William L. Clements Library
The University of Michigan
Schoff Civil War Collection
Soldiers' Letters 50





Whitcomb, Robert
and
Whitcomb, George

Papers, 1862 December 2-1867 December 2
36 items



Whitcomb, Robert, b. ca. 1834
Rank:Private, Wagoner, Q.M. Sergeant (1864 August 7); 2nd Lieutenant (Bvt; 1866 September 21)
Regiment:169th New York Infantry Regiment. Co. D (1862-1865)
Service:1862 August 8-1865 July 19

Whitcomb, George M., ca.1840-1864
Rank:Corporal; Sergeant (1863 April 7)
Regiment:169th New York Infantry Regiment. Co. D (1862-1865)
Service:1862 August 8-1864 July 30


Background note:

In August, 1862, when Company D of the 169th New York Infantry was forming near Glens Falls, its recruits included two brothers from Sandy Hill, Robert and George Whitcomb. Robert, a 28-year old farmer with a wife and young daughter, and George, 22 and a bachelor, were soon given responsibility as non-commissioned officers, Robert becoming wagoner, working with the regimental quartermaster, and George, who mustered in as a Corporal, becoming 5th sergeant of Co. D.

After serving in the defences of Washington through their first winter, the 169th took part in the siege of Suffolk, Va., in April and May, 1863, and in operations on the Peninsula later that summer. In August, they were attached to the Department of the South and ordered to Folly Island, S.C., and it was there that the brothers experienced their first separation. In February, 1864, George was sent as part of an expedition to Jacksonville, Fla., while Robert remained behind with the regimental stores, suffering both from grief over the separation and guilt over seeing his younger brother and friends in jeopardy while he remained safe. The Whitcomb family appears to have been very close, particularly Robert and George, but they did suffer from their share of family problems. There is a suggestion that at one time Robert had had a drinking problem (1863 April 7) and a brother Silas seems to have been associating with questionable women. Another brother, Melvin, attempted to avoid military service first by claiming that he was under 18, and then when he was drafted, by refusing at accept service in the 98th Infantry. In both efforts he was unsuccessful. There is no official record of Melvin Whitcomb with his regiment after being wounded at Cold Harbor, but it appears that he may have deserted and escaped to Ohio to live with cousins. After the war, he returned to New York and moved in, at least on a temporary basis, with Robert.

The 169th Regiment were ordered to return to Virginia to participate in the summer campaigns of 1864, and were present at Cedar Creek, Drewry's Bluff, Cold Harbor and Petersburg. At the Battle of the Crater on July 30th, the greatest action the regiment had ever seen, according to Robert, George was killed in action. Robert continued with the 169th through Dutch Gap and Chaffin's Farm and their transfer to North Carolina. The regiment was engaged during both assaults on Fort Fisher, and were at Raleigh, N.C., when the Confederacy fell. He mustered out of the service, receiving a brevet 2nd Lieutenancy for meritorious wartime service, and settled with his wife and child on a farm at Bald Mountain.


Scope and Contents:

The Whitcomb letters unfortunately reflect only a small portion of the Civil War service of George and Robert Whitcomb. The collection includes thirteen war-date letters from Robert (plus one post-war letter), five from George and two from both brothers, all but one addressed to their parents, Eli and Harriet or to their family. Among the remaining correspondence are six letters from Melvin Whitcomb and five letters from Catie (Brevoort) Brailey, a cousin from Delta, Ohio. What seems to be lacking from the collection are any letters, if they ever existed, describing the battles and skirmishes that the two took part in.

Robert's letters, in particular, provide an interesting commentary on several aspects of the war. First, while it would be hard to consider him the prototypical ideologically-motivated soldier, Robert can be quite passionate about his duty. Typical are his anger over deserters and draft dodgers fleeing New York for Canada, 800 a day by some reports, and the venom with which he talks about the rioters in New York City ("I hope that such men as refuse to come after they have been drafted will be hung or shot & if they had my position there would be no danger of either" 1863 July 23). He was adamant that the draftees who were assigned to the 169th would do nothing to besmirch the regiment's good reputation, and his long diatribe on draftees gives a distinctive, volunteer's view of the lowly conscript.

Robert recognized and appreciated the fact that in his position with the quartermaster he had it much easier than the average soldier. On expeditions, he rode, while George and others marched, and during battles, Robert was generally held back. Despite this, Robert was very anxious to get the fighting done with and to end the war on Union terms. In one of his most moving letters, he describes the galvanizing experience of seeing Union soldiers paroled from southern prisons, walking skeletons, some of whom died when eating their first full meal. "We had ought to kill everyone [of the rebels] that we come for," he wrote, "for they hant human beings they are brutes…I wish you could see one load of them prisoners you would say kill every man in the Rebel army" (1865 March 7). His strong feelings for his fellow soldiers, and particularly for his brother, permeate several letters, and after his separation from George when George was sent to Florida, Robert's letters become more thoughtful, displaying a determined, and occasionally mournful or bitter streak. His letter of 1864 February 23 is particularly moving, in which he recounts the loneliness he felt and his fears for the expedition.

George's letters are not quite as well written as Robert's, but do include some interesting descriptions of active field service, including a humorous episode in which five members of the 13th Indiana Infantry who were out picking blackberries ran into several Confederate cavalrymen. Not having their weapons with them, they grabbed cornstalks and charged at the cavalrymen, shouting, taking them by surprise and scattering them. They returned to camp with two bay mares and another horse worth, as George was quick to point out, $500 a piece in normal times.

Finally, the collection includes some interesting letters relating to the intriguing case of Melvin Whitcomb, who seems to have tried unsuccessfully to avoid the draft. In one letter to his father, Melvin begs for proof that he was under age, but in his next letter, written in February, 1864, he was in a conscript camp on Riker's Island attemtping to resist the state's efforts to place him in the 98th Infantry. By the following March, with two years remaining in his enlistment, Melvin was living with relatives in Delta, Ohio, though it is a little unclear what his status was with the military. Robert, who all along sympathized with Melvin, wrote that Mel would never be able to take comfort, and would always feel guilty, suggesting, without saying it, that Mel was a deserter (1865 March 7). Mel began working on the canals, and may have adopted a false name, Eugene Hoyle to write home, though this is somwhat speculative. Regardless, Mel had returned to New York State by the summer of 1867, and was living in Robert's new place on Bald Mountain.


M-2581
Cat. 6/94 rsc





Link to subject index to the Robert and George Whitcomb Papers

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