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E-raamat: I Am Fighting for the Union: The Civil War Letters of Naval Officer Henry Willis Wells

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An insightful, detailed, and invaluable account of daily life in the Union Navy



An insightful, detailed, and invaluable account of daily life in the Union Navy
 
On May 18, 1862, Henry Willis Wells wrote a letter to his mother telling her in clear terms, “I am fighting for the Union.” Since August 1861, when he joined the US Navy as a master’s mate he never wavered in his loyalty. He wrote to his family frequently that he considered military service a necessary and patriotic duty, and the career that ensued was a dramatic one, astutely and articulately documented by Wells in more than 200 letters home, leaving an invaluable account of daily life in the Union Navy.

Wells joined the navy shortly after the war began, initially on board the Cambridge, attached to the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron, which patrolled the waters of the Chesapeake Bay. He witnessed the Battle of Hampton Roads and the fight between the ironclads CSS Virginia and the USS Monitor. Next, the Cambridge assisted in the blockade of Wilmington, North Carolina. In one instance, the warship chased the schooner J. W. Pindar ashore during her attempt to run the blockade, and Confederate forces captured Henry’s boarding party. After a short prison stay in the infamous Libby Prison in Richmond, his Confederate captors paroled Henry. He travelled back to Brookline, and soon thereafter the Navy Department assigned him to the gunboat Ceres, which operated on the sounds and rivers of North Carolina, protecting army positions ashore. Henry was on board during the Confederate attempt to capture Washington, North Carolina. During this April 1863 attack, Henry was instrumental in the town’s defense, commanding a naval battery ashore during the latter part of the fight.

His exceptional service gained him a transfer to a larger warship, the USS Montgomery, again on the blockade of Wilmington. Later the service assigned him to the Gem of the Sea, part of the East Gulf Blockading Squadron. Through his hard work and professionalism, he finally earned his first command. In September 1864, he became the commanding officer of the Rosalie, a sloop used as a tender to the local warships. Later he commanded the schooner Annie, also a tender. At the end of December 1864, however, the Annie suffered a massive explosion, killing all hands, including Wells. He was twenty-three years old when his life and career ended tragically. Wells’s letters document both his considerable achievements and his frustrations. His challenges, triumphs, and disappointments are rendered with candor. I Am Fighting for the Union is a vital and deeply personal account of a momentous chapter in the history of the Civil War and its navies.
 

Arvustused

The Wells letters are a valuable addition to the naval history of the Civil War. In these letters written to his mother, sister, young brother Ben and a few others during the four years he served in the Union Navy, Wells describes his experience aboard six Union Navy vessels serving in the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron and West Gulf Blockading Squadron. Few published or manuscript collections of letters or journals of Union Navy officers or sailors offer readers, students, and historians descriptions of life aboard this many Union vessels over such an extended period of time. Barbara Brooks Tomblin, author of Bluejackets and Contrabands: African Americans and the Union Navy

"Though Henry Wells was never able to live the life he might have imagined for himself, his letters leave behind a richly informative legacy of Civil War naval service that historian Robert Browning has significantly rescued from obscurity. In terms of sheer numbers, the body of published Union naval correspondence remains disproportionately small in comparison to that of those who wrote about their army service, but the Wells letter collection at least qualitatively narrows that unfortunate gap. Worthy of the highest recommendation, I Am Fighting for the Union is a letter collection possessing value rarely equaled in the entire Civil War naval library."Civil War Books and Authors

Acknowledgments vii
Introduction ix
Abbreviations xxiii
Chronology xxv
1 "I Like My Situation First Rate": Patrolling Virginia Waters
1(27)
2 "I Hope They Are Going to Give Us a Chance to Do Something at Last": Blockade Duty
28(72)
3 "If They Would Only Put Me on Board a Man of War": OffWilmington
100(41)
4 "The Bold and Daring Act": Prisoner of War
141(4)
5 "Coolness and Gallantry under Trying Circumstances": Service in the North Carolina Sounds
145(45)
6 "The Papers Cry Out against the Wilmington Blockade": Back on the Wilmington Blockade
190(26)
7 "It Makes Our Life Here Seem Doubly Monotonous": Duty in Florida
216(62)
8 "I Like My New Position Quite Well": In Command
278(21)
9 "It Is with Feelings of Sadness": The Death of Henry Wells
299(6)
Notes 305(20)
Bibliography 325(4)
Index 329
Robert M. Browning Jr. retired in 2015 as Chief Historian of the United States Coast Guard. He is author or editor of six books, among them From Cape Charles to Cape Fear: The North Atlantic Blockading Squadron during the Civil War, U.S. Merchant Vessel War Casualties of World War II, and Lincolns Trident: The West Gulf Blockading Squadron during the Civil War. He is past editor of the International Journal of Naval History.