Description:

UNION CAPTAIN OFFERS HIS BLISTERING ASSESSMENT OF THE STATE OF THE UNION!
Incredible content letter by Union Capt. Edward Moses giving his political opinions on the war, race issues and politics, 8pp. 8vo., "U.S. Bark Fernandina", St. Simons, Ga., Feb. 3, 1863 to "Josey". In small part: "...I was in P[ort] Royal...to take a glass or two of wine with our worthy Rear Admiral (better known among us as 'Old Dummy')...a boat comes from Capt. Steedman...with the sad news of the sinking of the 'Hatteras' by the 'Alabama'...he allowed the crew all but four to perish by drowning he [Semmes] deserves no quarter...I trust he may be taken and hung up like a dog...we have...a miserable collection of floating coffins our stupid octogenarian of a Sec. of the Navy has been squandering the government funds...the South deserve credit for bravery and good management, we for stupidity and swindling operations...United States once the envy of the world is now and will be the laughing stock for all nations our country is being sacrificed to political nigger worshippers and swindling speculators, and until we have a thorough clean out in Washington from the President to the lowest messenger boy nothing but this miserable state of things will be...our President is an honest well meaning man...he is a mere tool in the hands of thieves and nigger worshippers...we have refugees and contraband coming in nearly every day two weeks since a white woman & child with a negro and a wench with her child...yesterday four boys! Came in this morning...a man by the name of 'Gibbs'...passed into the Southern army...at Richmond and at the fight at Fredericksburg...changed his Confederate money for gold...escaped in a canoe bringing his servant & her child...one of the boys that came in this morning found his Father & Mother who had escaped some months previous...I had an opportunity last Monday to send my friend DuPont a fine deer which I had shot...". Fine condition. The USS Fernandina served in the South Atlantic Blockading Squadron which she joined off Charleston. Aside from the summer of 1863, when she sailed north for repairs, the bark blockaded at St. Simons, Georgia and at St. Catherine's, Georgia, and in Ossabaw Sound. She captured the sloop Annie Thompson on Jan. 16, 1864, after the blockade runner had grounded.

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October 9, 2010 11:00 AM EDT
Stamford, CT, US

Alexander Historical Auctions LLC

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