Joseph Poor was born in
Kankakee, Illinois, on March 18, 1836. Elizabeth Miller was
born on September 12, 1839, in Ohio. They were in Schulyer
County, Missouri, when they were married by Isaac Newland, a
Minister of the Gospel, on January 2, 1859.
In 1860, a son, William J. Poor, was born on January
16th, the Pony Express was inaugurated on April 3rd and a
census on July 26th showed Joseph, Elizabeth and their young
son living in Delhi, Delaware County, Iowa. Southern states
threatened to secede if Abraham Lincoln were elected, but the
Clayton County Journal wasn’t convinced. “They say that the
Union will be divided if Lincoln is elected President,” it
wrote on October 25th. “Indeed! because a majority of the
voters of the United States are in favor of a certain man and
invest him with the highest office in their gift, the Union is
to be dissolved! Ridiculous! Is there a sensible, an
unprejudiced man, in the State of Iowa who believes this? Bah!
No one anticipates such a result.”
Abraham Lincoln was elected, Southern states did secede
and, on April 12, 1861, Confederate guns fired on Fort Sumter.
The ensuing war escalated beyond anyone’s expectations and by
the middle of the next year the President called for 300,000
volunteers to augment the armies already in the field. Iowa
was given a quota of five regiments and, if not raised by
August 15th, would face a draft. Joseph Poor (his age
erroneously listed as twenty-five) enlisted as a Private on
August 14, 1862. His Descriptive Book said he had dark eyes, a
dark complexion and dark hair; occupation farmer. He was
mustered into Company K at Camp Franklin in Dubuque on August
23rd and, on September 9th, ten companies were mustered in as
the state’s 21st regiment of volunteer infantry. After very
brief and largely ineffective training, they marched through
town on a rainy September 16th and, at the foot of Jones
Street, boarded the sidewheel steamer
Henry Clay and two
barges tied alongside and started south.
After one night on Rock Island, they continued their
journey, debarked at Montrose, traveled by train to Keokuk,
boarded the Hawkeye
State, spent one night in St. Louis and left by rail about
midnight on September 21st. They reached Rolla the next
morning and spent the next month camped near a spring
southwest of town before moving to Salem, Houston, Hartville
and, after a wagon train was attacked on November 24th, back
to Houston. That’s where they were on January 9, 1863, when
word was received that a Confederate force was moving north to
attack Springfield. Joseph was one of twenty-five volunteers
from Company K who joined an equal number from the other
companies and, with volunteers from an Illinois regiment,
hurried westward on the “double quick.” On the 10th, they
camped along Wood’s Fork of the Gasconade River and on the
11th fought a one-day battle at Hartville before returning to
Houston.
The regiment left for West Plains on January 27th, but
Joseph was ill and left behind.
By April 10th he had rejoined the regiment at
Milliken’s Bend where General Grant was organizing an army to
capture Vicksburg. The regiment was assigned to a corps led by
General John McClernand and traveled slowly south along the
west side of the Mississippi walking along dirt roads, wading
through swamps and crossing bayous. On April 30th they crossed
from Disharoon’s Plantation to the Bruinsburg landing on the
east bank where they were designated the point regiment for
the entire Union army. On May 1st Joseph participated in the
Battle of Port Gibson and soon thereafter was detailed as a
company cook. There’s no indication that Joseph participated
in the campaign’s subsequent battles and assaults, but he was
with the regiment during the forty-seven day siege that ended
on July 4, 1863.
By then, like many others, Joseph had become sick.
Suffering from chronic diarrhea, he was admitted to the
hospital at Jefferson Barracks in St. Louis on July 18th but,
on September 23, 1863, (“emaciated eyes sunken and languid,
tongue clear, appetite poor”) he was transferred to an army
general hospital in Quincy, Illinois. At least sixty-five
members of the regiment died from the debilitating effects of
the illness, but hospital notes reflected Joseph’s slow
recovery: October 20, “improving a little;” October 26, “has
less pain while at stool appetite some better;” November 20,
“still improving;” December 10th, “still has diarrhoea;”
January 28th, “diarrhoea checked;” February 20, “gaining
strength;” March 1st, “on duty in Ward;” March 9th, “returned
to duty.” Joseph reached the regiment on Matagorda Island,
Texas, on April 11, 1864. He maintained his health for several
months during service in Texas and southwestern Louisiana but,
in October and November was treated for remittent fever, back
pain and diarrhea before being admitted to the hospital ship
D. A. January on
November 10, 1864, with a lung inflammation. From there he
entered a general hospital at Mound City where he remained for
the balance of his service. With the war winding down, he was
mustered out on June 16, 1865 (one month before the regiment
was mustered out) and returned home.
Still living in Delhi, Joseph and Elizabeth had three
more children - Isaac, John and Franklin. Joseph considered
homesteading farther west, but stayed in Iowa where census
records indicated the family was living in Delhi in 1870 and
Illyria Township in Fayette County in 1880. Like most veterans
who had been sick during the war, Joseph applied for an
invalid pension indicating he was still suffering from
illnesses contracted in the military. Comrades John Dalrymple
and Gorham Nash had served with Joseph and testified to his
wartime illnesses. Joseph Boleyn lived with Joseph from the
fall of 1866 to 1876 and they had worked together “a great
deal at chopping wood and farm work,” but Joseph was sometimes
“laid up for two or three days at a time.” Samuel Boleyn had
met Joseph in 1866 and recalled that he had a “troublesome
cough and a sallow complexion.”After examination by a board of
pension surgeons in West Union, Joseph was approved in 1887
for a monthly pension of $8.00, later increased to $10.00.
Joseph never completely regained his health. He died on
October 2, 1894, at fifty-nine years of age and was buried in
the small Spring Branch Cemetery in Delaware County. Six days
later, with Manchester’s John Dain as her attorney, Elizabeth
signed (by mark) an application for a widow’s pension. A clerk
in Schuyler County signed a certificate confirming she had
been married to Joseph and John Dubois testified that after
the war he had “lived neighbor to the Poors for a good many
years.” He had known Joseph before the war, served in the
regiment’s Company H, and knew that Elizabeth had not
remarried. Elizabeth was quickly approved for a $12.00 monthly
pension retroactive to the day after Joseph’s death.
A new pension act was adopted on September 8, 1916, and
nineteen days later, pursuant to provisions of the act,
Elizabeth applied for an increase. Her application was
approved and her pension was increased to $20.00. The pension
had been increased to $30.00 and then to the $50.00 monthly
that she was receiving when she died on September 14, 1929,
two days after her ninetieth birthday. She is buried in Wadena
Cemetery, Fayette County, where two of their sons (William and
Franklin) are also buried.
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