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Pierce family papers
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Held at: University of Delaware Library Special Collections [Contact Us]181 South College Avenue, Newark, DE 19717-5267
This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the University of Delaware Library Special Collections. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.
Overview and metadata sections
The Pierce family papers includes letters written by George Kirke Pierce and Enos William Pierce to their parents, Elias and Sarah A. Pierce; their sister, Marey Jane Pierce; and their brother, Ezra Pierce. Both sons served in the Pennsylvania Volunteers during the Civil War.
Elias Pierce (1807-1871) and Sarah Ann Moseley (1809-1905) were married on January 17, 1833, and had seven children: Catharine Ann (1834-1902), Turzah Elizabeth (b. 1836), George Kirke (1838-1864), Enos William (1840-1864), Marey Jane (b. 1843), Ezra (b. 1845), and Sarah Maria (1848-1872).
The Pierce home was in Brandywine Hundred, New Castle County, Delaware, where the family engaged in farming. Both Enos and George worked on the farm prior to their military service during the Civil War.
George K. Pierce was born September 12, 1838. He served as a private in Company D of the 97th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Volunteers until his death following a battle in an area between Petersburg and Richmond, Virginia, on July 26, 1864. His commanding officer was Captain William S. Mendenhall. Captain Mendenhall arranged for Elias Pierce to retrieve the body of his son following George's death.
Enos W. Pierce was born December 4, 1840. Enos Pierce served in Company F of the 97th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Volunteers. He was reported missing and presumed dead following a battle on May 20, 1864, near Bermuda Hundred, Virginia.
Several letters in the collection are from George and Enos Pierce to their only brother, Ezra Pierce. Ezra was born December 10, 1845, and in 1885 he married Mary Jane Goodman. An obituary of their son, Lewis Ezra Pierce, appears in F10. According to Patrick Morris in his thesis, The Pierce Letters, Ezra Pierce did not volunteer for army service at the beginning of the Civil War but was later conscripted. After having lost two sons to the war, his family did not wish for him to serve. They paid the government a bounty of $500 in lieu of Ezra's military service.
Morris, Patrick Winston.The Pierce Letters: a history of the 97th Pennsylvania Volunteers. Newark, Delaware: 1954Biographical information was also derived from correspondence and documents in the collection.
The letters and documents in this collection were written between 1833 and 1954, but primarily focus on three years of the Civil War, 1862-1864. Most of the forty-eight items, which include letters, photographs, drawings, and words for a song, provide an excellent portrait of military life for two brothers, George and Enos Pierce. A few of the items, such as a marriage certificate for Elias and Sarah Pierce, the obituaries, and a page of biographical information, provide details about other members of the Pierce family.
The core of the collection is the group of letters written by George and Enos Pierce to their parents and siblings. Beginning in February 1862, following their arrival at Fernandina, Florida, as part of the 97th Regiment of the Pennsylvania Volunteers, the two brothers corresponded until their deaths in 1864.
Over those three years the letters described the movements of their companies, detailed their daily lives as Union troops, recounted battles in which they engaged, depicted their surroundings, and recorded their feelings about the war and home. Enclosed in the letters are Enos's drawings of the defenses for Fort Wagner and a Presbyterian Church near Port Royal, South Carolina, as well as the words to a song titled "Song of George Riley," assumed to be written by George Pierce.
While stationed in areas of Florida, South Carolina, and Virginia, the brothers described battles at Fort Wagner (South Carolina), James Island (South Carolina), Charleston (South Carolina), and Bermuda Hundred (Virginia). They also reported daring night raids by small bands of Confederate troops on the Union picket lines in Fernandina, Florida, and Port Royal, South Carolina.
The descriptions of military life contain complaints about the weather, insects, sleeping conditions, and food; but are also filled with good humor and indications of the comradery among the soldiers. For example, a Christmas 1862 letter, written from St. Helena Island, South Carolina, describe the festivities and games by which the men celebrated the holiday.
Both Enos and George Pierce were killed during battles in Virginia in 1864. In his final letters George Pierce described his efforts to locate his brother following a battle at Bermuda Hundred, Virginia, on May 23. He reported the horrible losses sustained by his regiment in that battle and his lack of success in discovering the fate of his brother.
George Pierce was wounded in a battle near Petersburg, Virginia, on July 26 and died within days. The letters, instructions, and military pass found in F8 document his death and his father's efforts to retrieve the body.
Other items in the collection include one letter from a cousin, William H. Pierce, who was a member of the First Delaware Battery stationed at Portsmouth, Virginia; a marriage certificate for Elias and Sarah Pierce; two photographs of George and Enos Pierce; and biographical information about the Pierce family.
These letters were the basis of a University of Delaware senior thesis titled "The Pierce Letters: a history of the 97th Pennsylvania Volunteers," which was written in 1954 by Patrick Winston Morris. This thesis used the Pierce letters and various military records to trace the movements and activities of the 97th Pennsylvania Volunteers, as well as detail the history of the regiment. Because the information gathered from the military records adds significantly to information found in the letters, this thesis is an excellent resource for details concerning the regiment and the Pierce brothers.
The collection is arranged in chronological order employing five series.
- Box 1: Shelved in SPEC MSS manuscript boxes (1 inch)
Access to digitized versions of the Pierce family papers is available at the University of Delaware Institutional Repository.
Acquired, 1956.
Originally processed, 1956; revised by Anita A. Wellner, November 1993. Encoded by Monifa Carter, Natalie Baur, February 2010; revised by Jaime Margalotti, November 2012.
People
- Pierce, George--Correspondence
- Pierce, Enos--Correspondence
- Pierce, Elias--Correspondence
- Pierce, Marey--Correspondence
- Pierce, Ezra--Correspondence
- Pierce, William--Correspondence
- Pierce family--Correspondence
- Pierce, George
- Pierce, Enos
- Pierce, Elias
- Pierce, Marey
- Pierce, Ezra
- Pierce, William
Organization
Subject
Place
- United States--History--Civil War, 1861-1865
- South Carolina--History--Civil War, 1861-1865
- Virginia--History--Civil War, 1861-1865
- Florida--History--Civil War, 1861-1865
Occupation
- Publisher
- University of Delaware Library Special Collections
- Finding Aid Author
- University of Delaware Library, Special Collections
- Finding Aid Date
- 2010 February 26
- Access Restrictions
-
The collection is open for research.
- Use Restrictions
-
Use of materials from this collection beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. Permission to publish or reproduce is required from the copyright holder. Please contact Special Collections, University of Delaware Library, http://library.udel.edu/spec/askspec/
Collection Inventory
Signed by James B. Ayars. Printed by James Kelley, Doylestown, PA. Clipping affixed to back includes marriage announcement of Edward Richards and Miss Catharine A. Pierce on December 13, 1860.
Photographs are of George and Enos Pierce although it is uncertain which brother is in which picture.
Autograph letter signed. From Fernandina, Florida, via East Royal, South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. From Fernandina, Florida.
Autograph letter signed. From Jacksonville, Florida, via Port Royal South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. From Jacksonville, Florida, via Port Royal, South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. From Jacksonville, Florida, via Port Royal, South Carolina. With envelope.
Autograph letter signed. From Port Royal, South Carolina. With envelope.
Autograph letter signed. From Port Royal, South Carolina. Includes signed pencil sketch of Presbyterian Church with short description: "Prispretearian [sic.] Church on port Royal lent. Drawing while on picket." With envelope.
Autograph letter signed. From James Island.
Autograph letter signed. From Portsmouth, Virginia, via Port Royal, South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. From South Carolina via Port Royal, South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. From St. Helena Island.
Autograph letter signed. From Port Royal, South Carolina. With envelope.
Coconut bark originally sealed in one of the Pierce letters.
Autographed document by George K. Pierce. Patrick Morris states that George Pierce wrote this song about the Civil War while on picket duty.
Autograph letter signed. From Port Royal, South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. With envelope.
Autograph letter signed. From James Island.
Autograph letter signed. From Seabrook Island, South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. From Morris Island, South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. From Morris Island, South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. From Morris Island, South Carolina. With envelope.
Autograph letter signed. From Morris Island, South Carolina.
Autograph letter signed. From Fernandina, Florida.
Autograph letter signed. From Fernandina, Florida. With envelope.
Autograph letter signed. From Fernandina, Florida via Port Royal, South Carolina.
Used page from printed 1863 diary. Describes Fort Wagner and the battles there.
Sketch on "Our Whole Union" stationary. Autograph letter signed on the back.
Autograph letter signed. From Fernandina, Florida.
Autograph letter signed. From Fernandina, Florida, via Port Royal, South Carolina. With envelope.
Autograph letter signed. From Bermuda Hundred, Virginia. Reports Enos as missing and possibly dead.
Autograph letter signed. From White House Landing, Virginia. With envelope. George describes search for missing Enos. Piece of flag originally enclosed.
Autograph letter signed. From near Petersburg, Virginia, via Fortress Monroe. Discusses missing Enos.
Autograph letter signed. From near Petersburg, Virginia, via Fortress Monroe. With envelope. Discusses missing Enos.
Envelopes that have become disassociated from the letters in which they were mailed.
Autograph letter signed. From Petersburg, Virginia. With envelope. Describes George Pierce's wounding.
Autograph letter signed. With envelope marked "In haste." Passes on news of George Pierce's wounding.
Autograph document signed. To be presented at Chesapeake Hospital, in order to find wounded George K. Pierce.
From Provost Marshal's Office, Head Quarters Department Virginia and North Carolina, Fort Monroe, Virginia. By command of Major General Butler. Seal of John Cassels, Capt. and Provost.
Autograph letter signed from N.S. Mendenhall. Provides instructions on how Elias Pierce can retrieve the body of George K. Pierce from a grave at the Field Hospital 18th Army Corps.
Signed notice. From Treasury Department, Second Auditor's Office, EB Linch, auditor. With envelope.
Stamped envelope with Rowland postmark c/o Ezra Pierce.
Autograph letter signed. From Landenburg. With envelope.
Newspaper obituary. From the
Wilmington Sunday Star .Newspaper obituary. Another short obituary pasted to bottom of clipping.
Typed copy. Lists births, deaths, and marriages of the Pierce family, 1838-1904.