Posted on Jul 28, 2022
What was the most significant event on July 29 during the U.S. Civil War?
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A. In 1862, Belle Boyd was arrested as a Confederate spy. She was released a month later on lack of evidence.
B. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Sarah Morgan of Baton Rouge writes in her journal of the sufferings of the Union soldiers in the malarial summer heat of Louisiana: “These poor soldiers are dying awfully. Thirteen went yesterday. On Sunday the boats discharged hundreds of sick at our landing. Some lay there all the afternoon in the hot sun, waiting for the wagon to carry them to the hospital, which task occupied the whole evening. In the mean time these poor wretches lay uncovered on the ground, in every stage of sickness. . . . All day our vis-à-vis, Baumstark, with his several aids, plies his hammer; all day Sunday he made coffins, and says he can’t make them, fast enough. Think, too, he is by no means the only undertaker here! Oh, I wish these poor men were safe in their own land! It is heartbreaking to see them die here like dogs, with no one to say Godspeed. The Catholic priest went to see some, sometime ago, and going near one who lay in bed, said some kind thing, when the man burst into tears and cried, “Thank God, I have heard one kind word before I die!” In a few minutes the poor wretch was dead.”
C. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: The newly commissioned CSS Alabama leaves Mersey River, England: A most significant event takes place on this date in the John Laird shipyards in Birkenhead, when a vessel commissioned by the Confederate States of America (known up to this point only as Hull No. 290) is launched and---despite the best diplomatic efforts of Ambassador Charles Francis Adams, Sr.---is allowed to leave Liverpool harbor as the S.S. Enrica. At sea, the ship is outfitted with cannons and equipment and re-commisioned the CSS Alabama, which will make history as the most successful and destructive ship in the Confederate Navy, capturing and destroying a huge amount of Yankee shipping and driving much of the Northern merchant shipping from the seas.
D. Friday, July 29, 1864: Deep Bottom I, Darbytown, Virginia. Successful Federal diversion which drew Confederate forces away from Petersburg. The Confederate held the field. During the night of July 29, the Federals recrossed the river leaving a garrison as heretofore to hold the bridgehead at Deep Bottom.
Background: During the night of July 26-27, the Union II Corps and two divisions of US General Sheridan's cavalry under command of Major General Winfield Scott Hancock crossed to the north side of James River to threaten Richmond. This demonstration diverted Confederate forces from the impending attack at Petersburg on July 30. Union efforts to turn the Confederate position at New Market Heights and Fussell's Mill were abandoned when the Confederates strongly reinforced their lines and counterattacked.
Pictures
1. 1862 Belle Boyd wanted poster
2. 1862 Sarah Morgan, Baton Rouge
3. 1862 CSS Alabama leave Mersey River England
4. 1864-07 Petersburg tunnel Plan des Stollens;
5. 1860s P.G.T. Beauregard.
FYI MSG Roy Cheever Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. PO3 Edward Riddle SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL Maj William W. 'Bill' Price COL (Join to see) COL Lisandro MurphySSgt David M. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. SPC Maurice Evans SPC Jon O. SGT David A. 'Cowboy' GrothSSG Trevor S. 1SG Steven Imerman SSgt Charles AnknerSGT Jim ArnoldRyan CallahanAmn Dale PreisachLTC Keith L Jackson
B. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Sarah Morgan of Baton Rouge writes in her journal of the sufferings of the Union soldiers in the malarial summer heat of Louisiana: “These poor soldiers are dying awfully. Thirteen went yesterday. On Sunday the boats discharged hundreds of sick at our landing. Some lay there all the afternoon in the hot sun, waiting for the wagon to carry them to the hospital, which task occupied the whole evening. In the mean time these poor wretches lay uncovered on the ground, in every stage of sickness. . . . All day our vis-à-vis, Baumstark, with his several aids, plies his hammer; all day Sunday he made coffins, and says he can’t make them, fast enough. Think, too, he is by no means the only undertaker here! Oh, I wish these poor men were safe in their own land! It is heartbreaking to see them die here like dogs, with no one to say Godspeed. The Catholic priest went to see some, sometime ago, and going near one who lay in bed, said some kind thing, when the man burst into tears and cried, “Thank God, I have heard one kind word before I die!” In a few minutes the poor wretch was dead.”
C. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: The newly commissioned CSS Alabama leaves Mersey River, England: A most significant event takes place on this date in the John Laird shipyards in Birkenhead, when a vessel commissioned by the Confederate States of America (known up to this point only as Hull No. 290) is launched and---despite the best diplomatic efforts of Ambassador Charles Francis Adams, Sr.---is allowed to leave Liverpool harbor as the S.S. Enrica. At sea, the ship is outfitted with cannons and equipment and re-commisioned the CSS Alabama, which will make history as the most successful and destructive ship in the Confederate Navy, capturing and destroying a huge amount of Yankee shipping and driving much of the Northern merchant shipping from the seas.
D. Friday, July 29, 1864: Deep Bottom I, Darbytown, Virginia. Successful Federal diversion which drew Confederate forces away from Petersburg. The Confederate held the field. During the night of July 29, the Federals recrossed the river leaving a garrison as heretofore to hold the bridgehead at Deep Bottom.
Background: During the night of July 26-27, the Union II Corps and two divisions of US General Sheridan's cavalry under command of Major General Winfield Scott Hancock crossed to the north side of James River to threaten Richmond. This demonstration diverted Confederate forces from the impending attack at Petersburg on July 30. Union efforts to turn the Confederate position at New Market Heights and Fussell's Mill were abandoned when the Confederates strongly reinforced their lines and counterattacked.
Pictures
1. 1862 Belle Boyd wanted poster
2. 1862 Sarah Morgan, Baton Rouge
3. 1862 CSS Alabama leave Mersey River England
4. 1864-07 Petersburg tunnel Plan des Stollens;
5. 1860s P.G.T. Beauregard.
FYI MSG Roy Cheever Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. PO3 Edward Riddle SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL Maj William W. 'Bill' Price COL (Join to see) COL Lisandro MurphySSgt David M. MAJ Dale E. Wilson, Ph.D. SPC Maurice Evans SPC Jon O. SGT David A. 'Cowboy' GrothSSG Trevor S. 1SG Steven Imerman SSgt Charles AnknerSGT Jim ArnoldRyan CallahanAmn Dale PreisachLTC Keith L Jackson
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 2
Image:
1. 1862-07-29 CSS Nashville 2.
2. Belle Boyd Confederate Spy
3. Union Major General John Pope
In 1861 “Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard wrote to his aides-de-camp, including Colonel William Porcher Miles, who was also serving in the Confederate Congress as chairman of the House Military Affairs Committee at the same time. In his letter, Beauregard claims that it is a lack of subsistence supplies that made it impossible for the Confederate Army to advance on Washington, D.C. after the victory at the Battle of Manassas. Beauregard's accusations soon made their way up the chain of command and his letter would stir up a dispute with Confederate President Jefferson Davis that would cause dangerous division within the Southern high command.”
MANASSAS, VIRGINIA, July 29th, 1861. “My dear Colonels, I send you, herewith, some important suggestions relative to the best mode of providing for the wants of this army, furnished me by Colonel L. M. Hatch, whose experience in such matters entitles his views and opinions to considerable weight. Unless the requirements of our army in the field are provided for beforehand, we shall be in a perfect state of destitution very shortly.
I will remark here, that we have been out of subsistence for several days, some of my regiments not having had anything to eat for more than twenty-four hours. They have stood it, though, nobly; but, if it happens again, I shall join one of their camps and share their wants with them; for I will never allow them to suppose that I feast while they suffer.
The want of food and transportation has made us lose all the fruits of our victory. We ought at this moment to be in or about Washington, but we are perfectly anchored here, and God only knows when we will be able to advance; without these means we can neither advance nor retreat. The mobility of an army, which constitutes the great strength of modern armies, does not certainly form an element of ours, for we seem to be rooted to this spot.
Cannot something be done towards furnishing us more expeditiously and regularly with food and transportation?
It seems to me that if the States had been called upon to furnish their quota of wagons per regiment in the field, one of these evils could have been obviated.
From all accounts, Washington could have been taken up to the 24th instant, by twenty thousand men ! Only think of the brilliant results we have lost by the two causes referred to.
Again, we must have a few more field-officers from the old service, otherwise our regiments will get worsted sooner or later.
In haste, yours truly, G. T. BEAUREGARD.”
Below are a number of journal entries from 1862 and 1863 which shed light on what life was like for soldiers and civilians – the good, the bad and the ugly. The 1863 letter from the brothers Dial who are Unionist mountaineers in NC is challenging to read but the points come across pretty clearly – secessionists leave us alone.
Tuesday, July 29, 1862: We got on the right road and started at 8 o'clock this morning. We marched twelve miles and bivouacked for the night. The weather is extremely hot and the roads are very dusty. Orlando Stout of Company E fell out of the ranks today, and getting too far behind, was taken prisoner.
Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Union Army surgeon Alfred L. Castleman, with the Army of the Potomac camps at Harrison’s Landing, Virginia, notes mysterious movements in the army: “Some mysterious movements are going on in this army. At night we look over a large flat covered with tents, lighted by camp fires, resonant with the sounds of living soldiers. In the morning that same flat is deserted and still, as if the angel of death had enjoyed a passover. What has become of the busy actors of the night, none who dare speak of it can conjecture.”
Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Confederate War Department clerk John Beauchamp Jones notes the effect of the Yankee Gen. Pope and his policies: “JULY 29TH.—Pope’s army, greatly reinforced, are committing shocking devastations in Culpepper and Orange Counties. His brutal orders, and his bragging proclamations, have wrought our men to such a pitch of exasperation that, when the day of battle comes, there will be, most be terrible slaughter.”
Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Sarah Morgan of Baton Rouge writes in her journal of the sufferings of the Union soldiers in the malarial summer heat of Louisiana: “These poor soldiers are dying awfully. Thirteen went yesterday. On Sunday the boats discharged hundreds of sick at our landing. Some lay there all the afternoon in the hot sun, waiting for the wagon to carry them to the hospital, which task occupied the whole evening. In the mean time these poor wretches lay uncovered on the ground, in every stage of sickness. . . . All day our vis-à-vis, Baumstark, with his several aids, plies his hammer; all day Sunday he made coffins, and says he can’t make them, fast enough. Think, too, he is by no means the only undertaker here! Oh, I wish these poor men were safe in their own land! It is heartbreaking to see them die here like dogs, with no one to say Godspeed. The Catholic priest went to see some, sometime ago, and going near one who lay in bed, said some kind thing, when the man burst into tears and cried, “Thank God, I have heard one kind word before I die!” In a few minutes the poor wretch was dead.”
Wednesday, July 29, 1863: We passed a miserable night, for we had no tents and the ground was wet from yesterday's rain; besides, the ground is so rough and hilly that we can hardly find a place big enough to camp on. Things dragged on slowly this morning, so I had a chance to run around some to view the fortifications. The rebels were strongly fortified, and had dug large caves under ground at the foot of the hills just off from the roadway to protect themselves from our shells. Troops are going aboard the transports, some down the river to reinforce General Banks at Port Hudson, and others north to aid General Dodge in Tennessee and northern Mississippi.
Wednesday, July 29, 1863: Capt. Josiah Marshall Favill, a young Englishman who serves as an officer in the 57th New York Infantry, writes in his diary about the lingering disorder in New York City after he and a companion deliver the body of Gen. Zook, killed at Gettysburg, to his family. The two young officers volunteer to help quell the riot, but are forced to lay low instead: “In accordance with orders, as soon as the obsequies of General Zook were over, Broom and I reported to the military commander of the district, General Dix, when it was suggested as a mater of prudence we doff our uniforms. This seemed to us most astonishing, that the uniform which we supposed every man and woman, particularly just after such a great and magnificent battle, would delight in, should be a badge of disfavor, but as we had no citizens’ clothing, we were obliged to confine ourselves to those parts of the city considered least dangerous, which was most humiliating; however, we volunteered our services in case of necessity, left our address and retired. Mitchell very kindly sent us a twenty day leave of absence from General Warren, now in command of the Second corps, so we remained in town till the 27th. Butler soon arrived with a large force, which went into bivouac on the Battery, City Hall Park, and other open places, and the rioters were instantly brought under control. Guns were posted in various places sweeping the streets, and Butler’s reputation was not of the sort the rioters and negro lynchers cared to trifle with.”
Wednesday, July 29, 1863: In the mountains of North Carolina, three brothers, apparently Unionists, write a threatening letter to Captain Quill Hunter, who is probably a Confederate conscription or provost officer---an example of the typical resistance of the Unionist mountaineers against the Confederate government: “Capt Quill Hunter if yo ever hunt for us a gin i will put lead in yo god dam your hell fired soll yo have give the people orders to Shoot us down when they find us and if yo dont take your orders back i will Shoot yo If Sutch men as yo are is christians of heaven i want to know who is the hippocrits of hell we have never done yo any harms for yo to hunt for us we will give yo something to hunt for heareafter here after when any body sees us i will know where to watch for yo the Secessions needent to degrudge what we steel for we are the United States Regulars (Seal)
We dont ax [Sprinkles houns?] no more adds than hell does a powder house ave got orders from the Govenor to take yo because yo dont take us that is our latest orders we dist dare yo to go and Abuse Mother or talk about trying them When the Yankees comes we will go and Show them Some Secess to kill If this dont give yo warning enough the next warning we will give yo with powder and lead take the hint in time we are the old United States Regulars.
Wilse Dial, James Dial, Calvin Dial”
Saturday, July 29, 1864: Home again from my visits. I have worked three full days now in the harvest field.
A. Monday, July 29, 1861: Union forces in western Virginia still held the upper hand. President Jefferson Davis decided to send General Robert E Lee to the area to resolve matters.
B. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Naval assault on Fort McAllister, Georgia. A blockade runner, unable to get into port at Charleston or Savannah, breaks through the Union blockade at the Ogeechee River and heads upriver to the protection of Fort McAllister, pursued by four Federal ships. The Union ships exchange artillery fire with the fort for an hour and a half, and then withdraw.
Naval assault on Fort McAllister, Georgia. Fort McAllister came under Union attack for the second time, somewhat by accident. The CSS Thomas L. Wragg (The Nashville) had been successfully turned away from Charleston and Savannah by the Union naval blockade that was becoming more effective. The Nashville broke through the blockade and headed up the Ogeechee to the protection of the guns of Fort McAllister.
Coming upriver to deal with the schooner were a handful of Union vessels, under Commander Charles Steedman, led by the Paul Jones, a heavily armored side-wheeler with a 100-pounder rifled cannon among the weapons onboard. In support of the Paul Jones were two 90-day gunboats, The Umadilla and The Huron and the sloop Madgie. When the Paul Jones rounded a nearby island shortly after 10:00am its guns were blazing. The fort's commander, now Captain Hartage, could tell by the range that the Paul Jones must be using the new rifled cannon and ordered his men to hold fire. Finally, the Yankee side-wheeler came into range and the Rebel gunners saluted it warmly.
For nearly an hour and a half the cannons blazed. Then the Paul Jones and the others retreated to safety further down the river.
C. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: The newly commissioned CSS Alabama leaves Mersey River, England: A most significant event takes place on this date in the John Laird shipyards in Birkenhead, when a vessel commissioned by the Confederate States of America (known up to this point only as Hull No. 290) is launched and---despite the best diplomatic efforts of Ambassador Charles Francis Adams, Sr.---is allowed to leave Liverpool harbor as the S.S. Enrica. At sea, the ship is outfitted with cannons and equipment and re-commisioned the CSS Alabama, which will make history as the most successful and destructive ship in the Confederate Navy, capturing and destroying a huge amount of Yankee shipping and driving much of the Northern merchant shipping from the seas.
D. Friday, July 29, 1864: Deep Bottom I, Darbytown, Virginia. Successful Federal diversion which drew Confederate forces away from Petersburg. The Confederate held the filed. During the night of July 29, the Federals recrossed the river leaving a garrison as heretofore to hold the bridgehead at Deep Bottom.
Background: During the night of July 26-27, the Union II Corps and two divisions of US General Sheridan's cavalry under command of Major General Winfield Scott Hancock crossed to the north side of James River to threaten Richmond. This demonstration diverted Confederate forces from the impending attack at Petersburg on July 30. Union efforts to turn the Confederate position at New Market Heights and Fussell's Mill were abandoned when the Confederates strongly reinforced their lines and counterattacked.
1. Monday, July 29, 1861: Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard wrote to his aides-de-camp, including Colonel William Porcher Miles, who was also serving in the Confederate Congress as chairman of the House Military Affairs Committee at the same time. In his letter, Beauregard claims that it is a lack of subsistence supplies that made it impossible for the Confederate Army to advance on Washington, D.C. after the victory at the Battle of Manassas. MANASSAS, VIRGINIA, July 29th, 1861. “My dear Colonels, I send you, herewith, some important suggestions relative to the best mode of providing for the wants of this army, furnished me by Colonel L. M. Hatch, whose experience in such matters entitles his views and opinions to considerable weight. Unless the requirements of our army in the field are provided for beforehand, we shall be in a perfect state of destitution very shortly.
I will remark here, that we have been out of subsistence for several days, some of my regiments not having had anything to eat for more than twenty-four hours. They have stood it, though, nobly ; but, if it happens again, I shall join one of their camps and share their wants with them ; for I will never allow them to suppose that I feast while they suffer.
The want of food and transportation has made us lose all the fruits of our victory. We ought at this moment to be in or about Washington, but we are perfectly anchored here, and God only knows when we will be able to advance ; without these means we can neither advance nor retreat. The mobility of an army, which constitutes the great strength of modern armies, does not certainly form an element of ours, for we seem to be rooted to this spot.
Cannot something be done towards furnishing us more expeditiously and regularly with food and transportation?
It seems to me that if the States had been called upon to furnish their quota of wagons per regiment in the field, one of these evils could have been obviated.
From all accounts, Washington could have been taken up to the 24th instant, by twenty thousand men ! Only think of the brilliant results we have lost by the two causes referred to.
Again, we must have a few more field-officers from the old service, otherwise our regiments will get worsted sooner or later.
In haste, yours truly, G. T. BEAUREGARD.”
Beauregard's accusations soon made their way up the chain of command and his letter would stir up a dispute with Confederate President Jefferson Davis that would cause dangerous division within the Southern high command.
http://www.civilwar-online.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1861
2. B Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Naval assault on Fort McAllister, Georgia.
http://blueandgraytrail.com/year/186207
3. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- The state of Kansas begins to call for black volunteers for the “First Regiment of Kansas Zouaves d’Afrique”, arguably the first black regiment in the Union army.
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
4. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: near Denmark, Tennessee - On July 29, a Confederate force arrived at Hatchie Bottom, located near Denmark, when they learned of a Union cavalry position nearby. The cavalry, commanded by Brig. Gen. John Logan, was soon attacked by the Confederates. The cavalry was eventually routed and quickly fled the area.
http://www.mycivilwar.com/battles/1862s.html
5. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Belle Boyd was arrested as a Confederate spy. She was released a month later on lack of evidence.
http://blueandgraytrail.com/year/186207
6. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Union Army surgeon Alfred L. Castleman, with the Army of the Potomac camps at Harrison’s Landing, Virginia, notes mysterious movements in the army: “Some mysterious movements are going on in this army. At night we look over a large flat covered with tents, lighted by camp fires, resonant with the sounds of living soldiers. In the morning that same flat is deserted and still, as if the angel of death had enjoyed a passover. What has become of the busy actors of the night, none who dare speak of it can conjecture.”
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
7. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Confederate War Department clerk John Beauchamp Jones notes the effect of the Yankee Gen. Pope and his policies: “JULY 29TH.—Pope’s army, greatly reinforced, are committing shocking devastations in Culpepper and Orange Counties. His brutal orders, and his bragging proclamations, have wrought our men to such a pitch of exasperation that, when the day of battle comes, there will be, most be terrible slaughter.”
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
8. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Sarah Morgan of Baton Rouge writes in her journal of the sufferings of the Union soldiers in the malarial summer heat of Louisiana: “These poor soldiers are dying awfully. Thirteen went yesterday. On Sunday the boats discharged hundreds of sick at our landing. Some lay there all the afternoon in the hot sun, waiting for the wagon to carry them to the hospital, which task occupied the whole evening. In the mean time these poor wretches lay uncovered on the ground, in every stage of sickness. . . . All day our vis-à-vis, Baumstark, with his several aids, plies his hammer; all day Sunday he made coffins, and says he can’t make them, fast enough. Think, too, he is by no means the only undertaker here! Oh, I wish these poor men were safe in their own land! It is heartbreaking to see them die here like dogs, with no one to say Godspeed. The Catholic priest went to see some, sometime ago, and going near one who lay in bed, said some kind thing, when the man burst into tears and cried, “Thank God, I have heard one kind word before I die!” In a few minutes the poor wretch was dead.”
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
9. July 29, 1862: John B. Jones notes Pope's movements. Union Major General John Pope's depredations were drawing attention on this day 154 years ago. “Pope’s army, greatly reinforced, are committing shocking devastations in Culpepper and Orange Counties. His brutal orders, and his bragging proclamations, have wrought our men to such a pitch of exasperation that, when the day of battle comes, there will be, most be terrible slaughter.”
http://www.civilwar-online.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
10. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Stevenson, Alabama: Over 200,000 rations arrive by rail to feed General Buell’s army. About the same amount will arrive again the following day.
https://bjdeming.com/2012/07/23/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-23-29-1862/
11. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Western Theater - By this date, the bulk of Braxton Bragg’s army has arrived by tedious railroad stagings in Chattanooga, and the Federals are realizing that their advance on this crucial Appalachian rail junction has been blocked. Gen. Rosecrans, in command of Pope’s (formerly) Army of the Mississippi, has been advancing eastward from Corinth, and Rosecrans’ recently-promoted cavalry chief, Brig, Gen. Philip Sheridan, is leading raids into Confederate country. On the 28th, Sheridan captures a Confederate officer in possession of papers that establish Bragg’s design of concentrating at Chattanooga in order to work in concert with Gen. Kirby-Smith in Knoxville. Meanwhile, Gen. Sterling Price, with several Confederate divisions, begins maneuvers in northern Mississippi.
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
12. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Trans-Mississippi Theater: Unionist guerillas (also known as Jayhawkers) attack Confederates at Moore's Mills, Missouri in what becomes a rather savage fight for involving fairly small units. The Jayhawkers lose 16 men killed and 30 wounded, while the Rebels lose 62 dead and 100 wounded.
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
13. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: US President Lincoln authorizes General Halleck to tell General Meade that Lincoln is “unwilling he should now get into a general engagement” with Lee.
https://bjdeming.com/2013/07/29/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-29-august-4-1863/
14. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: Southern hopes for recognition abroad are again dashed when Queen Victoria, in a speech to Parliament, reaffirms Britain’s neutrality, saying: “The civil war between the Northern and Southern states of the American Union still unfortunately continues, and is necessarily attended with much evil, not only to the contending parties, but also to nations which have taken no part in the conflict. Her Majesty, however, has seen no reason to depart from the strict neutrality which Her Majesty has observed from the beginning of the contest.”
https://bjdeming.com/2013/07/29/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-29-august-4-1863/
15. Wednesday, July 29, 1863 --- Capt. Josiah Marshall Favill, a young Englishman who serves as an officer in the 57th New York Infantry, writes in his diary about the lingering disorder in New York City after he and a companion deliver the body of Gen. Zook, killed at Gettysburg, to his family. The two young officers volunteer to help quell the riot, but are forced to lay low instead: “In accordance with orders, as soon as the obsequies of General Zook were over, Broom and I reported to the military commander of the district, General Dix, when it was suggested as a mater of prudence we doff our uniforms. This seemed to us most astonishing, that the uniform which we supposed every man and woman, particularly just after such a great and magnificent battle, would delight in, should be a badge of disfavor, but as we had no citizens’ clothing, we were obliged to confine ourselves to those parts of the city considered least dangerous, which was most humiliating; however, we volunteered our services in case of necessity, left our address and retired. Mitchell very kindly sent us a twenty day leave of absence from General Warren, now in command of the Second corps, so we remained in town till the 27th. Butler soon arrived with a large force, which went into bivouac on the Battery, City Hall Park, and other open places, and the rioters were instantly brought under control. Guns were posted in various places sweeping the streets, and Butler’s reputation was not of the sort the rioters and negro lynchers cared to trifle with.”
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1863
16. Wednesday, July 29, 1863 --- In the mountains of North Carolina, three brothers, apparently Unionists, write a threatening letter to Captain Quill Hunter, who is probably a Confederate conscription or provost officer---an example of the typical resistance of the Unionist mountaineers against the Confederate government: “Capt Quill Hunter if yo ever hunt for us a gin i will put lead in yo god dam your hell fired soll yo have give the people orders to Shoot us down when they find us and if yo dont take your orders back i will Shoot yo If Sutch men as yo are is christians of heaven i want to know who is the hippocrits of hell we have never done yo any harms for yo to hunt for us we will give yo something to hunt for heareafter here after when any body sees us i will know where to watch for yo the Secessions needent to degrudge what we steel for we are the United States Regulars (Seal)
We dont ax [Sprinkles houns?] no more adds than hell does a powder house ave got orders from the Govenor to take yo because yo dont take us that is our latest orders we dist dare yo to go and Abuse Mother or talk about trying them When the Yankees comes we will go and Show them Some Secess to kill If this dont give yo warning enough the next warning we will give yo with powder and lead take the hint in time we are the old United States Regulars.
Wilse Dial, James Dial, Calvin Dial
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1863
17. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: Lincoln didn't want another Battle of Fredericksburg or Battle of Chancellorsville. With Lee back on Virginia soil, Lincoln became wary of the Gray Fox laying a trap for Meade. Lincoln tells Halleck to ease up on Meade. In the immediate aftermath of the Battle of Gettysburg, Abraham Lincoln had pressed hard on Major General George G. Meade to aggressively pursue the retreating Confederates, hoping to destroy Lee's army before it could get back across the Potomac River. On this day 150 years ago, Lincoln instructed Major General Halleck to ease up on Meade, fearing that Meade might feel too much pressure to attack Lee.
Executive Mansion, Major General Halleck: Washington, July 29, 1863. “Seeing Gen. Meade's despatch of yesterday to yourself, causes, me to fear that he supposes the government here is demanding of him to bring on a general engagement with Lee as soon as possible. I am claiming no such thing of him. In fact, my judgment is against it; which judgment, of course, I will yield if yours and his are the contrary. If he could not safely engage Lee at Williamsport, it seems absurd to suppose he can safely engage him now, when he has scarcely more than two thirds of the force he had at Williamsport, while it must be, that Lee has been re-inforced. True, I desired Gen. Meade to pursue Lee across the Potomac, hoping, as has proved true, that he would thereby clear the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and get some advantages by harrassing him on his retreat. These being past, I am unwilling he should now get into a general engagement on the impression that we here are pressing him; and I shall be glad for you to so inform him, unless your own judgment is against it. Yours truly A. LINCOLN.
http://www.civilwar-online.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1863
18. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: A wish list for blockade runners. As the Union blockade of Southern ports tightened and demands for additional munitions increased the strain on the tiny Southern industrial base, the Confederacy made an appeal to the companies engaged in blockade running to increase their importation of materials needed for the manufacture of arms.
CIRCULAR.] HDQRS. DEPT. S. C., GA., AND FLA., Charleston, S. C., July 29, 1863. Messrs. JOHN FRASER & CO., W. C. BEE & CO., GIBBS & CO., A. S. JOHNSON, Esq., H. COBIA, Esq., HENRY HART, THEO. ANDREW, Esq., and Captain FERGUSON: “On the representation of the Chief of the Niter and Mining Bureau, War Department, of the urgent necessity for an early and constant increase of the supplies of saltpeter, pig-lead, Scotch pig-iron, and zinc, for the use of the C. S. Ordnance Department, the commanding general directs me to notify you of these necessities of the service, and to invoke your assistance with the vessels with which you are concerned.
It will be confidently expected that you will issue such instructions to your agents in Nassau and Europe as to cause them to import by each ship under your control, either to Wilmington or Charleston, say, an average of 20 tons of these munitions on each voyage, saltpeter and lead being most needed at present.
I am assured Professor Holmes, of the Niter and Mining Bureau, Charleston, will be ready to receive and pay promptly for these articles.
Major Heyliger, at Nassau, will be instructed to arrange for the shipment of any of these stores belonging to the Ordnance Department at that port; but it is the chief object of this communication to acquaint you of this urgent need of the Government, and to induce you to engage in the importation of the supplies, to the limited extent, at least, I have indicated.
Respectfully, your obedient servant, THOMAS JORDAN, Brigadier-General, and Chief of Staff.”
http://www.civilwar-online.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1863
19. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: Unionists forces occupied the whole of Morris Island except Battery Wagner. If Wagner was captured, the Unionists could start a bombardment of Charleston.
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/the-american-civil-war/american-civil-war-july-1863/
20. Friday, July 29, 1864: Atlanta campaign: General Sherman again: The next morning the Fifteenth Corps wheeled forward to the left over the battle-field of the day before, and Davis’s division still farther prolonged the line, which reached nearly to the ever-to-be-remembered “Sandtown road.”
Then, by further thinning out Thomas’s line, which was well entrenched, I drew another division of Palmer’s corps (Baird’s) around to the right, to further strengthen that flank. I was impatient to hear from the cavalry raid, then four days out, and was watching for its effect, ready to make a bold push for the possession of East Point.
https://bjdeming.com/2014/07/27/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-28-august-3-1864/
21. Friday, July 29, 1864: Shenandoah Valley operations: Early’s Raid: “First it was Antietam. The next year it was Gettysburg. The people of southern Maryland and Pennsylvania were learning to get very nervous as midsummer approached. Their misgivings were well-founded as Jubal Early and company crossed the Potomac today, continuing the excursion which had briefly threatened the very gates of Washington itself. Union cavalry was pursuing, and there was little opportunity for Early to commit much outrage. Folks were fearful nonetheless and those who could afford to, sought to be elsewhere for awhile.”
https://bjdeming.com/2014/07/27/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-28-august-3-1864/
A Monday, July 29, 1861: Union forces in western Virginia still held the upper hand. President Davis decided to send General Robert E Lee to the area to resolve matters.
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/the-american-civil-war/american-civil-war-july-1861/
B Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Naval assault on Fort McAllister, Georgia. Fort McAllister came under Union attack for the second time, somewhat by accident. The Thomas L. Wragg (The Nashville) had been successfully turned away from Charleston and Savannah by the Union naval blockade that was becoming more effective. The Nashville broke through the blockade and headed up the Ogeechee to the protection of the guns of Fort McAllister.
Coming upriver to deal with the schooner were a handful of Union vessels, under Commander Charles Steedman, led by the Paul Jones, a heavily armored side-wheeler with a 100-pounder rifled cannon among the weapons onboard. In support of the Paul Jones were two 90-day gunboats, The Umadilla and The Huron and the sloop Madgie. When the Paul Jones rounded a nearby island shortly after 10:00am its guns were blazing. The fort's commander, now Captain Hartage, could tell by the range that the Paul Jones must be using the new rifled cannon and ordered his men to hold fire. Finally the Yankee side-wheeler came into range and the Rebel gunners saluted it warmly.
For nearly an hour and a half the cannons blazed. Then the Paul Jones and the others retreated to safety further down the river.
http://www.ourgeorgiahistory.com/wars/Civil_War/ftmcallister.html
B+ Tuesday, July 29, 1862: The Georgia coast: A blockade runner, unable to get into port at Charleston or Savannah, breaks through the Union blockade at the Ogeechee River and heads upriver to the protection of Fort McAllister, pursued by four Federal ships. The Union ships exchange artillery fire with the fort for an hour and a half, and then withdraw.
https://bjdeming.com/2012/07/23/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-23-29-1862/
C Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Mersey River, England: A most significant event takes place on this date in the John Laird shipyards in Birkenhead, when a vessel commissioned by the Confederate States of America (known up to this point only as Hull No. 290) is launched and---despite the best diplomatic efforts of Ambassador Charles Francis Adams, Sr.---is allowed to leave Liverpool harbor as the S.S. Enrica. At sea, the ship is outfitted with cannons and equipment and re-commisioned the CSS Alabama, which will make history as the most successful and destructive ship in the Confederate Navy, capturing and destroying a huge amount of Yankee shipping and driving much of the Northern merchant shipping from the seas.
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
C+ Tuesday, July 29, 1862: The steamer ‘290’ sailed from Liverpool en route to the Portuguese island of Terceira. Here, ‘290’ was equipped and armed to be a commerce raider. ‘290’ was also renamed to the ‘CSS Alabama’ – the most famous Confederate naval vessel of the war.
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/the-american-civil-war/american-civil-war-july-1862/
D Friday, July 29, 1864: Deep Bottom I, Darbytown, Strawberry Plains, Virginia. During the night of July 26-27, the Union II Corps and two divisions of US General Sheridan's cavalry under command of Major General Winfield Scott Hancock crossed to the north side of James River to threaten Richmond.
This demonstration diverted Confederate forces from the impending attack at Petersburg on July 30.
Union efforts to turn the Confederate position at New Market Heights and Fussell's Mill were abandoned when the Confederates strongly reinforced their lines and counterattacked.
During the night of July 29, the Federals recrossed the river leaving a garrison as heretofore to hold the bridgehead at Deep Bottom.
http://americancivilwar.com/statepic/va/va069.html
FYI SPC Deb Root-WhiteLt Col Charlie Brown GySgt Jack Wallace CWO4 Terrence Clark SPC Michael Oles SR SPC Michael Terrell PO1 John Johnson SPC (Join to see) SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SGT Paul RussoA1C Pamela G RussellLTC Trent KlugMSG Roy CheeverPO2 Russell "Russ" Lincoln SFC Bernard Walko SFC Stephen King SFC Ralph E Kelley SSG Franklin Briant Lt Col Scott Shuttleworth MSgt Robert C AldiSGT Paul Russo
1. 1862-07-29 CSS Nashville 2.
2. Belle Boyd Confederate Spy
3. Union Major General John Pope
In 1861 “Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard wrote to his aides-de-camp, including Colonel William Porcher Miles, who was also serving in the Confederate Congress as chairman of the House Military Affairs Committee at the same time. In his letter, Beauregard claims that it is a lack of subsistence supplies that made it impossible for the Confederate Army to advance on Washington, D.C. after the victory at the Battle of Manassas. Beauregard's accusations soon made their way up the chain of command and his letter would stir up a dispute with Confederate President Jefferson Davis that would cause dangerous division within the Southern high command.”
MANASSAS, VIRGINIA, July 29th, 1861. “My dear Colonels, I send you, herewith, some important suggestions relative to the best mode of providing for the wants of this army, furnished me by Colonel L. M. Hatch, whose experience in such matters entitles his views and opinions to considerable weight. Unless the requirements of our army in the field are provided for beforehand, we shall be in a perfect state of destitution very shortly.
I will remark here, that we have been out of subsistence for several days, some of my regiments not having had anything to eat for more than twenty-four hours. They have stood it, though, nobly; but, if it happens again, I shall join one of their camps and share their wants with them; for I will never allow them to suppose that I feast while they suffer.
The want of food and transportation has made us lose all the fruits of our victory. We ought at this moment to be in or about Washington, but we are perfectly anchored here, and God only knows when we will be able to advance; without these means we can neither advance nor retreat. The mobility of an army, which constitutes the great strength of modern armies, does not certainly form an element of ours, for we seem to be rooted to this spot.
Cannot something be done towards furnishing us more expeditiously and regularly with food and transportation?
It seems to me that if the States had been called upon to furnish their quota of wagons per regiment in the field, one of these evils could have been obviated.
From all accounts, Washington could have been taken up to the 24th instant, by twenty thousand men ! Only think of the brilliant results we have lost by the two causes referred to.
Again, we must have a few more field-officers from the old service, otherwise our regiments will get worsted sooner or later.
In haste, yours truly, G. T. BEAUREGARD.”
Below are a number of journal entries from 1862 and 1863 which shed light on what life was like for soldiers and civilians – the good, the bad and the ugly. The 1863 letter from the brothers Dial who are Unionist mountaineers in NC is challenging to read but the points come across pretty clearly – secessionists leave us alone.
Tuesday, July 29, 1862: We got on the right road and started at 8 o'clock this morning. We marched twelve miles and bivouacked for the night. The weather is extremely hot and the roads are very dusty. Orlando Stout of Company E fell out of the ranks today, and getting too far behind, was taken prisoner.
Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Union Army surgeon Alfred L. Castleman, with the Army of the Potomac camps at Harrison’s Landing, Virginia, notes mysterious movements in the army: “Some mysterious movements are going on in this army. At night we look over a large flat covered with tents, lighted by camp fires, resonant with the sounds of living soldiers. In the morning that same flat is deserted and still, as if the angel of death had enjoyed a passover. What has become of the busy actors of the night, none who dare speak of it can conjecture.”
Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Confederate War Department clerk John Beauchamp Jones notes the effect of the Yankee Gen. Pope and his policies: “JULY 29TH.—Pope’s army, greatly reinforced, are committing shocking devastations in Culpepper and Orange Counties. His brutal orders, and his bragging proclamations, have wrought our men to such a pitch of exasperation that, when the day of battle comes, there will be, most be terrible slaughter.”
Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Sarah Morgan of Baton Rouge writes in her journal of the sufferings of the Union soldiers in the malarial summer heat of Louisiana: “These poor soldiers are dying awfully. Thirteen went yesterday. On Sunday the boats discharged hundreds of sick at our landing. Some lay there all the afternoon in the hot sun, waiting for the wagon to carry them to the hospital, which task occupied the whole evening. In the mean time these poor wretches lay uncovered on the ground, in every stage of sickness. . . . All day our vis-à-vis, Baumstark, with his several aids, plies his hammer; all day Sunday he made coffins, and says he can’t make them, fast enough. Think, too, he is by no means the only undertaker here! Oh, I wish these poor men were safe in their own land! It is heartbreaking to see them die here like dogs, with no one to say Godspeed. The Catholic priest went to see some, sometime ago, and going near one who lay in bed, said some kind thing, when the man burst into tears and cried, “Thank God, I have heard one kind word before I die!” In a few minutes the poor wretch was dead.”
Wednesday, July 29, 1863: We passed a miserable night, for we had no tents and the ground was wet from yesterday's rain; besides, the ground is so rough and hilly that we can hardly find a place big enough to camp on. Things dragged on slowly this morning, so I had a chance to run around some to view the fortifications. The rebels were strongly fortified, and had dug large caves under ground at the foot of the hills just off from the roadway to protect themselves from our shells. Troops are going aboard the transports, some down the river to reinforce General Banks at Port Hudson, and others north to aid General Dodge in Tennessee and northern Mississippi.
Wednesday, July 29, 1863: Capt. Josiah Marshall Favill, a young Englishman who serves as an officer in the 57th New York Infantry, writes in his diary about the lingering disorder in New York City after he and a companion deliver the body of Gen. Zook, killed at Gettysburg, to his family. The two young officers volunteer to help quell the riot, but are forced to lay low instead: “In accordance with orders, as soon as the obsequies of General Zook were over, Broom and I reported to the military commander of the district, General Dix, when it was suggested as a mater of prudence we doff our uniforms. This seemed to us most astonishing, that the uniform which we supposed every man and woman, particularly just after such a great and magnificent battle, would delight in, should be a badge of disfavor, but as we had no citizens’ clothing, we were obliged to confine ourselves to those parts of the city considered least dangerous, which was most humiliating; however, we volunteered our services in case of necessity, left our address and retired. Mitchell very kindly sent us a twenty day leave of absence from General Warren, now in command of the Second corps, so we remained in town till the 27th. Butler soon arrived with a large force, which went into bivouac on the Battery, City Hall Park, and other open places, and the rioters were instantly brought under control. Guns were posted in various places sweeping the streets, and Butler’s reputation was not of the sort the rioters and negro lynchers cared to trifle with.”
Wednesday, July 29, 1863: In the mountains of North Carolina, three brothers, apparently Unionists, write a threatening letter to Captain Quill Hunter, who is probably a Confederate conscription or provost officer---an example of the typical resistance of the Unionist mountaineers against the Confederate government: “Capt Quill Hunter if yo ever hunt for us a gin i will put lead in yo god dam your hell fired soll yo have give the people orders to Shoot us down when they find us and if yo dont take your orders back i will Shoot yo If Sutch men as yo are is christians of heaven i want to know who is the hippocrits of hell we have never done yo any harms for yo to hunt for us we will give yo something to hunt for heareafter here after when any body sees us i will know where to watch for yo the Secessions needent to degrudge what we steel for we are the United States Regulars (Seal)
We dont ax [Sprinkles houns?] no more adds than hell does a powder house ave got orders from the Govenor to take yo because yo dont take us that is our latest orders we dist dare yo to go and Abuse Mother or talk about trying them When the Yankees comes we will go and Show them Some Secess to kill If this dont give yo warning enough the next warning we will give yo with powder and lead take the hint in time we are the old United States Regulars.
Wilse Dial, James Dial, Calvin Dial”
Saturday, July 29, 1864: Home again from my visits. I have worked three full days now in the harvest field.
A. Monday, July 29, 1861: Union forces in western Virginia still held the upper hand. President Jefferson Davis decided to send General Robert E Lee to the area to resolve matters.
B. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Naval assault on Fort McAllister, Georgia. A blockade runner, unable to get into port at Charleston or Savannah, breaks through the Union blockade at the Ogeechee River and heads upriver to the protection of Fort McAllister, pursued by four Federal ships. The Union ships exchange artillery fire with the fort for an hour and a half, and then withdraw.
Naval assault on Fort McAllister, Georgia. Fort McAllister came under Union attack for the second time, somewhat by accident. The CSS Thomas L. Wragg (The Nashville) had been successfully turned away from Charleston and Savannah by the Union naval blockade that was becoming more effective. The Nashville broke through the blockade and headed up the Ogeechee to the protection of the guns of Fort McAllister.
Coming upriver to deal with the schooner were a handful of Union vessels, under Commander Charles Steedman, led by the Paul Jones, a heavily armored side-wheeler with a 100-pounder rifled cannon among the weapons onboard. In support of the Paul Jones were two 90-day gunboats, The Umadilla and The Huron and the sloop Madgie. When the Paul Jones rounded a nearby island shortly after 10:00am its guns were blazing. The fort's commander, now Captain Hartage, could tell by the range that the Paul Jones must be using the new rifled cannon and ordered his men to hold fire. Finally, the Yankee side-wheeler came into range and the Rebel gunners saluted it warmly.
For nearly an hour and a half the cannons blazed. Then the Paul Jones and the others retreated to safety further down the river.
C. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: The newly commissioned CSS Alabama leaves Mersey River, England: A most significant event takes place on this date in the John Laird shipyards in Birkenhead, when a vessel commissioned by the Confederate States of America (known up to this point only as Hull No. 290) is launched and---despite the best diplomatic efforts of Ambassador Charles Francis Adams, Sr.---is allowed to leave Liverpool harbor as the S.S. Enrica. At sea, the ship is outfitted with cannons and equipment and re-commisioned the CSS Alabama, which will make history as the most successful and destructive ship in the Confederate Navy, capturing and destroying a huge amount of Yankee shipping and driving much of the Northern merchant shipping from the seas.
D. Friday, July 29, 1864: Deep Bottom I, Darbytown, Virginia. Successful Federal diversion which drew Confederate forces away from Petersburg. The Confederate held the filed. During the night of July 29, the Federals recrossed the river leaving a garrison as heretofore to hold the bridgehead at Deep Bottom.
Background: During the night of July 26-27, the Union II Corps and two divisions of US General Sheridan's cavalry under command of Major General Winfield Scott Hancock crossed to the north side of James River to threaten Richmond. This demonstration diverted Confederate forces from the impending attack at Petersburg on July 30. Union efforts to turn the Confederate position at New Market Heights and Fussell's Mill were abandoned when the Confederates strongly reinforced their lines and counterattacked.
1. Monday, July 29, 1861: Confederate General P.G.T. Beauregard wrote to his aides-de-camp, including Colonel William Porcher Miles, who was also serving in the Confederate Congress as chairman of the House Military Affairs Committee at the same time. In his letter, Beauregard claims that it is a lack of subsistence supplies that made it impossible for the Confederate Army to advance on Washington, D.C. after the victory at the Battle of Manassas. MANASSAS, VIRGINIA, July 29th, 1861. “My dear Colonels, I send you, herewith, some important suggestions relative to the best mode of providing for the wants of this army, furnished me by Colonel L. M. Hatch, whose experience in such matters entitles his views and opinions to considerable weight. Unless the requirements of our army in the field are provided for beforehand, we shall be in a perfect state of destitution very shortly.
I will remark here, that we have been out of subsistence for several days, some of my regiments not having had anything to eat for more than twenty-four hours. They have stood it, though, nobly ; but, if it happens again, I shall join one of their camps and share their wants with them ; for I will never allow them to suppose that I feast while they suffer.
The want of food and transportation has made us lose all the fruits of our victory. We ought at this moment to be in or about Washington, but we are perfectly anchored here, and God only knows when we will be able to advance ; without these means we can neither advance nor retreat. The mobility of an army, which constitutes the great strength of modern armies, does not certainly form an element of ours, for we seem to be rooted to this spot.
Cannot something be done towards furnishing us more expeditiously and regularly with food and transportation?
It seems to me that if the States had been called upon to furnish their quota of wagons per regiment in the field, one of these evils could have been obviated.
From all accounts, Washington could have been taken up to the 24th instant, by twenty thousand men ! Only think of the brilliant results we have lost by the two causes referred to.
Again, we must have a few more field-officers from the old service, otherwise our regiments will get worsted sooner or later.
In haste, yours truly, G. T. BEAUREGARD.”
Beauregard's accusations soon made their way up the chain of command and his letter would stir up a dispute with Confederate President Jefferson Davis that would cause dangerous division within the Southern high command.
http://www.civilwar-online.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1861
2. B Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Naval assault on Fort McAllister, Georgia.
http://blueandgraytrail.com/year/186207
3. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- The state of Kansas begins to call for black volunteers for the “First Regiment of Kansas Zouaves d’Afrique”, arguably the first black regiment in the Union army.
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
4. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: near Denmark, Tennessee - On July 29, a Confederate force arrived at Hatchie Bottom, located near Denmark, when they learned of a Union cavalry position nearby. The cavalry, commanded by Brig. Gen. John Logan, was soon attacked by the Confederates. The cavalry was eventually routed and quickly fled the area.
http://www.mycivilwar.com/battles/1862s.html
5. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Belle Boyd was arrested as a Confederate spy. She was released a month later on lack of evidence.
http://blueandgraytrail.com/year/186207
6. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Union Army surgeon Alfred L. Castleman, with the Army of the Potomac camps at Harrison’s Landing, Virginia, notes mysterious movements in the army: “Some mysterious movements are going on in this army. At night we look over a large flat covered with tents, lighted by camp fires, resonant with the sounds of living soldiers. In the morning that same flat is deserted and still, as if the angel of death had enjoyed a passover. What has become of the busy actors of the night, none who dare speak of it can conjecture.”
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
7. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Confederate War Department clerk John Beauchamp Jones notes the effect of the Yankee Gen. Pope and his policies: “JULY 29TH.—Pope’s army, greatly reinforced, are committing shocking devastations in Culpepper and Orange Counties. His brutal orders, and his bragging proclamations, have wrought our men to such a pitch of exasperation that, when the day of battle comes, there will be, most be terrible slaughter.”
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
8. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Sarah Morgan of Baton Rouge writes in her journal of the sufferings of the Union soldiers in the malarial summer heat of Louisiana: “These poor soldiers are dying awfully. Thirteen went yesterday. On Sunday the boats discharged hundreds of sick at our landing. Some lay there all the afternoon in the hot sun, waiting for the wagon to carry them to the hospital, which task occupied the whole evening. In the mean time these poor wretches lay uncovered on the ground, in every stage of sickness. . . . All day our vis-à-vis, Baumstark, with his several aids, plies his hammer; all day Sunday he made coffins, and says he can’t make them, fast enough. Think, too, he is by no means the only undertaker here! Oh, I wish these poor men were safe in their own land! It is heartbreaking to see them die here like dogs, with no one to say Godspeed. The Catholic priest went to see some, sometime ago, and going near one who lay in bed, said some kind thing, when the man burst into tears and cried, “Thank God, I have heard one kind word before I die!” In a few minutes the poor wretch was dead.”
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
9. July 29, 1862: John B. Jones notes Pope's movements. Union Major General John Pope's depredations were drawing attention on this day 154 years ago. “Pope’s army, greatly reinforced, are committing shocking devastations in Culpepper and Orange Counties. His brutal orders, and his bragging proclamations, have wrought our men to such a pitch of exasperation that, when the day of battle comes, there will be, most be terrible slaughter.”
http://www.civilwar-online.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
10. Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Stevenson, Alabama: Over 200,000 rations arrive by rail to feed General Buell’s army. About the same amount will arrive again the following day.
https://bjdeming.com/2012/07/23/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-23-29-1862/
11. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Western Theater - By this date, the bulk of Braxton Bragg’s army has arrived by tedious railroad stagings in Chattanooga, and the Federals are realizing that their advance on this crucial Appalachian rail junction has been blocked. Gen. Rosecrans, in command of Pope’s (formerly) Army of the Mississippi, has been advancing eastward from Corinth, and Rosecrans’ recently-promoted cavalry chief, Brig, Gen. Philip Sheridan, is leading raids into Confederate country. On the 28th, Sheridan captures a Confederate officer in possession of papers that establish Bragg’s design of concentrating at Chattanooga in order to work in concert with Gen. Kirby-Smith in Knoxville. Meanwhile, Gen. Sterling Price, with several Confederate divisions, begins maneuvers in northern Mississippi.
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
12. Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Trans-Mississippi Theater: Unionist guerillas (also known as Jayhawkers) attack Confederates at Moore's Mills, Missouri in what becomes a rather savage fight for involving fairly small units. The Jayhawkers lose 16 men killed and 30 wounded, while the Rebels lose 62 dead and 100 wounded.
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
13. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: US President Lincoln authorizes General Halleck to tell General Meade that Lincoln is “unwilling he should now get into a general engagement” with Lee.
https://bjdeming.com/2013/07/29/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-29-august-4-1863/
14. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: Southern hopes for recognition abroad are again dashed when Queen Victoria, in a speech to Parliament, reaffirms Britain’s neutrality, saying: “The civil war between the Northern and Southern states of the American Union still unfortunately continues, and is necessarily attended with much evil, not only to the contending parties, but also to nations which have taken no part in the conflict. Her Majesty, however, has seen no reason to depart from the strict neutrality which Her Majesty has observed from the beginning of the contest.”
https://bjdeming.com/2013/07/29/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-29-august-4-1863/
15. Wednesday, July 29, 1863 --- Capt. Josiah Marshall Favill, a young Englishman who serves as an officer in the 57th New York Infantry, writes in his diary about the lingering disorder in New York City after he and a companion deliver the body of Gen. Zook, killed at Gettysburg, to his family. The two young officers volunteer to help quell the riot, but are forced to lay low instead: “In accordance with orders, as soon as the obsequies of General Zook were over, Broom and I reported to the military commander of the district, General Dix, when it was suggested as a mater of prudence we doff our uniforms. This seemed to us most astonishing, that the uniform which we supposed every man and woman, particularly just after such a great and magnificent battle, would delight in, should be a badge of disfavor, but as we had no citizens’ clothing, we were obliged to confine ourselves to those parts of the city considered least dangerous, which was most humiliating; however, we volunteered our services in case of necessity, left our address and retired. Mitchell very kindly sent us a twenty day leave of absence from General Warren, now in command of the Second corps, so we remained in town till the 27th. Butler soon arrived with a large force, which went into bivouac on the Battery, City Hall Park, and other open places, and the rioters were instantly brought under control. Guns were posted in various places sweeping the streets, and Butler’s reputation was not of the sort the rioters and negro lynchers cared to trifle with.”
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1863
16. Wednesday, July 29, 1863 --- In the mountains of North Carolina, three brothers, apparently Unionists, write a threatening letter to Captain Quill Hunter, who is probably a Confederate conscription or provost officer---an example of the typical resistance of the Unionist mountaineers against the Confederate government: “Capt Quill Hunter if yo ever hunt for us a gin i will put lead in yo god dam your hell fired soll yo have give the people orders to Shoot us down when they find us and if yo dont take your orders back i will Shoot yo If Sutch men as yo are is christians of heaven i want to know who is the hippocrits of hell we have never done yo any harms for yo to hunt for us we will give yo something to hunt for heareafter here after when any body sees us i will know where to watch for yo the Secessions needent to degrudge what we steel for we are the United States Regulars (Seal)
We dont ax [Sprinkles houns?] no more adds than hell does a powder house ave got orders from the Govenor to take yo because yo dont take us that is our latest orders we dist dare yo to go and Abuse Mother or talk about trying them When the Yankees comes we will go and Show them Some Secess to kill If this dont give yo warning enough the next warning we will give yo with powder and lead take the hint in time we are the old United States Regulars.
Wilse Dial, James Dial, Calvin Dial
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1863
17. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: Lincoln didn't want another Battle of Fredericksburg or Battle of Chancellorsville. With Lee back on Virginia soil, Lincoln became wary of the Gray Fox laying a trap for Meade. Lincoln tells Halleck to ease up on Meade. In the immediate aftermath of the Battle of Gettysburg, Abraham Lincoln had pressed hard on Major General George G. Meade to aggressively pursue the retreating Confederates, hoping to destroy Lee's army before it could get back across the Potomac River. On this day 150 years ago, Lincoln instructed Major General Halleck to ease up on Meade, fearing that Meade might feel too much pressure to attack Lee.
Executive Mansion, Major General Halleck: Washington, July 29, 1863. “Seeing Gen. Meade's despatch of yesterday to yourself, causes, me to fear that he supposes the government here is demanding of him to bring on a general engagement with Lee as soon as possible. I am claiming no such thing of him. In fact, my judgment is against it; which judgment, of course, I will yield if yours and his are the contrary. If he could not safely engage Lee at Williamsport, it seems absurd to suppose he can safely engage him now, when he has scarcely more than two thirds of the force he had at Williamsport, while it must be, that Lee has been re-inforced. True, I desired Gen. Meade to pursue Lee across the Potomac, hoping, as has proved true, that he would thereby clear the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and get some advantages by harrassing him on his retreat. These being past, I am unwilling he should now get into a general engagement on the impression that we here are pressing him; and I shall be glad for you to so inform him, unless your own judgment is against it. Yours truly A. LINCOLN.
http://www.civilwar-online.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1863
18. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: A wish list for blockade runners. As the Union blockade of Southern ports tightened and demands for additional munitions increased the strain on the tiny Southern industrial base, the Confederacy made an appeal to the companies engaged in blockade running to increase their importation of materials needed for the manufacture of arms.
CIRCULAR.] HDQRS. DEPT. S. C., GA., AND FLA., Charleston, S. C., July 29, 1863. Messrs. JOHN FRASER & CO., W. C. BEE & CO., GIBBS & CO., A. S. JOHNSON, Esq., H. COBIA, Esq., HENRY HART, THEO. ANDREW, Esq., and Captain FERGUSON: “On the representation of the Chief of the Niter and Mining Bureau, War Department, of the urgent necessity for an early and constant increase of the supplies of saltpeter, pig-lead, Scotch pig-iron, and zinc, for the use of the C. S. Ordnance Department, the commanding general directs me to notify you of these necessities of the service, and to invoke your assistance with the vessels with which you are concerned.
It will be confidently expected that you will issue such instructions to your agents in Nassau and Europe as to cause them to import by each ship under your control, either to Wilmington or Charleston, say, an average of 20 tons of these munitions on each voyage, saltpeter and lead being most needed at present.
I am assured Professor Holmes, of the Niter and Mining Bureau, Charleston, will be ready to receive and pay promptly for these articles.
Major Heyliger, at Nassau, will be instructed to arrange for the shipment of any of these stores belonging to the Ordnance Department at that port; but it is the chief object of this communication to acquaint you of this urgent need of the Government, and to induce you to engage in the importation of the supplies, to the limited extent, at least, I have indicated.
Respectfully, your obedient servant, THOMAS JORDAN, Brigadier-General, and Chief of Staff.”
http://www.civilwar-online.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1863
19. Wednesday, July 29, 1863: Unionists forces occupied the whole of Morris Island except Battery Wagner. If Wagner was captured, the Unionists could start a bombardment of Charleston.
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/the-american-civil-war/american-civil-war-july-1863/
20. Friday, July 29, 1864: Atlanta campaign: General Sherman again: The next morning the Fifteenth Corps wheeled forward to the left over the battle-field of the day before, and Davis’s division still farther prolonged the line, which reached nearly to the ever-to-be-remembered “Sandtown road.”
Then, by further thinning out Thomas’s line, which was well entrenched, I drew another division of Palmer’s corps (Baird’s) around to the right, to further strengthen that flank. I was impatient to hear from the cavalry raid, then four days out, and was watching for its effect, ready to make a bold push for the possession of East Point.
https://bjdeming.com/2014/07/27/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-28-august-3-1864/
21. Friday, July 29, 1864: Shenandoah Valley operations: Early’s Raid: “First it was Antietam. The next year it was Gettysburg. The people of southern Maryland and Pennsylvania were learning to get very nervous as midsummer approached. Their misgivings were well-founded as Jubal Early and company crossed the Potomac today, continuing the excursion which had briefly threatened the very gates of Washington itself. Union cavalry was pursuing, and there was little opportunity for Early to commit much outrage. Folks were fearful nonetheless and those who could afford to, sought to be elsewhere for awhile.”
https://bjdeming.com/2014/07/27/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-28-august-3-1864/
A Monday, July 29, 1861: Union forces in western Virginia still held the upper hand. President Davis decided to send General Robert E Lee to the area to resolve matters.
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/the-american-civil-war/american-civil-war-july-1861/
B Tuesday, July 29, 1862: Naval assault on Fort McAllister, Georgia. Fort McAllister came under Union attack for the second time, somewhat by accident. The Thomas L. Wragg (The Nashville) had been successfully turned away from Charleston and Savannah by the Union naval blockade that was becoming more effective. The Nashville broke through the blockade and headed up the Ogeechee to the protection of the guns of Fort McAllister.
Coming upriver to deal with the schooner were a handful of Union vessels, under Commander Charles Steedman, led by the Paul Jones, a heavily armored side-wheeler with a 100-pounder rifled cannon among the weapons onboard. In support of the Paul Jones were two 90-day gunboats, The Umadilla and The Huron and the sloop Madgie. When the Paul Jones rounded a nearby island shortly after 10:00am its guns were blazing. The fort's commander, now Captain Hartage, could tell by the range that the Paul Jones must be using the new rifled cannon and ordered his men to hold fire. Finally the Yankee side-wheeler came into range and the Rebel gunners saluted it warmly.
For nearly an hour and a half the cannons blazed. Then the Paul Jones and the others retreated to safety further down the river.
http://www.ourgeorgiahistory.com/wars/Civil_War/ftmcallister.html
B+ Tuesday, July 29, 1862: The Georgia coast: A blockade runner, unable to get into port at Charleston or Savannah, breaks through the Union blockade at the Ogeechee River and heads upriver to the protection of Fort McAllister, pursued by four Federal ships. The Union ships exchange artillery fire with the fort for an hour and a half, and then withdraw.
https://bjdeming.com/2012/07/23/the-american-civil-war-150th-anniversary-july-23-29-1862/
C Tuesday, July 29, 1862 --- Mersey River, England: A most significant event takes place on this date in the John Laird shipyards in Birkenhead, when a vessel commissioned by the Confederate States of America (known up to this point only as Hull No. 290) is launched and---despite the best diplomatic efforts of Ambassador Charles Francis Adams, Sr.---is allowed to leave Liverpool harbor as the S.S. Enrica. At sea, the ship is outfitted with cannons and equipment and re-commisioned the CSS Alabama, which will make history as the most successful and destructive ship in the Confederate Navy, capturing and destroying a huge amount of Yankee shipping and driving much of the Northern merchant shipping from the seas.
http://civilwarsesquicentdaily-wolfshield.blogspot.com/search?q=July+29%2C+1862
C+ Tuesday, July 29, 1862: The steamer ‘290’ sailed from Liverpool en route to the Portuguese island of Terceira. Here, ‘290’ was equipped and armed to be a commerce raider. ‘290’ was also renamed to the ‘CSS Alabama’ – the most famous Confederate naval vessel of the war.
http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/the-american-civil-war/american-civil-war-july-1862/
D Friday, July 29, 1864: Deep Bottom I, Darbytown, Strawberry Plains, Virginia. During the night of July 26-27, the Union II Corps and two divisions of US General Sheridan's cavalry under command of Major General Winfield Scott Hancock crossed to the north side of James River to threaten Richmond.
This demonstration diverted Confederate forces from the impending attack at Petersburg on July 30.
Union efforts to turn the Confederate position at New Market Heights and Fussell's Mill were abandoned when the Confederates strongly reinforced their lines and counterattacked.
During the night of July 29, the Federals recrossed the river leaving a garrison as heretofore to hold the bridgehead at Deep Bottom.
http://americancivilwar.com/statepic/va/va069.html
FYI SPC Deb Root-WhiteLt Col Charlie Brown GySgt Jack Wallace CWO4 Terrence Clark SPC Michael Oles SR SPC Michael Terrell PO1 John Johnson SPC (Join to see) SMSgt Lawrence McCarter SGT Paul RussoA1C Pamela G RussellLTC Trent KlugMSG Roy CheeverPO2 Russell "Russ" Lincoln SFC Bernard Walko SFC Stephen King SFC Ralph E Kelley SSG Franklin Briant Lt Col Scott Shuttleworth MSgt Robert C AldiSGT Paul Russo
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In my personal opinion, The newly commissioned CSS Alabama leaves Mersey River, England: A most significant event takes place on this date in the John Laird shipyards in Birkenhead, when a vessel commissioned by the Confederate States of America.
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FYI PO3 Edward Riddle PO2 (Join to see) CPO Nate S. SCPO Del Wolverton PO3 John Wagner CDR (Join to see) LT John Chang PO2 (Join to see) SN Greg Wright LT Brad McInnis CWO3 Dennis M. CMDCM Gene Treants SCPO Larry Knight Sr. CPO B. Austin S. PO3 Steven Sherrill CDR Andrew McMenamin, PhDCWO3 Dave Alcantara PO1 Jerome Newland PO1 John Johnson
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