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"Rebel hordes are scattered to the four winds."

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles Start Price:60.00 USD Estimated At:120.00 - 150.00 USD
 Rebel hordes are scattered to the four winds.
Letter of Union soldier W.J. Green, Fort Halleck, Columbus, Ky., Oct. 8, (18)62, 4 3/4 x 7 3/4, 2 1/2 pp. To his brothers in Big Prairie, Logan County, Ill. "Old Co. B is all right and anxious to meet the Enemy in the Field again. There has been a great deal of hard Fighting down at Corinth within the last few days, and great loss on both sides but Ill(inoi)s has been tried again and found equal to the emergency. Our Regt. has been in the Fight and I hear that they have sustained a heavy Loss...Gen. Ord and Gen. Oglesby are both dangerously Wounded and Gen. Hackleman is Killed, and Price, Van Dorn, and Lovell's Rebel hordes are scattered to the four winds, and I hope our Troops will take them all Prisoners...You wrote about the Cowards getting married upon the Prairie and I expect that you Chaps will be getting married next. You must pick me out a woman as I have not got time myself and report who she is and where she lives...There was a good many Cakes sent down but there was none for me...." For a brief period, Columbus, Ky. became one of the new Confederacy's most strategically important locations. Captured by the Union, this "Gibraltar of the West" was renamed Fort Halleck. For both sides, Columbus was the "most heavily fortified and armed fortress on the Mississippi River during the entire war"--rosswar.blogspot.com. Columbus "also became a major refugee center for runaway slaves...." Two caramel dampstains in centerfold, else fine. * With orange cover, Columbus, Ky. c.d.s.; postage stamp likely fell off as little evidence of its adhesive; creases, wear, and spotting, but satisfactory, and giving identity to the letter. (2 pcs.)