Most of the collection consists of letters from John D. Twiggs to his wife, Sarah Eugenia Rambo Twiggs during the period 1862-1864. Almost all these letters have rough transcriptions of them in the Papers. In addition to descriptions of camp life, discussions of news from home, and providing news about individuals from the Edgefield District serving in the army, the letters relate some of his battlefield experiences. He describes several battles that took place in Virginia, such as the aftermath of the Battle of Fredericksburg in 1862; the Battles of Second Brandy Station and Culpeper Court House in 1863; and the fighting that occurred in October-November 1863 during the Bristoe campaign, including the “Buckland Races” (Battle of Buckland Mills). He also describes the Battle of Chapman’s Fort in South Carolina in 1864.
There are two letters and one telegram to Twiggs in the collection including a letter from Confederate General Wade Hampton expressing regret over the 1st South Carolina Cavalry being transferred out of his command. There is also an undated account by Twiggs of his encounter with a South Carolina “wild cat.” In addition, the collection contains a color photograph of a painting of Twiggs and a printed copy of a photograph of Hampton.
The collection is useful to researchers interested in military life in the Civil War era, the operations of the 1st South Carolina Cavalry Regiment, and the aforementioned engagements.
This collection is open to the public without restriction.
John David Twiggs was born on April 6, 1826 in Richmond County, Georgia, the son of George L. and Sarah Lowe Twiggs. He studied medicine and became a doctor, moving to Hamburg in the Edgefield District of South Carolina. Twiggs married Sarah Eugenia Rambo and they had six children: Albert, George, Sarah, Mattie, John David Jr., and Marion.
He enlisted in the 1st South Carolina Cavalry Battalion in 1862 as a captain commanding Company C and was promoted to major in the Battalion shortly thereafter. When the Battalion was reorganized into the 1st South Carolina Cavalry Regiment in that same year he became the lieutenant colonel of the Regiment. While on furlough he was shot and killed on September 15, 1864 in a confrontation with a neighbor, Robert J. Butler, Sr. just outside of Hamburg.
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English
The John D. Twiggs Papers are a resource for researching military life in the Civil War era and the activities of the 1st South Carolina Cavalry Regiment, particularly the Battles of Fredericksburg (1862), Second Brandy Station (1863), Culpeper Court House (1863), and Chapman’s Fort (1864), as well as the fighting that took place during the Bristoe campaign in Virginia in October-November 1863.
The collection consists of an account, correspondence, a color photograph, a printed copy of a photograph, and transcripts for most of the correspondence.
Chronological.
Donated by Henry Twiggs in 2008 and 2011. Accessions 08-065 and 11-135.
The collection was processed and a finding aid created by James Cross in 2023.
Part of the Clemson University Libraries Special Collections and Archives Repository