Edmund Joy Collection: Collections in :60 Seconds

 

This segment of the Old State House Museum Collections in :60 Seconds discusses the Edmund Joy Collection.  Edmund Joy was a Union officer during the Civil War and spent roughly two years stationed in Little Rock, Arkansas.   Joy was a lawyer, a businessman, and a good friend of General Frederick Steele.  The Old State House museum houses the Joy Collection, which contains letters, his diaries, photographs, and even Joy's uniform.  This episode is a very brief look at the Joy Collection, and as such, I'd be remiss if I didn't provide more information.  To look at more of the Joy Collection on our online collection website, eMuseum, click the links below:

eMuseum - 1996.003 - Joy accession
eMuseum - 1998.004 and 1998.049 - Joy accession

For those of you that would prefer to read a more detailed biography, here is an excerpt from History of Iowa by Benjamin F. Gue:
        EDMUND L. JOY was born at Albany, New York, October 1, 1835, and was educated at Anthony's Classical Institute, Albany Academy and the University of Rochester. He studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1857 and immediately thereafter removed to Iowa, making his home at Keokuk where he entered upon practice. Later he settled in Ottumwa where he was chosen city attorney in 1860. At the beginning of the Civil War he was active in raising troops and upon the organization of the Thirty-sixth Regiment of Iowa Volunteers he was elected captain of Company B. He participated in the campaigns in Tennessee, the siege of Vicksburg and the Yazoo Pass expedition, taking part in the engagement at Fort Pemberton. At the Battle of Helena he commanded the left wing of the regiment and was in the Little Rock campaign. In 1864 he was appointed by President Lincoln Judge Advocate, with the rank of major, and assigned to the Seventh Army Corps, serving in the Department of Arkansas. He assisted in the organization of the judicial system of the State under reconstruction and aided in the reestablishment of the State government after the close of the war, under a new Constitution. After retiring from the service he removed to Newark, New Jersey, where he served in the Legislature of that State in 1871-2. He was a delegate to the Republican National Convention in 1880and in 1884-5 he was a Government director of the Union Pacific Railroad Company by appointment of President Arthur. Mr. Joy died at Newark, New Jersey, February 14, 1892.

0 comments:

Post a Comment