North Carolina War Between the States Sesquicentennial
“The Official Website of the North Carolina War Between the States Sesquicentennial Commission”
“they whipped mrs. r”
Chester, South Carolina, [February]. 27, 1865
“My
Darling Sister, I am so rejoiced to be able to once more write you
though it is more than probable this letter may never reach its
destination. Every day we were in hourly expectation of a visit from
Sherman’s troops. When Columbia was evacuated they sent all the
Government stores to this place….The Treasury Department went through to
Charlotte. I saw a good many of the girls….only stayed a few hours and
were very anxious for me to go to North Carolina…..
I
must tell you some of the outrages the Yankees have committed around
here. An old man by the name of Brice lived in Fairfield District….The
Yankees hung him because he would not tell where he had hid his money
and silver. They robbed every house they passed, burnt a great many.
They have burnt Tom Boulware’s and some houses near there, burnt Mary S.
DeG’s gin house, cribs, etc., and took two watches and some other
things from here.
They
stripped old Mrs. R., Kate’s mother, and whipped her, destroyed
everything Mrs. N. Beckham had to eat and the Boulware’s and Watson’s, I
hear, are living off the corn left by our cavalry men in the woods.
It has been some time since I have had as comfortable a night’s rest as I
had last night….
Wheeler’s
men killed sixteen Yanks I hear in retaliation for whipping Mrs. R. Oh
Ann, I do think the idea of a Lady’s being stripped and whipped by
those villains is outrageous, the most awful thing I have heard of. Oh
Annie, is it not awful to see the way our people are suffering and the
sin that is committed…..I just know people cannot die from fear…..”
(When Sherman Came: Southern Women and the “Great March,” Katherine M. Jones, Bobbs-Merrill, 1964, pp. 229-230)
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