury Chase have submitted resignations.  Many of the cabinet were Lincoln's rivals for the Republican nomination in 1860, and this and other political differences have led to tensions.  Lincoln does keep all of his cabinet together for now, after refusing to accept the resignations.

More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XX, Chapter XXXII, Part II, Correspondence,  pp. 209-218.
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 90-91.
  • Shelby Foote: The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1I, Fredericksburg to Meridian, pp. 1-81. 
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol 3. The Tide Shifts, pp, 600-603.
  • Peter Cozzens, No Better Place to Die: The Battle of Stones River, pp. 1-41.

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 27TH

 


 

Monday, December 19, 2022

December 19, 1942 - Saturday - 80 years ago today

 -- see the previous two posts for the earlier part of the story --

-- this post is two pages, click the Read More link at bottom for second page --

 Mary McLaughlin - Working in Boston, USO

After a year of college and another summer of working in the mountains, Mary's family needed her to go to work, and she found a job in downtown Boston. 

Mary:

My brother, Tommy, was born during my year at Lowell and my parents needed my help to bring in some money so I left school in the fall and went to work at Dun & Bradstreet in Boston.  A former neighbor of ours was the District Manager.  I began as a file clerk.  It was a hard job, but I liked working there.

-------------------------

I remember December 7, 1941 very clearly.  I was at home wearing an orange corduroy dress.  It was Sunday and I was listening to the radio and heard a news flash that the Japanese had bombed Pearl Harbor in the Hawaiian Islands.  Sailors were instructed to get back to their ships.

From that time on everything changed.  We had been working our way out of the long Depression years and things were beginning to look encouraging.

On December 8 recruiting offices everywhere were mobbed with young men volunteering to fight.  There had been a draft for young men in which they served for a year.  There had been some complaining about it but now everyone was angry.  They also thought they could finish things up in six months!

Boston was a port, of course, so there had to be a blackout because German submarines had been seen a few miles off the coast.  Imagine the whole shopping district in complete darkness.  We also had blackout in Stoneham where I lived because it was only twelve miles from Boston.

A few days after the Pearl Harbor attack Germany declared war on the United States as Italy also did.  The three countries and their friends were known as the Axis Powers.

Everything went into the war effort.  Canned goods, meat, gasoline, tires, and shoes were some of the things that were rationed.  Everyone had a ration book with stamps to be used when trying to buy any of these things.  I say trying because they were very scarce.

People who had cars had to carry passengers when they drove to work, so they tried to find someone going their way.  I rode with a couple of groups and it was more fun that taking the trolley and the subway.  It was a lot quicker too.

As we have seen, there were only a few victories early in the war.  The home front suffered from the lack of good news.

Mary:

After the war started there were no victories for our side for years.  Every day we heard about ships being sunk and battles lost.  Boston had a  blackout and it was very eerie to try to shop after work.  You could hardly see your way around and all the stores had blackout curtains.  Many things were rationed and we all had ration books.  We were allowed three pairs of shoes per year, and points were used for certain foods, tires, gasoline, etc.

We were completely unprepared for war and it took a long time to get productive.  All women who could went to work in the factories and shipyards which ran twenty four hours a day.  My friends Irene and Colleen were attending college, but in the summer they worked at the GE plan in Lynn.

The men from Stoneham who were in the Army were sent with the 182nd Infantry to fight on the island of Guadalcanal in the South Pacific.  We heard awful stories about the battle.  They did get back at the end of the war, though.

December 19, 1862 - Friday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Crittenden's Corps - Wood's Division - Wagner's Brigade 

Things remain the same in the Army of the Cumberland.  The main concerns are locating the Confederate cavalry.  Forrest is believed to be in western Tennessee, ready to attack Fort Donelson or other nearby places.  Morgan has been tracked to Hartsville, TN, but his destination is uncertain.

General Rosecrans, despite his indications in the messages to Halleck on the 15th, has still made no plans for a forward movement.

More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XX, Chapter XXXII, Part II, Correspondence,  pp. 186-209.
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 90.
  • Shelby Foote: The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1I, Fredericksburg to Meridian, pp. 1-81. 
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol 3. The Tide Shifts, pp, 600-603.
  • Peter Cozzens, No Better Place to Die: The Battle of Stones River, pp. 1-41.

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 23RD

Thursday, December 15, 2022

December 15, 1942 - Tuesday - 80 years ago today

-- See previous post for the first part of this story --

Mary McLaughlin - After HS Graduation - Summer Work and College

After high school, Mary learned of a summer job in the New Hampshire mountains, where she worked until attending Lowell Teachers College (now U Mass-Lowell) in the fall.

Mary:

When Colleen and I were seniors, Mr. Davis, our math teacher, told us about the Rosebrook Inn in New Hampshire where we could get summer jobs. We had enrolled in Lowell Teachers College and were to start in the fall.  Irene had enrolled too and already had her job for the summer.  

Colleen and I took the train to Whitefield, N.H. and were met and taken to Rosebrook Inn in Twin Mountain which was a very small town about four miles from Mt. Washington.  Colleen was to be a waitress and I was to be the laundress.  There were five other girls working there.  We all lived in rooms over the garage behind the inn.  We got along well and had fun together.

There was not a lot to do in Twin Mountain.  There was roller skating two nights a week and dancing one night.  So we danced and skated with the Twin Mountain boys, many of whom seemed to be named Monahan.

 

 Mary returned to the Rosebrook Inn the next summer, this time as a waitress rather than a laundress.  Time changes things greatly; when she visited the area in the late 90's, she could no longer locate the inn.  Below is a link to a postcard that shows the inn as it was:

Rosebrook Inn

Here is another image:

 


Mary:

In the fall we entered Lowell Teachers College at Lowell, Mass.  Getting there was not a lot of fun.  I had to walk to Stoneham Square, about a mile, take a bus to Woburn, then take the train to Lowell.  Colleen and Irene rode the bus also, and girls from all the towns around were on the train, so it was fun.  When the train reached Lowell, we walked another mile to school.

Our initiation was quite an experience.  We had to wear a stocking over our hair and carry our books around in a pail.  We couldn't wear makeup and had to bow down to any upperclasswoman we met.  This went on for a week.

One of the things we enjoyed most was our spring dance.  I invited Phil Cody and Irene went with his friend.  Phil knew several of the guys who were there and they did a lot of crazy things that kept us all laughing.  That spring Irene and I were dating some soldiers from the 182nd Infantry who were stationed at Camp Edwards on Cape Cod.  They usually got home on the weekends.


 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 19TH

December 15, 1862 - Monday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Crittenden's Corps - Wood's Division - Wagner's Brigade 

The 15th finds the Army of the Cumberland in the same state, encamped near Nashville and trying to get good information on the location of the Confederate army.  General Rosecrans sends the two messages below to General Halleck in Washington:

Confederate President Jefferson Davis was in the area to review the army.  Morgan has taken time out from cavalry raids to get married, and his wedding is a gathering of the army's commanders.  Not sure about the other details in the first message.

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NASHVILLE, TN,, December 15, 1962 -- 1:10 PM
Major-General HALLECK:
    Reports of last evening fully confirmed.  Jeff. Davis attended John H. Morgan's wedding last night; was serenaded, and made a speech, in which he said Lincoln's proclamation put black and white on an equality.  Urged them to fight to the death, and to hold Middle Tennessee at all hazards, until Grant could be whipped.  Bragg ordered all Kentucky and Tennessee exiles conscripted.  Buckner, Breckenridge, and Hanson protested, and threatened to resign.  Jeff. took the matter in hand.  Things will be ripe soon.
W. S. ROSECRANS, 
Major-General.
------------------------------------------  

-------------------------------------------    
NASHVILLE, TN,, December 15, 1962 -- 1:10 PM
Major-General HALLECK:
   I have relieved General Hamilton from duty.  He is very sick.  His brother-in-law likely to die.  They will leave for New York as soon as practicable.  Authentic information up to this morning of the rebel army.  The center, composed of three divisions, at Murfreesborough, was reviewed by Jeff. Davis Friday week; left wing, under Buckner and Hardee, moved from Shelbyville to Triune and Nolensville; right, under Kirby Smith, at Readyville; Morgan probably crossing the Cumberland, now near Hartsville; object, dash on railroad; rebel troops say the will fight us; Bragg to go to Mississippi; Johnston to stay; bridge at Bridgeport, cross both sides on trestles, about finished; railroad track on front of Murfreesborough torn up, iron removed, and bridge fitted for the passage of troops; Cumberland still very low; rain threatens; will be ready in a few days.
W. S. ROSECRANS, 
Major-General.
------------------------------------------ 

In the second message are the current reports about the location of the opposing army.  Some of the other information is doubtful, and Bragg is most certainly not leaving for Mississippi.  Rosecrans is promising that in a few days he will be ready to move.

-----------------------------

Fredericksburg Campaign

In the east, another devastating battle for the Union occurs at Fredericksburg, VA.  General Burnside attempts a direct assault on entrenched Confederate positions above Fredericksburg and suffers a bloody repulse, with 12,700 killed and wounded - over twice the Confederate loss.  An evacuation of Fredericksburg follows.

This defeat, along with Grant being stalled in Mississippi, means that any Union progress must come from Rosecrans' army.  The urging from Washington for a move forward will only grow.


More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XX, Chapter XXXII, Part II, Correspondence,  pp. 163-186.
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 90.
  • Shelby Foote: The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1I, Fredericksburg to Meridian, pp. 1-81. 
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol 3. The Tide Shifts, pp, 600-603.
  • Peter Cozzens, No Better Place to Die: The Battle of Stones River, pp. 1-41.

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 19TH

 

Sunday, December 11, 2022

December 11, 1942 - Friday - 80 years ago today

-- A new subject, Mary McLaughlin now enters the story. --

Mary McLaughlin - Early Years

Mary McLaughlin
was born on April 11, 1922 in Haverhill, MA to Raymond and Helen McLaughlin.  Raymond and Helen were married in 1921, and Mary was the oldest of what would eventually be nine McLaughlin children.

Mary's notes regarding her family:

My parents were Raymond McLaughlin and Helen Deneau who were both born in 1900.  My grandfather, William Patrick McLaughlin, was a shoe manufacturer in Haverhill, Mass., and for a while my father worked for him.  My grandfather Deneau ran a tobacco store at one time.  At one time he was not well enough to work so my grandmother ran a boarding house to help to support the family.

My parents were both of French-Irish descent.  Grandfather Deneau was born in Trois Rivieres, Quebec, but I never heard where Grandmother McLaughlin was born.  Grandfather McLaughlin was said to have been born in Newburyport, Mass.  Grandmother Deneau I think was born somewhere in Ireland and came to Dover, N. H. when she was about 6 years old.

My father had two brothers, William H. and Adrian, who were both older than he and two sisters, Ruth, who was older, and Helen, who was younger. Adrian was in France in World War I as an ambulance driver and died of pneumonia there.

There were also five children in my mother's family: Narcisse (called Jack), and Felix who were older, a sister, Pauline who was older, and a brother Joseph, who died in infancy.  With names like Narcisse and Felix in her family, my mother considered herself lucky to be have been named Helen Adelaide.  My father used to tease her by calling her Adelaide, which she hated.
 

Mary's Grandfather McLaughlin owned a shoe factory and Raymond had worked for him until 1928, when the shoe factory was sold. By this time, Mary had three siblings; sister Helen, brother Dick, and sister Claire. 

Mary:

After my parents were married, my father worked for his father for a while, but in 1928 his father retired and the business was sold so Dad had to do something else.  His parents then invested in theaters for his brother Bill and for him.  Bill's was in Stoneham and Dad's was in Weymouth.  Unfortunately, at just about this time, talking pictures were being developed.  

Grandfather McLaughlin had died and Grandmother didn't feel that she could afford to invest the considerable amount it would take to put in the sound equipment, so Dad lost his theater.

Bill's theater was upgraded for "talkies", but there was not enough to upgrade both theaters; as the silent movies' popularity faded out, theaters without sound could not survive.  Having lost his theater, Raymond got a job at the shipyard nearby, but was injured and lost that job.

Mary:

In 1931 I was nine years old.  It was one of the worst years of the Great Depression.  Dad had been working at the Fore River Shipyard in Quincy, Mass. near Weymouth where we lived then.  He had dropped a pipe on his foot which injured it so he could not work.

I remember the time that my brother Bob was born.  My mother was not doing well and was in bed with the baby.  Two or three of the other kids were sick with the flu.  I had been helping Dad around the house.  One night we were putting supper on the table - Campbell's vegetable soup which we seemed to eat a lot of - and I told him I was sick.  He told me I better go to bed then. I can still remember the sad, sad look on his face.  I guess he had never been more discouraged.

Bob was the fifth child and was born in 1931.  The family was about to move again.

Mary:

In 1931 Dad somehow heard about a projectionist job in Fall River, Mass.  Though he did not belong to the projectionist union, he was hired.  Of course, he was called a scab and threatened, but the union dues were $500 and it might as well have been five million.  He just had no hope of getting it.  One of the favorite tricks of the union was to take a horrid-smelling liquid into the theater and spill it over the floor.  Everyone was driven out.  My mother was there one night when it happened and stepped in the stuff.  She tried and tried to get it off her shoes, but never could.  She had to throw them away.  I still remember that smell!

In Fall River we lived upstairs in a large old house.  There were three bedrooms, a large living room, dining room and kitchen.  Our landlady was a very nice spinster who was, I think, quite dismayed by the number of us, but it was still Depression time and she needed the money badly.  We went to St. Peter and Paul School which was taught by the Sisters of Mercy, who I thought were quite unmerciful.  They had us terrorized.  I must say, the public school teachers were no better.  I guess they had pretty tough kids to deal with, but they really had us scared.  For the first time in my life, I hated to go to school.

Having been forced out of his projectionist job, Raymond decided to move to Stoneham and work for his brother as the projectionist at his theater.  In later years, Mary, who almost always voted Democratic, would nevertheless retain her antipathy toward unions because of the way her father was treated.

Mary:

Since things were so unpleasant and frightening, I was almost glad to  hear that Dad had lost his job.  The theater owner was losing too much money and was afraid of the threats of the union.  Our next move was to Stoneham where Dad was to work for Uncle Bill.

Stoneham was a pretty nice place.  Sometimes we would walk way out to a wooded place where you could catch the trolley to Boston and only have to pay half fare.  We would go to Filene's basement with my mother and look for bargains when we had a little money.

There were picnic areas in the woods and a small zoo which I used to take my brothers and sisters to.  We picked tiny wild blueberries in the woods around the reservation and would have blueberry cake or even pie if we had enough.  It took two pies for us.  I was learning to make desserts by this time.  My specialty was chocolate cake, probably because Dad loved it and raved about it.

I was in fifth grade when we moved to Stoneham.  We went to St. Patrick's School and I liked it pretty well, even though Sister Ernestine would get annoyed with us every once in a while and make us copy pages and pages out of one of our books.  It was better than Fall River.  I joined the 4-H Club and took canning and sewing.  I went to the Park Department's summer activities, learning how to make an aluminum can into a beaded plant, etc.

After graduating from eighth grade, I went to Stoneham High School where Colleen Cronin from St. Pat's became my best friend.  We went everywhere together and took all the same subjects.  We joined the Glee Club and the Dramatic Club, though I would have died if I had had to say anything onstage.  I limited myself to walk-on parts.  Colleen played a teacher in What A Life, and I was chosen to be in a musical number in our spring musical show.

We were always able to see almost every movie the theater showed so we all became movie fans like most of our other relatives.  We knew all the character actors as well as the stars.


As Mary was graduating high school in 1940, the family had grown to seven children.  Times were still hard and the Depression was still on, but was easing somewhat. 

-------------------------------------

At least part of the economic improvement came from the US re-arming due to the world situation.  In May, Germany invaded France, and France soon collapsed leaving Britain alone on the Western Front.  The British Army barely managed an escape at Dunkirk.  War drums were no longer in the distance, but were clear and loud; the likelihood of the United States becoming involved was growing quickly.

More Information:

  • Official Navy Chronology, pp. 287-289.
  • The Struggle for Guadalcanal, Samuel Eliot Morison, pp. 283-373.
  • Neptune's Inferno, The U.S. Navy at Guadalcanal, James D. Hornfischer, pp. 378-429.
  • The Darkest Year, The American Home Front, 1941-1942, William K. Klingaman


NEXT POST: DECEMBER 15TH

 


December 11, 1862 - Thursday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Crittenden's Corps - Wood's Division - Wagner's Brigade 

The success of Morgan's Confederate cavalry at Hartsville, TN (see previous entry) on the 7th has stirred a beehive of activity in the Union command.  There is much concern with finding Morgan and Forrest; Forrest is expected to move back into Kentucky to try to break up the railroad and Morgan has not been located since his attack at Hartsville.  

There is also concern of an attack in western Tennessee on Fort Henry or Donelson by a sizable force.  A skirmish south of Nashville is interpreted as a feint to distract from the main attack on the forts.  This attack never did develop.

General Rosecrans trades a series of letters with General Bragg regarding the treatment of civilians and irregular army personnel (Rosecrans believes some of the Confederate troops disguise themselves as civilians).  Rosecrans also is trying to manage protecting the railroad and moving Union troops into position for his upcoming move to the south.

More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XX, Chapter XXXII, Part II, Correspondence,  pp. 135-163.
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 90.
  • Shelby Foote: The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1I, Fredericksburg to Meridian, pp. 1-81. 
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol 3. The Tide Shifts, pp, 600-603.
  • Peter Cozzens, No Better Place to Die: The Battle of Stones River, pp. 1-41.

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 15TH

 


Wednesday, December 7, 2022

December 7, 1942 - Monday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner: 

John had probably begun, or was about to begin, his trip to Boston to return to the service.  He had been assigned to a Fletcher-class destroyer, the Fullam.  This destroyer was being finished at the Charlestown Navy Yard, and would be commissioned in the late winter.

Home Front

Of course the 7th marked one year since the surprise attack at Pearl Harbor and the country's entry into the war. 

In the book The Darkest Year, in the Epilogue, William Klingaman describes the situation on the 7th.  There was little in the way of commemoration of the anniversary of the attack, and most everyone was working, as the ambitious production goals set by the government were not yet being met but needed to be caught up. Despite some victories, the war front news had been mostly bad, and bloody and inconclusive fighting was still continuing in the South Pacific and North Africa.  A real turn in the tide seemed very far off.  

News had been censored heavily and in general, the public had some mistrust in the government because of this.  Rationing of goods (gas rationing having just begun) and other wartime sacrifices had begun to wear on the citizens at home.  Big business was making profits, but smaller businesses, farmers and other independent workers were suffering.  The government was undeterred in exerting control; it would now decide who went to war and who working in industry at home, and it would exert even tighter control of the flow of all goods, including foodstuffs.  

All of these things, and other issues besides, contributed to tensions on the home front.  Only war victories could in the end relieve the tensions.

See The Darkest Year, The American Home Front, 1941-1942, William K. Kligaman.  The entire book gives an interesting description of the happenings in the US during the first year of war.

------------------------

More Information:

  • Official Navy Chronology, pp. 286-287.
  • The Struggle for Guadalcanal, Samuel Eliot Morison, pp. 283-373.
  • Neptune's Inferno, The U.S. Navy at Guadalcanal, James D. Hornfischer, pp. 378-429.
  • The Darkest Year, The American Home Front, 1941-1942, William K. Klingaman

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 11TH

December 7, 1862 - Sunday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Crittenden's Corps - Wood's Division - Wagner's Brigade 

On the 4th there is more correspondence from General Halleck demanding a forward move, and another response from General Rosecrans justifying his current actions.  General Thomas on the 7th sends a plan to protect Nashville while moving on Knoxville.  These are the beginnings of the discussion of the next moves of the army.  

Forrest's Confederate cavalry is out and about and causing concern for the Union generals.  Morgan's Confederate cavalry attacked Hartsville, TN on the 7th, capturing 1800 Union defenders and inflicting 2096 Union casualties total.

More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XX, Chapter XXXII, Part II, Correspondence,  pp. 109-117.
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 89.
  • Shelby Foote: The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1I, Fredericksburg to Meridian, pp. 1-81. 
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol 3. The Tide Shifts, pp, 600-603.
  • Peter Cozzens, No Better Place to Die: The Battle of Stones River, pp. 1-40.

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 11TH

Sunday, December 4, 2022

December 3, 1942 - Thursday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner: 

John was still at home on leave.  

Wider War

As John will soon be returning to duty on a new ship, here are some notes on the various theaters and events that were happening at this time:

South Pacific - The battle for Guadalcanal continues to rage, and on November 30, there was another close-quarters night battle, known as the Battle of Tassafaronga,  is fought near the island.  The US Navy loses one cruiser, while three more are badly damaged.  One Japanese destroyer is sunk.  

Central Pacific - This area is mostly quiet right now as almost all forces on both sides have been diverted to the Solomons.

North Pacific - The Japanese have held Attu and Kiska since the Midway operation, and there is a tense stalemate between the relatively small forces on either side.  1943 will see more of a focus on removing the Japanese from the Aleutians.

Africa - Operation TORCH continues as allied forces fight Vichy French forces in northern Africa.  The Allies need to defeat the French and then move eastward toward the German army commanded by Rommel.

Eastern Front - As no second front in Western Europe has yet been established,  the fighting here is ferocious.  The current battle is centered on Stalingrad (now Volgograd) as the Germans  attempt to reach the oilfields in Central Asia.  The Russians had trapped the German Sixth Army in a pocket that it would never escape.  The siege of Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) continued into its second year.

South Asia - The Japanese were advancing in Burma and threatening the British hold on India. 

------------------------

More Information:

  • Official Navy Chronology, pp. 284-286.
  • The Struggle for Guadalcanal, Samuel Eliot Morison, pp. 283-318.
  • Neptune's Inferno, The U.S. Navy at Guadalcanal, James D. Hornfischer, pp. 378-394.

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 7TH

 

December 3, 1862 - Wednesday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Crittenden's Corps - Wood's Division - Wagner's Brigade 

The recent quiet time remains in effect as General Rosecrans continues to work on the organization, supply, discipline, and positioning of the army, while sending various expeditions out to try to find the Confederate cavalry.

Rosecrans views all these measures as prerequisites for moving forward; the Government at Washington does not, and will soon be prodding Rosecrans once again to move forward.


More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XX, Chapter XXXII, Part II, Correspondence,  pp. 109-117.
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 89.
  • Shelby Foote: The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1I, Fredericksburg to Meridian, pp. 1-81. 
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Vol 3. The Tide Shifts, pp, 600-603.
  • Peter Cozzens, No Better Place to Die: The Battle of Stones River, pp. 1-40.

 

NEXT POST: DECEMBER 7TH