Hard Bread and Coffee Our Only Food, Blankets Our Only Shelter: The First March of the 20th Maine
I n September 1862, the new recruits of the 20 th Maine endured their first wartime march during the Maryland Campaign and “a hard one it was” remembered Sergeant Edward Simonton. “We marched our march last Friday and hard one it was, at the rate of 20 miles a day, under a scorching sun, loaded down with gun, ammunition, rations and blankets- leaving our knapsacks behind,” he wrote. “Hard bread and coffee was our only food-blankets our only shelter at night. The old regiments said it was the hardest march they ever had. I felt ready to drop once or twice, but the idea that we were in pursuit of old Stonewall nerved me up to new effort and urged me onward.” The 20 th Maine, mustered into service on August 29, 1862, at Camp Mason, near Portland, Maine, had sailed from Boston to Alexandria, Virginia aboard the steamer Merrimack along with the 36 th Massachusetts. Upon arrival on September 6, the regiment camped at the Washingto...