
Henry C. Gilbert papers, 1826-1864
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Creator:
- Gilbert, Henry Clarke, 1818-1864
- Abstract:
- The Henry C. Gilbert papers consist of a substantial body of personal and business correspondence documenting a long and successful public career. As attorney, Indian agent, political hand, and Colonel of a regiment of Civil War volunteers, Gilbert served his state and nation for over twenty years.
- Extent:
- 365 items (1.5 linear ft.)
- Language:
- English
- Authors:
- Collection processed and finding aid created by Rob S. Cox, 1992
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The Henry C. Gilbert papers consist of a substantial body of personal and business correspondence documenting a long and successful public career. As attorney, Indian agent, political hand, and Colonel of a regiment of Civil War volunteers, Gilbert served his state and nation for over twenty years, giving his life in the cause. His letters, mostly addressed to his wife, Hattie (Harriet), are extremely literate, tinged with a good natured sense of humor, though occasionally a black humor, and a deeply felt affection for family and nation. At his best, Gilbert is a passionate, keenly observant writer who never minces his words or hides his opinions. His forthrightness and firmness of opinion come through in nearly every letter, as does his sense of fun and fair play.
The Gilbert papers are arranged into several series. The first four boxes comprise the main run of correspondence, both professional and personal, written between 1826 and his death in May, 1864. The correspondence begins in earnest after Gilbert's move to Michigan. The early part of the collection is dominated by letters stemming from his work as prosecuting attorney for Branch County, providing a limited indication of crime and criminality in rural western Michigan in the 1840s. There are three extensive reports on Branch County merchants prepared by Gilbert in 1845 that give an indication of their viability for credit agencies.
Gilbert's employment as an Indian agent is somewhat sketchily documented, though there is a very nice series of five letters written while Gilbert was distributing annuity payments in the upper Lower Peninsula and Upper Peninsula in the fall of 1853. The best of these includes a nice description of the Indian village at Cross Village at the northern limit of the Lower Peninsula. Unfortunately, Gilbert's letters from the field tend to be somewhat sparse of detail, and are generally shorter than average.
For many researchers, the heart of the Gilbert papers is the 210 letters written while he was colonel of the 19th Michigan Infantry. These letters form a complete and detailed history of the activities of the regiment from its formation in July, 1862, through the death of Col. Gilbert at the Battle of Resaca on May 13, 1864. Although the regiment was in the rear during much of this period, assigned to reserve duty with the Army of the Cumberland in Kentucky and Tennessee, they nevertheless provide an important perspective on the war, as well as on the attitudes, motivations, and duties of an officer. Gilbert was ideologically driven, and less concerned for self-glorification or promotion than for the ardent and ceaseless pursuit of the war against secession and slavery. While he did not follow the radicalism of his cousin, Theodore Dwight Weld, he was a moderate abolitionist and held progressive views on race relations. Some of his best letters are filled with a strident patriotism and calls to sacrifice for the survival of the Union.
The significance of Gilbert's Civil War letters lies in their documentation of the activities of the army of occupation in Kentucky and Tennessee. Although the 19th Michigan was not involved in many major battles prior to Resaca, Gilbert's letters paint a vivid picture of the brutality of the guerrilla conflict in East Tennessee and the resulting devastation. Gilbert leaves no doubt that he considered the situation to be an inevitable result of civil war and a necessity in meeting the political goal of ending the war and slavery. His transformation from a stern disciplinarian into a more ruthless and rigid commander under the pressure of guerrilla violence is a particularly interesting feature of the collection.
In one letter and in his diary, Gilbert provides an account of the Union debacle at the Battle of Thompson's Station and of his capture by Confederate forces. Information on his imprisonment at Libby Prison in Richmond is sketchy, but between his diary entries for this period and five letters a strong sense emerges of the physical and psychological hardships he endured. His toughness, though, resulted in his very rapid return to active duty.
Among other miscellaneous items of note in the collection is a humorous description of Gilbert's visit to the home in of Theodore Dwight Weld and Sarah and Angelina Grimké in Belleville, N.J. (1849 July 22). To his annoyance, Gilbert, the smoking, coffee guzzling carnivore, found that the lot of them were on the Graham system, eschewing meat, caffeine, and tobacco. Of equal interest are two exceptional descriptions of séances with one of the Fox sisters, held in Detroit in 1853 (1853 August 26, 29). Gilbert is at his literary best in conveying the emotional power of these séances and the mechanics of the séance itself.
Box 5 of the Gilbert papers contains correspondence and records relating to the Southern Michigan Railroad, 1848-1852. As the only one of three railroad lines planned for Michigan to be completed in the 1850s, the Southern Michigan Railroad established an important communications and commercial link between the eastern and western parts of the state. As President, stock holder, and chief lobbyist in Lansing, Gilbert was instrumental in securing passage of a bill in 1849 to help finance the construction of the line.
The Southern Michigan Railroad series contains a considerable body of detailed information regarding the laying out and financing of the line, including 74 letters received by Gilbert between June, 1849, and December, 1851, contracts, time sheets for laborers, surveys for right of way, and information on stocks and dividends. Additional information on the railroad can be found in letters from Gilbert to his wife, filed in the main correspondence series.
Finally, the Champion-Warner series relates to Gilbert's financial entanglements with his father-in-law, Reuben Champion, with whom he was often at odds. Most of these items are deeds and legal documents relating to the grist mill in Lima, Ind.
- Biographical / Historical:
-
Like many Michigan emigrants of the 1830s, Henry C. Gilbert and his father, Daniel, had roots in the farming regions of central New York State. Henry attended school at the Pompey Academy in his home town a few miles south of Syracuse, but before turning twenty-one, he and his father emigrated to southwestern Michigan. The Gilberts settled in the new village of Coldwater, on land that had been purchased from the Potawotami Indians just over a decade previously.
In Coldwater, Gilbert found fertile land in every sense of the word. In 1841, he received a certificate to enable him to hold school, but before long he and his father began to pursue more lucrative lines, establishing a dry-goods store while Henry pursued a legal career. His fortunes bloomed. After becoming Circuit Court Commissioner in 1845, Gilbert was appointed by Gov. Alpheus Felch as prosecuting attorney for Branch County in the following year and again by Epaphroditus Ransom in 1848. Gilbert's home life in Coldwater was equally productive. He married Harriet Ousley Champion (1827-1876) in a Presbyterian ceremony held on November 26, 1843, and the couple eventually had eight children, including sons, Frederick (1846-1850), James (1855-1871), Philip (1860-1938), and Henry (1862-after 1943), and daughters, Lucy (1844-1865), Grace (1849-1914), Rosamond (1851-1881), and Norah (1853-1905).
Thus within a few years of their arrival in Michigan, Gilbert and his family had firmly established themselves as vital elements in the political, social, and economic life of Coldwater. Gilbert was among the men tapped by eastern credit bureaus to provide information on local merchants for credit ratings, and the connections he established as a mason, merchant, president of the Sons of Temperance, and attorney enabled him to assist in the economic and infrastructural development of the county. At the same time, he was well able to further his own interests, supporting his growing family, and even assisting his ill-starred father-in-law in averting financial disaster in running a failing grist mill in Lima, Indiana.
Almost inevitably, Gilbert was drawn into political life. While he was allied with the conservative wing of the Democratic Party, his social politics were generally "liberal," favoring internal improvement and social causes such as moderate abolitionism. In 1848-49, he lobbied tirelessly in the new capitol, Lansing (then called Michigan City), for a bill to authorize public funds for construction of the Southern Michigan Railroad, of which he was President and a major share holder. Partly through his efforts, the railroad bill succeeded and the line was run through Coldwater in 1851. Though he did not particularly enjoy the work, Gilbert was a single-minded, even ferocious, lobbyist, even joking with his wife that he hoped that state senator H. H. Comstock, then dying with delirium tremens, would not die too soon: "we have paid for his vote for our R.R. bill & we want it" (1849 February 18).
Gilbert was particularly active in organizing for the Democratic Party during the general election of 1852, and was sent east to attend the Baltimore convention. A measure of his importance is suggested by a lengthy visit paid to him in October by the great titan of the Democracy in Michigan, Lewis Cass, and although Pierce and the Whigs won the election, Gilbert was rewarded for his yeoman's work with a plum appointment as Indian agent for Michigan, a position he retained for many years. Gilbert was a representative during the treaty negotiations at La Pointe, Wisconsin, in 1854, and made regular trips around the state to deliver annuity payments to the Chippewa and Potawotami.
It is unclear whether Gilbert had had any exposure to Spiritualism prior to 1853, but in August of that year, he attended two séances in Detroit held by one of the Fox sisters, probably Margaret. The séance was transformative for Gilbert, who received communications from several departed relatives, including his young son, Frederick. Henry became instantly convinced of the authenticity of the experience, and by 1855, he was purchasing Spiritualist tracts, seeking to broaden his understanding. In November of the following year he was excommunicated by the Presbyterian Church, "acknowledg[ing] himself to know nothing of experimental religion and desir[ing] that his name be taken from the records" (1856 November 22). His brother James W., was expelled in December, 1856, and Harriet followed in 1860. Henry subsequently helped to establish a Spiritualist church in Coldwater, personally inviting the new minister, Frederick L. H. Willis. Willis achieved brief notoriety in the early 1850s when he was dismissed from Harvard for mediumistic activities.
Throughout the decade, political demands and work as an Indian Agent took Gilbert regularly away from home, much to his and his wife's regret. In his mind, though, the demands of public life and the duties of citizenship left him little choice. "As you are a good Democrat," he joked to his wife, "you will of course cheerfully acquiesce [in the separation]... I have become a missionary, a regular missionary & you know that peculiar & very useful class of people always sacrifice themselves & their personal desires & predilections to what they consider duty. In fact, I have had a call and must respond" (1852 October 15).
Gilbert was again called upon to sacrifice his "personal desires & predilections" when the Civil War erupted. Although he was well over 40 years old in the summer of 1862, Gilbert agreed to raise a regiment for service in the Union army, and accepted a commission as colonel, driven by a fervent patriotism that made the decision inevitable. "I'm not unmindful of the claims that family have upon me," he informed Hattie, "They are sacred beyond comparison... I accept it [the commission] not with feelings of personal pride... but with profound thankfulness that I am thought capable & worthy of being assigned to such trust " (1862 August 10).
Raised in Coldwater and other towns in Branch County, the 19th Michigan Infantry mustered into service at Camp Wilcox in Dowagiac, Mich., in August. They had little opportunity to drill before being attached to the Reserve Corps of the Army of the Cumberland in September and sent to the Ohio River near Cincinnati to guard against possible Confederate invasion. A month later, they were ordered into Kentucky itself. From the beginning, Gilbert was a disciplinarian in his role as regimental commander, insisting that his soldiers refrain from the common practice of "foraging" for supplies. "It will not do in this country to let every soldier be the judge when it is right to confiscate & when not," he asserted, "They would hurt friends more than foes. Besides it demoralizes & ruins a regiment" (1862 October 27-29).
As part of the reserve, the 19th Michigan saw little action while stationed near Nicholasville, Ky., and area firmly, if only recently, in Union hands. Among their more demanding tasks was to deal with the deluge of "contrabands" escaping from slavery. Unlike some commanders, Gilbert did not prevent slave owners from recapturing fugitives, but neither did he prevent his men from getting in the way. In general, it appears as if his experiences in Kentucky, and later in Tennessee, slowly galvanized his moderate abolitionism into a more radical form. Eventually, he half-jokingly suggested that for every African-American enslaved in the south, a white rebel ought to be enslaved in the north. In his mind, there was no doubt that the war was being fought over slavery and that the fighting "must last as long as Slavery, the cause of the war, exists" (1863 September 22).
While in the reserve, Gilbert and his men complained bitterly of the inactivity of life in the rear, and were frustrated by the sense that they were accomplishing nothing to ending the war. "[H]ow can we write about war," he asked "when we neither see nor hear or know any thing about it. Our journey thus far has been more like a pleasure trip than it has like service in the field" (1862 November 22-23). After two months at Nicholasville, the 19th were ordered to Danville, apparently in an effort to check the marauding cavalry of John Morgan, but instead of Morgan, they found renewed stagnation and frustration. Gilbert, however, never flagged in his enthusiasm for prosecuting the war. He demanded that sacrifice was necessary to wage and win a war, and that a wholehearted sacrifice was absolutely necessary. "Let every man & every policy & every institution that stands in the way be unhesitatingly sacrificed," he wrote to his teenaged daughter, Lucy, "Let blood run every where & Death in every form decimate the people but let right prevail. The constitution about which so much nonsense has been printed & spoken has had its day. It is now dragging us to destruction. In such a crisis one good patriotic song is worth more than a thousand such dead carcasses" (1863 January 15-16).
At the end of January, 1863, the 19th Michigan were again ordered to move, boarding a steamboat for Nashville. Finally, Gilbert seemed to have found what he had expected. Guerrillas and Confederate cavalry operated freely in the countryside, putting heavy pressure on Union forces at every turn. It seemed that the Confederates knew how to wage "aggressive warfare" while the Union did not. "They haven't half as many men as we have but their Generals have a great deal more gumption" (1863 February 26). After moving on to Franklin, Tenn., on March 4th, the 19th Michigan (as part of 3rd Brigade, 1st Division of the Reserve), were ordered on a reconnaissance toward Columbia, Tenn. As if to confirm Gilbert's opinion of the generalship in the two armies, they were surrounded near Thompson's Station by Confederate forces under Earl Van Dorn, W.H. Jackson, and Nathan Bedford Forrest, and nearly half of the federal force were taken prisoner. Gilbert was held at Libby Prison until his parole in May, but despite being weak and ill, he allowed himself only one month of recuperation at home before returning to his regiment in June.
Whether in his imagination or not, after his return, Gilbert focused more intently than ever on the total destruction caused by the war, and the evacuation of huge portions of the countryside. During the summer, the 19th Michigan were posted near Guy's Gap, New Fosterville, and Murfreesboro, Tenn., attempting to suppress guerrilla activity and maintain a watch over Confederate sympathizers. In Murfreesboro, he took a young slave boy under his wing whose master had run off, and helped him to learn to read. Although tinged with a paternalist racism typical of the times, Gilbert was more prepared than most of his compatriots to accept African-Americans as soldiers and equals. He considered Black soldiers as a great benefit to the Union, and equal in quality to whites. "Give us 100,000 of them. They will fight," he wrote, adding that their very presence demoralized the south and provided a constant irritation to southerners (1863 September 26).
Shortly after losses at the Battle of Chickamauga forced reallocations of Union forces, the 19th Michigan were sent to occupy McMinnville, Tenn., a town recently captured from rebel forces and an important rail center. On October 7th, Company D was engaged nearby in a fierce fight with Confederate cavalry commanded by Joseph Wheeler, but two weeks later, the regiment was able to enter McMinnville unopposed, entering headlong into duty in a land wracked by guerrilla warfare. It did not take Gilbert long to develop a low opinion of the morality of the Tennessee guerrilla, nor of Tennessee Unionists. The 4th (East) Tennessee Cavalry, temporarily assigned to provide support to the 19th, were a "set of coarse, illiterate, lawless fellows who plunder every body & are almost as much dreaded by the Union men as by the rebels" (1863 October 26-27).
McMinnville was desolate, its citizens divided between the Union and Confederacy. Some families, he found, had sons in both armies. When he first arrived, Gilbert again displayed his disciplinarian side, refusing to permit his soldiers to plunder or forage, but the ruthlessness of the warfare soon convinced him of the tactical value of a hard hand. Eventually, he even seemed to relish the public executions of guerrillas and their sympathizers, not for the cruelty or even vengefulness, but as an instrument in pursuing a war that seemed to respect no laws or bounds. By the winter months, with no cavalry to support him, he embarked on a program to take hostages from among the local citizenry who had relatives in the Confederate army, threatening to hang one hostage for every Union man harmed. His plan worked to perfection, stopping some of the depredations committed on civilians. When possible, the regiment was also occupied in pursuing guerrillas. It was an awful business, according to Gilbert, "but there is an excitement about it that places it far above anything recorded by Cumming or Gerard the Lion Hunter. Their game were mere brutes without intelligence. Here we hunt men with brains" (1864 March 23).
The immediate task, however, was to build fortifications around the city and rail lines, for which Gilbert impressed every African-American man remaining who had not enlisted. There was a certain irony in protecting even the most extreme southern sympathizing families. When the regiment were detailed to assist local families during the hard winter with food and fuel, Gilbert expressed delight that "Women who not long ago held their heads very high & cursed the Yankee vandals in their hearts if not their lips are very glad now to get fuel & Yankee rations just as the negro family next door get theirs... Today we are feeding women & children & tomorrow perhaps killing their husbands & fathers in battle" (1864 January 7).
While McMinnville itself remained firmly in Union control, murders abounded, and guerrillas infested the countryside where no quarter was given on either side. Nonetheless, in February, 1864, Gilbert arranged for his nine year old son, Jamie, to come to Tennessee for a visit. Jamie became a popular mascot among the soldiers, learning to play the drum. He seems generally to have enjoyed himself in McMinnville, but when the regiment was ordered to join in the Atlanta Campaign in late April, Jamie was sent home. Passing through Gordon's Gap and falling into entrenchments near Buzzard's Roost, the regiment entered the front lines expecting a stiff fight at Resaca. On May 12th, Col. Gilbert wrote to his wife, "Our cause is holy & just & we must succeed. Whether I shall live to see & share the triumph the future must determine." The next day he died of wounds received at the Battle of Resaca. He is buried with his wife, children, and brother in the cemetery in Coldwater, overlooking Randall Lake.
- Acquisition Information:
- Donated 1991. M-2763, M-3230.1 .
- Custodial History:
-
The Henry C. Gilbert papers were donated to the Clements Library in November and December, 1991, through the generosity of Rosemary Gilbert Bell, Alcetta Gilbert Campbell, Elizabeth Gilbert Green, Ann Gilbert Hollar, and Charles L. Woodward, Gilbert's great-grandchildren.
- Processing information:
-
Cataloging funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) and the "We the People" project.
- Arrangement:
-
The collection is organized into three series: Correspondence and Documents, Railroad papers, and Diaries. The main correspondence series is arranged chronologically and alphabetically. The Southern Michigan Railroad were bundled by Gilbert and enclosed in paper sleeves. Items have been removed from the sleeves, but the original order has been maintained.
- Rules or Conventions:
- Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)
Related
- Additional Descriptive Data:
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Related Materials
Additional letters of Henry C. Gilbert appear in the Lucius Lyon papers and James G. Birney papers at the Clements Library.
The George Martin Trowbridge papers, Schoff Civil War Soldiers' Letters, contains the papers of Trowbridge, surgeon of the 19th Michigan following the resignation of Dr. Clarke.
The following newspapers from the Gilbert Papers were transferred to the Books Division for cataloging and storage:
The Daily Rebel (Chattanooga, Tenn.), 1863 January 23
The Daily Citizen (Vicksburg, Miss.), 1863 July 2. "Wallpaper" newspaper from Vicksburg with Gilbert's marginal notation: "An exact copy of the last issue, (on some of their own paper) except this 'Note" at the right corner. The paper was found in the Office & the type still standing. Henry" (See Gilbert's diary for January 1, 1864, and H.C. Gilbert ALS to Hattie Gilbert, 1864 January 1 for references to this newspaper).
Brownlow's Knoxville (Tenn.) Whig and Rebel Ventilator, 1863 November 18. Vol. 1, No. 2
The Coldwater (Mich.) Union Sentinel, 1864 June 3 (Philip Gilbert's copy containing the obituary of Henry C. Gilbert)
Three magazines were included with the Gilbert Papers:
The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, vol. 23, No. 122. August, 1848.
The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, vol. 25, No. 134. August, 1849.
Putnam's Monthly, no. 15. March, 1854.
Partial Subject Index
Accidents - 1863 January 8
- 1863 July 5
Actions and defenses--Michigan - 1848 November 2
- 1849 February 6
- 1849 February 14
- 1849 February 20
Adams, Hamlet B. - 1863 April 28-May 7
African American barbers - 1863 August 4
African Americans--Kentucky - 1863 January 8
Afrrican Americans--Tennessee - 1863 July 14
- 1863 September 11
Alabama--Description and travel - 1864 April 26-30
Allen, Calman - 1846 October 27
Aristocracy--Confederate States of America - 1862 April 20
Atlanta Campaign, 1864 - 1864 May 8-12
Bacon, David - 1862 August 22
Bail--Michigan - 1846 November 26
Baird, Absalom, 1824-1905 - 1862 November 22-24
Bathing - 1863 August 4
Beersheba (Tenn.) - 1864 April 15
- 1864 April 16
Berry, Enos G. - 1845 July 24
Bird, James - 1840 July 7
Birthdays - 1863 July 14
Bragg, Braxton, 1817-1876 - 1863 August 16
Branch County (Mich.)--Fair - 1852 October 8
Branch County (Mich.)--Climate - 1853 August 8
Branch County (Mich.). Circuit Court. Commissioner - 1845 February 18
Bribery--Michigan - 1838 August 17
Brothers--Death - 1863 April 28-May 7
Buell, Don Carlos, 1818-1898 - 1862 November 12
- 1862 December 11-14
Bullard & Cole - 1845 November 27
Bureaucracy - 1853 April 25
- 1854 March 1
Burials - 1863 February 15
Butler, Benjamin Franklin, 1818-1893 - 1863 January 15-16
California--Gold discoveries - 1851 December 26
Campbell, John - 1851 June 28
- 1851 July 25
Camps (Military)--Kentucky - 1862 December 11-14
Camps (Military)--Ohio - 1862 September 18
Camps (Military)--Tennessee - 1863 June 17
Carbuncles - 1855 February 11
- 1855 February 13
Carr, A. C. - 1845 July 24
Carr, C. W. - 1845 July 24
Carter, G. W. - 1863 November 4
- 1864 March 20-21
Cass, Lewis, 1782-1866 - 1848 June 27
- 1849 February 4
- 1852 October 8
- 1852 October 15
Champion, Reuben J., 1797-1864 - 1864 January 19
Channing, William Henry, 1810-1884 - 1854 January 28
Chickamauga Campaign, 1863 - 1863 September 26
- 1863 September 28
- 1863 September 30
Children - 1862 October 8
- 1862 November 16
- 1862 November 27-28
Children--Death - ca.1845
Chippewa Indians--Michigan - 1853 November 17
- 1855 February 8
Chippewa Indians--Pensions - 1853 September 14
- 1853 October 21
- 1853 November 9
- 1853 November 15
- 1853 November 17
- 1855 June 3
Chloroform - 1863 August 26
Christmas - 1863 December 22-23
- 1863 December 25-26
Civilians--Kentucky--Civil War, 1861-1865 - 1862 December 23-24
- 1862 December 27-28
Civilians--Tennessee--Civil War, 1861-1865 - 1862 April 20
- 1863 July 20
- 1863 September 26
- 1863 October 4
- 1863 November 3
- 1863 November 17-20
- 1864 January 3
- 1864 January 7
- 1864 January 12
- 1864 April 1
Clark, O. B. & Co. - 1845 July 24
- 1845 November 27
Clarke, Lucy Bliss, d. 1850 - 1845 March 31
Clarke, William E. - 1863 June 22
Coburn, John - 1863 July 30
- 1863 September 17
- 1863 September 22
- 1863 October 14
Coffee - 1864 May 8-12
Collecting of accounts--New York (State) - 1838 July 30
- 1838 August 17
Comstock, H. H. - 1849 February 18
Confederate States of America. Army--Cavalry - 1863 September 21
Confederate States of America. Army--Officers - 1863 February 26
Copperhead (Nickname) - 1862 October 16
- 1863 January 14
- 1863 September 22
Counterfeiters--Michigan - 1838 August 17
Counterinsurgency - 1863 November 4
- 1864 March 13-16
County attorneys--Michigan--Branch County - 1846 January 30
- 1848 March 6
Courts martial and courts of inquiry - 1863 December 17-20
Crime - 1860 July 4
Crime--Michigan--Branch County - 1845 November 1
Criminals--Tennessee - 1864 April 15
Cristy, Samuel K. - 1849 December 22
Cummings, Nelson - 1849 November 6
Cushing, Leander - 1863 May 7
Daily Citizen (Vicksburg, Miss.) - 1864 January 1
Danforth, James H. - 1849 February 12
Danville (Ky.) - 1862 December 11-14
Dead - 1863 February 4-5
- 1864 May 3
Death - 1846 January 5
- 1850 December 23
- 1863 February 4
- 1864 May 8-12
Debtor and creditor - 1850 February 11
- 1851 January 30
- 1851 June 28
- 1851 July 25
Deeds--Michigan--Branch County - 1851 January 30
Deeds--New York (State) - 1835 July 8
Deeds--Wisconsin - 1856 October 11
Democratic National Convention, 1852 - 1852 June 2
Democratic Party - 1848 June 27
- 1852 June 2
- 1852 October 15
Deserters, Military - 1863 May 7
Deserters, Military--Confederate States of America - 1863 July 14
- 1863 December 12
Dickson, J. Bates - 1863 August 27
Diet - 1862 November 15
Draft - 1863 September 22
- 1863 November 10-13
Dreams - 1851 December 26
Dried foods - 1862 December 23-24
- 1863 January 14
Dry-goods--Michigan - 1845 July 15
- 1845 July 24
Dry-goods--New York (State) - 1839 May 1
- 1839 May 7
- 1839 October 22
- 1839 October 22
- 1839 October 25
- 1839 November 14
Duty - 1862 August 22
- 1862 August 24
Eclipses, Lunar - 1862 December 5
Edwards, Thomas J. - 1844 October 17
Elections--Michigan--1848 - 1848 August 29
Elections--Michigan--1852 - 1852 October 15
Elections--Tennessee--1864 - 1864 March 5
Elliott, Thomas H. - 1863 October 11
Emancipation Proclamation - 1862 November 2-3
- 1862 November 22-24
- 1863 August 4
- 1863 December 17-20
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882 - 1854 January 28
Excommunication--Presbyterians - 1850 November 22
- 1856 December 9
- 1860 January 31
Executions and executioners - 1863 November 4
- 1864 January 19
- 1864 March 10
- 1864 March 20-21
Family - 1862 August 10
- 1862 August 24
- 1862 October 8
- 1862 November 9
- 1863 January 28
- 1863 February 4
Family news - 1849 July 22
Farm tenants--Michigan - 1853 September 28
Fathers-in-law--Death - 1864 January 19
Fatigue - 1864 May 8-12
Felch, Alpheus, 1804-1896 - 1853 March 16
Finance, Personal - 1863 December 5
- 1863 December 17-20
Firearms - 1863 February 15
Firearms--Accidents - 1863 July 5
Flies - 1863 July 12
Flour-mills--Indiana - 1848 August 31
- 1850 February 24
- 1850 March 12
Flowers--Alabama - 1864 April 26-30
Food - 1862 October 27-29
- 1862 December 5
- 1863 March 3
- 1863 October 30
- 1863 November 17-20
Foraging--Kentucky - 1862 October 27-29
- 1863 January 26-27
Foraging--Tennessee - 1863 February 24-25
- 1863 October 30
- 1863 November 15
Fords (Stream crossings) - 1864 March 5
- 1864 April 19-24
Forrest, Nathan Bedford, 1821-1877 - 1863 February 4-5
Fort Donelson (Tenn.) - 1863 February 4
- 1863 February 4-5
Fort Donelson, Battle of, 1863 - 1863 February 4-5
Fortifications - 1863 November 10-13
Fourth of July orations - 1860 July 4
Fox, Margaret, 1833-1893 - 1853 August 26
- 1853 August 29
France--History--Revolution, 1789-1799 - 1863 January 15-16
Franklin & Miller - 1840 July 7
Franklin (Tenn.) - 1863 June 19
Fredericksburg, Battle of, 1862 - 1862 December 15
Freemasons--Indiana - 1849 December 22
- 1850 February 11
Fulkerson, Lot - 1846 October 27
Funeral rites and ceremonies--New York (State) - 1826 June 18
Funeral rites and ceremonies - 1863 August 26
Fur trade--Canada - 1845 July 3
Gilbert, Hattie, 1827-1876 - 1860 January 31
Gilbert, Henry C., 1818-1864 - 1848 June 27
- 1850 November 22
- n.y. March 6
Gilbert, James W., 1820-1863 - 1843 November 26
- 1856 December 9
- 1863 January 30-February 1
- 1863 August 26
Gilbert, James, 1855-1871 - 1863 January 30-February 1
- 1863 August 21
- 1864 January 1
- 1864 February 24
- 1864 March 20-21
- 1864 March 23
- 1864 April 1
- 1864 April 16
- 1864 April 19-24
- 1864 April 26-30
- 1864 May 2
Gilbert, Lucy, 1844-1865 - 1863 July 27
- 1863 July 28
- 1863 August 21
- 1863 August 26
- 1863 December 17-20
- 1864 January 1
Goffe, Leander, ca.1837-1863 - 1863 May 26
Gordon, James - 1863 March 9
Graham System - 1849 July 22
Granger, Gordon, 1822-1876 - 1863 January 21
Green, James W. - 1864 March 17
Grimké, Sarah Moore, 1792-1873 - 1849 July 22
Groendyke, Asa T. - 1845 July 24
- 1845 November 27
Guerrillas--Tennessee - 1863 July 20
- 1863 October 26-27
- 1863 November 3
- 1863 November 4
- 1863 November 11
- 1863 November 15
- 1863 December 25-26
- 1864 January 3
- 1864 January 19
- 1864 March 1
- 1864 March 10
- 1864 March 13-16
- 1864 March 20-21
- 1864 March 23
- 1864 April 1
- 1864 April 9-11
Guerrillas--Tennessee--Law and legislation - 1864 March 17
- 1864 March 23
- 1864 March 24
Harding, Abner Clark, 1807-1874 - 1863 February 4-5
Hole in the Day - 1855 February 8
Homesickness - 1849 February 25
- 1864 January 19
Hopkins, John L. - 1845 November 27
Horses - 1862 September 18
- 1862 September 22
Hostages - 1864 March 10
- 1864 March 13-16
- 1864 March 20-21
- 1864 March 23
- 1864 March 24
- 1864 April 1
Howitzers - 1862 December 10
- 1863 January 21
Hunt Brothers - 1840 July 7
Hunting - 1864 March 23
Husband and wife - 1848 October 1
- 1863 December 1-3
Husbands--Death - 1863 May 26
Indian agents--Michigan - 1853 August 8
- 1853 August 11
- 1853 August 25
- 1853 September 9
- 1853 September 22
- 1853 October 21
- 1853 November 15
- 1853 November 17
- 1854 January 15
- 1854 January 18
- 1854 January 28
- 1854 November 11
- 1855 February 8
- 1855 June 3
- 1855 June 10
- 1855 June 11
- 1857 May 19-27
Indian agents--Selection and appointment - 1853 March 7
- 1853 March 12
- 1853 March 16
- 1853 March 20
- 1853 March 22
- 1853 April 23
- 1853 April 25
Insubordination - 1863 August 16
Insurance, Fire - 1855 January 13
Insurance, Fire--Michigan - 1853 January 8
Invoices--Michigan - 1844 November 27
- 1844 November 29
Invoices--New York (City) - 1839 May 7
- 1839 October 22
- 1839 October 22
- 1839 October 25
- 1839 November 14
Jaundice - 1863 October 14
Jonesville (Mich.) - 1849 February 8
Kentucky--Description and travel - 1862 October 27-29
- 1862 November 15
- 1862 November 22-24
- 1862 December 27-28
Kentucky--History--Civil War, 1861-1865 - 1862 November 2-3
- 1862 November 9
Kentucky--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Destruction - 1862 October 20-21
Kentucky--Politics and government--Civil War, 1861-1865 - 1862 December 27-28
Keyes, Samuel - 1849 November 6
Knight, Henry C., 1817-1867 - 1849 September 26
Larceny--Michigan - 1846 October 27
Latta, William - 1838 August 17
Lawyers--Michigan - 1844 April 29
- 1849 February 6
Lawyers--Michigan--Branch County - 1845 November 1
Leach, E. O. - 1845 November 27
Leases--New York (State) - 1839 May 1
Letts, Abraham - 1844 October 17
Lex talionis - 1863 November 3
- 1864 March 10
- 1864 March 13-16
- 1864 March 23
Lexington (Ky.) - 1862 October 27-29
Libby Prison - 1863 March 21
- 1863 April 28-May 7
- 1863 May 7
Lice - 1863 April 28-May 7
Littlefield, Darwin - 1845 November 27
Lobbyists--Michigan - 1849 February 4
- 1849 February 12
- 1849 February 18
Lockwood, Henry - 1845 July 24
Loco Focos - 1845 March 31
Loyalty oaths - 1864 March 5
Marches--Alabama - 1864 April 26-30
Marches--Georgia - 1864 May 8-12
Marches--Kentucky - 1862 October 20-21
- 1862 December 27-28
- 1863 January 26-27
- 1863 January 28
- 1863 January 29
Marches--Tennessee - 1863 February 21
- 1863 June 27
- 1863 October 26-27
- 1864 April 19-24
Marcy, William Learned, 1786-1857 - 1853 April 23
Marriage certificates--Michigan - 1843 November 26
Massachusetts--Politics and government--1849-1853 - 1851 May 28
Mayo, Amory Dwight, 1823-1907 - 1853 February 27
McClellan, George B., 1826-1885 - 1862 November 12
McMinnville (Tenn.) - 1863 October 4
- 1863 October 26-27
- 1863 October 30
- 1863 November 3
- 1864 January 12
- 1864 February 28
McMinnville (Tenn.), Skirmish near, 1863 - 1863 October 7
McOmber, Arins - 1846 April 10
McOmber, Asa - 1846 April 10
Mediums - 1853 August 26
- 1853 August 29
Merchants--Michigan--Branch County - 1845 July 24
- 1845 November 27
- 1845 November 27
Michigan--Politics and government--1849-1853 - 1849 February 4
- 1849 February 18
- 1849 February 20
- 1849 November 6
Military discipline - 1862 August 11
- 1862 October 27-29
- 1862 December 5
- 1863 October 30
- 1864 January 24-25
Military occupation--Tennessee - 1862 April 20
- 1863 October 30
- 1864 March 10
- 1864 April 9-11
Military police--Corrupt practices - 1863 August 16
Miners--California--Religious life - 1851 December 26
Morale - 1862 October 27-29
- 1862 December 5
Morgan, James Dada, 1810-1896 - 1863 July 28
- 1863 August 16
Morgan, John Hunt, 1825-1864 - 1862 December 28-29
- 1863 August 10
Mortgages--Michigan - 1844 August 6
- 1844 October 17
Mortgages--New York (State) - 1840 July 7
Moses (Biblical character) - 1863 July 12
Murder - 1864 March 1
Murfreesboro (Tenn.) - 1862 April 20
- 1863 June 27
- 1863 October 4
Muster rolls - ca.1864 March
Nashville (Tenn.) - 1862 April 20
- 1863 February 9
- 1863 February 15
- 1863 August 4
- 1864 January 16
New Year - 1863 January 1-3
Ohio--Description and travel - 1862 September 18
Old age - 1850 December 23
Orders (Military Science) - 1863 June 24
Ordnance - 1863 January 1
- 1864 March 30
- 1864 March 31
- 1864 March 31
Packages from home - 1863 November 26
Paine, Thomas - 1853 September 28
Paris (Ky.) - 1862 October 27-29
Payne, Thomas L. - 1843 April 6
Perry, J. L. - 1838 July 30
- 1838 August 17
Photographs - 1862 December 19
- 1863 January 21
Pillage--Kentucky - 1862 October 27-29
Pittsburgh (Pa.)--Description - 1848 October 1
Pneumonia - 1862 December 5
Politicians--Kentucky - 1862 November 22-24
Porter, A. L. & Co. - 1845 July 24
- 1845 November 27
- 1845 November 27
Porter, Philo - 1851 January 30
Powel, Charles - c.1845
Powell, Kate - c.1845
Power of attorney--Massachusetts - 1847 May 25
Pre-trial release--Michigan - 1838 August 17
Presidents--United States--Election--1848 - 1848 June 27
Prices - 1863 August 2
Prices--Tennessee - 1863 February 19
- 1864 January 17
Prisoners of War--Capture - 1863 March 9
- 1863 October 7
- 1863 November 4
Prisoners of War--Confederate States of America - 1863 June 29
Prisoners of War--Correspondence--Censorship - 1863 April 28-May 7
Property tax--Michigan - 1843 April 6
- 1845 April 12
Punishment - 1864 January 24-25
Quartermasters--Corrupt practices - 1863 January 15-16
Railroad bridges--New York (State) - 1854 February 26
Railroad travel - 1852 October 15
Railroads--Michigan - 1849 February 8
- 1849 February 18
- 1849 February 20
- 1849 February 25
Railroads--Tennessee - 1864 January 19
Ransom, Epaphroditus, 1797-1859 - 1849 February 8
Rawson, Lowell - 1849 November 6
Real property--Michigan - 1851 May 28
Real property--Michigan--Branch County - 1849 February 12
Returns, Military - 1863 January 1
- 1864 March 31
Root, Roland - 1845 November 27
- 1845 November 27
Rosecrans, William Starke, 1819-1898 - 1863 January 15-16
- 1863 August 16
- 1863 October 21
Rousseau, Lovell H. (Lovell Harrison), 1818-1869 - 1863 December 5
- 1864 January 17
Sacrifice - 1863 January 15-16
Saw-mills--Tennessee - 1864 January 26
Seances - 1853 August 26
Sermons, Spiritualist - 1863 August 26
Shafter, John N. - 1863 November
- 1864 January 3
Shafter, William R., 1835-1906 - 1863 August 26
- 1863 October 19
- 1863 November 17-20
- 1863 November 22
- 1863 December 1-3
- 1863 December 17-20
Shan wa no quo am - 1853 November 17
Shelbyville (Tenn.) - 1863 June 24
- 1863 August 2
Sick children - 1862 November 15
- 1862 November 27-28
- 1863 July 27
- 1863 July 28
- 1863 December 17-20
Signals and signaling - 1863 July 5
Skeels & Lewis - 1845 July 24
Slave-trade--Kentucky - 1862 November 22-24
Slavery - 1863 July 12
- 1863 August 4
- 1863 September 22
- 1863 December 17-20
Slavery--Extension to the territories - 1845 March 31
Slavery--Kentucky - 1862 November 22-24
Slaves--Tennessee - 1863 July 20
- 1863 August 4
Smallpox - 1864 April 9-11
Smith & Hale - 1845 November 27
Soldiers' Aid Society - 1863 December 17-20
Soldiers--Confederate States of America - 1863 February 26
Soldiers--Death, Accidental - 1863 July 5
Soldiers--Health and hygiene - 1862 October 2
- 1862 December 5
- 1862 December 23-24
- 1863 February 15
- 1863 February 19
- 1864 March 1
Soldiers--Tennessee - 1862 December 11-14
- 1863 October 30
Soldiers--United States - 1862 October 16
Solidarity--United States - 1863 July 5
Sons - 1863 July 18
Southern Michigan Railroad - 1848 August 29
Southern sympathizers--Tennessee - 1864 March 11
Spas--New York (State) - 1850 December 22
Spaulding, Grace Gilbert, 1849-1914 - 1863 October 2
Spiritualism - 1853 August 26
- 1853 August 29
- 1855 February 16
- 1856 December 9
- 1862 October 8
- 1863 January 28
Spiritualism--Michigan - 1860 January 31
Stafford, John A. - 1863 September 16
Stealing - 1863 January 8
- 1863 October 28
- 1864 January 24-25
Stevens, O. B. - 1863 December 17-20
Strategy - 1862 November 2-3
- 1862 November 12
Sutlers - 1863 November 10-13
Taxation--Michigan--Branch County - 1849 February 9
- 1849 February 14
- 1849 February 16
- 1849 February 21
Taxation--Tennessee - 1864 March 13-16
Taylor, Zachary, 1784-1850 - 1848 June 27
Teachers--Michigan--Jonesville - 1849 September 26
Teachers--Selection and appointment--Michigan - 1841 October 23
Temperance - c.1848
Tennessee--Description and travel - 1864 January 24-25
Tennessee--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Destruction - 1863 June 19
- 1863 June 27
- 1863 July 5
- 1863 July 26
- 1864 January 24-25
- 1864 April 19-24
Tennessee--Politics and government--Civil War, 1861-1865 - 1864 April 1
Tennessee. Militia - 1863 November 8-9
Tents - 1863 June 13
Texas - 1845 March 31
Thomas, Mary, d. 1826 - 1826 June 18
Thompson's Station, Battle of, 1863 - 1863 March 9
Truesdail, William - 1863 August 16
Union sympathizers--Kentucky - 1862 November 27-28
Union sympathizers--Tennessee - 1863 August 2
- 1863 October 26-27
- 1863 November 3
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865 - 1863 July 9
- 1863 July 12
- 1863 August 10
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865---Americans - 1862 November 9
- 1862 November 27-28
- 1863 January 8
- 1863 January 24
- 1863 July 20
- 1863 August 21
- 1863 August 26
- 1863 October 26-27
- 1863 November 10-13
- 1863 November 14
- 1863 December 5
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Causes - 1863 September 22
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Civilian relief - 1864 January 3
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Deportations from Tennessee - 1864 March 11
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Medical care - 1863 October 12
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Participation, African-American - 1863 August 4
- 1863 September 17
- 1863 September 26
- 1864 January 19
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Postal service - 1863 December 22-23
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Prisoners and prisons - See also headings beginning Prisoners of War
- 1863 May 7
- 1863 May 26
- 1863 November 4
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Songs and music - 1863 February 7
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--War work - 1863 December 17-20
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Women - 1863 January 24
- 1863 September 13-14
- 1863 October 4
- 1863 October 10
- 1863 October 21
United States--Politics and government--1857-1861 - 1860 July 4
United States. Army of Kentucky--Officers - 1863 January 21
United States. Army of the Cumberland. Reserve Corps - 1863 September 22
United States. Army of the Potomac - 1863 December 5
United States. Army--African-American troops--Recruiting, enlistment, etc. - 1863 November 10-13
- 1863 December 1-3
United States. Army--Appointments and retirements - 1862 August 8
- 1863 November 22
United States. Army--Bands - 1863 January 18-19
United States. Army--Dentistry - 1863 August 26
United States. Army--Enlistment - 1862 August 10
United States. Army--Inspection - 1862 November 2-3
United States. Army--Invalid Corps - 1863 September 16
- 1863 October 26
United States. Army--Leaves and furloughs - 1863 August 27
United States. Army--Michigan Infantry Regiment, 6th - 1862 August 22
United States. Army--Missouri Infantry Regiment, 23rd - 1863 November 15
- 1863 November 17-20
United States. Army--Officers - 1862 August 10
- 1863 January 15-16
- 1863 August 16
- 1863 August 19
United States. Army--Officers---Examinations - 1862 December 8
United States. Army--Officers--Attitudes - 1863 November 15
- 1863 December 17-20
- 1864 May 3
United States. Army--Officers--Barracks and quarters - 1862 November 2-3
- 1863 October 30
United States. Army--Officers--Pay, allowances, etc. - 1862 December 5
United States. Army--Promotions - 1863 December 9
- 1863 December 17-20
United States. Army--Recruiting - 1862 July 15
- 1862 July 16
- 1862 July 17
- 1862 July 22
- 1862 August 11
United States. Army--Tennessee Cavalry Regiment, 4th - 1863 October 26-27
United States. Army. Corps, XI - 1864 January 10
United States. Army. Police - 1863 August 16
United States. Constitution - 1863 January 15-16
Van Buren, Martin, 1782-1862 - 1848 June 27
Vegetarianism - 1849 July 22
Vicksburg (Miss.)--Capture, 1863 - 1863 July 7
Violence - 1860 July 4
War - 1862 October 8
- 1863 February 7
War and crime - 1864 March 10
- 1864 March 13-16
Ward, William Thomas, 1808-1878 - 1864 January 17
Warner, Edward A., d. 1844 - 1844 February 19
Water - 1862 October 20-21
Waterman, David - 1851 January 30
Weather - 1863 January 15-16
Wedding anniversaries - 1863 November 22
Weekes, Dundas & Co. - 1840 July 7
Weld, Elizabeth Clarke, 1772-1854 - 1849 July 22
Weld, Theodore Dwight, 1803-1895 - 1849 July 22
Wheeler, Joseph, 1836-1906 - 1863 October 7
Wilder, Rosamond Gilbert, 1851-1881 - 1862 November 12
- 1862 November 15
Williams, Clark H. - 1844 February 19
Wilson, Hattie Adelaide Gilbert, 1824-1855 - 1844 April 29
Women--Michigan--Education - 1863 December 30
Women--Tennessee - 1863 November 8-9
- 1864 January 3
- 1864 January 7
- 1864 April 1
- Alternative Form Available:
-
Transcripts of Gilbert's letters and diaries from 1862 to 1864 have been published by Alcetta Gilbert Campbell in The Civil War Letters and Diaries of Henry C. Gilbert, 1991. The volume is located in the transcript section of the Manuscripts Division.
Typed transcripts of Gilbert's Correspondence 1826-1862 are also located in the transcript section of the Manuscripts Division.
Subjects
Click on terms below to find any related finding aids on this site.
- Subjects:
-
Executions and executioners.
Hostages.
Indian agents--Michigan.
Lex talionis.
Libby Prison.
Lobbyists--Michigan.
Military discipline.
Ojibwa Indians.
Railroads--Michigan.
Soldiers--Health and hygiene.
Spiritualism. - Formats:
-
Diaries.
Letters (correspondence)
Photographs. - Names:
-
Democratic Party (U.S.)
United States. Army--Michigan Infantry Regiment, 19th (1862-1865)
Shafter, William Rufus, 1835-1906. - Places:
-
Kentucky--Description and travel.
Kentucky--History--Civil War, 1861-1865.
McMinnville (Tenn.)
Michigan--Politics and government.
Nashville (Tenn.)
Tennessee History Civil War, 1861-1865 Destruction and pillage.
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865.
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--African Americans.
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Copyright status is unknown.
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
Henry C. Gilbert Papers, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan