Paul collection of Civil War papers and related ephemera

The Paul collection of Civil War papers and related ephemera, housed in seven folders in one box, primarily consists of over 100 transcribed letters from and concerning Richard Henry Morris, who served with the 9th New York Infantry during the Civil War. Along with a few other items, additional mat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Paul, James Caverly Newlin and Margaret Morris Clausen. (Creator)
Collection:Paul Collection of Civil War Papers and Related Ephemera
Collection Number:3689
Format: Manuscript
Language:English
Subjects and Genres:
Online Access:Link to finding aid
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Physical Description: 0.2 Linear feet , 1 box
Access: The collection is open for research.
Summary: The Paul collection of Civil War papers and related ephemera, housed in seven folders in one box, primarily consists of over 100 transcribed letters from and concerning Richard Henry Morris, who served with the 9th New York Infantry during the Civil War. Along with a few other items, additional materials in the collection include a biography and memorial of Ulric Dahlgren and a handwritten account from 1888 of the assassination of President Lincoln titled "A Story of a Great Crime."
Making up the bulk of the collection are transcriptions of Richard Henry Morris's letters, which are on fragile, onion-skin paper (Folder 2). Use photocopies of these documents have been made, and researchers are asked to consult the photocopies first (Folder 1). In his letters, Morris presented detailed and vivid accounts of his war service, though it is unclear to whom he wrote them as none of the transcriptions (which are undated) contain either salutations or signatures. In addition to the 1861-1863 letters, there is one letter dated 6 February 1865 and three letters from 1860 that appear to have been written by someone other than Morris, perhaps his wife or another family member. Throughout his service, Morris traveled to numerous camps, including Camp Butler, Newport News, Virginia; Fort Hatteras, North Carolina; and Camp Parke, Fredericksburg, Virginia. Two of his letters from 1862 were written from vessels off the North Carolina Coast, the transport Eagle and the gunboat Shrapnel. He participated in an 1861 clash at Fort Hatteras and the 1862 Battle of Roanoke Island. He also wrote about many other minor skirmishes with Confederate troops in addition to general camp life--rations, other soldiers, using African Americans as "servants," warding off disease, and morale. He usually ended his letters asking about friends and family in Philadelphia and Bristol and frequently mentioned a place called "Oaklands." In addition to these letters, the collection contains an 1864 memorial sermon and three-page typed biography of Ulric Dahlgren (Folder 3), who was a Bucks County native and studied law in Philadelphia before the outbreak of the Civil War. Folders 4 and 5 contain two programs from a reunion of the Hawkins' Zouaves Association and a partial document with the Philadelphia city seal, respectively. Following this is a handwritten account of Abraham Lincoln's assassination by Captain Richard S. Collum (Folder 6), who was originally from Indiana but was stationed in Philadelphia for the last six years (1891-1897) of his United States Marine Corps career and died there in 1905. Finally, Folder 7 contains a memorial from the Military Order of the Loyal Legion for Richard Henry Morris.