Department of Pennsylvania
A Fourth of July firefight at Harpers Ferry, Virginia.
Captain Alfred Dart's Fourth of July opened with a skirmish across the Potomac River.
He found time to write home to Carbondale on the holiday.
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George Shafer was 17 years old and had just survived his first Civil War battle when he sat down to write his mother in Carbondale, PA.
He wanted her to know he was safe — and wondered what the town was doing to celebrate the Fourth of July.
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On July 2, 1861, the men of the 11th Pennsylvania finally met the enemy.
Writing from Williamsport, MD two days later, Private William Ferris of Pittston, PA became the first soldier in this series to report from an actual battlefield — and the news from the front was only getting more serious.
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In a letter to the "Miners' Journal," Private James K. Helms of the 6th Pennsylvania describes the scenes as the US Army crossed the Potomac River at Williamsport, MD in June 1861.
The young soldier's account vividly describes their first march toward the enemy in Virginia.
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Charles Cyphers and the 8th Pennsylvania have left Camp Slifer behind.
Soldiers are everywhere he looks, Harpers Ferry looms on the horizon, and Cyphers tells his editor to expect news of a battle soon — provided no secessionist puts a bullet through him first.
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On June 1, 1861, an African American man named Frank Jones was murdered by soldiers near Camp Slifer in Chambersburg.
A sergeant from Luzerne County wrote home to describe it.
His letter is one of the most disturbing documents in this series — and an unflinching look at deep-rooted racism lurking beneath the Union war effort.
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Men bathing in a stream, spreading out under the trees for a nap, watching an eagle pass overhead — Charles Cyphers' fourth letter from Camp Slifer captures the quiet, restless rhythm of soldiers waiting for the war to find them.
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On the morning of May 4, 1861, Sergeant Charles Cyphers stepped out of his tent at Camp Slifer near Chambersburg and found five inches of fresh snow on the ground. He picked up his pen and wrote home — and what he captured is a vivid snapshot of soldiers waiting, wondering, and trying to stay warm.
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“If you could but see our outfit, methinks that you would not want to be a soldier.”
Writing from Camp Slifer in April 1861, Sergeant Charles Cyphers described the long hours, rough conditions, and early realities of army life just miles from the Mason-Dixon line - where the Civil War was escalating.