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Katherine Couse Civil War Letter, Accession #10441 , Special Collections Dept., University of Virginia Library, Charlottesville, Va.
The Couse letter was given to the Library by James Holsaert of Tucson, Arizona, on January 26, 1981.
This twelve-page letter was written in diary form by Katherine Couse to unidentified friends, May 4-22, 1864. She was a Union sympathizer from New Jersey who had moved with her family to "Laurel Hill," Spotsylvania Co., Virginia, before the Civil War. Her letter describes her life during the battles of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania which were fought near her home. She writes regarding her family's day-to-day existence, mentioning tea with doctors, staff officers, and Edwin Forbes, Frank Leslie's war correspondent, looting of their home by soldiers in both armies, caring for local refugees, the Federal hospitals on their property and the desolation of the countryside after the armies left. Couse briefly mentions Confederate generals Richard Ewell, James A. Longstreet, Thomas L. Rosser, and Union generals Ambrose Burnside, Ulysses S. Grant, and George Meade, among others.
With the letter is a leaf bearing quotes in her handwriting from two of Shakespeare's plays, Two Gentlemen of Verona and Julius Caesar .