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BENJAMIN F. ODELL |
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Benjamin F. Odell was born on January 26, 1832, in Cass
County, Michigan. In 1834, Mary Grice was born in neighboring
Berrien County and, on June 13, 1854, they were married by the
Rev. John Martindale “near Poultney P.O. Delaware Co Iowa.” A
girl, Alice O. Odell, was born on July 11, 1855, and a boy,
Lawrence F. Odell, was born on March 29, 1858.
Benjamin
was working as a teacher and did not enlist in the military
during the war’s first year but, in June 1862, the President
called for more volunteers, Governor Kirkwood assured the
President that Iowa would fulfill its quota and, on July 28,
1862, Benjamin was one of the first to enlist in what would be
Company B of the 21st Regiment of the state’s volunteer
infantry. He was enrolled by Charles Heath at Strawberry Point
and described as having brown eyes, black hair and a dark
complexion. At 6' 3", Benjamin was one of the tallest men in a
regiment in which the average height was 5' 8¾”. The
company was mustered in on August 18th and the regiment on
September 9th, both at Camp Franklin in Dubuque. With only
brief, largely ineffective, training in the ways of war, they
boarded the Henry Clay and started downriver on September 16,
1862. After an overnight stay at Rock Island and a transfer to
the Hawkeye State, they reached St. Louis on September 20th
and Rolla by rail on the 22nd. For the next several months,
Benjamin was present with the regiment as it moved from Rolla
to Salem, Houston, Hartville, back to Houston, south to West
Plains, and then northeast through Thomasville, Ironton and
Iron Mountain until, on March 11th, they walked into the old
French town of Ste. Genevieve. With a good camp on a ridge
north of town, most rested and tried to recover their health,
but nine of their comrades died and another nine were
discharged due to a variety of ailments (tuberculosis, lung
fever, a spinal problem, chronic diarrhea).
From Ste.
Genevieve, detachments started downstream on different
steamers in early April. By April 6th, they were united at
Milliken’s Bend where General Grant was assembling a large
army. On the 8th the regiment was inspected, on the 9th it
participated in a “grand review” and on the 10th Benjamin
Odell was detached to serve with an ambulance corps. The
regiment left “the Bend” in a corps led by General John
McClernand on April 12th and moved slowly south along roads,
through swamps and across bayous west of the river. On April
30th, they crossed to the Bruinsburg landing on the east bank.
On May 1st, men able for duty participated in the Battle
of Port Gibson, also known as the Battle of Magnolia Hills.
Soon thereafter, four of the regiment’s ambulance drivers were
captured but Benjamin was not among them. The regiment was
held in reserve during the Battle of Champion’s Hill on the
16th, participated in an assault at the Big Black River on the
17th, and participated in an assault at Vicksburg on May 22d.
The siege of Vicksburg ended with its surrender on July 4,
1863. By then, the regiment had 736 men still on the rolls but
some were on furloughs, some were on detached duty and many
were sick or wounded. On July 5th, those still able for duty
left in pursuit of Confederate General Joe Johnston to the
city of Jackson. After returning to Vicksburg, they were
transported south where they camped at Carrollton, Louisiana.
Benjamin was still with the ambulance corps, but
present in Carrollton when company rolls were taken on August
31, 1863. From there, they moved into southwestern Louisiana -
Bayou Boeuf, Brashear City and Berwick - where, on October
2nd, Benjamin was returned to regular duty. For the next
several days they walked from one place to another until
camping along Bayou Vermilion on October10th to wait for
supplies and, while waiting, gather sweet potatoes, listen to
Chaplain Hill’s sermons and administer oaths of allegiance to
willing Southerners. Before long they were on the move again
and, on November 22nd, arrived by train in Algiers where they
were immediately ordered to Texas.
Their departure was
delayed slightly when Lieutenant Colonel Van Anda, then in
field command, was found to be intoxicated. With Major Crooke
ordered to take charge, they were soon underway (some on the
Corinthian and some on the St. Mary’s) and a few days later
were put ashore along the Gulf Coast. Benjamin was present and
on duty as they spent the next seven months guarding the coast
near Matagorda and Indianola. The salt water, seashells and
beaches were interesting, but soldiers eventually became bored
since, in the words of Colonel Merrill, they were nothing more
than "guardians of the sacred drifting sands of Texas." In
June, they returned to New Orleans and then traveled by rail
from Algiers to Terrebonne Station. Two weeks later, with the
government seemingly not knowing what to do with them, they
were moved back to Algiers, then north on the Mississippi to
Morganza, and then up the White River of Arkansas.
On
October 20, 1864, after several weeks at St. Charles, the
regiment left for De Vall’s Bluff, but this time Benjamin did
not go with it. Suffering from scurvy and dropsy (swelling) of
the feet and legs, he was sent to the Washington U.S.A.
General Hospital in Memphis where he was admitted on October
23rd. On April 28, 1865, with the end of the war in sight, the
War Department issued General Orders No. 77 in an effort to
start reducing military expenditures. It provided, in part,
“that all soldiers in the hospitals, who require no further
medical treatment, be honorably discharged from service, with
immediate payment.” Benjamin Odell was still in the hospital
but well enough to be assisting as a nurse when the order was
made.
On May 11th, he was transferred to the Gayoso
U.S.A. General Hospital overlooking the Mississippi and, on
June 2, 1865, he was discharged from the military. His
Descriptive Book noted that he had “performed his duty with
honor to himself & credit to the service” whether with the
ambulance corps or on regular duty with the regiment. He
returned to Iowa where another child, Bertha Odell was born on
February 7, 1867. In 1872, Alice, the oldest of the children,
was in a class of eighteen students when she graduated from
the “normal” course at the state university in Iowa City and,
six years later, Mary Odell, the last of the couple’s
children, was born on December 29, 1878.
It’s not clear
how long the family stayed in Iowa, but Benjamin was working
as a farmer in Orchard, Nebraska when, on June 3, 1879, he
applied for an invalid pension and referenced his wartime
medical problems (“lost my teeth”). The Adjutant General
confirmed his service, the Surgeon General confirmed his
hospitalizations, a board of surgeons confirmed he had
scorbutic spots indicative of scurvy, in-laws said he was
“entirely temperate” and others attested to his pre-war good
health. On January 29, 1885, five and one-half years after he
applied, a certificate was mailed providing for $4.00 monthly.
By 1890, Benjamin was living in Flagler, Colorado where he
secured a land patent, was a friend of William Lavington,
founder of the town, and became involved in politics of the
day. Benjamin was described as a “rabid populist” and
reportedly published “four letter-sheet ‘simultaneous’
dailies” all of which carried the pending proposal for women’s
suffrage, but he was described by an opposition newspaper as
being “well past middle life, had a stooping form and cat-like
eyes, and he used to excite some comment as he went about
dressed in a style very much in vogue shortly after the
landing of the ark.”
William sought an increase in his
pension and surgeons confirmed “he is able to wear an upper
plate but lower ridge is so flat and irregular that false
teeth cannot be worn.” The pension was gradually increased to
the $12.00 monthly that he was receiving when he died in
January 1907. One of William’s daughters, Bertha (Odell)
Pearson, is buried in Flagler Cemetery, but William’s burial
and those of his wife and other three children have not been
located. |
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~ Compiled & submitted by
Carl Ingwalson <cingwalson@cfilaw.com> |
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