E 527 .5 i22d TRANSACTIONS .p Copy 1 OF THE FIRST ANNUAL REUNION OF THE 122(1 Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers. HELD AT IvANCASTBR, F>A., Thursday, May 17, 1883. LANCASTER, PA. THE NEW ERA STEAM PRINTING HOUSE. 1884. TRANSACTIONS OF THE FIRST ANNUAL REUNION OF THE 122(1 Regiment Pennsylvania Volnnteers. HELD AT T^ANCASTER, PA., Thursday, May 17, 1883. LANCASTER, PA. THE NEW ERA STEAM PRINTING HOUSE. 1884. <\ COMMITTEES. ^' General Executive Committee: Col. EMLEN FRANKLIN, Chairman. THOMAS C. WHlxTo^,^^.- ^ w\f V^l^S.^-" , Seigt. GEORGE F. SPRENGER, Secretary. On Ceremonies : Hon. JOHN T. MacGONIGLE, Chairman I^ieut. ISAAC MULLIKIN 11,. Trwrrxr o o GEORGE M. BORGER. On Rendezvous and Collation: Sergt. GEORGE F. SPRENGER, Chairman. GEORGE W. CORMENr. Z^'^T.^Tur ... On Finance and Contribution • tRANK GALBRAITH. On JTotifleation of Members : n. . , „„„ "''°'' ''°'' ^°^^'"> MOGOVERU, Chalrmau. Zu B™S,T??5C ct B Sr ""f "■ ^'^-^^OKER, CO. P. ' « " ••♦,.< ' 'PRfisilJEi«t, Col.' EMLEN FRANKLIN. Chaplain, Rev. ELIM KIRK. ORATORS, K. ALLEN LOVELL, Esq., J. DAVISDUFFIELD, Esq. Historian, Dk. JOHN S. SMITH. PROCEEDINGS. At 2 O'clock the members assembled at Maemierchor Hall, and, after forming by companies, marched down East King street, led by the City Band, and, escorted by a delegation of the George H. Thomas Post, G. A. R., they marched to Centre Sqnare and around the Soldiers' Monument. After indulging in a short street parade the members marched to Fulton Hall. The stage was occupied by Colonel Emlen Franklin, Lieut. Colonel Edward McGovern, Adjutant D. H. Heitshu, Chaplain Elim Kirk, Quar- termaster John T. MacGonigle, Captain George Musser, the Speakers and the Committee of Ai'i'angements. The Band played " Star Spangled Banner," and " Yankee Doodle." Mayor Mac- Gonigle called the meeting to order, and nominated Col. Emlen Franklin for President. The nomination met with vociferous applause, and when the Colonel stepped forward three hearty cheers weiife given him. Colonel Emlen Franklin's Speech. The Colonel made a brief speech of welcome, beginning with the remark that there was no need to tell how proud and happy he felt on having been called on to preside, and saying that there was no need to speak in a formal manner to them, for they knew as well as he the object and intents of the re-union. It was a sort of family gathering, where old memories would be re- called. For 3^ears this re-union had been talked of among the com- rades abroad as well as those here in Lancaster, and the large, enthusiastic meeting was the result of that agitation. Words failed him on this occasion. The feelings that filled his breast throbbed also in theirs. Twent}^ 3^ears had passed since the Regiment returned from the war, and what recollections come with the occasion? The memory of the dead was tinged with sadness, but the braves who went before now sleep the sleep of the blest. The first thing he and his comrades should do, and the best thing the^^ could do, 4 Transactions of the First Annual Reunion was to return thanks to God for sparing their lives and permit- ting them to be here at this time ; he therefore asked all present to join in prayer. Prayer by Rev. Elim Kirk, of Philadelphia, Pa. Music by the Band, "Hail Columbia." Then came K. Allen Lovell, Esq., of Huntingdon, Pa,; then J. Davis Duffleld, Esq., of Philadelphia, Pa.; then followed the History of the Regiment by John S. Smith, D. D. S., of Lan- caster, Pa. Colonel McGovern now announced that the banquet would be held at Moennerchor Hall, the Band played and the exercises of the afternoon were ended. In the Evening. The boys of the 122d, with their guests, Post 84, G. A. R., gathered around the festive board. Colonel Franklin presided. After the collation was eaten, the President offered the follow- ing sentiment : " The Judiciary, our protection in time of peace as the soldiers were in war." Responded to by Hon. Wm. N. Ashman. J. Davis Duffleld entei'tained the boys with a ten minutes' speech. Sergeant George F. Sprenger read a number of letters and tele- grams received. The first paper was the following greeting, adopted by the 99th Regiment survivors at their re-union: " That your re-union may be a grand success, and your enjoy- ment and pleasure in meeting old comrades after so many years may be greater than it was twenty years ago on 3'our return home, is the wish of your fellow soldiers and comrades of the Red Dia- mond." A letter was read from Miss M. Slaymaker, representing the " Patriot Daughters," thanking the Committee for the invitation to be present at the re-union. George S. Boone offered a resolution that a committee be ap- pointed to make all the preliminary arrangements for a perma- nent organization. of the 122d Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers. 5 Captain George M. Franklin moved an amendment that tlie Executive Committee, as now appointed, be authorized to report a permanent organization. The amendment was unanimouslj'^ adopted, and a motion to adjourn, to meet at the call of the Ex- ecutive Committee, having been adopted, the boys slowly passed from the Hall, and their first re-union was over. PERMANENT ORGANIZATION. CoL. EMLEN FRANKLIN, Chairman. Col. EDWARD McGOVERN. Hon. JOHN T. MacGONIGLE. Capt. GEORGE M. FRANLLIN, Treasurer. Capt. JAMES F. RICKSECKER. Sergt. DAVID C. HAVERSTICK. Serot. GEORGE F. SPRENGER, Secretary. Transactions of the Fii-st Annual Reunion ORATION. BY K. ALLEN LOVELL, ESQ., OF HUNTINGDON, PA. Comrades : Standing here to-day, in a busy and peaceful city, in this beautiful and spacious Hall, and in a presence so pleasing and significant, strange and interesting memories come, like flood tides from the past. Here, before me and about me, I look into faces that to my eyes have been invisible for twenty years, and yet as we have each traversed the teeming avenues of business life, in all that long interval, up and down this great Commonwealth, how often, in memory, the familiar voice of some comrade that has cheered and helped us on the weary march has again sounded in our ears and transported us back to the time when our life seemed em- bodied in the song : "All quiet along the Potomac to-night, Where the soldiers lie peacefully dreaming, Their tents in the rays of the clear autumn moon, Or the light of the watch-fire's gleaming." But when awakened fromour reverie by the noise and the din of the busy life about us, we have thanked God it was but a dream, and that the visions floating before us were but memories of the past. As we greet each other on this anniversary occasion let us re- call for a moment the dark days of 18fi2, when it seemed as if the Union, so dear to us all, purchased at such great sacrifices of blood and treasure,, was about to be rent in twain; and the grand States, comprising empires within their broad and rich bosoms, were to become independent and hostile governments. The magnificent Army of the Potomac, after knocking at the very gates of Richmond, had been driven back, defeated and dis- pirited,leaving many of its grandest men,noblest spirits, maimed and dying on those eaxly and terrible battle fields, and many more to- suffer and perish in the horrible prisons of the South. of the 122d Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers. 7 Thoughtful and patriotic men all over the North, as they met each other in the streets, on their farms, in their stores and offl ces, spoke with bated breath and sorrowful hearts of the latest disaster to the Union arms. The very blackness of darkness seemed ready to settle down upon the country; and yet all this impenetrable gloom, as we look back over the past, from the present, seems to have been needed to properly awaken and arouse that great slumbering giant, the North, to the fact that the Nation's life was in peril. Scarcely had the news of the army's disaster before Richmond been flashed over the countr}^ when a deep-seated feeling seemed to possess men of all classes. They said, here is a war in which ever}' citizen has a personal duty to perform. Men gathered from their farms, their stores, their offices to fill the depleted ranks, — great schools all over the North, filled with young men in training for the intellectual conflicts of life, became military camps, and all conversation, literature and song were alike con- secrated to the cause that rested on all hearts. Under such circumstances as these, only a short distance from this city, on the 12th of August, 1862, was organized the Regi- ment whose re-union we celebrate to-day. Composed largely of young men who had no previous knowledge of military duty, ac- tive measures were at once begun to acquire proficiency in drill and render the men acquainted with the art of war. Scarcely had the organization been performed, however, when the disasters of Pope's campaign rendering it necessary that all available forces should be gathered about the Capital, the Regiment was summoned to Washington, where, on the 16th of August, it was reported to General Casey, then in command of the city's de- fenses. No comrades here present, I venture, but recall the day that our grand old Regiment, 1,000 strong, proudly marched through the streets of the National Capital, the Stai'sand Stripes floating- over us, and sweet strains of martial music quickening every step; but before the '■ Long Bridge " had been crossed, and we had climbed the bluffs that rise on the Virginia side, the burning August sun, whose heat was intensified by reflection from the dry sand and parched earth, the clouds of dust rising to stifle and choke the moving columns, the heated musket, the well-filled '8 Transactions of the First Annual Reunion knapsack that strangely seemed to grow heavier at every step — all these conspired to destroy forever the beautiful visions of the ease and glory of a soldier's life. As the early morning sun looked down upon the camp where rested the 122d Regiment, during its first night on the " sacred soil " of Virginia, it revealed the contents from many a knapsack which the soldier deemed unnecessary as he started on his second day's march. After only a brief delay the Regiment was moved to Fairfax Court House, where it was assigned to General Piatt's Brigade, composed, with it, of the 86th and 124th New York Yolunteers. This Brigade subsequently became the 3d of the 3d Division and 3d Army Corps. I need not recall the anxious weeks of marching, counter- marching and drill, through which the command now passed and which always constitutes the most trying experience in the earlj^ life of the soldier — tr3ang, because seemingly sounnecessary and yet so vital in training for the exposure and suffering incident to a soldier's life in time of war. The further history of the 122d Regiment now becomes the history, in part, of the Army of the Potomac. Pope having been beaten at Manassas, the Confederate army, flushed with victor}-, marched northward, crossed the Potomac, and while threatening Wasliington, proclaimed freedom of speech and action to all citizens of Maryland who were willing to show their sympathy for the cause of the South. While our Division, General Whipple commanding, was left in charge of the defenses about Washington, the Army of the Po- tomac under McClellan also passed north, and by rapid move- ments the advance columns engaged the enemy before Lee had time to concentrate his forces and fought the battle of South Mountain, in which, although the Confederates had greatly the ad- vantage of position, they were beaten and withdrew under cover of darkness to Antietam. Here they selected their position with care, concentrated their whole army, planted their batteries so as to do most effective service, and waited the approach of McClellan; and here was fought, Sept. 16th and 17th, one of the most sangui- nary conflicts of the war, and perhaps up to that time the most so of any battle ever fought on the American Continent. of the 12'2d Begiment Pennsylvavia Volunleei's. 9 From this terrible encounter, Lee escaped again to his native soil of Virginia. Whipi)le's Division, leaving Washington, joined the main body of the Union army in Maryland, when McClellan, crossing the Potomac near Berlin, moved South by gradual marches until Warrenton was reached. At that place McClellan was relieved of his command, General Burnside appointed his successor, and the army was halted near Falmouth, on the North side of the Rappahannock. In December, from the 11th to the 16th, was fought the bloody and fruitless battle of Fredericksburg, in which the 122d, while enjoying the luxury of serving as a target for the Confederate batteries, was preserved from the terrible sacrifice to which thou- sands of their comrades were invite:^ — of repeatedly charging, through shot and shell, through blinding storms of musketry, over an open plain, only to find the enemy safely intrenched behind a solid stone wall at the base of the impregnable heights. We all remember, after the army had returned to the north side of the Rappahannock, and a short time had elapsed, how utterly futile was the second attempt of General Burnside to surprise the €nemy, and how this campaign passed into history as the great " mud march." It now seemed that the country again demanded a change in the leadership of the Army of the Potomac. While the Union armies in the West were achieving notable victories, the way from Washington to Richmond was still greatly obstructed. General Hooker was now called to the front, and Burnside was re- lieved. The new Commander had fought in man}^ battles of the war, and by his daring and the impetuosity of his attacks had justly won the admiration of his superiors and the love and confidence of his men. Under the inspiration of his command, the array dur- ing the winter was rendered more efficient in discipline, and was strengthened by re-enforcements until, in the Spring of 1863, new life and hope seemed evei-ywhere visible. In the latter part of April the camps at Falmouth were quietly abandoned and portions of the arm}^, moving West, crossed the Rappahannock and Rapidan at the ujiper fords, and proceeded in the direction of Chancellorsville ; while Sedgwick's command, designed to attract the enemy's attention, moved down the river / 10 Transactions of the First Annual Reunion. to Franklin's Crossing. The 122d moved with the corps under General Sickles, on April 28th, and, proceeding to a point be- low Fredericksburg, as if to cross the river in support of Sedg- wick, halted and remained until the morning of the 30th, when the whole corps moved rapidly West to the United States ford, and, crossing, rejoined the main army under Hooker near Chan- cellorsville, on May 1. Early in the morning of May 2d, the Third Corps was thrown well forward on the right centre of the line of battle, between the 12th and 11th corps, and as Stonewall Jackson, on that day, swept around the front of Hooker's entire army, from its left to its right, his moving columns were more than once pierced, driven off, and thrown into confusion by the advance divisions of Sickles' corps. On the right of Sickles rested the 11th corps, in command of General Howard, who, though also apprised of the large masses of Confederates moving in his front during the day, yet believed them to be portions of Lee's army in full retreat, until six in the evening, when Jackson, having succeeded in massing his entire command of 25,000 men on Hooker's ex- treme right, charged with his usual impetuosit}^ striking the 11th corps in front and on its exposed flank and hurling it back in utter confusion and broken fragments towards the centre of our line of battle. When the tide of disaster reached the 3d corps it was fortu- nately checked. Every foot of ground was stubbornly con- tested by Sickles, Stonewall Jackson fell, mortally wounded, and the Confederate columns were stayed. It was now late in the evening of Ma}' 2. During the night the lines of the Third corps were re-formed and by a bold attack Sickles pushed back the enemy, regaining part of the ground lost by Howard's disaster, and posted his guns so as to effectually cover the open space about the Chancellor House. At early dawn on Sunday morning the Confederates pushed forward heavy columns on their chosen i)oints of attack, and never did men with more desperate determination, more utter recklessness of life, dash themselves upon Sickles' corps, whose 40 cannon, ably fought, tore through their close ranks with fright- ful carnage. " In the Annals of the War," says an eye witness, " there has of the 122d Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers. 11 been no greater manifestation of desperation than that shown by the Confederates on this Sunday morning. They came through the woods in a solid mass, receiving in their faces the terrible hail storm, which burst like the fury of a tornado from the lines of Berry, Birney and Whipple. The batteries hurled in grape and canister. The advancing column was cut up and gashed as if pierced and ploughed by invincible lightning. Companies and regiments melted away, yet still they came. Whipple, Berry and Birney advanced to meet them. Tlie living waves rolled against each other as you have seen the billows on a stormy sea. The enemy, as if maddened at the obstinac}^ of these handfuls of men, rushed up to the muzzles of the cannon, only to be hurled back, leaving long lines of dead where the storms of grape and canis- ter swept through." Sickles could not hold out against these tremendous odds. Twice had he sent urgent appeals to Hooker for re-enforcements, but the Commanding General himself had been stricken down by a shell from the enemy's guns and was thought to be dying. During that fatal hour the army was without a leader, and Sickles, instead of being supported by 10,000 fresh troops, out of the 30,- 000 not engaged, and thus enabled to have driA'en the enemy from his front and achieved a substantial victory, was compelled to gradually give way and take up a new line more contracted and more easily defensible, against which the fury of the storm spent itself in vain. The 122d,in this desperate encoimter, suffered severely in killed and wounded. Generals Berry and Whipple were among the number who fell mortalljr wounded on that fatal day. General Sedgwick, who had crossed below Fredericksburg, stormed and taken the Heights, and was now marching his forces in the direction of Chancellors- ville, was suddenl}' halted by a division of the Confederate army, detached by bee for that purpose, and was afterwards attacked in such numbers, during the evening and night of May 4th, as to overwhelm him and drive him across the Rappahannock at Bank's ford, with heavy loss. On the night of May 5th Hooker also crossed at United States ford, and thus ended this remarkable series of battles on the lines of the Rappahannock. 12 Transactiom of the First Annual Reunion After the death of General Whipple, his body was forwarded to Washington, and the 122d was ordeied to accompanj^ it to act as escort at his funeral. At the conclusion of these sad rites, the Regiment's term of service having now expired, it was ordered to Harrislnirg, where, on the 15th and 16th days of May, it was mustered out— the men returning to Lancaster, May It, 1863, just twenty years ago to- day. Thus briefly, and no doubt in many respects inaccurately, I have sketched the organization and work of the 122d Regiment. We who are here to-day were permitted to witness the triumph- ant close of the war, and after almost a generation has passed are allowed to greet each other on this happy occasion. Not so with our brave comrades, who, more than twenty years ago, on that beautiful Sabbath morning in May, gave up their lives, freely sacrificed in a cause the ultimate success of which was yet in doubt; not so with those of our number, equally he- roic, who, when their youthful faces were first turned toward the seat of war, their hearts sw^elling with patriotism, as with joy they thought of the glory they should achieve on the field of bat- tle, yet, with wasting disease, slowly perished on the weary march, enduring their great sufferings in quiet, for their coun- try's sake. From the graves of our fallen comrades— a Kling or a Bailey, sleeping peacefully on the field of Chancellorsville, a Readman or a Wade, resting in quiet repose at Berlin or Falmouth— there comes to us to-day an inspiration, voiced from every patriot grave all over this great Republic, quickening our devotion to the government and institutions for which they gave their lives, and to the great cause of liberty throughout the world. No historian whose pen shall trace out the causes which led to the great American conflict, record its deeds of valor and heroic suffering, and not devote many of his brightest images to tell of the noble, self-sacrificing spirit of Christian women in that time of the nation's peril, can merit or receive the approval of those for whom he writes. Probably never in any war, in any country, was there so uni- versal and so specific an acquaintance on the part of the women with the principles at issue and the interests at stake, and it Is of the 122d Regiment Peiwsylvojna Volunteers. 13 impossible to over-estimate the amount of consecrated work done by them for the army. Amid discouragements and fearful delays they never flagged, but to the last increased in zeal and devotion many denying themselves the comforts to which they had al- ways been accustomed, that they might wind another banrlage around some unknown soldier's wound, or give some parched lips in the hospital another sip of water. God himself keeps this record ; it is too sacred to be trusted to man. But the great cause has triumphed. Our government, with all its blessings of freedom, is established on a firmer footing than before the war. The great root of Intterness has been plucked up. Free government has shown itself able to defend itself ; able to secure to the people of this country the blessings of liberty ; able to maintain their rights against the most formidable attack which any conspiracy or nation can organize. In this great cause, the 122d Regiment has borne her part. She has done what she could to make clear the true principles and results of the conflict; to uphold the flag of the country on the field of battle ; and many of her number have laid down their lives that they might contribute to the attainment of our national success. And now, as we turn our faces away from the glorious achieve- ments of the past, whose fading memories will soon depart for ever, let us look out into the great future, full of promise and hope. Can we not there discern this magnificent Republic, our beloved country, as she marches proudly and grandly in the lead of the nations of the earth : chastened, it may be, by the struggles and blood stains of the centuries through which she has passed, yet with gathered strength for every noble purpose and respon- sive to every impulse of an enlightened civilization. In that glad day there shall remain no trace of the State sov- ereignty and sectional bitterness of the past, but as the grand column moves onward, in the procession of the ages, this great nation, growing in splendor and power as time advances, shall re- ceive welcome plaudits and grateful homage from the North, the the South, the East, and the West— a country unbroken and in- destructible. 14 Transactions of the First Annual Reunion ORATION BY J. DAVIS DUFFIELD, ESQ., OF PlITLADELPHIA, PA. Friends and Comrades: If this were the anniversary of the- departure of our Regi- ment for the seat of war there could have been no appropriate- ness in my selection for this part of the programme ; but as it is the anniversary of our return, I can recognize the entire propriety of such selection, remembering that I was a very sick boy in going to war, and a very glad one in returning. Well do I remember the kind reception which awaited us on our return at the hands of the citizens of Lancaster. The repast that was set before us in the Court House afforded a happy con- trast to the previous meals of hard tack, pork and coffee which had so frequently been furnished us at the expense of Uncle Sam. The greetings I'eceived by members of the Regiment who were at home here aroused considerable env}'^ in me, I can assure you, and made me wish in m}^ isolation that I had either been born in Lancaster county, or were able to transport from Bucks county some of my friends for the occasion. I was struck on that oc- casion with the amount of beaut^^ which the city afforded, and am not quite sure that I have yet recovered from the effects of that impression. I congratulate you who returned as I did (and were perhaps almost as glad to get back) that you did return, and were not left upon some of the battle fields of Virginia as sac- rifices to the insatiable Moloch of war. It is a subject of congratulation, also, that so many of us have been spared through the years that are past to meet together at this reunion — the 20th anniversary of our return ; and let us, while enjoying the festivities of this occasion, not forget to bring to mind others of our comrades who were left upon the field of battle, as Avell as those who have gone since their return to join the " bivouac of the dead." With our mirth let us minole our tears, and let our joys be softened b}^ our prayers for those who have gone before. There will perhaps be few opportunities af- of the li32d Regiment PenriHylvania Volunteers. 15 forded us who survive to meet togetlier as we do to-day ; so let us enjoy this occasion in the full spirit of " fraternity, charity and loyalty,"not knowing which of us, before another similar occasion shall be presented, shall have answered the " long roll of death." The faces of Maj. Thad. Stevens and Q. M. Sergt. Jacob Mar- tin are present to m\' mind — although absent from this occasion ■ — the former good natured and kindly, the latter alwaj's jolly and social. Let it be hoped that there may possibly be reunions of our comrades in the spirit land, and that the dead that have gone before are having a counterpart of this occasion in realms which their valor and their virtues have won for them. We know not the future, but only the present and something of the past, but nothing has ever so thoroughly stirred the hearts of a people (and probably' nothing ever will) as the services and sacrifices of its soldier}-. The soldiers of the Union have on every hand received recognition and gratitude ; and it has only been in cases where the designs of crafty politicians have been attempted to be carried out, through the prostitution of this sentiment, that the people have revolted. The names of Kearney, Sedgwick, Whipple, McClellan, Hancock, Meade, Grant and hun- dreds of others stand on the pages of their country's liistory as examples of military stbility and courage for the emulation of fu- ture generations, and are enshrined in the hearts of the people in gratitude for their services in maintaining this government " of the people, by the people and for the people." Their swords are now beaten into plowshares, as our bayonets are turned into pruning hooks ; and let the glory of the soldier not be dimmed by the. mistakes of the partisan nor his valor forgotten through the faults of the politician. " Peace hath her victories as well as war." The mai'ches, the camp fires, the bivouacs, the parades, and the drills of the Regiment in which we joined come vividly to our minds ; and I have often wished that just for one evening (not, of course, for a great length of time) the scenes of a camp fire could be restored. Some of the experiences of our soldier life were thoroughl}^ enjoyable ; and I am not unmindful of the forages that were made with such refreshing results to the inner man. However, be it said to the credit of Col. Franklin, that he always took proper measures for repressing any undue spirit of wanton- 16 Transactions of the First Annual Reunion ness in that direction, although his efforts to protect a certain hen house on the urgent appeals of the good woman of the man- sion in a night march on the road down to Piedmont did not prevent a number of dishes of chicken broth from being served up next morning, as I myself can testify. The quickness with which a number of pigs and calves were disposed of later on in the march towards Falmouth, on a bright winter's afternoon, would have earned positions for a number of our men at a first-class abattoir; and, if I remember aright, the Colonel's cook was put in charge of some of that pork. Some of you, my comrades, may remember that this occurred upon the farm of a man whose milk house loft was well filled with apples aud potatoes, and some of you may remember having been chased out of that loft by the proprietor of the premises, not, however, without a certain amount of booty having been secured. The locking of the door of that loft, you will remember, put a stop to foraging in that direction. It is unfortunate that war means a relapsing into primitive conditions of life — communism pales before its lurid light. The restraints of civilized life are relaxed, and that which in peace would be considered a crime becomes in war a merit to be re- warded. It means desolation, destruction and death; and it also means present and resulting demoralization to society which cannot be immediately reinvested with its wholesome and proper restraints. In the language of Burke : " War suspends the rules of moral obligation, and what is long suspended is in danger of being totally abrogated. Civil war strikes deepest of all into the man- ners of the people. The}' vitiate their politics ; they corrupt their morals ; they pervert even the natural taste and relish of equity and justice. B}' teaching us to consider our fellow crea- tures in a hostile light, the whole body of our nation becomes gradually less dear to us. The ver}^ names of affection and kindred, which were the bond of charity, become new incentives to hatred and rage when the communion of our country is dis- solved." That we may have no more of it is the wish of all who have participated in it. North and South, although the coming- generations of our country, knowing nothing of war but b}^ tradi- tion, ma}^ rush into it and obtain the wisdom of its experiences. Let it be hoped that this country will never again witness a war of sec- of the 122(1 Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteers. It tion against section, brother against brother. Dearly has the South paid for her errors in the loss of her property and her sons ; and while we may have little or no regard for their so-called " states- men" who labored so zealously to bring it about, yet toward those who fought against us we can only feel as brave men should feel toward each other. Would that their valor had been shown and blended with our own against a common enemy, rather than in an efiort to perpetrate the crowning iniquity of our American civilization (in derogation of the rights of humanity and in vio- lation of the laws of God), the institution of human slavery. The progress of human intelligence had lighted up its iniqui- ties to the dullest comprehension, and whatever fatuity of reason- ing may have blunted the conscie\ices and dulled the sensibilities of our brethren at the South, there is a result attained in its abo- lition which promises development of their resources wherefrom shall flow wealth and power for them. Joining hands with them, we (soldiers of the North and South), in defence of a common country', can well bid defiance to any foreign adversary ; and to au}^ that may dare assail us we may say with Henry the V in the play : "Take heed, How you awake our sleeping swords of war, We charge you in the name of God, take heed ! For never two such kingdoms did contend Without much flow of blood, whose guiltless drops Are every one a woe, a sore complaint 'Gainst him, whose wrong gives edge uiito the swords. That make such waste in brief mortality. "' It seems in strange contrast with the sequence of events to read upon a tombstone in Hollywood Cemetery at Richmond of a brave son of the South, who, so it states, " was killed in the bat- tle's front while charging the eneni}^ at Malvern Hills, July 1, 1862," this insci-iption : "Rest on, embalmed and sainted dead. Dear as the blood he gave, Fear not that impious foot shall trea