Manuscripts
David Low Huntington Civil War diary
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Diaries and correspondence of David Woosley
Manuscripts
The small group of items includes two diaries kept by David Woosley while he was a Moravian missionary to the Cahuilla, Cupeño, and Luiseño Indians of southern California. Woosley would travel to the Pala Indian Reservation, the Pechanga Reservation, the Potrero Indian Reservation, and the Fort Yuma Reservation, as well as La Jolla, Rincon, Temecula, and Banning, California, to teach Sabbath School and conduct church services. In his diaries, Woosley includes details regarding his interaction with other missionaries, including William H. Weinland, his experiences with the Indians, their attitude towards Christianity, and their attendance at his church services. One of the diaries contains lists of children that attended Sabbath School at La Jolla and Pechanga from 1908-1911. The other items in the group are several letters, from 1940, written by various missionaries regarding the 50th anniversary of the Moravian's mission work in southern California; an incomplete booklet entitled "Proceedings of the Society for Propagating the Gospel Among the Heathen" for the year 1914 (Woosley is author of one of the entries); and a photograph of the faculty and staff of the Moravian Theological Seminary taken in 1896
mssHM 66349-66358
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Charles Lee Civil War diary
Manuscripts
Diary that Charles Lee kept from January 1 to November 10, 1864. In addition to camp life and multiple vows to lay off whiskey, the diary covers visits to the regiment by Ulysses S. Grant and Joshua Thomas Owen, and gives brief accounts of the battles at Morton's Ford (1864, Feb. 6 - 7), Po River, (May 10, 1864), and the Petersburg campaign, including Jerusalem Plank Road (June 22 - 23), Strawberry Plains (Aug. 14), Ream''s Station (Aug. 25), Weldon Railroad (Aug. 25), and Fort Sedgwick (Oct. 27) and describes Finley hospital which Lee described as "a singular place" with the "Band playing at one End of the Ward outside and the Doctors performing an operation at the other."
mssHM 30476
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John Coyle Civil War diary
Manuscripts
A diary kept by John Coyle while serving as an agent of the United States Christian Commission from July to October, 1864. Daily entries give detailed accounts of Coyle's ministry in Alexandria, Virginia, including hospitals, churches, schools, and prisons and his encounters with the patients, physicians, nurses, preachers, congregants, students, and inmates; the accounts of his ministry to soldiers wounded in the battles of the Overland campaign include African-American troops. Coyle met with many African-American preachers, including Leland Warring, a former slave turned preacher, the founder of Alexandria's "contraband school." Waring autographed the front flyleaf of the diary commemorating their meeting. Coyle's descriptions of the city hospitals include accounts of the L'Ouverture Hospital for African-American troops. The entries also describe some sightseeing, including a day trip to Mount Vernon. Reverend Coyle found service in the field less satisfying, as he was mostly engaged in distributing goods and newspapers, with very few opportunities to preach, but he did take the time to visit neighboring communities.
mssHM 83835
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Henry Boyer Civil War diary
Manuscripts
Diary kept in Lexington, Kentucky. Laid in: tariff of prices on goods exposed to sale by the sutler.
mssHM 30479
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David Henry Fay pocket diary
Manuscripts
Pocket diary for the year 1862 kept by David Henry Fay. Includes daily entries and sections for memoranda, cash accounts, and bills payable and receivable. Typescript of diary also present.
mssHM 55578
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Henry Breidenthal Civil War diary
Manuscripts
Breidenthal's diary that covers the month from October 10 to November 12, 1861, when the 3rd Regiment was attached to Reynolds's command at Cheat Mountain, W. Va. Breidethal, being and a devout Christian and possessing of an indomitable if somewhat morose personality, set to out devote his spare time to writing a diary in large part to avoid "the society here" that he found was "not congenial to my tastes." (He dismissed "the general character of our soldiery" as "lowbred" and their aspirations "rising but little above the instinct of the animal creature.") The daily entry contain detailed expositions on his Bible reading, including political implications of the Scripture, (Breidenthal was a passionate abolitionist who counted "our complicity with African Slavery -- a crime of sufficient enormity to sink this great nation" as one of the great sins and regarded "Bible defenders of the American slavery" as "false prophets"); his opinions on the books he was reading (he studiously avoided "trashy novels" and "obscene books," preferring sermons by Henry Ward Beecher, a biography of Cavour, or a "Life of Balaam, by Rev. Hatfield"); political news, including discussion of Fremont's proclamation of Aug. 30, 1861; and camp life, especially entertainment (of which he heartily disapproved, being particularly troubled by the widespread gambling, "not edifying conversation and vulgar songs" as well as dancing and smoking); regimental gossip and jockeying for promotions. He also recounts, in great detail, the inquiry into the death of a soldier killed by a sentinel too scared to give the required challenge.
mssHM 68485-68486