
Gordon family papers, 1853-1883 (majority within 1861-1862)
Using These Materials
- Restrictions:
- The collection is open for research.
Summary
- Creator:
- Gordon family
- Abstract:
- The Gordon family papers document the life of a Maryland family with Confederate sympathies. The collection particularly focuses on the correspondence between Josiah H. Gordon and his wife Kate during Josiah's political imprisonment during the Civil War.
- Extent:
- 504 items
- Language:
- English
- Authors:
- Collection processed and finding aid created by Mary Parsons, 2004
Background
- Scope and Content:
-
The Gordon family papers contain 504 letters written or received by Josiah H. Gordon, his wife Kate, and their son Robert ("Bobby") between 1853 and 1883. The largest part of the correspondence consists of 359 letters between Josiah H. Gordon and his wife Kate, with an additional 43 letters written by their son "Bobby" to his father. Another 66 letters are from friends and relatives to Josiah or Kate, and 36 are business letters to Josiah. Kate's letters were written from their home in Cumberland, Md. Josiah's earlier letters, prior to his arrest, were written while he was away from home on business in Annapolis, Baltimore, and Frederick, Md. His prison letters came from Fort Lafayette, New York [12 letters] and from Fort Warren, Massachusetts [108 letters]. Immediately after his release he wrote from Bedford and Huntington, Pennsylvania, then from Jessup's Cut and Pierce Land, Maryland. In the early 1870s, he wrote from his home in Cumberland to his son "Bobby" at Roanoke College in Salem, Virginia, and later to his daughter Helen who was away at school (1882).
Although the correspondence covers 30 years, all but approximately thirty of the letters date from a single 15-month period, between April 1861 and June of 1862, during which time Josiah was in prison for 8 months. Maryland was a state of divided loyalties, with the town of Cumberland sharply divided, but it remained in Union hands for most of the War. The Gordons were clearly Southern sympathizers, and with Josiah a Delegate in the Maryland House, his opinions were well known. From the time of his first arrest on Aug. 30, 1861, until two months after his release on May 7, 1862, he was separated from his wife and three small children. The Gordon Family Papers are especially interesting because they give both sides of this correspondence between a husband, held as a political prisoner in a "Northern" fort, and his wife and young son at home in Maryland, where they have been classified as "the enemy." They wrote to each other 3-5 times a week during the year they were apart. The letters provide a clear picture of the quiet, secure, daily life in prison, and its turbulent counterpart back home in Maryland in the early days of the Civil War. Both Gordons felt the Confederacy would prevail, and despite censorship of all their letters, expressed strong political sentiments -- so strong that both were warned to tone down their letters. One of Josiah's letters in early March of 1862 was returned to him as unsendable. Kate's April 3, 1862 letter to him was delivered with the following warning from Col. Dimick [the commander of Fort Warren], "Please request Mrs. Gordon to avoid military and other matters relating to our national affairs."
Kate Gordon's 88 letters to her husband during the time of his arrest and imprisonment in the "North" portray a woman forced to assume her husband's normal role at a very difficult time. Her letters are filled with questions, such as how much meat to order for the winter, whether to keep or sell their horse which the Union troops keep "borrowing," what direction their nine-year-old son's education should take, what their slave Wesley should be doing. Kate, on her own for the first time with two young children, had to make decisions in a hostile environment. Cumberland had many volatile Union supporters, and was occupied by Federal forces for most of 1861 and 1862. She had to cope with the anger people felt toward her imprisoned husband. In August 1861 the Gordon's house was attacked by a mob, who broke most of the downstairs windows and almost kicked in the front door. In early 1862 some young rowdies "were stoning Wesley in the most furious manner." In his 39 letters, nine-year-old Bobby wrote his own observations of local events. On Aug. 18, 1861, he wrote, "the people put Cow manure on the Carriage and wrote traitor on the back and cut the tassels off and Stole the colored mans coat."
Josiah's 108 letters to Kate from Fort Warren describe what can only be called a very comfortable prison experience: Friends sent him food packages with pickled oysters, hams, turkeys, fine teas, and whiskey; he received newspapers and letters once or twice a day; and prisoners visited freely from room to room. Josiah found in his companions some of the "most respectable, intelligent, and influential gentlemen in the country." One lucky prisoner was even sent "a most elegant set of rose wood furniture" for his room by an anonymous female admirer in Boston. Josiah had a lot of time to write and to think about his family, who were living without his support and in constant threat of violence. He was anxious to learn how the war was going; he believed that the battle reports in northern newspapers were exaggerated or erroneous.
Josiah Gordon's Fort Warren letters give detailed descriptions of daily routines, as well as Christmas and New Year's celebrations. A map is enclosed in his Feb. 4, 1862 letter, showing the locations of windows, fireplace, and the beds of his five roommates. Food played a big part in the prison world, and in addition to the food packages sent to them, he wrote detailed descriptions of their "mess." Prison expenses came to $5.00 a week - $3.00 for board and washing, and $2.00 for clothes and "room expenses." Of course board would have been provided free had they chosen to eat prison rations. Fellow prisoners included Generals Simon Buckner and Lloyd Tilghman (both held in solitary confinement), and prisoners of war taken at Forts Hatteras and Donaldson. The most unusual prisoner was Hatteras Turk, "a large white dog captured by Gen'l Butler on the sandy beach of North Carolina, and now here with his master. This noble animal was at fort Hatteras during the bombbardment and ran after the shells as they fell trying to pick them up in his mouth just as he ran after the foot ball here to day." Although the "political prisoners" and "prisoners of war" were treated differently in some ways (prisoners of war had more freedom to roam the island than political prisoners did), the two groups interacted freely. The political prisoners tended to be from a higher social class. Gordon writes that "we 'prisoners of state' have the Hatteras boys employed to cook for us and wait upon our rooms." The Hatteras prisoners also crafted "rings" which were much admired and purchased by Gordon and his friends as gifts to send home to their families. "They are made out of gutta percha buttons inlaid with mother of pearl, silver and gold with no tools but a pocket knife, a brick and a file."
Although most of the Gordon family papers contain letters written by family members, three letters from friends are of particular interest. These were written by fellow Fort Warren prisoners E.G. Kibourn and William G. Harrison. Kilbourn's letter was written after he had been released in 1862, to the still imprisoned Gordon. Harrison's two letters were written to a recently freed Gordon from a still-imprisoned Harrison. These letters convey the intimacy of friends who shared the same prison experience and had grown very close.
Also of interest is a single undated letter from H. D. Downey, probably a nephew of Gordon's, describing the laying of the corner stone at Marshall College in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania, c. 1837. The letter also noted, at some length, the rivalry between textbook agents in the area, who sold the Emerson Series or the Cobb's Series.
- Biographical / Historical:
-
Josiah H. Gordon was born in Waynesboro, Pennsylvania on May 6, 1816, the son of Hanse Gordon and Martha R. Downey. His wife, Kate E. Umbaugh (b.1822), was the daughter of Michael Umbaugh and Jane Herbert of Frederick Md. After their marriage, Josiah and Kate Gordon lived in Cumberland, Maryland. They had nine children, only two of which lived to adulthood - Robert H. ("Bobby") and Helen. Jane Umbaugh, Kate's mother, lived with the Gordon family, and by 1870, a 14-year-old niece, Juliette Umbaugh, was also living with them. She was probably the daughter of Kate Gordon's brother, Herbert Umbaugh and his wife Nellie. Herbert Umbaugh died fighting for the Confederacy in 1862. A second niece, Mary Umbaugh, had joined the family by 1880. Two black slaves formed part of the Gordon household -- Wesley, whom the Gordons owned, and Tilly, who worked for the Gordons but was owned by a neighbor, Mrs. O'Neal. The Gordons paid Mrs. O'Neal $4.00 a month for Tilly's services.
Josiah Gordon read law with Gen. McKaig in Cumberland, Maryland, and was admitted to the bar in 1845. He was elected prosecuting attorney for Allegany County in 1851 and served for four years. In 1859 he was elected to the Maryland House of Delegates from Allegany County. His first term in office coincided with the political crisis of 1861, and Gordon, against the will of the majority of his constituents and in the minority in the legislature, voted to secede. Gordon soon found himself an unpopular man in a heated political environment, and he was under great suspicion by Federal authorities of aiding the Confederacy. In a letter published in the Official Records, Gordon was identified as one of the two most dangerous men in the state, and was considered a significant threat to the prospects of keeping Maryland in the Union. Soldiers of the 3rd Pennsylvania Infantry arrested Gordon during a routine roundup on August 30, 1861, and although they found no hard evidence against him, he was held in prison for six days until he relented in his opposition to taking the oath of allegiance. He was released on Sept 5th and returned to Annapolis, traveling on to Frederick where the Governor had decided it was safer for the Delegates to meet, as the Capital was occupied by Union troops.
On September 17th, Gordon was rearrested as 'one of a party of conspirators known to be plotting to pass an act of secession' and again, on principle, he refused to take the oath. He was transported to Fort Lafayette, New York Harbor, and then, in November, to Fort Warren in Boston Harbor, where he was held as a "political prisoner" for six months, although no formal charges were ever made against him. Gordon was unconditionally released on May 7, 1862, and for the next two months stayed with friends in other parts of Maryland and Pennsylvania, not daring to return home to his wife and family in Cumberland, where Union feelings ran strongly against him.
Wesley, the Gordon's slave, was 24 years old when Josiah Gordon was imprisoned, and had to assume a lot of responsibility in Josiah's absence. Kate wrote of Wesley's "helpfulness" and "kindness" to her and the children at a time when some slaves in the area were running off. When the Gordon house was attacked for the second time in 1861, Wesley was stoned.
After the war Josiah Gordon continued to practice law in Cumberland. He was joined by his son Robert H. Gordon, who had attended Roanoke College in Salem, Virginia, from 1870-1871. They formed the law firm of J.H. Gordon & Son. Josiah served as president of the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal in 1869, and was appointed to take the place of an associate judge in 1883. He died Aug. 14, 1887. His son Robert died in 1910.
- Acquisition Information:
- 1992. M-2886.3 .
- Arrangement:
-
The Grodon family papers are arranged by author:
- Series 1: Josiah H. Gordon
- Series 2: Kate Gordon
- Series 3: Robert H. Gordon
- Series 4: Other authors
- Rules or Conventions:
- Finding aid prepared using Describing Archives: A Content Standard (DACS)
Related
- Additional Descriptive Data:
-
List of prisoners at Fort Warren mentioned in Josiah Gordon's letters
- Alvey, Richard H. (attorney from Washington Co. Md.)
- Buckner, Gen. Simon (captured at Fort Donaldson - see Gordon's March 6, 1862 letter)
- Brown, George W. (Mayor of Baltimore)
- Faulkner, Charles J. (Congressman from Virginia)
- Harrison, William G. (member of Maryland House of Delegates) [see 2 letters he wrote to Gordon in May 1862 and Gordon's March 14, 1862 to him]
- Howard, Frank Key (newspaper editor from Baltimore)
- "Hattaras Turk" - a large white dog captured with the men from Fort Hattaras
- Kilbourn, Elbridge G. - ( attorney from Baltimore) [see his April 1862 letter to Gordon]
- Kopperal, Mr. (from Mississippi)
- Mason and Slidell
- Moorhead, Charles S. (ex-governor of Kentucky)
- Mcgill, Dr. Charles (from Hagerstown, Md.)
- Miler, Mr.
- North, Rev.
- Thomas, Dr. John (from Baltimore)
- Tilghman, Gen. Lloyd (captured at Fort Donaldson - see Gordon's March 6, 1862 letter)
- Wallis, Severn Teakle (member of Maryland House of Delegates)
- Warfield, Henry M. (Maryland legislator)
- (Col. Justin Dimick, the Union commander of Fort Warren is mentioned in a number of the letters.)
Partial Subject Index
Baltimore Harbor - 1861 August 13 [Josiah H. Gordon]
Books - textbooks - 1862 February 1 [Robert H. Gordon]
- Undated, but probably ca. 1837 [H. D. Downey]
- Undated, but probably ca. 1837 [H. D. Downey]
Buckner, Gen. Simon - 1862 March 6 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 11 [Josiah H. Gordon]
Censorship - Civil War - 1862 March 5 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 6 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 April 10 [Josiah H. Gordon]
Chickenpox - 1862 January 30 [Kate Gordon]
- 1862 February 2 [Kate Gordon]
- 1862 February 6 [Kate Gordon]
- 1862 February 12 [Kate Gordon]
Dixie - 1861 August 31 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1861 February 6 [Kate Gordon]
Dogs - 1861 December 10 [Josiah H. Gordon]
Dimick, Justin - 1861 December 14 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1861 December 31 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 5 and 11 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 April 10 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 May 15 [Wm. G. Harrison]
Football - 1861 December 10 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1861 December 12 [Josiah H. Gordon]
Fort Sumter (Charleston, S.C.) - 1861 April 11 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1861 April 14 [Josiah H. Gordon]
Fort Warren (Mass.) - 1861 November 1 through May 6, 1862 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 May 15 & 18 [William Harrison]
Games - 1861 December 8 [Robert H.Gordon]
- 1861 November 8 [Robert H. Gordon]
- 1861 December 12 [Robert H. Gordon]
Ice - 1862 February 21 [Robert H. Gordon]
Marshall College (Mercersburg, Pa.) - ca. 1837 [H. D. Downey]
Mason and Slidell - 1861 November 25 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1861 December 31 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 9 [Josiah H. Gordon]
Measles - 1862 January through March most letters [Kate Gordon]
Merrimack (Frigate) - 1862 March 15 [Robert H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 17 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 18 [Kate Gordon]
Poems - 1862 January 22 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 January 23 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 15 [Robert H. Gordon]
- 1869 October 3 [Josiah H. Gordon]
Prisoners' families - passim
Roanoke College - nd [1870 or 1871] [Robert H. Gordon]
Sketches - 1861 September 20 [Robert H. Gordon]
Slavery - 1862 January 14 [Kate Gordon]
- 1861 April 29 May 1, July 11, July 25 [Kate Gordon]
- 1862 April 20 [Kate Gordon]
- 1862 February 2 [Kate Gordon]
- 1862 May 7 [Kate Gordon]
- passim
Solitary confinement - 1862 March 11 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 20 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 May 18 [Wm. Harrison]
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 1811-1896. Uncle Tom's cabin - 1862 March 9 [Jane B. Lauffin to Kate Gordon]
Tilghman, Lloyd, 1816-1863 - 1862 March 6 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 11 [Josiah H. Gordon]
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Contraband - 1861 Oct. 15 [Josiah H. Gordon]
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865--Female participation - 1862 January 7 [Josiah H. Gordon
- 1862 January 9 [Josiah H. Gordon]
- 1862 March 14 [Josiah H. Gordon]
United States History Civil War, 1861-1865--Prisoners and prisons. - passim
United States--President (1861-1865 : Lincoln)--Emancipation Proclamation - 1862 April 20 [Kate Gordon]
- 1862 April 27 [Kate Gordon]
- 1862 May 7 [Kate Gordon]
Subjects
Click on terms below to find any related finding aids on this site.
- Subjects:
-
Political prisoners.
Secession--Maryland. - Names:
-
Gordon, Josiah H., b. 1816.
Gordon, Kate E. Umbaugh, b. 1822.
Gordon, Robert H. - Places:
-
Fort Warren (Boston, Mass.)
Maryland--History--Civil War, 1861-1865.
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865.
United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865-Prisoners and prisons.
Contents
Using These Materials
- RESTRICTIONS:
-
The collection is open for research.
- USE & PERMISSIONS:
-
Copyright status is unknown.
- PREFERRED CITATION:
-
Gordon Family Papers, William L. Clements Library, The University of Michigan