Civil War
soldiers endured many hardships during the time they served. Though they couldn’t do much about the long
marches and short supplies, many of them did find ways to cope with the
loneliness and home-sickness. There are
many recorded instances of soldiers bringing pets from home, or adopting pets
they found, as a way to provide companionship and to boost their moral. Sometimes an animal would be adopted by the
whole regiment as a mascot.
As you might expect, dogs were very popular as pets and mascots. This Library of Congress image shows an unidentified Confederate soldier with his hound dog. |
In
searching the museum’s collection for examples of pets in the Civil War, I
discovered a poem written by Colonel Salome Marsh of the 5th
Maryland Infantry. He was so distraught
over losing his dog, Sam, that he memorialized him in a poem. It’s a bit long, so I’ll just share the first
part of it here. It’s not quite a
literary classic, but it does convey Col. Marsh’s feelings for his lost pet.
Epitaph
on a Favorite Dog
Poor Sam is dead
and gone,
We ne'er shall
see him more,
He has left us
here to mourn,
Whom we did once
adore.
Alas, Thy days
are numbered,
True and
faithful friend,
The tender ties
are severed,
That kept thee
to thy end.
When other
friends proved false,
Thou wert always
true,
Hence, death,
hath given cause,
To mourn the
loss of you.
Horses
and mules were an essential part of the war effort, but many of them became
more than just a mode of transportation to their owners. The most famous example is General Robert E.
Lee’s horse, Traveller. He became so
popular that people would pull hairs from his tails as souvenirs! An officer with the 3rd Louisiana had a pet donkey
named Jason. Jason was allowed to sleep
in his owner’s tent at night (probably for the added warmth), but he sometimes
got the wrong tent and tried to curl up next to the commander instead!
Raccoons
and squirrels were often kept as pets too. The
12th Wisconsin and the 104th Pennsylvania both kept raccoons as their mascots. A Union nurse, Clarissa Jones, was given a
pet squirrel by her brother, Lane. She
named the gray squirrel “Secesh,” which was a nickname at the time for
Confederates! She wrote home to Lane
about him, “Let me tell you about
Secesh—I have put it out to board—the poor little beast seemed so lonely and
felt so lean that I feared it pined for its native woods and as I had not the
time to notice it thro’ the day I concluded to lend it to Tom Lyman Mr. H’s
grandson. I took it there today to
exhibit it to the children. Tom brought
up a large cage which he made for his own pet of a like race - he offered it to
me and knowing his propensity for….such things I loaned it to him till he got
tired of it.”
Some farm
animals became pets and mascots as well.
General Lee kept a chicken in camp as a pet. She reportedly laid an egg under his cot
every morning, which he then had for breakfast!
The 2nd Rhode Island had a sheep they named Dick. Dick was taught to do tricks to amuse the
men. Unfortunately for Dick though, he was
later sold to a butcher for five dollars to buy food for the men.
There
are accounts of a few more unconventional pets as well.
The 26th
Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry had a badger for their mascot, probably since
Wisconsin is known as the Badger State.
The 12th Wisconsin was a bit more unconventional though, and
had a bear which accompanied them on their marches!
NMCWM Educator, Tom, and unofficial museum mascot, Lacy, show that faithful pets are just as much a part of our lives now as they were during the Civil War! |
Photos
courtesy of the National Museum of Civil War Medicine, except where otherwise
noted.
Animals, especially dogs, did so much to help soldiers withstand the loneliness and stress of army life! It's interesting to us that even though war has changed in the 150 years since the American Civil War, the relationships between modern soldiers and their Military Working Dogs are much the same, in terms of affection and trust, as the relationships that Civil War soldiers shared with their dogs. Now, as then, dogs help soldiers maintain their humanity in the worst of times. No wonder they bond for life!
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