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Illinois in the American Civil War

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The Great Seal of the United States of America during the American Civil War
Unionstates
in the
American Civil War

Dual governments
Territories and D.C.

During theAmerican Civil War, the state ofIllinois was a major source of troops for theUnion Army (particularly for those armies serving in theWestern Theater of theCivil War), and of military supplies, food, and clothing. Situated near major rivers and railroads,Illinois became a major jumping-off place early in the war forUlysses S. Grant's efforts to seize control of theMississippi andTennessee rivers. Statewide, public support for the Union was high despite pocketsCopperhead sentiment among some antiwar Democrats.

The state was energetically led throughout the war by GovernorRichard Yates. Illinois contributed 250,000 soldiers to theUnion Army, ranking it fourth in terms of the total manpower in Federal military service. Illinois troops predominantly fought in theWestern Theater, although a few regiments played important roles in the East, particularly in theArmy of the Potomac. Several thousand Illinoisians were killed or died of their wounds during the war, and a number of national cemeteries were established in Illinois to bury their remains.In addition to PresidentAbraham Lincoln, a number of other Illinois men became prominent in the army or in national politics, including generals,Ulysses S. Grant,John M. Schofield andJohn A. Logan, SenatorLyman Trumbull, and RepresentativeElihu P. Washburne. No major battles were fought in the state, although several river towns became sites for important supply depots and "brownwater" navy yards. Several prisoner of war camps and prisons dotted the state after 1863, processing thousands of captive Confederate soldiers.

The war was highly controversial in Southern Illinois—known as "Little Egypt." There was some support for the Confederacy but mostly it was a matter of fierce opposition to Lincoln's war policies. The most dramatic episode came when Congressman John A. Logan switched from opposition to a national leader in support of the war,

History

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Color-bearers of the7th IVI

During the Civil War, 256,297 men from Illinois served in the Union army, more than any other northern state except forNew York,Pennsylvania andOhio. Beginning with Illinois residentPresident Lincoln's first call for troops and continuing throughout the war, the state mustered 150infantry regiments, which were numbered from the 7th Illinois to the 156th Illinois. Seventeencavalry regiments were also mustered, as well as two lightartillery regiments.[1] Due to enthusiastic recruiting rallies and high response to voluntary calls to arms, themilitary draft was little used in Chicago and its environs, but was a controversial factor in supplying manpower to Illinois regiments late in the war in other regions of the state.Camp Douglas, located near Chicago, was one of the largest training camps for these troops, as well asCamp Butler nearSpringfield. Both served as leading prisoner-of-war camps for captiveConfederates. Another significant POW camp was located atRock Island.[2] Several thousand Confederates died while in custody in Illinois prison camps and are buried in a series of nearby cemeteries.

There were no Civil War battles fought in Illinois, butCairo, at the juncture of theOhio River with theMississippi River, became an important Union supply base, protected byCamp Defiance. Other major supply depots were located atMound City and across the Ohio river atFort Anderson inPaducah, Kentucky, along with sprawling facilities for theUnited States Navygunboats and associated river fleets. One of which would take part in the nearbyBattle of Lucas Bend.Leadingmajor generals with Illinois ties includedUlysses S. Grant,John Buford,John Pope,John M. Schofield,John A. Logan,John A. McClernand,Benjamin Prentiss andStephen Hurlbut.Brigadier GeneralElon J. Farnsworth, who began his career in the 8th Illinois Cavalry, died at theBattle of Gettysburg. President Lincoln maintained his home inSpringfield, Illinois, where he is buried. Over 100 soldiers from Illinois units would earn theMedal of Honor during the conflict.

Controversy in Little Egypt

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Opposition to the war effort in Illinois was largely based inLittle Egypt, that is the southern counties that had been settled by Southerners before 1840.[3] A few dozen men, volunteered for theConfederate States Army in Tennessee.[4]

Eighteen counties of southern Illinois formed the congressional district of DemocratJohn A. Logan. Rumors abounded in early 1861 whether he would organize his supporters and join the Confederacy. In fact he was suppressing pro-Confederate elements, and organizing his supporters to fight for the Union. Lincoln made him a general, and Logan played a major role under generals Grant and Sherman. His men marched to war as Democrats; they marched home as Republicans. Later, Logan helped found theGrand Army of the Republic veteran organization, was elected to the United States Senate as a Republican, and was the Republican vice presidential nominee in 1884.[5][6] As a precaution, Union troops remained inLittle Egypt for the remainder of the war.[7]

Home-front support: Chicago and downstate

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During the Civil War (1861–1865), state and local government, businesses, voluntary societies. and families gave massive support to the war effort, and th national government provided heavy funding.[8][9][10][11][12][13][14] Many new organizations were created to mobilize support, some of which became permanent.[15]

By 1861 Chicago's commercial infrastructure and water and rail links had advanced enough to support rapid industrialization funded by the national war effort. By 1860 traffic on Lake Michigan made Chicago one of the busiest ports in the Western Hemisphere. In the 1850s the Congress granted land to railroads to promote their growth. TheIllinois Central Railroad was the first to be established. Banks loaned it the $27 million needed for construction and by 1860 it operated 705 miles of track criss-crossing Illinois from Chicago to Galena to Cairo. It was the longest railway in the world. It set up a depot every ten miles, where ambitious men rushed in to start a town by buying plots from the land grant.[16] In the decade of the 1850s, the national railway grid was expanding rapidly from 9,000 miles of track to 31,000. Outside the Midwest, rail mileage nearly tripled, but inside the region it expanded by a factor of 7 from 1,300 to 9,000 miles.[17] Chicago thereby became the nation's greatest rail center. Much of the necessary iron and steel was imported from Pittsburgh, but new mills were Increasingly set up in Chicago.[18] When the war broke out in 1861, Chicago's main rivals Cincinnati and St Louis lost access to their primary markets to the South. Chicago replaced them as the hub for the national distribution of wheat and meat. Furthermore, Chicago became the supply base for the Western armies, as GeneralUlysses S Grant took his forces on the Illinois Central—his supply line—down to Cairo. He then marched south to seize control of Kentucky and Tennessee on his way to victories atShiloh,Vicksburg, andChattanooga.[19] For the entire war, the Illinois Central carried 626,000 soldiers back and forth for a total of 128,000,000 passenger miles of military service, for which the War Department paid $1.7 million.[20]

The opening of theUnion Stock Yard clinched Chicago's new dominant role for beef and pork as farmers across the hinterland shipped their cattle and hogs by rail.[21] Hundreds of small factories opened in Chicago and downstate cities to provide Union forces with urgently needed supplies from uniforms to wagons.[22] Between 1860 and 1870 factory employment in Cook County exploded from 5,400 to 31,000, while the city's population tripled from 112,000 people to 299,000.[23]

All the new business necessitated expanded banking facilities. Thanks to new federal laws creating the national banking system, local financiers opened 13 national banks in the city in 1863 to 1865. Leadership came from theFirst National Bank of Chicago which not only served local business but also serviced accounts for 80 new national banks in 15 states. Chicago's big banks dominated the west in the same way New York's Wall Street dominated the rest of the nation's finance.[24]

Criticism of the war appeared in Chicago as well as downstate. TheChicago Times underWilbur F. Storey was the nation's most stridentCopperhead critic of Republican Lincoln and his emancipation program. In June 1863, GeneralAmbrose E. Burnside sent Army troops to close the newspaper. It was the leading Democratic newspaper in a Democratic city and protests were vehement, so Lincoln reversed the suppression.[25][26] Some 26,000 Confederate prisoners were sent toCamp Douglas on theSouth Side; 4,500 of them died of disease due to deliberately inadequate sanitation and poor medical facilities.[27][28]

Patriotic women mobilized to help needy Union soldiers and their families. Among them were ChicagoansMary Livermore andJane Hoge, who organized two gigantic NorthwestSanitary Fairs in 1863 and 1865 to raise money.[29] Thousands of women volunteered to nurse wounded soldiers at hospitals behind the front. The male doctors were highly dubious about this spontaneous sort of unorganized help. The convalescents were appreciative; as sick civilians they rarely had been hospitalized and instead depended on care at home by mothers, sisters and wives.[30] Most famous of all wasMother Bickerdyke who was highly visible at military hospitals in Grant's army. Back in Chicago she campaigned energetically to raise money and clothing, and tell families how their sons were being treated.[31][32] The doctors, however did very much appreciate the very well organized Catholic sisters. They were already were operating their own hospitals and they sent well-trained cadres to assist doctors in military hospitals. TheSisters of Mercy based in Chicago worked on a floating hospital on the Mississippi River, and they took charge of a new hospital on shore.[33][34][35]

Cook County and neighboring counites sent 36,000 men to war. The draft was unpopular but was seldom needed because Chicago paid irresistible cash bounties for men who volunteered. However, in the southeastern part of the state, draft resistance was fierce in several communities settled by Southerners who resented the increasing dominance of the Yankee element in the state's politics and economy.[36]

About four thousand Chicago soldiers died in the War. Pride in their heroism became memorialized in the tall statues standing guard over parks that were often named after Grant and Lincoln.[37][38][39]

War politics

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During the1860 Presidential Election, two men from Illinois were among the four major candidates. Illinois voted in favor of Springfield residentAbraham Lincoln (172,171 votes or 50.7% of the ballots cast) over ChicagoanStephen Douglas (160,215; 47.2%). Of minor consequence in the statewide results were Southern candidatesJohn C. Breckinridge (2,331; 0.7%), andJohn Bell (4,914; 1.5%).[40]Throughout the war, Illinois politics were dominated byRepublicans under the energetic leadership of GovernorRichard Yates, a Southerner from Kentucky, and SenatorsLyman Trumbull andOrville H. Browning. Democrats scored major gains in the 1862 election by attacking Lincoln's emancipation plan as danger to the state since it would bring in thousands of freed slaves.[41] As a result, the Democrats had a majority in the legislature and in 1863, Browning's Senate seat, formerly held by Douglas prior to the war, was filled by the Democrats with the election ofWilliam Alexander Richardson.In the1864 presidential election, Illinois residents supported Lincoln's re-election, giving the president 189,512 votes (54.4% of the total) to GeneralGeorge McClellan's 158,724 votes (45.6%).[42] Within a year, Lincoln was dead and his remains had been returned to Springfield for burial.

Confederate Homefront support

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Copperheads

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Opposition views of the Peace Democrats (or "Copperheads") filled the columns ofThe Chicago Times, the mouthpiece of the rivalDemocratic Party. At one point early in theGettysburg campaign in June 1863, Union troops forcibly closed the newspaper at bayonet point. It was only reopened when Democratic mobs threatened to destroy the rival Republican paper and President Lincoln intervened.[43]Barry shows that Amos Green (1826–1911) fromParis, Illinois, was a leading lawyer and Peace Democrat (Copperhead). Green saw the War as unjust and Lincoln as a despot who had to be stopped. He wrote vicious denunciations of the administration in local newspapers. He was arrested forsedition in 1862. After his release in August 1862, he became the grand commander of the secret Order of American Knights in Illinois, which fought restrictions on civil liberties. It was also called theKnights of the Golden Circle and later the Sons of Liberty. Green was funded by the Confederate government to arrange riots at the Democratic National Convention in 1864. Although the riots never materialized, he continued giving antigovernment speeches until he was again arrested in November 1864. After this arrest, he agreed to testify for the government about the activities of the Knights; his testimony implicated others but ignored his own deep involvement in antigovernment plots.[44] In 1864, a clash between Copperheads and Union Soldiers inCharleston, Illinois resulted in nine dead and twelve wounded in what is now called the "Charleston Riot".

Notable leaders from Illinois

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Among the many Illinois generals who rose to post-war prominence wereUlysses S. Grant, who became president in 1869,Green B. Raum, who became a U.S. congressman and the Commissioner of theInternal Revenue Service, andJames L. Alcorn, who was aU.S. Senator and theGovernor of Mississippi. Both were born nearGolconda.Galena-bornJohn Aaron Rawlins, long a confidant of U.S. Grant, became theUnited States Secretary of War in the Grant Administration.John M. Palmer, a resident ofCarlinville, was a postbellumGovernor of Illinois and the presidential candidate of theNational Democratic Party in the1896 election.Edward S. Salomon, an immigrant fromEurope, was appointed by President Grant as the Governor of theWashington Territory.William P. Carlin ofCarrollton became a general in the postbellum U.S. Army and commanded several outposts inMontana and elsewhere.

A number of soldiers from Illinois regiments would eventually become governors of U.S. states. Among them wereJohn Marshall Hamilton, future governor of Illinois;Albinus Nance, future governor of Nebraska;John St. John, future governor of Kansas; andSamuel Rinnah Van Sant, future governor of Minnesota.

See also

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References

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Notes

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  1. ^Illinois regiments during the Civil WarArchived 2005-02-04 at theWayback Machine
  2. ^Theodore R. Walker, "Rock Island Prison Barracks."Civil War History 8.2 (1962): 152-163.
  3. ^Christopher Phillips, "Travels in Egypt: Eyewitness to the Civil War in Illinois's" Butternut" Region."Ohio Valley History 8.2 (2008): 23-47.excerpt
  4. ^Metcalf, Frank. "The Illinois Confederate Company,"Confederate Veteran, vol. 16, pp.224-5. S.A. Cunningham, 1908.
  5. ^William S. Morris; et al. (1998).History 31st Regiment Illinois Volunteers Organized by John A. Logan. SIU Press. pp. 15–20.
  6. ^James Pickett Jones (1995).Black Jack: John A. Logan and Southern Illinois in the Civil War Era. SIU Press. pp. 82–90.
  7. ^"The Civil War and Late 19th Century"Archived 2012-02-23 at theWayback Machine,The History of Southern Illinois, Egyptian Area on Aging, Inc., 1996–2009, accessed 15 May 2009
  8. ^Arthur C. Cole,The Era of the Civil War: 1848 –to 1870 (1919) pp. 253–386.online
  9. ^Roger Biles,Illinois: A history of the land and its people (2005) pp. 102–121.
  10. ^James R. Grossman et al., eds. ‘’The Encyclopedia of Chicago’’ (2004), pp.63, 119, 169, 210, 233, 425, 515, 581–582, 730–731.
  11. ^Theodore Karamanski,Rally 'Round the Flag: Chicago and the Civil War (1993)online
  12. ^Bessie Louise Pierce,A History of Chicago, Volume II from Town to City. 1848–1871 (1940) pp. 246–302.online
  13. ^Kurt A. Carlson, "Backing the Boys in the Civil War: Chicago's Home Front Supports the Troops - and Grows in the Process,"Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, (2011) 104#1/2, pp 140-165
  14. ^For primary sources see Theodore J. Karamanski and Eileen M. McMahon, eds. ‘’Civil War Chicago : Eyewitness to History’’ (Ohio University Press, 2014).online
  15. ^Thomas Bahde, "'Our Cause Is a Common One': Home Guards, Union Leagues, and Republican Citizenship in Illinois, 1861–1863."Civil War History 56.1 (2010): 66-98.
  16. ^John E. Stover,History of the Illinois Central (1975) pp.34–57.
  17. ^Chauncey M. Depew, ed.,One Hundred Years of American Commerce 1795-1895 (1895) pp.140–145.
  18. ^Kenneth Warren,The American Steel Industry: 1850–1970 (1975) pp.62-63.
  19. ^Stover, pp. 85–107.
  20. ^Stover, p.99.
  21. ^William Cronon,Nature’s Metropolis: Chicago and the Great West (1991) p.301.
  22. ^Pierce, ‘’History of Chicago,’’ p. 272.
  23. ^Statistics of the United States in 1860. Compiled from the original returns of the 8th census (1866) p.xviii; Francis A. Walker,A Compendium of the Ninth Census: June 1, 1870 (1872) pp.152, 818.
  24. ^Cronon, p.305.
  25. ^Justin E Walsh, "To Print the News and Raise Hell!: A Biography of Wilbur F. Storey" (1968) pp. 174-175online
  26. ^Cecil Clyde Blair, " The Chicago Democratic Press and the Civil War" (PhD dissertation, U of Chicago; ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  1947. T-00560).
  27. ^George Levy,To Die in Chicago: Confederate Prisoners at Camp Douglas, 1862–1865 (1994).
  28. ^David L. Keller,The Story of Camp Douglas: Chicago's Forgotten Civil War Prison (History Press, 2015) pp. 167-202;online
  29. ^Wendy Hamand Venet,A Strong‐Minded Woman: The Life of Mary A. Livermore (U of Massachusetts Press, 2005) pp.69–126.
  30. ^Ann Douglas Wood, "The War within a War: Women Nurses in the Union Army,"Civil War History 18.3 (1972): 197-212.excerpt
  31. ^Jeffrey S. Sartin, “ 'Commissioned by God': Mother Bickerdyke during the Civil War",Military Medicine 168#10 (2003) pp. 773–777,https://doi.org/10.1093/milmed/168.10.773
  32. ^Megan VanGorder, "What Mother Meant: Maternal Competence, Medical Authority, and Memory in the Case of Mary Bickerdyke (1820–1910)" (PhD dissertation,  Northern Illinois University; ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  2022. 28967157) pp.70–122.
  33. ^Judith Metz, "In Times of War," in Priscilla Stepsis and Dolores Liptack, eds. Pioneer Healers: The History of Women Religious in American Health Care (1989) pp.39–57.
  34. ^Mary Denis Maher,To Bind up the Wounds: Catholic Sister Nurses in the U. S Civil War (Greenwood, 1989).
  35. ^Mary Beth Fraser Connolly,Women of Faith: The Chicago Sisters of Mercy and the Evolution of a Religious Community (Fordham UP, 2014)online.
  36. ^Robert E. Sterling, "Civil War Draft Resistance in Illinois."Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1971) 64.3: 244-266.JSTOR 40190785
  37. ^Karamanski,Rally 'Round the Flag, p.235.
  38. ^Pierce, ‘’History of Chicago,’’ p. 273-276.
  39. ^Jeremy Knoll, "Remembering the Fallen: The Creation of Civil War Monuments in Illinois, 1865–1929."Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 114.2 (2021): 33–95.
  40. ^Leip, 1860
  41. ^Bruce S. Allardice, "'Illinois is Rotten with Traitors!' The Republican Defeat in the 1862 State Election,". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, Spring/Summer 2011, Vol. 104 Issue 1/2, pp 97-114
  42. ^Leip, 1864
  43. ^Chicago History website
  44. ^Peter J. Barry, "Amos Green, Paris, Illinois: Civil War Lawyer, Editorialist, and Copperhead,"Journal of Illinois History, Spring 2008, Vol. 11 Issue 1, pp 39-60

Further reading

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Scholarly studies

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  • Allardice, Bruce S. “‘Illinois is Rotten with Traitors!’ The Republican Defeat in the 1862 State Election,”Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, 104 (Spring–Summer 2011), 97–114.
  • Baker, Jason B.Chicago to Appomattox: The 39th Illinois Infantry in the Civil War (McFarland, 2022).
  • Bearden-White, Christina. "Illinois Germans and the Coming of the Civil War: Reshaping Ethnic Identity"Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 109#3 (2016), pp. 231–251 DOI: 10.5406/jillistathistsoc.109.3.0231
  • Bohn, Roger E. "Richard Yates: An Appraisal of his Value as the Civil War Governor of Illinois,"Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society Spring/Summer2011, Vol. 104 Issue 1/2, pp 17–37in JSTOR
  • Cole, Arthur Charles.The Era of the Civil War 1848–1870 (1919), the standard scholarly history; vol 3 of the Centennial History of Illinois.
  • Costigan, David.A city in wartime: Quincy, Illinois and the Civil War (2021).
  • Duerkes, Wayne N. "'I for one am ready to do my part': The initial motivations that inspired men from Northern Illinois to enlist in the U.S. Army, 1861–1862,"Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (2012) 105#4 pp 313–32in JSTOR
  • Dyer, Frederick H.,A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion. 3 volumes. Thomas Yoseloff, reprinted 1959; covers every state
  • Girardi, Robert I. "'I am for the President's Proclamation teeth and toe nails': Illinois Soldiers Respond to the Emancipation Proclamation."Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 106#3-4 (2013) pp: 395–421.in JSTOR
  • Gleeson, Ed.Illinois Rebels - A Civil War Unit History of G Company, 15th Tennessee Regiment Volunteer Infantry (1996, Guild Press of Indiana: Carmel, Indiana)
  • Grossman, James R.. Ann Durkin Keating, and Janice L. Reiff, eds.The Encyclopedia of Chicago (2005)online version
  • Hicken, Victor,Illinois in the Civil War, University of Illinois Press. 1991.ISBN 0-252-06165-9.
  • Jones, James Pickett (1995).Black Jack: John A. Logan and Southern Illinois in the Civil War Era. SIU Press. p. 91ff.
  • Jordan, Brian Matthew.Marching Home: Union Veterans and Their Unending Civil War (WW Norton & Company, 2015)
  • Karamanski, Theodore J.,Rally 'Round the Flag: Chicago and the Civil War. Nelson-Hall, 1993.ISBN 0-8304-1295-6.
  • Kleen, Michael, “The Copperhead Threat in Illinois Peace Democrats, Loyalty Leagues, and the Charleston Riot of 1864,”Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society, 105 (Spring 2012), 69–92.
  • Lentz, Perry.Key Command: Ulysses S. Grant's District of Cairo (University of Missouri Press, 2006)
  • Levy, George.To Die in Chicago: Confederate Prisoners at Camp Douglas, 1862–65. (2nd ed. 1999)excerpt and text search.
  • Metcalf, Frank. "The Illinois Confederate Company,"Confederate Veteran, vol. 16, pp.224-5. S.A. Cunningham, 1908.
  • Miller Jr, Edward A.The Black Civil War Soldiers of Illinois: The Story of the Twenty-Ninth US Colored Infantry (Univ of South Carolina Press, 2021).
  • Pierce, Bessie Louise.A History of Chicago: Volume II: From Town to City 1848–1871 (1937)
  • Prichard, Jeremy.  "In Lincoln's Shadow: The Civil War in Springfield, Illinois." (PhD Dissertation University of Kansas, 2014).online
  • Swan, James B.Chicago's Irish Legion: The 90th Illinois Volunteers in the Civil War (Southern Illinois University Press, 2009)
  • Williams, Kenneth Powers. Grant Rises in the West: The first year, 1861–1862 (U of Nebraska Press, 1997)

Historiography and memory

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  • Karamanski, Theodore J. "Illinois at the High Tide: The Era of the Civil War, 1848–1870."Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 111.1-2 (2018): 55–78.online
  • Knoll, Jeremy. "Remembering the Fallen: The Creation of Civil War Monuments in Illinois, 1865–1929."Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society 114.2 (2021): 33–95.

Primary sources

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  • Burton, William L.,Descriptive bibliography of Civil War manuscripts in Illinois. Civil War Centennial Commission of Illinois, Northwestern University Press, 1966.
  • Flotow, Mark, ed.In Their Letters, in Their Words: Illinois Civil War Soldiers Write Home (Southern Illinois University Press, 2019).
  • Office of the Adjutant General,Roster of Officers and Enlisted Men. 9 volumes, State Printing Office, 1900.
  • U.S. War Department,The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, 70 volumes in 4 series. Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1880–1901.online
  • Voss-Hubbard, Mark, ed.Illinois's War: The Civil War in Documents. (Ohio University Press, 2013) 244 pp.online review

External links

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