April 11, 1864: Photograph of Henry Warner

henry warner

Henry Warner Jr. was the younger brother of John Riddle Warner, the grandfather of the poet Marianne Moore.  Henry served in  Independent Battery G from August 1862 until June 1865.

Citation: Unidentified photographer, photograph of Henry Warner. ca. 1864. Moore XII:01:18b.

April 9, 1864: Photograph of Henry Warner

henry warner

Henry Warner Jr. was the younger brother of John Riddle Warner, the grandfather of the poet Marianne Moore.  Henry served in  Independent Battery G from August 1862 until June 1865.

Citation: Charles Cohill, photograph of Henry Warner Jr. Philadelphia, ca. 1864. Moore XII:01:18d.

March 30, 1864: Henry and Mary Warner to John Warner

Henry and Mary Warner lived in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania, now part of Pittsburgh. They are the great-grandparents of poet Marianne Moore.  By the 1860s they had three surviving children:  John, Henry, and Anne. Their letters to John, a Presbyterian minister living in Gettysburg, are preserved as part of Marianne Moore’s family papers.

Moore VI-6-3 p1 letter to John 3-30-64 300dpi Moore VI-6-3 p2 letter to John 3-30-64 300dpi

Transcript:

Allegheny City, Wednesday, March 30. 1864

Dear John. Hoping Baby & yourself are well, I now sit down to write you a letter as from Mother – Henry left us on Friday night, and his visit was a very uncomfortable one to us. The day after he came he prepared for Sewickly, I asked him where he was going? He said to Sewickly, it knocked me down so much that I could hardly speak. I asked him if he was engaged to her, he told me yes. I bursted out crying and told him that he said, in promise to me, that he would not do anything that would worry me; it is two years ago since he made that promise to me, then he left without making me one word of an answer, and did not come back until 12 OClock next day. I told him that I hoped, I would be quietly laid in the cemetery before that would take place; I told him that he did not do as his brother done, that he did not disgrace us, nor himself; Had we known that he was going to Sewickly, there would never be one invited into the door on his account; I went to a great deal of trouble & expense on his account but had I known that he was going to Sewickly I would not have honoured him that much. He went the second time, and staid that night and part of the second day. We never said one unkind word to him about it, but we were very cool and very broken hearted all the time he was here, and it made me so irritable that I could hardly speak a kind word to any one; We have but three, and you know the circumstances that one is placed in, now we bless God, that if Henry is lost, we still have you.

We expected a letter from you this morning, as you were to lecture on Monday night, we thought you would surely on Tuesday drop a line in the Harrisburgh P.O. which we would have this morning giving us to know what success you have had, let it be good or bad we want to know it if it had been only one line, it would suffice for the present. We are all in tolerable health.

Your affectionate father & mother

Henry & Mary Warner

 

Citation: Henry and Mary Warner, autograph letter signed to John Riddle Warner.  Allegheny City [Pittsburgh],30 March 1864. Moore VI:06:3

March 23, 1864: Henry and Mary Warner to John Warner

Henry and Mary Warner lived in Allegheny City, Pennsylvania, now part of Pittsburgh. They are the great-grandparents of poet Marianne Moore.  By the 1860s they had three surviving children:  John, Henry, and Anne. Their letters to John, a Presbyterian minister living in Gettysburg, are preserved as part of Marianne Moore’s family papers.

Moore VI-6-3 p1 letter to John 3-23-64 300dpi Moore VI-6-3 p2 letter to John 3-23-64 300dpi

Transcript:

Allegheny City, Wednesday, March 23rd.1864 – 2 ½ P.M.

Dear John, your Welcome letter of Monday 21st, we received this morning, just as I brought it in (8 1/2 o’clock) in came Dr. Rodgers, who was on his way over to Pittsburgh, and wished to see Henry before he would leave for the East; Henry will leave on Friday evening 25th on 8 OClock train, so as to arrive at the Fort on 26th it being the day on which his furlough will expire. On last Sabbath he attended meeting in our church three times, forenoon, afternoon, & night. Your father did not go at night, but Mother & Henry did; On last Friday we had a few friends to take tea and spend the evening. Rev’d J.B. Clarke, Lieut Lewis of Fort Delaware, from Birmingham, Mrs & Miss Eliza Lewis, Robert, Anne, & their two children, Mrs Lockhart, & Miss Mary her daughter, Miss Annie Curry next door neighbor, & Miss Agnes Stevenson & your Bro Hy. I think all told. We are glad to know, “Baby & yourself are very well”. Late in spring or summer will be a long time to look for, but if we only have the pleasure of seeing each other then, alive and well it will be a joyful meeting; there is quite ‘a stir’ here about a sanitary fair, which is to be held in either Pittsburgh or Allegheny, both cities contend for the honor, and it is not decided yet where it will be held. Uncle Maxwell still exists and is pretty well. Acy has had a young daughter, and all is well up there; Next Friday week, Anne will be moving, and as you say, we do sincerely hope mother will get through that operation without damage.

Your affectionate father & mother

Henry & Mary Warner

P.S. We were favoured with the Legislation Record sent us by Hans “Henon Esq.” H.R. for which we return thanks, under his motion in behalf of Lee, coal company, also Allegheny and Perrysville Plank & Road Co.

The Evening Chronicle has a correspondent, who signs himself ‘Amos’, we will look for his allusion to your lecture on next Tuesday evening anxiously.

H.W.

Citation: Henry and Mary Warner, autograph letter signed to John Riddle Warner.  Allegheny City [Pittsburgh],23 March 1864. Moore VI:06:3

March 21, 1864: A. S. Mitchell to William T. Sherman

 AMs 777-1_1 AMs 777-1_2 AMs 777-1_3

AMs 777-1_4

Transcript:

Cincinnati, O.

March 21. 1864

General:

I wish to procure the release of Alex W. Smith, Jr., James D. Harrell, and Joseph B. Douglas–Confederate prisoners, lately sent North from Memphis—on the condition that they take the Amnesty oath as prescribed by President Lincoln. These young men are all minors, two of them were conscripted into the Rebel service, the other was sold into it, as a substitute at the age of 16 years. They all left it voluntarily, and without furlough, with the intention of escaping from that service. They were captured at the Federal lines on their return towards their homes, confined at Memphis + then sent North, as above stated. I regard the case of these young men as in itself meritorious; but I chiefly solicit their release on the grounds of public policy. Lately I went into Tipton County, West Tennessee, under your authority, General, to organize the citizens thereof for self-defence, + to put them in a position to suppress guerillaism & robbery and maintain peace and order in the County without military intervention. In this work I was entirely successful. A large majority of the County enrolled, under your guarantee of favor, and filed their enrollment with Maj. Gen. Hurlbut. I am sure they are going to fight the thing through unaided + in good faith. Among the most prominent & decidedly the most efficient citizens in this good work were Alexander W. Smith, Sr. and John B. Douglas, who have been respectively the presiding County Justice and County Clerk of Tipton Co. for many years. One is the father of one of the prisoners, the other the uncle of the other two. They make this application for the release of their young relatives, & I desire that they should have their petition granted as a reward for their good work, and for the moral effect their success will have in Tipton County, showing as it will to all doubting men, that favors begin to flow to good citizens as soon as friendship to the government begins. Maj. Gen. Hurlbut who examined into this application at Memphis promptly recommended it to your favorable consideration. Not expecting to meet you in Cincinnati I left the papers at St. Louis. I would be glad to have you say to the Secretary of War that you would like to have Maj. Gen. Hurlbut’s recommendation in behalf of these young men carried out, +I will present the original papers with his endorsement in Washington. With sentiment of high regard, I am General, your obt. Servant A.S. Mitchell

Maj. Gen. W. T. Sherman U.S.A.

If the statement of facts as to these prisoners is true I have no objection to their release

W.T. Sherman [illeg]

Cincinnati

March 20. 64

Let these three boys take the oath of Dec. 8th and be discharged. A Lincoln April 14, 1864

 

Citation: A. S. Mitchell, autograph letter signed to William T. Sherman. Cincinnati: 21 March 1864. AMs 777/1