99

Mann Page.

Description of 2000 captured Union soldiers being marched to prison.

Near Charlottesville, VA, 19 June 1862
Autograph Letter Signed to his uncle David Coupland Randolph (1804-1886). 3 pages, 10 x 7¼ inches, on one folding sheet, with docketing on final blank; mailing folds, minimal wear.

Mann Page (1831-1904) was a member of one of Virginia's leading extended families. His grandfather was a first cousin of Thomas Jefferson. He was a lieutenant in the 21st Virginia Infantry. His regiment had been serving under Stonewall Jackson in the Shenandoah Valley campaign, and had been tasked with bringing a large body of Union prisoners southward from Winchester toward Richmond. 

He describes a "long and tedious march from Winchester, with about two thousand prisoners, and I can assure you that it was no child's play for our little reg't (not over 300 strong) to gard so many Yankeys for three weeks, up every night and marching all day long, and from the time we left Winchester until we crossed the Blue Ridge Mountains at Rock Fish Gap, they could hear the firing and knew that the fight was goin on between Old Jack & the Yankeys, and they were just as certain that they would be recaptured, for they saying to us that we were marching them along now, but by tomorrow, old Shields & Freemont would have the hole of Jackson's army marching to Fort McHenry. When we crossed the bridge at Port Republic they could see their Cavalry just across the other branch of the river, which made them feel so certain that some of them refused to go any farther, but I let them have it with my sword, rite & left, and they soon found out that we were not to be frightened by the prospect of being attacked, but I can tell you that it was ticklish times with us, and if they had southern men they would have all gotten away, but providence protected us."

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