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$45.00 |
A Vermont Cavalryman in War and
Love: By Elliott W. Hoffman. . Published by Schroeder Publications in 2007. Hardcover with dust jacket, 544 pages, index, more than 55 photos and maps. William Wells rose from the rank of private to brevet major general. Through Wells’ letters, the reader will become familiar with the inner workings of one of the most successful cavalry regiments in the Civil War—capturing 39 cannon, three flags, and 1,000 prisoners in the course of 73 engagements. This new primary source material is appealing to those with various interests in the Civil War outside Wells and the 1st Vermont Cavalry. Wells’ was captured by Confederate Colonel John Mosby on March 17, 1863, near Herndon, Virginia. He was a prisoner of war for seven weeks, spending most of that time at Libby Prison. At Gettysburg, Wells and Gen. Elon Farnsworth rode side by side in the ill-fated dash into the Confederate right flank, for which Wells earned the Medal of Honor. Wells and the regiment also served valiantly in Grant’s 1864 Overland Campaign and at Cedar Creek in the Shenandoah Valley. By 1865 he was a brigade commander and Major General George Armstrong Custer’s right hand man. This book not only gives new insight to Custer through Wells’ eyes, but other Civil War figures such as Farnsworth, Wilson, Mosby, and Kilpatrick. Wells’ first letters are written to parents and friends until mid-1863 when he commenced writing to “Friend Anna” Richardson. At the time Wells was 25 years old. The reader can see the relationship develop to the point of marriage in these letters. In one of Wells’ first letters, he relates how he was almost captured for a second time, but was able to escape only after the loss of his horse and wallet that contained $125. Anna writes of her memories of the short time they had together. The letters compel the reader to see what is written next in this budding relationship and their longing to be together. On a furlough home in January 1865, Wells and Anna became engaged during a sleigh ride—the only time they were together since the commencement of their correspondence. In 1865, Wells commanded a brigade that consisted of the 8th New York, 15th New York, 3rd Indiana, and 1st Vermont. In the engagement at Waynesboro, Virginia, on March 2, the brigade captured 15 battle flags while eliminating Confederate General Jubal Early’s command. Two days later Anna received a ring, and on March 8, she scrawled her vows in a letter to Wells. At the Battle of Five Forks, Wells wrote Anna that his clothes had six holes made by bullets and that he was hit by a spent piece of shell. On April 3, Wells’ brigade routes the Confederate Brigade of General Rufus Barringer at Namozine Church. At Appomattox Station on April 8, Wells’ men were in the thick of the fight capturing a large number of Confederate soldiers and cannon. Then, at Appomattox Court House on April 9th, his men were engaged in some of the last fighting that fateful day when the truce flags are sent out by Lee’s army.
Following the
Appomattox Campaign, Wells was commissioned a full brigadier general and
took command of the division, and he mustered out of service on January 15,
1866, and married Anna three days later.
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Copyright (c) 2000 The Bivouac |
The Bivouac
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