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ORIGINAL SIGNED CIVIL WAR CDV 74TH OHIO COL. GRANVILLE MOODY MINISTER CAMP CHASE

$ 419.76

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Condition: Used
  • Original/Reproduction: Original
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Conflict: Civil War (1861-65)
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States

    Description

    Up for sale is a rare original Autographed Civil War CDV image of Colonel and later Brig General Granville Moody of the 74th Ohio Infantry O.V.I. Granville Moody Enlisted on 12/10/1861 as a Colonel and was commissioned into Field and Staff of the 74th Ohio. He resigned on 5/16/1863. He was also commandant at Camp Chase Prison in 1862. He later rose to the rank of Brig General and was referred to as the Fighting Parson for his bravery at the battle of Stones River Tenn.
    The CDV image is is nice condition with minimal fading. Edges and corners show very little to no wear. On the rear signed by Granville Moody himself, reads: Col. Moody OVM. > M.Witt Columbus, Ohio Photographer. Great image to add to your collection of one the harder figures to find of the American Civil War.
    Please view photo's for condition, and ask any questions before close of auction. Thank you
    No out of country shipping. > Sorry
    Granville Moody (1812-1887) –
    Moody was born in Portland, Maine, the son of William and Harriet Brooks Moody.  He moved to Ohio at the age of eighteen and became a Methodist minister in 1833.  Her served at the Greene Street M.E. Church c. 1857-1861 and c. 1863-1865.  In 1862, he was commissioned a colonel and took command of the 74
    th
    Ohio Volunteer Infantry Regiment which had formed in Xenia.  In 1862, he also served as the commandant of Camp Chase, a prisoner of war camp located west of Columbus.  While serving with his regiment in Tennessee, he participated in the Battle of Stone River.  For his bravery during the battle he became known as the “Fighting Parson”.  He resigned his commission in May of 1863 and returned to his position of pastor at Greene Street Church.  Moody would be awarded the rank of Brevet Brigadier General in March of 1865.  At a convention in Philadelphia in c. 1863-64, Moody met President Lincoln.  Never afraid of expressing his opinion, Moody was a featured speaker at a local Republican Union Party rally in 1863.  He responded to comments about southern sympathizers having their rights trampled upon, “Rights! Rights!  Let me tell you, my friends, that the only rights those people have is to be hanged in this world and damned in the next.”  Reverend Moody used his brief meeting with Lincoln to later request a political favor.  Moody wrote a letter to the president in March of 1865 requesting the appointment of Joseph M. Patterson as the Piqua postmaster.  Moody’s letter relates that First Sergeant Patterson (Company A, 110
    th
    Regiment) had lost his arm after the Battle of the Wilderness.  Lincoln granted Moody’s request and Patterson served as Piqua’s postmaster from 1865 to 1879.  Paterson died in 1906.  In June of 1865, Rev. Moody opened the Ohio Republican Union Party Convention in Columbus.  Rev. Moody retired from the active ministry in 1883 and wrote his autobiography, published in 1890, entitled,
    A Life’s Retrospect.