Mr Henry M rector [sic]
govener [sic] of the State Dere Sir I am sorrow
To inform you abe lincoln has so
many friends here as he has in pike
[and] Polke Co [and] this [and] Pike they saye [sic] the popel has
give them no showing gone out of Union one this
heades [sic] they would note gone oute [and] has not
for they stick to union yete [and] one of the
Croude [sic] has hallow huraw for lincoln [and] has
all the commitey union men [and] dars [sic] any -
body to tech [sic] one of or any commitey [and] grate [sic]
young men [and] says they dont intend to go
to fite till they are drafted [and] if they get
tuck [sic] prisoners they will tell north they
would note of faught agante [sic] them they
was compelde [sic] to do so [and] the north will be
good to them now I will gave [sic] you as many
of thir nams as I can recolect [sic] David White
juner [sic] david white seinior [sic] henry White Wm White
Wm White White senior Jackson White
William H. Foster, Montgomery County, Arkansas, to Governor Henry M. Rector
Date Original
1861-10-14
Creator
Foster, William H.
Biographical/Historical Note
Though Arkansas was one of the states that seceded from the Union upon the onset of the Civil War, a number of its citizens still held their loyalties to the United States. This created much tension between neighbors whose views did not align. Some Confederacy-supporting citizens went so far as to report their neighbors to Governor Henry Rector, who acted to quash disloyalty to the Confederacy.
Description
In his letter, Foster writes that there are many people of Montgomery, Pope, and Polk counties were heavily in favor of the Union, and named a number of them. These men would not fight for the Confederacy unless conscripted and made up a sham company to fool Confederate recruiters into thinking they had already enlisted.
Physical Description
1 page handwritten, front and back: 20 x 12.6 cm (7 7/8 x 5 in.)
Subjects
Civil War; Arkansas; Confederate States of America
Geographical Area
Montgomery County. (Ark.)
Language
English
Local Identifier
Kie Oldham papers
Digital Resource
Document
Digital Collection
Every Front is The Home Front - Arkansas in the Civil War
Publisher
Arkansas State Archives
Preferred Citation
William H. Foster, Montgomery County, Arkansas, to Governor Henry M. Rector, Kie Oldham papers, Arkansas States Archives, Little Rock, Arkansas
Rights and Usage
Use and reproduction of images held by the Arkansas State Archives without prior written permission is prohibited. For information on reproducing images held by the Arkansas State Archives, please call 501-682-6900 or email at state.archives@arkansas.gov.
Mr Henry M rector [sic]
govener [sic] of the State Dere Sir I am sorrow
To inform you abe lincoln has so
many friends here as he has in pike
[and] Polke Co [and] this [and] Pike they saye [sic] the popel has
give them no showing gone out of Union one this
heades [sic] they would note gone oute [and] has not
for they stick to union yete [and] one of the
Croude [sic] has hallow huraw for lincoln [and] has
all the commitey union men [and] dars [sic] any -
body to tech [sic] one of or any commitey [and] grate [sic]
young men [and] says they dont intend to go
to fite till they are drafted [and] if they get
tuck [sic] prisoners they will tell north they
would note of faught agante [sic] them they
was compelde [sic] to do so [and] the north will be
good to them now I will gave [sic] you as many
of thir nams as I can recolect [sic] David White
juner [sic] david white seinior [sic] henry White Wm White
Wm White White senior Jackson White