Letter from Frederick William Seward to Frances Miller Seward, July 26, 1861
xml:
Letter from Frederick William Seward to Frances Miller Seward, July 26,
1861
transcriber
Transcriber:spp:ael
student editorTranscriber:spp:iwl
Distributor:Seward Family Digital Archive
Institution:University of Rochester
Repository:Rare Books and Special Collections
Date:1861-07-26
In the context of this project, private URIs with the prefix "psn"
point to person elements in the project's persons.xml authority
file.
In the context of this project, private URIs with the prefix "pla"
point to place elements in the project's places.xml authority file.
In the context of this project, private URIs with the prefix "psn"
point to person elements in the project's staff.xml authority file.
In the context of this project, private URIs with the prefix "psn"
point to person elements in the project's bibl.xml authority file.
verical-align: super; font-size: 12px;
text-decoration: underline;
text-decoration: line-through;
color: red;
Letter from Frederick William Seward to Frances Miller Seward, July 26, 1861
action: sent
sender: Frederick Seward
Birth: 1830-07-08
Death: 1915-04-25
location: Washington D.C., US
receiver: Frances Seward
Birth: 1805-09-24
Death: 1865-06-21
location: Auburn, NY
transcription: iwl
revision: jxw 2021-05-15
<>
Page 1
Washington, July 26th 1861
My dear Mother,
There are rumors that Huson
Birth: 1822 Death: 1861-10-14
has been seen by different people since the
battle, but on tracing them up we can learn
nothing authentic. He was with Mr Ely
Birth: 1815-02-15 Death: 1892-05-18
, who has probably been taken prisoner. The Richmond
papers, I see, boast that they have captured
two members of Congress. No other member
is missing, so that it is perhaps Ely &
Huson to whom they refer.
The newly called troops begin
to arrive from the North. Seven regiments
came in yesterday. But for the departure
of the three months men whose time is about
out, we should have an Army of 100,000
here in a few days. As it is, we shall
have such an Army in a fortnight or three
weeks. Dozens of new regiments have been
accepted, all on the condition that they
march within twenty days.
Affectionately your son
Frederick
Frederick July 26
1861