Thursday, January 9, 2014

January 10, 1864---The loss of the U.S.S. IRON AGE



JANUARY 10, 1864:           

The U.S.S. IRON AGE runs aground in Lockwood’s Folly Inlet near Wilmington, N.C., one of several Civil War vessels to be lost in the inlet.  One of the Holden family of nearby Holden Beach salvages the Captain’s razor from the wreck. It becomes a family heirloom, still passed down through the generations.


Tuesday, January 7, 2014

January 9, 1864---The Battle of Loudon Heights, VA; a bad augury



JANUARY 9, 1864:   

The Battle of Loudon Heights: 

The North American continent is locked in subzero cold as far south as Memphis, Tennessee. All Americans, though particularly Southerners, are suffering from the truly arctic conditions, especially with shortages of firewood and coal. John Singleton Mosby’s vaunted Rangers choose this day to launch a surprise attack against Union troops stationed in Loudon County, Virginia. For the first time, Mosby’s Rangers are decisively repulsed. Although casualties are light on both sides, one of the dead is Willie Mosby, the brother of The Gray Ghost.



In a measure of how dire the South’s military manpower needs have become the Richmond Daily Dispatch reports that:

In Georgia there have been exempted — civil officers, 522; railroad employees, 616; telegraph employees, 13; newspaper employees, 174; ministers of the gospel, 274; shoe makers, 504; tanners, 377; blacksmiths, 590; wagonmakers, 266; millers, 409; factory employees, 554; school teachers, 266; salt manufacturers 151; overseers, 201; ferrymen, 10; physicians, 486; militia officers, 397 (?); (N. C. 3,437;) aliens, 628; (Va. 69;) express company, 13; cadets, 12; manufacture of dental instruments, 3; batters, 14; nitre and mining service, 120; mail contractors and carriers, 4; shepherds, 107; physical disability, 1,499; substitutes 7,000.

Altogether, this number makes up a bare fraction of the number under arms. That the Confederacy is counting so closely is a bad augury. The number of Exempts (6,711 minus the disabled) almost equals the number of Substitutions (7,000). “Aliens” includes citizens of other Confederate States (are their own States looking for them?)
 

January 8, 1864---A new Union Government in Louisiana



JANUARY 8, 1864:    

A Unionist Convention meets in New Orleans to organize the Reconstruction government of Louisiana. 


Sunday, January 5, 2014

January 7, 1864---Two pardons and a funeral



JANUARY 7, 1864:  

President Lincoln (U.S.A.) and President Davis (C.S.A.) both pardon two young deserters from their respective armies, commuting the men’s death sentences to terms of imprisonment. The two Presidents, who had been born months apart in adjoining counties in Kentucky, both shared a horror of sending frightened young men to stand in front of firing squads, and pardoned or commuted the sentences of many a young man despite the objections of their field commanders, who felt that pardons and commutations undermined military discipline. 

  
Caleb Blood Smith, President Lincoln’s former Secretary of The Interior and now a Federal Judge, dies at age 55 in Indianapolis. Smith was an unpopular Secretary, described as a man with "neither heart nor sincerity about him." As Secretary of The Interior he had been chiefly responsible for Indian Affairs, and the disastrous Sioux War of 1862 had erupted on his watch, ultimately forcing him from office.