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Family Member History Page - Willoughby Perry Hill, 1841-1925

The American Civil War is one of the most momentous and controversial periods in American history. 
Time Line of The Civil War, 1861

This time line was compiled by Joanne Freeman and owes a special debt to the Encyclopedia of American History by Richard B. Morris.

January-July 1861 -- The South Secedes. When Abraham Lincoln, a known opponent of slavery, was elected president, the South Carolina legislature perceived a threat. Calling a state convention, the delegates voted to remove the state of South Carolina from the union known as the United States of America. The secession of South Carolina was followed by the secession of six more states -- Mississippi, Florida, Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, and Texas -- and the threat of secession by four more -- Virginia, Arkansas, Tennessee, and North Carolina. These eleven states eventually formed the Confederate States of America. At a convention in Montgomery, Alabama, the seven seceding states created the Confederate Constitution, a document similar to the United States Constitution, but with greater stress on the autonomy of each state. Jefferson Davis was named provisional president of the Confederacy until elections could be held.

When President Buchanan -- Lincoln's predecessor -- refused to surrender southern federal forts to the seceding states, southern state troops seized them. At Fort Sumter, South Carolina troops repulsed a supply ship trying to reach federal forces based in the fort. The ship was forced to return to New York, its supplies undelivered. At Lincoln's inauguration on March 4, the new president said he had no plans to end slavery in those states where it already existed, but he also said he would not accept secession. He hoped to resolve the national crisis without warfare. When President Lincoln planned to send supplies to Fort Sumter, he alerted the state in advance, in an attempt to avoid hostilities. South Carolina, however, feared a trick; the commander of the fort, Robert Anderson, was asked to surrender immediately. Anderson offered to surrender, but only after he had exhausted his supplies. His offer was rejected, and on April 12, the Civil War began with shots fired on the fort. Fort Sumter eventually was surrendered to South Carolina. The attack on Fort Sumter prompted four more states to join the Confederacy. With Virginia's secession, Richmond was named the Confederate capitol. Residents of the western counties of Virginia did not wish to secede along with the rest of the state. This section of Virginia was admitted into the Union as the state of West Virginia on June 20, 1863. Four Slave States Stay in the Union. Despite their acceptance of slavery, Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland, and Missouri did not join the Confederacy. Although divided in their loyalties, a combination of political maneuvering and Union military pressure kept these states from seceding.

Public demand pushed General-in-Chief Winfield Scott to advance on the South before adequately training his untried troops. Scott ordered General Irvin McDowell to advance on Confederate troops stationed at Manassas Junction, Virginia. McDowell attacked on July 21, and was initially successful, but the introduction of Confederate reinforcements resulted in a Southern victory and a chaotic retreat toward Washington by federal troops. None of the included photographs of First Bull Run were made at the time of battle (July 21); the photographers had to wait until the Confederate Army evacuated Centreville and Manassas in March 1862. Their views of various landmarks of the previous summer are arranged according to the direction of the federal advance, a long flanking movement by Sudley's Ford. Suddenly aware of the threat of a protracted war and the army's need for organization and training, Lincoln replaced McDowell with General George B. McClellan. To blockade the coast of the Confederacy effectively, the federal navy had to be improved. By July, the effort at improvement had made a difference and an effective blockade had begun. The South responded by building small, fast ships that could outmaneuver Union vessels. On November 7, 1861, Captain Samuel F. Dupont's warships silenced Confederate guns in Fort Walker and Fort Beauregard. This victory enabled General Thomas W. Sherman's troops to occupy first Port Royal and then all the famous Sea Islands of South Carolina, where Timothy H. O'Sullivan recorded them making themselves at home.

For the rest of the Civil War Timeline, visit http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/cwphtml/tl1861.html

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Billy Yank

Taken From The Union Soldier in the Civil War

The name "Billy Yank" was used to mean any average, common soldier in the Union Army, much the same way the term "G.I. Joe" was used in the Second World War. His counter-part in the Confederate Army was likewise known as "Johnny Reb." However, unlike his counter-part in the Confederate Army, Union soldiers were a more diversified group. There were many nationalities, races and occupations. In a sense, the Union Army represented a cross-section of American society in the mid-nineteenth century.

About 75% of the soldiers in the Union Army were American born. Of the foreign born soldiers, the Irish and Germans were the most numerous due to heavy immigration of these two groups in the decades preceding the war. However, there were more nationalities prevalent. The English, Canadian, Scandinavian, French, Italian and Hungarian were also members of the Union Army. These foreign born soldiers gave color and variety to army camp life. They sang their native songs, ate their native foods and drank their native beverages.

Many immigrant soldiers were formed into their own regiments such as the Swiss Rifles (15th Missouri); the Gardes Lafayette (55th New York); the Garibaldi Guard (39th New York); the Martinez Militia (1st New Mexico); and the Polish Legion (58th New York). But for the most part, the soldiers of these ethnic groups were scattered as individuals throughout units. Within these units they were only a minority.

As much as this diversity of ethnic origin gave color and variety to the army, it also aroused prejudice and friction among the American born soldiers. Some officers complained of assignments to units composed of foreigners, mainly because of speech and custom differences. One colonel, for example, had to give commands in fifteen different languages. Also, the foreigners' resistance to prescribed regulations in dress, food and drink posed numerous problems for Union officers.

 

The average Union soldier, unlike his Confederate counter-part, carried about fifty pounds of equipment and clothing. Below is a list of items which made up the well equipped Billy Yank:

  1. Musket
  2. Bayonet
  3. Cartridge Box (40 rounds)
  4. Belt
  5. Cap Pouch
  6. Haversack
  7. Canteen
  8. Knapsack
  9. Blanket
  10. Gum Blanket (Rain Poncho or Ground Cloth)
  11. Shelter Half
  12. Winter Greatcoat
  13. Tin Cup and Plate
  14. Leggings

All this cost the Federal Government about forty-two dollars per man in 1861, and the reenactor about nine hundred dollars in 1986

Sometimes, this equipment was not sufficient to last the year because many times the materials were of inferior quality and wore out fast. This was due to dishonest contractors who sold second rate merchandise to the Federal government, the practice of which continued for the first several months of the war. An example of the poor quality of equipment was relayed in an account by A.C. Stearns of the 13th Massachusetts Infantry:
"We drew knapsacks in place of those lost at Bull Run, also blankets and tents. I remember the blankets we drew were so short that when we covered our feet our heads were bare, and if we covered our heads, our feet were exposed, and let me here say that a soldier wants his head covered as well as his feet.''
In defense of the war contractors, however, most were conscientious, and according to James McPherson, by 1862 the Union forces became the best equipped in the world's history.

Willoughby and Becky Hill, 1910 Willoughby Perry and Rebecca E. Hill ca. 1910
B: 1841

D: 1925, Drakesboro, Muhlenberg Co., KY
Marriage:  22 February, 1865, Muhlenberg Co., KY
Married: Rebecca E. Utley
Children: 


Parents: Son of Thomas and Lutansy Hill, Muhlenberg Co., KY
U.S. military service record: Pvt., K Co. 11th Kentucky Infantry, Union Troops
Where the person "fits" in our family tree

Photo of Willoughby and Becky Hill graciously donated by John M. Hill.

The History Channel'

Profiles

More Links for the Civil War:

National Civil War Association

Company K, 11th Kentucky Infantry Regiment
11th Kentucky Infantry Regiment

Field Element

Cpl. Joseph Vick                   Captain WC Shannon
Corporal Joseph L. Vick Cpt Washington Columbus Shannon
Photo courtesy Vick's g. grandson, Jim Wallace
Captains: Martin Jefferson Roark, Columbus M. Martin, Washington C. Shannon
1st Lieutenant: James L. Roark
2nd Lieutenant: Green B. Eades
Sergeants: Kinchen L. Terry, Thomas McDonald, Augustus Lewis, William H. Martin, Julius Vincent, James N. Campbell
Corporals: Zachariah Stovall, John B. Blackwell, Seth Beasley, Robert H. Tolbert, Samuel M. Pace, John A. Williams, William H. Hughes, Joseph L. Vick, Thomas H. Turner
Musician: Sidney P. Walker
Wagoner: John E. Gibbs
Privates: James A. Allen, Alexander B. Cox, Lewis Dwyer, Charles B. Eades, W. Henry Gossett, William R. Hayes,
Willoby P. Hill , Kenyon Harper, Thomas Lovell, William J. Letchford, William J. Lamb, John W. Mathis Jr., Anderson F. Miller, Nathan G. Neeley, John L. Neeley, Arington W. Oates, William D. Oates, Charles H. Oates, Lamberton Oates, Michael Shanks, Green B. Stewart, Louis Stanly [Stanley?], John A. Stanley, Richard Turner, Thomas J. Turner, Agel M. Terry, Riley Tyson, Silas Tyson, James A. Warner, William A. Williams, Alexander H. Williams, Thomas M. Wilcox, George B. Blackwell, Robert P. Bell, William L. Clark, Porter H. Calvert, Granville Corley, William Forrester, Joseph H. Hayes, James H. Latham, James S. Lewis, Henry C. McCrackin, William W. Oates, George L. Oates, William A. Randolph, James H. Stewart, James Tyson, John G. Allen, George W. Buchannan, Zephaniah Ball, John B. Bailes, James Crail, George B. Chandler, John Cobb, Richard Hany, Timothy Harper, James R. Hayes, Columbus A. Harris, James D. Ingram, Doctor F. Johnson, Philip Mercer, Bennett Mercer, William M. McDonald, Henry H. Neeley, Jacob Shanks, Jesse Shanks, Isaac Shanks, John B. Staples, John A. Strader, William Taylor, Winchester W. Utley, Richard Williams, Henry Whanger, John R. Wells, George H. Tooley, John Livingston, Thomas B. Harrison, Riley R. Cobb, John W. Lane, Mathew N. Lanford, William Stewart, Benjamin Stewart, John Willis


A slideshow of major battles of the Civil War.

FIeld of Battle

Stop by for "Reenactor Photos With A Period Look".  A must-see!
All pictures at this site are copyrighted and used on my site with permission


Confederate Roll Musters   Union & Confed Flags     Union Roll Musters

The typical method of shelter during the Civil War was the tent. There were four basic types of tents used. They are illustrated below.

The Sibley tent was first used by Henry Sibley in 1857. He must have gotten the idea from the Indians, for it closely resembled the "teepee." Its dimensions were roughly eighteen feet in diameter and twelve feet high. There was a hole at the top for a pipe which rose from a small "Sibley" stove. Capacity was approximately twelve men. In rainy weather, when all the openings were closed the exhalations from the bodies of twelve men who differed in the habits of personal cleanliness would create a nauseating climate. These tents were not very practical in the field mainly because they were too large and expensive to transport.

At our reenactment encampment at Manassas in 1986, this tent was present but not in any great numbers, and one entire platoon of at least ten men was staying in just one of these tents.Union Camp

The "A" or wedge tent covered an area of about seven feet by seven feet and was made to house about four men, although often six men occupied them. In this case, the men would "spoon" together when sleeping. This meant that they would all sleep in the same direction and turn over together at the same time, when one of the men would say to do so. At our twentieth century camp we only placed two men in any one of these tents, but of course, we didn't have the numbers of men that the real Union army had to accommodate a hundred years ago. These tents also required too much wagon transport and were turned over to troops who were more permanently stationed.

The third type of tent was the hospital or wall tent. This was much more spacious than the wedge tent, as a person could stand up inside of it. These were used mostly as field hospitals during combat or for officers' accommodations. Two or more of these tents could be joined together to make a considerably large hospital for the wounded. The smaller or standard size tents were used exclusively by officers.

For the Civil War soldier shelter was inadequate most of the time and lacked convenience nearly all of the time. When men first enlisted in the army, they lived in spacious barracks in places like Reading, MA and Elmira, NY. But they were to find out that this was only for the time from enlistment until their units received marching orders. From that point on, the soldier was "sentenced" to the army tent.
Take the tour of Camp Life in the Civil War.

Union & Confed Flags

Memories and Stories - The 11th Kentucky Volunteers
The following names were compiled from Regimental Records at the National Archives. Spelling of names, along with alternate spellings, are as they appear on the Muster Rolls. Succeeding entries are: rank at enlistment, company assigned, age at enlistment, date enlisted and where enlisted. All enlistments were for three years, unless otherwise noted. The regiment was mustered into Federal Service on 9 Dec 61 at Calhoun, Kentucky. Hospitalizations, wounds, transfers, promotions and other information are also included. The regiment was mustered out of Federal Service 14-17 Dec 64 at Bowling Green, Kentucky. Unfortunately, the regimental papers were lost to Confederate forces on 23 Nov 64 due to the abandonment of Pulaski, Tennessee by Federal forces. Major General Schofield ordered the evacuation of Pulaski to return to Nashville and only essential materials were taken along. However, a few duplicate enlistment and discharge certificates still survive.

IN BRIEF

A fierce battle took place at Stones River between December 31, 1862 and January 2, 1863. General Bragg's Confederates withdrew after the battle, allowing General Rosecrans and the Union army to control middle Tennessee. Although the battle was tactically indecisive, it provided a much-needed boost to the North after the defeat at Fredericksburg. Lincoln later wrote to General Rosecrans, "I can never forget [...] you gave us a hard-earned victory, which had there been a defeat instead, the nation could scarcely have lived over."

The 584-acre National Battlefield includes Stones River National Cemetery, established in 1865, with more than 6,000 Union graves; and the Hazen Brigade Monument, believed to be the oldest, intact Civil War monument still standing in its original location. Portions of Fortress Rosecrans, a large earthen fort constructed after the battle, still stand and are preserved and interpreted by the National Park Service. Much of the nearly 4,000-acre battlefield is in private hands.

DESIGNATIONS
Stones River National Military Park - March 3, 1927
Stones River National Battlefield - April 22, 1960
Civil War Timeline
Summary of Stone's River Battle

Field Element

Hill, Allen, Private, I Co, 28 yrs, 2 Oct 61 at Camp Caloway (Hartford), KY. Wounded (severely) at battle of Shiloh (Shiloh, TN) and sent home to Muhlenberg Co, KY. Returned to duty Jul 62. May-Aug 64 sick at General Hospital Chattanooga, TN. Discharged 14 Dec 64 at Bowling Green, KY.

Hill, Elias, Private, I Co, 27 yrs, 16 Oct 61 at Camp Caloway (Hartford), KY. Wounded at skirmish of Sacramento (Sacramento, KY) on 28 Dec 61. Jan-Feb 62 sick at Calhoun, KY. Aug 62 sick at Nashville, TN. Deserted 24 May 64 at Calhoun, TN and returned to regiment 23 Jul 64. Was court martialed, but verdict or sentence unknown. Discharged 14 Dec 64 at Bowling Green, KY.

Hill, James, Private, I Co, 39 yrs, 17 Oct 61 at Camp Caloway (Hartford), KY. Jan-Apr 62 detailed as a nurse at General Hospital Nashville, TN. Mar-Jun 63 sick at Bowling Green, KY. Mar-Apr 64 sick at General Hospital Louisville, KY. May-Aug 64 sick at Camp Nelson, KY. Discharged 17 Sep 64 at Camp Nelson, KY due to disability. Discharge certificate states disability due to conjunctivitis of both eyes. At discharge was 5 ft 9 in, fair complexion, blue eyes, dark hair, farmer, and born in TN.

Hill, Jesse G., 3rd Sergeant, H Co, 21 yrs, 28 Sep 61 at South Carrollton, KY. Jan-Apr 62 sick at Calhoun, KY. Promoted to 2nd Sergeant (vice Henry Tinsley, discharged) on 6 May 62. Commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant (vice Joseph D. Yonts, promoted) on 12 Aug 62. Tendered resignation on 12 Oct 62 due to chronic diarrhea. Discharged 19 Oct 62 at Springfield, KY.

Hill, John S., Private, I Co, 18 yrs, 7 Oct 61 at Camp Caloway (Hartford), KY. Promoted to 7th Corporal Jul 62. Promoted to 5th Corporal Nov 62. Promoted to 4th Corporal Sep 63. Promoted to 3rd Corporal Nov 64. Discharged 14 Dec 64 at Bowling Green, KY.

Hill, Willo
ughby P., Private, K Co, 20 yrs, 10 Oct 61 at Earles, KY. Wounded (slightly) at battle of Stone's River (Murfreesboro, TN) on 2 Jan 63. Feb 63 AWOL. Mar-Apr 63 sick at home. Jul 63 arrested for desertion. Restored to duty 6 Aug 63 with stoppage of pay during period of desertion. [Father Thomas Hill died of Pneumonia 7 January, 1864] Discharged 16 Dec 64 at Bowling Green, KY.

Confed border

Other family members of mine were in the Civil War, as well!  The Mashburn family of Alabama had so many boys serving in the war, had they gathered them all together it would have comprised the Mashburn Brigade!  My great-great uncle Noah O. Mashburn served in the 8th GA Infantry. For more about my family in the Civil War, go to Mashburns of Alabama.

8th GA Infantry

Mashburn Family in the Civil War