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- GLC#
- GLC07460.121-View header record
- Type
- Letters
- Date
- 26 May 1865
- Author/Creator
- Wheeler, Lysander, 1837-1917
- Title
- to his parents, brother-in-law, and sister
- Place Written
- Washington, District of Columbia
- Pagination
- 4 p. : envelope Height: 20.3 cm, Width: 25.1 cm
- Primary time period
- Civil War and Reconstruction, 1861-1877
- Sub-Era
- The American Civil War
Writes that he is very grateful to be able to see his family once again and looks forward to being reunited with them. He hopes that the war is over for good and that they will be able to return home soon. Writes that the government is working hard on getting the army's papers ready so the troops can be sent home. There are rumors that the troops will be sent home by regiments to a military post nearest to their hometowns. From there they will be mustered out. He thinks that his regiment will go to Chicago, Illinois but he cannot say how soon they will leave. Writes of how the regiment was reviewed in front of the Capitol and White House. From Washington, D.C. the regiment marched four and a half miles and camped along the Baltimore Pike. The other Union troops were surprised at the discipline of General William T. Sherman's troops as they thought of them as "marauders" who only "knew how to fight." Writes that Sherman's army was greatly praised and treated by the people of Washington, D.C. A newspaper clipping of the poem "Shoulder Straps is included with the letter. Another newspaper clipping describing the review of General Sherman's troops as they marched through Washington, D.C.
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