March 9, 1863
---Lt.
Col. Rutherford B. Hayes writes to an uncle with details about the extended
visit by his wife and boys to his regiment’s camp in the mountains of western
Virginia. The future president also
offers his succinct opinion of the new draft laws, of wasteful strategies, and
of the best way to win the war:
Camp
Reynolds, March 9, 1863.
Dear Uncle:
— Yours of last Sunday came to hand yesterday. Wife and boys still here — very
happy. They fish and row skiff and ride horseback. They can all row. Webb and
Birch rowed a large load of soldiers across the river and back — a large
roaring river, almost like the Ohio in a fair fresh. They will go home in a
week or two probably. We shall remain here two or three weeks and then probably
go to Charleston.
The
new conscript act strikes me as the best thing yet, if it is only used. I would
only call enough men to recruit up weakened regiments, and compel the return of
the shirks and deserters. Make our commanders give more time to drill and
discipline; make the armies regulars — effectives; stand on the defensive
except when we can attack in superior numbers; send no more regiments or
gunboats to be gobbled up one at a time. Mass our forces and we shall surely
conquer.
Sincerely,
R.
B. Hayes.
---Kate Cumming, a nurse at
the Confederate Army hospital in Chattanooga, writes in her journal about the
care of patients, especially in regard to the doctrine of “fresh air” for
regaining health—and of the ministrations of the patients’ wives:
March 9.—Yesterday
was a very warm day. Just before sunset we had one of the most terrific
hail-storms I have ever seen; some of the hail-stones were the size of a hen’s
egg. It broke nearly all of our windows on the west side of the house. It only
lasted a few minutes. Had it been of much longer duration, I think the house
would have fallen, as the rain poured through the windows in torrents, and
would have swept all with it. . . . They
get plenty of fresh air now; Dr. Hunter is a great believer in that any way. He
says that when men have been living in the field as ours have, without even a
tent to cover them at night, when brought into a close room, especially when
wounded, they get worse right away. I have seen the truth of this exemplified.
When
we first came here, there was a very sick man, whose wife was nursing him; he
was in a small room, which the wife would not permit a breath of fresh air to
enter, thinking it would kill him, as he had a very bad cough; we all thought
he would die. One day Dr. Hunter ordered him to be put into a large ward, where
there were about twenty patients; but it was well ventilated. The wife was in a
terrible state, and said the moving would kill her husband, and asked me to beg
Dr. Hunter to have him moved back. I did so, but he would not grant my request;
he said fresh air was the only thing that would save the man, and he did not
care to have his murder on his conscience. I found him inexorable, and thought
him very hard-hearted. From that time the man commenced to improve, and in a
week or two received a furlough, and went home with his wife.
The
doctors do not like the wives of the men to come and nurse them; they say they
invariably kill them with kindness. . . .
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