• Jasper N. Barney to John C. Dinsmore, John C. Dinsmore Papers
    Jasper N. Barney
    letter
    Civil War
    Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
    document
    This is a letter of Private Jasper N. Barney of Mound City, Illinois to his brother-in-law Captain John C. Dinsmore, dated October 24, 1862. Barney was in the U.S. Army, a member of the 16th Illinois Infantry Regiment. Dinsmore served in the U.S. Army, Captain of Company E, 99th Illinois Infantry Regiment. He resigned his commission in 1864. In the letter Barney challenges Dinsmore on his views regarding the Emancipation Proclamation. In his unit Barney has found many supporters of the proclamation and he supports the administration's policy along with the proposal to colonize ex-slaves. (See pages two and three. For more from the John C. Dinsmore Papers please see 1118458 and 1118455. Transcription provided by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library & Museum and the White House Historical Association.)
  • Jasper N. Barney to John C. Dinsmore, John C. Dinsmore Papers (Part 1 of 4)
    Jasper N. Barney
    letter
    Civil War
    Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
    document
    This is a letter of Private Jasper N. Barney of Mound City, Illinois to his brother-in-law Captain John C. Dinsmore, dated October 24, 1862. Barney was in the U.S. Army, a member of the 16th Illinois Infantry Regiment. Dinsmore served in the U.S. Army, Captain of Company E, 99th Illinois Infantry Regiment. He resigned his commission in 1864. In the letter Barney challenges Dinsmore on his views regarding the Emancipation Proclamation. In his unit Barney has found many supporters of the proclamation and he supports the administration's policy along with the proposal to colonize ex-slaves. (For a full pdf of this letter, please see 1118457.)
  • Jasper N. Barney to John C. Dinsmore, John C. Dinsmore Papers (Part 2 of 4)
    Jasper N. Barney
    letter
    Civil War
    Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
    document
    This is a letter of Private Jasper N. Barney of Mound City, Illinois to his brother-in-law Captain John C. Dinsmore, dated October 24, 1862. Barney was in the U.S. Army, a member of the 16th Illinois Infantry Regiment. Dinsmore served in the U.S. Army, Captain of Company E, 99th Illinois Infantry Regiment. He resigned his commission in 1864. In the letter Barney challenges Dinsmore on his views regarding the Emancipation Proclamation. In his unit Barney has found many supporters of the proclamation and he supports the administration's policy along with the proposal to colonize ex-slaves. (For a full pdf of this letter, please see 1118457.)
  • Jasper N. Barney to John C. Dinsmore, John C. Dinsmore Papers (Part 3 of 4)
    Jasper N. Barney
    letter
    Civil War
    Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
    document
    This is a letter of Private Jasper N. Barney of Mound City, Illinois to his brother-in-law Captain John C. Dinsmore, dated October 24, 1862. Barney was in the U.S. Army, a member of the 16th Illinois Infantry Regiment. Dinsmore served in the U.S. Army, Captain of Company E, 99th Illinois Infantry Regiment. He resigned his commission in 1864. In the letter Barney challenges Dinsmore on his views regarding the Emancipation Proclamation. In his unit Barney has found many supporters of the proclamation and he supports the administration's policy along with the proposal to colonize ex-slaves. (For a full pdf of this letter, please see 1118457.)
  • Jasper N. Barney to John C. Dinsmore, John C. Dinsmore Papers (Part 4 of 4)
    Jasper N. Barney
    letter
    Civil War
    Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
    document
    This is a letter of Private Jasper N. Barney of Mound City, Illinois to his brother-in-law Captain John C. Dinsmore, dated October 24, 1862. Barney was in the U.S. Army, a member of the 16th Illinois Infantry Regiment. Dinsmore served in the U.S. Army, Captain of Company E, 99th Illinois Infantry Regiment. He resigned his commission in 1864. In the letter Barney challenges Dinsmore on his views regarding the Emancipation Proclamation. In his unit Barney has found many supporters of the proclamation and he supports the administration's policy along with the proposal to colonize ex-slaves. (For a full pdf of this letter, please see 1118457.)