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Auction archive: Lot number 139

Civil War Archive of Private Townley Gillett, Ohio 7th Volunteer Infantry

Estimate
US$500 - US$1,000
Price realised:
US$3,000
Auction archive: Lot number 139

Civil War Archive of Private Townley Gillett, Ohio 7th Volunteer Infantry

Estimate
US$500 - US$1,000
Price realised:
US$3,000
Beschreibung:

Archive of letters and documents related to Townley Gillett (1834-1862) of the 7th Ohio Infantry. Includes 13 letters from Gillett, most to his cousin Susan Bayner; Gillett's promotion to corporal certificate; a debt receipt signed by Gillett; a letter written to him from his sister Sarah; an unsigned letter to someone named Billings; 4 additional letters, most regarding the handling of Gillett's estate; 2 documents including an appraisal for Gillett's estate; and a discharge document from the 150th Ohio National Guard for John Cowell, the administrator of Gillett's estate. Townley Gillett enlisted on April 22, 1861 and was mustered into Co. A of the 7th Ohio Infantry as a private. Promoted to corporal Nov. 20, 1861 (promotion papers included here) but killed in action on June 9, 1862 during the Battle Port Republic in Virginia. His first letter is not long after his enlistment and he is still located at Camp Dennison near Cincinnati. He writes to Susan on June 14, [1861], concerned for his son: "I felt bad when I left my little boy thinking wither I should ever see him again." Records indicate that his wife Hattie Gricenbrier (b. 1837) and his young daughter Ada (b.1860) both died in 1861 and context suggests that his son Franky (1857-1908) was living with his mother in law. In a letter on July 6th, Gillett reports about their trip south from Camp Dennison, opening: "We are in the enemy's country now" and after recounting the long journey, he writes, "just before we got into Weston there was a spy, he fired his gun and we fired three shots at him but he was to far off to hit him...we went into the town double quick and surrounded it in a very short time and we took from forty to fifty secessionists. The Union folks was glad to have us come as soon as we got things straight. The Union folks give us a good breakfast it was just we we wanted after...the Union folks have raised two American flags. We raised one last Monday and on the fourth of July." The Ohio 7th would see extensive action in Western Virginia in the early years of the war, and in a letter written on September 7, 1861, Gillett recounts fighting, likely the Battle of Kessler's Cross Lane, to Susan: "I suppose you have heard we had a fight with the secessionists. We had about eight hundred, the secessionists had three thousand infantry, four hundred cavalry, and six pieces of artillery. We had neither cavalry nor artillery. It was early in the morning they had surrounded us before we knew it. We was just getting breakfast when the pickets was fired and we tried to form a line but the balls came so thick we had to retreat...uphill. Company A, K, and C was in the thickest of the fight. We had, I believe, fifty balls fired for every man of us as soon as we got to the top of the hill there was three rebels companies retreating down to the road." By October, they were stationed in Charleston, of which Gillett writes: "Charleston is the largest place we have been in since we cross the Ohio River here is a great many slaves here. It is very dirty place, There was a flood here about three weeks ago it was so high that it floated the houses from one end of the lots to the other." Shortly thereafter, Gillett was promoted to Corporal, and his promotion document, signed by E.B. Taylor and recommended by Captain Orrin J. Crane is dated Nov. 20, 1861 at Camp Warren, VA. From the beginning of January 1862, the 7th Ohio would be engaged in the Blue's Gap Affair, on March 23 they were at Kernstown , the opening battle of Confederate General Stonewall Jackson's Shenandoah Valley Campaign - a Union victory which proved to be Jackson's only defeat during the war. Gillett wrote Susan to let her know of his safety in a brief letter dated March 26, [1862] from Strasburgh. In his last letter, written from "Camp near Woodstock, Virginia" on April 11, 1862 on Union letterhead, he writes: "The rebels fly for it when we get at them like we did at Winchester. The battlefield the next morning, i

Auction archive: Lot number 139
Auction:
Datum:
19 Nov 2020
Auction house:
Cowan's Auctions, Inc.
Este Ave 6270
Cincinnati OH 45232
United States
info@cowans.com
+1 (0)513 8711670
+1 (0)513 8718670
Beschreibung:

Archive of letters and documents related to Townley Gillett (1834-1862) of the 7th Ohio Infantry. Includes 13 letters from Gillett, most to his cousin Susan Bayner; Gillett's promotion to corporal certificate; a debt receipt signed by Gillett; a letter written to him from his sister Sarah; an unsigned letter to someone named Billings; 4 additional letters, most regarding the handling of Gillett's estate; 2 documents including an appraisal for Gillett's estate; and a discharge document from the 150th Ohio National Guard for John Cowell, the administrator of Gillett's estate. Townley Gillett enlisted on April 22, 1861 and was mustered into Co. A of the 7th Ohio Infantry as a private. Promoted to corporal Nov. 20, 1861 (promotion papers included here) but killed in action on June 9, 1862 during the Battle Port Republic in Virginia. His first letter is not long after his enlistment and he is still located at Camp Dennison near Cincinnati. He writes to Susan on June 14, [1861], concerned for his son: "I felt bad when I left my little boy thinking wither I should ever see him again." Records indicate that his wife Hattie Gricenbrier (b. 1837) and his young daughter Ada (b.1860) both died in 1861 and context suggests that his son Franky (1857-1908) was living with his mother in law. In a letter on July 6th, Gillett reports about their trip south from Camp Dennison, opening: "We are in the enemy's country now" and after recounting the long journey, he writes, "just before we got into Weston there was a spy, he fired his gun and we fired three shots at him but he was to far off to hit him...we went into the town double quick and surrounded it in a very short time and we took from forty to fifty secessionists. The Union folks was glad to have us come as soon as we got things straight. The Union folks give us a good breakfast it was just we we wanted after...the Union folks have raised two American flags. We raised one last Monday and on the fourth of July." The Ohio 7th would see extensive action in Western Virginia in the early years of the war, and in a letter written on September 7, 1861, Gillett recounts fighting, likely the Battle of Kessler's Cross Lane, to Susan: "I suppose you have heard we had a fight with the secessionists. We had about eight hundred, the secessionists had three thousand infantry, four hundred cavalry, and six pieces of artillery. We had neither cavalry nor artillery. It was early in the morning they had surrounded us before we knew it. We was just getting breakfast when the pickets was fired and we tried to form a line but the balls came so thick we had to retreat...uphill. Company A, K, and C was in the thickest of the fight. We had, I believe, fifty balls fired for every man of us as soon as we got to the top of the hill there was three rebels companies retreating down to the road." By October, they were stationed in Charleston, of which Gillett writes: "Charleston is the largest place we have been in since we cross the Ohio River here is a great many slaves here. It is very dirty place, There was a flood here about three weeks ago it was so high that it floated the houses from one end of the lots to the other." Shortly thereafter, Gillett was promoted to Corporal, and his promotion document, signed by E.B. Taylor and recommended by Captain Orrin J. Crane is dated Nov. 20, 1861 at Camp Warren, VA. From the beginning of January 1862, the 7th Ohio would be engaged in the Blue's Gap Affair, on March 23 they were at Kernstown , the opening battle of Confederate General Stonewall Jackson's Shenandoah Valley Campaign - a Union victory which proved to be Jackson's only defeat during the war. Gillett wrote Susan to let her know of his safety in a brief letter dated March 26, [1862] from Strasburgh. In his last letter, written from "Camp near Woodstock, Virginia" on April 11, 1862 on Union letterhead, he writes: "The rebels fly for it when we get at them like we did at Winchester. The battlefield the next morning, i

Auction archive: Lot number 139
Auction:
Datum:
19 Nov 2020
Auction house:
Cowan's Auctions, Inc.
Este Ave 6270
Cincinnati OH 45232
United States
info@cowans.com
+1 (0)513 8711670
+1 (0)513 8718670
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