Captain Gold T. Curtis Gold T. Curtis

Name: Gold T. Curtis
Company: K
Enlisted January 7, 1862; died July 24, 1862, at St. Louis, Missouri
Birth
  • Date: August 16, 1821
  • Place: Morrisville, New York
Mustered In
  • Date: January 7, 1862
  • Rank: Private
  • Age: about 38
  • Residence prior to military service: New York; Stillwater, Washington County, Minnesota
  • Vocation prior to military service: Lawyer, collection agent (1852-1862)

Death
  • Date: July 24, 1862
  • Place: St. Louis, Missouri
  • Burial: Stillwater, Washington County, Minnesota

Gold T. Curtis Biography and Civil War Narrative

Gold Tompkins Curtis was born August 16, 1821, in Morrisville, New York. His parents were John G. and Ruth (Bartlett) Curtis. In 1839 he graduated from Hamilton College in Clinton, New York.

While still in New York state, Gold T. Curtis began practicing law. He married Mary Abigail Anderson of Belleville, New York in 1849. They had a daughter, Jennie, born about 1851-52.

In 1853, Gold and Mary Curtis moved to Stillwater, Washington County, Minnesota, where Gold continued practicing law and also invested in real estate. He held offices of district attorney and probate judge, and was also a member of the constitutional convention of 1857. That same year Gold and Mary had a son, Gold T. Curtis, Jr., who would later become a banker in Great Falls, Montana.

At the time of the 1860 U.S. Census, 35-year-old attorney Gold T. Curtis lived in Stillwater, Minnesota, with his 30-year-old wife, Mary A. Curtis, his 8-year-old daughter, Jennie O. Curtis, and his 3-year-old son, Gold.

James Taylor Dunn, in his book The St. Croix: Midwest Border River, includes a chapter focusing on a few significant people from along the banks of the St. Croix River in a chapter dubbed "River Rats and Village Folk." One section of that chapter, namely, "They Buried Him with a Great Parade" focuses on Gold T. Curtis. Dunn describes the high reputation that Curtis gained for himself as a lawyer:

His forensic abilities were considered exceptional both in and out of the courtroom. The Hudson North Star in May, 1855, reported that his handling of a Wisconsin murder trial showed that Curtis possessed a "mind ingenious." It was generally conceded, too, that he was without a rival in the conduct of a lawsuit and as a pleader in open court -- never losing his self-possession or forgetting the one objective that he would win the case. [page 228]

Dunn also describes Curtis's dedication to the "Union cause":

"Slavery must fall," the Stillwater lawyer told his minister, the Reverend R. C. Bull. "I want a hand in it. I want it said when I am gone that I aided and participated in this great struggle." Late in December, 1861, Curtis abandoned his legal practice and at great personal expense opened a recruiting office. He was eminently successful in assembling a full company of area men for the Fifth Regiment of Minnesota Infantry.

One of the men that Curtis recruited was his own partner, John P. Houston. Gold T. Curtis enlisted as a private in Company K of the 5th Minnesota on January 7, 1862. He was officially appointed Captain of the company on April 30, 1862. John Houston was named First Lieutenant. About May 13, 1862, Captain Curtis and his company left Fort Snelling and headed south along with Companies A, E, F, G, H, and I. By the time they left Minnesota, a number of the volunteers had already deserted at Fort Snelling: Alexander Kennedy (March 24), Thomas Clark (before April 30), Peter Le Blanc (April 30), Michael Green (May 8), William Carrey (May 10), James Black, Sr. (May 12), and Gabriel Olson (prior to May 13). An 18-year-old musician, William Mathews, was retained in Minnesota by civil authorities on May 13. The Company was at St. Louis, Missouri on May 18-19, and four more enlisted men deserted: John Leary, Cornelius McGuire, Cornelius O'Grady, Patrick O'Leary.

The 5th Minnesota Regiment reported to General John Pope near Corinth, Mississippi, on May 24, where they were attached to the Second Brigade (Loomis), Second Division (Stanley), Army of Mississippi (Pope). Just four days later they were engaged in the Battle of Farmington.
The Siege of Corinth -- a vital rail center -- had begun on April 29 under the command of Major General Henry W. Halleck. Taking Corinth was Halleck's follow-up objective to the Union victory at Shiloh on April 6-7. Halleck used a slow, deliberate "offensive entrenchment" approach to Corinth, fortifying after each advance. A battle at Farmington on May 28 was just one of several encounters in the tedious process. Company K suffered at least two significant casualties at Farmington: the death of William Blackburn and the wounding of Henry Base. Brigadier General David S. Stanley commanding the Second Division submitted the following report of the activities of May 28th:

    On the 28th my division moved forward 1 1/4 miles and halted near the White House on Bridge Creek, presenting a diagonal double line to Corinth, the right flank nearest the enemy's main work and the front facing a large earthwork battery erected by the enemy south of the Memphis and Charleston Railroad. This battery was silent for several hours until about noon.
    I directed Dees' and Maurice's batteries to open upon the position, and was soon answered by four guns from the rebel battery. Notwithstanding their fire, which mostly passed over the heads of our men, the work of intrenching was carried on until about 3 o'clock p.m., when the enemy, who had previously cut roads through the swamp and across Bridge Creek, approached in three column and attacked our right, their battery at the time plying us with round shot and shell. Of how this was met and repulsed a full report has been made to the general commanding the army. Suffice to say that the result was satisfactory to the Second Division. We had to deplore the loss of some gallant men, but in turn we buried over 50 of the enemy in a space of 3 acres, and the lesson they received permitted our pickets to remain in peace during the forty-eight hours we remained in that place. My division was the advanced salient point of the line investing Corinth, and the energy and industry of our troops made our position so strong by the morning of the 29th that it would have been a bold enemy that would have disturbed us. [Official Records, Chapter XXII: Series 1, vol 10, Part 1 (Shiloh), pp. 722-723]

During the night of May 29, the Confederate Army snuck out of Corinth, and Union patrols entered on May 30 finding it abandoned by the Confederates. The 5th Minnesota marched south in pursuit of the withdrawing Confederates to Tuscumbia Creek on May 30, and on June 2 they continued on to Booneville. They returned toward Corinth on Wednesday and Thursday, June 11 and 12, settling in at Camp Clear Creek. The march in the hot Mississippi sun had been a challenge for the Minnesota soldiers who were accustomed to a cooler climate. Camp Clear Creek became the Regiment's home until August. Unfortunately the toll taken by the heat and the camp conditions was greater on the Regiment than the battle on May 28 or many of the subsequent battles. Lucius F. Hubbard described the conditions:

The regiment did not enjoy life much at Camp Clear Creek. It was an unhealthy locality. Disease lurked in the earth and in the air, and its seeds became implanted in the constitutions of many of the men. [Minnesota in the Civil and Indian Wars, Volume I, page 261]

On July 10, 1862, Governor Alexander Ramsey wrote a letter to Lieutenant Governor Ignatious Donnelly in St. Paul, Minnesota,
while visiting the 4th and 5th Minnesota regiments in Mississippi. He reported that Captain Curtis was ill and had left for home the previous day. Having received furlough from General Rosecrans, Curtis traveled to St. Louis, Missouri, where he was met by his wife. Gold T. Curtis died of dysentery in St. Louis on July 24, 1862. His remains were brought back to Stillwater, Minnesota, and interred with military honors on August 2, 1862.

The Minnesota Historical Society has in its collections the "Gold T. Curtis and family papers, 1842-1901." Included in the papers are correspondence and related legal and financial papers (1842-1901), Washington County (Minn.) township plats (undated), diaries (1854-1859), daybook and ledgers (1843-1862), cash books (1853-1861) and other materials (1853-1862) created by Gold and Mary Curtis.





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