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In 1862 at the age of thirty-two, Centreville, Michigan, physician
John Bennitt joined the 19th Michigan Infantry Regiment as an
assistant surgeon and remained in military service for the rest of
the war. During this time Bennitt wrote more than two hundred
letters home to his wife and daughters sharing his careful and
detailed observations of army life, his medical trials in the field
and army hospitals, dramatic battles, and character sketches of the
people he encountered, including his regimental comrades, captured
Confederates, and local citizens in southern towns. Bennitt writes
about the war's progress on both the battlefield and the home
front, and also reveals his changing view of slavery and race.
Bennitt traces the history of the 19th Michigan Infantry, from its
mustering in Dowagiac in August 1862, its duty in Kentucky and
Tennessee, its capture and imprisonment by Confederate forces, its
subsequent exchange and reorganization, its participation in the
Atlanta and the Carolinas Campaigns, its place in the Grand Review
in Washington, and the final mustering out in Detroit in June 1865.
John Bennitt's significant collection of letters sheds light not
only on the Civil War but on life in a small Michigan town.
Although a number of memoirs from Civil War surgeons have been
published, ""I Hope to Do My Country Service"" is the first of its
kind from a Michigan regimental surgeon to appear in more than a
century.
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