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Lot 419: 18623Union Soldier Civil War Letter

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Militaria Start Price:180.00 USD Estimated At:300.00 - 600.00 USD
Lot  419: 18623Union Soldier Civil War Letter
<b>Civil War Union Letters</b><hr><b>Moving West And Capturing Rebels!</b>

<b>April 6, 1863, Union Correspondent Details Rigors of Railroad Travel and Reports on the Capture of 250 Rebels, Very Fine.</b>
Autograph Letter Signed, William R. Trout - traveling with the Acting Chief of Commissary, U.S. Vols., 1st Brigade, 2nd Division, 9th Army Corps - 3 pages, 7.5” x 12.25,” with a two-page postscript measuring 4” x 6.75,” Headquarters, Lexington, Kentucky; addressed to “Dear Joseph.” Two slight tears and a few tiny holes at folds; exceptionally bright and legible.

In March, the 2nd Division was ordered to quit the Army of the Potomac, to do duty in the Blue Grass region of Kentucky. The move to the Dept. of the Ohio forms the basis of this account. In part: “We started from New Port News March twenty-sixth & took the Steam boat Metamosa proceeded up the Chesapeake Bay landed at Baltimore... stayed until the next evening then left for Harrisburg in Sleeping cars by the 9 o’clock train arrived there at 3 in the morning changed cars almost immediately & proceeded to Pittsburgh where we arrived the next day at noon took dinner changed cars for Crestline stopped at Massillon & took supper seated ourselves & started arrived at Crestline at 2 o’clock changed cars again & arrived at Cincinnati at 8 o’clock the next morning and took carriage and went to the Burnett House but could not procure rooms & fetched up at Spencer House... We sojourned in Cincinnati from Sunday March 29th to April 1st when we took the 6 o’clock train for Lexington Ky. where we now hold forth... One of the Ohio Regts. captured and brought into town about two hundred and fifty Secessionists the most distressed looking beings I ever beheld the most of the people in this neighborhood are Rebels in principle...”