Aquia Creek - the quartermasters offices |
Camp Forbes Pleasant
Valley Maryland Saturday Oct 25/62
Dear Wife
I will try and write a few more lines. I have not received a
letter for the last three mails and I begin to feel lonely. I have been waiting
for that box before I wrote again but it has not arrived yet. I begin to feel
the need of my mittens and shirts. We begin to have cold frosty nights. It is
quite warm again today. it has been very pleasant most of the time. We have
been in the camp almost three weeks with the exception of our excursion to
Frederick but don’t suppose we shall stay much longer. The troops are
collecting fast around this vicinity and they say the rebel camp is in sight of
Harper’s Ferry and perhaps this is a calm before a great storm. If it must come
the quicker the better. I hope this state of affairs won’t remain a great while
longer but the Lord only knows. The men seem to be loseing their confidence and
patriotism and don’t care how the thing is settled if the war will only end and
they can get home. I should like to get home as well as anyone and I don’t
boast of any more courage or patriotism than the other folke but I do want to
see slavery receive its death blow before I come home and have the war end so
that it will stay ended but I believe God will bring good out of this strife as
I have ever believed if I had my hopes in man alone I could not endure it at
all.
Oh dear Wife all my earthly treasures are at home. You are
of more value than your weight in gold. Oh how I long for the time to come that
I shall be permitted to come home and see those dear ones that I know are ready
to receive me with open arms. I feel that I have thrown a great responsibility
upon you, but I pray that God will sustain you and give you strength to bear
your burdens and may we be permitted to spend a few more happy days on earth
with our little ones but the future is all uncertain wherever we are. My health
has been very good and I have gained eight or ten pounds. The boys all say how
you fat up. Calvin has come back with us again. He got sick of teaming but
Stephen has gone into an ammunition train. There is some sickness in our
regiment. Our Captain is quite sick. They thought he was dieing last night.
George Davis is very well. Calvin cheeks tick out like a squirrel but when we
begin to march again it will take off our flesh. We have just received orders
to be ready to march tomorrow morning so you see we have no Sabbath but can pray
to our father in Heaven while we are on the march. We have a prayer in our
little tent each night. I used to read in my testament before I layed down and
George and Stephen want I should lead in prayer which I was very glad to do but
it is not my own little family circle.
My love to Dear Mother and Brothers and Sisters. Write as
often as you can. Tell Eugene to write again and I will print him another
letter as soon as I get time. Kiss little Ned for me forty times a day.
I must draw my letter close. You wanted I should number my
letters but I don’t know how many I have written to you.
Oh you spoke of sending a lock of baby’s hair. I did not
find as it was in the evening and opened the letter and read it through before
I saw that line. I hunted my nest all over but I could not find it. Please send
me another.
Good Bye Dear Wife.
God bless you.
W.B. Rogers
You'll notice that he mentions that Stephen went into the ammunition train. This was a very dangerous job.
An ammunition convoy |
Camp Forbes Near Lovette Village Virginia
Oct 28/62
Dear Wife
I will inform of my whereabouts. I am in Old Virginia now.
We left Pleasant Valley Sunday morning. We marched to a village called Berlin.
It rained all day and it was quite cold. We stood in the village about two
hours in the rain and then we went across the Potomack on a pontoon bridge and
marched about 3 or 4 miles and encamped. It rained terrible and the wind blew
so that it blowed our tent down two or three times. It was a terrible sight. It
rained untill about nine o’clock in the next morning. We were wet clear
through. They tried to make us camp on a wheat field that was just sowed and
was all mud but the men wouldn’t do it. The boys thought it was pretty hard but
we lived through it and are well today. I had the chills a little but I had a
good night’s sleep last night. I feel pretty well today. I have cut four heads
of hair this morning. We probably shall not remain here long. The whole army is
coming across. It looks as though there was to be some great move somewhere but
we can’t imagine what it is to be or where we are going but I hope it will be a
blow that will tell something towards the end of this terrible war but my only
hope is in an overruling power. If it was in man alone I should not think it
would end very soon but I pray that I may live through it and be permitted to
see you once more. I have just been looking at your miniatures. Oh how I love
those Dear faces. If it was not for you and the children I should not care to
live long in my present condition but Gods will be done. You did not say a word
about little Ned. I wondered if he was well. I wrote a letter the day before we
started from camp. I shall write as often as I can but we may get away from
railroad communication so that we cannot send letters as well as we have but I
don’t know. I hope you won’t stop writeing. They will reach me some time if I
live. We have not received the box yet and I don’t know when we shall. I should
like the mittens and shirts but I suppose it is all for the best. I haven’t
much news to write. I dread the cold winter. I don’t think it is a great deal
warmer here than it is in Massachusetts but I try to look on the bright side of
things but when I think of you I seem to have something to live for and I will
struggle on and trust God. There is considerable sickness in our regiment but
none have died that I know of. we left our Captain and our Colonel was sick so
he had to stop and Berlin. It has just been said in camp that our letters
cannot be sent at present but will finish my letter and let it go when it can.
Give my love to all and tell them to remember me in their prayers. I need them
very much.
So I will bid you goodbye Dearest of earthly friends.
Your affectionate husband
W. B. Rogers
The Pontoon bridge at Berlin(present day Brunswick) |
"The whole army is coming across. It looks as though there was to be some great move somewhere but we can’t imagine what it is to be or where we are going but I hope it will be a blow that will tell something towards the end of this terrible war but my only hope is in an overruling power. If it was in man alone I should not think it would end very soon but I pray that I may live through it and be permitted to see you once more. "
Years may go by, but the sense of danger and urgency doesn't. The more things change, the more they stay the same.