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Paper
No. 1. -- The Outfit Modified
With the men who composed the Army of Northern Virginia will die the memory of
those little things which made the Confederate soldier peculiarly what he was.
The historian who essays to write the
"grand movements" will hardly stop to tell how the hungry private
fried his bacon, baked his biscuit and smoked his pipe; how he was changed from
time to time by the necessities of the service, until the gentleman, the
student, the merchant, the mechanic and the farmer were merged into a perfect,
all enduring, never tiring and invincible soldier. To preserve these little
details, familiar to all soldiers, and by them not thought worthy of mention to
others, because of their familiarity, but still dear to them and always the
substance of their "war talks," is the object of this paper.
The volunteer of 1861 made extensive
preparations for the field. Boots, he thought, were an absolute necessity, and
the heavier the soles and longer the tops the better. His pants were stuffed
inside the tops of his boots, of course. A double-breasted coat, heavily wadded,
with two rows of big brass buttons and a long skirt, was considered comfortable.
A small stiff cap, with a narrow brim, took the place of the comfortable
"felt" or the shining and towering tile worn in civil life.
Then over all was a huge overcoat,
long and heavy, with a cape reaching nearly to the waist. On his back he
strapped a knapsack containing a full stock of underwear, soap, towels, comb,
brush, looking glass, toothbrush, paper and envelopes, pens, ink, pencils,
blacking, photographs, smoking and chewing tobacco, pipes, twine string and
cotton strips for wounds and other emergencies, needles and thread, buttons,
knife, fork and spoon, and many other things as each man's idea of what he was
to encounter varied. On the outside of the knapsack, solidly folded, were two
great blankets and a rubber or oilcloth. This knapsack, &c., weighed from
fifteen to twenty five pounds, and sometimes even more. All seemed to think it
was impossible to have on too many or too heavy clothes, or to have too many
conveniences, and each had an idea that to be a good soldier he must be provided
against every possible emergency.
In addition to the knapsack, each man
had a haversack, more or less costly, some of cloth and some of fine morocco,
and stored with provisions always, as though he expected any moment to receive
orders to march across the great desert, and supply his own wants on the way. A
canteen was thought indispensable, and at the outset it was thought very prudent
to keep it full of water. Many, expecting terrific hand to hand encounters,
carried revolvers, and even bowie knives.
Merino shirts (and flannel) were
thought to be the right thing, but experience demonstrated the contrary.
In addition to each man's private
luggage, each mess, generally composed of from five to ten men who were drawn
together by similar tastes and associations, had its outfit, consisting of a
large camp chest containing skillet, frying pan, coffee boiler, bucket for lard,
coffee box, salt box, sugar box, meal box, flour box, knives, forks, spoons,
plates, cups, &c., &c. These chests were so large that 8 or 10 of them
filled up an army wagon, and were so heavy that two strong men had all they
could do to get one of them into the wagon. In addition to the chest each mess
owned an axe, water bucket, and bread tray. Then the tents of each company, and
little sheet iron stoves, and stove pipe, and the trunks and valises of the
company officers, made an immense pile of stuff, so that each company had a
small wagon train of its own.
All thought money was absolutely
necessary, and for awhile rations were disdained, and the mess supplied with the
best that could be bought with the mess fund. Gloves were thought to be good
things to have in winter time, , and the favorite style was buck gauntlets with
long cuffs.
Quite a large number had a
"boy" along to do the cooking and washing. Think of it! a Confederate
soldier with a body servant all his own, to bring him a drink of water, black
his boots, dust his clothes, cook his corn bread and bacon, and put wood on his
fire. Never was there fonder admiration than these darkies displayed for their
masters.
Their chief delight and glory was to
praise the courage and good looks of "Marse Tom," and prophesy great
things about his future. Many a ringing laugh and shout of fun originated in the
queer remarks, shining countenance and glistening teeth of this now forever
departed character.
It is amusing to think of the follies
of the early part of the war, as illustrated by the outfits of the volunteers.
They were so heavily clad, and so burdened with all manner of things, that a
march was torture, and the wagon trains were so immense in proportion to the
number of troops, that it would have been impossible to guard them in an enemy's
country. Subordinate officers thought themselves entitled to transportation for
trunks and even mattresses and folding bedsteads, and the privates were as
ridiculous in their demands.
This much by way of introduction. The
change came rapidly and stayed not until the transformation was complete. Nor
was the change attributable alone to the orders of the general officers. The men
soon learned the inconvenience and danger of so much luggage, and as they became
more experienced, vied with each other in reducing themselves to light marching
trim.
Experience soon demonstrated that
boots were not agreeable on a long march. They were heavy and irksome, and when
the heels were worn a little one sided, the wearer would find his ankle twisted
nearly out of joint by every unevenness of the road. When thoroughly wet, it was
a laborious undertaking to get them off, and worse to get them on in time to
answer the morning roll call. And so good, strong, broad bottomed and big flat
heeled brogues or brogans succeeded the boots, and were found much more
comfortable and agreeable, easier put on and off, and altogether the most
sensible.
A short waisted, single breasted
jacket usurped the place of the long tail coat, and became universal. The enemy
noticed this peculiarity, and called the Confederates gray jackets, which name
was immediately transferred to those lively creatures, which were the constant
admirers and inseparable companions of the Boys in Gray and Blue.
Caps were destined to hold out longer
than some other uncomfortable things, but they finally yielded to the demands of
comfort and common sense, and a good soft felt hat was worn instead. A man who
has never been a soldier does not know, nor indeed can know, the amount of
comfort there is in a good soft hat in camp, and how utterly useless is a
"soldier hat" as they are generally made. Why the Prussians, with all
their experience, wear their heavy, unyielding helmets, and the French their
little caps, is a mystery to a Confederate who has enjoyed the comfort of an old
slouch.
Overcoats an inexperienced man would
think an absolute necessity for men exposed to the rigors of a Northern Virginia
winter, but they grew scarcer and scarcer. They were found a great inconvenience
and burden. The men came to the conclusion that the trouble of carrying them hot
days outweighed the comfort of having them when the cold day arrived. Besides
they found that life in the open air hardened them to such an extent, that the
changes in the temperature were not felt to any degree. Some clung to their
overcoats to the last, but the majority got tired lugging them around, and
either discarded them altogether, or trusted to capturing one about the time it
would be needed. Nearly every overcoat in the army in the latter years was one
of Uncle Sam's, captured from his boys.
The knapsack vanished early in the
struggle. It was found that it was inconvenient to "change" the
underwear too often, and the disposition not to change grew, as the knapsack was
found to gall the back and shoulders, and weary the man before half the march
was accomplished. It was found that the better way was to dress out and out, and
wear that outfit until the enemy's knapsacks or the folks at home supplied a
change. Certainly it did not pay to carry around clean clothes while waiting for
the time to use them.
Very little washing was done, as a
matter of course. Clothes once given up were parted with forever. There were
good reasons for this. Cold water would not cleanse them or destroy the vermin,
and hot water was not always to be had. . One blanket to each man was found to
be as much as could be carried, and amply sufficient for the severest weather.
This was carried generally by rolling it lengthwise, with the rubber cloth
outside, tying the ends of the roll together, and throwing the loop thus made
over the left shoulder with the ends fastened together hanging under the right
arm.
The haversack held its own to the
last, and was found practical and useful. It very seldom, however, contained
rations, but was used to carry all the articles generally carried in the
knapsack; of course the stock was small. Somehow or other, many men managed to
do without the haversack, and carried absolutely nothing but what they wore and
had in their pockets. The infantry threw away their heavy cap boxes and
cartridge boxes, and carried their caps and cartridges in their pockets.
Canteens were very useful at times, but they were as a general thing discarded.
They were not much used to carry water, but were found useful when the men were
driven to the necessity of foraging, for conveying buttermilk, cider, sorghum;
&c., to camp. A good strong tin cup was found better than a canteen, as it
was easier to fill at a well or spring, and was serviceable as a boiler for
making coffee when the column halted for the night.
Revolvers were found to be about as
useless as heavy lumber as a private soldier could carry, and early in the war
were sent home to be used by the women and children in protecting themselves
from insult and violence at the hands of the ruffians who prowled about the
country shirking duty.
Strong cotton was adopted in place of
flannel and merino, for two reasons. First, because easier to wash, and second,
because the vermin did not propagate so rapidly in cotton as in wool.
Common white cotton shirts and
drawers proved the best that could be used by the private soldier.
Gloves to any but a mounted man were
found useless, worse than useless. With the gloves on, it was impossible to
handle an axe well, or buckle harness, or load a musket, or handle a rammer at
the piece. Wearing them was found to be simply a habit, and so, on the principle
that the less luggage the less labor, they were discarded.
The camp chest soon vanished. The
Brigadiers and Major Generals even found them too troublesome, and soon they
were left entirely to the quartermasters and commissaries. One skillet and a
couple of frying pans, a bag for flour or meal, another bag for salt, sugar and
coffee, divided by a knot tied between, served the purpose as well. The skillet
passed from mess to mess. Each mess generally owned a frying pan, but often one
served a company.
The oilcloth was found to be as good
as the wooden tray for making up the dough. The water bucket held its own to the
last!
Tents were rarely seen. All
the poetry about the "tented field" died. Two men slept
together, each had a blanket and an oilcloth. One oilcloth went next to the
ground. The two laid on this, covered themselves with two blankets, protected
from the rain with the second oilcloth on top, and slept very comfortably
through rain, snow or hail, as it might be.
Very little money was seen in camp.
The men did not expect, did not care for, or get often any pay, and they were
not willing to deprive the old folks at home of their little supply; so they
learned: to do without any money.
When rations got short and were
getting shorter, it became necessary to dismiss the darkey servants. Some,
however, became company servants, instead of private institutions, and held out
faithfully to the end, cooking the rations away in the rear, and at the risk of
life carrying them to the line of battle to be devoured with voracity by their
"young mahsters."
Reduced to the minimum, the private
soldier consisted of one man, one hat, one jacket, one shirt, one pair of pants,
one pair of drawers, one pair of shoes, and one pair of socks. His baggage was
one blanket, one rubber blanket, and one haversack. The haversack generally
contained smoking tobacco and a pipe and generally a small piece of soap, with
temporary additions of apples, persimmons, blackberries, and such other
commodities as he could pick up on the march.
The company property consisted of two
or three skillets and frying pans, which were sometimes carried in the wagon,
but oftener in the hands of the soldiers. The infantrymen generally preferred to
stick the handle of the frying pan in the barrel of a musket, and so carry it.
The wagon trains were devoted
entirely to the transportation of ammunition and commissary and quartermaster's
stores, which had not been issued. Rations which had become company property,
and the baggage of the men, when they had any, was carried by the men
themselves. If, as was sometimes the case, three days rations were issued at one
time and the troops ordered to cook them and be prepared to march, they did cook
them, and eat them if possible, so as to avoid the labor of carrying
them. It was not such an undertaking either, to eat three days rations in one,
as frequently none had been issued for more than a day, and when issued were cut
down one half.
The infantry found out that bayonets
were not of much use, and did not hesitate to throw them, with the scabbard,
away.
The artillerymen, who started out
with heavy sabers hanging to their belts, stuck them up in the mud as they
marched, and left them for the ordinance officers to pick up and turn over to
the cavalry.
The cavalrymen found sabres very
tiresome when swung to the belt, and adopted the plan of fastening them to the
saddle on the left side, with the hilt in front and in reach of the hand.
Finally sabres got very scarce even among the cavalrymen, who relied more and
more on their short rifles.
No soldiers ever marched with less to
encumber them, and none marched faster or held out longer.
The courage and devotion of the men
rose equal to every hardship and privation, and the very intensity of their
sufferings became a source of merriment. Instead of growling and deserting, they
laughed at their own bare feet, ragged clothes and pinched faces, and weak,
hungry, cold, wet, worried with vermin and itch, dirty, with no hope of reward
or rest, but each fighting on his own personal account, needing not the voice of
any to urge them on, marched cheerfully to meet the well fed and warmly clad
hosts of the enemy.
Paper
No. 2. -- Romantic Ideas Dissipated
Paper 1
| Paper 2 | Paper 3 | Paper 4 | Paper
5
To offer a man promotion in the early part of the war was equivalent to an
insult. The higher the social position, the greater the wealth, the more
patriotic it would be to serve in the humble position of a private; and many men
of education and ability in the various professions, refusing promotion, served
under the command of men greatly their inferiors, mentally, morally, and as
soldiers. It soon became apparent that the country wanted knowledge and ability,
as well as muscle and endurance, and those who had capacity to serve in higher
positions were promoted.
Still it remained true, that inferior
men commanded their superiors in every respect, save one -- Rank; and leaving
out the one difference of rank, the officers and men were about on a par.
It took years to teach the educated
privates in the army that it was their duty to give unquestioning obedience to
officers, because they were such, who were awhile ago their playmates and
associates in business. It frequently happened that the private, feeling hurt by
the stern authority of the officer, would ask him to one side, challenge him to
personal combat, and thrash him well.
After awhile these rambunctious
privates learned all about extra duty, half rations and courts martial. It was
only to conquer this independent resistance of discipline that punishment or
force was necessary. The privates were as willing and anxious to fight and serve
as the officers, and needed no pushing up to their duty.
It is amusing to recall the disgust
with which the men would hear of their assignment to the rear as reserves. They
regarded the order as a deliberate insult, planned by some officer who had a
grudge against their regiment or battery, who had adopted this plan to prevent
their presence in battle, and thus humiliate them. How soon did they learn the
sweetness of a day's repose in the rear!
Another romantic notion, which for
awhile possessed the boys, was that soldiers should not try to be comfortable,
but glory in getting wet, being cold, hungry and tired. So they refused shelter
in houses or barns, and, "like true soldiers," paddled about in the
mud and rain, thinking thereby to serve their country better.
The real troubles had not come, and
they were in a hurry to suffer some. They had not long thus impatiently to wait,
nor could they latterly complain of the want of a chance to "do or
die."
Volunteering for perilous or very
onerous duty was popular at the outset, but as duties of this kind thickened it
began to be thought time enough when the "orders" were peremptory or
the orderly read the "detail."
Another fancy idea was that the
principal occupation of a soldier should be actual conflict with the enemy.
They didn't dream of such a thing as
camping for six months at a time without firing a gun, or marching and
countermarching to mislead the enemy, or driving wagons and ambulances, building
bridges, currying horses, and the thousand commonplace duties of the soldier.
On the other hand, great importance
was attached to some duties which soon became mere drudgery.
Some times the whole detail for guard
-- first, second and third relief -- would make it a point of honor to sit up
the entire night, and watch and listen as though the enemy might pounce on them
at any moment, and hurry them off to prison. Of course they soon learned how
sweet it was, after two hours' walking of the beat, to turn in for four
hours! which seemed to the sleepy man an eternity in anticipation, but only
a brief time in retrospect, when the corporal gave him a "chunk," and
remarked, "Time to go on guard."
Everybody remembers how we used to
talk about "one Confederate whipping a dozen Yankees." Literally true
sometimes, but, generally speaking, two to one made hard work for the boys. They
didn't know at the beginning anything about the advantage the enemy had in being
able to present man for man in front and then send as many more to worry the
flanks and rear. They learned something about this very soon, and had to contend
against it on almost every field they won.
Wounds were in great demand after the
first wounded hero made his appearance. His wound was the envy of thousands of
unfortunates who had not so much as a scratch to boast, and who felt
"small" and of little consequence before the man with a bloody
bandage. Many became despondent and groaned as they thought that perchance after
all they were doomed to go home safe and sound, and hear, for all time, the
praises of the fellow who had lost his arm by a cannon shot, or had his face
ripped by a sabre, or his head smashed with a fragment of shell. After awhile
the wound was regarded as a practical benefit. It secured a furlough of
indefinite length, good eating, the attention and admiration of the fair, and,
if permanently disabling, a discharge. Wisdom, born of experience, soon taught
all hands better sense, and the fences and trees and ditches and rocks became
valuable and eagerly sought after when "the music" of "minnie"
and the roar of the "Napoleon" twelve pounders was heard.
Death on the field, glorious first
and last, was dared for duty's sake, but the good soldier learned to guard his
life, and yield it only at the call of duty.
Only the wisest men, those who had
seen war before, imagined that the war would last more than a few months. The
young volunteers thought one good battle would settle the whole matter; and,
indeed, after "first Manassas" many thought they might as well go
home! The whole North was frightened, and no more armies would dare assail the
soil of Old Virginia. Colonels and brigadiers, with flesh wounds not worthy of
notice, rushed to Richmond to report the victory and the end of the war! They
had "seen sights" in the way of wounded and killed, plunder, &c.,
and according to their views no sane people would try again to conquer the
heroes of that remarkable day.
The newspaper men delighted in
telling the soldiers that the Yankees were a diminutive race, of feeble
constitution, timid as hares, with no enthusiasm, and that they would perish in
short order under the glow of our Southern sun.
Any one who has seen a regiment from
Ohio or Maine knows how true these statements were. And besides the newspapers
did not mention the English, Irish, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Swiss,
Portuguese and Negroes, who were to swell the numbers of the enemy, and as our
army grew less make his larger. True, there was not much fight in all this
rubbish, but they answered well enough for drivers of wagons and ambulances,
guarding stores and lines of communication, and doing all sorts of duty, while
the good material was doing the fighting.
Sherman's army, marching through
Richmond after the surrender of Lee and Johnston, seemed to be composed of a
race of giants, well-fed and well-clad.
Many feared the war would end before
they would have a fair chance to "make a record," and that when
"the cruel war was over" they would have to sit by, dumb, and hear the
more fortunate ones who had "smelt the battle" tell to admiring home
circles the story of the bloody field. Most of these "got in" in time
to satisfy their longings, and "got out" to learn that the man who did
not go, but "kept out" and made money, was more admired and courted
than the "poor fellow" with one leg or arm less than is
"allowed."
It is fortunate for those who
"skulked" that the war ended as it did, for had the South been
successful, the soldiers would have been favored with every mark of distinction
and honor, and they "despised and rejected" as they deserved to be.
While the war lasted it was the
delight of some of the stoutly built fellows to go home for a few days, and kick
and cuff and tongue lash the able bodied bombproofs. How coolly and submissively
they took it all! How "big" they are now!
The rubbish accumulated by the hope
of recognition burdened the soldiers nearly to the end.
England was to abolish the blockade
and send us immense supplies of fine arms, large and small. France was thinking
about landing an imperial force in Mexico, and marching thence to the relief of
the South. But the "Confederate yell" never had an echo in the
Marseillaise, or "God save the Queen," and Old Dixie was destined to
sing her own song without the help even of "Maryland, my Maryland."
The "war with England," which was to give Uncle Sam trouble and the
South an ally, never came.
Those immense balloons which somebody
was always inventing, and which were to sail over the enemy's camps dropping
whole cargoes of explosives, never "tugged" at their anchors or
"sailed majestically away."
As discipline improved and the men
began to feel no longer simply volunteers, but enlisted volunteers, the romantic
devotion which they had felt was succeeded by a feeling of constraint and
necessity, and while the army was in reality very much improved and strengthened
by the change, the soldiers imagined the contrary to be the case. And if
discipline had been pushed to too great an extent, the army would have been
deprived of the very essence of its life and power.
When the officers began to assert
superiority by withdrawing from the messes and organizing "officer's
messes," the bond of brotherhood was weakened; and who will say that the
dignity which was thus maintained was compensation for the loss of personal
devotion as between comrades?
At the outset the fact that men were
in the same company put them somewhat on the same level and produced an almost
perfect bond of sympathy, but as time wore on the various peculiarities and
weaknesses of the men would show themselves, and each company, as a community,
would separate into distinct circles as indifferent to each other, save in the
common cause, as though they had never met as friends.
The pride of the volunteers was
sorely tried by the incoming of conscripts -- the most despised class in the
army -- and their devotion to company and regiment was visibly lessened. They
could not bear the thought of having these men for comrades, and felt the flag
insulted when claimed by one of them as "his flag." It was a great
source of annoyance to the true men, but was a necessity. Conscripts crowded
together in companies, regiments and brigades would have been useless -- but
scattered here and there among the good men, were utilized. And so, gradually,
the pleasure that men had in being associated with others whom they respected as
equals, was taken away and the social aspect of army life seriously marred.
The next serious blow to romance was
the abolishment of election and the appointment of officers. Instead of the
privilege and pleasure of picking out some good hearted, brave comrade and
making him captain, the lieutenant was promoted without the consent of the men,
or, what was harder to bear, some officer hitherto unknown was sent to take
command. This was no doubt better for the service, but it had a serious effect
on the minds of volunteer patriot soldiers, and looked to them too much like
arbitrary power exercised over men who were fighting that very principle. They
frequently had to acknowledge, however, that the officers were all they could
ask, and in many instances became devotedly attached to them.
As the companies became decimated by
disease, wounds, desertions and death, it became necessary to consolidate them,
and so the social pleasures received another blow. Men from the same
neighborhoods and villages, who had been schoolmates together, -- were no longer
in companies, but mingled indiscriminately with all sorts of men from anywhere
and everywhere.
Those who have not served in the army
as privates can form no idea of the extent to which such changes as those just
mentioned effect the spirits and general worth of a soldier. Men who when
surrounded by their old companions were brave and daring soldiers, full of
spirit and hope, when thrust among strangers for whom they cared not and who
cared not for them, became dull and listless, lost their courage and were slowly
but surely "demoralized." They did, it is true, in many cases, stand
up to the last, but they did it on dry principle -- having none of that
enthusiasm and delight in duty which once characterized them.
The Confederate soldier was peculiar
in that he was ever ready to fight, but never ready to submit to the routine
duty and discipline of the camp or the march. The soldiers were determined to be
soldiers after their own notions, and do their duty for the love of it as they
thought best. The officers saw the necessity for doing otherwise, and so the
conflict was commenced and maintained to the end.
It is doubtful whether the Southern
soldier would have submitted to any hardships which were purely the result of
discipline, and, on the other hand, no amount of hardship clearly of necessity
could cool his ardor. And in spite of all this antagonism between the officers
and men, the presence of conscripts, the consolidation of commands, and many
other discouraging facts, the privates in the ranks so conducted themselves that
the historians of the North were forced to call them the finest body of infantry
that was ever assembled. But to know the men, we must see them divested of all
their false notions of soldier life, and enduring the incomparable hardships
which marked the latter half of the war.
Paper No. 3. -- On The March
Paper 1 | Paper
2 | Paper 3 | Paper 4 | Paper 5
It is a common mistake of those who write on subjects familiar to themselves, to
omit that particularity of description and detailed mention which, to one not so
conversant with the matters discussed, is necessary to a clear appreciation of
the meaning of the writer. This mistake is all the more fatal when the writer
lives and writes in one age and his readers live in another.
And so a soldier, writing for the
information of the citizen, should forget his familiarity with the every day
scenes of soldier life and strive to record even those things which seem to him
too common to mention. Who does not know all about the marching of soldiers?
Those who have never marched with them and some who have. The varied experience
of thousands would not tell the whole story of the march. Every man must be
heard before the story is told, and even then the part of those who fell by the
way is wanting. Orders to move! Where? when? what for? -- are the eager
questions of the men as they begin their preparations to march. Generally nobody
can answer, and the journey is commenced in utter ignorance of where it is to
end. But shrewd guesses are made, and scraps of information will be picked up on
the way. The main thought must be to "get ready to move." The orderly
sergeant is shouting "fall in" and there is no time to lose. The
probability is that before you get your blanket rolled up, find your frying pan,
haversack, axe, &c., and "fall in" the roll call will be over, and
some "extra duty" provided. No wonder there is bustle in the camp.
Rapid decisions are to be made between the various conveniences which have
accumulated, for some must be left. One fellow picks up the skillet, holds it
awhile, mentally determining how much it weighs, and what will be the weight of
it after carrying it five miles, and reluctantly, with a half ashamed, sly look,
drops it and takes his place in ranks. Another having added to his store of
blankets too freely, now has to decide which of the two or three he will leave.
The old water bucket looks large and heavy, but one stout hearted, strong armed
man has taken it affectionately to his care.
This is the time to say farewell to
the bread tray, farewell to the little piles of clean straw laid between two
logs, where it was so easy to sleep; farewell to those piles of wood, cut with
so much labor; farewell to the girls in the neighborhood; farewell to the
spring, farewell to "our tree" and "our fire" good bye to
the fellows who are not going, and a general good bye to the very hills and
valleys.
Soldiers commonly threw away the most
valuable articles they possessed. Blankets, overcoats, shoes, bread and meat,
all gave way to the necessities of the march; and what one man threw away would
frequently be the very article another wanted and would immediately pick up. So
there was not much lost after all.
The first hour or so of the march was
generally quite orderly - the men preserving their places in ranks and marching
with a good show of order; but soon some lively fellow whistles an air, somebody
else starts a song, the whole column breaks out with roars of laughter,
"route step" takes the place of order, and the jolly singing,
laughing, talking and joking that follows none could describe.
Now let any young officer dare to
pass along who sports a new hat, coat, saddle, or anything new, or odd, or fine,
and how nicely he is attended to.
The expressions of good natured fun,
or contempt, which one regiment of infantry was capable of uttering in a day for
the benefit of passers by, would fill a volume. As one thing or another in the
dress of the "subject" of their remarks attracted attention, they
would shout, "Come out of that hat! - you can't hide in thar"
"Come out of that coat, come out - there's a man it it" "Come out
of them boots!!" The infantry seemed to know exactly what to say to torment
cavalry and artillery.
If any one on the roadside was simple
enough to recognize and address by name a man in the ranks, the whole column
would kindly respond, and add all sorts of pleasant remarks, such as, "Halloa,
John, here's your brother!" "Bill!!, oh Bill!!!, here's your ma!"
"Glad to see you! -- How's your grandma?" "How-dye do!"
"Come out of that 'biled(boiled-clean) shirt'!"
Troops on the march were generally so
cheerful and gay that an outsider looking on them as they marched would hardly
imagine how they suffered. In summer time, the dust, combined with the heat,
caused great suffering. The nostrils of the men, filled with dust, became dry
and feverish, and even the throat did not escape. The "grit" was felt
between the teeth, and the eyes were rendered almost useless. There was dust in
eyes, mouth, ears and hair. The shoes were full of sand, and penetrating the
clothes, and getting in at the neck, wrists and ankles, the dust, mixed with
perspiration, produced an irritant almost as active as cantharides. The heat was
at times terrific, but the men became greatly accustomed to it, and endured it
with wonderful ease. Their heavy woolen clothes were a great annoyance. Tough
linen or cotton clothes would have been a great relief; indeed, there are many
objections to woolen clothing for soldiers even in winter. The sun produced
great changes in the appearance of the men. Their skins were tanned to a dark
brown or red, their hands black almost, and, added to this the long, uncut beard
and hair, they too burned to a strange color, made them barely recognizable to
the homefolks.
If the dust and the heat were not on
hand to annoy, their very able substitutes were. Mud, cold, rain, snow, hail and
wind took their places. Rain was the greatest discomfort a soldier could have.
It was more uncomfortable than the severest cold with clear weather. Wet
clothes, shoes and blankets; wet meat and bread; wet feet and wet ground; wet
wood to burn, or, rather, not to burn; wet arms and ammunition; wet ground to
sleep on, mud to wade through, swollen creeks to ford, muddy springs, and a
thousand other discomforts attended the rain. There was no comfort on a rainy
day or night except in "bed" - that is, under your blanket and
oilcloth. Cold winds, blowing the rain in the faces of the men, increased the
discomfort. Mud was often so deep as to submerge the horses and mules, and at
times it was necessary for one man or more to extricate another from the mud
holes in the road.
Marching at night, when very dark,
was attended with additional discomforts and dangers, such as falling off
bridges, stumbling into ditches, tearing the face and injuring the eyes against
the bushes and projecting limbs of trees, and getting separated from your own
company and hopelessly lost in the multitude.
Of course, a man lost had no
sympathy. If he dared to ask a question, every man in hearing would answer, each
differently, and then the whole multitude would roar with laughter at the lost
man, and ask him "if his mother knew he was out?"
Very few men had comfortable or
fitting shoes, and less had socks, and, as a consequence, the suffering from
bruised and inflamed feet was terrible. It was a common practice, on long
marches, for the men to take off their shoes and carry them in their hands or
swung over their shoulder.
When large bodies of troops were
moving on the same road the alternate "halt" and "forward"
was very harassing. Every obstacle produced a halt and caused the men at once to
sit and lie down on the road side where shade or grass tempted them, and about
the time they got fixed they would hear the word "forward!" and then
have to move at increased speed to close up the gap in the column.
Sitting down for a few minutes on a
long march is pleasant, but it does not always pay. When the march is resumed
the limbs are stiff and sore, and the man rather worsted by the rest.
About noon on a hot day, some fellow
with the water instinct would determine in his own mind that a well was not far
ahead, and start off in a trot to reach it before the column. Of course another
followed and another, till a stream of men were hurrying to the well, which was
soon completely surrounded by a thirsty mob, yelling and pushing and pulling to
get to the bucket as the windlass brought it again and again to the surface.
Impatience and haste soon overturn the windlass, spatter the water all around
the well till the whole crowd is wading in mud, and now the rope is broken and
the bucket falls to the bottom. But there is a substitute for rope and bucket.
The men hasten away and get long slim poles, and on them tie, by their straps, a
number of canteens, which they lower into the well and fill, and, unless, as was
frequently the case, the whole lot slipped off and fell to the bottom, drew them
to the top and distributed them to their owners, who at once threw their heads
back. inserted the nozzles in their mouths and drank the last drop, hastening at
once to rejoin the marching column, leaving behind them a dismantled and dry
well. It was in vain the officers tried to stop the stream making for the water,
and equally vain to attempt to move the crowd while a drop remained accessible.
Many who were thoughtful carried full canteens to comrades in the column who had
not been able to get to the well, and no one who has not had experience of it
knows the thrill of gratification and delight which those fellows knew when the
cool stream gurgled from the battered canteen down their parched throats.
In very hot weather, when the
necessities of the service allowed it there was a halt about noon, of an hour or
so, to rest the men and give them a chance to cool off and get the sand and
gravel out of their shoes. This time was spent by some in absolute repose but
the lively boys told many a yarn, cracked many a joke, and sung many a song
between "halt" and "column forward!". Some took the
opportunity, if water was near, to bathe their feet, hands and face, and nothing
could be more enjoyable.
The passage of a cider cart (a barrel
on wheels) was a rare and exciting occurrence. The rapidity with which a barrel
of sweet cider was consumed would astonish any one who saw it for the first
time, and generally the owner had cause to wonder at the small return in cash.
Sometimes a desperately enterprising darkey would approach the column with a
cart load of pies "so called." It would be impossible to describe
accurately the taste or appearance of these pies. They were generally similar in
appearance, size and thickness to a pale specimen of "Old Virginia"
buckwheat cakes, and had a taste which resembled a combination of rancid lard
and crab apples. It was generally supposed that they contained dried apples, and
the sellers were careful to state that they had "sugar in 'em" and
"was mighty nice." It was rarely the case that any "trace"
of sugar was found, but they filled up a hungry man wonderfully. Men of sense,
and there were many such in the ranks, were necessarily desirous of knowing
where or how far they were to march, and suffered greatly from a feeling of
helpless ignorance of where they were and whither bound -- whether to battle or
camp. Frequently, when anticipating the quiet and rest of an ideal camp, they
were thrown, weary and exhausted, into the face of a waiting enemy, and at
times, after anticipating a sharp fight, having formed line of battle and braced
themselves for the coming danger, suffered all the apprehension and gotten
themselves in good fighting trim, they would be marched off in the dryest and
prosiest sort of style and ordered into camp, where, in all probability, they
had to "wait for the wagon," and for the bread and meat therein, until
the proverb, "Patient waiting is no loss," lost all its force and
beauty.
Occasionally, when the column
extended for a mile or more, and the road was one dense moving mass of men, a
cheer would be heard away ahead and increasing in volume as it approached until
there was one universal shout. Then some general favorite officer would dash by,
followed by his staff, and explain the cause.
At other times, the same cheering and
enthusiasm would result from the passage down the column of some obscure and
despised officer, who knew it was all a joke, and looked mean and sheepish
accordingly.
The men would generally help each
other in real distress, but their delight was to torment any one who was
unfortunate in a ridiculous way. If, for instance, a piece of artillery was fast
in the mud, the infantry and cavalry passing around the obstruction would rack
their brains for words and phrases applicable to the situation and most
calculated to worry the cannoneers who, waist deep in the mud, are tugging at
the wheels.
Brass bands, at first quite numerous
and good, became very rare and the music very poor in the latter years of the
war. It was a fine thing to see the fellows trying to keep the music going as
they waded through the mud. But poor as the music was, it helped the footsore
and weary to make another mile, and encouraged a cheer and a brisker step from
the lagging and tired column.
As the men became tired, there was
less and less talking, until the whole mass became quiet and serious. Each man
was occupied with his own thoughts. For miles nothing could be heard but the
steady tramp of the men, the rattling and jingling of canteens and
accoutrements, and the occasional "close up, men, -- close up!" of the
officers. As evening came on, questioning of the officers was in order, and for
an hour it would be, "Captain, when are we going into camp?" "I
say, lieutenant! are we going to or to blank?" "Seen anything of our
wagon?" "How long are we to stay here?" - "Where's the
spring?" Sometimes these questions were meant simply to tease, but
generally they betrayed anxiety of some sort and a close observer would easily
detect the seriousness of the man who asked after "our wagon," because
he spoke feelingly as one who wanted his supper and was in doubt as to whether
or not he would get it.
Many a poor fellow dropped in the
road and breathed his last in the corner of a fence, with no one to hear his
last fond mention of his loved ones. And many whose ambition it was to share
every danger and discomfort with their comrades, overcome by the heat or worn
out with disease, were compelled to leave the ranks, and while friend and
brother marched to battle, drag their weak and staggering frames to the rear,
perhaps to die, pitiably alone, in some hospital, and be buried as one more
"Unknown."
An accomplished straggler could
assume more misery, look more horribly emaciated, tell more dismal stories of
distress, eat more and march further (to the rear), than any ten ordinary men.
Most stragglers were real sufferers, but many of them were ingenious liars,
energetic foragers, plunder hunters and gormandizers. Thousands who kept their
place in ranks to the very end were equally as tired, as sick, as hungry and as
hopeless as these scamps, but too proud to tell it or use it as a means of
escape from hardship.
Paper No. 4. -- Cooking and
Eating
Paper 1 | Paper
2 | Paper 3 | Paper 4 | Paper 5
Rations in the Army of Northern Virginia were alternately superabundant and
altogether wanting. The quality, quantity and frequency of them depended upon
the amount of stores in the hands of the commissaries, the relative positions of
the troops and the wagon trains, and the many accidents and mishaps of the
campaign. During the latter years and months of the war, so uncertain was the
issue as to time, quantity and composition, the men became in large measure
independent of this seeming absolute necessity, and by some mysterious means,
known only to purely patriotic soldiers, learned to fight without pay and find a
subsistence in the field, the stream or the forest, and, on the bleak mountain
side, a shelter.
Sometimes there was an abundant issue
of bread and no meat; then meat in any quantity and no flour or meal. Sugar in
abundance and no coffee to be had for "love or money," and then coffee
plenteously without a grain of sugar. For months nothing but flour for bread and
then nothing but meal, till all hands longed for a biscuit, or fresh meat until
it was nauseating; and then salt pork without intermission.
To be one day without
anything to eat was common. Two days fasting, marching and fighting was
not uncommon, and there were times when no rations were issued for
three or four days. On one march, from Petersburg to Appomattox, no rations were
issued to Cutshaw's battalion of artillery for one entire week, and the men
subsisted on the corn intended for the battery horses, raw bacon captured from
the enemy, and the water of springs, creeks and rivers. No doubt there were
other commands suffering the same privations.
A soldier in the Army of Northern
Virginia was fortunate when he had his flour, meat, sugar and coffee all at the
same time and in proper quantity. Having these, the most skillful axe man of the
mess hewed down a fine hickory or oak, and cut it into. "lengths." All
hands helped to "tote it" to the fire. When the wood was convenient,
the fire was large and the red coals abundant.
The man most gifted in the use of the
skillet was the one most highly appreciated about the fire, and as tyrannical as
a Turk; but when he raised the lid of the oven and exposed the brown, crusted
tops of the biscuit, animosity subsided. The frying pan, full of
"grease," then became the centre of attraction. As the hollow cheeked
boy "sopped" his biscuit, his poor, pinched countenance wrinkled into
a smile and his sunken eyes glistened with delight.
The strong men squatted around,
chuckling over their good luck and "cooing" -- like a child with a big
piece of cake. Ah! this was a sight which but few of those who live and die are
ever permitted to see.
And the coffee, too -- how delicious
the aroma of it, and how readily each man disposes of a quart.
And now the last biscuit is gone, the
last drop of coffee, and the frying pan is "wiped" clean. The tobacco
bag is pulled wide open, pipes are scraped, knocked out and filled, the red coal
is applied, and the blue smoke rises in wreaths and curls from the mouths of the
no longer hungry, but happy and contented soldiers.
Songs rise on the still night air,
the merry laugh resounds, the woods are bright with the rising flame of the
fire, story after story is told, song after song is sung, and at midnight the
soldiers steal away one by one to their blankets on the ground and sleep till
reveille. Such was a meal when the mess was fortunate. How different when the
wagons had not been heard from for forty eight hours, and the remnants of stock
on hand had to do. How, the question is, how to do the largest amount of good to
the largest number with the smallest amount of material? The most experienced
men discuss the situation and decide that "somebody" must go foraging.
Though the stock on hand is small, no one seems anxious to leave the small
certainty and go in search of the large uncertainty of supper from some farmer's
well filled table. But at last several comrades start out, and as they disappear
the preparations for immediate consumption commence. The meat is too little to
cook alone, and the flour will scarcely make six biscuits. The result is that
"slosh" or "coosh" must do. So the bacon is fried out till
the pan is half full of boiling grease. The flour is mixed with water until it
flows like milk, poured into the grease and rapidly stirred till the whole is a
dirty brown mixture. It is now ready to be served. Perhaps some dainty fellow
prefers the more imposing "slap jack." If so, the flour is mixed with
less water, the grease reduced, and the paste poured in till it covers the
bottom of the pan, and, when brown on the underside, is by a nimble twist of the
pan turned and browned again. If there is any sugar in camp it makes a delicious
addition.
About the time the last scrap of
"slap jack" and the last spoonful of "slosh" are disposed
of, the unhappy foragers return. They take in the situation at a glance --
realize with painful distinctness that they have sacrificed the homely slosh for
the vain expectancy of apple butter, shortcake and milk, and, with woeful
countenance and mournful voice, narrate their adventure and disappointment thus:
"Well, boys, we have done the best we could. We have walked about nine
miles over the mountain, and haven't found a mouthful to eat. Sorry,
but it's a fact." "Billy Brown fell down the mountain and mashed his
nose; Patso nearly scratched his eyes out with the briars, and we are all hungry
as dogs -- give us our biscuit." Of course there are none, and, as it is
not contrary to army etiquette to do so, the whole mess professes to be very
sorry, and is greatly delighted.
Sometimes, however, the foragers
returned well laden with good things, and, as good comrades should, shared the
fruits of their toilsome hunt with the whole mess. Foragers thought it not
indelicate to linger about the house of the unsuspecting farmer till the lamp
revealed the family at supper, and then modestly approach and knock at the door.
An invitation to enter was almost certain to follow and was certainly accepted.
The good hearted man knew that his guests were "posted" about the meal
which was in progress in the next room, the invitation to supper was given, and,
shall I say it, accepted with an unbecoming lack of reluctance.
The following illustrates the
ingenuity of the average forager.
There was great scarcity of meat, and
no prospect of a supply from the wagons. Two experienced foragers were sent out,
and as a farmer about ten miles from the camp was killing hogs, guided by
soldier instinct, they went directly to his house, and found the meat nicely cut
up, the various pieces of each hog making a separate pile on the floor of an
outhouse. The proposition to buy met with a surprisingly ready response on the
part of the farmer. He offered one entire pile of meat, being one whole hog, for
such a small sum that the foragers instantly closed the bargain, and as promptly
opened their eyes to the danger which menaced them. They give the old gentleman
a ten dollar bill and request the change. He is pleased with their honest method
and hastens away to his house for the desired change.
The two honest foragers hastily
examine the particular pile of pork which the simple hearted farmer has
designated theirs, find it very rank and totally unfit for food, transfer half
of it to another pile, from which they take half and add to theirs, and await
the return of the farmer. He returns, gives them their change and assures them
they have a bargain. They agree that they have, toss the good and bad together
into a bag, say goodbye, and depart as rapidly as artillerymen on foot can. The
result of this trip was a "pot pie" of large dimensions, and some six
or eight men gorged with fat pork, declaring that they had never cared and would
never again wish to eat pork -- especially pork pies.
A large proportion of the eating of
the army was done in the houses and at the tables of the people -- not by the
use of force, but by the wish and invitation of the people. It was at times
necessary that whole towns should help to sustain the army of defence, and when
this was the case, it was done voluntarily and cheerfully. The soldiers -- all
who conducted themselves properly -- were received as honored guests and given
the best in the house. There was a wonderful absence of stealing or plundering,
and even when the people suffered from depredation they attributed the cause to
terrible necessity rather than to wanton disregard of the rights of property.
And when armed guards were placed over the smokehouses and barns, it was not so
much because the Commanding General doubted the honesty as that he knew the
necessities of his troops. But even pinching hunger was not held to be an excuse
for marauding expeditions.
The inability of the government to
furnish supplies forced the men to depend largely upon their own energy and
ingenuity to obtain them. The officers knowing this, relaxed discipline to an
extent which would seem, to an European officer for instance, ruinous. It was no
uncommon sight to see a brigade or division, which was but a moment before
marching in solid column along the road, scattered over an immense field
searching for the luscious blackberries. And it was wonderful to see how
promptly and cheerfully all returned to the ranks when the field was gleaned. In
the fall of the year a persimmon tree on the roadside would halt a column and
detain it till the last persimmon disappeared.
The sutler's wagon, loaded with
luxuries, which was so common in the Federal army, was unknown in the Army of
Northern Virginia; and for two reasons, the men had no money to buy sutlers'
stores and the country no men to spare for sutlers. The nearest approach to the
sutler's wagon was the "cider cart" of some old darkey or a basket of
pies and cakes displayed on the roadside for sale.
The Confederate soldier relied
greatly upon the abundant supplies of eatables which the enemy was kind enough
to bring him, and he cheerfully risked his life for the accomplishment of the
two fold purpose of whipping the enemy and getting what he called "a square
meal." After a battle there was general feasting on the Confederate side.
Good things, scarcely ever seen at other times, filled the haversacks and the
stomachs of "Boys in Gray." Imagine the feelings of men half famished
when they rush into a camp -- at one side, while the enemy flees from the other,
and find the coffee on the fire, sugar at hand ready to be dropped into the
coffee, bread in the oven, crackers by the box, fine beef ready cooked,
desiccated vegetables by the bushel, canned peaches, lobsters, tomatoes, milk,
barrels of ground and toasted coffee, soda, salt, and in short everything a
hungry soldier craves. Then add the liquors, wines, cigars and tobacco found in
the tents of the officers and the wagons of the sutlers, and remembering the
condition of the victorious party, hungry, thirsty and weary, say if it did not
require wonderful devotion to duty and great self denial to push on, trampling
under foot the plunder of the camp, and pursue the enemy till the sun went down.
When it was allowable to halt, what a
glorious time it was! Men who a moment before would have been delighted with a
pone of corn bread and a piece of fat meat now discuss the comparative merits of
peaches and milk and fresh tomatoes, lobster and roast beef, and forgetting the
briar root pipe, faithful companion of the vicissitudes of the soldier's life,
snuff the aroma of imported Havanas. In sharp contrast with the mess cooking at
the big fire was the serious and diligent work of the man separated from his
comrades, out of reach of the woods, but bent on cooking and eating. He has
found a coal of fire, and having placed over it in an ingenious manner the few
leaves and twigs near his post, he fans the little pile with his hat. It soon
blazes. Fearing the utter consumption of his fuel, he hastens to balance on the
little fire his tin cup of water. When it boils, from some secure place in his
clothes, he takes a little coffee and drops it in the cup, and almost instantly
the cup is removed and set aside; then the slice of fat meat is laid on the
coals and when brown and crisp, completes the meal -- for the
"crackers" or biscuit are ready. No one but a soldier would have
undertaken to cook with such a fire, as frequently it was no bigger than a quart
cup.
Crackers, or "hard tack" as
they were called, are notoriously poor eating, but in the hands of the
Confederate soldier were made to do good duty. When on the march and pressed for
time, a piece of solid fat pork and a dry cracker was passable or luscious, as
the time was long or short since the last meal. When there was leisure to do it,
hard tack was soaked well and then fried in bacon grease. Prepared thus it was a
dish which no Confederate had the weakness or the strength to refuse.
Sorghum, in the absence of the better
molasses of peace times, was greatly prized and eagerly sought after. A
"Union" man living near the Confederate lines was one day busy boiling
his crop. Naturally enough, some of "our boys" smelt out the place and
determined to have some of the sweet fluid. They had found a yearling dead in
the field hard by, and in thinking over the matter determined to sell the Union
man if possible. So they cut from the dead animal a choice piece of beef,
carried it to the old fellow and offered to trade. He accepted the offer and the
whole party walked off with canteens full.
Artillerymen, having tender
consciences and no muskets, seldom, if ever, shot stray pigs; but they did
sometimes, as an act of friendship, wholly disinterested, point out to the
infantry a pig which seemed to need shooting, and by way of dividing the danger
and responsibility of the act, accept privately a choice part of the deceased.
On one occasion, when a civilian was
dining with the mess, there was a fine pig for dinner. This circumstance caused
the civilian to remark on the good fare. The "forager" remarked that
pig was an uncommon dish, this one having been kicked by one of the battery
horses while stealing corn and instantly killed. The civilian seemed to doubt
the statement after his teeth had come down hard on a pistol bullet, and
continued to doubt though assured that it was the head of a horseshoe nail.
The most melancholy eating a soldier
was ever forced to do, was when pinched with hunger, cold, wet and dejected, he
wandered over the deserted field of battle and satisfied his cravings with the
contents of the haversacks of the dead. If there is anything which will overcome
the natural abhorrence which a man feels for the enemy, the loathing of the
bloated dead and the awe engendered by the presence of death, solitude and
silence, it is hunger. Impelled by its clamoring men of high principle and
tenderest humanity, become for the time void of sensibility and condescend to
acts which, though justified by their extremity, seem afterwards, even to the
doers, too shameless to mention.
When rations became so very small
that it was absolutely necessary to supplement them, and the camp was
permanently established, those men who had the physical ability worked for the
neighborhood farmers at cutting cordwood, harvesting the crops, killing hogs or
any other farmwork. A stout man would cut a cord of wood a day and receive fifty
cents in money or its equivalent in something eatable. Hogs were slaughtered for
the "fifth quarter." When the corn became large enough to eat, the
roasting ears, thrown in the ashes with the shucks on and nicely roasted, made a
grateful meal. Turnip and onion patches also furnished delightful and much
needed food, good, raw or cooked.
Occasionally, when a mess was hard
pushed for eatables, it became necessary to resort to some ingenious method of
disgusting a part of the mess, that the others might eat their fill. The
"pepper treatment" was a common method practiced with the soup, which
once failed. A shrewd fellow who loved things "hot" decided to have
plenty of soup, and to accomplish his purpose, as he passed and repassed the
boiling pot, dropped in a pod of red pepper. But, alas! for him, there was
another man like minded who adopted the same plan, and the result was the
"mess" waited in vain for that pot of soup to cool.
The individual coffee boiler of one
man in the Army of Northern Virginia was always kept at the boiling point. The
owner of it was an enigma to his comrades. They could not understand, his
strange fondness for "red hot" coffee. Since the war he has explained
that he found the heat of the coffee prevented its use by others and adopted the
plan of placing his cup on the fire after every sip. This same character never
troubled himself to carry a canteen, though a great water drinker. When he found
a good canteen he would kindly give it to a comrade, reserving the privilege of
an occasional drink when in need. He soon had an interest in thirty or forty
canteens and their contents, and a drink of water if it was to be found in any
of them. He pursued the same plan with blankets and always had plenty in that
line. His entire outfit was the clothes on his back and a haversack accurately
shaped to hold one half pone of corn bread.
Roasting ear time was a trying time
for the hungry privates. Having been fed during the whole of the winter on salt
meat and coarse bread, his system craved the fresh, luscious juice of the corn,
and at times his honesty gave way under the pressure. How could he resist? -- he
didn't -- he took some roasting ears! Sometimes the farmer grumbled, sometimes
he quarreled and sometimes he complained to the officers of the depredations of
"the men." The officers apologized, eat what corn they had on hand and
sent their "boy" for some more.
One old farmer conceived the happy
plan of inviting some privates to his house, stating his grievances and securing
their cooperation in the effort to protect his corn. He told them that of course
they were not the gentlemen who took his corn! Oh no! of
course they would not do such a thing; but wouldn't they please speak
to the others and ask them please not to take his corn? Of course! certainly! oh
yes! they would certainly remonstrate with their comrades. How they burned
though as they thought of the past and contemplated the near future. As they
returned to camp through the field they filled their haversacks with the silky
ears, and were met on the other side of the field by the kind farmer and a file
of men who were only too eager to secure the plucked corn "in the line of
duty."
A faithful officer, worn out with the
long, weary march, sick, hungry and dejected, leaned his back against a tree and
groaned to think of his inability to join in the chase of an old hare, which, he
knew from the wild yells in the wood, his men were pursuing. But the uproar
approached him -- nearer, nearer and nearer until he saw the hare bounding
towards him with a regiment at her heels. She spied an opening made by the folds
of the officer's cloak and jumped in and he embraced his first meal for forty
eight hours. An artillery man was camped for a day where no water was to be had.
During the night, awakened by thirst, he arose and stumbled about in search of
water. To his surprise he found a large bucketful. He drank deep and with
delight. In the morning he found that the water he drank had washed a bullock's
head and was crimson with his blood.
Some stragglers came up one night and
found the camp silent. All hands asleep. Being hungry they sought and to their
great delight found a large pot of soup. It had a peculiar taste, but they
"worried" it down, and in the morning bragged of their good fortune.
The soup had defied the stomachs of the whole battery, being strongly
impregnated with the peculiar flavor of defunct cockroaches.
Shortly before the evacuation of
Petersburg, a country boy went hunting. He killed and brought to camp a muskrat.
It was skinned, cleaned, buried a day or two, disinterred and eaten with great
relish. It was splendid.
During the seven days' battles around
Richmond, a studious private observed the rats as they entered and emerged from
a corncrib. He killed one, cooked it privately and invited a friend to join him
in eating a fine squirrel. The comrade consented, ate heartily, and when told
what he had eaten, forthwith disgorged. But he confesses that up to the time
when he was enlightened he had greatly enjoyed the meal.
It was at this time, when rats were a
delicacy, that the troops around Richmond agreed to divide their rations with
the poor of the city, and they were actually hauled in and distributed. Comment
here would be like complimenting the sun on its brilliancy or warmth.
Orators dwell on the genius and skill
of the general officers; historians tell of the movements of divisions and army
corps, and the student of the art of war studies the geography and topography of
the country and the returns of the various corps: they all seek to find and to
tell the secret of success or failure.
The Confederate soldier knows the
elements of his success -- courage, endurance and devotion. He knows also by
whom he was defeated -- sickness, starvation, death. He fought not men only, but
food, raiment, pay, glory, fame and fanaticism. He endured privation, toil and
contempt. He won, and despite the cold indifference of all and the hearty hatred
of some, he will have for all time, in all places where generosity is, a fame
untarnished.
Paper No. 5. -- Improvised
Infantry--To Appomattox Courthouse
Paper 1 | Paper
2 | Paper 3 | Paper 4 | Paper 5
Sunday, April 2d, 1865, found Cutshaw's battalion of artillery occupying the
earthworks at Fort Clifton, on the Appomattox, about two miles below Petersburg,
Virginia. The command was composed of the Second company Richmond Howitzers,
Captain Lorraine F. Jones, Garber's battery, Fry's battery and remnants of five
other batteries (saved from the battle of Spotsylvania Courthouse, May 12,
1864), and had present for duty nearly five hundred men, with a total muster
roll, including the men in prison, of one thousand and eighty.
The place -- the old "Clifton
House" -- was well fortified, and had the additional protection of the
river along the entire front of perhaps a mile. The works extended from the
Appomattox on the right to Swift creek on the left. There we re some guns of
heavy calibre, mounted and ready for action, and in addition to these some field
pieces disposed along the line at suitable points. the enemy had formidable
works opposite, but had not used their guns to disturb the quiet routine of the
camp. The river bank was picketed by details from the artillery armed as
infantry, but without the usual equipments. The guard duty was so heavy that
half the men were always on guard.
The huts, built by the troops who had
formerly occupied the place, were located, with a view to protection from the
enemy's fire under the hills on the sides of the ravines or gullies which
divided them, and were underground to the eaves of the roof Consequently, the
soil being sandy, there was a constant filtering of sand through the cracks, and
in spite of the greatest care the grit found its way into the flour and meal,
stuck to the greasy frying pan and even filled the hair of the men as they slept
in their bunks.
At this time rations were reduced to
the minimum of quantity and quality, being generally worm eaten peas, sour or
rancid mess -- pork and unbolted corn meal, relieved occasionally with a small
supply of luscious canned beef imported from England, good flour (half rations),
a little coffee and sugar, and, once, apple brandy for all hands. Ragged,
barefooted and even bareheaded men were so common that they did not excite
notice or comment, and did not expect or seem to feel the want of sympathy. And
yet there was scarcely a complaint or murmur of dissatisfaction and not the
slightest indication of fear or doubt. The spirit of the men was as good as ever
and the possibility of immediate disaster -- had not cast its shadow there.
Several incidents occurred during the
stay of the battalion at Fort Clifton which will serve to illustrate everyday
life on the lines. It occurred to a man picketing the river bank that it would
be amusing to take careful aim at the man on the other side doing the same duty
for the enemy, fire, laugh to see the fellow jump and dodge, and then try again.
He fired, laughed, dropped his musket to reload, and while smiling with
satisfaction heard the "thud" of a bullet and felt an agonizing pain
in his arm. His musket fell to the ground and he walked back to camp with his
arm swinging heavily at his side. The surgeon soon relieved him of it
altogether. The poor fellow learned a lesson. The "Yank" had beat him
at his own game.
The guard house was a two story
framed building about twelve feet square, having two rooms, one above the other.
The detail for guard duty was required to stay in the guard house; those who
wished to sleep going up stairs, while others just relieved or about to go on
duty clustered around the fire in the lower room. One night, when the upper
floor was covered with sleeping men, an improvised infantryman who had been
relieved from duty walked in, and preparatory to taking his stand at the fire,
threw his musket carelessly in the corner. A loud report and angry exclamations
immediately followed. The sergeant of the guard, noticing the direction of the
ball, hurried up stairs, and to the disgust of the sleepy fellows, ordered all
hands to "turn out." Grumbling, growling, stretching and rubbing their
eyes, the men got up. Some one inquired, "where's Pryor?" His chum,
who had been sleeping by his side, replied "there he is asleep shake
him!" His blanket was drawn aside, and with a shake he was commanded to
"get up!" But there was no motion, no reply. The ball had passed
through his heart, and he had passed without a groan or a sigh from deep sleep
to death. The man who was killed and the man who was sleeping by his side, under
the same blanket, were members of the Second company Richmond Howitzers. The
careless man who made the trouble was also an artilleryman, from one of the
other batteries.
Shortly after this accident, after a
quiet day, the men retired to their huts and the whole can p was still as a
country church yard. The pickets on the river's edge could hear those on the
opposite side asking the corporal of the guard the hour and complaining that
they had not been promptly relieved. Suddenly a terrific bombardment commenced
and the earth fairly trembled. The men, suddenly awakened, heard the roar of the
guns, the rush of the shots and the explosion of the shells. To a man only half
awake the shells seemed to pass very near and in every direction In a moment all
were rushing out of their houses, and soon the hillsides and bluffs were covered
with an excited crowd, gazing awestruck on the sight. The firing was away to the
right, and there was not the slightest danger. Having realized this fact, the
interest was intense. The shells from the opposite lines met and passed in mid
air -- their burning fuses forming an arch of fire which paled occasionally as a
shell burst, illuminating the heavens with its blaze. The uproar, even at such a
distance, was terrible. The officers, fearing that fire would be opened along
the whole line, ordered the cannoneers to their posts; men were sent down into
the magazine with lanterns to arrange the ammunition for the heavy guns; the
lids of the limbers of the field pieces were thrown up; the cannoneers were
counted off at their posts; the brush which had been piled before the embrasures
was torn away, and with implements in hand all stood at attention till the last
shot was fired, -- the heavens were dark again and silence reigned. Soon all
hands were as sound asleep as though nothing had occurred.
The next morning an artilleryman came
walking leisurely towards the camp, and being recognized as belonging to a
battery which was in position on that part of the line where the firing of the
last night occurred, was plied with questions as to the loss on our side, who
was hurt, &c., &c. Smiling at the anxious faces and eager questions, he
replied: "When? Last night? Nobody!" It was astounding, but
nevertheless true.
On another occasion some scattering
shots were heard up the river, and after awhile a body came floating down the
stream. It was hauled on shore and buried in the sand a little above high water
mark. It was a poor Confederate who had attempted to desert to the enemy but was
shot while swimming for the opposite bank of the river. His grave was the centre
of the beat of one of the picket posts on the river bank, and there were few men
so indifferent to the presence of the dead as not to prefer some other post.
And so while there had been no
fighting there were always incidents to remind the soldier that danger lurked
around, and that he could not long avoid his share. The camp was not as joyous
as it had been, and all felt that the time was near which would try the courage
of the stoutest. The struggles of the troops on the right with overwhelming
numbers and reports of adversities, caused a general expectation that the troops
lying so idly at the Clifton house would be ordered to the point of danger. They
had not long to wait.
Sunday came and went as many a Sunday
had. There was nothing unusual apparent, unless, perhaps, the dull and list less
attitudes of the men and the monotonous call of those on guard were more
oppressive than usual. The sun went down, the hills and valleys and the river
were veiled in darkness. Here and there twinkling lights were visible. On the
other side of the river could be heard a low rumbling which experienced men said
was the movement of artillery and ammunition trains bound to the enemy's left to
press the already broken right of the Confederate line.
Some had actually gone to sleep for
the night. Others were huddled around the fires in the little huts, and a few
sat out on the hillside discussing the probabilities of the near future. A most
peaceful scene -- a most peaceful spot. Hymns were sung and prayers were made,
though no preacher was there. Memory reverted fondly to the past, to home and
friends. The spirit of the soldier soared away to other scenes and left him to
sit blankly down, gaze at the stars and feel unspeakable longings for undefined
joys, and weep, for very tenderness of heart, at his own sad loneliness.
At 10 P.M. some man, mounted on
horseback, rode up to one of the huts and said the battalion had orders to move.
It was so dark that his face was scarcely visible. In a few minutes orders were
received to destroy what could be destroyed without noise or fire. This was
promptly done. Then the companies were formed, the roll w as called and the
battalion marched slowly and solemnly away. No one doubted that the command
would march at once to the assistance of the troops at or near Five Forks. It
was thought that before morning every man would have his musket and his supply
of ammunition, and the crack of day would see the battalion rushing into battle
in regular infantry style, whooping and yelling like demons. But they got no
arms that night. The march was steady till broad day of Monday the 3d of April.
Of course the men felt mortified at having to leave the guns, but there was no
help for it, as the battery horses which had been sent away to winter had not
returned. It was evident that the battalion had bid farewell to artillery and
commenced a new career as infantry.
As the night wore on the men learned
that the command was not going to any point on the lines. That being determined,
no one could guess its destination. Later in the night, probably as day
approached, the sky in the direction of Richmond was lit with the red glare of
distant conflagration, and at short intervals there were deep, growling
explosions as of magazines. The roads were filled with other troops, all
hurrying in the same direction. There was no sign of panic or fear, but the very
wheels seemed turning with unusual energy. The men wore the look of
determination, haste and eagerness. One could feel the energy which surrounded
him and animated the men and things which moved so steadily on, on, on ! ! There
was no laughing, singing or talking. Nothing but the steady tread of the column
and the surly rumbling of the trains.
As morning dawned, the battalion
struck the main road leading from Richmond. Refugees told the story of the
evacuation and informed the boas from the city that it was in the hands of the
enemy and burning, and the chances were that not one house would be left
standing. Here it became clearly understood that the whole army was in full
retreat. From this point the men began to say, as they marched, that it was
easier to march away than it would be to get back, but that they expected and
hoped to fight their way back if they had to contest every inch. Some even
regretted the celerity of the march, for, they said, "the further we march
the more difficult it will be to win our way back." Little did they know of
the immense pressure at the rear and the earnest push of the enemy on the flank
as he strove to reach and overlap the advance of his hitherto defiant but now
retreating foe.
A detail had been left at Fort
Clifton with orders to spike the guns, blow up the magazine, destroy everything
which could be of value to the enemy, and rejoin the command. The order was
obeyed, and every man of the detail resumed his place in the ranks.
From this point to Appomattox, the
march was almost continuous, day and night, and it is with the greatest
difficulty that a private in the ranks can recall with accuracy the dates and
places on the march. Night was day, -- day was night. There was no stated time
to sleep, eat or rest, and the events of morning became strangely intermingled
with the events of evening. Breakfast, dinner and supper were merged into
"something to eat" whenever and wherever it could be had. The
incidents of the march, how ever, lose none of their significance on this
account, and, so far as possible, they will be given in the order in which they
occurred and the day and hour fixed as accurately as they can be by those who
witnessed and participated in its dangers and hardships.
Monday the 3d the column
was pushed along without ceremony at a rapid pace until night, when a halt was
ordered and the battalion laid down in a piece of pine woods to rest. There was
some "desultory" eating in this camp, but so little of it that there
was no lasting effect. At early dawn of Tuesday the 4th, the men struggled to
their feet, and with empty stomachs and brave hearts resumed their places in the
ranks, and struggled on with the column as it marched steadily in the direction
of Moore's church, in Amelia county, where it arrived in the night. The men laid
down under the shelter of a fine grove, and friend divided with friend the
little supplies of raw bacon and bread picked up on the day's march. The men
were scarcely stretched on the ground and ready for a good nap, when the orderly
of the Howitzers commenced bawling, "Detail for guard!! Detail for guard!!
Fall in here, fall in!" Then followed the names of the detail. Four men
answered to their names, but declared they could not keep awake if placed on
guard. Their remonstrance was in vain. They were marched off to picket a road
leading to camp, and when they were relieved said they had slept soundly on
their posts. No one blamed them.
While it was yet night, all hands
were roused from profound sleep, the battalion was formed and away they went,
stumbling, bumping against each other, and sleeping as they walked.
Whenever the column halted for a moment, as it did frequently during the night,
the men dropped heavily to the ground and were instantly asleep. Then the
officers would commence: "Forward! column forward!!" Those first on
their feet stumbling on over their prostrate comrades, who would in turn be
awakened, and again the column was in motion, and nothing heard but the
monotonous tread of the weary feet, the ringing and rattling of the trappings of
the horses and the never ending cry of "Close up men, close up!!"
Through the long, weary night there
was no rest. The alternate halting and hurrying was terribly trying and taxed
the endurance of the most determined men to the very utmost; and yet on the
morning of Wednesday the 5th, when the battalion reached the neighborhood of
"Scott's Shops," every man was in place and ready for duty. From this
point, after some ineffectual efforts to get a breakfast, the column pushed on
in the direction of Amelia Courthouse, at which point Colonel Cutshaw was
ordered to report to General James A. Walker, and the battalion was thereafter a
part of Walker's division. The 5th was spent at or near the Courthouse -- how,
it is difficult to remember; but the day was marked by several incidents worthy
of record.
About two hundred and twenty five
muskets (not enough to arm all the men), cartridges and caps were issued to the
battalion: simply the muskets and ammunition. Not a cartridge box, cap box, belt
or any other convenience ornamented the persons of these newborn infantrymen.
They stored their ammunition in their pockets along with their corn, salt, pipes
and tobacco.
When application was made for
rations, it was found that the last morsel belonging to the division had been
issued to the command, and the battalion was again thrown on its own resources,
to wit: corn on the cob intended for the horses. Two ears were issued to each
man. It was parched in the coals, mixed with salt, stored in the pockets and
eaten on the road. Chewing the corn was hard work. It made the jaws ache and the
gums and teeth so sore as to cause almost unendurable pain.
After the muskets were issued a line
of battle was formed with Cutshaw on the right. For what purpose the line was
formed the men could not tell. A short distance from the right of the line there
was a grove which concealed an ammunition train which had been sent from
Richmond to meet the army. The ammunition had been piled up ready for
destruction. An occasional musket ball passed over near enough and often enough
to produce a realizing sense of the proximity of the enemy and solemnize the
occasion. Towards evening the muskets were stacked, artillery style of course,
the men were lying around, chatting and eating raw bacon, and there was general
quiet, when suddenly the earth shook with a tremendous explosion and an immense
column of smoke rushed up into the air to a great height. For a moment there was
the greatest consternation. Whole regiments broke and fled in wild confusion.
Cutshaw's men stood up, seized their muskets and stood at attention till it was
known that the ammunition had been purposely fired and no enemy was threatening
the line. Then, what laughter and hilarity prevailed, for awhile among these
famishing men!
Order having been restored, the march
was resumed, and moving by way of Amelia springs, the column arrived near
Deatonsville about ten o'clock the morning of Thursday the 6th. The march though
not a long one, was exceedingly tiresome, as the main roads being crowded, the
column moved by plantation roads, which were in wretched condition, and crowded
with troops and trains. That the night was spent in the most trying manner, may
be best learned from the fact that when morning dawned the column was only six
or seven miles from the starting point of the evening before.
This delay was fatal. The whole army
-- trains and all -- left Amelia Courthouse in advance of Walker's division,
which was left to cover the retreat -- Cutshaw's battalion being the last to
leave the Courthouse, thus bringing up the rear of the whole army, and being in
constant view of the enemy's hovering cavalry. The movement of the division was
regulated to suit the movements of the wagon trains, which should have been
destroyed on the spot, and the column allowed to make its best time, as owing to
the delay it occasioned the army lost the time it had gained on the enemy in the
start, and was overtaken the next day.
At Deatonsville another effort to
cook was made, but before the simplest articles of food could be prepared, the
order to march was given, and the battalion took the road once more.
A short while after passing
Deatonsville, the column was formed in line of battle -- Cutshaw's battalion
near the road and in an old field with woods in front and rear. The officers,
anticipating an immediate attack, ordered the men to do what they could for
their protection. They immediately scattered along the fence on the roadside,
and taking down the rails stalked back to their position in line, laid the rails
on the ground and returned for another load. This they continued to do until the
whole of the fence was removed. Behind this slim defence they silently awaited
the advance of the enemy.
Soon it was decided that this was not
the place to make a stand. The first detachment of the Second company of
Richmond Howitzers, and twenty men each from Garber and Fry, under the command
of Lieutenant Henry Jones, were left behind the fence rail work, with orders to
resist and retard the advance of the enemy while the column continued its march.
This little band was composed of true
spirits -- the best material in the battalion. Right well did they do their
duty. Left alone to face the advance of the immense host eagerly pursuing the
worn remnant of the invincible army, they waited until the enemy's skirmishers
appeared in the field, when, with perfect deliberation, they commenced their
fire. Though greatly outnumbered and flanked right and left, they stubbornly
held on till the line of battle following the skirmishers broke from the woods
and advancing rapidly, poured into them a murderous volley. And yet, so unused
were they to running, they moved not till the infantry skirmishers had retired
and the word of command was heard. Then stubbornly contesting the ground, they
fought their way back through the woods. The gallant Lieutenant Jones fell
mortally wounded, having held control of his little band to the moment he fell.
His friend K refused to leave him, and they were captured together, but
immediately separated by the enemy. P was pierced through and through by a
musket ball as he was hurrying through the woods, and fell heavily to the
ground. B was severely wounded, but managed to escape. H was killed outright.
The battalion had left this point but
a short time, marching in column of fours with the division, and had reached the
brow of a gently sloping hill, perfectly open for perhaps a mile, with a broad
valley on the left, and beyond it a range of hills partly wooded. In an open
space on this range the enemy placed a battery in position, and in anticipation
of doing great slaughter from a safe distance, opened a rapid fire on the
exposed and helpless column. The shells came hurtling over the valley, exploding
in front, rear and overhead, and tearing up the ground in every direction. Ah!
how it grieved those artillerymen to stand, musket in hand, and receive that
shower of insolence. How they longed for the old friends they had left at Fort
Clifton. They knew how those rascals on the other side of the valley were
enjoying the sport. They could hear in imagination the shouts of the cannoneers
as they saw their shells bursting so prettily, and rammed home another shot.
There was some impediment ahead, and
there the column stood, a fair mark for these rascals. There was no help near,
and all that could be done was to stand firm and wait orders; but help was
coming!
A cloud of dust was approaching from
the rear of the column. All eyes were strained to see what it might mean.
Presently the artillerymen recognized the well known sound. A battery was coming
in full gallop, the drivers lashing their horses, and yelling like madmen. The
guns bounded along as though they would outrun the horses, and with rush, roar
and rattle they approached the front of the battalion. Some fellow in the Second
company Howitzers sung out "Old Henry Carter!!! Hurrah! for the Third
company!! Give it to 'em, boys!!" It was indeed the Third company of
Howitzers, long separated from the Second, with their gallant captain at their
head!
Not a moment was lost. The guns were
in battery, and the smoke of the first shot was curling about the heads of the
men in the column in marvelously quick time. Friends and comrades in the column
called to the men at the guns, and they, as they stepped in and out, responded
with cheerful, ringing voices: "Hello Bill!" "How are you
Joe?" Bang!! "Pretty" -- Bang!! -- "well, I thank you."
Bang!! "Oh! we're giving it to 'em now." Bang!!!
As the battalion moved on, the
gallant boys of the Third company finished their work. The disappointed enemy
limbered up, slipped into the woods and departed. Cheered by this fortunate
meeting with old comrades and with the pleasant odor of the smoke lingering
around them, these hitherto bereft and mournful artillerymen pushed on, laughing
cheerily at the discomfiture of the enemy, and feeling that though deprived of
their guns by the misfortunes of war, there was still left at least one battery
worthy to represent the artillery of the army.
As the column marched slowly along,
some sharp eyed man discovered three of the enemy's skirmishers in a field away
on the left. More for amusement than anything else, it was proposed to fire at
them. A group of men gathered on the roadside, a volley was fired, and to the
amazement of the marksmen, for the distance was great, one of the skirmishers
fell. One of his comrades started on a run to his assistance, and he, too, was
stopped. The third man then scampered away as fast as his legs could carry him.
The battalion applauded the good shots and marched on.
At Sailor's creek the detachment
which had been left at Deatonsville behind the fence rails to watch and retard
the approach of the enemy, having slowly retired before their advance, rejoined
the command. Indeed, their resistance and retreat was the beginning of and ended
in the battle of Sailor's creek.
The line of battle was formed on
Locket's hill, which sloped gently down from the line to the creek, about one
hundred and fifty or two hundred yards in rear of and running nearly parallel
with the line of battle. A road divided the battalion near the centre. The
Howitzers were on the left of this road and in the woods; Garber's men were on
the right of the Howitzers, on the opposite side of the road, in a field; Fry's
men on the extreme left. To cross the road dividing the line was a hazardous
experiment, as the enemy, thinking it an important avenue, swept it with
musketry.
It was amusing to see the men hauling
out of their pockets a mixture of corn, salt, caps and cartridges, and,
selecting the material needed, loading. They were getting ready to stand. They
did not expect to run, and did not until ordered to do so.
The enemy's skirmishers advanced
confidently and in rather free and easy style, but suddenly met a volley which
drove them to cover. Again they advanced in better order, and again the
improvised infantry forced them back. Then came their line of battle, with
overwhelming numbers; but the battalion stubbornly resisted their advance. The
men, not accustomed to the orderly manner of infantry, dodged about from tree to
tree, and with the deliberation of huntsmen picked off here and there a man.
When a shot. "told," the marksman hurrahed! all to himself. There was
an evident desire to press forward and drive the advancing foe. Several of the
men were so enthusiastic that they had pushed ahead of the line, and several
yards in advance they could be seen, loading and firing as deliberately as
though practicing at a mark.
Colonel Cutshaw received a wound
which so shattered his leg that he had to be lifted from his horse into an
ambulance. He was near being captured, but by hurrying away the ambulance at a
gallop, he escaped to a house a short distance in the rear, where he fell into
the hands of the enemy. The same night he suffered amputation of a leg. Captain
Garber was struck, and called for the ambulance corps, but on examination found
the ball in his pocket. It had lodged against the rowel of a spur which he found
the day before and dropped in his pocket.
At last the enemy appeared in strong
force on both flanks, while he pushed hard in front. It was useless to attempt a
further stand. The voice of Captain Jones, of the Howitzers, rang out loud and
clear: "Boys, take care of yourselves!" Saying this, he planted
himself against a pine, and as his men rushed by him, emptied every chamber of
his revolver at the enemy, and then reluctantly made his way, in company with
several privates, down the hill to the creek.
At the foot of the hill a group of
perhaps a dozen men gathered around Lieutenant McRae. He was indignant. He
proposed another stand, and his comrades agreed. They stood in the road facing
the gentle slope of the hill from which they had been ordered to retire. The
enemy's skirmishers were already on the brow of hill, dodging about among the
trees and shouting to those behind to hurry up. Their favorite expressions were
"Come along, boys, here are the damned Rebel wagons!" "Damn 'em,
shoot 'em down!"
In a few moments their line of
battle, in beautiful order, stepped out of the woods with colors flying, and for
a moment halted. In front of the centre of that portion of the line which was
visible - - probably a full regimental front -- marched the colors and color
guard. McRae saw his opportunity. He ordered his squad to rise and fire on the
colors. His order was promptly obeyed. The color bearer pitched forward and
fell, with his colors, heavily to the ground. The guard of two men on either
side shared the same fate, or else feigned it. Immediately the line of battle
broke into disorder and came swarming down the hill, firing, yelling and cursing
as they came. An officer, mounted, rode his horse close to the fence on the
roadside, and with the most superb insolence mocked McRae and his squad,
already, as he thought, hopelessly intermingled with the enemy. McRae, in his
rage, swore back at him, and in the hearing of the man called on a man near him
to shoot "that ------ ------", calling him a fearfully hard name. But
the private's gun was not in working order, and the fellow escaped -- for the
time. Before he reached the woods, whither he was going to hurry up the
"boys," a Howitzer let fly at him, and at the shock of the bullet's
stroke, he threw his arms up in the air and his horse bore him into the woods a
corpse.
A little to the left, where the road
crossed the creek, the crack of pistols and the "bang" of muskets was
continuous. The enemy had surrounded the wagons and were mercilessly shooting
down the unarmed and helpless drivers, some of whom, however, managed to cut the
traces, mount and escape.
In order to escape from the right of
the line, it was necessary to follow the road, which was along the foot of the
hill, some distance to the left. The enemy seeing this, were pushing their men
rapidly at a right oblique to gain the road and cut off retreat. Consequently,
those who attempted escape in that direction had to run the gauntlet of a
constant fusillade from a mass of troops near enough to select individuals,
curse them and command them to throw down their arms or be shot.
Most of McRae's squad, in spite of
the difficulties surrounding them, gained the creek, plunged in, and began a
race for life up the long, open hillside of plowed ground, fired upon at every
step by the swarm of men behind, and, before they reached the top, by a battery
in close proximity, which poured down a shower of canister.
The race to the top of the long hill
was exceedingly trying to men already exhausted by continual marching, hunger,
thirst and loss of sleep. They ran, panting for breath, like chased animals,
fairly staggering as they went.
On the top of this long hill there
was a skirmish line of cavalry posted with orders to stop all men with arms in
their hands and form a new line, but the view down the hill to the creek and
beyond revealed such a host of the enemy, and the men retiring before them were
so few, that the order was disregarded and the fleeing band allowed to pass
through.
The men's faces were black with
powder. They had bitten cartridges until there was a deep black circle around
their mouths. The burnt powder from the ramrods had blackened their hands, and
in their efforts to remove the perspiration from their faces they had completed
the coloring from the roots of the hair to the chin. Here was no place for rest,
however, as the enemy's battery behind the creek on the opposite hills, having
gotten the range, was pouring in a lively fire. Soon after passing the brow of
the hill, darkness came on. Groups of men from the battalion halted on the
roadside, near a framed building of some sort, and commenced shouting,
"Fall in Howitzers!!" "This way Garber's men!!" "Fry's
battery!!" "Fall in!!" "Cutshaw's battalion fall in
here!!" Thus of their own accord trying to recover the organization from
its disorder. Quite a number of the battalion got together, and in spite of
hunger, thirst, defeat and dreadful weariness, pushed on to the High bridge. So
anxious were the men to escape capture and the insinuation of desertion that
when threatened with shooting by the rear guard, if they did not move on, they
scarcely turned to see who spoke; but the simple announcement "the Yankees
are coming!" gave them a little new strength, and again they struggled
painfully along, dropping in the road sound asleep, however, at the slightest
halt of the column.
At the bridge there was quite a halt,
and in the darkness the men commenced calling to each other by name -- the
rascally infantry around, still ready for fun -- answering for every name.
Brother called brother, comrade called comrade, friend called friend; and there
were many happy reunions there that night. Some, alas! of the best and bravest
did not answer the cry of anxious friends.
Before the dawn of day the column was
again in motion. What strange sensations the men had as they marched slowly
across the High bridge. They knew its great height, but the night was so dark
that they could not see the abyss on either side. Arrived on the other side, the
worn- out soldiers fell to the ground and slept more dead than alive. Some had
slept as they marched across the bridge, and declared that they had no distinct
recollection of when they left it, or how long they were upon it.
Early on the morning of the 7th, the
march was resumed and continued through Farmville, across the bridge and to
Cumberland heights, overlooking the town. Here, on the bare hillside, a line of
battle was formed, for what purpose the men did not know -- the Howitzers
occupying a central place in the line, and standing with their feet in the midst
of a number of the graves of soldiers who had perished in the hospitals in the
town.
While standing thus in line a detail
was sent into the town to hunt up some rations. They found a tierce of bacon
surrounded by a ravenous crowd, fighting and quarreling. The man on duty
guarding the bacon was quickly overpowered, and the bacon distributed to the
crowd. The detail secured a piece and marched back triumphantly to their waiting
comrades.
After considerable delay the line
broke into column and marched away in the direction of Curdsville. It was on
this march that Cutshaw's battalion showed itself proof against the
demoralization which was appearing, and received, almost from the lips of the
Commander in Chief, a compliment of which any regiment in the army might be
proud.
All along the line of march the
enemy's cavalry followed close on the flanks of the column, and whenever an
opportunity offered swooped down upon the trains. Whenever this occurred the
battalion, with the division, was faced towards the advancing cavalry and
marched in line to meet them, generally repulsing them with ease. In one of
these attacks the cavalry approached so near the column that a dash was made at
them, and the infantry returned to the road with General Gregg, of the enemy's
cavalry, a prisoner. He was splendidly equipped and greatly admired by the
ragged crowd around him. He was or pretended to be greatly surprised at his
capture. When the column had reached a point two or three miles beyond
Farmville, it was found that the enemy was driving in the force which was
protecting the marching column and trains. The troops hurrying back were panic
stricken, all efforts to rally them were vain, and the enemy was almost upon the
column.
General Gordon ordered General Walker
to form his division and drive the enemy back from the road. The division
advanced gallantly, and conspicuous in the charge was Cutshaw's battalion. When
the line was formed, the battalion occupied rising ground on the right. The line
was visible for a considerable distance. In rear of the battalion there was a
group of unarmed men under command of Sergeant Ellett, of the Howitzers. In the
distribution of muskets at Amelia Courthouse the supply fell short of the demand
and this squad had made the trip so far unarmed. Some, too, had been compelled
to ground their arms at Sailor's creek. A few yards to the left and rear of the
battalion, in the road, was General Lee, surrounded by a number of officers,
gazing eagerly about him. An occasional musket ball whistled over, but there was
no enemy in sight. In the midst of this quiet a general officer at the left and
rear of the battalion, fell from his horse, severely wounded. A messenger was
sent from the group in the road to ask the extent of his injury. After a short
while the enemy appeared, and the stampeded troops came rushing by. Cutshaw's
battalion stood firmly and quietly, as if on parade, waiting orders. General
officers galloped about, begging the fleeing men to halt, but in vain. Several
of the fugitives, as they passed the battalion, were collared by the disarmed
squad, relieved of their muskets and ammunition, and with a kick allowed to
proceed to the rear. There was now between the group in the road and the enemy
only the battalion of improvised infantry. There they stood, on the crest of the
hill, in sharp relief. Not a man moved from his place. Did they know the Great
Commander was watching them? Some one said "forward," the cry passed
from lip to lip and with cheers the battalion moved rapidly to meet the enemy,
while the field was full of the stampeded troops making to the rear. A courier
came out with orders to stop the advance, but they heeded him not. Again he
came, but on they went. Following the line was the unarmed squad, unable to do
more than swell the volume of the wild shouts of their comrades. Following them
also was the commissary department, consisting of two men, with a piece of bacon
swung on a pole between them, yelling and hurrahing. As the line advanced, the
blue jackets sprang up and ran through the broom straw like hares, followed by a
shower of balls. Finally an officer -- some say General Gordon, and others an
aid of Longstreet's -- rode out to the front of the battalion, ordered a halt,
and in the name of General Lee thanked the men for their gallant conduct and
complimented them in handsome style. His words were greeted with loud cheers,
and the battalion marched back to the road carrying several prisoners and having
retaken two pieces of artillery which had been abandoned to the enemy. After the
enemy was driven back out of reach of our trains and column of march and the
troops were in line of battle, General Lee in person rode up in rear of the
division, and addressing himself directly to the men in ranks (a thing very
unusual with him), used language to this effect: "That is right men; that
is all I want you to do. Just keep those people back awhile. I do not wish you
to expose yourselves to unnecessary danger." Mahone's division then coming
up, took the place of Walker's, and the march was resumed. The battalion passed
on, the men cutting slices from their piece of bacon and eagerly devouring them.
As night came on the signs of disaster increased. At several places whole trains
were standing in the road abandoned, artillery, chopped down and burning,
blocked the way, and wagon loads of ammunition were dumped out in the road and
trampled under foot. There were abundant signs of disaster. So many muskets were
dropped on the road that Cutshaw's unarmed squad armed itself with abandoned
muskets, ammunition and equipments. There was a halt during the night in a piece
of stunted woods. The land was low and sobby. In the road passing through the
woods stood several batteries, chopped down and deserted. There was a little
flour on hand, which had been picked up on the road. An oilcloth was spread, the
flour placed on it, water was found, and the dough mixed. Then some clean
partition boards were knocked out of a limber chest, the dough was spread on
them and held near the fire till partially cooked. Then, with what delight, it
was devoured!
At daybreak Saturday the march was
resumed and continued almost without interruption during the whole day -- the
men, those whose gums and teeth were not already too sore, crunching parched
corn and raw bacon as they trudged along. Saturday night the battalion rested
near Appomattox Courthouse in a pine woods. Sunday morning, April 9th, after a
short march, the column entered the village of Appomattox Courthouse, marching
by what seemed to be the main road. Several dead men, dressed in the uniform of
United States regular artillery, were lying on the roadside, their faces turned
up to the blaze of the sun. One had a ghastly wound in the breast, which must
have been made by grape or canister.
On through the village without
halting marched the column. "Whitworth" shots went hurtling through
the air every few minutes, indicating very clearly that the enemy was ahead of
the column and awaiting its arrival. On the outskirts of the village the line of
battle was formed. Indeed, there seemed to be two lines -- one slightly in
advance of the other. Wagons passed along the line dropping boxes of cartridges,
which the men were ordered to knock open and supply themselves with forty rounds
each. They filled their breeches' pockets to the brim. The general officers
galloped up and down the line, apparently hurrying everything as much as
possible. The shots from a battery in advance were continually passing over the
line, going in the direction of the village, but without harm to any one. The
more experienced men predicted a severe struggle. It was supposed that this was
to be an attack with the whole army in mass, for the purpose of breaking through
the enemy's line and making one more effort to move on.
Finally the order
"forward!" ran along the line, and as it advanced the chiefs of
detachments, gunners and commissioned officers marched in rear, keeping up a
continual cry of "Close up men, close up!" "Go ahead now, don't
lag!" "Keep up!" Thus marching, the line entered a body of woods,
proceeded some distance, changed direction to the left, and emerging from the
woods, halted in a large open field, beyond which was another body of woods
which concealed further view in front.
After some delay, a detail for
skirmish duty was ordered. Captain Jones detailed four men, -- Fry and Garber
the same number. Lieutenant McRae was placed in command. The infantry detailed
skirmishers for their front. All arrangements completed, the men deployed and
entered the woods. They had advanced but a short distance, when they encountered
a strong line of picket posts. Firing and cheering they rushed on the surprised
men, who scampered away, leaving all their little conveniences behind them, and
drove them for about a mile. From this point large bodies of the enemy were
visible, crowding the hilltops like a blue or black cloud. It was not many
minutes before a strong line of dismounted cavalry, followed by mounted men,
deployed from this mass to cover the retreat of their fleeing brethren and
restore the picket line. They came down the hills and across the fields, firing
as they came. On looking around to see what were the chances for making a stand,
Lieutenant McRae found that the infantry skirmishers had been withdrawn. The
officer who had commanded them could be seen galloping away in the distance. The
little squad, knowing they were alone, kept up a brisk fire on the advancing
enemy, till he was close up in front and well to the rear of both flanks. On the
left, not more than two hundred yards, a column of cavalry, marching by twos,
had crossed the line and were still marching, as unconcernedly as possible, to
the rear of McRae. Seeing this, McRae ordered his squad to retire, saying at the
same time, "But don't let them see you running, boys! "
So they retired, slowly, stubbornly
and returning shot for shot with the enemy, who came on at a trot, cheering
valiantly, as they pursued four men and a lieutenant. The men dragged the butts
of their old muskets behind them, loading as they walked. All loaded, they
turned, halted, fired, received a shower of balls in return, and then again
moved doggedly to the rear. A little lieutenant of infantry, who had been on the
skirmish line, joined the squad. He was armed with a revolver and had his sword
by his side. Stopping behind the corner of a corn crib he swore he would not go
any further to the rear. The squad moved on and left him standing there, pistol
in hand, waiting for the enemy, who were now jumping the fences and coming
across the field, running at the top of their speed. What became of this
singular man no one knows. He was, as he said, "determined to make a
stand." A little further on the squad found a single piece of artillery,
manned by a lieutenant and two or three men. They were selecting individuals in
the enemy's skirmish line and firing at them with solid shot!
Lieutenant McRae laughed at the ridiculous sight, remonstrated with the officer
and offered his squad to serve the gun, if there was any canister in the limber
chest. The offer was refused, and again the squad moved on. Passing a cow shed
about this time, the squad halted to look with horror upon several dead and
wounded Confederates who lay there upon the manure pile. They had suffered
wounds and death upon this the last day of their country's struggle. Their
wounds had received no attention and those living were famished and burning with
fever.
Lieutenant McRae, noticing a number
of wagons and guns parked in a field near by, surprised at what he considered
great carelessness in the immediate presence of the enemy, approached an officer
on horseback and said, in his usual impressive manner, "I say there! what
does this mean?" The man took his hand and quietly said: "We have
surrendered." "I don't believe it, sir!" replied McRae, strutting
around as mad as a hornet; "you mustn't talk so, sir! you will demoralize
my men!" He was soon convinced, however, by seeing Yankee cavalrymen
walking their horses around as composedly as though the Army of Northern
Virginia had never existed. To say that McRae was surprised, disgusted,
indignant and incredulous is a mild way of expressing his state of mind as he
turned to his squad and said: "Well, boys, it must be so, but it's very
strange behavior. Let's move on and see about it." As though dreaming, the
squad and the disgusted officer moved on.
Learning that the army had gone into
camp, the skirmishers went on in the direction of the village and found the
battalion in the woods near the main road. Fires were burning and those who had
been fortunate enough to find anything eatable were cooking. Federal troops were
riding up and down the road and loafing about the camps trying to be familiar.
They seemed to think that "How are you, Johnny?" spoken in
condescending style, was sufficient introduction.
During the day a line of men came
single file over the hill near the camp, each bearing. on his shoulder a box of
"hard tack" or crackers. Behind these came a beef, driven by soldiers.
The crackers and beef were a present from the Federal troops near, who, knowing
the famishing condition of the surrounded army, had contributed their day's
rations for its relief. All honor to them. It was a soldierly act which was
thoroughly appreciated.
The beef was immediately shot and
butchered, and before the animal heat had left the meat, it was impaled in
little strips on sticks, bayonets, swords and pocket knives, roasting over the
fires.
Though numbers of the enemy visited
the camps and plied the men with all sorts of questions, seeming very curious
and inquisitive, not an unkind word was said on either side that day. When the
skirmishers under McRae entered the camp of the battalion, their enthusiastic
descriptions of driving the enemy and being driven in turn failed to produce any
effect. Many of the men were sobbing and crying, like children recovering from
convulsions of grief after a severe whipping. They were sorely grieved,
mortified and humiliated. Of course they had not the slightest conception of the
numbers of the enemy who surrounded them.
Other men fairly raved with
indignation, and declared their desire to escape or die in the attempt; but not
a man was heard to blame General Lee. On the contrary, all expressed the
greatest sympathy for him and declared their willingness to submit at once, or
fight to the last man, as he ordered. At no period of the war was he held in
higher veneration or regarded with more sincere affection, than on that sad and
tearful day.
In the afternoon of Tuesday the 11th,
the little remnant of the army remaining was massed in a field. General Gordon
spoke to them most eloquently, and bid them farewell. General Walker addressed
his division, to which Cutshaw's battalion was attached, bidding them farewell.
In the course of his remarks he denounced fiercely the men who had thrown down
their arms on the march, and called upon the true men before him to go home and
tell their wives, mothers, sisters and sweethearts how shamefully these cowards
had behaved.
General Henry A. Wise also spoke,
sitting on his horse and bending forward over the pommel of his saddle.
Referring to the surrender, he said: "I would rather have embraced the
tabernacle of death." There were many heaving bosoms and tear stained faces
during the speaking. A tall, manly fellow, with his colors pressed to his side,
stood near General Gordon, convulsed with grief.
The speaking over, the assembly
dispersed and once more the campfires burned brightly. Night brought long needed
rest. The heroes of many hard fought battles, the conquerors of human nature's
cravings, the brave old army, fell asleep -- securely guarded by the encircling
hosts of the enemy. Who will write the history of that march? Who will be able
to tell the story? Alas! how many heroes fell!!
The paroles, which were distributed
on Tuesday the 11th, were printed on paper about the size of an ordinary bank
check, with blank spaces for the date, name of the prisoner, company and
regiment, and signature of the commandant of the company or regiment. They were
signed by the Confederate officers themselves, and were as much respected by all
picket officers, patrols, &c., of the Federal army as though they bore the
signature of U.S. Grant. The following is a copy of one of these paroles,
recently made from the original:
Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia,
April 10th, 1865
The bearer, Private -------- ------- ,
of Second company Howitzers, Cutshaw's battalion, a paroled prisoner of the Army
of Northern Virginia, has permission to go to his home and there remain
undisturbed.
L. F. JONES,
Captain Commanding Second Company Howitzers.
The "guidon," or color bearer, of the Howitzers had concealed the
battle flag of the company about his person, and before the final separation cut
it into pieces of about four by six inches, giving each man present a piece.
Many of these scraps of faded silk are still preserved, and will be handed down
to future generations. Captain Fry, who commanded after Colonel Cutshaw was
wounded, assembled the battalion, thanked the men for their faithfulness, bid
them farewell, and read the following:
Headquarters
Army Northern Virginia,
Appomattox Courthouse, April 10th,
1865.
GENERAL
ORDER No. 9.
After four years of arduous service, marked by unsurpassed courage and
fortitude, the Army of Northern Virginia has been compelled to yield to
overwhelming numbers and resources. I need not tell the brave survivors of so
many hard fought battles, who have remained steadfast to the last, that I have
consented this result from no distrust of them; but feeling that valor and
devotion could accomplish nothing that would compensate for the loss that must
have attended a continuance of the contest, I determined to avoid the useless
sacrifice of those whose past services have endeared them to their countrymen.
By the terms of agreement, officers and men can return to their homes and remain
until exchanged. You will take with you the satisfaction that proceeds from the
consciousness of duty faithfully performed, and I earnestly pray that a merciful
God will extend to you his blessing and protection.
With an unceasing admiration of your constancy and devotion to your country, and
a grateful remembrance of your kind and generous consideration for myself, I bid
you all an affectionate farewell.
R. E. Lee.
This grand farewell from the man who had in the past personified the glory of
his army and now bore its grief in his own great heart, was the signal for
tearful partings. Comrades wept as they gazed upon each other, and with choking
voices said, farewell! And so, - - they parted. Little groups of two or three or
four, without food, without money, but with "the satisfaction that proceeds
from the consciousness of duty faithfully performed," were soon plodding
their way homeward.
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