I have received permission from Mr. Robert A. McKintosh of the SC State Archives to post portions of his book: "Dear Martha ...' : The Confederate War letters of a South Carolina soldier, Alexander Faulkner Fewell." Pvt Fewell was a member of Company E, 17th South Carolina Volunteers, also known as the "Indian Land Tigers." The book is very rare and has been out of print since 1976. If I could get enough interest generated, Mr. McKintosh would like to reprint it. It is well footnoted and organized.
Weirdly enough, one of my own relatives, George W. Deas is mentioned in the letters. Mr. McKintosh is a descendant of A.F. Fewell. So both of us were discussing the 17th South Carolina at the State Archives and we didn't realize until later that we both had relatives in the same company. Apparently my ancestor George hauled a box home for Alex and also brought him some socks. 145 years, we would be discussing those men!
So I will print as many letters as possible but, I would like support to have this book republished. With over 270 letters preserved by McKintosh's family, this book also includes letters received by Fewell in the field, the reader gets to follow the full conversation, so we get news from the battlefront and the response of the folks back home.
Camp College Green
Columbia, Dec 1st , 1861
John W. Fewell
Dear Son
I Rec'd your letter on Friday last with all t[/CENTER]he news and [it] was more satisfactory than any letter I have received. I have not much to write about.
We leave this place in the morning for Hampton's Race Course 19 which is said to be about four miles from Columbia. We have to go on foot and perhaps carry our knapsacks, guns & e. It is near the Rail Road. I know nothing of the place and would rather remain here but men in camp annoy the Citizens of Columbia too much at night. Your Uncle Sam & myself are quite well and all of our Company are in good health. I have just got to my tent after getting my dinner which was rough but with good health men can almost eat anything. We get 1 1/4 lb beef per man daily also corn meal, & flour, rice & salt. this is all the rations they can give us. I sent you my ambrotype 20 the other day, some say it is not a good one. I shall send another when we get our uniforms.
Martha we are speaking of getting a uniform having it cut out and sent home to be made. I shall send you mine and there will be others sent to the society. 21 If they will have them made, which I have no doubt they will do with pleasure. Write to me as often as you can. I shall write often as I can but don't expect it as often as I have written this week, it seems to me that I have not been absent One month. I should like to see you all but we must not fret. He who rules all things knows how to try us and there is not a doubt but what all things are for the best. Trust in him and fear not- I wrote to your Uncle John on Friday to come down and bring you with him if your Ma was willing. If he comes tell him to write day he will be down and I will meet him in Columbia at the Depot. It is quite warm here, at least pleasantly so and dry. Your Uncle D Williams 22 is well and holds the same office in his company that I do in mine.
I hope this may find you all well. Tell Tom 23 Your Aunt Mat 24 & Martha to write to me and not think because I don't write that I have forgot them. I cannot say when I will be home. I want to come about the time you will be killing hogs if I can or by Christmas at least. Tell Sam I heard him hollow as soon as I read your letter, Fanny, Curly head, Dick, Ben & the baby.
Martha you may think I never feel loansome in camp but I do think it one of the lonesomest places in the world unless excited by business. Just leave a man alone and he is just as certain to think of home and family as the needle flies around and around the compass and yet always settles at one point. Direct your letters until you hear from me again to Columbia (and not Camp College Green) care Capt Meacham.
Write to me soon just such a a letter as you sent me. It gives me all the news.
A. F. Fewell
7 Oclock I went to Church this evening in Camp and heard an excellent Sermon.
Ebenezer 25 Dec 3 1861
Ebenezerville Dec 3 1861
A. F Fewell
Dear Pa
I received your letter on of Monday last. I believe I have no news to write to you. We are all well and hope this letter will find you so. There was a drove of hogs went pass here on Sunday last of 250. they were not for sale. They were taking them to Liberty Hill. 26 I and Warren 27 went to mill this morning and got home by dinner time. We took nine bushels of wheat. Grand pa is here now. Uncle Johnny says for you to write him how long you want him to stay here. He says he he will stay all year if you want him. He wants you to write him and let him know. He has to stay so that Ulyssus 28 can come home. Mar and Grand ma sends you and Uncle Sam a box of provisions. Grand ma sends the same box. Mar sends you a raw chicken and too cooked ones and a poke of rye. And to the things Aunt Mary Williams 29 is going to send Uncle Dan's box with it. We will be done pickin cotton tomorrow.
Uncle Johnny says for you to write whne you will be home so that he can ready to kill the hogs. Mar says she will let me come down there. Tell uncle Sam howdy for me. All the choldren send their love to you. Grand ma is going to kill too hogs in the morning. Uncle Johnny had five ploughs laid at McClouds Shop 30 . The gin is fixed the way you wanted it. I do hope that I will get to come down to see you again. The people met at Rock Hill31 the other day to stop the speculation. 32 They are going to send something to the legislature. Our hogs are fat. Old Dr. Moore33 dies last night. You and Uncle Sam must writ.
Yours truly
J. W. Fewell
19 Hampton's Race Course was only two miles from Columbia. It was built by the Columbia Jockey Club and named for Wade Hampton II.
20 A photograph made on glass.
21 The Ladies Aid Society was formed by the Ebenezer Prebyterian Church to help supply the soldiers with any needed items.
22 Daniel C. Willimas was a private in Company E and the husband of Mary May a sister of Martha Ann Fewell. Dan later became commissary Sergeant of the 17th S. C. Infantry and served until paroled at Appomattox, Va. On April 9, 1865.
23 Robert Thomas May “Tom” was a younger brother of Martha Ann Fewell born in 1846. he spent part o the war as a student at the Arsenal Academy in Columbia, S.C. Then on October 17, 1864, Tom joined Company E as a private and served until paroled at Apppomattox, Va.
24 Alex's sister Matilda born in 1836, she married Simon M. Mills and lived until 1876.
25 Ebenezer (or Ebenezerville) was a small community founded about 1785 in York County, S. C. It was located 15 east of York the county seat.
26 A small community 50 miles south of Ebenezer.
27 A young slave belonging to Alex F. Fewell.
28 Alex's cousin Ulysses Adkins who with John Barron Sr. helped run his cousins farm when he was away at war. Due to a leg injury. Ulysses never served in the Confederate Army.
29 A sister of Martha Ann Fewell and the wife of Dan Williams, a private in Company E.
30 William McCloud was the town blacksmith.
31 Rock Hill was founded in 1852 by some of the residents of Ebenezer and by 1860 had a population of over 100 people. It's rapid growth was due to the railroad which brought commerce and industry to the town.
32 Speculators frequently bought an item in short supply to sell later at inflated prices.
33 Dr. William Moore was a 71 year old retired medical doctor who died in York, S.C. On December 1, 1861.
Weirdly enough, one of my own relatives, George W. Deas is mentioned in the letters. Mr. McKintosh is a descendant of A.F. Fewell. So both of us were discussing the 17th South Carolina at the State Archives and we didn't realize until later that we both had relatives in the same company. Apparently my ancestor George hauled a box home for Alex and also brought him some socks. 145 years, we would be discussing those men!
So I will print as many letters as possible but, I would like support to have this book republished. With over 270 letters preserved by McKintosh's family, this book also includes letters received by Fewell in the field, the reader gets to follow the full conversation, so we get news from the battlefront and the response of the folks back home.
Camp College Green
Columbia, Dec 1st , 1861
John W. Fewell
Dear Son
I Rec'd your letter on Friday last with all t[/CENTER]he news and [it] was more satisfactory than any letter I have received. I have not much to write about.
We leave this place in the morning for Hampton's Race Course 19 which is said to be about four miles from Columbia. We have to go on foot and perhaps carry our knapsacks, guns & e. It is near the Rail Road. I know nothing of the place and would rather remain here but men in camp annoy the Citizens of Columbia too much at night. Your Uncle Sam & myself are quite well and all of our Company are in good health. I have just got to my tent after getting my dinner which was rough but with good health men can almost eat anything. We get 1 1/4 lb beef per man daily also corn meal, & flour, rice & salt. this is all the rations they can give us. I sent you my ambrotype 20 the other day, some say it is not a good one. I shall send another when we get our uniforms.
Martha we are speaking of getting a uniform having it cut out and sent home to be made. I shall send you mine and there will be others sent to the society. 21 If they will have them made, which I have no doubt they will do with pleasure. Write to me as often as you can. I shall write often as I can but don't expect it as often as I have written this week, it seems to me that I have not been absent One month. I should like to see you all but we must not fret. He who rules all things knows how to try us and there is not a doubt but what all things are for the best. Trust in him and fear not- I wrote to your Uncle John on Friday to come down and bring you with him if your Ma was willing. If he comes tell him to write day he will be down and I will meet him in Columbia at the Depot. It is quite warm here, at least pleasantly so and dry. Your Uncle D Williams 22 is well and holds the same office in his company that I do in mine.
I hope this may find you all well. Tell Tom 23 Your Aunt Mat 24 & Martha to write to me and not think because I don't write that I have forgot them. I cannot say when I will be home. I want to come about the time you will be killing hogs if I can or by Christmas at least. Tell Sam I heard him hollow as soon as I read your letter, Fanny, Curly head, Dick, Ben & the baby.
Martha you may think I never feel loansome in camp but I do think it one of the lonesomest places in the world unless excited by business. Just leave a man alone and he is just as certain to think of home and family as the needle flies around and around the compass and yet always settles at one point. Direct your letters until you hear from me again to Columbia (and not Camp College Green) care Capt Meacham.
Write to me soon just such a a letter as you sent me. It gives me all the news.
A. F. Fewell
7 Oclock I went to Church this evening in Camp and heard an excellent Sermon.
Ebenezer 25 Dec 3 1861
Ebenezerville Dec 3 1861
A. F Fewell
Dear Pa
I received your letter on of Monday last. I believe I have no news to write to you. We are all well and hope this letter will find you so. There was a drove of hogs went pass here on Sunday last of 250. they were not for sale. They were taking them to Liberty Hill. 26 I and Warren 27 went to mill this morning and got home by dinner time. We took nine bushels of wheat. Grand pa is here now. Uncle Johnny says for you to write him how long you want him to stay here. He says he he will stay all year if you want him. He wants you to write him and let him know. He has to stay so that Ulyssus 28 can come home. Mar and Grand ma sends you and Uncle Sam a box of provisions. Grand ma sends the same box. Mar sends you a raw chicken and too cooked ones and a poke of rye. And to the things Aunt Mary Williams 29 is going to send Uncle Dan's box with it. We will be done pickin cotton tomorrow.
Uncle Johnny says for you to write whne you will be home so that he can ready to kill the hogs. Mar says she will let me come down there. Tell uncle Sam howdy for me. All the choldren send their love to you. Grand ma is going to kill too hogs in the morning. Uncle Johnny had five ploughs laid at McClouds Shop 30 . The gin is fixed the way you wanted it. I do hope that I will get to come down to see you again. The people met at Rock Hill31 the other day to stop the speculation. 32 They are going to send something to the legislature. Our hogs are fat. Old Dr. Moore33 dies last night. You and Uncle Sam must writ.
Yours truly
J. W. Fewell
19 Hampton's Race Course was only two miles from Columbia. It was built by the Columbia Jockey Club and named for Wade Hampton II.
20 A photograph made on glass.
21 The Ladies Aid Society was formed by the Ebenezer Prebyterian Church to help supply the soldiers with any needed items.
22 Daniel C. Willimas was a private in Company E and the husband of Mary May a sister of Martha Ann Fewell. Dan later became commissary Sergeant of the 17th S. C. Infantry and served until paroled at Appomattox, Va. On April 9, 1865.
23 Robert Thomas May “Tom” was a younger brother of Martha Ann Fewell born in 1846. he spent part o the war as a student at the Arsenal Academy in Columbia, S.C. Then on October 17, 1864, Tom joined Company E as a private and served until paroled at Apppomattox, Va.
24 Alex's sister Matilda born in 1836, she married Simon M. Mills and lived until 1876.
25 Ebenezer (or Ebenezerville) was a small community founded about 1785 in York County, S. C. It was located 15 east of York the county seat.
26 A small community 50 miles south of Ebenezer.
27 A young slave belonging to Alex F. Fewell.
28 Alex's cousin Ulysses Adkins who with John Barron Sr. helped run his cousins farm when he was away at war. Due to a leg injury. Ulysses never served in the Confederate Army.
29 A sister of Martha Ann Fewell and the wife of Dan Williams, a private in Company E.
30 William McCloud was the town blacksmith.
31 Rock Hill was founded in 1852 by some of the residents of Ebenezer and by 1860 had a population of over 100 people. It's rapid growth was due to the railroad which brought commerce and industry to the town.
32 Speculators frequently bought an item in short supply to sell later at inflated prices.
33 Dr. William Moore was a 71 year old retired medical doctor who died in York, S.C. On December 1, 1861.
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