From "Sarah Morgan; The Civil War Diary Of A Southern Woman"
Aug 19th (1862, Baton Rouge, LA)
Yesterday two Colonels, Shields & Breaux,(30th LA) both of whom distinguished themselves in the battle of Baton Rouge, dined here. Their personal appearance was by no means calculated to fill one with awe, or even to give one an idea of their rank; for their dress consisted of merely cotonade pants, flanel [sic] shirts, and extremely short jackets, (which, however, is rapidly becoming the uniform of the Confederates [sic] States)...
Aug 23rd
...This morning Withers' battery [1st Mississippi Light Artillery] passed Mr Elder's on their way to P. Hudson, and stopped to get water. There were several buckets served by several servants; but I took possession of one, and filled the canteens as fast as the soldiers handed them to me, to their great amusement. What a profusion of thanks over a can of water! It made me smile, and they smiled to see my work, so it was all very funny. It was astonishing to see the number of Yankee canteens in the possession of our men. Almost all those who fought a B.R. are provided with them. In their canvass, and wire cases, with neat stoppers, they are easily distinguished from our rough, flat, tin ones.
John Eric Suttorp
Aug 19th (1862, Baton Rouge, LA)
Yesterday two Colonels, Shields & Breaux,(30th LA) both of whom distinguished themselves in the battle of Baton Rouge, dined here. Their personal appearance was by no means calculated to fill one with awe, or even to give one an idea of their rank; for their dress consisted of merely cotonade pants, flanel [sic] shirts, and extremely short jackets, (which, however, is rapidly becoming the uniform of the Confederates [sic] States)...
Aug 23rd
...This morning Withers' battery [1st Mississippi Light Artillery] passed Mr Elder's on their way to P. Hudson, and stopped to get water. There were several buckets served by several servants; but I took possession of one, and filled the canteens as fast as the soldiers handed them to me, to their great amusement. What a profusion of thanks over a can of water! It made me smile, and they smiled to see my work, so it was all very funny. It was astonishing to see the number of Yankee canteens in the possession of our men. Almost all those who fought a B.R. are provided with them. In their canvass, and wire cases, with neat stoppers, they are easily distinguished from our rough, flat, tin ones.
John Eric Suttorp
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