A Guide to the William Francis Brand Civil War Letters, 1856-1959 (bulk 1857-1866) William Francis Brand Civil War Letters, 1856-1959 11332

A Guide to the William Francis Brand Civil War Letters, 1856-1959 (bulk 1857-1866)

A Collection in
The Special Collections Department
Accession number 11332


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Processed by: Special Collections Department

Repository
Special Collections, University of Virginia Library
Collection number
11332
Title
William Francis Brand Civil War Letters, 1856-1959 (bulk 1857-1866)
Physical Characteristics
ca. 134 items (one Hollinger box).
Language
English
Abstract
This collection, 1856-1959 (bulk 1857-1866), chiefly consists of Civil War letters written by Confederate soldier William Francis Brand (1840-1932), Augusta County, Virginia, to Amanda Catherine Armentrout, his future wife and a Greenville, Augusta County resident. Brand was a private in Company E (the Augusta Grays), 5th Virginia Regiment, Stonewall Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia. Also present are notes, genealogical information, a 1959 news article concerning these letters, several letters from friends and relatives in Virginia and elsewhere, and photocopies of abbreviated typescripts and notes of selected Brand letters by the chairman of the Waynesboro Civil War Centennial Committee.

Administrative Information

Access Restrictions

The collection is without restrictions.

Use Restrictions

See the University of Virginia Library’s use policy.

Preferred Citation

William Francis Brand Civil War Letters, 1856-1959, Accession # 11332, Special Collections Dept., University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.

Acquisition Information

The William Francis Brand Civil War Letters were a gift to the Library from Mr. W. Brand McCaskill of Charlottesville, Virginia, September 27, 1997, and bear no restrictions.

Biographical/Historical Information

According to Lee A. Wallace, Jr., 5th Virginia Infantry, (Lynchburg: H. E. Howard, 1988, page 99), and internal evidence in the collection, William Francis Brand was born August 31, 1840, in Augusta County, Virginia. By occupation he was a miller and enlisted (in Greenville) as a private in the Confederate Army, Company E, 5th Virginia Infantry, on April 18, 1861. He enlisted for the duration of the war, and during his military service was stationed or saw combat at Haynesville (July 2, 1861); First Manassas [First Bull Run] (July 21, 1861); furloughed because of the amputation of his big toe, March 16, 1863; Kernstown (March 23, 1862; his brother Tom was killed); Front Royal (May 23, 1862); McDowell (May 8, 1862); Winchester (May 25, 1862); Port Republic (June 9, 1862; struck in the hand by bouncing cannonball); Cold Harbor (June 27, 1862); Malvern Hill (July 1, 1862); Cedar Mountain (August 9, 1862); Winchester (June 13, 1863); Gettysburg (July 1-3, 1863); Seven Run? [Payne's House] (November 27, 1863; on detached duty to collect deserters in Augusta County, February 1864); the Wilderness (May 5-7, 1864; shot in the shoulder); Spotsylvania Court House (May 10-12, 1864); Winchester (September 19, 1864); Strasburg Junction (September 20, 1864; wounded in the thigh); and the Petersburg siege and retreat [April 2-6, 1865]. After the war Brand was a farmer and member Stonewall Jackson Camp of the United Confederate Veterans; he died in Lexington on May 25, 1932 and was buried at Tinkling Spring Presbyterian Church, Fisherville.

Scope and Content Information

Most of his letters, 1861-1867, are to his future wife Amanda C. Armentrout and accounts of camp life and members of his regiment and their families, local, state, and national events. Brand's letters sometimes reflect an often troubled relationship between the couple as they regularly accuse or apologize for supposed unfaithfulness, end and renew their relationship, pledge undying love and devotion to each other, set and postpone the date of their wedding (January 21, 1864, December 12, 1865, January 9, 1866, May 24, 1866, July 21, 1866). He also admits to a swearing problem and promises her that he will stop (April 5, 1866). He wrote his letters from a variety of Virginia cities, towns, counties and military camps including Brandy Station, Caroline County, Centreville, Charles Town, Essex County, Greenville, Harpers Ferry, Lexington, Liberty Mills, Madison County, Martinsburg, Morgan County, Nelson County, Orange County, Petersburg, Rockbridge County, and Winchester. Brand discusses illegal and underage voting by members of his regiment for secession (May 25, 1861); the battle of [First] Kernstown (April 6, 1862); the battle of [First] Winchester (May 29, 1862); his unhappy stay at a Nelson County hospital (August 29, 1862); thanks Armentrout for sending cheese (February 6, 1863); description of an operation on his big toe (May 23, 1863); using pokeroot ink to write his letters (October 11, 1863); a massive snowball fight between two groups of Confederate troops (March 24, 1864); the battles of Spotsylvania (May 16, 1864), Fisher's Hill (September 22, 1864), Cedar Creek (October 28, 1864), and Bentonville, North Carolina (March 22, 1865); and encountering barefooted Valley girls "awkward in their manners" (August 19, 1864).

Brand mentions or quotes prominent civilians and military personages in his letters including: Jefferson Davis [1808-1889], Jubal Early [1816-1894], Elmer Ellsworth [1837-1861], Richard Ewell [1817-1872], Richard Brooke Garnett [1817-1863], Joseph E. Johnston [1807-1891], Abraham Lincoln [1809-1865], James A. Longstreet [1821-1904], Prince Napoleon [Prince Napoléon-Jérôme, 1822-1891, born Napoléon-Joseph-Charles-Paul Bonaparte], John Pope [1822-1892], Robert Emmett Rodes [1829-1864], Jeb Stuart [1833-1864], James Alexander Walker [1832-1901], and Charles S. Winder [1829-1862]. Several identified members of various Confederate regiments and mutual friends and families are also mentioned or discussed by name. Brand's wartime letters are listed and described at the end of this guide.

Amanda C. "Kate" Armentrout, a resident of Greenville, Augusta County, and Brand's (postwar) wife was born on September 1 but the year is unknown (see her letter of September 1, 1867). There are several antebellum letters from her former schoolmate John P. Lightner [1841?-1862] who enlisted in Company I, 4th Virginia Infantry, during June 1861 and died of typhoid fever in February 1862 [James I. Roberston, 4th Virginia Infantry, second edition (Lynchburg, 1982), page 61]. According to the donor's genealogical notes "Family Record," Lightner later married Anne, Amanda's sister. Also present is a September 14, 1857, letter from John's brother George Pilson Lightner [1839-1925], later a member of the 52nd Virginia Infantry. John and George Lightner's letters describe student life at Brownsburg Academy and the Christian Creek School (both in Rockbridge County) and Washington College [later Washington and Lee University], Lexington, during 1856-1861. John describes war preparations in Lexington (May 18, 1861) and a flag presentation and speech by Governor John Letcher [1813-1884] and Company I's assignment as the headquarters guard for General Gustavus Woodson Smith [1822-1896] (October 31, 1861). William F. Brand mentions John Lightner in a June 23, 1861, letter. Lightner's letters are listed and described at the end of this guide.

Amanda Armentrout's 1859-1874 correspondents include various relatives and friends. A January 12, 1861, letter describes a taffy pull; there are also several letters from Robert B. Spillman, apparently a Confederate officer stationed at Chimborazo Hospital, Richmond, and later a Fredericksburg and Westmoreland County resident (December 28, 1864, January 12 and 29 and October 15, 1865, October 13, 1866). She addresses few of her letters to future husband William Francis Brand (whom she often addresses as "Willie): June 5, 1864, July 6, 23, 29, and August 17, 1866 (which includes a poem); she first addresses him as husband in her October 7, 1866, letter. Selected Armentrout letters are listed and described at the end of this guide.

Miscellaneous Brand family letters (1863, 1866-1867, 1873) include letters of William Francis Brand's brother Charles David Brand urging him to marry Armanda Armentrout (August 12 and November 25, 1866), an August 12, 1866, letter in which Charles discusses "a grand memorial" held at the Buckingham Female Institute [August 1, 1866] and attended by 500 persons "about two-thirds of that number lovely fair sex," and, a Confederate soldier's description of his wounding and capture at the battle of Gettysburg, November 11, 1863. A separate folder of miscellaneous materials and genealogical notes contains a 1959 news article about William and Amanda Brand ("Letters from Civil War Soldier Describe His Life As Member of Confederate Army," Waynesboro News-Virginian), a ca. 1925-1930 Standing Liberty Type Quarter Dollar, notes on the Brand letters by Colonel S. L. Denison, chairman, Waynesboro Civil War Centennial Committee, and a 1932 typescript excerpt from the minutes of Tinkling Spring Church regarding the death of Brand as its senior elder.

Organization

Letters of John P. Lightner to Amanda C. Armentrout, 1856-1861, 16 items

Correspondence of Amanda C. Armentrout, 1859-1866, 1867, and 1871-1874, 37 items

William F. Brand to Amanda C. Armentrout, 1861-1862, 20 items

WFB to Amanda C. Armentrout, 1863, 12 items

WFB to Amanda C. Armentrout, 1864-1865, 22 items

WFB to Amanda C. Armentrout, 1866-1867, 14 items

Miscellaneous Brand Family Letters, 1863, 1866-1867, and 1873, 6 items

Miscellaneous Materials and Genealogical Notes, ca. 1925, 1932, and 1959, n.d., 7 items

Contents List

Letters of John P. Lightner to Amanda C. Armentrout 1856-1861
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Correspondence of Amanda C. Armentrout (selected) 1859-1866, 1867 & 1871-1874
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William F. Brand to Amanda C. Armentrout 1861-1867
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WFB Letters to ACA (selected) 1866-1867
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Miscellaneous Brand Family Letters (selected) 1863, 1866-1867 & 1873
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Miscellaneous Materials and Genealogical Notes ca. 1925, 1932 & 1959, n.d.
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