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Samuel T. Reeves Correspondence - Introduction and Index


Jump directly to Index of Letters

Introduction to the Samuel T. Reeves Correspondence

By George Rugg

The Reeves collection includes a total of 31 letters, 28 of which were written by Sgt. Samuel T. Reeves during his Civil War service with the 80th Indiana Infantry. Reeves (b. 1831/2) was a farmer, from Vigo township, Knox County, Indiana. All the letters are addressed to his wife, Huldah Harriet Reeves, in Knox County. Reeves was mustered in to Company C of the 80th Indiana for three years’ service on 3 September 1862, and remained in that unit for the duration of the war. Though the letters by Reeves span sixteen months, from March 1864 to June 1865, most (22) date from the spring of 1865. During that time Reeves was not with his regiment in North Carolina, but was convalescing in the army hospital at Camp Dennison, in southwest Ohio. He appears to have been recovering from an illness first suffered in 1863, which kept him in the hospital or otherwise away from his regiment for much of the rest of the war. Of the six letters which predate Reeves’ arrival at Camp Dennison, two were written from Tennessee, including one dated 17 March 1864 from Morristown, while four were written from Georgia during June-September 1864, when the 80th, attached to the 23rd Army Corps, was moving on Atlanta. Three additional letters in the collection were written to Samuel Reeves after the war, from family members in Texas.

The letters are most notable, perhaps, for their religious exhortation. Reeves writes frequently and ardently of his Christian beliefs, of the need for faith and forbearance to ensure a permanent union with God in a heaven “where there is no sorrow no war no sin no separation” (12 March 1865). He takes evident pleasure in contemplating the rewards of heaven; his accounts of the latter verge at times on the ecstatic. As he frequently reminds his wife, the personal difficulties occasioned by the war should never be allowed to undermine “a kinde and cheerful Spirit,” or overwhelm a profound thankfulness for the promise of salvation.

Thus, Reeves can find solace in his faith, despite his separation from his family and despite the illness that has left him unable to fight: “at a thought it Seams that I am not doing my part but on reflection I am Subject to him that doeth all things right” (19 March 1865). The war itself is likewise the instrument of a greater, divine purpose. As he writes on 3 April 1865: “(if god has a desire in this war) (and I truly believe he has) it will close when the national Sin is blotted out and not before ) Gods will must and will be done and wee should be reconsiled to it.” The “national Sin” probably refers to slavery — though nowhere else in the letters does Reeves reveal himself an abolitionist. And nowhere does he pronounce his allegiance to a particular Christian sect or denomination.

Reeves’ religious beliefs are evident as well in the several poems that accompany the letters, as in the one sent to Huldah on 11 June 1864. Reeves’ “long looked for morning” connotes not just war’s end but resurrection, especially of the “Hoosier boys” who have died for the cause. The benevolent persona characteristic of the letters typically colors even Reeves’ discussions of the enemy. A notable exception occurs in the letter of 16 April 1865, in which he expresses his outrage at those sympathetic to the assassination of Lincoln.

Reeves was mustered out of service from Camp Dennison on 6 June 1865, five days after writing the last of these letters.

Provenance note: The Reeves letters were purchased by the University Libraries in 2000, from an ebay vendor in Coal City, Indiana.

Bibliographic note: For a roster of the enlisted men of the 80th Indiana, see Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Indiana, Indianapolis, 1865-69, v. 6, 292-307, with additions and corrections in v. 8, 293-94. No formal regimental history of the 80th Indiana has been published. A web site devoted to the regiment is located at www.80thindiana.net.


Index of Letters

NUMBER MS TYPE DATE PLACE(S) AUTHOR
MSN CW 5012-1LetterMarch 17, 1864Camp near Morristown, TennesseeSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-2LetterJune 11, 1864UnknownSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-3LetterSeptember 4, 1864Marietta, GeorgiaSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-4LetterSeptember 11, 1864Marietta, GeorgiaSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-5LetterSeptember 14, 1864Decatur, GeorgiaSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-6LetterMarch 12-13, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-7LetterMarch 15-16, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-8LetterMarch 19-21, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-9LetterMarch 22-24, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-10LetterMarch 26-27, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-11LetterMarch 30, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-12LetterApril 2-4, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-13LetterApril 6, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-14LetterApril 9-10, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-15LetterApril 12, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-16LetterApril 16-17, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-17LetterApril 20, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-18LetterApril 30 - May 1, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-19LetterMay 3-4, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-20LetterMay 5-9, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-21LetterMay 10-11, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-22LetterMay 14-15, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-23LetterMay 17-18, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-24LetterMay 21, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-25LetterMay 25, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-26LetterMay 28-29, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-27LetterJune 1, 1865Camp Dennison, OhioSamuel T. Reeves
MSN CW 5012-28LetterApril 24, 1870Titus County, TexasJonathan and Mary Keith
MSN CW 5012-29LetterJuly 10, 1870Titus County, TexasJonathan and Mary Keith
MSN CW 5012-30LetterOctober 20, 1870Titus County, TexasJonathan and Mary Keith
MSN CW 5012-31Poem[August 1863-April 1864]TennesseeSamuel T. Reeves



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