
The following letters were written by Daniel Webster Rodgers (1840-1931) and his brother Augustine W. Rodgers (1843-1893) while serving in Co. B, 12th Vermont Infantry—a nine-month’s regiment organized at Battleboro, Vermont in early October 1862 and sent to Washington D. C. in mid October. Once there, they were attached to Abercrombie’s Division, Military District of Washington. Late in their term of service they sent to the Rappahannock and then marched to Gettysburg but did not participate in the fighting. They mustered out shortly after the battle.
From the 1850 US Census, we learn that Daniel and Augustine were the orphaned children of Frederick William Rodgers (1806-1854) and Lorana Hadley (1806-1856) of Hartland, Windsor county, Vermont.
Included in this same set of letters are two by their cousin, William Wallace Rodgers, the son of Lorenzo Rodgers (1808-1846) and Mary Ann Rood (1812-1880) who also served Co. B, 12th Vermont Infantry.
There is only 1 letter written by Daniel, 3 by Augustine, and two by William. All of them were addressed to Daniel and Augustine’s younger brother, Jacob Rodgers (b. 1846), in Hartland, Vermont.
To read other letters by members of the 12th Vermont Infantry transcribed andpublished by Spared & Shared, see:
Mark P. Bartlett, Co. D, 12th Vermont (1 Letter)
Leonard Emery, Co. D, 12th Vermont (6 Letters)
Silas Goddard Emery, Co. D & F, 12th Vermont (1 Letter)
Oscar F. Marston, Co. D, 12th Vermont (2 Letters)
[My thanks to Abbey Weber Jones for providing me with a first draft of these transcriptions.]
Letter 1
Alexandria, [Virginia]
November 8th 1862
Brother Jacob,
I thought you would like to hear from your old brother Dan. He is alive yet and like[ly] to live some time. I have had a pretty hard diarrhea but I am better now. Augustine has got back to camp but he is very weak yet. I am afraid that he won’t be able to do any duty very soon—if ever. He wants to get a discharge but he can’t get one yet. He had ought to be at home. I am afraid that he never will see Vermont without he does within three months.
We have had a quiet a young winter here. It snowed yesterday most all day. About six inches fell. I should think it looked like Vermont snow storms.
How does my old horse do now? Have you put him up to hay yet? Let him run as long as he does well. When it is time to put him up to hay, set it down and keep run how many weeks you have him up to hay. I want you should let me know how he is doing. Has his ribs got covered up yet? Does he breathe any better than he did? Give him a few potatoes once a week when you get to the barn.
Tell Mr. Burnham to write to me and I will answer it. Tell Betsy that she had better write a line to her cousin if she wants him as a cousin. If she don’t, she had better keep mum. I am a going to write to her as soon as I get time. Tell Mrs. Hatch that Ben is a chopping wood to make our barracks for winter. We have a very good time down in Dixies land. Will is the same old chap that he was in Vermont. He has got so he can eat beans as well as any of us. I would like some Vermont butter and some sausage for Thanksgiving. I shall send for a box when we get settled down.
Write as soon as you can and let me know how things are getting along. Give my respects to all of my inquiring friends. Yours truly, from your brother, — Daniel W. Rodgers


Letter 2

Mt. Pleasant [Hospital]
February 18th, 1863
Good morning brother Jacob,
How is your health this morning? I received a letter from you yesterday. I was very glad to hear from you and hear you was smart and the rest of the folks. You wrote in your last that you had snow aplenty. We had a hard storm here yesterday for this country. The snow fell about 8 inches yesterday. It is as sloppy as you please here today.
You said you had company the other day. I should been very glad to popped in about that time, you had better believe. You said Jim wanted you should work for him. You said you should do as I said. I shant say anything about it. If the rest of the folks think you had better, why you had better do as the rest of the folks think. See what Dan and Ben think about it. If they think you had better do so, why all right. But I should go to Burk. But if you are a going to work out, I think that that would be a good place—as good a place as you can find, don’t you?
I sent you a picture of the hospital last Sunday. I want you should keep the best one and you may do what you are mind to with the other one. Tell Betsy to answer that letter or I shant write to her again. Give my love to everybody that wants it. So goodbye from your brother, — A. W. Rodgers


Letter 3
Mt. Pleasant Hospital
February 27th, 1863
Dear Brother,
I just received a letter from you. I was glad to hear from you and to hear that you was well and the rest of the folks also. I got a letter from Ben yesterday. He told me Dan was sick. That I hated to hear, but I could not help it. He will take good care of himself, I guess. If he practices what he preaches he will. He used to talk to me most all the time about being careful when he was sick. He used to take good care of himself when I was there. You wanted to know how I was. Well, I am quite smart. I am out of doors all I want to be and take care of myself.
I don’t know but what I am just as well off here as I should be to home. It don’t cost me anything for medicine nor board and I am getting $20 a month and have nothing to do. I want you should tell Betsy Kendall if she don’t answer that letter I wrote to her, I shall be mad. I don’t think of anything more. Give my love to all from your brother, — A. W. Rodgers


Letter 4
Mt. Pleasant Hospital
March 11th, [18]63
Dear brother,
I received yours of the 7th yesterday. Was glad to hear you was smart. My health is better than it has been for 3 or 4 weeks. I have just escaped a fever and that’s all. I feel as smart as common now. If I was sure of staying here long, I would have you send me a small box—one that would weigh some 20 lbs or so. But I don’t know how long I shall stay so I don’t know whether it will pay or not. I got a letter from Alma last night. She says she has not heard from me but once since I came out here.
We signed the pay rolls yesterday and I think we shall be paid off in a day or two. I shall get mine expressed home—most of it. I shall send it to Birk, I guess.
I can’t write [because] the boys act so [up so much]. I will wait till the mail comes in and see if I get any letters.
Well Jake, the mail has come in and I got another letter from you but Horace didn’t know but he should be in Virginia before long did he? He wont know whether it is best to come or not if he is drafted or not. He will have to ask Elmira is she is willing. I wish I was there to stay with Lucine so you could work out if you want to but if nothing happens, I shall be there sometime, I hope.
Our brigadier general was taken prisoner the other night and (I am glad of it) and guess all the boys will be. There is no news here at all. It is so dry as a chip, so you must excuse me this time. So goodbye from your bub. Write soon, — Augustine W Rodgers
I want you should send me a paper once in a while, won’t you?


Letter 5
Camp near Rappahannock Bridge, Va.
May 17, 1863
Friend Jacob,
I take my pen to write a few lines to you in reply to yours of May 3rd. I was gla to hear from you. I hope that we shall get home before a great while. It is getting to be pretty warm here. There is some cold nights here yet. It froze considerable last night.
We have got pretty well downtoward the front now. We wash in the Rappahannock every morning. I don’t believe that we shall go much farther [to the] front. Our company is guarding a bridge. Cos. G and K are up ten or fifteen miles. The other 7 companies are back two miles in the woods. Our company is the largest in the regiment and the best captain and so the colonel puts ours ahead. I had rather be alone and get rid of the red tape. We know just what we have got to do. It takes 12 men for guard a day.
We have been digging rifle pits. We are pretty well fortified here now. The rebs won’t get us out without they shell us out. I don’t feel much concrened about it. There is not any infantry near hear. There is cavalry scouting round here. — W. W. Rodgers


Letter 6
Union Mills, Va.
June 18, 1863
Friend Jacob,
Sir, I now take my pen to write a few lines in return for the few lines that I received from you [on] May 31st. I was glad to hear from you. You must begin to think about haying. I guess you farmers will get some help from here to do your haying. If you don’t, you will come out slim for help.
I don’t expect that we shall have to stay here but about 8 days longer without of [Gen.] Lee gets ahead of us. If he does, they would be some tall fighting if he gets in our way on the road home. I don’t know where he is now. The last time that we heard from him, he was going up the Shenandoah. He is getting to be pretty bold. I heard they had started for Maryland. I think they will have to fight considerable before they get there. It was the report that General McClellan is put back in command of the army again.
We have had a good chance to see a part of the Army of the Potomac. The Vermont Brigade is out near Fairfax Station. Will went over there yesterday. He see the Hartland Boys. They are all tough and rugged. You would like to have been here yesterday and day before. The Boys say that [now] he has come out from behind his breastworks, they are a going to give him a licking.
There was a train of artillery crossed Bull Run the other day. It took it 7 hours to cross. You would call it a long string. Any quantity of wagons.
Dan is getting yp be smart again. All of the rest of the Boys are smart. — Wm. W. Rodgers









































