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Eugene S. Mitchell Papers

 Collection
Identifier: MU-PP-0131

Scope and Contents

The Eugene S. Mitchell Collection consists mainly of items from Mitchell's education at Mercer University (1857-1860) and correspondence from during and after the American Civil War (1862-1871).

Series 1 consists of correspondence, mostly from Mitchell to Chloe Emma Lewis, his future wife. The bulk of the letters were written between 1863 and 1865 from Mitchell’s service in the Virginia battlefields of the Civil War. Only three letters in the collection were written by people other than Mitchell as follows: One was written by Chloe Emma Lewis to Eugene Mitchell; a second letter was written to Mitchell by a S. N.(?) Robbins; a third was written by Mitchell’s Aunt Julia. Each letter is in its own folder due to fragility and size.

In addition to the Correspondence, the Mitchell collection contains a pamphlet of a printed speech addressed to the Phi Delta Society of Mercer University in 1857 by R. E. Rester. The papers also include a diploma from Mercer University, the marriage license for Chloe Lewis and Eugene Mitchell, and a tintype of Mitchell in a brown union case disconnected at the hinge. The photograph is in its own box and the diploma is loose. All are contained in an archival oversized box to accommodate the varying sizes of the items in the collection.

Letters from Mitchell record his feelings about the war itself, specific battles, and hardships of camp life and life on the march. He refers to well-known Confederates, as Stonewall Jackson, Jeb Stuart, and Robert E. Lee, sometimes in critical terms. Writing from Camp Gregg, Virginia, March 27 of 1863, Mitchell regales Chloe with a tale about the Confederate and Union armies on each side of the Rappahannock and a Union band playing, its performance ending with “Dixie” to the yells of the Confederates, followed by “Yankee Doodle,” and then “Home Sweet Home.” In a letter from August 6, 1863, Mitchell speaks of hearing that southern women have lost faith in the war and worries this is the case with Chloe, whom he attempts to encourage.

Mitchell writes of campaigns in which his regiment has fought and others in which he has not fought and how he perceives the war is proceeding. He describes the battle at Chancellorsville and the death of Stonewall Jackson in May of 1863 and a year later waxes somewhat poetic in regard to nature and its negative rather than positive effect on the soldier. He writes at the end of August, 1864, of reasons for his inability to pen a letter to Chloe and describes the various types of weaponry fired from the Union lines and forts they have built. In a later letter Mitchell speaks of his desire for a furlough and of his deep feelings for the soldiers in his regiment; he writes that he doesn’t get ill seriously enough to warrant leave but that “a slight wound would be desirable.”

Some of Mitchell’s letters simply speak of his feelings for Chloe, but in December of 1864 he begins a discourse on Sherman and his sojourn in Georgia, a topic that appears in other correspondence. In his letter of December 21, 1864, Mitchell writes of the rumor of Jefferson Davis’ death and tells Chloe that he is very ill, cautioning her not to mention that fact to his mother or Aunt J(ulia). The letter of July 8, 1865, finds Mitchell imprisoned in Fort Delaware, and on August 22, 1865, affirms his love for Chloe from Newtown, Maryland. This letter concludes Mitchell’s war correspondence. Following ones are from towns in Georgia as he approaches his marriage to Chloe in October of 1867.

Dates

  • Creation: 1856-1871

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Unrestricted access. All requests subject to limitations noted in departmental policies on reproduction.

Rights Statement

To quote in print, or otherwise reproduce in whole or in part in any publication, including on the World Wide Web, any material from this collection, the researcher must obtain permission from (1) the owner of the physical property and (2) the holder of the copyright. Persons wishing to quote from this collection should consult the reference archivist to determine copyright holders for information in this collection. Reproduction of any item must contain the complete citation to the original.

Biographical / Historical

Eugene Severn Mitchell was a white man born on July 28, 1841, in Hillsborough, Jasper County, Georgia, and died on December 10th, 1871, in Atlanta. He was the son of Levin Mitchell and Ann Marie Corbin, both of Worcester County, Maryland. They married in Worcester County May 30, 1826, and by the 1850 Census, when Eugene Mitchell was 8, the family was in Macon, Bibb County, Georgia. The Georgia Property Tax rolls of 1836 show Levin Mitchell to be in the Howard District of Bibb County; that is five years before the birth of Eugene. In the 1860 Census Eugene is 18 years old and has graduated from Mercer University; the census shows his siblings to be Benjamin, 28, Robert, 21, Laura, 28, and Willie, 15.

Eugene Mitchell enlisted as a private in the Confederate Army, and attained the rank in Company F of Full Jr 2nd Lieutenant September 25, 1862. He served with the Georgia 45th Infantry Regiment out of Jones County, beginning March 4, 1862, where he was promoted to Full 2nd Lieutenant on August 15, 1864. Mitchell spent his years in service writing to his friend and future bride, Chloe Emma Lewis, born May 18, 1845.

Mitchell’s regiment engaged in Virginia for the most part, with brief times in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. This Georgia unit fought in some of the more significant battles of the Civil War, such as Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Richmond, Malvern Hill, and the 2nd Appomattox Courthouse. Mitchell was captured and incarcerated in the Union Prison at Fort Delaware between March and June of 1865. At least by late December of 1865 Eugene Mitchell had found work in his hometown of Macon, Georgia. Two years later, on October 17, 1867, he married his long-time sweetheart, Chloe Emma Lewis. The 1870 Census found the Mitchell family in Montgomery Ward G, Montgomery, Alabama, with Mitchell working as a coal dealer. Eugene and Chloe had two children, Anne, born September 12, 1868, in Griffin, Georgia, and Laura, born February 1, 1870, in Alabama. A third child, Eugene S. Mitchell, was born in Atlanta, Georgia, October, 1871, only three months prior to his father’s death on December 10, 1871, of extreme lung congestion. Mitchell’s will was probated in February of 1872; he was buried at Oak Hill Cemetery alongside Laura, or Lollie as she was called, who died August, 1872. Annie Mitchell never married, and the 1890 Census lists her in her mother Chloe’s household at age 31. Ancestry.com records show that Anne requested a passport at age 27 and received it on October 15, 1895, and was a passenger aboard the Vaderlund out of New York in 1905. The 1940 Federal Census found Anne living alone at age 71; she died in 1953. Anne, too, was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery.

Eugene S. Mitchell the younger married Nina Cynthia Hardy on April 30, 1896, and they had two children together, Eugenia and Emma Lewis.

Chloe was remarried in 1884 to John D. Turner, a two-time widower with several children. Turner was a few years older than Chloe and died in 1909. The couple had a son together, Curtis L. Turner. In 1933, she requested a war widow’s pension based on Eugene Mitchell’s war record and did the same in 1937 using John Turner’s war record. Turner had practiced medicine during the Civil War after having apprenticed with his physician father. He ran a cotton compress in Atlanta later in life. Chloe passed away at the age of 94 years in 1940 and is buried with the Mitchells in Oak Hill Cemetery in Griffin, Georgia, alongside first husband Eugene and their two daughters.

Extent

1.75 Linear Feet (1 oversized flat box) : Paper materials, photograph, and ephemera

Language of Materials

English

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of David Brown of Greensboro, North Carolina, a descendent of Chloe Emma Lewis from her marriage to John Turner (June 6, 2011)

Title
Eugene S. Mitchell Papers
Author
Gabrielle Hale and Sybil McNeil (2015-2016) and Jahni Jules (2022)
Date
2015-2016 and 2022
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Sponsor
Gift of David Brown (Greensboro, North Carolina; June 6, 2011)

Repository Details

Part of the Mercer University Archives and Digital Initiatives Repository

Contact:
1501 Mercer University Dr.
Macon Georgia 31207 USA
4783012968