Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Positively devilish: Book looted from Fredericksburg in 1862

A tattered copy of  Dialogues of Devils, looted from Fredericksburg, Va., in December 1862.
"Taken from deserted house of a wealthy citizen ..." reads a soldier's inscription inside the book once
 owned by William Warren, a prominent resident of Fredericksburg, Va.
.  (New England Civil War Museum | Rockville, Conn.)

 Like this blog on Facebook | Follow me on Twitter

William Warren of  Fredericksburg, Va. 
(Ancestry.com)
In 1862, 38-year-old merchant William Warren lived with his family at the corner of Amelia and Caroline streets in Fredericksburg, Va. His house, only blocks from the Rappahannock River, was destroyed during the Federals’ bombardment of the town on Dec. 11, 1862. Compounding the disaster for the family, their residence was looted by Union soldiers. A book from William's collection ended up with a private in Company D of the 44th New York, "Ellsworth’s Avengers," who kept it for the remainder of the war.

We can only speculate how the 1838 edition of Dialogues Of Devils, which chronicled the “many vices that abound in the civil and religious world,” was obtained by 37-year-old Cyrus Snow Crain. On a blank page near the front, the private wrote, "Taken from the deserted house of a wealthy citizen of Fredericksburg, Va. where books & furniture were scattered about in profusion. Preserved as a memento of the occupancy of that city by our troops Dec. 13th, 14th, 15th 1862.” Warren’s name is written in the book in three places.

Did Crain, who became regimental chaplain in March 1863, steal the book from Warren's house? Was it given to him by another soldier when the Yankees looted the town on Dec. 12, 1862? Or did he simply pick it up in the street?

The 44th New York suffered 42 casualties, including seven killed or mortally wounded, during the disastrous Union attack on Marye’s Heights on Dec. 13. Perhaps Crain obtained the book when his regiment, part of the rear-guard for the Union army as it retreated across the Rappahannock on Dec. 16, occupied Fredericksburg a day earlier. A 44th New York regimental historian blamed the pillaging of the town on “camp followers, who had the time and opportunity for such lawlessness.”

                                                       GOOGLE STREET VIEW
        William Warren's 1862 house is gone. A gym occupies part of the property today. 
                                                            
For the well-educated Warren, who was involved in the cotton, iron and grocery businesses, the war brought financial ruin. His estate, according to the 1860 census, was worth $12,000, an impressive sum at the time. Warren owned a tan yard along the Rappahannock a short distance from his house. He also operated mills to benefit the Confederacy. But during the Battle of Fredericksburg, “his beautiful home and business interests were completely wrecked,” according to a post-war account published in the Richmond Dispatch.

At an unknown date, Warren moved with his wife, Mary, to Richmond, “where he soon won recognition as a business man of fine abilities and sterling worth.” In 1870, he went to work for a bank as a bookkeeper and discount teller, among other roles, positions that spanned decades. But it was a giant step removed from his previous station in life.

Warren's property in Fredericksburg was near his tan yard
 along the Rappahannock River. (Explore an
 excellent 1860 map of  Fredericksburg from 
National Park Service blog.)
“Mr. Warren was a typical southern gentleman of the old school,” the Dispatch noted upon his death in 1900. “He was sincerely admired and greatly respected by the community at large -- a man whom everybody trusted implicitly, and who, while occupying a subordinate position, still leaves his mark and a place that will not easily be filled.”

After his wife’s death in 1874, Warren moved in with a daughter and son-in-law in Richmond. There, on Nov. 22, 1900, he was struck by a dray at Tenth and Broad streets while on his way home from work. Three days later, he died from effects of his injuries at his daughter’s house. The 74-year-old Virginian was buried in his hometown of Fredericksburg.

“Our brother was a man of aesthetic nature and refined tastes, with a decided literary bent, which he occasionally indulged in excursions into the field of poetry, with no mean success,” an obituary noted about Warren. “Tennyson was his favorite among the great masters of song, and the tender farewell that trembled on the inspired Laureate’s lips are ‘he crossed the bar’ found echo in our brother’s heart and was often repeated by him in view of his departure.”

William Warren's name appears twice at top of  title page.
For Cyrus Crain, the Civil War dragged on. He spent part of the winter of 1863 at the V Corps post hospital at Windmill Point, the largest military hospital in the Fredericksburg area. On a blank page in the back of Warren’s Dialogues of Devils, Crain even wrote scathing reviews of Windmill Point, where 4,000 sick soldiers were treated:
“These scribblings were offered to while away time while in the hospital at Windmill Point, Va., a bleak promontory on the Virginia side of the Potomac, a few miles below Acquia Creek. The sick and wounded were hastily taken here before the necessary preparations were completed & as consequence many died & others suffered much."
And on another page:
"Would … the people north know how the government treated its sick soldiers at Windmill Point there would be a storm."
As regimental chaplain, Crain ministered to soldiers at Gettysburg, where the 44th New York defended Little Round Top and suffered 26 killed among 111 casualties. He was discharged from the  army on March 17, 1864. A short time later, he married his second wife, Mary, with whom he raised three children. (His first wife, Merab, died in 1862.) Crain preached in small towns throughout New York, and died in 1895 at 71 

In battered conditionDialogues of Devils survives in Rockville, Conn., at the New England Civil War Museum, a former Grand Army of the Republic hall.

How it got there is unknown.

(See post here on the Windmill Point hospital from John Hennessy, chief historian and chief of interpretation at Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park.)


44th New York Private Cyrus Crain, who obtained Warren's book, wrote scathingly  inside it about
 a Fredericksburg area hospital for soldiers.
44th New York Private Cyrus Crain, who later became the regiment's chaplain, wrote musings
in the book about Windmill Point hospital for soldiers: "The sick and wounded were hastily
 taken here before the necessary preparations..."

 Have something to add (or correct) in this post? E-mail me here.


NOTES AND SOURCES

-- Ancestry.com
 -- Genealogical and Family History of Western New York: A Record of Western New York, Volume 3, edited by William Richard Cutter, New York, Lewis Historical Publishing Co., 1912.
-- Nash, Eugene Arus, A History of the Forty-fourth Regiment, New York Volunteer Infantry, Chicago, R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company, 1911 .
-- Richmond Dispatch, Nov. 27, 1900.
-- Richmond Times, Nov. 27, 1900.
-- William Warren obituary from 1900 newspaper clipping, probably from Virginia, accessed on ancestry.com on Dec. 19, 2016.

No comments:

Post a Comment