Dupont, Samuel F., 1803-1865 to Harwood

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GLC#
GLC04226
Type
Letters
Date
January 24, 1861
Author/Creator
Dupont, Samuel F., 1803-1865
Title
to Harwood
Place Written
Wilmington, North Carolina
Pagination
3 p. : docket ; Height: 20.2 cm, Width: 13 cm
Primary time period
Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861-1877
Sub-Era
The American Civil War

Says he heard from his family that the "eldest member of our present generation had died." Says the woman was like a second mother to his wife. Goes on to proclaim her goodness. Went to the funeral and had to return quickly to the navy yard. Wrtites, "What a blot on our naval escutchion that Pensacola affair! Not so much for old [Commodore] Armstrong, but...traitors [Commodore Ebenezer] Farrand & Renshaw; and our poor miserable way of doing things, accepting...when such an event as the capture of a Navy Yard is announced before waiting to hear a single circumstance! These men will all come back when their states return."

According to an 1865 New York Times article, after the stars and stripes were hauled down at Pensacola, Florida, January 12, 1861, Flag Officer Renshaw ran his sword through the flag. Written near Wilmington, North Carolina.

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