Artifact label: “Not a thing was saved” -- Lieutenant H. D. McLellan Letter from Lieutenant H.D. McLellan to “Binnie” McLellan, January 1862. Union Lieutenant H.D. McLellan wrote home about the plundering of a Confederate commodore’s estate in Virginia, reporting that the commodore’s “family left in a hurry,” leaving a “large amount of Plate, the furniture of the best kind, ladies dresses of rich materials,” and “the Commodore’s uniforms,” to the discretion of the Union soldiers who made sure that “Not a thing was saved.” While plundering has been depicted as an example of northern aggression, this letter suggests pillaging may have had multiple purposes, done out of need for supplies and shelter as well as perhaps representing greed, and a...