Category Archives: 114th New York Infantry

1864-65: Daniel Webster Turner to Vesta Turner

Daniel Webster Turner in later years.

The following letters were written by Daniel Webster Turner (1837-1932), the son of Samuel and Amanda (Wells) Turner of Oxford, Chenango county, New York. Daniel enlisted at age 25 on 23 July 1862 to serve three years in Co. A, 114th New York Infantry. He was quickly promoted to first sergeant and later commissioned a second lieutenant. He was named Captain of his company on 20 June 1863 and wounded in action on 19 September 1864, at Winchester, Virginia. He mustered out with his company on 8 June 1865 at Washington, D. C.

Daniel wrote the letters to his younger sister Vesta Turner.

To read letters by other members of the 114th New York Infantry published on Spared & Shared, see:
Asa Holmes, Co. A, 114th New York (10 Letters)
Erastus R. Gregory, Co. C, 114th New York (1 Letter)
Elbridge LaMunion, Co. G, 114th New York (1 Letter)
Charles E. Thompson, Co. G, 114th New York (1 Letter)

Letter 1

Headquarters 114th New York Camp
Russell, Virginia
December 16th 1864

Dear Brother & Sister,

Your kind favor of the 9th inst. came to hand last night & I was very glad to hear that you were enjoying your usual health &c. I was somewhat surprised to hear that Charley is going to be married so soon but I had a letter a few days since that informed me that it was going to take place soon without doubt as he was making some preparations for the occasion, &c.

The weather has been very cold here for the last week and very good sleighing a portion of the time. It is more mild at present but is frozen up so that there is no mud to bother about getting about. I have very comfortable quarters at present & can keep very comfortable if I can get wood enough to burn which is a pretty scarce article about here & is growing more & more so each day, &c.

There has been no move here of late, the weather being too severe to admit of anything except doing picket duty, &c. which is very trying these cold nights. Many of the men freeze their feet & ears &c.

We have good news from Sherman &c. stating that his campaign has been a perfect success & that he has reached Savannah and that a battle was going on for the possession of that city which is probably ours before this. The Rebs are evidently taken somewhat by surprise at the course that the Rebellion is assuming & many of them are anxious to return to the Union, &c. The success of Sherman & the cutting of the railroads that lead to Richmond which must sooner or later fall & I think that the time is not far distant. Our Corps from the Army of the Shenandoah are at present with Foster & cooperating with Sherman. There is a report that Early is going to attempt to regain possession of the Valley again but he may find a hard job if our force is reduced nearly one half, &c.

I have had the easiest time as far as duty is concerned since I came back that I ever had. Have not been on duty but once aside from drill &c. Crumb has got his mind made up to go home. He has sent in for a leave of absence but whether it will be granted or not remains to be determined. My company remains quite small as yet but is gaining slowly. Have 22 men present for duty but some of them are not armed. One man came back that has been absent a year and a half & has had three furloughs within the last five months.

There is some dull times among the officers. Many of them have become perfectly reckless since the two last battles & are drinking very hard. But when the Old Colonel got back they had to be a little more cautious. But it is bad enough now. I never saw such a change in the appearance of men in so short a time as there was in some of them in the time that I was absent from the regiment & the example that they set before the men tends to do away with all dissipation as they are not respected by their men, &c.

You may send me eight of those photographs when you get them—that is if they are good ones & do what you are a mind to with the rest. You had not better enclose them all at one time &c. Please to give my respects to all enquiring friends & especially give my congratulations to the Bride & Groom or which are to be soon. I should enjoy being there very much but it is not destined so to be but I shall think of the time & remember that others are enjoying themselves, &c. Write often & tell me all of the news & what is going on about home &c. From your affectionate brother, — D. W. Turner, Capt., 114th N. Y. S. V.


Letter 2

Camp Sheridan, Virginia
March 12th 1865

Dear Sister Vesta,

Your much welcome letter of March 4th came to hand last evening & I was very glad to hear that you were all well &c. Everything remains quiet about here & has for some time except the excitement that it caused by the prisoners that Sheridan captured arriving here the first of last week which we had to take charge of and delivered to Harpers Ferry.

The weather is much more pleasant than it has been & we have now & then a real spring day which we enjoy very much by sunning ourselves in much the same manner that fools do in a warm pleasant day.

We do not get any news from Sheridan since the capture of the prisoners above mentioned but we feel confident that he will accomplish his object before he returns if he returns at all.

We had a Review this morning at eleven a.m. which went off very well. Men looked finely for the season. We are having services regularly for the Sabbath at two p.m. and 6.30 p.m. & prayer meetings twice each week, but there is not a very large attendance.

There is not as strong signs of a move as a week or ten days since but we may be ordered out when we are least expecting it. The Pay Master was here & paid us off last Friday. Your humble servant got a little over a thousand in green backs which will enable me to pay up my debts & send a little home as soon as there is an opportunity to do so.

Your letter seems to carry the idea that the Rouses are as flirty as ever & if they cannot rule, that they desert their collars.

I suppose that you will be making sugar by the time that this reaches you—that is, if the weather is as warm as usual at this season of the year. How is Charlie & wife getting along farming? and what are the news in general? Write often and let me know what is going on about Preston & the surrounding towns. Give my love to all, &c. — D. W. Turner

114th N. Y. S. Vols.


Letter 3

Gen. Gofrey Weitzel leads his Black troops into Richmond on 3 April 1865.

Camp Sheridan, Virginia
April 4, 1865

Dear Sister Vesta,

Your letter reached me in due time & I was very glad to hear that you were all enjoying good health & that you had not suffered from the effects of the flood which I learn by the papers has been very destructive, particularly in the western part of the State.

We have not moved as yet as you will see by the heading of my letter but are in readiness to move at a moment’s warning. Our surplus baggage has been sent to the rear or is in readiness to send as soon as transportation is furnished.

There has been quite an addition made to our force within the last few days. Hancock’s Corps & part of the Fourth Crops are here so there is quite a strong force in the Valley but it is pretty badly scattered at present. A force about ten thousand strong moved up today but I am not informed of their destination—whether they are going into camp in the vicinity of Winchester or going to push up the Valley. Our Division is to be known in the future as Dwight’s Division of the Army of the Shenandoah & is not assigned to any Corps at present.

The weather is somewhat changeable but is quite pleasant most of the time except now and then a rainstorm which are not of very long duration. Most of the time is taken up by drills, inspections, reviews, &c. Had a recruit in my company last evening [who] has ben in the Confederate service 18 months but got tired & made up his mind to try ours for three years.

Sheridan & Grant are everlastingly thrashing the confederates about Richmond & at last compelled them to evacuate the place & to seek some other place of defense, but if they cannot hold Richmond after expending three years on its defenses, how can they expect to cope with our army in the open field & no defensive works?

The news at present are very encouraging & I hope that they may continue to be so & that Grant may cut Lee off & prevent a junction with Johns[t]on & demoralize & shatter his army so that they can never be got together again. The gentry of Richmond must have felt pretty indignant when Gen. [Godfrey] Weitzel marched his colored troops in & took possession of the place. But it is a good lesson & will learn them that they have got to submit to military law although it may be carried into force by the darkey. The Confederacy is at last on its last legs & must soon succumb to the hateful Yanks although he may be worse than the brute in their estimation.

Maj. Curtis returned to the regiment last evening from Frederick, Maryland. Capt. Baker has been ordered back & will probably return in a day or two. General Emory has been assigned to the command at Cumberland, Maryland.

Yunxy [?] is well but is getting somewhat demoralized. Has got to gumming it & loses his money about as fast as he earns it. Everything remains quiet. There has not been any attack by guerrillas for some time & things are getting to be quite monotonous, not having anything to disturb us for the last three months or over. Please write soon & tell me all that is going on about home &c. Give my love to all. From your affectionate brother, — D. W. Turner, Capt., 114th N. Y. Infantry Vol.

1862-63: Asa Holmes to Frank A. Holmes

An image of an unidentified Yank (Griffing Collection)

These letters were written by Pvt. Asa Holmes (1816-1863) who was was 46 years-old when he enlisted in Co. A, 114th New York Infantry on 1 August 1862 at Oxford, Chenango County, New York, to serve three years. He died of chronic diarrhea on 1 (or 2) November 1863 at Barracks Hospital at New Orleans.

Asa was the son of John Holmes (1760-1849) and Esther Wilcox Ensworth (1776-1863) of Oxford, Chenango County, New York. Asa wrote the letter home to Oxford where his wife, Eliza Ann (Odell) Holmes (1817-18xx) and their two children—Mary A. (b. 1842) and Frank (b. 1850)—were residing. By 1863, his son Frank was 13 years old and his daughter Mary was 18, married, and the mother of a child.

Seven companies of this regiment were recruited in Chenango County, and three in Madison. They rendezvoused at Norwich, where the regiment was organized and mustered into the U.S. service for three years on September 3, 1862. Three days later, it started for the front, moving to Binghamton by canal boats and proceeding from there to Baltimore. In November, it sailed for New Orleans as part of Banks’ expedition, and upon its arrival there, it was assigned to Weitzel’s (2nd) brigade, Augur’s (1st) division, 19th corps. It was stationed for a time at Brashear City and neighboring points, and it was first engaged at Fort Bisland, where it had 11 men wounded, 3 mortally. It did not participate in the Bayou Teche campaign, but joined its corps before Port Hudson on May 30, 1863, where it was actively engaged for 40 days in the siege and suffered severely in the grand assault of June 14. The loss of the regiment during the siege was 73 killed, wounded, and missing.

A letter from Asa’s captain states that Asa contracted the illness that killed him about the 9th of July but he remained with his regiment until 3 September 1863 when he was sent to the hospital. Asa was among the 192 men in the regiment who died of disease and other causes during the war.

[Note: see also Holmes, Asa. Civil War letters, 1863 June 16-17.  2 items. Located at Pearce Civil War Collection, Navarro College, Corsicana, Texas.]

Letter 1

Baltimore[Maryland]
September 22, 1862

Frank, I got your letter today. I was glad to hear from you that you was well. My health is good but the hardships I have to go through with. I have bought my vittles half of the time since I left Oxford. Those [that] ain’t got any money fair hard.

The war news today [is] that Old Stonewall Jackson was taken and 6 thousand prisoners with him. I have wrote two letters before this and sent you three papers. I will send you one tomorrow morning and you will get the latest news of war.

Thy bring into Baltimore from 100 to 150 every day or to prison. I want you should write when you leave all about it.

From your father, — Asa Holmes

Direct your letter as the same you did, Get what money you want. Enquire for paper. — Asa Holmes


Letter 2

Newport News, Va.
November 16, 1862

Frank, I haven’t heard from you this long time. My health is poor. Have got a bad cough. If I am on this vessel much longer, I shall die with 1200 on board. We have been on 16 days now. I don’t know where we shall go to yet. Tell sister to write to me Frank. Write soon.

Direct your letter to Asa Holmes, Fort Monroe, Va., Co. A, 114th Regiment New York Volunteers.

December 2nd, 1862

Frank, I wrote to you last night. Now I write to inform you that we was called up at midnight to go on board the vessel. The whole brigade numbers about 7,000 men, to be ready any minute to go. Don’t know where. Don’t make much difference now. I lay in my bunk to write this.

I sent fifty cents in the other letter to you. Also fifty in this. Ask Mr. Lewis if he has received my check and the money I sent.

My health is better but not good yet. I shall come around yet safe, I suppose. There is some hope I shan’t. Do the best you can till I come. Then I can tell you more than I can write about the war. — Asa Holmes

Elisa, take good care of Frank and not have him a nigger to no one. There is money enough to do it. — Asa Holmes


Letter 3

Quarantine Station Sixty Miles Below New Orleans
On Mississippi [River]
December 18, 1862

We have to lay here ten days. No vessel can pass here that have any sick on board. Every vessel has to be examined by the government doctor which comes on board, We had 200 sick—some with the ship fever, measles and typhoid fever and small pox and body lice by the bushel, and the itch and ship rash too.

Frank, I don’t know whether I put that money in the other letter or not, I was in such a hurry. I put some in this.

There is not but four houses here and them belong to the government for sick hospital. Frank, [I wish] you was here to see the orchards of oranges and lemons. Some as as big as pumpkins. We are on shore today. Snakes and alligators too numerous to mention. We can’t hear a word about the war here.

Keep up good courage. I shall be home by and bye. I am exposed to all kind of sickness. Hope you are well and all the rest. When I come to a stopping place, then I’ll tell you where to direct your letters. Then you must write a long letter to me.

I have seen the elephant all lover. I have took the first lesson with the rest of them.

To Frank A. Holmes, [from] Asa Holmes


Letter 4

December 15th 1862

Frank, my health is good now. I am on board the vessel yet. We are [with]in sixty miles of New Orleans. We shall reach there today. Plenty of oranges and lemons grow here. I only have five minutes to write this as we expect the steamer down the river every moment for twenty one.

We had a hard gale. The steamer they think is lost and all on board. She had on Company H, E, F, and G of 114th. Haven’t hear from her since the first days sail. When I land, I will write the particulars of the voyage. Don’t write till you hear from me.

Keep up good courage. Our fare is hard but I think I shall live through it. Don’t you suffer any for money. I send fifty cents in this to you. — Asa Holmes


Letter 5

New Orleans [Louisiana]
[January] 15th, 1863

Frank, I write but a few words to you for all letters [must be] to the office in fifteen minutes. i have wrote to Mr. Lewis what to do wit hthe money and let you have what you want. I told him to have you go to school all the time was gone. Go and see if he has got it. If he has, write it down in your book, the date of it too, and all money you get of him.

As for the war news, we get none. This is a beautiful country here. Splendid sugar plantations all around here. Very warm weather here. If tis cold in Old Chenango, I would like to be there today. I have seen a great deal since I started from home and expect to see more. Some of our boys have seen the elephant. They have been robbed of their money and put in jail too. Some of our most popular ones are most reckless ones. Now that is most generally the case. I mention no names. Time will tell.

Write Eliza, Mary A., D. Frank. Direct your letter to Asa Holmes, Co. A, 114 the Regt. N. Y. S. V., New Orleans, La. Banks Expedition


Letter 6

Brashear City [present day Morgan City, Louisiana]
February 10, 1863

Frank, I feel very uneasy to think I don’t get a letter from you. This is the last one I shall write to you or sister till I get one. This is the sixteenth I have wrote to you and got no answer and I think it’s time to stop now till one is [received]. Sister I think don’t think enough of me to write. I don’t feel good tonight. Amen

— Asa Holmes


Letter 7

Bayou Boeuf
Camp Mansfield
March 9, 1863

Rather bad news, Frank, I write. Yesterday one of the gunboats left Brashier City to go up the river with one company [Co. F] of the 160th Regiment on board and one of the General’s staff on board to see what they could discover. They got about two miles from the city where the rebels had fixed a battery with sixteen guns around a bend in the river. They got close on to it before they see it and they destroyed our boat and killed all on board but two. 1 The pilot jumped overboard and ran ashore. The General’s staff got shot through the face. The gunboat Calhoun started as soon as she heard the firing with Co. C of the 114th Regiment but she run on[to] a sand bar before she got there to help them. If they could of got there, both boats would [have] drove them back.

I don’t know what will be the next move. There is a great stir with the big officers today. It may be that we shall have to follow them up and whip them out. There has one gunboat gone down to the gulf to pilot two large gunboats up here. They say, “I hope so.” I think we shall have a big battle before long the way things shape—it is brewing pretty fast.

My health is good now. My cough has most left me—only when I have been out all night on guard or picket in the rain. It is very sickly in the regiment now. It is reported that there ain’t about two hundred and fifty for hard duty now. That is pretty small number from a large regiment.

Write how Hiram Lewis gets along. I wonder if Stephen Lewis feels as savage as ever about the war. I can tell him something about it he never thought of yet, nor I before I left home. Write how Elizabeth gets along since W. was married. I should think Mary A. Deila would write to me and let me know how she gets along this spring. I write two letters every week to you. You must go to school every day this summer without fail. Don’t think of working for no one this summer. Learning is better than money to you and get it while you can and improve it expressly in writing. You can write better, I think, than the last you wrote to me. I could not hardly read it. But I am glad to have a letter from you if it is only a straight mark on paper. It looks though you had some respects for me. I hope Mary A. Delia will send Elroy’s likeness to me. I know it is hard for her to write. It used to be for me but I can write a sheet of paper over in ten minutes now. Don’t think nothing of it. I know I don’t spell every word right, but I think you can make it out.

No more at present. — Asa Holmes

I have no letter tonight from you nor nobody else but most of the boys have got one and reading it. Never mind. I can be contented till I get one from Oxford. Frank, don’t you be kicked around by no one. — Asa Holmes

1 Asa is referring to the engagement at Pattersonville on 8 March 1863, where Co. F, Capt. Josiah P. Jewett, was on board the gunboat Diana during the action with the Confederate batteries. Co. F lost 6 killed and 16 wounded, Capt. Jewett being mortally wounded. 


Letter 8

Bayou Boeuf
March 24th 1863

Frank, I have a few moments time to inform you that we are here and no battle yet. We have been reinforced by another battery of twelve guns. It is a splendid one. We had lively times here the next night after we got here. The picket above ours fired three guns about midnight that alarmed the camp and they was ready in fifteen minutes. The battery was ready with their horses harnessed. I was on guard closest to the road. The general and his staff rode by backwards and forwards pretty often. The battery that was below where I was went up by [me] on the run. Every horse was straight. Nothing happened that night.

Yesterday General Banks was here and staff. He stayed about three hours. It must be on special business. They fired twelve guns when he arrived here. The soldiers don’t know nothing till they tell us to pick up and march. We are in camp where the mud is over shoe. We are on a sugar plantation. What makes the mud? We have had a heavy rain. It is very warm here now. [There are] all kinds of snakes here and descriptions and sizes. What would you think to have one crawl into your bed? They crawl into the tents nights.

I saw ripe blackberries and they say there is plenty of strawberries in New Orleans now and green peas. We soldiers can’t get them for they would be too good for us to eat. Hard tack and coffee is good enough for us, and to sleep on the ground. I have slept on the ground a great many nights [with] nothing but my coat and blankets. But that is nothing [compared to] what it is to suckle twins.

My health is good now. If I don’t catch cold, I shall go it through thick and thin. This war is a big thing but I can’t see it. Damn every Black abolitionist you see and the Peace Democrats [too] for they are no better than the secesh are for I have had a little chance to see how the thing runs here.

Got a letter from Isaac Stratton last night. I think now we shall be up the Mississippi before a great while. I think that will be the next move and I don’t care how quick if it is tomorrow. I will wait till the mail comes tonight before I write anymore. I can’t wait. I have got to go on picket tonight up the river about a mile above the camp to see what the rebels are doing up there.

The news today is that we are a going to have another Brigade join ours in a few days. That will make a large army. There is something up or they would not send more troops to help us. I wrote this in a hurry and my pen ain’t good for nothing. Good luck to all. I don’t care how. Write soon. — Asa Holmes


Letter 9

Port Hudson
July 1, 1863

Frank, I am at the breastworks firing at the rebels as usual. We have some pretty hot firing most of the time. We have got the rebels in a tight box now and we shall hold them there.

Gen. Banks called his troops together yesterday and made a long speech to them. He told them it was best to make another charge on all sides. He thinks we can take [Port Hudson] in that way & he thinks the sooner the better. I suppose we shall have to try it again [but] there will be a great many dead and wounded left on the field. But that the only way, I suppose, to take the fortress. It is a hard way, I tell you.

I told you in my other letters I should not write who was killed and wounded till we got through fighting. Then I will write the particulars—if I am alive. I have got to stand my chance with the rest of the soldiers.

July 2nd. Good morning to all of you. I have been to the breastworks facing the rebel balls for twenty-four hours and I am alive yet. I thank God. I have just got your letter dated June the 12th. I was sorry to hear you was so unwell but you and Frank must not feel bad about me. I shall come out alright. If I don’t, I am nothing but a poor cuss. We are a going to hold the 4th of July in the fort if we get into it. It will take a great many lives to get there. I shan’t worry about it. Farewell to all. — Asa Holmes

Get Harper’s Weekly May 27th and you will see the first battle.


Letter 10

Donaldsonville, La.
July 21st 1863

Well Frank, I am here yet. I have just come in off from picket. I have been out for twenty-four hours. We suffer from the heat amazingly. You think it is hot in old Chenango of the Fourth day of July? What do you think of it here now?

It is very peaceable here now for a few days. The soldiers are a resting & appear to enjoy themselves very much. I think this state will come back into the Union before a great while. I think there won’t be much more hard fighting in this state. The Rebels is getting pretty tired of it. There will be some guerrilla fights, of course, but no more big battles, I think. We may have a pretty hard battle with the Rebel army that we have got surrounded here but I think they will surrender before fighting very hard. Our army has taken a great many prisoners already from it & they say the Rebel soldiers are deserting very fast. There is from ten to twenty comes into our lines every day. They say they have got tired of this war & won’t fight anymore.

I was pleased to hear from Mr. Williams that he was so strong a Union man. You take such a man & if he is drafted, he won’t whine, but he will go like a brave soldier and fight to protect the Union forever.

Well I feel very well now except my eyes. They are very weak since I got over the fever & jaundice. It colored my shirts very yellow. There is such a blur over my eyes that I can’t hardly see to write or read. I hope they will get over it as I grow stronger. They are very much as they was when I had the measles. That bothered me very much. I sweat so much it runs into my eyes and makes them smart so.

Well, Mary A. Dealia, how do you get along — and Marting too? & the boy — is he well? If he is, I would like to see him. I will pay for his likeness if you will take the pains to send it to me. This is the last time I shall write about it. You can send it or not. I will pay all expenses. I shall have money by and by & if I die, you will have part of it — or your boy — so it makes no difference. Eliza, write to me whether you got my two letters I wrote before this. I don’t want none of you worrying about me. I am here & you are there — all of you — & I am but one alone by myself. Is Ma fetch round alright yet? I don’t let nothing trouble me.

I sit here a writing while there is a regiment getting onto a transport for some place, I don’t know where. They are the Twelfth [12th] Connecticut that belong to our brigade. They have been with us ever since we have been in Louisiana. The 8th Vermont has got marching orders today for someplace too. They belong to Weitzel’s [2nd] Brigade too. It may be our [turn] next. We can’t tell.

Well, Frank, I have got a good silver-plated knife I am going to fetch you when I come home. It is a dirk knife with a spring in the back of it.

Farewell to all, — Asa Holmes

Write soon. Direct your letters as you always have. They will follow the regiment.