Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech
Special Collections and University Archives, University Libraries (0434)John M. Jackson
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The collection is open to research.
This collection has been digitized and is available online.
Researchers wishing to cite this collection should include the following information: [identification of item], [box], [folder], Silas H. Stepp Letters, Ms1992-020, Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, Va.
The Silas H. Stepp Letters were donated to Special Collections and University Archives in 1992.
The processing and description of the Silas H. Stepp Letters commenced and was completed in November, 2023.
Silas H. Stepp, son of Joseph M. and Rachel Walters/Waters Stepp, was born at Black Mountain (Buncombe County), North Carolina, on March 1, 1823. He married Eleanor Fortune (1825-1897) in 1843; the couple would have five children. The 1850 and 1860 federal censuses list the Stepps as farmers residing in Buncombe County. Silas Stepp enlisted in Company D, 7th North Carolina Cavalry Battalion (Confederate) on April 27, 1863, and he transferred to Company C, 6th North Carolina Cavalry on August 3, 1863. On June 22, 1864, he was captured at Jackson's Mill, North Carolina, and was first imprisoned at New Bern, North Carolina, then transferred to Fort Monroe, then Point Lookout, and finally to Elmira Prison on July 8, 1864. Stepp died in the prison on January 2, 1865, and was buried in what is now Woodlawn National Cemetery, Elmira.
This collection contains seventeen wartime letters (photocopies only) written by Silas H. Stepp, a Confederate soldier in Company C, 6th North Carolina Cavalry (and later a prisoner of war) during the American Civil War. The letters are addressed to Stepp's wife (Eleanor Fortune Stepp), whom he sometimes refers to as "my sweet pink." Fourteen of the letters were written by Stepp from unspecified locations in Tennessee and North Coarlina during the spring of 1864. The letters focus on his regiment's movements. He also discusses--among other things--mutual acqaintances, the new Confederate currency, being tried for not obeying an order to curry his horse, being under fire, destroying rail and telegraph lines, camp fare, and taking prisoners.
A fifteenth letter was written from the camp of the 132nd New York Infantry, just after Stepp had been taken prisoner. Stepp's final three letters were written from Elmira Prison Camp in the summer and fall of 1864, and discuss his health, treatment by his captors, and the impossibility of being exchanged or released on parole. He also conveys news of mutual acquaintances among his fellow prisoners and provides his wife with instructions for managing the farm.
The guide to the Silas H. Stepp Letters by Special Collections and University Archives, Virginia Tech, is licensed under a CC0 ( https://creativecommons.org/share-your-work/public-domain/cc0/ ).