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The following has been excerpted from Iowa Historical Record, January, 1889. Iowa State
Historical Society.
WAR MEMORIES. 11th Iowa
By the favor of Gov. Kirkwood I was appointed Assistant Surgeon of the 11th Iowa Infantry
Volunteers on the organization of that regiment. I joined it at Camp McClellan, the place of
rendezvous, three miles above Davenport, on the Mississippi river bluff. The Colonel, A. H.
Hare, lived at Muscatine, and had not yet joined. The Lieutenant Colonel, William Hall, was in
command. Hall's home was in Davenport, where he had been a young attorney. He was about
thirty years old, wore his dark hair, parted in the middle, long and streaming over his shoulders.
He had a full dark beard and a pale intellectual face. He was kind-hearted, generous, gay with his
friends, impulsive and brave. He had a fine mind, lodged in a small frail body. He labored under
a chronic nervous disease, which made his legs unreliable. In walking, when he threw forward
his foot to take a step, it was sure to go too far forward, or to one side, or perhaps backwards,
while the other, when it came its turn to progress, would execute movements opposite and
contrary. This unfortunate infirmity, which was temporarily benefited by stimulants, often
occasioned him to be wrongly accused of intoxication when he was sober, and credited with
sobriety when he was toned up with whiskey. The parents of Col. Hall's wife, Mr. and Mrs.
Higgins, had an elegant and hospitable home on one of the hills back of the city, and here, just
before leaving camp McClellan for the south, Hall took all his officers one evening to tea. Our
table zests are much enhanced by the recollection of delicious flavors relished when hungry
youths, and the rich aroma of Mrs. Higgin's coffee has often lent for me a sweet flavor to bad
decoctions of rye and Rio since that evening.
It was a cold snowy November day on which we left Davenport on a steamboat. The men
murmured at being crowded on one boat and exposed to the weather, and Gov. Kirkwood being
aboard he obtained additional transportation when we landed at Burlington, and half the
regiment was transferred to another boat. We took aboard Col. Hare at Muscatine, and the
Major, J. C. Abercrombie, at Burlington. The Major, who proved himself a very trusty and
gallant soldier, had command of the battalion on the boat I was on. Soon after leaving Burlington
supper was served on the boat, the cabin of which was assigned to the commissioned officers. At
this hour a great many of the men reported themselves sick. I requested the steward of the boat in
such cases to supply them with cabin fare and allow them beds in the state-room. Pretty soon the
long dining table in the cabin was lined on either side with sick soldiers disposing of the cabin
viands at a rapid rate. Abercrombie, who had had experience as a soldier in the Mexican war,
took me aside, and told me those men at the table were evidently not sick, and that if I did not
use more discrimination I would soon have the whole battalion in the cabin. After promising
more care, I soon learned from the Major that he was familiar with the place of my residence,
which he said he often had visited on business during the sessions here of the legislature, but, as
I divined from the drift of his conversation, to pay his addresses to a young lady at the Crummy
House.
Col. Hall's ill health made his temper irritable at times. After the battle of Shiloh, in the slow
march from Pittsburg Landing to Corinth, we were for some days encamped in a dense swamp,
devoted previously to our coming entirely to the uses of owls and ticks. One night Hall lay there
in his tent unable to sleep. He had issued strict orders against noise in camp after taps. On this
night the orders seemed to be ignored. To hoo, to hoo, sounded a voice, very distinct and very
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human, and to a nervous man could easily be transmuted to Tough Hall, Tough Hall, to h-l, to hl,
or anything else disrespectful. The Colonel called the guard who was pacing in front of his
tent, sent for the officer of the day, and had many suspects arrested. But the offender was not
detected till dawn revealed the culprit roosting on a pine bough over the Colonel's tent, in the
form and semblance of a screech owl. The Colonel accepted the apologies of the bird, who sent
his regrets in a parting to hoo, to hoo, and Hall devoted his attention for some time afterwards to
extricating himself from the toils of a huge tick.
It was during this short campaign that the "scratches" became so prevalent as to suggest to a
casual visitor the idea that the regular old-fashioned itch was raging in the army as an epidemic.
All soon became familiar with the pests which occasioned the discomfort. On one occasion when
the camps of the 16th and the 11th joined, Surgeon Wm. Watson of the 11th, visited a friend in
the 16th, to which I had by this time been transferred. He began to chafe his friends of the 16th
with the prevalence of "grey backs" and their large size in the 16th, claiming that the 11th was
comparatively exempt from the nuisance. At this moment Capt. Alpheus Palmer of the 16th, by
the light of our rail fire detected an enormous one crawling on the cape of Watson's overcoat.
This so turned the jest against Watson that he shunned the camp of the 16th for sometime
afterward.
It was about this time that the Government having authorized an additional assistant surgeon
to each regiment, the new medical officers began to join their regiments. Dr. D. C. McNeal, of
Clinton county, was appointed to the 16th. McNeal was a man of varied abilities. In addition to
his professional qualifications, which were good, he had been a Methodist minister and an editor,
and was an amateur actor, musician and ventriloquist. He wore a full beard and his goatee
reached to his belt. Soon after he joined the 16th I made a visit to Chaplain Estabrook, of the
15th, and in the course of conversation remarked on the arrival of McNeal. Estabrook was a very
social man, and distinguished himself in his brave ministrations to the wounded on the field
during the battle of Shiloh. On this occasion he was sitting on a camp stool at an improvised
table where he had been writing. At the mention of McNeal's name, he laid his face between his
hands on the table, and I could see by the convulsive motions of his sides that he was indulging
in a fit of silent laughter which he could not suppress. After a while he raised his head, and, gave
me some account of McNeal's varied accomplishments, which I soon afterwards learned for
myself.
It was while we were at Grand Junction, just previous to the beginning of the Central
Mississippi campaign, that McNeal, tucking up his beard, changing his dress, and disguising his
voice, deceived Capt. Turner, of the 16th, into the belief that he, McNeal, was Judge Thayer,
then of Muscatine, but now editor of the Clinton Age, who was expected daily on a visit with
others from Iowa. Turner was seated on a canvas stool, taking a hand in a game of old sledge, by
the light of a tallow dip, on an inverted candle box, but was so completely deceived that he
deserted the game, shook hands, and entered into conversation about home matters with the
supposed judge.
It was before this, and while we were at Bolivar, that Col. Add. H. Sanders, of the 16th, now
editor of the Davenport Tribune, who was near-sighted, mortified himself before a squad of
comrades. We had just gone into a new camp, and the tents were pitched irregularly. Sanders had
everything in his tent always in precise order. In this instance he came into Capt. Palmer's tent,
supposing it to be his own, ;and flopped down on the cot, and began to give directions how those
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present should conduct themselves while there. "I don't want you, captain," he began, "to smoke
that strong pipe in here, nor you, doctor, to put your feet on that stool." Pretty soon some one
intimated to the colonel that he was in the wrong pew, when he hastily beat a retreat.
Sanders, however, was not given to retreating before the enemy. He was brave to rashness,
and if commissioned officers had been included in the competition for prizes for bravery, he
would have given Sergeant Duffin a hard tussle for the gold medal. I recollect how disappointed
he was after the battle of Iuka because he had not been wounded. Two weeks afterwards we had
another battle at Corinth, where Sanders was more fortunate. The first day's fight was nearly over
and Sanders was still unwounded, though wooing the enemy's lead. Finally, in desperation, he
rode a long way in front of his regiment, as if to reconnoitre, and the coveted bullet came,
carrying away a good-sized slab of flesh from the outside of his thigh. With all his bravery he
dreaded pain, and while being taken to the rear expressed some anxiety to know whether the ball
was lodged and would have to be cut out which proved unnecessary, as the- missile, after laying
bare his thigh bone, which glistened like a smooth quarter, had gone on, perhaps to kill another
less lucky man.

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