Saturday, August 31, 2024

August 30, 1944 - Wednesday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner - USS Daly: 

USS Daly (DD-519) -New Guinea 

August 27th:. Force of cruisers and destroyers en route to New Guinea; first stop is at Milne Bay.  Gunnery exercises in the afternoon.  Temperatures 60s-70s, moderate breezes.

August 28th: Proceeding to Milne Bay; training exercises during the day.  Temperatures 70s, light to moderate breezes.

August 29th: Continuing to Milne Bay; exercises during the day.  Temperatures 70s-80s, light breezes.

August 30th: Reached Milne Bay in the morning and took on fuel. Received men on board for transfer to Seeadler Harbor for other duty.  Captain's mast assigned punishment for about 50 men who had gone absent over leave (AOL) during the stay in port at Sydney; some of the men who were AOL longer were deferred to deck court.  

Left in the afternoon to continue to Seeadler Harbor in the Admiralty Islands. Temperatures 70s-80s, light to moderate breezes. 

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The island of Morotai is scheduled for invasion on September 15th.  Morotai is about 500 miles WNW of Biak Island.  It is about half way to the Philippines.

General DeGaulle and the Free French forces took control in Paris.  Soviet troops continue to advance in Lithuania, Ukraine, and Romania.

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More Information:


NEXT POST:  SEPTEMBER 3RD

August 30, 1864 - Tuesday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Stanley's Corps - Newton's Division - Wagner's Brigade

Atlanta Campaign 

 

Sherman pulls his forces out of their entrenchments and sends them on their circular route around Atlanta.  Confederate General Hood is unsure what is in progress, and thus unsure where to move.  Only after a day or two does Hood realize that it is now Sherman's whole army that is moving south of town to cut the railroads, and he orders an attack on the Union corps that has reached Jonesboro, GA, and has already cut one of the two remaining railroads.  

 

Union General Schofield is also approaching the remaining railroad line at Rough and Ready station.  Control of the city hangs in the balance as these forces collide.

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John Baer Diary Entries - text in white, comments in blue. Entries for August 27th, 28th, 29th and 30th.

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DIARY ENTRY - Saturday, August 27th, 1864

I will not make any more remarks on political economy for fear of getting some contraband items and getting my book confiscated, which I would not have done for considerable.  I never expect it to benefit anybody but myself, and it will be no benefit to me more than a pleasure to refer to it once in a while to keep little incidents fresh in memory.  There are some items I would fair forget but as long as memory holds good, they cannot be erased, and rather than revert to then long enough to relate them I have committed some few of them to writing.  Others will never be known if they are not known until I tell them.  Not that I have been engaged in anything that I would not have known, but incidents that have occurred under my observation since I have been a prisoner.


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DIARY ENTRY - Sunday, August 28th, 1864

Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy - this injunction is hard to keep under the circumstances - necessity compels men to do things that under other circumstances would not be lawful to do on the Sabbath day - but on the principle that it is right to help an ox out of a pit on the Sabbath day, how much more would it be right to minster to the wants of men.  After drawing rations and eating supper, I visited an old friend in distress, and found his bunk mates ministering to his infirmities as well as they could.

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DIARY ENTRY -  Monday, August 29th, 1864

Being slightly indisposed, I was not in a humor for taking notes.  There were, however, some new arrivals, and among the number was one from the 40th.  I was glad to see one that knew something about the results of the fights on the day I was captured, but was sorry to see him under the circumstances, but many others share his misfortunes.  And it is an old adage that misery loves company.  Brave boys are they that have gone at their country’s call, and yet we cannot forget that many brave boys must fall.  What sad news that so many comrades are numbered with the slain.  Captain Elliott’s fortune was to fall leading his company to the charge.  Noble Charles gave his life, a sacrifice on his country’s altar.  Five others from the Company shared his fate, and found a resting place beneath the soil of Georgia.  Few are the homes of loyal hearts that have not been penetrated by grief and mourning for loved ones fallen in this fearful struggle for popular government.

 

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John may have known very little about the results of the battle at Kennesaw Mountain, depending on what time he was captured.  The regiment suffered greatly, being in the front of the attack.  It appears that at least six of Company A were killed; these may well have been men he knew even before the war, as the regiment was recruited from the local area.  The 40th Indiana had 30 killed, 78 wounded, and 13 missing (including John), for 121 total.  This is very significant for a regiment that would have at most 1000 men, and probably significantly fewer by this stage of the war.

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DIARY ENTRY - Tuesday, August 30th, 1864

Richmond, Va., August 26 via Macon August 28, 1864.  a telegram to the Macon Confederate states that the Confederate authorities have proposed to the Federal authorities to exchange officers for officers and man for man, giving up the only point of contention heretofore existing, that of paroling the excess according to the terms of the cartel.  To leave the excess, if any, on our hands until captures have been made to exchange them.  It further states although the proposition had been made on the 22nd, that up to the 26th it had not been accepted by our authorities.  If this proposition has been made, and as they claim, the only point of contention to be that of paroling the excess has been dropped, there is yet room for hope.  This proposition I should think very fair, and can see no reason why it should not be accepted, unless our government thinks it better to sacrifice 30 or 50,000 men, rather than give the rebels that addition to the force already in the field - there are men who believe, or at least pretend to believe, that the delay is on account of the few Negro prisoners held by the rebels.  I cannot believe that the government authorities are so blind to its interest to hold back one day on account of the Negro.  Every month sacrifices more white men than the whole amount of black prisoners held by the rebels.  I was told only three days ago that in eight days previous there had been over 1,000 men died at this camp.

 

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Union leaders, including General Grant, had been refusing exchanges if black soldiers were not exchanged on the same basis as white soldiers.  John, understandably, would like any equal basis exchanges that could be done, to be done as soon as possible.

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More Information:

 

NEXT POST:  SEPTEMBER 3RD

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

August 26, 1944 - Saturday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner - USS Daly: 

USS Daly (DD-519) -New Guinea 

August 23rd:. In port at Sydney for the 10th straight day. Temperatures 60s, light to moderate winds.

August 24th: Another day in port.  Temperatures 50s-60s, mild winds.

August 25th: A number of men were absent over leave during the day.  Temperatures 50s, light winds.

August 26th: In the afternoon, Daly put out to sea for Seeadler Harbor, New Guinea. Temperatures 50s-60s, light winds.

Daly has spent 12 days in port at Sydney.  Now will begin the final push for the recapture of the Philippines.

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The island of Morotai is scheduled for invasion on September 15th.  Morotai is about 500 miles WNW of Biak Island.  It is about half way to the Philippines.

The Liberation of Paris was completed with the German surrender of the city on August 25th.  General DeGaulle leads a liberation parade in Paris the next day.

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More Information:


NEXT POST: AUGUST 30TH

August 26, 1864 - Friday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Stanley's Corps - Newton's Division - Wagner's Brigade

Atlanta Campaign 

 

Sherman has realized that cavalry will not be able to break the railroad to the extent needed to force the Confederates out of Atlanta.  He therefore returns to his previous plan; to sweep around the city with most of his army, destroying the railroads as he goes, in particular, the Macon railroad.  


Leaving just enough troops to protect his supplies, Sherman pulls the rest of the army from their trenches, and moves them to the right once again. The right wing (Howard) will move the furthest out from the city, through Fairburn, and then toward Jonesboro.  The center (Thomas) will pass through Red Oak and then eastward.  The right (Schofield) will move toward Rough and Ready station, nearest to Atlanta.  The intended initial line extends from just east of where the current Hartsfield International Airport is today, south to Jonesboro, GA.

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John Baer Diary Entries - text in white, comments in blue. Entries for August 23rd, 24th, 25th and 26th.

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DIARY ENTRY -  Tuesday, August 23rd, 1864

The sun is just descending below the horizon.  There are a few small clouds in the west, but everything is indicative of fair weather.  I am sitting in the northeast corner of the tent., leaning against the tent stake and facing westward - it is unnecessary to say what I am doing, and to a person aware of my condition it would not be hard to guess the subject of reflection.  I never gave a description of our tent yet.  It consists of two blankets sewn together, resting on two uprights and a ridge pole fastened at the corners, and in the center by stakes elevated about two feet from the ground - this forms the shade and shelter for ten men, and two of the ten are sick.  Our bed consists of the ground with no covering, and nothing to sleep upon to keep us out of the dirt.  This is the description, but no one could realize it without seeing it.  News floating and unreliable.

 

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Here are some reproductions of typical tents that would have been used in the camp.  This is from the Andersonville National Historic Site.  Several men, as described above, would share a tent for sleeping, whatever shade it could provide in the heat of the day, and protection from rain that occurred almost daily.  



 

 

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DIARY ENTRY - Wednesday, August 24th, 1864

Weather very hot, and on that account I have not extended my peregrination to any great distance.  My desire to ramble about does not increase, in fact it is a bore to attempt to go any place in the stockade, for the immense crowd is always on the streets, and the disagreeable sights that meet our eyes at every turn, and almost at every step.

 

Exchange is again on the rise and if it continues running up, it will be higher in a few days than at any time since I have been a prisoner.  It reminds me very much of the gold market, only it has taken the reverse hitherto.  While our troops were successful, gold would take a fall, and if we met with a reverse, it would run up.  Not so with the exchange fever - it always runs highest when we are successful and depreciates when the rebels gain a little.  Until this last time, our success has been attended by a gradual rise in gold and a gradual increase of the exchange fever.

 

Could all hopes of an early exchange be eradicated from the minds of the men in this camp, there are one-third of the men that would die in less than two months - they would settle down to the conviction that two months imprisonment would be certain death, and having arrived at that conclusion, all feelings of manhood would depart from them, and death would not be long in visiting them.

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DIARY ENTRY - Thursday, August 25th, 1864

Had a change in grub from bad to worse.  I predicted a change a short time ago and consequently was not surprised, except that it should come true so soon.  Weather oppressively hot with appearance of rain.  New of exchange still on the rise.

 

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DIARY ENTRY - Friday, August 26th, 1864

The drum has just beat for roll call and it made me feel like I was at home to hear a Yankee drummer - there is such a difference in everything done by a true blooded Federal vs. a Rebel that a blind man could distinguish one from the other if the performance required a noise.

 

I have been taking lessons in economy since I have been here.  I have studied into the economy politic of both the North and South and have arrived at the conclusion that if the South had any basis for issuing money, and had as judicious a Treasury as we do, that their political economy would far excel ours.  The mode of subsisting the Army in the South is certainly cheap and their calculations are so nicely made that there is no waste whatever.  Wheat is a produce that cannot be raised in the South to any extent - barely enough to keep the armies in hard bread during an active campaign season, and not entirely then, for whenever they rest a day they receive meal.  Corn, rice, and beans are the principal articles of agriculture, and all troops in garrison duty are subsisted on these, the men in the field receiving them when not actively engaged.  All these articles are cheap and substantial, and are collected by tithe, so that they cost nothing but transportation from the depots of delivery to the army - being delivered at military depots by the producer - and the transportation amounts to nothing, as all railroads are subject to military use.

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More Information:

 

NEXT POST:  AUGUST 30TH

Sunday, August 25, 2024

August 22, 1944 - Tuesday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner - USS Daly: 

USS Daly (DD-519) -New Guinea 

August 19th:. Remaining in port at Sydney, Australia.  Temperatures 50s-60s, light winds.

August 20th: Another day in port.  Temperatures 50s-60s, light breezes.

August 21st: All day in port at Sydney.  Temperatures 50s-60s, light winds.

August 22nd: Remaining in port.  Temperatures 50s-60s, moderate breezes.

Daly sailors are enjoying liberty in port at Sydney.  Temperatures are cool as this is still winter in Australia.

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The island of Morotai is scheduled for invasion on September 15th.  Morotai is about 500 miles WNW of Biak Island.  It is about half way to the Philippines.

The Liberation of Paris was begun on the 19th when the Free French forces began an uprising in the city. 

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More Information:


NEXT POST: AUGUST 26TH

August 22, 1864 - Monday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Stanley's Corps - Newton's Division - Wagner's Brigade

Atlanta Campaign 

 

Sherman and the army are awaiting the results of the cavalry expedition under General Kirkpatrick, hoping he can sever the remaining railroad links into Atlanta.  Plans also continue for the proposed sweep around the city, should the raid fail.

 

Confederate cavalry under Forrest capture Memphis for one day before they leave.  Attempts to stop Forrest have mostly come to nothing, and Forrest will now be free to operate against Sherman's supply lines.  Sherman, for now, has enough supplies near Atlanta for the next two weeks. 


Kirkpatrick returned to Union lines on the 22nd, believing he has disabled the railroad for about 10 days. However, the road is repaired by the time he has returned, and trains are already entering the city.  Sherman works to complete the plan for his sweep around the city.

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John Baer Diary Entries - text in white, comments in blue. Entries for August 19th, 20th, 21st and 22nd.

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DIARY ENTRY - Friday, August 19th, 1864

Weather still hot and if signs are true there is no reason why it will not be exceedingly unhealthy - I have noticed in the last few days flies are getting very scarce - judging from this the atmosphere is becoming impregnated with a poisonous vapor which is destructive to animal life.

 

Visited friend Buck and found him in a pretty bad condition with scurvy in the leg.  Heard some read from a diary of thirteen months in the rebel service.  Read some extracts from Captain Spikes’ journal of his exploring expedition to Africa, and some other man’s reasoning as to the source of the Nile, and was impressed with cause of some large bodies of water being salt while others are fresh.

 

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DIARY ENTRY - Saturday, August 20th, 1864

Estimating losses reminds me that time is precious and ought to be improved - whether I have improved my time since I have been in prison remains for the future to determine.  I have lost a great deal of very precious time in respect to getting information, although I have been informed in some points the truth of which I never would have realized under other circumstances; but there are other truths the realization of which have been a great deal pleasanter in many respects - whether they would have been as important I know not, neither can I determine - circumstances frequently settle many points of importance as it has almost done with me on the present occasion.  If I were a speaker, I expect that I would turn out to be a preacher, as I have to read the Bible at odd hours.  My disposition is too hostile for anything of that kind.

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DIARY ENTRY - Sunday, August 21st, 1864

Campaigns are still going on - besides the progress of the war, there is another theme to engage the minds of the people - that is the Presidential campaign.  Who the conservative candidate is I have no positive information, having been captured before the nominations - neither was there any point made to enlist the sympathies of the people, but I imagine the excitement is at such a pitch that they are beginning to pull every wire; and one of the wires for the Democrats to pull, one that will enlist the sympathies of more persons than any other, is to get a full statement of facts concerning the condition of prisoners, draw a comparison, and give the administration a nib for not doing their duty in regard to prisoners.

 

That statement they can get, for I know that a petition was sent to the President and Governors of States to be published to the world, and it cannot be denied that the rebels are interested in an exchange - by allowing a petition worded as that one to pass through their lines, and after it was gotten up, it was sanctioned by the commander of the prison, and men allowed to go through with it on parole.  I am not a politician and would not be a Democrat if I was, but if I was one, I would pull that string with effect.  If they have taken a war footing, they must manifest an interest for the soldier as the only chance to raise the party.

 

Of one thing I am certain, that is if I am not out of this before the election I will not vote for any of them.  Another Sabbath has passed - the shades of evening are drawing nigh, the sun has been obscured by clouds, and a drizzling rain fell the greater part of the day.  All has been in most perfect unison with my feelings - a longing for home and an anxiety pervading every thought, but is that anxiety greater than that which fills the thoughts and minds of a lonely companion?  She is at home, surrounded with its comforts, but sorrow penetrates there quicker than it can where there is less sympathy.  Sympathy is a stranger to this place, at least there is but little of it made manifest by words.

 

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In the presidential election of 1864, the choice of the Democrats to run against President Lincoln was none other than George B. McClellan, John's old commander from the early days of the war, when the 10th Indiana fought at Rich Mountain.  

It would seem that prisoner exchange did not become a large issue in the campaign, and McClellan would have understood the reasoning behind suspending exchanges, and might have hesitated to criticize it.

John continuously thinks of home, and Jenny; wondering what she knows of his current situation.

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DIARY ENTRY - Monday, August 22nd, 1864

In looking over yesterday’s notes, the idea of the amount of sympathy manifested in the camp was forced upon me by some of the examples I have seen and heard.  Word is a very scarce article in camp, and when a man dies and is carried out (he is generally carried out by comrades), the men carrying the corpse are allowed to bring in a load of wood on their return.  I have frequently heard men wish that such a one of their sick comrades would die so that they could get some wood, and have known instances of men quarreling and fighting because they could not agree as to which should have the privilege of carrying out a corpse - each claiming it from having waited on the man while living.  There have been other instances occurred under my notice of men fighting for a dying man’s shoes or blouse - such occurrences are frequent, and all the sympathy that is felt is a desire that the man will die that some other man may better his condition - and as a general thing, when a man gets down, those around him, instead of endeavoring to assist him and attempt to keep him, they give him a push and get him further down.  The inhumanity of men in the camp is greater, considering everything, than that of the rebels.

 

A new issue of prisoners was received this afternoon, some from our brigade, but none from the Regiment that I could find.  All as ignorant in regard to the movements of the army and everything else as if they had not been raised in an enlightened age.

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More Information:

 

NEXT POST:  AUGUST 26TH

Sunday, August 18, 2024

August 18, 1944 - Friday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner - USS Daly: 

USS Daly (DD-519) -New Guinea 

August 15th:. Moored at Sydney, Australia all day.  Temperatures 50s, light winds.

August 16th: All day in port at Sydney.  Temperatures 50s, light winds.

August 17th: Another day in port. Temperatures 60s, light winds.

August 18th: Remained in port.  Temperatures 50s, light breezes.

Daly sailors are enjoying liberty in port at Sydney.

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The island of Morotai is scheduled for invasion on September 15th.  Morotai is about 500 miles WNW of Biak Island.  It is about half way to the Philippines.  Biak Island fell to the Allies on the 17th.

Landings begin in southern France by an Allied invasion force.

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More Information:


NEXT POST: AUGUST 22ND

August 18, 1864 - Thursday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Stanley's Corps - Newton's Division - Wagner's Brigade

Atlanta Campaign 

 

Sherman sends a cavalry force under General Judson Kilpatrick to raid south of Atlanta, and try again to cut the railroads and force the Confederates out of Atlanta.  This force will be out for several days.  In the meantime, Sherman prepares for his circling movement around the city.


Hood's cavalry has moved north and managed to break the railroad at several places in the Union rear areas.  This is not terribly successful, as repair parties have become skilled at fixing any damage.  The Confederate cavalry are thus away from Atlanta, where they are more needed.

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John Baer Diary Entries - text in white, comments in blue. Entries for August 15th, 16th, 17th and 18th.

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DIARY ENTRY - Monday, August 15th, 1864

True religion and war walk in separate paths.  I do not know whether the change at home is rapid as to be noticed, those that are there but two years worked such a change as to make it noticeable to those who had been absent.  Truly the change has been very great.  Grapevine rumors are below par - scarcely any in circulation.

 

The rebels have circulated the report that Valandigham has raised an insurrection and has 150,000 organized forces intending to set up a Northern Confederacy.  How I long to be at home when that Confederacy is established.  I would like to see some of Valandigham’s Generals. 

 

I am not in the habit of complaining of anything the Administration does, but I certainly think they are doing wrong in sacrificing as many men as they are doing daily for the sake of keeping an overplus of rebels out of the field.  The ends in my opinion will not justify the means.  I know that an exchange would increase their army while it would add but little to ours, but the disparity in numbers now in the field is so great that the difference would scarcely be noticeable, and the change in the mode of living in one month’s time would make the change in our favor.  At the end of that time, two-thirds of the men here would be able for the field, while as many of the rebels that are able to take the field now would be unfit for service, besides being an incumbrance to the rebel army.

 

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Clement Vallandigham was an anti-war Democrat (Copperhead) from Ohio.  His speeches during the war caused him to be tried, convicted, and banished to the Confederacy.  He then went to Canada and re-entered the North in 1864.


The Union's policy at this time is to refuse to exchange prisoners as they believe that exchanges will help the rebel army much more that that of the Union.  On the 18th, General Grant will re-iterate this policy.  Whether this policy is wise or not, it certainly imperils the Union prisoners suffering in the camps.


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DIARY ENTRY - Tuesday, August 16th, 1864

What would it take to pay me for the loss sustained in this war?  From the precarious condition of my property at the time of capture, I expect that it has all gone by the board, then the pecuniary loss would be something near two thousand dollars, besides three years and a half of the best part of my life which in a pecuniary point of view has realized me nothing, the wages being barely necessary to defray necessary expenses.  The foregoing of all the pleasures that might have been enjoyed, and the effect on the physical and intellectual man by the suffering I have endured - and some have even endured more, and not yet more for I have given all but life, and on many fields have even dared to give that - but Providence has spared me for other pains, but whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and I will not complain or murmur at his mercies.

 

The powers that be are ordained by God, but whether he controls their individual actions I am inclined to doubt.  Man is a free moral agent.  It is his to choose or refuse and unless his actions are governed by the Scriptures, they are not controlled by Providence.  By this I know the actions of our Administration are not governed by Providence, consequently, I will venture a remark on their conduct. 

 

After suffering and enduring all that we have, and knowing that the truth of our condition has been represented time and time again to high Government officials in the strongest terms that language will permit, and having ocular demonstrations of the misery as they have had by men who have escaped, it seems almost incredible that they could refuse almost any terms to liberate those who are confined in the walls of Sumpter prison.

 

Last week, in three successive days, there were 335 men carried from the camp to the grave.  One hundred and twelve the first day, one hundred and nine the second, and one hundred and fourteen the third.  Can the Government expect that if we are left here during the coming winter that any of them who escape the hand of death will ever benefit them any?   If so, upon what grounds?  Surely not upon the grounds of duty or allegiance.  There cannot be any claim on either point.  If the Government fails to fulfill its obligations to its brave defenders when it can be done without violating any other obligations, surely they will not exact more service.

 

Yet there is an undying patriotism that nothing will quench.  Thousands have already endure to the end and thousands more are ready and willing to hazard their lives in the field of battle - but the thoughts of being sacrificed in prison is more than many will endure.  I will stop writing on this point lest I should be constrained to utter something derogatory to some of our Officials.

 

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From this entry we learn that John owns a farm and worries that it has probably been defaulted for non-payment.  He was also married in the spring and would be concerned about his wife, Jenny, as well.   

He then returns to the matter of exchange - to a soldier, the decision against exchange would seem the absolute worst sort of bean-counting, and it does in fact make many despair of ever reaching home.  At this time is the worst of the daily death toll at the camp, as John recounts in the fourth paragraph.  

On the 14th, something happened that many of the prisoners would consider a gift from heaven - a spring appeared in the camp and began to provide clean, clear water to those inside the camp - it was named the Providence Spring.  This must have seemed a miracle; as mentioned before, prisoners up to this time had only rain water to drink.

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DIARY ENTRY - Wednesday, August 17th, 1864

There has been a change in the commander of the prison.  This is evident from an order that made its appearance.  Although by a Confederate commander I fully concur with him in his opinion that it is for our benefit, and believe in having it enforced to the letter.  It shows more signs of humanity than any action that has yet been taken in regard to the prisoners.  It is an order for police duty.

 

I was informed that during yesterday and night before last there were considerable over 100 dead carried from the hospital, besides those that were carried out of the stockade.  If we were a superstitious set, this would be almost enough to impress us with a fatality such as used to be common among sailors - but as a general thing we are not so, although I am convinced it exists to a certain extent.  There are numbers of men who, when they enter the gates of Sumpter prison feel that the gates of death are closing behind them, and they never expect to see the world again - to such the future affords no fair prospects, and imprisonment is fatal.  Others become discouraged after a time, and feel that death would be a relief - and indeed it would be to a great many.


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DIARY ENTRY -  Thursday, August 18th, 1864

 

Had the colic all night and it has been productive of very disagreeable sensations in the vicinity of the stomach - although somewhat relieved, I do not feel as well as I could desire.  Weather oppressively hot.

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More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XXXVIII, Chapter L, Part V, Correspondence, pp. 505-594. 
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 174.
  • The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1II, Red River to Appomattox, Shelby Foote, pp. 492-520.
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Retreat With Honor, pp. 315-320.
  • Decision In The West, The Atlanta Campaign of 1864, Albert Castel, pp, 469-471.
  • Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant, pp. 613-620.
  • Memoirs of General William T. Sherman, pp. 572-577.
  • Events: 1864   

 

NEXT POST:  AUGUST 22ND

Wednesday, August 14, 2024

August 14, 1944 - Monday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner - USS Daly: 

USS Daly (DD-519) -New Guinea 

August 11th:. At sea all day en route to Sydney, Australia,  Temperatures 70s, light winds.

August 12th: At sea all day.  Temperatures 60s, winds up to 20 knots in the evening.

August 13th: Arrived Sydney mid-morning, tied up at Wooloomooloo dock. Moored for the rest of the day. Temperatures 60s, winds dying down through the day, light breezes in the evening..

August 14th: Moored all day.  Temperatures 50s-60s, light winds.

Daly has been at sea for some time now, and participated in a number of invasions in the New Guinea theater.  The crew is no doubt looking forward to some shore leave while in Sydney.

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The island of Morotai is scheduled for invasion on September 15th.  Morotai is about 500 miles WNW of Biak Island.  It is about half way to the Philippines.

Intense fighting continues around the French city of Falaise in Normandy.  In Italy, the allies have control of Florence.

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More Information:


NEXT POST: AUGUST 18TH

August 14, 1864 - Sunday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Stanley's Corps - Newton's Division - Wagner's Brigade

Atlanta Campaign

Sherman is growing impatient for progress and is frustrated that the Confederate lines cannot be broken or flanked.  By the 13th, he has made a plan to take nearly his whole army in a circle around Atlanta, fairly far out from the city (a radius of about 15 miles) and cut the railroads that supply the city.  As the Confederate General Hood has sent his cavalry north to break the Union supply lines, Sherman will first try one more cavalry raid to try to break the railroad links.  Preparations continue for both these actions on the 14th.

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John Baer Diary Entries - text in white, comments in blue. Entries for August 11th, 12th, 13th and 14th.

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DIARY ENTRY -  Thursday, August 11th, 1864

No rations yesterday, and only half rations of bread this morning, but happening to have a few beans on hand we had a pretty good mess of bean soup for dinner.  Did not get it cooked as well as we might have had it not been for the rain - it seems to have a knack of raining once a day, sometimes that once lasts all day.  Well, since the shower, the atmosphere is very pleasant, but I fear another shower before night.

 

Nothing new or interesting, 10th Indiana and 7th Kentucky regiments represented in the bunk, conversation turned on old times, home and incidents.  Last night, low miserable language cannot express the misery witnessed during the rain and afterwards.  Death would be preferable to being compelled to witness such scenes, yet there is a hope which buoys me up under all trials - the hope of reaching home and family - I ought to write, but friends cannot help knowing our condition, and for them to think me dead would be a pleasure to knowing the truth.

  

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DIARY ENTRY - Friday, August 12th, 1864

Very pretty weather, but exceedingly hot - so very hot that it is even uncomfortable in the shade, which for the most part is very deficient both for shade and shelter.  A gloomy thought lingers around us - one of our men is sick, and it is an utter impossibility to get a doctor to prescribe for him.  I would attempt it myself, but it is as much impossible to get the medicine, so that the disease will have to run its course - and if the constitution and nature is not sufficient to wear it out and throw it off, there is no alternative but death - and it takes a constitution and courage stronger than most men have to endure under the circumstances, and if a man settles down to the conviction that he is going to die, his time is near at hand.

 

“It is appointed unto man: one, to die, and after death the judgement; man’s days are numbered”, and it is true that all men must die, and that there is but one time to die - but the thoughts of having to bury a comrade so far from home and friends is productive of very unpleasant feelings.  The mortality here is greater by disease than by the missiles of death in the front rank of Sherman’s army.  This will throw light to some degree on the kind of treatment received by prisoners when there are more men dying of disease out of 35,000 than die of disease and get killed in action in constant skirmishing with an army of 150,000 - and with this to give light, the real clue to the real truth of the circumstances will be so small that the thread will be almost entirely lost.

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DIARY ENTRY - Saturday, August 13th, 1864

The most comprehensive stretch of the imagination based on facts that can be reproduced in language will fail to convey in an adequate form the most faint idea of all that has to be suffered and endured in a prisoners’ camp.  I have read of the horrors of the Bastille and the tower, but prisoners suffered little in comparison to what is suffered here.  When I say suffered I mean from confinement and exposure, besides, their suffering and punishment  was for crime.  When they were taken to the rack or wheel, their suffering for the time was most severe and sometimes unto death, but during confinement they had a palace in comparison with Camp Sumpter.  The rations that are issued are barely enough to keep body and soul together, even if it was very palatable and if every man got his full share - but by the time the men get it, it is generally one-fourth exhausted and the manner of cooking is miserable beyond description.

 

How long, oh how long will Father Abraham let us endure this?  The Jersey prison ship would not have been harder to escape from, and the mortality among the prisoners could not have been much greater.  In six months over five thousand Federal soldiers have found a resting place beneath the sod of Georgia in the vicinity of Andersonville.


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DIARY ENTRY - Sunday, August 14th, 1864

How exceedingly and oppressively hot is the sun of Georgia - a few white clouds are floating along the horizon, the leaves of the tall pines are scarcely stirred by the breeze.  The pine smoke moves close to the ground.  The sound of many voices is born in our ears.  Some are engaged in conversation of loved objects far away.  Others are engaged in riotous disputes and others are engaged in cursing - some without object curse from habit, others have various objects of hatred on which to vent their spleen, but in all the employments there is nothing to indicate that this is the Sabbath day.

 

Although I do many things that are not in accordance with Divine Law, I cannot so far forget myself as to cast off all feelings of regard for the Sabbath day.  My mind reverts to the days that I used to meet the Brethren at Wild Cat and enjoy such seasons of pleasure and happiness.  How long it seems since I met with them.  What changes have taken place since then?  Almost four years have passed since I used to attend the Saturday evening meetings and they are fresh in my memory as if it had been but yesterday.  Brothers Fuller, Bowers, and Huffer are in Illinois, Sammy Webb at Nashville.  Brothers Osburn also W. H. Manary and Jos. L. Ashly I fear have entirely fallen away, and Bald Ellis* when I last saw him was rioting in wickedness and sin.  Many whose faces were familiar have cast off this mortal coil and have been called up higher to take a seat in the mansion of bliss.  Pestilence has gone through the land, nipping many fair flowers in the bud.  Truly war and pestilence go hand in hand and sin and riotous living are the results of war.

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The long weeks of imprisonment are taking their toll on John.  Rations are scarce and cannot be cooked properly.  Water is only available from capturing the rain, as the small branch that runs through the camp has no potable water.  A Georgia summer is not only hot but extremely humid.  Dozens of prisoners die each day, and many more are sick.  There is no formal agreement for prisoner exchanges and so exchanges are made only sporadically if at all.  With all these concerns, it enters the mind that one may not escape the camp at all, and perish far from home and family.

Sunday Entry: The church at Wild Cat was one of the first churches established in Wea Township, in Tippecanoe County south of Lafayette.  Once the first church became overcrowded, three more were built, and Wild Cat was one of those.

Wea Township

 

The first church erected was that built by members of the United Brethren denomination and was known as the "Otterbein church". It was located near the Black schoolhouse, and for several years was the only house of public worship within the township.  While it really belonged to the United Brethren people, Presbyterians and Methodists also occupied it.  Later on other church buildings were found necessary and the Spring Grove Union church, Wild Cat church, and the Methodist Episcopal church were all liberally supported by the citizens of the township.

 

Past and present of Tippecanoe County, Indiana, DeHart, R.P. 1832-1918, page 182

 

 I am uncertain as to the original location of the church.  Given its name, we might expect it on or near the local Wildcat Creek; however, neither branch of the creek goes through Wea Township.


*The name of 'Bald Ellis' is given for a church member.  I think this may be a copy error in transcribing the diary, as that would be an odd name, even for a nickname.

 

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More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XXXVIII, Chapter L, Part V, Correspondence, pp. 455-505. 
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 174.
  • The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1II, Red River to Appomattox, Shelby Foote, pp. 492-520.
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Retreat With Honor, pp. 315-320.
  • Decision In The West, The Atlanta Campaign of 1864, Albert Castel, pp, 466-469.
  • Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant, pp. 613-620.
  • Memoirs of General William T. Sherman, pp. 572-577.
  • Events: 1864   

 

NEXT POST:  AUGUST 18TH

Sunday, August 11, 2024

August 10, 1944 - Thursday - 80 years ago today

Status - John Skinner - USS Daly: 

USS Daly (DD-519) -New Guinea 

August 7th:. Moored all day at Seeadler Harbor, Admiralty Islands.  Temperatures 70s-80s, light winds.

August 8th:Underway at 3:30 PM for Sydney, Austrialia. Temperatures 80s, light breezes.

August 9th: At sea all day passing east of New Guinea.  Temperatures 80s, moderate breezes.

August 10th: Moving south, stopped an Milne Bay, New Guinea to deliver some passengers there and pick up others going to Sydney; resumed course to Sydney for the rest of the day. Temperatures 70s-80s, light breezes.

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Guam falls to US forces on the 10th. 

As the cleanup continues in New Guinea, preparations are underway for the next step toward the Philippines.  President Roosevelt has decided that the Philippines will be the next top priority in the Pacific War.  

The next target - the island of Morotai - is scheduled for invasion on September 15th.  Morotai is about 500 miles WNW of Biak Island.  It is about half way to the Philippines.

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More Information:


NEXT POST: AUGUST 14TH

August 10, 1864 - Wednesday - 160 years ago today

Status - John Baer - 40th Indiana Regiment - Stanley's Corps - Newton's Division - Wagner's Brigade

Atlanta Campaign

Sherman has tired of attempting to flank the rebels out of their positions and has determined a different tactic; ordering large guns to be sent from the north, he orders as much of the city to be reduced as possible by firing over the lines and into the city proper, night and day.

Hood has sent his cavalry around the Union army to attack their supply lines north of the army.  This is risky as it leaves the Confederate army without cavalry.

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John Baer Diary Entries - text in white, comments in blue. Entries for August 7th, 8th, 9th and 10th.

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DIARY ENTRY -  Sunday, August 7th, 1864

Five weeks in prison and I have lost nothing by the experience so far as I can judge - true, I am not as stout as I was when I came in, but that is easily accounted for.  The insufficiency of the food and the want of exercise are the causes of the weakness perhaps both physically and mentally, for there are mental weaknesses existing to an alarming extent - a great many men have lost all principles of manhood and become perfectly childish, and yet they are scarcely blameable.  Many of them - their time has expired and their regiments have gone home; and yet they are left here in such a miserable condition.  It takes men of fortitude and undoubted loyalty not to succumb under the circumstances.

 

More rumors of exchange.  It is reported that General Winder has received orders for 10,000 prisoners to be delivered at Hilton Head this week.  They are to start tomorrow, but tomorrow never comes here - and as long as the thing is to be done tomorrow, I will be like the lark was with the farmer when he depended on his neighbors and kinsmen to reap his wheat - I will rest easy - but when it comes today I will begin to think about moving.

  

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DIARY ENTRY - Monday, August 8th, 1864

Finished reading the Old Testament in the forenoon.  Rained so in the afternoon that I could not write till late in the evening, and then had not time on account of having to issue rations.

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DIARY ENTRY - Tuesday, August 9th, 1864

The first incident of note was that of administering the Oath of Allegiance to a few characters of doubtful loyalty.  There have been men going out from time to time on parole to do different kinds of work for the Confederacy.  Some even volunteered to make shoes for the so-called Confederate government.  This was looked upon as both dishonorable and disloyal; but as yet there were no steps taken to prevent it and no stringent measure used to warn or intermediate men that felt inclined to go.  At length it came to such a pitch that some got so bold as to request the adjutant to administer the Oath of Allegiance to the Confederacy.

 

This caused the regulators to open their eyes and keep on the alert for other movements.  Presently it was reported that they wanted men to work on the fortifications.  One of the regulators disguised himself and started out as a Rebel Sergeant to get volunteers for that purpose, and was not long in getting a squad of five or six, and started with them as though he intended to take them out, but only took them to the headquarters of the regulators to administer the oath.

 

The process of administering it was very simple but altogether unpleasant to the recipient.  When they got to headquarters, they were ordered to take off their pants - for which there was no alternative but obedience - this order being obeyed, they received a sever chastisement with a strap, after which they were dismissed but did not get away without black eyes.

 

 I dislike miscreants, notwithstanding the stringent measures and the vigilance of the police to prevent crimes, there is a great deal of stealing done.  The regulators and their laws resemble the regulators of Texas and the lynch law, and would bear a pretty good comparison.  They are composed chiefly of the rounders of Brooklyn and New York, and in my opinion, it would be an impossibility to find an honest man among them.  There are reasons for everything, and one reason for the vigilance of the regulators is that they exercise their power for gain, at present for making money and in hopes of gaining favor with government officials - but should the true history of their careers be ferreted out and presented to the authorities, it is more than probable that they would be involved in some difficulty.

 

Rained in torrents all afternoon, and just when it was raining the hardest, the rebel signal gun boomed forth the sound to arms and the poor Georgia militia had to roll out.  The cause of the alarm was that the branch had raised so that it washed part of the stockade out, and the rebs anticipated a break, but the rain and the immense amount of water was enough to prevent anything of the kind.

 

I did not finish my remarks in regard to the regulators.  I presume that under existing circumstances, they are a necessary evil used to prevent a greater, and in case of two existing evils, it is policy to choose the lesser.


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DIARY ENTRY - Wednesday, August 10th, 1864

Some arrivals yesterday of which I made no note owing to the long comment on the regulators and the lynch law.  News unimportant except of an exchange of the officers at Charleston.  The editor of a Macon paper in a long editorial urges an immediate exchange as a great saving to the Confederacy.  Whether such an article would have any influence in the authorities is rather doubtful, but it is certainly the ardent desire of several thousand men that it will.  Newspaper Generals in my opinion are not only a nuisance but an evil.

 

Rumors of exchange are still flying, they are favorable but not reliable. One of my acquaintances says that he had a conversation with a Quartermaster and he told him that the terms of exchange were agreed upon, that they were making preliminary arrangements for prisoners, and that General Winder had orders to have everything in readiness to forward the prisoners to the point of exchange at any time.  This report is confirmed by a Yankee that has been clerking at Winder’s headquarters, but no reliance can be placed in such rumors, so I let them pass - not, however, without a desire that they may prove true at an early day.

 

Another flood in the afternoon and rain at night.  How terrible to think that 5,000 men have to stand in the rain and storm, and after the tempest is stilled, lie down on the wet ground without covering or shelter, in wet clothes, frequently have to yield to nature, fatigue overcomes them and they are compelled to succumb.

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The mention of the lark in the Sunday diary entry seems to be a reference to an Aesop's fable:

 The Lark and Her Young Ones

This is a summary of the Regulator-Moderator War in Texas:

Regulator-Moderator War


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More Information:

  • Link: War Operations, see Volume XXXVIII, Chapter L, Part V, Correspondence, pp. 407-455. 
  • The Civil War Day by Day, John S. Bowman, Ed. p. 174.
  • The Civil War, A Narrative, Vol 1II, Red River to Appomattox, Shelby Foote, pp. 492-519.
  • Battles and Leaders of the Civil War, Retreat With Honor, pp. 315-320.
  • Decision In The West, The Atlanta Campaign of 1864, Albert Castel, pp, 455-466.
  • Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant, pp. 613-619.
  • Memoirs of General William T. Sherman, pp. 572-576.
  • Events: 1864   

 

NEXT POST:  AUGUST 14TH