They expected a few hundred. They got tens of thousands.
The opening line still hurts across the years.
“Dear Mother — I am here a prisoner of war & mortally wounded.”
John
Winn Moseley was writing home from the Gettysburg battlefield on July
4, 1863. He was a 30-year-old Confederate from Alabama being cared for by his Yankee captors.
“I
can live but a few hours more at farthest,” he wrote. “I was shot
fifty-yards of the enemy’s line. They have been extremely kind to me.”
Moseley
died the next day. His letter — on delicate blue paper, stained with
what might be blood — made it to his mother in Buckingham County, Va.,
and the family kept it ever after. Now it has come to light in a trove
of Civil War documents that the State Library of Virginia discovered in a
surprisingly straightforward way: It asked state residents to bring
them out of their homes.
From 2010 until last year, as Virginia
observed the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, archivists traveled the
state in an “Antiques Roadshow” style campaign to unearth the past.
Organizers had thought the effort might produce a few hundred new items.
They were a little off. It flushed out more than 33,000 pages of
letters, diaries, documents and photographs that the library scanned and
has made available for study online.
Read the rest here.
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