Lucius Lute Moseley was a nineteen-year-old student at Beloit Academy when he enlisted in the Union Army.
These 125 letters, never before made available to scholars or students of the war, became touchstones and sources of pride for the Moseley family-and provide a uniquely candid and vivid view of this tumultuous period in US history..
Frank and forthright, he was remarkably articulate, insightful, and thoughtful, whether describing mundane activities or the nearly unfathomable death of President Lincoln.
Mosely wrote detailed missives to his family in Beloit about his wartime experiences, demonstrating a flair for describing both camp life and battles.
He marched in the Washington, D.
C., Grand Review before returning to the Beloit area, where he remained for the rest of his life.
Briefly captured and interred in a Confederate POW Camp, he returned to action and participated in Sherman\'s Atlanta campaign.
From 1862 to 1865, Moseley fought in the Civil War as an infantry soldier in Wisconsin\'s 22nd Volunteers.
His father lost most of his modest assets through litigation of a building contract he had received, which likely influenced his son\'s decision to enlist in the army.
Moseley grew up on a family farm outside Beloit, Wisconsin, where his father operated the first dray service before opening a blacksmith shop and lumber yard.
Lucius Lute Moseley was a nineteen-year-old student at Beloit Academy when he enlisted in the Union Army