John Wood raises regiment for war

Cannon roared along the riverfront. Speeches swelled from Washington Park. And banquets filled tables throughout the city. Quincyans in January 1864 welcomed home their soldier-sons of the Civil War's 10th, 16th, and 50th Illinois Infantry regiments.
For most of the recently discharged veterans, tested many times and on many fields, it was a visit only. They were on furlough. Even after three years of fighting and brutal, bloody maiming, three years of losing brothers and neighbors and friends on reddened soils in Missouri and Tennessee, most of the soldiers who survived had re-enlisted.
Theirs was an inexplicable heroism, and it inspired dozens of fresh young Adams County recruits to join the cause of freedom and Union.
It was not just young men.
When Illinois Gov. Richard Yates and other northwestern governors in early 1864 recommended that President Abraham Lincoln authorize volunteer regiments for 100-day enlistments, Quincy patriarch John Wood offered to serve. The founder of Quincy -- seven times its mayor, a state senator, Illinois governor, and now state quartermaster general -- raised and led a regiment of volunteers, the 137th Illinois Infantry. Wood was 65 years old.
What moves a man to such gainly contribution? What more did John Wood have to prove? Four decades earlier, Wood personally fought to keep slavery out of Illinois, an accomplishment he considered his life's greatest work. Alarmed by sure signs of rebellion in 1860, Wood as governor focused his one-year administration on rebuilding the state's militia, which, ignored by governors for more than a decade, had atrophied.
Wood remedied that, and when President Lincoln called on the states in mid-1861 for soldiers, Illinois was among the best prepared. The "New York Times" observed that "Illinois alone ... sent forth more volunteers in proportion to her population than any other state in the Union. ..."
Most of the young men Wood recruited for his regiment in 1864 abandoned their spring labors to unite with him. Leaving fields and families, 957 men -- a quarter of them from Adams County -- responded, reporting to Camp Wood in Quincy. They were mustered into service on Sunday, June 5, 1864, for 100 days. The length of their enlistment reflected the governors' belief that the destructive new strategy of generals Ulysses S. Grant and William T. Sherman for their campaign into the Deep South would soon end the war. Wood believed it, too.
"I have an assured belief that ere the term of our enlistment shall have expired," Wood told his Quincy neighbors, "the military power of this accursed rebellion will have been crushed in its strongholds; and that under the guidance of our Generals in the field, the mighty host of freemen who compose the armies of the Union will have delivered successful battle, and driven Treason discomfited and howling into his last ditch."
The 100-day soldiers would brace the Union army's effort by doing guard and garrison duty at the rear so that regulars could be sent to fight at the front.
Commissioned a colonel in May, Wood for the first time presented his freshly uniformed regiment to the citizens of Quincy in a parade from the camp to Washington Park on Tuesday, June 7. One after another, the ten companies of men arrived between 5 and 6 p.m., their new smooth-side-out ankle-high boots drumming in unison along streets from the south in the march to the grassy park. Their soldierly bearing "made a very presentable appearance," observed the Quincy Daily Whig the next day.
Col. Wood led the 137th regiment from atop an unusually large jet-black horse. The animal, a new saddle and bridle, and two Colt Navy revolvers and holsters were gifts to Wood from the admiring people of his community. The pistols, ships engraved on their barrels, are in the collection of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County.
"It was a grand sight," the Daily Whig reported, "the noble bearing of the gallant commander, devoting not only the prime of his life but the vigor of his old age to the service of his country. It is an example worthy of all imitation -- his very presence kindling a blaze of enthusiasm among the soldiers."
After a speech by Lt. Col. Thomas Roach of Colchester, Wood's second in command, the crowd gave Wood three cheers. The ladies of Quincy presented a silk Union flag manufactured in Philadelphia to the regiment and the ladies were awarded three cheers. Businessman Matthias Denman, won three cheers for the Stars and Stripes, and at Maj. Gen. Benjamin Prentiss's call, three cheers were raised for the regiment's soldiers.
In a letter in the next day's Whig, Wood thanked his neighbors for the "especially acceptable ... manifestations of their good will." He promised to put the gifts to "immediate practical use." He asked his friends' "hopes and confidence in the men of the 137th and appreciation for what they had given up" to march for the Union.
On June 9, the regiment left under orders for Memphis, Tennessee. There Wood was named commander of the Third Brigade, which included his 137th and three other 100-day Illinois regiments. The 137th was assigned to guard and picket duty on the Hernando Road, south of Memphis.
Sometime after July 23, Wood contracted a serious illness that hospitalized him in a building at the State Female College near Hernando Road. He was not present for the attack on his regiment -- their first time under fire -- at 4 a.m. August 21 by one of the most brutal of rebel generals, Maj. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest. The Confederates dashed through Wood's pickets leaving debris where the regiment's encampment had been. Pvt. Marcellus Babcock of Augusta was lying in his tent as Forrest's rebels rode past. Afterward, Babcock counted 62 holes in the canvas. Capt. Henry Castle of Quincy of the 137th had the tent sent to the Quincy Ladies Sanitary Fair to be auctioned during a fundraising event in October.
Wood did not escape Forrest's brutality. Writing an account of the skirmish for the Quincy Whig Republican, Capt. Castle reported that Forrest had barked orders to "burn the d------d Yankee college. ..." He left a unit of Confederates behind to fulfill his order, then led his brigade on to Memphis.
Joined by other smaller detachments, the 137th reorganized to repel the rebels outside the college building in which Wood was being treated. The colonel was not alone. His daughter Ann (Wood) Tillson, wife of Gen. John Tillson, Jr., and the wife of Wood's son John Jr., had arrived just days before to nurse Wood and were in his room. .
During three hours of fighting, three or four mini-balls entered the sick room of Col. W.," Castle reported.
In a letter published in the Whig Republican Sept. 10, Chaplain Hiram P. Roberts of Quincy reported that "many daring deeds were done by the boys which will be remembered to their honor for years to come." Seven were killed in the action, two "by rough treatment from the hands of the enemy" -- they were bayoneted, and 17 died of wounds. Thirty-two died of disease.
Mustered out with his men on Sept. 4, Wood returned to Quincy nine days later, accompanied by his daughter and Chaplain Roberts. The Daily Whig reported that he was "quite feeble but improving daily."
Improve he did. Within a year the widowed Wood remarried, completed his $200,000 octagonal mansion, and resumed his active life in civic affairs. He quickly became involved in helping some 200 African American "contrabands," wives and children of fugitive Missouri slaves who joined Illinois' only African American regiment, the 29th Infantry, formed in Quincy in 1864. The war still months from being over, Wood concerned himself with reconstruction.
Reg Ankrom is a member of several history-related organizations, the author of a biography of Stephen A. Douglas of Quincy, and a frequent speaker on pre-Civil War history.
Sources
"An Incident." Quincy Daily Whig, August 20, 1864.
Castle, Henry A. "From the 137th Regiment." Quincy Daily Whig Republican, September 3, 1864.
"Citizen's Present to Col. Wood." Quincy Daily Whig, June 8, 1864.
Collins, William H. and Cicero F. Perry. Past and Present of the City of Quincy and Adams County, Illinois. Chicago: The S.J. Clark Publishing Co., 1905.
"The Contrabands in Quincy." Quincy Whig Republican, September 10, 1864.
"Flag Presentation." Quincy Daily Whig, June 8, 1864.
"From the 137th Regiment." Quincy Daily Whig Republican, July 23, 1864.
"The Glorious Patriotism of the West--A Handsome Acknowledgment." Quincy Whig Republican, May 7, 1864.
Illinois Civil War Muster and Descriptive Rolls, accessed January 5, 2014, at http://www.cyberdriveillinois.com/departments/archives/databases/datcivil.html
"Justice to a Brave Regiment." Quincy Daily Whig, September 3, 1864.
"The Memphis Raid." Quincy Daily Whig, August 26, 1864.
"Military Matters," Quincy Whig Republican, June 11, 1864.
"The 137th Regiment." Quincy Daily Whig, September 14, 1864.
Reece, J.N. "One Hundred and Thirty Seventh Infantry Regiment: One Hundred Days' Service," Report of the Adjutant General of the State of Illinois, Vol. VII. Springfield, Illinois: Journal Company, Printers and Binders, 1900.
Wood, John. "Quincy, June 8, 1864--Messrs. Savage, Tillson, Bernard, Head and Grimshaw (Committee)." Quincy Daily Whig, June 8, 1864.





