Letter from Augustus Hesse, Fort Ramsay, Upton hill, Va., to Deborah Weston, January the 4th, 1863
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Description
Holograph, signed.In this letter, Augustus Hesse recounts in dramatic detail the arrival in a carriage of Mr. [R. Warren] Weston, Anne W. Weston, and Emma F. Weston and his happiness at their visit. He tells of hearing about the rebel cavalry raid at Dumfries in which 300 prisoners were taken. The same evening, in response to marching orders, "dit we leave Upton hill in good spirit." Augustus Hesse describes the march to Arandale and the position of the troops for battle. When it was learned that their was no chance for a fight, "I took a tea-bag and made me a cup of hot tea, whereby I remember Mrs. Weston." They learned from the inhabitants that the rebels had torn up the track, taken black people employed by the railroad, and were marching toward Centreville. Hesse's battery returned to Upton Hill.
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Digital CommonwealthKeywords
- Antislavery Movements
- Boston
- Civil War
- Civil War, 1861 1865
- Correspondence
- Hesse, Augustus D. 1867
- History
- Massachusetts
- Slaver
- United States
- Weston, Anne Warren 1812 1890
- Weston, Deborah B. 1814
- Weston, Emma Forbes B. 1825
- Weston, R. Warren (Richard Warren) 1819 1873
- Women
- Women Abolitionists