Subscribe (RSS)
150 Years Ago Today…
Browse by Category
Browse by Tag
27th Infantry (Massachusetts) 44th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment African Americans blockade camp life casualties Chapel Hill Charleston conscription diaries family food home front Massachusetts mobilization naval operations New Bern newspapers Newton Wallace New York North Carolina occupation ordinances Pettigrew family religion Rev. Overton Bernard Richmond Sarah Lois Wadley Secession Convention slavery slaves soldier conditions South Carolina students Tennessee troops Union occupation Union soldiers United States Navy University of North Carolina Virginia William A. Graham Wilmington Wilmington (N.C.) Daily Journal womenRecent Comments
- Lance McDonald on 10 April 1863: “A great many spectators especially ladies _ for whom Genl Hardee has given the entertainment _ he has several at his house _ and this is the second or third time they have come up from Huntersville.”
- Lance McDonald on 10 April 1863: “A great many spectators especially ladies _ for whom Genl Hardee has given the entertainment _ he has several at his house _ and this is the second or third time they have come up from Huntersville.”
- Robert Terry on 29 March 1863: Sketch….showing…..Siege of Washington, NC, March 29 to April 16, 1863
- Michael Ward on 25 February 1863: “Troops have been pouring in in great numbers from North Carolina.”
- 28 January 1863: “Well, Judge, if they are our enemies we will have to admit they have fine music…” | Civil War Day by Day on 18 January 1863: “I made twelve garments last week and worked sixty-two button holes and sewed on as many buttons. Can you equal that?”
Blogroll
UNC Libraries
Tag Archives: Robert W. Parker
18 August 1862: “as to a sick man’s getting home now, that is almost impossible, unless he is able to dodge the guard and run the blockade, as they are carried, as I am informed, by the doctors now.”
Item description: Letter, 18 August 1862, from Robert W. Parker of the 2nd Virginia Cavalry to his wife, Rebecca Louise Fitzhugh Walker Parker, at home in Bedford County, Va. Item citation: From volume 2 in the Robert W. Parker Papers, … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 2nd Virginia Cavalry, Rebecca Louise Fitzhugh Walker Parker, Robert W. Parker
Comments Off
15 July 1862: “…We have been compelled by the pressure of our enemies to give up more of our mother state to their brutal army.”
Item description: Letter, 15 July 1862, from Robert W. Parker of the 2nd Virginia Cavalry to his wife, Rebecca Louise Fitzhugh Walker Parker, at home in Bedford County, Va. Parker wrote of his company’s retreat from Culpeper to Rapidan Station, … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged casualties, Chapel Hill, conscription, Culpeper, Gen. Richard Stoddert Ewell, Gen. Stonewall Jackson, railroads, Rapidan Station, Robert W. Parker
Comments Off
6 July 1862: “It seems strange but nevertheless true that most of the boys from our neighborhood have either been killed wounded or died of sickness.”
Item description: Entry, dated 6 July 1862, from the diary of Robert W. Parker (2nd Virginia Cavalry, CSA), near Culpeper, Va., to his wife, Rebecca Louise Fitzhugh Walker Parker. [Transcription available below images.] Item citation: From volume 2 in the … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 2nd Virginia Cavalry, Culpeper, Rebecca Louise Fitzhugh Walker Parker, Richmond, Robert W. Parker, Seven Days Battles, Virginia
Comments Off
25 April 1862: “tell him to write often for I really think three letters a year is but few he has ten times the chance to write I have”
Item description: Letter, dated 25 April 1862, from Robert W. Parker (2nd Virginia Cavalry of the Confederate States of America Army), near Gordonsville, Va., to his wife, Rebecca Louise Fitzhugh Walker Parker. Item citation: From volume 2 in the Robert … Continue reading
9 February 1862: “…they are steady and prudent not partaking of the vices so common in camp – George told me he had been often begged to play cards – he told them he did not know how and never intended to know…”
Item description: Letter, 9 February 1862, from Frances Goggin Parker to her son Robert W. Parker, a soldier in the 2nd Virginia Cavalry. [Transcription available below images.] Item citation: From volume 2 in the Robert W. Parker Papers, Southern Historical … Continue reading
Posted in Southern Historical Collection
Tagged 2nd Virginia Cavalry, camp life, family, home front, Robert W. Parker, Virginia
Comments Off
9 October 1861: “I don’t think there is half the excitement down here in the guard to the war that there is up in Bedford.”
Item description: Letter, 9 October 1861, from Robert W. Parker to his wife Rebecca, describing camp life. Robert W. Parker was born in 1838 in Pittsylvania County, Va. His father, Ammon H. Parker, and mother, Frances Goggin Parker, eventually settled … Continue reading
29 May 1861: “we arrived in camp yesterday near 4ocl all our company are on foot.”
Item description: In this letter, Robert W. Parker tells his wife that he was just appointed officer of the guard. He remarks on the status of troops present, portraying the typical conditions for cavalry soldiers. Item citation: From the Robert … Continue reading
