Jan. 20, 1862: Lt. Charles Wright Wills, a soldier in an Illinois regiment, writes:
Bird’s Point, Mo., January 20, 1862.
It goes confounded good once more to stand on boards, and be able to sit down without wet coming through a fellow’s pants. If I write and tell you where we’ve been, you won’t read it, and if I don’t write all about it you’ll scold, so of the two I’ll choose the first and tell you all I know. We got on the steamer ‘Aleck Scott’ last Tuesday morning with five days’ rations and started down the river through very heavy floating ice. ‘Twas a very cold day and full three inches of snow lay on the ground. We landed at Fort Jefferson and camped for the night. By some mismanagement our tents and equipage failed to come and we had to cook the bacon we had in our haversacks on sticks over the fire, for supper, and sleep out on the snow, without tents to protect us from the wind. That was a sweet old night! Next day we shouldered our knapsacks, blankets all wet by a rain from 2 to 5 in the morning, and awful heavy, and tramped about ten miles in a southeast direction, . . . and returned to our camp of the previous night. It had turned warm by this time and the slush was six inches deep on our backward march. Slept in the mud that night and remained in camp all next day, during which it rained every hour. Friday night it rained in a small way all the time, and in the morning, (if you remember when you have too many clothes in a tub of water how the water will ‘slosh’ when you press the clothes) you’ll understand my ‘condish.’ I had my blanket spread on some stiff brush, and Mr. Aqua surrounded brush, and every time Wills turned, brush would bend and water would slosh and blanket would leak and upshot was, Wills was damb’d wet, but too spunky to get up until he’d had his nap. Saturday we got out of ‘provish,’ and at 1 p.m. we struck tents, and thought we were off for home sure. But we only marched back a few miles and camped at Elliott’s Mills. Here, by orders from the colonel, we killed two hogs for the company, and he took what cornmeal we wanted from the mill, and we supped sumptuously. Here although the mud was deep we slept finely.
No comments:
Post a Comment