Category Archives: 4th New Hampshire Infantry

1861: Bradford A. Hurd to Luther Hurd

I could not find an image of Bradley but here is a cdv of an unidentified New Hampshire soldier photographed by A. W. Kimball of Manchester, N. H. (Dave Morin Collection)

Bradford A. Hurd (1832-1863) of Somersworth, New Hampshire was a 25 year-old shoemaker when he volunteered on 2 September 1861 as a private in Co. B, 4th New Hampshire Infantry. Just six months earlier he had married Carrie F. Bailey. His parents were James Hurd (1796-1876) and Abigail Wadilla (1798-1848) of Sanford, York county, Maine.

Bradford died at a hospital on 21 June 1863 from wounds to his leg and ankle caused by a shell on the night of 17 June 1863 while on fatigue duty at the upper point of Folly Island, South Carolina. Bradford’s commanding officer, Lt. Fred Kendell, claimed that the fatigue party was in the process of preparing the ground to erect batteries for the purpose of shelling Morris Island when the enemy noticed the activity and fired at them, mortally wounding Bradford. He was carried back to camp and his leg was amputated in the regimental hospital but they were unable to save him.

Some of Bradford’s war correspondence is reportedly housed in the Georgia Historical Society of Savannah.

Bradford wrote this letter to his younger brother, Luther J. Hurd (1842-1881).

Bombardment & Capture of Forts Walker & Beauregard, Port Royal, S. C., Nov. 7, 1861.

T R A N S C R I P T I O N

Hilton Head, South Carolina
December 2, 1861

Dear Brother,

I received your very kind letter last night, December 1st, and was very glad to hear from you once more. You don’t know how much pleasure it gives me to hear from home much more than it would if I was at Great Falls. The reason is I cannot get so much as a paper to read here and when I get a letter from a friend, it is a good treat to me. Besides that, I love to get letters from anyone.

We arrived here on the 7th of last month and had a battle with the rebels which lasted six hours and we whipped them badly and made them run. [See Battle of Port Royal] We took everything they had consisting in cotton, corn, guns, rice, cannons, cloth, and two forts. We took more than five hundred thousand dollars from the, We took thirty pieces of cannon, oranges, pineapples, sweet potatoes, peanuts, and everything almost you can mention of which we are feasting on.

We had a hard time coming here on board the boat [USS Baltic]. We was in a gale 18 days before we arrived here. Three days would have been long enough to come here had the wind been fair and we was without much food for ten days. No one can tell the scene but those that passed through it. Nay, I never see another such a time. I have not space to tell you all the details on this sheet of paper. Luther, how would you like that? But after all the hardships that I have passed through, I do not feel anything like giving it up. I am willing to do anything to save my country from ruin.

You said perhaps I was not more than two hundred miles from George. If he is at home, I am not more than fifty from him. You said you wanted me to send you something and if I can, I will send you a box of oranges and pineapples. Perhaps you will not want to hear from me very often for you will have to pay the postage on the letters for they will not take three cents and I can’t get any stamps. But if I live to get home, I will pay you. So Luther, be a good boy and write to me as often as you can. Give [my] love to Laura and the rest and I will write to them all soon as I can. — Bradford Hurd

1862: John Wells Sanborn to Friend Luther

I could not find an image of John but here is one of George Rumsey who served in the same company (Photo Sleuth)

The following letter was written by John Wells Sanborn (1843-1930) of Co. D, 4th New Hampshire Infantry. An obituary, published in the Palm Beach Post of 29 July 1930, reports that John was born in Sanbornton, Belknap county, New Hampshire on 7 May 1843. “He saw three years active service and during the capture of Morris Island was wounded and spent the remainder of the war in hospitals, being honorably discharged in September 1864.” After the war, John left New Hampshire to drive a bull team from Kansas City to Denver and enjoy life in Colorado. In 1874 he started a sheep ranch and eventually settled in Greeley, Colorado in 1884 where he lived until 1912. He then relocated to Lake City, Florida where he died in 1930. Census records reveal that John was the son of Christopher Sanborn (1803-1902) and his second wife, Mehitable Philbrick (1809-1883)

In this letter, John. gives a good description of Ferandina, Jacksonville and St. Augustine as the 4th New Hampshire made its way to Fort Marion where they would remain in garrison until October 1862.

T R A N S C R I P T I O N

Fort Marion
St. Augustine, Florida
May 3, 1862

Friend Luther,

I received your letter yesterday and was mighty glad to hear from you. I reckon there was no one in Co. D that felt any better than I did when I got your letter and papers and the same from home. I had been looking for news from you for some time and well I know I should get something worth reading.

Well about Governor [Nathaniel S.] Berry’s paying us our state pay, I guess if you could hear the tall swearing some of the soldiers get off about him you would think he had not payed us nor has he yet. Nor is there any prospect of his doing so very soon. So for once the Democrats don’t blow for nothing.

Ruth Smith’s marriage was news to me. What does King David think to have his boys leaving him so in his old age? I delivered the tobacco you sent to Horace who I guess thought it was a curious present. He had some bad spells of bleeding at the nose a few days ago but is now doing well.

When we went to Fernandina, we were all well pleased for although it is not so large or wealthy a place as this place, or Jacksonville, yet there is something about it that seems more like our pleasant hills in New Hampshire. The buildings and land look much more like those at home. The streets are of good width, well laid out, and a little sandy with many fine shade trees. In going up the river to Jacksonville, interesting sights presented themselves all of the way. Most of the way the banks are thickly wooded. Now and then you see cleared spots with a few negro huts here. You always see the occupants with flags of some kinds raised and waving handkerchiefs and showing every demonstrations of joy. On a little farther you see a good building looking out from some remote spot among the trees—also the negro shanties scattered around it. At these places you generally see white women, but not a man, if any there be dare show their heads. Corn was just large enough to be plainly seen. All these things with the expectation of being saluted with a ball or shell kept up quite an excitement.

Nearing Jacksonville, clouds of smoke could be seen rising on both sides of the river. This was the rebels last work before leaving. They burned a lot of sawmills, foundries, machine shops and a large hotel. Nearly everything on shore seemed to be on fire. There were but few white people left here. The Blacks were thicker than any other place I have been to. There are a large number of stores there [but] many of them had everything cleared out before we got there. Others were shut up with goods in them. The houses were mostly larger and more stately looking than at Fernandina. The streets are wide, very sandy, and hard to drill in. Nearly every street and garden are thivkly set out with fine shade trees.

There was no much to see in coming from Jacksonville here as the water came down in sheets as we came down the river. This is a peculiar looking place—narrow streets, little old unpainted houses except the stone ones which are painted with a coat of mortar. But two or three streets are wide enough to have any shade trees. Nearly every garden is filled with fruit trees of some kind, corn, potatoes, and such stuff is about as large as it is at home [by] the 4th of July. There is hardly a white man in this place but any quantity of fair damsels. 1

Direct your letters to me, 4th N. H. Regt., Co. D, Port Royal, S. C. Nothing else is needed. Yours truly, — John W. Sanborn

Write me another string of news when you get this.


1 To the annoyance of the soldiers of the 4th New Hampshire, the young damsels would often gather at the Plaza in St. Augustine, visibly chipping off pieces from the flagpole stump as souvenirs. This was from the flagpole that once waved the Confederate standard before they cut down the pole to prevent Union troops from flying the Stars and Stripes from it. [Source: St. August During the Civil War by Omega G. East, Florida Historical Quarterly, 1952.]

1863: Asbrah Pike Howe to Eddie A. Warner

I could not find an image of Asbrah but here is a cdv of Albert Henry Clay Jewett who also served in Co. D, 4th New Hampshire Infantry until he was commissioned an officer in Co. I. (Dave Morin Collection)

The following letter was written by 32 year-old Asbrah Pike Howe (1831-1897) of Acworth, Sullivan county, New Hampshire. Asbra was the son of Ephraim Howe (1791-1865) and Charlotte Pike (1795-1884). He was married in 1853 to Diadema Hull (1825-1910) and had a two year-old son named Frank when he enlisted in Co. D, 4th New Hampshire Infantry.

Asbrah wrote the letter to his hometown friend, informing him of siege operations his regiment was involved in on Morris Island near Charleston, South Carolina. From the regimental history we learn that, “The spring of 1863 opened with an attack upon Morris Island, then followed the siege of Charleston. Gen. Q A. Gillmore commanded the expedition. The division in which the Fourth New Hampshire found itself was commanded by Gen. A. H. Terry. The Fourth brigaded with the Third New Hampshire, Sixth Connecticut, and a battalion of sharpshooters. This brigade was commanded by Col. Louis Bell of the Fourth. Two long sand-bar islands on the coast just south of Charleston harbor formed the basis of an attack upon Charleston. Folly Island was captured with very little resistance.

The Fourth New Hampshire worked twenty-one nights in building batteries to attack Morris Island, which is separated from Folly Island by a narrow creek. On the 10th of July the Fourth participated in an attack on Morris Island. The successive charges on Fort Wagner were repulsed by the enemy. On the 23d of July the Fourth dug the first trench and planted the first chevaux-de-frise, for the long siege of Fort Wagner. From the 23d of July to the 7th of September may be looked upon as one continued battle under the blazing sun of South Carolina—digging trenches, advancing lines, repelling attacks and doing severe out post duty. The morning of September 7, when the line was formed for the final charge, the news came that the fort was evacuted. The capture of Fort Wagner resulted in the immediate capture of the whole island.” 

Transcription

Addressed to Master Eddie A. Warner, Acworth, New Hampshire; postmarked Port Royal, S. C.

Camp Morris Island, South Carolina
4th [New Hampshire] Regiment, Co. D, USA
August 22, 1863

Friend Eddie,

I was somewhat surprised and pleased to receive a letter from you which came in due time under date of August 9th. I had almost begun to think that I had no friends in Acworth outside of my own family for I have received but very few letters since I left home except those which came from home.

The bombardment of the defenses around Charleston commenced the 17th of this month and still continues but we are strictly forbidden by a General Order from Gen. Gilmore to write any particulars in regard to the progress of events.

Suffice it to say, therefore, that the general features of the case are favorable to the Union cause. Some casualties occur daily but the loss of life on our side has not yet been very great. Last night one of the sergeants of this company, while on picket, was hit by the fragment of a shell thrown from Fort Johnson from the effect of which he died this morning. I suppose all eyes are turned anxiously in the direction of Charleston waiting to see it in the hands of the Federal army but you must wait patiently for it is no small thing to subdue a city so strongly fortified.

My health is middling good at present but I have not been able to do duty for about a month, but am on duty now. I must draw to a close by wishing these few lines will find you in good health and spirits and hoping to hear from you again soon. Convey my compliments to all inquiring friends. With much respect, I remain your sincere friend, — A. P. Howe