







 |
CIVIL
WAR COMES
TO THE AREA, l861-1865

In the Civil War the character of the United States was changed,
and blood was shed for political principles. Though no major battles took
place in southwestern Ohio, more than 50,000 recruits were trained near
Indian Hill in Camp Dennison between 1861 and 1865.
Ohio contributed more men to the Grand Army of the Republic than
any other Northern state except New York.
Hamilton County residents who rallied to recruiting calls were
organized into Ohio Volunteer Infantry regiments, along with some men from
southwestern Indiana.
Camp Dennison, named for Governor William Dennison, a Cincinnati
native, was one of three major training sites for Ohio soldiers. Gov.
Dennison, lacking military experience himself, persuaded retired officer
George McClellan to command the entire Ohio militia. McClellan (who later
went on to command the Army of the Potomac) and his wife found to their
surprise that Cincinnati residents were "really quite Eastern and
quite civilized".
McClellan's task was to create an army out of nothing.
Every hamlet in Ohio, seized with anti-secessionist fervor, had
established companies which drilled on local grounds.
It was necessary to bring these widely scattered troops to a
central location and prepare them for battle.
George McClellan chose a tract of land on the outskirts of
Cincinnati as the proper location for this task.
The site was level, had railroad access, water nearby (Little Miami
River), a turnpike to Cincinnati (now St. Rt. 126 & 50), and also was
close enough to protect Cincinnati should Kentucky join the Confederacy.
Nimrod Price and Alfred Buckingham, an Indian Hill resident, leased
the land to the the government at very lucrative rates--about $12 to $20 an acre per month.
Early volunteers in spring of 1861 were housed in huts built with
lumber shipped from Cincinnati.
The first month that Camp Dennison was activated, 1500 recruits
lived in unfloored pine 12-man barracks 18 by 12 feet.
Each company had a street, 3 or 4 barracks, and a separate hut for
officers.
The parade grounds were on the eastern side, with Indian Hill above
the recruits to the west. Soon Camp Dennison was overpopulated, and
enlistees were housed in tents.
Later the smaller barracks were replaced with buildings 100 by 22
feet with three-tiered bunks on each side.
Each barracks housed an entire company and had a kitchen and two
stoves--a great improvement over the earlier huts.
In November, 1861, the first cavalry regiments to train at Camp
Dennison arrived (including the 4th, 5th, and 12th cavalries).
The 12th was famous for its regimental band mounted on snow white
horses. Indian
Hill residents loyal to the Union often took outings to Camp Dennison to
watch their men in uniform drill and to bring food and clothes.
Early companies who trained at Camp Dennison had different
backgrounds. The all-German 9th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, known as
"Die Neuner", used German as their language in drills.
The Irish regiment, the 10th Volunteer Infantry, commanded by
William Lytle, was nicknamed the "Bloody Tinth".
Uniforms were not available at the beginning of the war, and most
regiments used their civilian clothes.
However, some pre-war militia companies had distinctive parade
uniforms with red flannel shirts and black pants. 
Each unit was responsible for its own food and laundry.
Pay was $13 a month in greenbacks, but the sutler of the camp
provided tokens in exchange for the large paper bills.
Staples of the camp diet were rice, potatoes, bacon, and coffee,
but occasionally chicken (perhaps from an Indian Hill farmer) was
available. Often a company hired a cook or laundress; and officers
frequently brought to camp their own domestic help, some of whom remained
after the war as residents of the area..
With as many as 12,000 men at Camp Dennison at one time, tension
existed and clashes occurred.
Letters home described the constant "rane" (sic) , and
called the site "Mud Lake."
There was a rivalry between the
German 9th and the Irish 10th and dissatisfaction among recruits on
a 3-month enlistment who felt those serving 3 years were given
preferential treatment.
Sometimes, to get away from the Camp, soldiers walked up Indian
Hill to get a birds eye view of their encampment.
Despite the overcrowded conditions, coarse diet, and infighting,
Camp Dennison managed to train thousands of recruits.
The command of this difficult post changed frequently, with 18
commandants during the four years of the war.
After the Battle of Shiloh (April 1862), many wounded were
transported to Camp Dennison for treatment.
There had been a hospital barracks in Camp Dennison all along, with
Dr. Alfred Buckingham in charge, treating various complaints and
illnesses--the most serious of which was measles.
Common medicines were calomel, quinine, or whiskey.
As men injured in battle returned to the camp, more surgeons were
engaged.
Camp Dennison served as a camp and a hospital for the rest of the
Civil War.
The soldiers who had drilled there returned to be mustered out.
Their ranks were thinned, but the Union was restored; and in
September, 1865, Camp Dennison was deactivated.
At least one of the houses on the hillside overlooking Camp
Dennison still remains and is in use today as an Indian Hill home.
Also, materials from some of the camp structures that were razed
after the Civil War went into Indian Hill farm homes and barns--remnants of a
once booming military camp. |