Hardtack Described

For both Billy Yanks and Johnny Rebs, a common food was hardtack. Hardtack was a roughly three-inch by three-inch square and quarter-inch thick cracker or biscuit baked from unleavened flour, water, and salt. It was inexpensive and durable, qualities making it suitable for military campaigning.

Although hardtack was often a source of energy and sustenance during the Civil War, it usually was a target of scorn for the soldiers. Here on August 1, 1863 Sergeant Lawrence Van Alstyne, of the 128th New York Infantry U.S.A., describes hardtack in an entry from his diary:

“A year ago to-day I cradled rye for Theron Wilson, and I remember we had chicken pie for dinner with home-made beer to wash it down, To-day I have hard-tack. Have I ever described hard-tack to you? … In size they are about like a common soda cracker, and in thickness about like two of them…. But… The cracker eats easy, almost melts in the mouth, while hard-tack is harder and tougher than so much wood. I don’t know what the word “tack” means, but the “hard” I have long understood….. Very often they are mouldy, and most always wormy. We knock them together and jar out the worms, and the mould we cut or scrape off. Sometimes we soak them until soft and then fry them in pork grease, but generally we smash them up in pieces and grind away until either the teeth or the hard-tack gives up. I know why Dr. Cole examined our teeth so carefully when we passed through the medical mill at Hudson.”

Civil War hardtack from 1862.

Civil War hardtack from 1862.

Preserved hardtack from U.S. Civil War, Wentworth Museum, Pensacola, Florida.
Photo by Infrogmation, Infrogmation of New Orleans

The caption of the hardtack picture reads:
Hardtack from Atlanta area, 1862.
T.T. Wentworth, Jr. Collection
The standard Army ration of bread was issued as hardtack, which was supposed to have a longer shelf life than regular bread. The crackers were often so wormy that soldiers nicknamed them “wormcastles.”

John D. Billings Of The Army of the Potomac Describes Hardtack

“I will speak of the rations more in detail, beginning with the hard bread, or, to use the name by which it was known in the Army of the Potomac, Hardtack. What was hardtack? It was a plain flour and water biscuit. Two which I have in my possession as mementos measure three and one-eighth by two and seven-eighths inches, and are nearly half an inch thick. Although these biscuits were furnished to organizations by weight, they were dealt out to the men by number, nine constituting a ration in some regiments, and ten in others; but there were usually enough for those who wanted more, as some men would not draw them. While hardtack was nutritious, yet a hungry man could eat his ten in a short time and still be hungry. When they were poor and fit objects for the soldiers’ wrath, it was due to one of three conditions: First, they may have been so hard that they could not be bitten; it then required a very strong blow of the fist to break them. The cause of this hardness it would be difficult for one not an expert to determine. This variety certainly well deserved their name. They could not be soaked soft, but after a time took on the elasticity of gutta-percha.

“The second condition was when they were mouldy or wet, as sometimes happened, and should not have been given to the soldiers. I think this condition was often due to their having been boxed up too soon after baking. It certainly was frequently due to exposure to the weather. It was no uncommon sight to see thousands of boxes of hard bread piled up at some railway station or other place used as a base of supplies, where they only imperfectly sheltered from the weather, and too often not sheltered at all. The failure of inspectors to do their full duty was one reason that so many of this sort reached the rank and file of the service.

“The third condition was when from storage they had become infested with maggots and weevils. These weevils were, in my experience, more abundant than the maggots. They were a little, slim, brown bug an eighth of an inch in length, and were great bores on a small scale, having the ability to completely riddle the hardtack. I believe they never interfered with the hardest variety.”

“But hardtack was not so bad an article of food, even when traversed by insects, as may be supposed. Eaten in the dark, no one could tell the difference between it and hardtack that was untenanted. It was no uncommon occurrence for a man to find the surface of his pot of coffee swimming with weevils, after breaking up hardtack in it, which had come out of the fragments only to drown; but they were easily skimmed off, and left no distinctive flavor behind. If a soldier cared to do so, he could expel the weevils by heating the bread at the fire. The maggots did not budge in that way.”

…John D. Billings was a soldier in the Army of the Potomac during the Civil War. These quotes are from his book, Hardtack and Coffee – A Soldier’s Life In The Civil War, where he describes hardtack and its common problems.

Here is a post with a recipe for hardtack. Try it, you might like it!

Hardtack, Weevils and Other Enemies

by Jim Surkamp

 

My book 501 Civil War Quotes and Notes features quotes made before, during, and after the Civil War. Each quote has an informative note to explain the circumstances and background of the quote. Learn Civil War history from the spoken words and writings of the military commanders, political leaders, the Billy Yanks and Johnny Rebs who fought in the battles, the abolitionists who strove for the freedom of the slaves, the descriptions of battles, and the citizens who suffered at home. Their voices tell us the who, what, where, when, and why of the Civil War. Available as a Kindle device e-book or as a paperback. Get 501 Civil War Quotes and Notes now!

 

Civil War Christmas Days

Thomas Nast was a cartoonist and magazine illustrator. In 1860, Nast created campaign posters for Abraham Lincoln during Lincoln’s bid for the presidency. In 1862, Thomas Nast was working for Harper’s Weekly magazine and he was given the task to draw the Harper’s Weekly Christmas cover. Supposedly, President Lincoln asked Nast to draw a picture of Union troops being visited by Santa Claus.

Nast met Lincoln’s Santa Claus magazine cover request. The January 3, 1863 Harper’s Weekly magazine cover has Santa Claus on his sleigh passing out presents to Union soldiers at a snowy United States Army camp.

Civil War Christmas

Civil War Christmas

The soldiers are happy to have Santa visit their camp and two of them sit in the snow behind Santa’s sleigh as they open and play with their presents. Other soldiers are gathered with Santa as he gives them their Christmas gifts. A soldier on the left of the illustration has received a present of socks, socks would have been a greatly appreciated gift for a soldier during the Civil War. A sign with the words “Welcome Santa Claus” is prominent in the background, and in the distance you can see other soldiers coming on their way to see Santa Claus. Santa’s suit has stars and stripes on it, and at the bottom the magazine illustration has the words; “Santa Claus In Camp.”

Nast’s Harper’s Weekly Civil War Santa Claus cover is a patriotic theme for the magazine. Before January 3, 1863 both Antietam and Fredericksburg had claimed many Union lives, and without much, or any, progress for the Union war effort. The mood of the Union at this time was gloomy, on both the battle and home fronts. The Harper’s Weekly Civil War Santa Claus cover was designed with hope that it might raise Union morale. Nast would go on to draw many more Santa Claus illustrations for many years.

In general, wintertime was a time of military inaction during the Civil War as the armies of both the North and South would hunker down in camp to wait out winter. The winter weather, with its resultant snow, rain, ice, sleet, mud and muck and the complications of moving troops in these conditions made campaigns mostly impractical in Civil War times.

Despite the entertaining story of Thomas Nast, Abraham Lincoln, and Santa Claus on the cover of Harper’s Weekly, on Christmas day during the Civil War, fighting and dying did not pause for celebration of the Savior’s birth. Mankind’s sinful nature was fully demonstrated on Christmas day as the Civil War was fought.

Events of Civil War Christmas Days:

1860 – A Tuesday.

  • This quote is actually from before the Civil War began, but these words written in a Camden, Arkansas diary reveal the concerns of people in December, 1860 as conflict between the North and South seemed inevitable. People were not at peace:
    Another Christmas has come around in the circle of time but it is not a day of rejoicing. Some of the usual ceremonies are going on, but there is gloom on the thoughts and countenance of all the better portion of our people.

1861 – A Wednesday.

  • In Washington, D.C., the Cabinet met to discuss Mason and Slidell, two Confederate commissioners to Britain who were being held in Boston after they were removed from a British ship by a Union warship.
  • President Lincoln and his family had a dinner at the White House for guests .
  • Confederate Thomas Jonathan “Stonewall” Jackson celebrated Christmas with his wife in Winchester, Virginia. This would prove to be Jackson’s last Christmas spent with his wife. Jackson would learn in 1863 at Chancellorsville that those who live by the sword, die by the sword.
  • The Confederate schooner William H. Northrup was captured by the U.S.S. Fernandina off Cape Fear, North Carolina.
  • Skirmishing took place at Cherry, in western Virginia, and there was a Union expedition in operation close to Danville, Missouri.

1862 – A Thursday.

  • President Lincoln spent Christmas day in Washington, D.C. hospitals visiting injured soldiers.
  • Confederate raider John Hunt Morgan and his men spent Christmas day continuing their Kentucky raid with fighting at Green’s Chapel and Bear Wallow.
  • William Tecumseh Sherman and his corps were on their way to Vicksburg, they were near Milliken’s Bend, north of Vicksburg.
  • A skirmish occurred near Warrenton, Virginia.
  • A Union reconnaissance took place from Martinsburg to Charles Town in western, Virginia.

1863 – A Friday.

  • Bear Inlet, North Carolina Confederate salt works were destroyed by Union troops.
  • Beverly, West Virginia was reached by Union cavalry (the State of West Virginia had now been made from western Virginia).
  • Union gunboats were busy in the Stono River, in South Carolina.
  • The U.S.S. Marblehead came under heavy fire from Confederate batteries located on John’s Island, near Charleston, South Carolina. The U.S.S. Marblehead was hit twenty times, and the U.S.S. Pawnee and the mortar schooner C.P. Williams returned fire on the Confederate island battery. After an hour the firing stopped and the Confederates left. Two eight-inch sea-coast howitzers were captured by the Yankees.

1864 – A Sunday.

  • The Federal bombardment of Fort Fisher, North Carolina continued with nearly sixty warships in action. The Yankees landed two miles north of the fort, took a battery, and moved close to Fort Fisher. As darkness came, Confederates came in from the north. The Federal fleet eventually wound up returning to Hampton Roads, and the last of their troops left Fort Fisher on December 27. At the entrance to the Cape Fear River, Fort Fisher remained under Rebel control, for now.
  • In Fort Valley, Georgia Private Jackman of “The Orphan Brigade” wrote of his Christmas day:
    For breakfast had fresh pork, biscuit, sweet potatoes, etc. Cool disagreeable morning. At noon cold rain commenced falling. Bad prospect for a Christmas dinner — can’t cook in the rain. Slept all evening. Rain pouring down. Has been a most gloomy day — being the fourth birth day spent in the army. At night sat up late chatting around a smoky fire built under the sheds in the rain …