1863: Charles Milton Woodbury to his Mother

The following letter was written by Charles Milton Woodbury (1843-1865) of South Danvers who enlisted at age 18 in May 1861 to served as a private in Co. B, 17th Massachusetts Infantry. He made corporal in February 1864 but died of disease on 8 June 1865 at Fort Schuyler, New York, at war’s end.

Charles was the son of Benjamin Franklin Woodbury and Emily Jane Flower. He mentions his older brother in the letter, Benjamin Franklin (“Frank”) Woodbury (1832-1899).

The 17th Massachusetts spent the winter of 1861-62 near Baltimore, with the exception of an expedition into Virginia, and in the spring of 1862 was ordered to New Berne, N. C. It took part in an expedition to Goldsboro and met the Confederates at Kinston, Whitehall and Goldsboro. From Dec. 22, 1862, to July 25, 1863, the headquarters were at New Berne, with several minor expeditions. On July 25 it embarked in support of a cavalry raid on Weldon, but returned to duty again at or near New Berne. In Feb., 1864, a detail of the regiment had a sharp brush with the enemy at Batchelder’s creek, and in April another detachment was sent to the relief of Little Washington. The battalion spent the winter of 1864-65 near Beaufort, moved to Goldsboro in March, encountering the enemy along the route, and closed its term of service in July, 1865.

Transcription

Newbern, North Carolina
May 5th 1863

Dear Mother,

I received your letter last night and was much pleased to hear from home. You said that you have written three times to me and that I have not answered them. I have answered every letter that I have got. You say that Frank wants me to write to him. I have written three or four letters to him and have never got an answer from him. I don’t think that I shall write till I get an answer from the ones that I have wrote. I am willing to write as often as I get letters. I like to write as well as anyone but I don’t like to write when I don’t get any letters.

You wanted to know how we got along on the expedition. We got along pretty well. We don’t stay to home more than three or four days at a time before we have to go on another. We got back from one day before yesterday. We don’t know when we shall have to start again.

Tell Frank to answer to answer them letters that I sent him and I will answer him right away as soon as I get his. I have written three letters to you within a fortnight and have sent you $20 by Fisk. You go and get it if you have not got it. From your son, — C. M. Woodbury, Newbern, N. C.

Dear Sister, I got your letter in mother’s and was much pleased to hear from you. Tell Frank in your next letter that I had forgotten that I [had] such a brother. I am glad that he thought enough of me to let me know I had such a brother. Tell Comey [?] that I don’t hear anything from him now. Josiah is down to Morehead City. I seen him the other day and he looked [as] well as I ever seen him look in his life. All of the other boys are looking well. Some of them are sick. There is about 24 sick in our company. I never was so well in my life as I am now. I have had the shakes twice since I have been in Newbern, N. C.

From your affectionate brother, — Charles Wood.

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