Regimentals

Tuesday, December 12, 2017

In pension file docs, snapshots of a life lost at Fredericksburg

The Stone Wall at the base of Marye's Heights, Fredericksburg, Va. Private Thomas Roach
and his 72nd Pennsylvania comrades were in the first wave of attacks on the heights west of town.

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While her son Thomas served with the Army of the Potomac, Mary Roach eked out a living in Philadelphia by washing clothes and cleaning houses. Her husband, a "habitual drunkard," didn't support the family financially. In his early 60s in 1862, John Roach was "totally incapable of earning a living in consequence of said habitual drunkenness," a family acquaintance noted.

In the Philadelphia Inquirer on Dec. 16, 1862,
Private Thomas Roach was listed among the
104 killed and wounded in the 72nd Pennsylvania.
Before he enlisted in the 72nd Pennsylvania — Baxter's Fire Zouaves of the Philadelphia Brigade — Thomas Roach worked as a clerk, giving a major portion of his weekly wages to his mother. While he served in the army, the 21-year-old private often wrote letters to his mother on patriotic stationery, sometimes including $20 or so with the correspondence. It was enough money for his Irish-born mother to pay the rent and meet other family obligations.

Then came Dec. 13, 1862, a date that rocked the Roach family. During the first wave of attacks on Marye's Heights, Thomas suffered a mortal wound. Confederates may have stripped him of his shoes and outer clothes. A U.S. Army burial crew may have tossed his body into a trench.

Roach's final resting place is unknown.

Soon after her son's death, Mrs. Roach, who had four young children to raise, filed an application for a mother's pension. She included in her paperwork wartime letters written by her son, who often mentioned in that correspondence about sending his mother money. The government approved Mary's pension application for the standard $8 a month.

Here are documents from the pension file in the National Archives (via fold3.com) that provide a glimpse of a soldier whose life was snuffed out on the plain in Fredericksburg, Va. 

(Note: Some words in the letters below are illegible. Can you help decipher? E-mail me here or put a note in the comments section.)

'WE GET PAID TODAY AND I WILL SEND YOU $20'


On patriotic stationery, Thomas Roach wrote this letter on Dec. 4, 1861.

Poolsville, Md.
December 4, 1861

Dear Mother

I take the pleasure of return [ing] you these few lines to let you now [sic] I am rite well and to send you some good news. We got paid to day and i will send you $20.00 dollars to morrow by Adams Express Company which i hope you will get. I got $34.53 dollars. I [illegible] the sutlers [?] $7.00 dollars and i had to ...

Private Roach signed his letters with a bold flourish.
... pay him and less the balance to by things I will want. I will get paid again the first of January. Those will be more truble [sic] after the first payment. Give my best respects to all enquiring friends. Now [sic]  more at present.

Dec 4th 8 o'clock in the evening i send this letter to Washington a [illegible] men [illegible] as you will.

Your obedient son,

Thomas Roach


 ENVELOPE FOR LETTER SENT BY ROACH TO HIS MOTHER

Mary Roach lived at 1341 Olive Street in Philadelphia. (Google Street View: Olive Street today.)

 ADAMS EXPRESS ENVELOPE THAT HELD $20 FOR MRS. ROACH

Adams Express Co. was widely used by soldiers for shipping money and more back home.

 'WE EXPECT A BATTLE EVERY MOMENT'

In early June, the 72nd Pennsylvania was involved in fighting at Fair Oaks, near Richmond.

Camp Dispatch Station
[illegible]
June 6/62

Dear Mother

I take the pleasure of returning you these few lines to inform you that I am well and hope you are all the same. I send you $20 dollars by express to day. Have nothing new out here at present. We are with in 4 miles of the city of Richmond and we expect a battle every moment. We have drove the rebels back 2 miles since the battle. General Sumner says our regiment made one of the best bayonet [charges?] ...


that ever was made. He says he will put our regiment and batery against brigade in the rebel army. Our regiment jumped a 4 railed fence and chased and drove them half mile this morning. We have lost 2 men killed and 8 wounded. The regiment was left a [illegible] at the time in to the line of battle. News come down to day our regiment charged over one of Richardson's brigades. It has been raining for 5 days very near. ...


We are camp in the line of battle all the time with tents. We are released every 12 hours. I wish you would get me a red flannel shirt, one all ready made 16 inches wide in the neck, and take it down to the post office and have it mailed to me. Don't send it by express or I won't get it. Get a good one as a bad one aint worth nothing out here. ...


... Yours respectfully, Thos Roach

'DON'T FORGET TO SEND THAT RED HAT'


Roach used phonetic spellings for some words in his letters home.
June 11/62

Dear Mother, 

I received your kind and efecsined letter this morning and i am glad to here that you and all the children is well as i am the same. I sent you $20 dollars on the 6th by Adams Express Company. I did not get your letter in time to send it to where you moved to. It is directed to 1324 Heath St. ...



Our regiment had a skirmish with them on Monday. We drove them out of their rifle pits and a half mile on charge bayonets. We lost 4 [illegible] killed and 38 wounded. Don't forget to send that red hat [?]. Rap it up nice and tite and take it to the post office and have it waided [sic].

Your Efecsined son
Thomas Roach
Comp. A Baxter's Fire Zouaves 72 P.V. 
Burns Brigade Sedwick's division
[illegible]


 THOMAS' FATHER: ALLEGEDLY 'A HABITUAL DRUNKARD'

In this pension affidavit, an acquaintance of the family did not have nice things to say
 about Private Roach's father, John. (CLICK ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE.)

A SAD END FOR A SOLDIER'S MOTHER

By February 1895, Mary Roach lived at the "insane dept."of the almshouse in Philadelphia.
She died there on Sept. 29, 1896. The fate of her husband is unknown, as is 

the final resting place  of Thomas. 


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

6 comments:

  1. June 6 letter: obliquing (spelled phonetically) into line of battle?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Spelled in letter as "A bleaking"

      Delete
  2. December 4 letter: think you're right, owed (owied?) the sutler...

    ReplyDelete
  3. Could the June 11, '62 letter say "we lost 4 misen" (missing)?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

      Delete
  4. Mike Brock7:36 PM

    Burnside basically committed murder by sending those to men to their death. Many mained physically and mentally. They hated him both the wall and Meade Division. Burnside was a idiot. So manny died in field a slow painful death.

    ReplyDelete