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Hopkintons' Civil War Service

Hopkintons' Civil War Service
Author: Tom A. C. Ellis
Publisher:
Total Pages: 404
Release: 2015-01-22
Genre:
ISBN: 9781941573044

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Hopkinton acted early in the defense of our nation. Fort Sumter was attacked April 12, 1861. On April 19, 1861, Massachusetts's troops were fired on in Baltimore, Maryland. It was the "Pearl Harbor" of that generation; the town's people were appalled. The earliest Hopkinton could hold a Town Meeting was April 29, 1861. They did, and formed a War Committee that acted to appropriate funds for soldiers and their families, as well as form a Militia Company.Hopkinton was there from the beginning to the end. The first soldier to enlist was Edward Dove, on May 13, 1861. He was a sergeant in the 3rd Battalion of Riflemen known as "Dodd's Riflemen". Ironically, he would be among the last as on April 14, 1865, he accepted an appointment as Captain in the 103rd U.S. Colored Infantry. The last soldier to enlist from Hopkinton was Emory Watkins, February 17, 1865, into the 17th Mass. Vol. Inf. Throughout the war, Hopkinton's quota was 409 men. After exemptions, the quota was reduced below that number. Hopkinton supplied 478 men, well above her obligation. Hopkinton men went on to serve in 55% of all military units sent out by the Commonwealth. Fortunately, no one battle destroyed a high number of Hopkinton men.Still, twenty-six men would be killed in action, thirteen would die from wounds they received in battle, twenty-seven would die of disease, seventy-nine were wounded, and seventy-seven would become disabled and discharged. The Commonwealth, throughout the war, would raise two black infantry and one black cavalry regiment. Hopkinton would provide black men to serve in the two Infantry units, and an officer for the cavalry unit. Hopkinton also provided white men as officers in National black regiments.On the home front, the women of Hopkinton would also exceed expectations. They created an Auxiliary Association of the United States Sanitary Commission, through which they provided much needed supplies for the comfort and survival of the soldiers in the field. Hopkinton's contributions to the Civil War should never be forgotten; it is this book's intention to ensure that never happens.


The Granite Monthly

The Granite Monthly
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 422
Release: 1879
Genre: Local history
ISBN:

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The Granite Monthly

The Granite Monthly
Author: Henry Harrison Metcalf
Publisher:
Total Pages: 422
Release: 1879
Genre: New Hampshire
ISBN:

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Granite State Monthly

Granite State Monthly
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 420
Release: 1879
Genre:
ISBN:

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Charles Root Civil War Correspondence

Charles Root Civil War Correspondence
Author: Charles Root
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 1861
Genre: Bull Run, 2nd Battle of, Va., 1862
ISBN:

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Root's letters were sent to family and friends from various Civil War camps in Indiana, Virginia, Washington D.C., Maryland and North Carolina. The letters provide descriptions of camp life, life aboard military steamers and accounts of battles in Virginia and North Carolina. Several letters mention troop inspections by Lincoln. The collection also includes a Certificate of Honorable Service issued by the Assistant Adjutant General in April, 1886; two newspaper issues: Western Reserve Chronicle (Warren County, Ohio), August 19, 1819 and a facsimile of the July 2, 1863 issue of The Citizen (Vicksburg, Mississippi) issued on December 22, 1883; and 7 newspaper clippings reprinting some of the Root letters.