531 19 py 1 (T^f^-^ . ^A w -'^ REPORT CONTRIBUTORS Ladies' East Tennessee RELIEF ASSOCIATION. philadklpuia: HOLLAND & EDGAR. PRINTERS. lA NORTH EIGHTH STREET. 18G4. i^ 1 REPORT CONTKIBUTOES Ladies' East Tennessee RELIEF ASSOCIATION. ^l^L/^^ M. /4-^< ^i.U-M/^>-^ \^ ivL ft./v-u ou^ " 1j?c PHILADELPHIA: HOLLAND & EDQAE, PRINTERS. 64 NORTH EIGHTH STREET. 1864. 1 REPORT We herewith transmit to the contributors to the East Tennessee Relief Association, a report of our labors in that State, and although curtailed therein by the stringent orders of Gen. Sherman, prohibiting the transportation of other than army supplies, except to a very limited extent, we trust the arrangements made for the distri- bution of stores will meet the approbation of all concerned. On arriving in Knoxville, Rev. T. W. Humes informed us that our goods were still in Nashville awaiting a permit from the Custom- House to forward them. The length of time which would probably elapse before their arrival, induced the acceptance of the profifered services of Mrs. Horace B. Maynard and Mrs. Humes to act as agents in their distribution, as well as others that may be sent to Knoxville. Those forwarded consisted of one case women's shoes ; one do. staple trimmings, hosiery, handkerchiefs, combs, brushes, soap, domestic muslins, ready-made clothing, canned meats, soups, fruits, poultry, tomatoes, one box corn starch, one do. Hecker's farina, one do. concentrated milk, a case currant jelly, in addition to which, the following donations are thankfully acknowledged : — one box hospital stores from Hopewell Aid, New Jersey ; one do. ready- made clothing, Tioga Aid Society ; one do. Church of the Messiah, corner of Juniper and Locust Streets ; one do. Misses H.; one from Crosswicks, N. J., a large quantity from M. A. L., Philadelphia, together with a valuable assortment of medicines from Chas. Ellis. Many second-hand garments were received anonymously, and being but little worn weie of much service. Supplies are still being forwarded, and it is hoped sufficient interest will be manifested to enable us to continue to relieve, in some measure, the distress of the suffering Loyalit^ts of East Tennessee. The impossibility of organizing a Refugee Home at Knoxville, under existing stringent rules for transportation, is much to be regret- ted, as the establishment bearing that name is destitute of comfort and order. Government provides a house and half rations, but the latter are at times withdrawn. This cheerless shelter ia gladly hailed by hundreds of aged women and small children, some of whom walk sixty or seventy miles barefoot, over a mountainous region, exposed to pittiless storms, and often amidst the jeering of a relentless foe. To particularize the cases of destitution would be impossible, for they arrive not in scores but by thousands. With few exceptions, the sons, brothers and husbands of these are fighting or have fallen in the Union ranks, whilst in some instances they have been shot for allegiance to' the government. The following summary taken from official statistics in Sevier county, proves the loyalty of its inhabitants — sixteen hundred voters, sixty-one for secession — one thousand Federal soldiers. Mr. N. C. Patterson, of Roane County Auxiliary Relief Asso- ciation, writes to Mr. Jackson, General Agent, from Kingston, May 27th, 18G4 : — '* No rations being issued by the Commissary Department, we are using the stores received to supply extreme cases of destitution, not only, nor so much of our own County, as of Cumberland, Morgan, Scott and Anderson Counties. The scenes presented are truly painful ; women walk a distance of thirty to fifty miles, and ask for two or three mosses of provisions to keep their children from starving, until blackberries commence ripening. The Generals commanding all head quarters which we visited, expressed deep sympathy with the refugees, and the following ex- tract from a letter of Rev. T. W. Humes to Edward Everett, is an evidence of the interest manifested by all officers of the Army of the Cumberland with whom we conversed : — " I have had a conver- sation with Brig. General McLean of the U. S. Army, who ariived in town night before last. He made the journey through the mountains on horseback, and relates that about twelve or thirteen miles north of Jacksborough, he and his staff observed a log cabin near the road side, that had a very dilapidated appearance, the door being broken, the chinking between the logs gone, and the chimney in a wretched condition. Three children stood in the door-way, looking disconsolate atid emaciated. Their father was a soldier in one of the Tennessee regiments of the Federal Army, and had been taken prisoner by the rebels. The mother had taken one of her children and gone to Jacksborough to obtain something to eat, leav- ing the other three at home. Soon after passing the house. General ^IcLane dined, and sent a portion of his dinner to the children, the me.ssenger who carried it, told on his return, that when he entered 5 the cabin with the food, one of the children ate it with the eagerness which is excited by a ravenous appetite. The General sent back a message to the regiment which was some miles behind, informing the soldiers of the facta of the case, and he supposes they have left enough of their rations to feed the almost starving children of their fellow-soldier. About live miles this side of the log cabin, he and his staff met the mother and child returning from Jacksborough to their comfortless home; she had succeeded in getting a little flour, that was all. The County of Campbell, where this scene occurred, has suff'ered severely from the war, and almost from the beginning of it." Great privations are also endured by many occupying high social positions, to whom the north owe a debt that millions will not suf- fice to pay. With an unflinching devotion to the Union, the women of Tennessee " nerved the strong arm of man in the day of trouble, and of treading down, and of perplexity, breaking down of the walls and crying to the mountains." Some were sent beyond the rebel lines during the reign of terror, their property confiscated and sold to Georgia and other states, whilst others sold out at mere nominal prices to avoid confiscation, and the rebel money they were obliged to receive has impoverished them by its worthlessness. The scarcity of provisions, and the fabulous prices of all the necessities of life, (sugar one dollar per pound, and every thing in the same ratio,) re- quire sacrifices of which the people of the north can have no ade- quate conception. The day after our arrival in Chattanooga, the rain poured in torrents, and one vast expanse of mud spread around the depot and seemed to fill the valley from hill to hill. Long lines of cars filled the numerous walks with their freight of human souls, some with reinforcements for the front, and others bearing a por- tion of the 2500 wounded in the late battle ; ambulances filled with dead, and on the road side piles of cofiined remains awaiting the ar- rival of a freight train to take them north, and amidst all this, crowds of refugees huddle together without shelter. Some of these had been robbed by guerrillas of every article they possessed, except the clothing on their backs, and in many instances bonnets were taken from their heads, and the fiends would put them on and ride taun- tingly before the poor creatures, "exulting in their chivalry." We had obtained permission at the hotel for some of them to lie on the floor the night previously, and ordered breakfast for them in the morning. One was accompanied by a small child, and it was impos- Bible to rouse her from the depth of despair with which she was over- whelmed. Her eyes were so swollen and inflamed by continued weeping, that partial blindness was the result. Her husband was in the Federal Army, and on giving this information, she exclaimed : — " Oh ! I thought when the Union people came they would protect us ! but my children are starving, our corn is gone, our farm destroyed, and we must die !" Her boy was sleeping on the broad window sill, and I told her to rest for the night on a lounge, with promises of assisting her in the morning to obtain food. Before the dawn of day she had disappeared, no one knew whither. When breakfast was announced, one of the refugees, who had walked seventy miles, caught Mrs. H. by the arm, exclaiming: " Woman, you say you will pay for my breakfast. Oh, give me the money instead, to buy corn for my starving children at home." Her large black eyes expressed the earnestness of her request, and every word was stamped with truth. Her husband is in our army, and stationed about fifteen miles below Nashville, whither she was endeavoring to go to obtain some money. She had determined to retrace her steps homeward, but was pre- vented by information received from us that the Provost Marshall at Nashville had no power to allow her to return. Two cases were existing at that time where the mothers of families had left on the same errand, one leaving six children the other four. They were unable to obtain passes to return, as orders were stringent on account of the multiplicity of such cases. Since then four children of one family have died and two of the latter, whilst the heart broken mothers are still absent from their homes. No persuasion was ne- cessary after this statement, and on being informed that she could purchase corn in an adjacent county for one dollar per bushel, and that a Union neighbor would grind it for her, we gave her ten dol- lars, and she soon resumed her journey over the mountains. Her husband had enlisted at the commencement of the war and was con- fined in Jiibby prison a long time, which fact, togethfer with the above statement, were verified by information received from Mr. Nelson, of Knoxville, who was a prisoner at the same time. During this period she had cultivated the farm with her own hands and raised large crops, but all had been taken and the land laid waste. This class are uneducated, but industrious, and live by exchanging the products of their farms for other necessities. The three classes of Southern whites are thus described in Harper: " First, the ruling class, which includes the planters and the higher grades and professional men, and numbers about one million. 2d. The middle or laboring class, which includes the small traders, mechanics, farmers, and farm and other laborers, and numbers about six and a half millions ; and 3d. ' The mean white class,' which includes all who are appropriately called ' poor trash,' and number about half a million. The two latter classes are of very marked and decidedly opposite characteristics. One labors, is industrious, hardy, enterprising; a law-abiding and useful citizen. The other does not labor; is thieving, vicious, law-breaking and of no sort of account." There are very few of this class in East Tennessee. Thousands of those who have been surrounded by the comforts of life have had their homes desolated by the two contending armies, and pass in hundreds through Chattanooga, homeless victims of a pro-slavery oligarchy. We assisted several of this class pecuniarily, and also made intercessions for some at head quarters, resulting favorably. Provisions are scarce and enormously high in Chatta- nooga, but we were obliged to make purchases there to relieve extreme destitution. Some assistance was also bestowed on Look-Out Mountain, where much suffering prevails. We left means to purchase delicacies from sutlers for a woman in the last stages of consump- tion ; also, some clothing and a portion of the medicine kindly fur- nished by Charles Ellis. The remainder was distributed amono- invalids in Chattanooga. The Refuge Home in Nashville embraces barracks for those who need a temporary home and a hospital. The building was formerly a medical college, and to those accus- tomed to witness the comfort arising from systematic organizations in the North, this presents the very concentration of misery and want. Government provides the house and half rations, and medi- cal attendance, with free admission to all classes. The sick and dying lie around the dissecting and lecture room, whilst orphan children gaze on you so pitifully in their squallid misery, that thanks arise for the mercy that removes so many to their eternal homes. Disease is prevalent, but exhaustion from long journeys and exposure bear the greater proportion to the tomb. We furnished means to purchase milk and ice for the coming week. A few days since a mother and two little children laid themselves down to die in the Refugee Home, after travelling many miles, and it is a marvel how their weary limbs sustained them on their way. Many whose 8 husbands have fallen in the Union ranks, and who would have been able to raise themselves above want had opportunity been afforded, doubtless perish in the woods and caves, unheard of and unknown. The Refugee Farm is situate about two miles from Nashville, where gardens are laid out and assigned to different persons, who reap the benefit therefrom. The cultivated portion presents a thriving appearance, but much more land might be improved, if means could be obtained to purchase stock and farming utensils. We gave the superintendent One Hundred Doljars to purchase articles most needed, feeling an assurance that under his judicious management it will be well appropriated. There are seventy refugees at this place. Since our return, $200 has been received for farming purposes from the Gentlemen's Penn'a R. A. For the assistance we have been enabled to render these sufferers, as well as for the ability to forward more supplies, we thank the generous donors on behalf of a people suffering for their loyalty, and who will maintain their allegiance to the government even unto death. Our special thanks are due to Morton McMichael ; Editors Sun- day Morning Times; Evening Telegraph; Crissy and Markley; King and Baird ; Geo. D. Parrish & Co.; Adams Express ; Joseph Chapman, and Penn'a Central Railroad Co. As a Hospital in Knoxville will be established as soon as trans- portation for supplies is open, under the management of Mrs. Joseph Canby, and other ladies from Philadelphia, it is hoped contributions to aid us in our labors will not be withheld. MARY M. HALLOWELL, 2121 Arch Street, Phil'a. ELLEN E. PARRISH, 1305 Arch Street, Phil'a. "r »->jrnjrct:>:> 013 703 623 n