Collections in the Pearce Museum Category

Clark Wright Papers

Clark Wright was a well-known Unionist in southwest Missouri. A native of Highland County, Ohio, he married Sarah Hixson on February 25, 1847 in Lewisburg. They settled in Polk County, Missouri in 1858. Wright saw combat in Missouri and Arkansas before being transferred to Mississippi with the 6th Missouri Cavalry in 1863. His letters describe the experiences of a prominent cavalry officer in the first half of the war.

John M. Weidemeyer Papers

John M. Weidemeyer was born January 10, 1834, in Charlottesville, Virginia. By 1850, John and his parents moved to Osceola, St. Clair County, Missouri. Weidemeyer married Lelia V. Crutchfield in 1856, and the couple resided in Osceola until the outbreak of the Civil War in 1861. Weidemeyer and his family supported the Confederacy and Missouri’s secession from the Union. Weidemeyer recorded in his diary and letters to his wife, Lelia, the struggles of military life for a Confederate soldier. He also gave a first-hand account of the raid and burning of Osceola by James H. Lane and Charles Jennison’s Jayhawkers. John M. Weidemeyer was Captain of Company F of the 6th Missouri Infantry CSA and served in Missouri, Arkansas, but the regiment primarily assisted the Confederate Army on the East coast. After the war, Weidemeyer rejoined his family in Texas, before moving them to Clinton, Missouri, where they lived the remainder of his life. John M. Weidemeyer died on January 12, 1911, at 77 years old.

George Washington Williams Papers

George Washington Williams served in Company D of the 7th Missouri Cavalry from 1862 thru 1864. His letters are addressed to his wife, Jane, in Sage Town, Illinois, which is present day Gladstone, in Henderson County, Illinois. He described the conditions he and the rest of his unit faced while fighting Confederate forces throughout Arkansas. Williams expressed great concern for his family’s safety and well-being, but voiced little concern for himself. His letters exhibit the difficulties faced by families trying to survive during the conflict. Williams died at Pine Bluff, Arkansas, on November 25, 1864 from chronic diarrhea.

Henry Halleck Papers

Major General Henry W. Halleck commanded the Department of Missouri and Department of the Mississippi from November 1861 through July 1862. He was then appointed General-in-Chief, and served as a military advisor to Abraham Lincoln. Contained within the Halleck papers is a single order placed on March 12, 1862 just months prior to being ordered to Washington. Halleck requested Major William Prince at Fort Leavenworth to advance regiments from there to Kansas City and Independence, Missouri. His orders were to clear the border counties of “marauding bands of rebels.”

Chester White Papers

Chester L. White enlisted in the 2nd Ohio Cavalry on October 10, 1861. This letter, dated June 14, 1862, describes and engagement with Stand Waite and the First Cherokee Mounted Rifles in Indian Territory. The 2nd Ohio Cavalry was organized in Cleveland Ohio, but was sent to the Missouri-Kansas border for duty. The regiment participated in numerous military engagements in the Trans-Mississippi including, capture of Fort Gibson, occupation of Newtonia, and skirmishes at Carthage, Cow Hill, Cow Skin Prairie.

Remley Family Papers

George and Lycurgus Remley were brothers from Oxford, in Johnson County, Iowa who joined Company F of the 22nd Regiment of the Iowa Infantry. The brothers spent most of their time in service at Rolla, Missouri, but travelled further south and participated in the Battle of Port Gibson, in Georgia and the Siege of Vicksburg, Mississippi. George and Lycurgus frequently corresponded with their parents, the Reverend James Remley and their mother Jane back in Iowa, telling them of the conditions of military life and their movements across the country. They also sent letters back and forth to their Uncle William Zoll who lived in Warrensburg, MO. Unfortunately, both brothers did not survive through the war. Lycurgus died in camp near Vicksburg from illness in June 1863. George died at the Battle of Opequan in Winchester, Virginia in September 1864.

Ellen Cox Ewing Papers

Ellen Cox Ewing was a native of Ohio and the wife of Union General Thomas Ewing. Mrs. Ewing lived in Leavenworth, Kansas with her children to be near her husband who was stationed at Fort Leavenworth during the war. Mrs. Ewing’s 1861 letter to her aunt and sister recalls the adventurous train ride home from visiting family in Ohio. On the journey she rode with notorious Jayhawker Charles R. Jennison, whose presence caused fear and panic among the other passengers.

E.A. Coleman Papers

E. A. Coleman was born in 1810 in Gosine County, Connecticut in 1810. She was living on a farm in Texana, Texas in 1861. Coleman’s father and sisters lived in Kansas. Coleman was apparently in higher society as she had access to the Texas state legislature and frequently attended “meetings.” Coleman was a strong supporter of the Southern cause and in her letter to her sister Lucinda; she describes the conditions in Texas now that the state have officially succeeded from the Union.

James H. Wiswell Papers

James H. Wiswell was a teenage solider in the Union Army from Vermont. Wiswell enlisted in Company C, 4th US Cavalry, and served in Kansas and Missouri. He fought under the command of General Nathan Lyon and participated in the Battles of Dug Springs and Wilson’s Creek in 1861. His letter to his sister Naomi revealed the conditions of military life and the toll the defeat at Wilson’s Creek had on his company.