1862 December 25 across the Rappahannock from Fredericksburg

[from the diary of the Rev. Francis E. Butler, chaplain of the 25th New Jersey]

Dec 25. Thurs.  Wrote letter. Visited hospt. Celebrated Xmas with
roast beef and are dried apple pie – Q.M. & Capt Spear are
getting up a dance in front of our mess tent for the men.
It don’t seem to take much.  Rode out to find 2d. N. J. V.
Not successful.  Visitd. hos – wounded are nearly
all removed to Washington &c. found four dying men
one a Cath. wished me to pray for him, two were Christians
one very bright & happy – talked & prayed with all.
A mild day. ‘Tis sd. we are to return to Washington.

Captain Edward Spear of Co. K, and Quartermaster John S. Muschamp

[transcript by Mary Roy Dawson Edwards]

MSS 12935

1862 December 25 near Nashville, Tenn.

[from the diary of Captain William F. Hunter, Co. B., 97th Ohio]

                        Dec. 25th, ’62.
Reg’t. formed at day-
light, & returned to qrs.
in about ½ hour.
My Co. & Co. A, order-
ed to report at div.
Hd. Qrs.
As there are no pro-
visions at brig. Q.
M.’s , my to-day promised
to be a “genuine soldier’s
Christmas”: hard crack-
ers & Hitch!!
Thank God, the hard-
ships & privations
of the present, will
make us appreciate the
blessings of the past,
& render us more thank-
ful for any we may
receive in the future.
Co. on a foraging ex-
pedition out the Frank-
lin pike, & ret’d. about
7 ½ P.M., not able to
go along on accou[n]t
of lameness.

[transcript by Mary Roy Dawson Edwards]

MSS 10547-bm

1862 December 25 Campbell County, Va.

[from the diary of George W. Dabney, clerk of Campbell County]

Dec” 25  Christmas
Clear & pleasant
paper, envelopes & to
Cous: Blair – note from
Cous. Betsy – Lias back
letter from Pa about Lucy
Anns wedding – forbid a
ceremony by me – fears
(groundless) excited by C.H.I.
thwarted again –
Wd & neph visiting
ano. letter from Pa on wedding

MSS 3315

1862 Dec 25 “Hopedale,” Albemarle County, V.

[from the diary of Mary S. Boydon of “Hopedale,” Albemarle County, Va.]

Thursday 25th  A lovely day–The roads are so good
that most of us walked to chruch. I did not go
at all but stayed with J.L.  Sent a package to
the soldiers of four pair socks & three pair gloves-
In the afternoon received a box from Jrs Wellington
Gordon containing a beautiful bonnet Y pair of
undersleeves.  We have got several presents of flour
&c, & Charlotte sent a turkey.  God is so good to
us!

MSS 4288

1862 December 25 Chapel Hill, N.C.

[from the diary of Eliza Oswald Hill, refugee from Wilmington, N.C.]

Thursday 25th Christmas Day – Professor Hubbard gave us a fine sermon
to day – The Congregation was large – & the church very prettily dressed
with evergreens – When we returned home we found a very
nice Christmas dinner – & after dinner we received more
dessert from different families – The negroes have been more
merry than the whites – But take it all in all it has been extreme
ly dull until to night when the young ladies & gentlemen got up
a cotillion or two & danced a little by the Piano – Mrs Walters & Sarah
paid a visit this afternoon but I have been busy sewing ever
since dinner – Eliza has been altering my bonnet into a more
fashionable shape – & I have written two long letters – Eliza recei
-ved two this morning – one from Captain Mason who is feeling
sad & badly at her delaying her marriage longer – But she was
obliged by the many disappointment she has met with in
her wardrobe to do it – A fortnight will soon pass – & then
she will think it was all for the best – Joes letter was not
very cheering – 8 negroes were down sick – 3 or 4 ill
with Pneumonia from exposure without shoes or thick
clothing – None to be had at any price – His house is not yet
finished – & he has given his sister some advice which I
hope she will follow, & that is to have her property made
over to her before she marries -But I fear she wont do it –
Sarah has gone to her room to write to Fred – & I am writing
also – Mrs Johnston’s sister Mrs Smith has arrived–

MSS 6960

1862 December 25 Farm near Savannah, OHio

[from the diary of James Dinsmore Templeton, former musician and private in the 23rd Ohio]

Thursday, Dec. 25, 1862

Did nothing this
forenoon on act of
rain  Went this
afternoon up to
Mrs [Gaults?] for Sarah
remained there for
supper Came home
ate in the evening
Raining hard  roads very
mudy
Wrote letter & sent
it to [Herv?] Templeton
Raining most of
the day

MSS 10317

1862 December 25 [Clarke County, Va.]

[from the diary of Matthella Page Harrison as transcribed at a later date]

Christmas day, 1862
The most quiet one I ever spent.  Cousin John Page, Fez and myself dined here quietly.  No other visitors through the day.  No Yankees have yet appeared in our neighborhood, though said to be still in Winchester.

MSS 9759

1862 December 25 Staunton, Va.

[from the diary of Joseph A. Waddell, former newspaper publisher and civilian employee of the Quartermaster dept.]

Thursday night, Dec. 25, 1862.
I did some work this morning about one of my grape vines, and went down street about 10 o’clock.  Found sentinels, from the Provost Marshal’s Guard, at the corners, — strange and sad change from the times we had only two years ago! Upon joining a crowd near the Courthouse, I learned that the sentinels had, last night, assaulted citizens on the street, and ordered them not to pass unless they were going home. We all agreed that it was a high-handed usurpation which should not be submitted to. So John Baldwin wrote down Edwin Edmondson’s statement of his aunt, shortly after 9 o’clock, and sent it with a note to Davidson, commander of the post, enquiring if the guard had acted in pursuance of orders, and if so whether the proceeding was to be continued to-night. The note was signed in his reply that the Guard were inexperienced, and had misunderstood their instructions — notwithstanding the papers sent to him showed that the Provost Marshall was present at one of the public corners, and required the sentinel to use his gun when necessary to arrest passersby.
I feel a special jealously of the exercise of unnecessary military authority. It is what we have most to fear at this time. — While fully sustaining the military in all lawful and necessary measures, every encroachment by them upon civil rights should be promptly resisted.
I brought Legh up to dinner. We had Alick, Adeline, Sarah Warden, Mr + Mrs Baker, and Agnes + Augusta Tinsley. Legh seemed rather low- spirited, and left us abruptly just before dinner. I have felt much troubled about the matter. None of us knew he had left the house till we sat down to dinner. Poor fellow, he has cause for depression. The supply of rosin gave out at the Gas Works last night, and we have to get along with tallow candles. I should have mentioned that Va’s dinner was as good as she could have provided in peace times — Turkey, Old ham, spare-ribs, some cheese, sundry vegetables (potatoes, [illeg.], tomatoes +c) “huckleberry” + damson pies, raspberry puffs, cake, peaches + milk + preserves — We had a sufficiency of table furniture also — many families are sadly off for plates, tumblers, cups +c, having broken up old sets, and not being able to procure new ones.

[transcript by the Valley of the Shadow project]
MSS 38-258

1862 December 24 New Bern, N.C.

[from the diary of Jesse Calvin Spaulding, Co. F.,  25th Massachusetts]

Wednesday
Dec 24
Thursday night was one of the most
uncomfortable nights I ever spent
and I did not sleep any it was so cold, but
Friday morning I got up and ate a little breakfast
and then started on again.  We passed by Kinston
about noon and stopped to eat dinner
about two.  The boys shot a pig and I broiled
a piece and ate it with some hard tack, and
drank some coffee and pricked my blisters
and started on.  We stopped about five and
encamped near the forks of the roads in a
good place.  Here we found quite a number
of dead rebels.  Saturday we went as far as
the woods about eighteen miles from Newbern
where we staid that  night.  It was very cold
so that it froze hard.  I ate a little piece of
raw salt beef for supper with some hard tack
and coffee and got through the night after
a fashion.  Sunday morning we started in good
spirits and reached Newbern about two o’clock
and there found a mail had come in
and were sorry to hear that Burnside had
been defeated at Fredericksburg.  I got two let-
ters from home, and about five we had to go back
to our picket camp which we did with rather
hard feelings that we were obliged to march
so far for nothing, but I was glad to get back
and George and I thanked God together.
Monday I did not do much but fix up a
little and Tuesday we moved our camp into camp
Oliver and Wednesday were fixing up our
tents.  The eighth boys had used our things
pretty hard and cut a hole through the top of
our tent but we sewed it up and put a patch
over it.

MSS 11293