Ohio History Journal

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Civil War Letters of George M

Civil War Letters of George M. Wise

Edited by WILFRED W. BLACK*

 

 

George M. Wise was born at Bellaire, Ohio, on September 5,

1841. After attending Old Washington Academy four years, he

entered Jefferson College (later Washington and Jefferson College)

prior to his enlistment. There he was enrolled in the classical course

of instruction. After the war he was an accountant. An expert in

mathematics, as well as geometry, algebra, and trigonometry, he

added by tens rather than units, and in a test while he was county

auditor he beat the adding machine. For many years he taught a

Bible class and used only the Greek Testament. He died on Feb-

ruary 27, 1923.

The following letters to his brother, with one to his father, are

fragments of what must have been an extensive correspondence.

They were written in the South while Wise, working in the post

office and clerking in the office of the adjutant, served with the

Forty-third Ohio Regiment. His reflections cover military, political,

social, and economic phases of the Civil War.

Organized late in 1861 and early in 1862, the Forty-third Ohio

Regiment, along with the Twenty-seventh, the Thirty-ninth, and the

Sixty-third Ohio Regiments, constituted General John W. Fuller's

Ohio Brigade. The Forty-third Regiment left for the front on Feb-

ruary 21, 1862, and was not mustered out of the service until July

13, 1865. It served under Pope, Rosecrans, Hurlbut, Sherman,

Dodge, McPherson, Sprague, and Mower. Ohio's Official Roster

shows that the Forty-third Regiment participated in battle at New

Madrid, Missouri, Iuka, Mississippi, Corinth, Mississippi, Decatur,

Alabama, Resaca, Georgia, Dallas, Georgia, Kenesaw Mountain,

 

* Wilfred W. Black is a professor of history at Grove City College, Grove City,

Pennsylvania. He is a native of Findlay, Ohio.