The outbreak of the Civil War did not disturb the settlement and
prosperous growth of Monroe County, although many volunteers from the
district served in the Union forces. Some were "vigorous young farmers
and mechanics"; most of them were sons of the settlers who had been
cultivating the region since the early 1840's.
In Monroe County,
as in general throughout Iowa, popular sentiment upheld the Union and
the North, cut a few families were known to have sympathized with the
southern cause. No conflicts or hostile incidents have been recorded,
however, possibly because the men who were of military age are said to
have "skipped to the far west" to avoid the draft.
The quota of
volunteers requested from the State of Iowa was listed at 49,405, of
which Monroe County's share was 619. A large proportion of volunteers
from the county was enlisted with the 6th, 22nd and 32nd Infantries, and
the First Cavalry.
Company E of the 6th Infantry was composed
principally of Monroe volunteers, as were Companies A and K of the 36th.
Men from this district also served in the 8th, 17th, 18th, 33d and 37th
(Graybeard) Infantry Regiments, and in the 7th Iowa Cavalry. Altogether
879 men were enlisted from Monroe County.
Twenty-five
organizations were formed for active and home service, on the following
dates:
Monroe Guards, May 11, 1861, accepted for 6th Infantry.
Monroe Light Horse, May 11, 1861, accepted for 1st Cavalry.
Volunteer
Militia of Urbana Township (no date given).
Albia Rifles, organized
August 24, 1861.
Stacyville Union Guards, June 15, 1861.
Urbana
Grays, July 15, 1861.
Melrose Guards, October 21, 1861.
Albia
State Guards, May 30, 1863.
Monroe Grays, September 16, 1863.
Melrose Grays, July 10, 1863.
Franklin Sharpshooters, August 23,
1864.
Military Company of Monroe Township, August 20, 1864.
Lovilia Independent Company, August 1864.
Urbana Union Company,
September 3, 1864.
The Albia Invincibles, September 16k 1864.
Union Township Military Company, August 27, 1864.
Rough and Ready
Company, Mantua Township, August 18, 1864.
Pleasant Corner Company,
August 12, 1864.
Osprey Rangers, Sept. 6, 1864.
Wayne Township
Company, August 6, 1864.
Bluff Creek Rangers, August 18, 1864.
Guilford Township Company, August 23, 1864.
Pleasant Township
Company, August 27, 1864.
There were many casualties among Monroe
soldiers at the front, particularly among those who fought at Shiloh and
Vicksburg, and relatives were notified that husbands, sons, and brothers
had been killed in action, had died of wounds, or were taken prisoner.
The 6th Infantry lost a tremendous number; seven officers and 100 men
were killed in action; 469 men and 18 officers were wounded. The 36th
Infantry lost 35 men in action, 25 from wounds, 235 from disease, and on
by suicide; 142 were wounded.
Many who enlisted were very young,
others, scarcely more than boys, had recently emigrated from Europe.
Among the former was Charles H. Stevenson, who at the age of 16 had
received the first teacher's certificate granted in Monroe County. He
had been appointed to teach school in Mantua Township at a salary of $30
per monthm, but "this intended peaceful pursuit was interrupted; and he
resigned his position to accept $13 a month to assist in the
preservation of the Union."
Stevenson enlisted August 1, 1862 in
Company D, 22nd Iowa Volunteers -- a regiment which was the first to
cross the Mississippi in Grant's Vicksburg campaign and later made a
"gallant assault" on Fort Beauregard. Stevenson participated in the
siege of Petersburg and Richmond and the Shenandoah Valley campaign of
1864. Captured at the battle of Winchester, Virginia, September 19,
1864, he spent seven months in southern prisons -- at the notorious
Libby, and later at Salisbury and Andersonville. He was said to have
saved the lives of several of his comrades by sharing his scanty rations
with them.
One of the hard-fighting volunteers from Mantua
Township was H. M. Chidester, who was born in Lewis County, West
Virginia, October 28, 1837, and was one of 14 children in the Zadok
Chidester family. In June, 1846, the Chidesters had traveled by boat
down the Ohio and up the Mississippi rivers to Keokuk, then overland by
oxteam to Mantua Township, where the father secured 700 acres of land.
The son, H. M., who enlisted in February 1863 in Company A, 36th Iowa
Infantry, fought at Elkin's Ford and Camden, and
was taken prisoner
at Mark's Mills. During his ten months of captivity, he lived on one
pint of meal per day.
Another volunteer from Mantua Township was
Asa A. Baird, owner of a 240-acre farm, who had driven from West
Virginia in 1854, a journey of six weeks by horse and wagon. Serving in
the 36th Iowa Infantry, he also was taken prisoner at Mark's Mills and
was held for ten months in the Confederate prison at Tyler, Texas.
Levi Billings, whose parents settled in Monroe County when he was
six, and who in later days could describe seeing two to five yoke of
oxen driven to the breaking plow, enlisted in 1862 in Company B, 7th
Iowa Cavalry. His regiment formed a part of the rough-rider command in
the Western Army, covering 4,888 miles of the Plains, and participating
in several engagements with the hostile Sioux, Cherokee and other
warlike tribes.
The First Iowa Cavalry claimed Archibald
Sinclair, who was born in Ireland in 1847, and became a resident of
Monroe County in 1856. Enlisting at the age of 16, he served in the
southwest under General Davison and General Resecrans, and under General
Custer in Texas.
Such are a few thumbnail war records, typical of
the hundreds which might be mentioned to the credit of Monroe County.
James Drury, who fought with the 4th Vermont regiment, later lived
near Albia. Drury, a native of County Claire, Ireland, moved to America
in 1845, and enlisted in Vermont in 1861. For his bravery at the battle
of Weldon Railroad, June 23, 1864, Drury was granted a medal by a
special Act of Congress. The ex-soldier moved to Iowa in 1869 with his
young wife. "His entire capital was $2.50, out of which amount he was
obliged to pay 50 cents to have his trunk taken to his home, 8 miles
north of Albia." A stonemason by trade,
Drury was able to make a
good living, and later acquired 200 acres of land.