Description:

PENNSYLVANIA CAVALRY LIEUTENANT FIGHTS CONFEDERATES IN TENNESSEE
Excellent content A.L.S., 2pp. 4to., Nicholsville, Kentucky, Jan. 12, 1863, from Lieutenant Isaac D. Landis of the 9th Pennsylvania Cavalry to his parents. Landis described his unit''s recent raids into Tennessee. In part: "...We got back to camp on the 10th Inst which made just three weeks from the time we started out on that Bridge Burning Expedition. We had a hard time of it but only lost about ten men killed wounded and missing. We had two pretty brisk skirmishes with the Enemy one at Wautaga Bridge the other at Jonesville at Wautaga. We had 1 man killed & 4 wounded. The enemy fought pretty well until we were ordered in on a charge when they broke & run for the hills. We captured about half of them. We only had two men of our regt wounded. One had to have his leg amputated. The Bushwhackers took a great many of our men prisoners and I suppose they killed them. A man was not safe to get away from the regiment or he would be sure to be picked up. We suffered a great deal for want of provisions as we could only take 10 days'' rations with us but we got some of the rebels'' flour at Unionville Te[nnessee] where we burnt the first bridge. We destroyed 15 tons of Salt and a lot of splendid flour... We did not bring back half of the horses that we took when we started... we took all the good horses along the road and left the broken down horses in place of them. When we were coming back over the mountains every hundred yards we could see horses that had tumbled down and could not be got up again and the men would have to go on and leave horse saddles blankets & everything..." Landis states that they will have to acquire new horses before their next raid, and mentions in a post-script that he passed Christmas while on the march. He signs at the conclusion in black ink. Shows original mailing folds with some minor splitting, else very good. Landis would serve in the 9th Pennsylvania Cavalry for almost the entire war, from October 1862 until July 1865, receiving wounds in Georgia in November of 1864.

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April 18, 2018 10:00 AM EDT
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