John Wood: Illinois' Civil War quartermaster general

John Wood's 10-month tenure as governor of Illinois came to an end on Jan. 14, 1861. But, Illinois' new chief executive, Republican Richard Yates, quickly put Wood back to work, appointing him one of five Illinois delegates to the Peace Convention in Washington, D. C.
With the secessionists of the Deep South staying home and the Radical Republicans not budging, compromise was hopeless and the convention doomed to fail. Wood called it the "Old Grannies Convention." After a month the conference broke up and the delegates went home. Six weeks passed, and on April 12 South Carolina forces bombarded Fort Sumter.
President Lincoln responded on April 14, issuing a call for 75,000 troops to put down the rebellion. Gov. Yates followed on April 15 with an appeal for 6,000 Prairie State volunteers. To become soldiers, these not only needed to be trained but they also had to be clothed, equipped and armed. Yates named a number of men to get the job done. Among them was John Wood, appointed on April 19, 1861, the state's quartermaster general with the rank of colonel.
Since the state had made little provision for their food and shelter, troops arriving in Springfield were initially on their own. As a consequence confusion reigned. Once this problem was resolved, the volunteers required clothing, shoes, accoutrements, weapons, tents, pots and pans, etc. All had to be procured and issued. John Wood looked for help, and fortune smiled on him in the form of fellow Quincy resident, Edward Everett. During the Mexican War, Everett had served as a chief clerk in the army's Quartermaster Department. He knew the ins and outs of supply; and better yet, he understood the army's rules and regulations -- how the system worked. Everett was appointed assistant quartermaster general with the rank of major. He organized the department and established the necessary paperwork of vouchers, requisitions, and receipts. John Wood on the other hand was good at dealing with people.
"His well-known character inspired respect, his colloquial powers were of great service in bringing down contractors to their lowest terms, and his judgment was good in selecting articles and making purchases," Everett remembered. He added that Wood's "energy for action was an example ... to his subordinates, while his probity (integrity and honesty) frowned down indications of corruption, which not infrequently presented themselves from contractors. ..."
In his work "The Business of Civil War: Military Mobilization and the States," Mark R. Wilson writes that Illinois "spent more on procurement ... than any other" state. In 1861, the Quartermaster Department's purchases amounted to $3,714,122.36. Three-fourths of the 60,540 men that Illinois provided to the Union cause in 1861 were clothed and equipped by Wood's department.
Paperwork and attention to detail did not suit Wood, and soon after the Quartermaster Department was up and running his interest and zeal waned. The daily activity of drawing up contracts, certifying bills and vouchers, completing reports, and handling the correspondence fell to Maj. Everett. Quartermaster General Wood was more interested, Everett observed, in "witnessing the prosecution of the war in the field -- for which his position and acquaintance with officers of high rank afforded him many opportunities."
On June 14, 1862, U.S. Sen. Orville Browning of Quincy noted in his diary that he and fellow Illinois Senator Lyman Trumbull, along with governors Yates and Wood, visited the War Department "to see about settlement of Illinois accounts." The four were seeking reimbursement from the federal government for the expenses Illinois had incurred in raising and outfitting troops for the war. While waiting for a response, the ever restless Wood set out to visit the Army of Potomac and arrived in the midst of the Seven Days' Battles.
A correspondent with the New York Tribune, Horace Greeley's newspaper, came across Wood on his way to the front and in search of the 8th Illinois Cavalry. It was June 26, and the Battle of Gaines' Mill was not going well for the men in blue. Union troops were in panic and retreat. The writer penned: "Among the most earnest in withstaying (sic) the frightened host was ex-Governor Wood of Illinois -- a large, handsome old man, with a flowing white beard and the voice of a Stenator (sic). I should not have been astonished had those poor, bewildered men taken him for some old patriarch risen from the dead and calling to them. ..." The writer continued: "Sometime after the main body had passed on, when that stream had become decently small, in company with Gov. Wood I rode to find the Illinois cavalry, and came upon them stretched across the plain halting every unwounded man."
Finding the 8th Illinois Cavalry drawn up in line, Wood sought out the commander, Col. John Farnsworth, a former Republican Congressman. The unit's surgeon, Abner Hard, recalled the scene. "A venerable figure approached, dressed in citizen's clothes, with snowy locks surmounted by a ... ‘stove-pipe hat,' and entered into earnest conversation with Colonel Farnsworth. This was no other than Ex-Governor John Wood. ..."
The former governor volunteered his services, but Dr. Hard observed that "his appearance was anything but soldier-like." Farnsworth "advised an exchange of the ‘tall hat,' for a slouch or felt one, recently captured from a rebel, and with sabre, belt and spurs, obtained in like manner." Wood was changed from a civilian into a soldier. In the retreat from the Chickahominy to the James River, Dr. Hard wrote, "Governor Wood was found among the foremost in battle; his ... white hair streamed in the wind as he lifted his hat and waved it to cheer the men on. ...."
Another soldier remembered a courageous ex-Gov. Wood, in captured rebel garb and gear, exposing himself to enemy bullets while cheering the men on. When the fighting ended, Dr. Hard wrote that for his effort and daring, John Wood was counted "as one of the Eighth Illinois Cavalry."
Shortly thereafter the Illinois Quartermaster's Department was taken over by regular army officers; however, John Wood retained his position as quartermaster general throughout the war. In 1864, he raised and commanded the 137th Illinois Volunteer Infantry, a 100-day regiment.
Phil Reyburn is a retired field representative for the Social Security Administration. He authored "Clear the Track: A History of the Eighty-ninth Illinois Volunteer Infantry, The Railroad Regiment" and co-edited "Jottings from Dixie: The Civil War Dispatches of Sergeant Major Stephen F. Fleharty, U.S.A."
Sources
The History of Adams County, Illinois. Chicago: Murray, Williamson & Phelps, 1879.
Benneson, Cora Agnes. "The Work of Edward Everett of Quincy in the Quarter-Master's Department in Illinois during the First Year of the Civil War." Transactions of the Illinois State Historical Society for the Year1909, Publication No. 14, Springfield: Illinois State Journal Co., State Printers, 1910.
Boies, Henry L. History of De Kalb County Illinois. Chicago, Illinois: O. P. Bassett, Printer, 1868.
Chicago Tribune, July 7,, 1862.
Collins, William H. and Perry, Cicero F., Past and Present of the City of Quincy and Adams County, Illinois. Chicago: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1905.
Everett, Edward. "A Narrative of Military Experience in Several Capacities." Transactions of the Illinois State Historical Society for the Year 1905, Publication No. 10, Springfield: Illinois State Journal Co., State Printers, 1906.
Hard, Abner. History of the Eighth Cavalry Regiment Illinois Volunteers, During the Great Rebellion. Aurora, Illinois, 1868.
Hicken, Victor. Illinois in the Civil War. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1991.
Landrum, Carl A. Quincy in the Civil War, Quincy. Illinois: Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County, 1986.
Pease, Theodore Calvin and Randall, James G., eds. The Diary of Orville Hickman Browning, Volume I, 1850-1864. Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Historical Library, 1925.
The Quincy Whig Republican, July 12, 1862.
Wilson, Mark R. The Business of Civil War: Military Mobilization and the States, 1861-1865. Baltimore, MD: John Hopkins University Press, 2006.





