Sunday,
December 25, 1864.Washington,
DC. | Lincoln writes an endorsement on a letter
concerning Private David Henry Patterson, a member of the 9th New York
Cavalry's Company K. On November 2, 1864, Mrs. Kesiah Patterson, of Durand,
Illinois, wrote to Fannie McKean, of Washington, D. C., on behalf of David
Patterson's mother. On June 11, David Patterson was wounded in battle at
Trevilian Station, Virginia. Kesiah Patterson learned from David's mother that
he "has been ill almost from the moment of his entering the army. It seems that
he has himself physically unable to endure the rigor of camp life...A recent
illness deprived him of the little strength and courage that he had endeavored
to sustain himself with and now his only hope is to get to his mother and spend
the remnant of his life, which he feels will be brief, with her." Kesiah notes
that David Patterson is a patient at Finley Hospital, located in Washington D.
C.'s fourth ward. Perhaps McKean showed the letter to Lincoln, who forwarded it
to Illinois Congressman John F. Farnsworth with the note, "Can Gen. Farnsworth
tell anything about this case?" Kesiah Patterson to Fannie McKean, 2
November 1864, The Lincoln Museum, Ft. Wayne, IN; Newel Cheney, History
of the Ninth Regiment, New York Volunteer Cavalry. War of 1861 To 1865
(Jamestown, NY: Martin Merz & Son, 1901), 394. |