Ohio History Journal

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DOCUMENTS

DOCUMENTS

 

INTO THE BREACH

 

CIVIL WAR LETTERS OF WALLACE W. CHADWICK

 

 

Edited by MABEL WATKINS MAYER

 

Grandfather was always extremely proud of his brief war

record in 1864. In his more than four-score years, it was the

one outstanding experience in travel, adventure and patriotic

service that had relieved him, for a little while, of strenuous pio-

neering and heavy farm toil. What wonder that it made a lasting

impression on his life and conversation!

He loved to tell how President Lincoln, scarce of men and

not quite ready to launch a second draft, accepted the offer of the

governors of five states1 to lend their National Guardsmen to the

Union Army for one hundred days, so that all the veteran troops

could be free for heavy fighting.

He was proud of the fact that many of these Guardsmen

were men of families who left their farms at the planting season,

or gave up their shops or professions in order to help out in any

way they could during those days of crisis. Some of his neigh-

bors guarded prisons or prisoners; some protected the Baltimore

and Ohio Railroad; some saw active service in the Shenandoah

Valley or along the James River; some starved and died in Libby

Prison or Andersonville. He was proudest of all, that at their

homegoing, President Lincoln made an official acknowledgment of

the patriotic services of these "Hundred-Day Men."

Grandfather's letters to Grandmother during their one period

 

1 Ohio      30,000 men

Indiana                      20,000 men

Illinois                       20,000 men

Iowa                          10,000 men

Wisconsin                 5,000 men

Total                     85,000

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