October 10, 1864 Letter from
William Hoyt to Wife Phebe
Campbell
[Note: Wm. Hoyt was a Private in Co. H,
275th Regiment, PA Vols. The original letter was
copied by William and Phebe's granddaughter,
Jessica HOYT Thompson, perhaps in the 1950s, and transcribed by her
son, William Thompson. We tried to preserve the original grammar and
spelling, which was somewhat erratic. Jessica wrote the following comment
on her copy:
October 10th 64
Dear wife and baby,
Once more I am seated in my cabin with my pencil in hand to
write your answer to your much loved letter. I am well at present &
hope this will find you as well as I. You may think it strange that I
write every time with pencil but it is a hard matter to have ink here
& when we do it is a hard matter to keep them. I bought me a
portfolio to keep my papers & envelopes in. I was down to the
hospital this morning and about eight thousand men sick and wounded. You
can not put down your finger without you will find some one in
there.
I got you and Joe's picture
yesterday which made me think of home. There will not be many days that I
shall not see it, the picture. I think Joe's looks more natural than
yours. I have heard nothing of my photographs since I left Harrisburg but
hope to get them soon. You said the water in the well was bad. You must
get some one to draw the water out & clean it out then I think it
will be good again. You must keep Joe away from the well. You must not
let anyone draw wood off the farm except Sam without Rogers wants to draw
once in a while for logs. Tell me what Beever [sic] is going to do and
how Mary is getting along and all the particulars. I want you to let Sam
work the land. We have not seen Jim Simonds yet. John paid me the money
on that note in Harrisburg and I wrote him a receipt. You had better keep
the old rooster and kill the young ones and eat them. I would not want
those ten roosters. Your geese you had better kill and save the feathers
& sell that [illegible] to Lug [sic] as soon as it gets old
enough.
You say you think that I am home sick. I would give
anything to see you & Joe but I dare not get home sick for a minute.
You must not worry about me for I have a good place. I have been detailed
to go with the Doctors so I have no shooting to do. I have it very easy.
You must not work so hard. You had better get some boy that you can trust
to do the chores. You must be careful of yourself. When I draw my pay I
will send you the money and you must pay Stanton. I will tell you more
about it next time. See
E. Knapp and get that money from his note. Write as soon as you get
this and tell me all.