Louis Brown, in his book on the Salisbury Prison, has a long
list of civilian prisoners incarcerated at the North Carolina stockade. One of
those men listed is William Marsh. In 1860, Marsh was living in Elizabethton,
Carter County, Tennessee, working as a hatter. Marsh was twenty-four years old,
married to Ellen, with two children. They were all born in Virginia. His personal
estate was only worth $50, so being a hatter was obviously not a lucrative job
in mid-nineteenth-century Elizabethton.
At some point, it appears that Marsh was captured by Federal
forces. In October 1864, he was discharged from the Old Capitol Prison in
Washington, D.C. He apparently got a job working at the wharf on G Street in
Washington, D.C. It seems, maybe in his excitement over being released from confinement,
he indulged a little too much one evening, and his employer found that he had
dropped his copy of his Oath of Allegiance to the Confederacy. Marsh’s boss had
hired Marsh, “a Confederate refugee… through sympathy.” The official wrote that
Marsh swore he had not taken such an Oath (prior to losing his Oath). What
happened after that point in time is unknown. [1]
There is a little more to story. William Marsh’s name
appears on a list of “Union Men Confined at Salisbury, N.C.” in the New York
Tribune, July 29, 1862. While there is no information with this article, there
is a letter, in the Official Records, from Brig. Gen. James S. Wadsworth
(US), written on August 10, 1862, stating that an article from the New York
Tribune was being enclosed, and that Wadsworth was holding thirty
Confederate citizens from the area between Fredericksburg and Washington, D.C.,
“as hostages.” [2]
What became of William Marsh? It seems that he hired himself
as a substitute for John C. Wellbanks, and was mustered into Company C, 1st
Delaware Infantry. He was mustered in as a private on December 24, 1864, then
promoted to sergeant on January 24, 1865. In June, he was promoted to second
lieutenant and transferred to Company F. Marsh was mustered out of service on
July 12, 1865. Marsh apparently did not
return to East Tennessee. He is listed on the 1870 US Census as a resident of
Fort Chiswell, Wythe County, Virginia. It appears that his first wife, Ellen,
passed in the previous decade. He was, in 1870, married to Susan V. Marsh and
had four children at home. In 1880, he was in Surry County, North Carolina.
According to a family history chart on Ancestry, William Marsh died on April 2,
1893, in Kingfisher, Oklahoma, and he was buried in the Bob Marsh Cemetery,
Grayson County, Virginia.
Civilians arrested by the Confederate government for
disloyalty is a seldom discussed topic. Mark Neely Jr., writes that there were
at least 4,108 political prisoners arrested during the war.[3]
It would be interesting to find additional information on Marsh, namely, what
led to his arrest. Maybe those records will turn up one day.
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