The Photographic History of The Civil War Wphotographichist01mill - 0
The Photographic History of The Civil War Wphotographichist01mill - 0
The Photographic History of The Civil War Wphotographichist01mill - 0
of
The
In
Civil
War
Ten Volumes
2014
https://archive.org/details/photographichist01mill_0
COPYRIGHT,
PREPARING FOR
Florida Opens
who
tlie
Grim Game
any
vessels going
of
On a sandy
War.
what
is
now
pass.
foes,
On
Between
OF
01
this point
On
its site
the western end of this island was the strongly built Fort Pickens.
Out
of the deep
of the
shadows
heavy pieces
of
New
Early in 1861
we look
upon one
being shifted preparatory to being mounted on the rampart at Fort Barrancas, which, since January 12th, had been in possession of
State troops.
Fort Barrancas.
moves.
fortification called
up to Pensacola must
1911,
the
crisis
still
and
and
Stripes.
m.
///
In
Ten Volumes
Robert
S.
Editor-in-Chief
Lanier
Managing Editor
many
Special Authorities
New York
The Review of Reviews
1911
Co.
In
Volume One
The Opening Battles
Contributors
William H. Taft
Major, U.
Henry Wysham
Marcus
I^anier
S.
A.
Henry W. Elson
Lieutenant-Colonel, U.
E.
Wright
Brigadier-Oeneral, C.
Ehem Swift
French
J.
S. V.
S.
A.
Chadwick
Rear -Admiral, U.
S.
James Barnes
N.
New York
Copyright,
1911,
by Patriot Publishing
New
York, U.S.A.
NEW YORK
CONTENTS
MapBattle Grounds
PAGE
of the Civil
War
FOREWORDS
Greeting
12
President Tuft
Dedication
13
.....
Acknowledgment
14
The Publishers
Editorial Introductory
15
PREFACES
Photographing the Civil
War
30
as History
60
Putnam
88
French E. Chadwick
Records of the
Marcus
War Between
the States
102
J. Wriglit
Civil
War
Leaders
112
Eben Swift
Part I
137
Henry W. Elson
Bull Run
The
142
Part II
PAGE
DOWN THE
MISSISSIPPI
VALLEY
.......
IV.
171
178
Elson
The
196
Hen ry W. Elsun
New Madrid
216
Henry W. Elson
New
Orleans
The
226
James Barnes
Gunboats
.....
and Batteries
236
Henry W. Elson
Part III
251
Henry W. Elson
YoRKTOWN
Fair Oaks
Up the Peninsula
In
254
Sight of Richmond
......
The
Part
ENGAGEMENTS OF THE
CIVIL
282
304
.311
IV
WAR UP TO
JULY,
1862
.345
Georfje L. Kilmer
MapTheater
of Campaigns in Virginia
[10]
369
FOREWORDS
GREETING FROM PRESIDENT TAFT
DEDICATION
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
EDITORIAL INTRODUCTORY
We have
to the full the heroes of the South, and the South admire to
There is a monument in
Quebec that always commended itself to me - a monument to ccmroemorate the battle of the Plains of Abraham,
On one face
who died, nor to the Southern Yale men who died; but to the
Yale men who died in the Civil War.
BeDtcateD
FIFTY YEARS AFTER
FORT SUMTER
TO THE MEN IN BLUE AND GRAY
WHOSE VALOR AND DEVOTION
OF A UNITED
NATION
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
O
editorial
of
Yet
idea.
it is
services.
broad
these
in
it
true that the contributions throughout the entire ten volumes of the
Photocjrai'HIC History are a direct outgrowth of the plan created years ago by Mr. Miller,
and urged
since
to emphasize
importance
in
comprehensive form those deeds and words from the mighty struggle that strike universal,
noble
human
chords.
the present
it
lasting privilege.
photographs
in
to the i>ublic.
of
which no actual
Hence the
War-time
Civil
the present work are not only several times as numerous as those in any
and
many hundreds
special scholars
come
as a reve-
lines of the
(Confederate armies and of the hosts in the Mississii)pi Valley, whose fighting was no less
and rediscovery
of
first
American
but
in the
or as fully heralded.
epic, in
battles,
to the
Wysham
"Brady-Gardner"
erously contributed
them
is
Blair, C. S. A.;
J.
of the Confederacy;
S. v.;
Copp, U.
S. V.;
Colonel S. A. Cunningham, C.
S. A.;
M.
The
John P. Nicholson,
S. A.;
TJ. S.
General G. P. Thruston, U.
Artillery,
Gray
S. V.;
suspended their
Captain F. A. Roziene, U.
become available
W.
state
R. E. Koch, U.
loss
it is
photographs.
Deep acknowledgment
Daughters
men and
the
now
collection
Otis, I J. S. V.;
The University
of
historical departments,
patriotic organizations
which courteously
EDITORIAL INTRODUCTORY
ON
Western World
American
these
('ivil
known
crisis
Roses
of tlie iiiodeni
in
We
of civilization.
all
look back
on our own
The decades have shrouded the first American Revolution in romance, but the
time has now come when this second American revolution, at the turning point of its
regimes.
become an American
and a
half million
first
half century,
men
gathered on the battle-line to offer their lives for principles that were dear to them.
It
is
to
is
as
may
and the
hanging
in the balance.
The
kind.
vision
is
And what
in peace
a tribute
it is
to
not
upon the
tar-
when the
legions of the
of a continent
flag,
this anniversary,
ideals,
American character to
man-
men who
greatest problems.
In
this first
volume, standing
GKAPiiic
is
literally before
to be revealed in
As one stands
at W'ashington, or before the archives of the American libraries, he feels that the last
word
of evidence
treatises, containing
varying viewpoints relating to this epoch in our national development, have been written
so
me; while
in
my home
city of Hartford,
which
is
nearly two thousand works similar to those that are within the reach of
all
tells
I find
the American
caimot understand
war.
little
me
that they
Great generals have told how they led their magnificent armies in battle; military
tacticians
have mapped and recorded the movements of regiments and corps with tech[15]
nical accuracy,
which
of
crisis
ship.
in
civilization
maneuver, which
interest in
is
The
all
is
effects of this
strange
I
and the
of popular interest
knows
is
because this
little of
is
military
it.
The Americans
force.
them
is
to take
up arms.
It
mighty
are a
not their love for the art of war that has caused
It is
The American people feel the pulse of life itself; they love the greater emotions that
cause men to meet danger face to face. Their hearts beat to the martial strain of the
national anthem "The Star Spangled Banner" and they feel the melody in that old Marthe Confederacy, "Dixie, " for in them they catch mental visions of the sweep-
seillaise of
ing lines under floating banners at the battle-front; they hear the roar of the guns and
the clatter of cavalry; but more than that
they
feel
men
to
testify in
War
Civil
comes on
American Revolution,
who had issued to the world the declaration that all men are created politically free and
equal, who had formulated the Constitution that dethroned mediteval monarchy and
founded a new republic to bring new hope to the races of the earth parted at the dividing
line of a great
in the greatest
fratricidal tragedy that the world has ever witnessed, only to be reunited and to stand,
fifty
years later, hand in hand for the betterment of mankind, pledging themselves to
universal peace
This
and brotherhood.
is
is
more
is
men
same
phalanx or
continent
Roman
legion ever
knew
manhood than
epic
an
It
in those
No
Grecian
in the decision
of a constitutional
battled for principle rather than conquest, for right rather than power.
This
is
mede.
I recall
It
is
it
seems to
me
that
it
must be the
sjjirit
of
won at Runnywho turned the defeat of war into the vic"What else could be expected of a people in
of the
devout and resolute men who protested against the grinding exactions of the Stuarts;
the blood of the stalwart Dissenters and of the heroic Highlanders of Scotland, and of
[16]
who came
from the mountain battlements of Switzerland, whose signal lights summoned her people
tt)
batlle-line of I'urilan, of
Huguenot,
The
causes of the
American
make way
of Protestant, of Catholic, of
its sacrifice
Civil
War
its
will
on the altar
was a great
It
every
of civilization.
own
viewpoint.
It
came
nation.
it
is
unnecessary to linger in
to a crisis in the
American
result of a
sociological system that had come down through the ages before there was a republic on
the Western continent, and which finally came to a focus through the conflicting interests
When
and Madison
Jefferson
construed our constitution in one way, and Washington and Hamilton in another, surely
it is
There
for North, for South, for East, for West, on these battle-grounds
ditions a grander empire than Ctesar's legions won for Rome.
ill
To
feel
is
is
of a people's tra-
town
of
Hartford, Conn., to enter the halls of Washington and Lee University in historic Lexing-
ton in the
what
it
means to be a Southerner.
Lee.
my
upon
the Republic
and the
I,
first
friends
the
When
May flowers on
I felt
the graves of
mausoleum
returned to
soil,
to the
of
I felt
it
was
the heart-beat of
all
men.
When I now turn these pages I realize what a magnificent thing it is to have lived;
I am proud that my
how wonderful is man and his power to blaze the path for progress
heritage runs back through nearly three hundred years to the men who planted the seed
!
of liberty in the
New World
into which
is
men
bing body.
It
is
its
exploits
of the ages,
and
in
whose hearts
the per-
the Grecian legends and surpass Leonidas and his three hundred at Thermopylfe.
In
full
to military
and
The
collection of photographs
historical record,
human
is
is
now
War
it
exist as in-
from an en-
in
America,
The
military
movements
of the
may burden
stage the great scenes that are herein enacted, but the routine that
or detract from the broader, martial picture that
avoided.
human
than
numbers
so conflicting regarding
is
now
so abun-
many
literature.
statistics;
dant in American
memory
the
lies
and
in battle
killed
and impartially.
It
The hand
of the historian
War
may
told in
is
we must
may
It
all
in these
is
Northerners
from
for independence
The
photographs that
bound them
it
final
reader
record of
may
con-
and
who fought
each according to
Americans can
all
Here we are
or Southerners
but the
fail,
judgment may
falter, or his
all
united at the
to maintain the
his
own
Union
interpretation
These photographs are appeals to peace; they are the most convincing evidence of the
They bring
tragedy of war.
it
understand the meaning of the great movement for universal brotherhood that
Peace Society,
in
history
is
now
New York
speaking of them, truly says that they are the greatest arguments for
make
of the
to
Their mission
is
more than
to record history
it is
to
price of war.
As the founder
of this
memorial
library,
and
its editor-in-chief,
it is
my
pleasure to
Frank Drake,
whom
this
New
Search-Light Library of
more
friendly, fair,
of
Mr. Egbert
to
York, through
whom
Reviews Company.
it
Handy, president
Gilliss
was organized
The
The
of
all
result,
than has perhaps been possible under the conditions that preceded
co-operated to
we
hope,
is
this semi-centennial
anniversary.
To
President William
Howard
Taft,
his
in the Federal
and Con-
P|0tngraplftr Ti|tBt0ra nf
tl)^ (Etittl
Wnv
General G. W. Custis Lee, the sons of the great warriors who led the armies through the
American
Crisis; to the
in the
War Department
at Washington;
Academy
at
Grand Army
officers of the
West
to Dr.
Edward
S.
Order of the Loyal Legion, the United Confederate Veterans, the Daughters of the Con-
shown an appreciation
We are
especially indebted to
of the
editor of the
Na-
M. Dodge; Colonel
S.
and
to the
many
others who, in their understanding and appreciation have rendered valuable assistance
in the realization of its special mission to the
American people on
final
word
this semi-centennial.
that confronted the military, historical, and other authorities whose contributions have
made
the text of
and the
Review
of Reviews, they
been
set
ants,
and hearty
With
all
which, work-
War
spirit in
movements
of the Civil
effort
of all
my
concerned to
gratitude to
my
fulfil
as
we stand
let
is
Miller.
carrying the
than those of the mighty warriors who led the great armies to
the obliga-
personal assist-
Mr. Walter R. Bickford, Mr. Arthur Forrest Burns, and Mr. Wallace H.
And now,
The
make your
battle.
It
was General
all
appeal to his countrymen must always be an admonition against war: "Let us have
peace."
Hartford, Connecticut,
Fiftieth Anniversary
Lincoln's Inauguration.
[A-2]
[19]
FIHST I'UEFACE
PHOTOGRAPHING
THE
CIVIL
WAR
name
made
[22]
of the
way
"COOPERS BATTERY
This
wagon out
"
(SEE PAtiE
who supposed
'^2)
"LOAD!'
Mansfield house.
In the rear of the battery the
veteran \ Cnnont l)rif;a<le was aeting as support. To tlieir rear
was the hank of tlie river skirted hy trees. The grove of white
poplars to the right surrounded the Mansfield house.
With
charaetcristic coolness, some of the troops had already pitched
ruins of the
their
dog tents.
line of
Sixth Corps. ]5attery D was present al the first bat tie of lJull Run,
where the Confederates there engaged got a taste of its metal on
the Federal left
T3
-O
>
V3
<n
to
00
Si
.A
oj
5
EC
J=
V-
O
o
a.
-C
o.
.Si
5C
2
"o
0.^
-T3
3
o
-8
^
o
o
4<i
O
o
Oh
J3
^ <
J;
s.
*s
<n
.9
o
a
-j:
C5
TOG
fCLA
o
m
-J
K
H
Hh
Eh
CC
es;
o
I
H
O
So;'"
<
fa
=?
fa
J=
-Q
73
=s
-Si
From
Bull
Run
of the
Confederates, and strong camps for the defense of Washington were maintained throughout the war.
weary
of
Salmon
[28]
of
Rhode
Island,
At
in the capital.
willing subject
Abercrombie, an
of continuous guard-duty.
officers
It
She
in
camp by General
J. J.
Here
is
the
mount
The
rider
is
Such
at General Fitz
is
man and
the envy of modern photography, which does not achieve such depth without fast lenses, focal-plane
shutters,
plates,
before exposing
it,
To
it
leisure.
was necessary
five
PHOTOGRAPHING THE
CIVIL
WAR
EXTRAORDINARY
War
is
How
How
1865:
[30]
Below
Lytle
him a
pher
as
Confederate
it
employ
New
photogra-
Main Street,
18G4, when in the
stood on
Baton Rouge,
Hull
battle of
he returned precipitately to
the gallery of A. D.
is
in
Confederate Secret
of the
attempt to
York
Brady was a
It
was indeed
of
Later
Hrady
himself
to
and at
flee,
Lytle
in the thick
was
way
lost his
tol,
he
New York
of
sword
at Scott's
made
his
thence to
ture
we
way
to
New
see
Buckling
him
provision
still
New
made
for
Orleans,
Like Brady,
Lytle
it
photographic
supplies
Brady
thony
& Company
and
lines.
obtained his
of
from An-
New
York;
In the pic-
proudly wear-
traband
traffic to
flag
smuggling the
Washington and
York.
shots
Blufif,
was relayed to
Fire Depart-
on beneath
rifle
was
pany
up
of that
woods near
Here
name.
its
secretly
compelled
steal
nightfall
in the
would
day.
the
in
fatal
he
origin implies
trade"
Copyriuht by Rreifw of Heciews Co.
i.ssued
3^
Ifot0grajil|tng \\\t
flltutl
Mar
4jf
4^
4jf
a camp.
The
is
beyond
praise:
one cannot help living through this tense moment with these
men of long ago, and one's eyes instinctively follow their fixed
gaze toward the lines of the foe. This picture was shown to
Lieutenant James A. Gardner (of Battery B, First Pennsylvania Light Artillery
who immediately named half a
dozen of the figures, adding details of the most intimate interest (see pages 22 and 23)
) ,
I am, even at this late day, able to pick out and recognize a very
large number of the members of our battery, as shown in this photograph.
Our battery (familiarly known as Cooper's Battery) belonged to the
Fifth Corps, then commanded by Gen. G. K. Warren.
Our corps arrived in front of Petersburg on June 17, 1864, was put
into position on the evening of that day, and engaged the Confederate
batteries on their line near the Avery house.
The enemy at that time
32]
"
in
is
Barnard,
of
the
The
in the field.
larger
Mississippi.
new Federal
direction at Atlanta,
September-October, 1864.
of the
Captain Poe
much
that quarter.
Barnard
many
buildings in
official
f Reviews Co.
'
In the background
report.
right
all
the
known
lost
war
photographers
their
cumbersome
his
worked
tents
and
To
the
many
sliells.
off
by some sharpshooter.
In
the
of the State
Armory
being
In the back-
at Columbia, South
burned
troops
was
This
Carolina.
is
smaller
" What-Is-It,"
Brady's
tent,
see the
McPherson
we
Sherman's
as
passed
through
makinghis exposures,
linas,
chemicals
supplies
the
and
were carried
wagon showing
right.
The
general
served
is
photographs showing
of
was made
result
of
1865
that
done
to
render use-
mies in the
of
which
all
march
less to
to be forwarded later to
Washington by Captain
typical
by him
their progress
the
Sherman's work,
of
1865.
in
to the
fications,
February,
photographer, bring-
field,
the mili-
was commanded by General Beauregard. That night the enemy fell back
to their third line, which then occupied the ridge which you see to the
right and front, along where you will notice the chimney (the houses had
been burnt down). On the night of the 18th we threw up the lunettes
This position was occupied by us until possibly
in front of our guns.
about the 23d or 24<th of June, when we were taken further to the left.
The position shown in the picture is about six hundred and fifty yards
in front, and to the right of the Avery house, and at or near this point
was built a permanent fort or battery, which was used continuously during the entire siege of Petersburg.
that I occupied at chat time, as gunner. After that, I served as sergeant, first sergeant, and first lieutenant, holding the latter position
at the close of the war. All the officers shown in this picture are dead.
Army
tions
which was opposite us was that of Gen. Bushrod R. Johnson; but as the
of Northern Virginia, under General Lee, began arriving on the
evening of June 18th, it would be impossible for me to say who occupied
the enemy's lines after that. The enemy's position, which was along on
the ridge to the front, in the picture, where you see the chimney, afterward became the main line of the Union army. Our lines were advanced
to that point, and at or about where you see the chimney standing, Fort
Morton of the Union line was constructed, and a little farther to the
right was Fort Stedman, on the same ridge
and about where the battery
now stands, as shown in the picture, was a small fort or works erected,
known as Battery Seventeen.
When engaged in action, our men exhibited the same coolness that
is shown in the picture
that is, while loading our guns. If the enemy
is engaging us, as soon as each gun is loaded the cannoneers drop to the
ground and protect themselves as best they can, except the gunners and
the officers, who are expected to be always on the lookout. The gunners
Army
who
sight
and
of
how
first
the business of
army photoghim
at Bull
In the
exemplified by
compartment
for
left
includes a
more
The little
leisurely developing.
Savannah
March
to the
all
fol-
time
Sea.
we
light
was
it
marching
The view
is
of the exterior
Savannah
United
States
St.
ville,
Army, and
River.
.\ugustine, Beaufort,
from
darkly
the
parapet at
who
Sherman's
"bummers,"
bardment. Here he
could
the
is
in
the act
see
smoke
of
the
of
The
making an exposure.
Federal
gunboats
waiting
to
seem to eyes
far too
of the present
cumbersome
to
day
make
on,
wonderful defini-
possible the
tion
and beautiful
light
effects
the footsore
beyond.
and hungry
of
attack,
and
the
Stars
jl
''|
and
terize
that have
come down
to
and the
us
sea.
between them
a century.
two means
The wagon
Fa 31
of
up the
transportation.
fitted to carry
the
river
and the
joyful
the
thrown up.
Hu
notice in
mphreij's Journal in 1861 describes vividly
the records of the flight after Bull Run secured by the indefatigable Brady.
Unfortunately the unique one in which the
'////
He
[Brady]
Sunday morning
\\
liad
in
his wanderings*,
it
was
his fate to
7f]
II
THE CAMERA
IN
AND
WITH
TIIE
RETREAT
ARMY
ADVANCE
ill
betided
it.
to the
Above, two
of
them
Below
is
retreat,
a photograph-
last
Butler's,
at
Petersburg.
(above)
(below)
PHOTOGRAPHERS
PHOTOGRAPHERS
AT BULL RUN
AT BUTLER'S
BEFORE THE
SIGNALING
SECOND
TOWER
FIGHT
1804
It
is
clearly
Ill
.1
'J
lull
here in his persistent pushing forward upon Richmond, the cameraists were engaged in fixing, washing, and storing their negatives.
"What
Is
At
first
1865
were in Charleston, and the Union photogtime were securing views of the position.
BRADY'S "WHAT
IS
IT?
"
AT CULPEPER, VIRGINIA
|i
_Q
J2
6:
13
-s;
a>
C4
-a
.g
o5
be
o
60
g
OS
-1
ft
^ a
1^
-7?
.ti
WOX
4^
\asizmMlMm
We
shall get some more glimpses presently of these adventurous souls in action. But, as already hinted, extraordinary as were the results of Brady's impetuous vigor, he was
but one of many in the great work of picturing the war.
Three-fourths of the scenes with the Arm}^ of the Potomac
were made by Gardner. Thomas G. Roche was an indefatigable worker in the armies' train.
Captain A. J. Russell,
detached as official camera-man for the War Department,
obtained many invaluable pictures illustrating the military
railroading and construction work of the Army of the Potomac, which were hurried straightway to Secretary Stanton
at Washington.
Sam A. Cooley was attached to the Tenth
Army Corps, and recorded the happenings around Savannah,
Fort McAllister, Jacksonville, St, Augustine, Beaufort, and
Charleston during the bombardment; George INI. Barnard,
under the supervision of General O. JNI. Poe (then Captain in
the Engineer Corps), did yeoman's service around Atlanta.
S. R. Siebert was very busy indeed at Charleston in 1865.
he was a " camera spy," and a good one, too. He secured his
chemicals from the same great firm of Anthony & Co., in New
York, but instead of running the blockade with them, they
were supplied on " orders to trade." In many cases, for instance, the necessary iodides and bromides masqueraded as
It
this
photograph could have been taken before the advent of modern pho-
In grassy
or
modern photographic
fields
above the
The view
salon.
of a scout.
is
fifty
in
camp was
of Quarles' Mill,
while the
made almost
woman
Among
for a
She was captured astride of a bony steed and asserted that she belonged to a battery of
down her
As the
faithful
artillery.
who gave
day
camera
particu-
point
a line of battle around the ford on the southern bank just in time to head off a bold Confederate dash for
the same coign of vantage.
Crittenden's advance guard was hotly engaged in the woods beyond the mill
of the
quinine/ JNIr. Ly tie's son relates that his father used to signal
with flag and lantern from the observation tower on the top
of the ruins of the Baton Rouge capitol to Scott's Blufl',
whence the messages were relayed to the Confederates near
New Orleans; but he found this provided such a tempting target for the Federal sharpshooters that he discontinued the
practice.
of
made.
"
"
monopolizing
the field. And surely the sum total of achievement is triumphant enough to share among all who had any hand in it.
And now let us try to get some idea of the problem which
confronted these enthusiasts, and see how they tackled it.
*
This statement
is
historically confirmed.
he has seen many such ordersto-trade, signed by President Lincoln, but not countersigned by Secretary
Stanton.
ing, of the University of Louisiana, states
[441
day.
the Federal cavalryman's horse which has been ridden to the stream for a drink.
caught the
The
v/aterfall
picture
and
was taken
at Hazel Run, Virginia, above the pontoon bridge constructed for the crossing of the Federal troops.
During
the advances and retreats, while the Federal armies were maneuvering for position, the photographers
were frequently at a
tice
as this.
At such
specimens of landscape photography give us a clear conception of the character of the country over which
the Federal and Confederate armies passed and repassed during the stirring period of the war.
I|0tngrapl|tug
X\}t
dtutl
War
'
'
wore
off.
Having
arrived,
ally attendant
upon reaching
First, all the plain glass plates in various sizes, usually 8 x 10,
studio.
After coating the plate with collodion and letting the ether
and alcohol evaporate to just the right degree of " stickiness," it was
lowered carefully into a deep " bath holder " which contained a solution
of nitrate of silver about 60 for quick field-work.
This operation
created the sensitive condition of the plate, and had to be done in total
darkness except a subdued yellow light. When properly coated (from
three to five minutes) the plate was put into a "slide" or "holder"
and exposed to the action of the light in the camera. When exposed,
it was returned to the dark-room and developed.
1461
undreamed
is
of in the
an excellent example
The entrance
to the tent
is
wet-plate has caught the sheen and texture of the silk dresses
camp.
1864
worn by the
war photographers.
this picture are
officers' wives,
whom we
The
officers'
see
The collodion
on a
a permanent
quarters received
of the
visit to
an atmosphere of indescribable charm was thrown about the permanent camps to which the wives of the
parade was usually held for their entertainment.
When we remember
marvelous.
first
officers
gruesome side
attention.
came
of war.
amused
Thus
in their brief
review or a
consummation of which practically closfrd the war, the New York engineers, while not engaged in strengthening the Federal fortifications, amused
themselves by constructing a number of rustic buildings of great beauty. One of these was the signal tower toward the left of the
Federal line of investment.
Near it a substantial and artistic ho.spital building was erected, and, to take the place of a demolished
church, a new and better rustic structure sprang into being.
In the weary waiting before Petersburg during the siege, the successful
Ij0tograpl)tng
JNIr.
Rockwood
liar
(tttuil
knew all about Brady's wagon, havcontrivance made for himself before the war,
also
He
"
used an ordinary
delivery
wagon
of impedimenta.
" On exceptional occasions in very cold Aveather the life
of a AA'et plate might be extended to nearly an hour on either
side of the exposure, the coating or the dcA'clopment side, but
ordinarily the Avork had to be done Avithin a a ery fcAv minutes,
and every minute of delay resulted in loss of brilliancy and
deptli in the negative."
Some vivid glimpses of the Avar-photographers' troubles
come also from JSIr. J. Pitcher Spencer, Avho kncAv the Avork
intimatelj"
We
my
worthy
me
doff
to carry his
camera
"wet plate"),
there
came a large
realization of
[481
''/nXiZ-A'.:
for a
moment
it.
bend
army then
of the
photograph.
blow up the
dam
at the
mouth
of this canal,
fleet
It took Butler's
canal, exposed as they were to the fire of the Confederate batteries above.
ful effort to
up
in
up the
men
One
all
army photographer
which the Confederates had placed to prevent the passage of the Federal
this engineering feat are here seen plainly in the
l^ottled
river
to dig a canal at
batteries, torpedoes,
toward Richmond.
and obstructions
The
difficulties of
it,
render
it
navigable.
was an unsuccess-
I|0tngraplitng
tl)^ flltutl
Mar
reahze that
Still
further details
grajjhic expert,
JSIr.
F.
soldier
and photo-
M. Rood:
The plate " flowed " with collodion was dipped at once in a bath
of nitrate of silver, in water also iodized, remained there in darkness
three to five minutes ; still in darkness, it was taken out, drained, put
in the dark-holder, exposed, and developed in the dark-tent at once.
The time between flowing the collodion and developing should not exceed eight or ten minutes.
The developer was sulphate of iron solution and acetic acid, after which came a slight washing and fixing (to
remove the surplus silver) with solution of cyanide of potassium; and
The surface (wet or
then a final washing, drying, and varnishing.
dry), unlike a dry plate, could not be touched. I was all through the
war from 186165, in the Ninety-third New York regiment, whose
pictures you have given. I recognized quite a number of the old comrades.
You have also in your collection a negative of each company
of that regiment.
Fortunately the picture men occasionally immortalized
each other as Avell as the combatants, so that we have a numIn one
ber of intimate glimpses of their life and methods.
the wagon, chemicals and camera are in the very trenches at
Atlanta, and they tell more than pages of description. But,
naturally, they cannot show the arduous labor, the narrow
escapes, the omnipresent obstacles which could be overcome
only by the keenest ardor and determination. The epic of the
It would compare
war-photographer is still to be written.
favorably with the story of many battles. And it does not
[50]
"m
CAMP
LIFE OF
On
his
camp
if
by magic
into an
immense
immense
patient
and knapsacks
army mules
Army
of the
The barren
of McClellan's
supply base
fields
in
away
of the farriers
Potomac
transports convoyed up
fleet of
his
carelessly
camp
of the Fifth
New York
inspection
drill.
is
drawn up
in
columns of companies
for
From
The
May
While
divisions of Porter
in
the
Army
of the
and those of Franklin and Smith into the Sixth Corps under Franklin.
of Porter
and Franklin
in the organi-
On May
19th the
to Tunstall's Station.
movement
to
I}0t0grapl|tng
\\\
tli^ Oltutl
War
l|ot0graplttng
IIt^
dtutl
Mar
We
We
[54]
SECOND PREFACE
THE PHOTOGRAPHIC
RECORD
AS HISTORY
[56]
''iii;iniilit
1864
The delays Sherman had met with in his advance on Atlanta resulting in constant and indecisive
roads.
large party wished to
fighting without entrapping Johnston, had brought about a reaction at the North.
end the war. Election Day was approaching. Lincoln was a presidential candidate for the second time.
He had many enemies. But the news of Sherman's capture of Atlanta helped to restore confidence, and
to insure the continuation of the administration pledged to a vigorous prosecution of the war.
The
introduction on page 30, "Photographing the Civil War," remarks on the genius required to record
was a pioneer
that
'63
focus.
The
'61.
as this.
and experience.
Only experts
like the
men
In positions of danger and at times when speed and accuracy were required, there was the delicacy
of the old-fashioned
all its
drawbacks.
No wonder
pictures such as this exist; they had grown used to the old woodcut and the often mutilated attempts of
of action.
War.
Yet look at
this
standing in front giving his orders; his figure leaning slightly forward
mand.
made
The cannoneers,
the
Army of
ing repulse
the
resting or
Potomac
of
won
is
We
Rappahannock,
can hear the
just
officer
suffer, a
of the
men who
its
crush-
faith
and
IS
fifty
years since.
New
The words
years of
civil
my
recall the
"
war.
To one examining
drama
of the
was fought
manhood
of the country,
it
we
NEW
YORK.
men who dropped the ])ursuits of civil life and flocked to form the armies of
camp and on the battlefield the camera did its work and now takes us back over the
.showing us to the minutest detail how our men marched and lived and fought.
The
the North.
Thus,
youth
New York
93d
of the troops
in
is
strikingly evident in this picture as they stand assembled here with their
arms hastily
made upon
the
it
expressed
itself
not in utterance
silence.
With some difficulty, I made my way near
enough to the building to get a glimpse of the announcement
on the board. The heading was, " A battle is now going on in
JSIaryland it is hoped that General JNIcClellan will drive Lee's
army back into the Potomac,"
but in
To one who
all
things seem to
it is
fair to
02
enemy
'
5
r
I*
.!=
.Si
CJ
0--T3
is
^ a
y.
>>
p2 1=
.S
-3
W
<:
o
H
l-H
>
>
a;
w
Q
m
^
2 50
o
4->
J3
:c
PS
Ph
-!
-T3
.=
IS
6
M
IS
"a!
Si^
C3
+->
ca
.>
W3
I.S
c
O
.a Oh
(11
*^
ea
o 5 -a
->
to
possession of the
the regiments of
Longstreet.
He
will grieve
with the
Army
of the
Potomac
and with the country at the untimely death of the old hero.
General JNIansfield; he will recall the graphic description given
by the poet Holmes of the weary week's search through the
battle-field and the environs for the " body " of his son, the
young captain, who lived to become one of the scholarly members of the national Supreme Court; and he may share the
disappointment not only of the armj", but of the citizens back
of the army, that, notwithstanding his advantages of position,
McClellan should have f)ermitted the Confederate army to
withdraw without molestation, carrying with it its trains, its
artillery, and even its captured prisoners.
Another photograph in the series, which is an example of
special enterprise on the part of Mr. Brady, presents Lincoln
and JNIcClellan in consultation some time after this bloody
and indecisive battle. The pose and the features of the two
men are admirably characteristic. Two weeks have elapsed
since Lee's withdrawal across the river, but the
Army
of the
Potomac, while rested and fully resupplied, has been held by its
Lincoln's perin an inexplicable inaction.
young commander
64
f/
J3
It
'a.
CS
"O
-o
m
S
->
3
C
13
a
eS
-s
^O
42
O
o
w
H
H
m
w
K
to
Eh
*j
-t->
4J
>.
c
-a
a
03
J3
*j
-Q
_.
o
o
9,
^
-==
=e
0)
4J
\asiMMMlSzm
to the
On
as to the
on its way to the protection of Washinghad been attacked in Baltimore, and connections between
Washington and the North were cut off.
few hundred troops
represented all the forces that the nation had for the moment
j\Iassachusetts Sixth,
ton,
and I have had recalled to mind the vision of his tall figure
and sad face as he stood looking across the river where the
picket lines of the Virginia troops could be traced by the
smoke, and dreading from morning to morning the approach
of these troops over the Long Bridge. There must have come
to Lincoln during these anxious days the dread that he was to
be the last President of the United States, and that the torch,
representing the life of the nation, that had been transmitted
[661
THE COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF
Here the gaunt
figure of the Great Emancipator confronted General McClellan in his headquarters two weeks after Antietam had
checked Lee's invasion of Maryland and had enabled the President to issue the Emancipation Proclamation. Brady's camera has
preserved this remarkable occasion, the last time that these two men met each other.
"We spent some time on the battlefield and
conversed fully on the state of affairs. He told me that he was satisfied with all that I had done, that he would stand by me. He
parted from me with the utmost cordiality," said General McClellan. The plan to follow up the success of Antietam in the
effort to bring the war to a speedy conclusion must have been the thought uppermost in the mind of the Commander-in-Chief of the
Army as he talked with his most popular General in the tent. A few days later came the order from Washington to "cross the Potomac
And give battle to the enemy or drive him South." McClellan was relieved in the midst of a movement to carry out the order.
''
[A-5]
The anxiety
country and
jjossibilities
his responsibilities )
always impending.
The month
great contest.
of July, 1863,
marked
army
across the
highways to Baltimore and to Philadelphia, to isolate Washington from the North. The Army of the Potomac would, of
course, have been reconstituted, and Lee would finally have
been driven across the Potomac as he was actually compelled to
retire after the decision of the battle.
But such
a check to the
all ^probability
The value
Lee was
On
the
Vicksburg.
beautiful
made, on July
little
2,
was
Round
NEW YORK
1862
Copyriaht
h,, li,
VOLTTXTEERS
see
threatenerl in
distance the
would not consent to the withdrawal of many of the garrisons about Washington to reinforce McClellan on the Peninsula.
There
was little to relieve the tedium of guard duty, and the men spent their time principally at drill and in keeping their arms and accouterments spick and span.
The troops in the tents and barracks were always able to present a fine appearance on review. In
sharp contrast was that of their l)attle-scarred comrades who passed before Lincoln when he visited the front. Foreign military attaches often visited the forts about Washington.
we
see
two
of
Top.
actually on their
defense,
from
and rear of the Union line could have been enUnion force Avas for tlie moment available for the
but Warren, with two or three aides, raised some flags
which the
filaded.
way
left
jSTo
This momentary
the defense of the
was
available,
later,
came the
resjjite
hill troof)s
first
attack, followed
by a
summer
afternoon.
With
now
stands on Little
Round Top
hind
it.
The general
toward the
beautiful statue of
is
Warren
when
02)posite crest,
[70]
On
this
men fought
boulder they wormed their
conflict,
July
1,
From
1863.
boulder to
way, to find behind each a soldier waiting for the hand-to-hand struggle which meant the death of one
or the other.
field
presented a far more appalling appearance than does the picture, which was taken after the
were removed.
Little
This break in the Federal line was discovered by General Warren just in time.
with but two or three other
officers to
it.
The
help
him he planted
it
on the
hill,
Hastily procuring a
picture tells
all
flag,
W7R
fim
,///
'
themselves.
dm
Copyriijlit
by Revie
w of Reviews Co.
picture
ever been painted to equal this panorama of the very center of the
has
ground over wliich surged the struggUng troops 'mid shot and
of the fighting at
through
its
eye
Gettysburg.
we
the plain
and up
to
in
the
very
muzzles
the
of
The daring
The
is
spirit of
town
of
left
on
guns
which were belching forth grape and canister, swept the men
field
Little
Across
Gettysburg.
shell
Cemetery
Meade
in possession of the
made have
Ridge
in
in
history.
men
inches.
b}^
Under
shortest
])air,
with
the widest aperture for the water, Avas up-stream, Avhile the
longest pair, with the narrowest passage for the water, was
[74
this spot
cornfield
at nightfall
by Lee's
forces
to
fall
his death.
back.
is
The cupola
The town
of
first
of the
Gettysburg
Gen-
advancing early in the day, had encountered the Confederates and had been compelled
by hard
Riding out to
it
fighting
movement
During the
it,
and
to reconnoiter. General
Reynolds
fell,
right.
advanced
pierced
by a Confederate
Impahis
com-
cornfield in
bullet,
near the
placed at the jjoint on the rapids where the increased depth was
required.
As
rapids.
and
in
when
on alternate days,
in pulling
down
the sugar-mills
On
by the
from the West-
men
selected
refreshing.
The army
browed, unassuming
gested
building a
Admiral Porter's
fleet
water
imprisoned by low
Red River
expedition in
He was
his
dam.
of
any
moment
of his vessels
the
This
is
Acting Chief
The
Army Corps at
who
him
Government can
For
country."
this
was promoted to
refused to
achievement
Bailey
re-
of
He
fleet.
abandonment
lay
I feel
In the under-
consider for a
the Federal
"Words
C'oloncl Bailey.
all
Falls.
admiration
channel that
1864.
in the
vessels
his
till
He was born
trapped at Alexandria.
spring of 1863.
Lafayette
Her heavy
expedition,
The
The
Lafayette was
movement was
vessels save
discovered.
one transport.
The
shell
astern.
built
Falls.
in
for
heavy
fighting.
up to
broadside,
first
and
taste of
it
on the night
of
Lafayette stood
the
She and the Choctau^ were the most important acquisitions to Porter's
and armed
The
above the
had the stronger armament, carrying two 11-inch Dahlgrens forward, four 9-inch guns
Choctaw, were side-wheel steamers altered into casemate ironclads with rams.
Red River
in
Vicksburg as soon
as the
J. P.
Foster.
Colonel Bailey's wonderful dam which, according to Admiral Porter, no private company would have completed within a year.
Bailey's men did it in eleven days and saved a fleet of Union vessels worth $2,000,000.
Never was there an instance where such
difficulties were overcome so quickly iind with so little preparation.
The current of the Red River, rushing by at the rate of nine
miles an hour, threatened to sweep away the work of the soldiers as fast as it was performed.
The work was commenced by building
out from the left bank of the river with large trees cros,s-tied with heavy timber and filled in with brush, brick, and stone. We see
the men engaged upon this work at the right of the picture.
Coal barges filled with brick and stone were sunk beyond this, while
from the right bank cribs filled with stone were built out to meet the barges. In eight days Bailey's men, working like beavers under
the broiling sun, up to their necks in water, had backed up the current sufficiently to release three vessels. The very ne.vt
[
781
morning two
ton
to
of the barges
in the
The
"See
my Bummers,"
said Old
The
soldiers
fort
And
mas
even
this
The preponderance
even during
on the
\\
first
may
may
the
sources.
With
great engineering
skill,
with ingenuity in
utiliz-
Army
we
behind
of Northern Virginia a
higher
men
command than
The
commander and the
men
i'opynght by Review oj
LEE WITH
No
military loader in
HIS SON, G. W.
C.
ws Co
LEE,
any country, not even excepting General Washinffton himself, ever became so universally beloved as Robert
of Jefferson
Davis and
time that Lee began to drive back McCIellan's forces from Richmond
in the
final
So
it,
ha.stily
first
and
.son,
Confederate forces.
From
of the Confederates
the
were
[a-<1]
lieiui
He
figure,
Major-General G.
W.
is
The
march or have been
left to guard the lines of communication. Without constantly
renewed supplies an army is merely a helpless mass of men.
It is probable, in fact, that the history of modern warfare
gives no example of so complex, extensive, and difficult a military undertaking as that which was finally brought to a successful close by the armies of the North, armies Avhich were
contending against some of the best fighting material and the
ablest military leadership that the world has known.
are available, but seventy thousand or sixty thousand.
up on
the
Tllllil)
I'liK.KACE
Lines
THE SOUTHERN FLAG FLOATING OVER SUMTER ON APRIL 10, 1861 SOUTH
CAROLINA TROOPS DRILLING ON THE PARADE, TWO DAYS AFTER FORCING
OUT ANDERSON AND HIS FEDERAL GARRISON THE FLAG IS MOUNTED ON
THE PARAPET TO THE RIGHT OF THE FORMER FLAGSTAFF, WHICH HAS BEEN
SHATTERED IN THE COURSE OF THE BOMBARDMENT FROM CHARLESTON
E. Chadwick,
Navy
Who
its
off
it
services of
from communication
it
to guard every
point against a raid like that which had destroyed the Capitol of the United
States in
1814?
Had
need
had
it
it
stood so
its
its
much
New
York, the mouth of the Delaware, and the entrance of Chesapeake Bay
had
it
nmch
possessed the sea power to prevent the United States from desits
outcome of the
Civil V^^ax.
Hilary A. Herbert,
Naval War
NOWwe
College,
of
the Nai^y, in
the History
August
an
it is
not too
Alabama
address, ''The
of the United
States,''"'
Vol-
Sea and
delii'ered at the
10, 1896.
War,
up a nation
in his
South
a moderate
was worsted
This
is
so in
Copyright
h>/
trains, swift vessels like this one left Nassau and Bermuda and traveled direct for their destination, timed to
So great were the profits of blockade running that in some cases one successful voyage out and back would more
than repay the owners for the loss of the vessel. Under these circumstances it can be easily seen that men were tempted to take risks
that ordinarily they would avoid.
Arms"
mascus scimitar
a blade
so finely
tempered that
its
M. Walpole and
Lieutenant R. C. Gilchrist.
Gilchrist
is
degree only; for the fight was not wholly a fair one. Difference of forces in the field may be set aside, as the fight being
on the ground of the weaker, any disproportion in numbers Avas
But
largely annulled.
the
army
of the
North was
lavishly
equipped; there was no want of arms, food, raiment, ammunition, or medical care.
Everything an army could have the
On
the other
hand the
Some few
fact,
and made
clear this
Schwab, jorofessor
six reasons
for the
South's failure,
"We
are
Copyritjfit
To
To
the
h-ft
we
see a
of the
man who
the right a group of youngsters are reading letters from home, while in the background
men
tedium
in
still
home
life,
of the bright
officer.
spring day in
when they
enlisted.
accessories were
much
These
made
better
than the same troops could show later on, when the ruddy glow on their faces had given place to the sallowness of disease.
ON PARADE
Here a Confederate photographer has caught the Orleans Cadets, Company A, parading before
Pensacola, Florida, April 21, 1861.
11, 1861.
first
volunteer
company mustered
their
encampment
brilliant display, it
The
confidence for the future that their commander. Captain (afterwards Lieut. Colonel) Charles D. Dreux, watched their maneuvers on
this spring day, little
up
dreaming that
in less
Southern cause.
in
at
fall in battle,
the
first
flood tide.
men were
all
officers to offer
to be realized in
////,'//
its
sources which
made
it
it
but for
the great
full
fighting
field.
fx-
The
munitions of war.
The
The two
It
is
in the
South
1801
in the spring of 1861.
believed that nearly a hundred thousand from each State enlisted in the Southern
the Southland as
was impossible in the circumstances that they could be, was the result of the blockade of
the Southern coast, a force the South was powerless to resist.
What has been said shows how clear was the role of the
navy. The strategic situation was of the simplest; to deprive
the South of its intercourse with Europe and in addition to
cut the Confederacy in twain through the control of the Mississippi.
The latter, gained largely by the battles of Farragut,
Porter, Foote, and Davis, was but a part of the great scheme
of blockade, as it cut off the supply of food from Texas and
the shipments of material which entered that State by way of
jMatamoras. The question of the military control of Texas
could be left aside so long as its communications were cut, for
in any case the State would finally have to yield with the rest
of the Confederacy. The many thousand troops which would
have been an invaluable reenforcement to the Southern armies
in the East were to remain west of the JVIississippi and were to
have no influence in the future events.
The determination to attempt by force to reinstate the
Federal authority over a vast territory, eight hundred miles
from north to south and seventeen hundred from east to
west, defended by such forces as mentioned, was truly a
gigantic proposition, to be measured somewhat by the effort
put forth by Great Britain to subdue the comparatively very
small forces of the South African republic. It was as far from
Washington
it
to Atlanta (which
may
London
to Vienna.
The
frontier
hundred miles
in length.
[94]
<
'.>j,i/ri-jhl
I'll
lirriflV of Reiieu's
Co.
Washington
Artillery of
Company
of the
New
Orleans.
We
see
them
at
first
Washington
taste of battle, a
Camp
who
in forcing the
all
of the
the Federal
camps save
one.
The Confederates
The Washington
The timely
the next day at Pittsburg Landing enabled Grant to recover from the reverses suffered on that bloody
"first
day"
The
defeated Sherman's
arrival of Buell's
army
Sunday, April
1862.
6,
carried on excepting in that portion which ran from Lynchburg to Chattanooga through the eastern part of Tennessee,
where the population was in the main sympathetic with the
Union.
Thus the South had the great advantage, which it held for
several years, of holding and operating on interior lines. Its
communications were held intact, whereas those of the Federals,
as in the case of Grant's advance by way of the Wilderness, were
often in danger. It was not until Sherman made his great
march to the sea across Georgia, a march which Colonel Henderson, the noted English writer on strategy, says " would have
been impossible had not a Federal fleet been ready to receive
him when he reached the Atlantic," that the South felt its com-
To
say that at the outset there was any broad and well-
army
would
be an error. There was no such thing as a general staff, no
central organization to do the planning of campaigns, such as
now exists. The commanders of Eastern and Western armies
often went their own gait without any effective coordination.
It was not until Grant practically came to supreme military
command that complete coordination was possible.
Four Unionist objectives, however, were clear. The
greatl}^ disaffected border states which had not joined the Confederacy must be secured and the loyal parts of Virginia and
action,
it
many
of the
enlisted as the
February
man
Home Guards
16, 1861.
of Marshall
fire
of the
Ninth Mississippi
William A. Rankin.
of each other
and
their State."
more worthy
Their checked trousers and workday shirts are typical of the simple equipment each
fare, the
County, and were mustered into the State service at Holly Springs,
Lacking
enough
for the
in the regalia of
war-
it
own
To
quote again
was
the policy which, at the very outset of the war, brought the tre-
brought into play a force which, like the mills of God, grinds
slowly, but grinds exceedingly small.' " It was the command
of the sea which finally told and made certain the success of the
'
army and
is
which we engage.
An
in
The
for hini.
operations by which the Federal navy, in conjunction with the army, split
the Confederacy in two and severed the East from the West, must always,
tlierefore, liave
for
him a profound
by
interest
and importance.
this concentration
The
great
study."
Editors.]
981
Field-Marshal,
the
the
work
Bombardment
fleet liad
of G. S.
in the picture
left
armed
to the
many
Confederate soldiers
flag
of Sept. 8, 1863.
weeks.
The view
fell
The
is
solid shot.
upon a detachment
The guns
on the chimney
of sleeping soldiers.
J.
the Collection
of
Militari/ Records
HE
Fry shows
of Provost-]Marshal General
were
does not include the missing muster-rolls, so that to these figures a substantial j^ercentage must be added.
Differences in
102
R,nr,r, Co.
Copyria),t !. R,,,ew of
SOI TH CAROLINA MEN IN BLL K, SPRING 18(il
we see here entering the (Confederate service at Sullivan's Island, Charleston Harbor, still wear-
TWO YEARS
Confederate Uniforms at Gettysburg, July 1-3, 1863.
AI TI.iJWAItl)
'opyr^'jht by
"
rrorba nf
made
liar
tl|r
S^lm^m
tl|r
g^tat^B
to the strength
fore, the
and
matter
is
losses of the
Confederate army.
There-
is
no probability
War
Civil
battles
are
and en-
Alabama, 78;
ISIississipj^i,
Arkansas, 167; Tennessee, 298; Kentucky, 138; Ohio, 3; Indiana, 4; Illinois, 1; JNIissouri, 244; JNIinnesota, 6; California,
6;
It soon
official
record of the
War
Government
history, and this
It has continued
it
it
began, to
was completed.
858,514.67.
The
was
$2,-
On May
Mississippi Department.
in
is
officers
June to commemorate by means of the camera their long connection with the war. The oldest of them
was but
of
'26,
this
40.
The
in
worn
some chest
was
The names
of those standing,
from
to identify
him with a
victorious
David French
Boyd, Major of Engineers; D. C. Proctor, First Louisiana Engineers; unidentified; and William Freret.
names
The
In
made by the Government to procure the records of the Confederacy, the work of the department to obtain this material at first met with slight success.
naturally regarded the efforts
result.
By
The
sale at cost.
mentioned in these
pages as it indicates a wide-spread national desire on the part
of the people of the United States to have a full and impartial
history of this official record
is
It
is
the record of
editors have not only consulted these official reports, but give
permanent testimony of the photographic negaTherefore, as a successor to and complement of this Govtive.
ernment publication, nothing could be more useful or interesting than " The Photographic History of the Civil War." The
text does not aim at a statistical record, but is an impartial
narrative sup^jlementing the jjictures. Nothing gives so clear
a conception of a person or an event as a picture. The more
intelligent people of the country, Xorth and South, desire the
This
truth put on record, and all bitter feeling eliminated.
work, it is believed, will add greatly to that end.
the equally
[100]
FOURTH PREFACE
THE STRATEGY
OF THE
WAR LEADERS
superior navy of the Federals at the beginning and throughout the war enabled tliem to gain the advantage of penetrating the
rivers leading into the interior of the Confe<leracy and thus support the military forces in many telling movements.
To this fact
the surrender of Forts Henry and Donelson and the ultimate control of the Mississippi by the Union forces gives eloquent testimony.
In the East the regions between Washington and Richmond were traversed by streams, small and large, which made aggressive warfare
For this reason McClellan chose the James River Peninsula for his first advance upon the Confederate Capital. Far
more dreaded than the advance of the army was the approach of the powerful Monitor and the Galena up the James River, and the
[110]
difficult.
sunk
CIVIL
WAR
By Eben Swift
Lieutenant-Colonel 8th Cavab-y, United States
But
strategy, unfortunately,
is
Army
among
soldiers,
grasp of
many
the problems
it
map, the
factors,
and the
presents.
closest
comprehension of
its
Stonezoall Jackson
useful citizen.
and
the Civil
will
War,"
THE
particularly
when he makes
his
fifty years.
as told
many
any
participants.
He
of history and to
require him
itself.
It
may
not,
guage.
It
is
our lan-
"
eralship, and has several valuable derivatives, as " strategic
and " strategist," which make it a more useful word than
f
112]
excellent
the war.
airship
and then on a
Swedish
officer,
de-camp.
He
is
Count Zeppelin,
Army,
To
made him a
Hooker and
miiversal favorite.
On
later the
his left
is
The man
INIeade in the
is
and he subsequently
same capacity.
spirit,
But photography
on leave of absence, observing the war at close range as General McClellan's personal aide-
genial disposition
on the James.
of the Prussian
visit to
idle
on Meade's
staff.
an
Even the
loss of
was wounded.
Standing
is
Captain
Belle Isle.
Itr
g>tratega of lBfil-fi5
generalship.
time, place,
The
It
means the
and way
War of the
to fight battles.
first
with indifference
past, however,
it
new
new
in-
Although
hostilities at first
m
m
as
by the JNIississippi, Tennessee, Cumand James rivers. The advantage of the water route
over that by rail was at once utilized by the Northern generals.
[\u]
I//.
/A
1801
In
great oppor-
first
campaigns
of
lost
three
the
Bourbon
throne of
guests
distinguished
Potomac seated
camp
men
no distant day to
of
own
to recover
The
France.
the
Army
of
left,
the
and
his
They came
to
of
the
Washington
in
Due
Sep-
it
General McClellan.
Officially
staff of
merely guests
frequently
under
fire.
They
made a
like,
distinguished
The
painting of that
A KINGS SON L\
AMP
Due de
left,
skill
Captain Leclerc, on
Union
officer
these
their
of
plified
by the
fare.
Exposed to the
latest
imported
and grimmer
Cornwallis,
pieces
was
It
right,
has taken
game that
at
which
to seize,
men
of
now am-
of the
Napoleon
field
American admiral.
tified
that ever in
General
At the
close
tes-
McClellan
of
party
the
Peninsula
returned
to
Cam-
France,
close.
Ij^
^trat^gg of lBfil-fi5
It
All navi-
gable rivers within the area of operations were used for this
jjurjjose,
peake
and
JSIcClellan, Burnside,
Bay and
close to
its
Richmond.
The
by being confined
on
to
railroad lines.
In Virginia,
numerous rivers, running parallel to the direct line of advance,
form good lines for defense and also obstacles to an advance.
Several mountain valleys leading north at the eastern ranges
of the Alleghanies gave opportunities for leading large forces
safely into Pennsylvania from Virginia, or vice versa. Within
the mountain district, a railroad from Lynchburg, Virginia,
to Chattanooga, in Tennessee, about four hundred miles long,
gave an ojjportunity for transferring troops from one section
to the other, while the corresponding distance at the North was
three times as great.
In the western section, the Tennessee
and Cumberland rivers are separated at one place by a narrow
neck about two miles wide, thus somewhat simplifying the
problem of controlling these two important streams. The
events to a great extent are to be noticed.
generalship.
fensive lines,
the Northern generals to seek the flank rather than the front
There
is
wliiskers.
Army
of
Campaign.
tiieir
the Potomac on
In
the center
From
tartans and
Dun-
group
tlie
men both
these
new
of
de Joinvillc.
Prince
the observations of
Peninsula
its
of
conflict
mili-
on the
soil
The armies
and maintained
upon a
scale
in the field in
undreamed
say nothing of
of
Howe and
a manner and
by Napoleon, to
Cornwallis.
The
of
the
and
war,
in
Army
of the
Hotel Plaza,
officers
Potomac at a dinner
New York
City.
of the
in the old
Not
half the
still alive,
Copyrifjhl by Patriot
Pub. Co.
mili-
Yorktown
May,
in
Eu-
1862.
indifferent
first
The more
of war.
progressive, nevertheless,
realized that
much was
The
railroad
to be learned from
The
as
Napoleon
the
first
the influence
but
in the field,
proceeded both
At
was manifest
struggle
The sight
ironclad gun-
it.
ideas
of
Sherman maintaining
armies detheir
own.
railroad
and
miles
less
in his
r-emarkable than
posing force.
In these and
set the
many
other ex-
t|r
S^tratrgg nf lBfil-fi5
command
It caused Burnside's
army
On
the
dered as a consequence.
Government concentrated troops for the proteccapital the Western States gathered along the Ohio
the national
Pa
tion of
its
River and
good recruiting ground thus secured. The great difficulty of holding troops in service, whose
home countrj^ had been overrun, was appreciated by both sides
and exercised a strong influence on the plans of the generals.
These conditions dictated much of the strategy which is subject to criticism, and should not be forgotten.
The policy of furloughing great numbers of soldiers
during the war, as an inducement to reenlist, was probably
of the population and in the
unavoidable, but
it
many
months and
in the case of
blame.
It
in
getting
over
the
C't
armies.
to Harper's Ferry, Virginia, lay the Alleghany Mountains, an almost impassable barrier to the
Here we see them sloping toward the gap at Harper's Ferry on the Potomac.
him
became a
scene
is
facile
of
Armstrong Run.
in 1862.
veritable
gateway
of the Confederates.
to this
move-
The
The approach
through
it
in-
Up
the Valley
upoa
lW///////////'///CA\
\\
WW'
Corinth.
The plans
generals.
ment of war.
As an example of improvement, however, take Jackson's
march of fourteen miles on a country road and the battle fought
on jNIay 2, 1863, all between daylight and dark of one day.
In battles, also, we notice the fine play of early campaigns
replaced by a savage directness and simplicity at a later period,
in the Wilderness by Lee and at Spottsylvania by Grant.
Thus it was that both leaders had ceased to count on the inefficiency of the enemy. At the beginning of the movement on
Richmond both Lee and Grant seemed reckless in the risks
they took. It was not so earlier.
The earliest form of strategy was the practice of ruse,
stratagem, and surprise, but they have long been considered
as clumsj^ expedients which are no longer effective against
122:
y/M/
UK JlMOXl)
L\ JiLlXS,
(J(
l'IKD ]\\
THE FKUEKALS
l|r
^trat^gg nf lBfil-B5
and commanders.
Among
Some forms
thousand years.
several
way
army
it
to
is
an exact
illustrated
science.
The
[12-t]
AN IDLE GARRISON
fortifications about Washington seriously threatenefl.
That was when the Confederate General Jubal
A. Early, with a force of 10,000 men, marched against the Federal capital in July, 1864, with the intention of capturing it. Reinforcements were rushed to these works and Early retreated. The constant compliance with the clamor at the North that Washington
be strongly defended was a serious strategical mistake. The Army of the Potomac was at first superior in number to Lee's army
It could have been made overwhelmingly so at the beginning of the war if the troops around Washington had
of Northern Virginia.
been added to it. Grant demonstrated the wisdom of this policy in 1864 by leaving only a few heavy artillery regiments, the "hundred days' men," and detachments from the Veteran Reserve to defend Washington. He then outnumbered Lee in the field.
l)t
^tratrgy of 1BB1-B5
new
conditions
commonplace to
say at this time that the first thing to do in war is to decide
on your objective, but in the Civil War an incalculable amount
of time was wasted, much treasure expended, and many lives
It seems rather
each other in
mond
now
well
common
sense
we know
his
own
not.
JNIississippi,
or to
to
ericksburg.
[
126]
Copyriijht
Richmond, proceeded
bij
f'ntriol
Pub. Co.
JAMES.
For months Grant's brilHant flanking movements had gained him no advantage over
his opponent,
who
persistently remaining
position to another
With
cut
till
at last
off
Richmond,
it
and give
battle.
The investment
of Petersburg,
successfully prosecuted,
The
crossing of the
situation.
come
to
forth
would leave
James near
in the picture,
was the
Later, the historic " JNIarch to the Sea " introduces a novel
army
as a first objective,
1281
I|r
g>trat?gjj
Lynchburg by
of 1BBI-H5
4-
objectives, such as so-called " strategic points " along the coast
\\\NS^\V\^
JNIississippi,
issue.
seventy-five thou-
sand
in
He
probably thought
that an army of one hundred and twenty thousand men was
large enough for his purposes, but he foinid it was a mistake.
Equally fallacious A\'ith the importance given to " strategic
The
Kentucky and Tennessee was given by Grant's Fort
Donelson campaign, but the injury inflicted on the Confederate army by the large capture of men at Donelson and Island
Xumber 10 was the real and vital result. The control of territory that was not accompanied by the defeat of the foe
often had many disadvantages.
Such was the experience of
Grant and Sherman, the former in his first advance on Vicksburg, and the latter in the Atlanta camj^aign.
For the South it was an easier task to decide upon an objective because it was the weaker side and its acts were determined by those of the stronger. The main idea of the strategy
of the Southern generals was to divert attention to side issues,
to induce the opposing general to weaken his forces at decontrol of
cisive points.
Numerous examples of diversions are afforded
by Jackson's Valley campaign, in 1862, which kept many
[
130
I'i
Copyriyht by
WORK OF
TllE
lu.
The
great Civil ^Ya^ first introduced the railroad as a strategic factor in military operations.
In the upper picture we see the
Federal engineers at Vibhard Draw on Long Bridge at Washington busily at work rehabilitating a locomotive for use along the railroad
connections of the capital with its army.
Extemporized wooden structures of that time seem paltry in comparison with the great
steel cranes and derricks which our modern wrecking trains have made familiar.
The railroads in control of the North were much
better equipped and guarded than those of the South, yet the bold Confederate Cavalry, under such leaders as Stuart, were ever ready
for raids to cut communications.
How thoroughly they did their work whenever they got the chance, the lower picture tells.
Itr
mmmmwn
S>tral^gg of lBfil-B5
men away from McClellan; Early's march on AVashington, and many cavah-y raids.
The result of a study of objectives shows that, with good
thousand
and
troops,
only
way
safe,
to
The
The concentration
which
is
Lee made
six
The conduct
most
it
is
the
Johnston after
Bull Run, jMcClellan after Antietam, jNIeade after Gettysburg,
Bragg after Chickamauga, Grant after Chattanooga, and Lee
after Fredericksburg practically allowed the defeated enemy
difficult
in
This view of the magazine wharf at City Point in 1864 reveals the immensity of the transportation problem that was solved by the
North in support of its armies in the field. The Federal army in Virginia, unHke the armies of Napoleon, did not forage off the territory which it occupied.
Rail and water transportation made possible tlie bringing of supplies long distances.
Whatever point was
chosen for the army base quickly became a bustling center, rivaling the activity of any great commercial city, and giving employment
to thousands of men whose business it was to unload and forward the arriving stores and ammunition to the army in the field near by.
CnX
When Grant
down
I'OINT,
VIR(.]MA.
.11
^,
IS(i4
Copyright by
FalrM Fub.
Co.
to the siege of Petersburg, and City Point became tiie army base, the little village was turned temporarily into a great town.
AVinter (juarters were built in the form of comfortable cabins for the reserve troops and the garrison,
and ample hospital buildings were provided. The railroad to Petersburg was controlled and operated by the army for the forwarding
of troops and stores.
The supply base hmgest occupied by the Army of the Potomac, City Point, grew up almost in a night. W'ith
the coming of peace the importance of the post vanished, and with it soon after the evidences of its aggrandizement.
finally settled
\}t
g^trat^gij
of lBBl-fi5
\aesimMmM
the operations of October, 1863, had only partial success.
the end of the
Near
Hood, after Xashville,
than had yet been reached, and
of
the
The campaigns
army
retreat
and fought
On two
mac
army
loss, in
the presence of
His
numbers and to hide his
Federals shows how clearly he saw the secrets of Napoleon's
generalship, while his battles in the woods were entirely origThe power
inal and his use of entrenchments was efi'ective.
of the modern fire-arm in the hands of his opponents forced
him to accept less decisive results than great soldiers who
a powerful hostile army.
sate for inferior
preceded him.
As
use of the
Wr
The
increased deadliness of firearms taught the commanders in the Civil War the habit of greatly strengthening every new position
occupied with earthworks as formidable as possible. The Works in the upper picture were thrown up in a night by the Federals near
North Anna River, Virginia, in 1864. It is apparent how they would strengthen the resistance of a small force to larger numbers who
might advance across the open upon the position. In the lower picture we see the salient of " Fort Hell," with its ditch and abattis
and breastworks constructed of gabions, the result of many days' work of the soldiers in anticipation of attack. This was one of the
fortifications about Petersburg, where the construction of fieldworks was developed to the highest point of efficiency.
g>trat?gg nf lBfil-fi5
battalions.
The absence
in a single war,
may
this.
and
JNIcClellan
Sherman
true.
may
be narrowed down to
perhaps
Johnston hanthe statement that Lee, Jackson, and
dled inferior forces with as great skill as any commanders
After
all is said,
the subject
On
arm
jolts.
136
and
fight
it
out by short-
PART
BULL RUN
(here begin the chapters that picture broadly
the campaigns, from bull run to appomattox,
continuing through volume iii each of the
remaining seven volumes is devoted throughout to a separate phase of war-time activity.)
War, we
of Bull
little
see
Run
stream that was destined to mark the center of the first, and in many respects the most desperate, battle of the Civil
On the farther side
left of the bridge after the day had ended in a Federal rout (see "Bull Run," page 142).
what was
the Confederates under Beauregard had taken their stand with the stream as a contested barrier between them and
McDowell's troops.
At daylight
138
in disorder
Copyrioht
i.'ij
Utcit.
oj
JO vn
u-s
Co,
selves
fusion.
-a
a
PS
S
a
j3 ""
pa
-I
03
Q,
g
3
..a
CO
c o n c D
.2
^ X o
t: -e
S Q ~o - g-f
P c =
33
,_;
Ci*
cs
M
9
'
."2
Oh 'Si
00
PS
s
3
-s
c
o
J3
a.
ji
g
o
in
~
ca
aj
3
0)
0)
tn
"So
.::
'CS
t3
c3
"
3
o
13
G.
CO
2
I>
-3
< <
"
THERE
had been
strife,
can nation.
No
The
bound
had severed one by one;
their contention had grown stronger through all these years,
until at last there was nothing left but a final appeal to the
arbitrament of the sword then came the great war, the greatest civil war in the annals of mankind.
the
successful.
ties
that
For
The
war.
North
fall
to the
[A complete
tlie
various engagements,
The
U2
Editous.
1861, and
t'i>])!/n:/hl
l;,
It
in
all
New
Orleans on
May
Academy
Major
wounded
at Chapultepec.
Early in
iij
IN
Hiiii ws Co.
'61.
whom
'
at
won
II-
on Fort Sumter
in April.
'61
command
Owing
in
1838.
in the
became
>
'
July
3S
1861
1
and
political idea,
North, with
its
now
the
At
The
first call
thousand men, was answered with surprising alacrity. Citizens left their farms, their workshops, their counting rooms,
and hurried to the nation's capital to take up arms in defense
of the Union.
similar call by the Southern President was
answered with equal eagerness. Each side believed itself in
the right. Both Avere profoundly sincere and deeply in earnest.
Both have won the respect of history.
After the fall of Fort Sumter, the two sides spent the
spring months marshaling their forces for the fierce conflict
President Lincoln had called for threethat was to follow.
months' volunteers at the beginning of July some thirt}^ thousand of these men Avere encamped along the Potomac about
As the weeks passed, the great
the heights of Arlington.
Xorthern public grcAV impatient at the inaction and demanded
that Sumter be avenged, that a bloAv be struck for the Union.
The " call to arms " rang through the nation and aroused
the people.
No
less
The commander
at
Washington and
at
Army
Richmond.
Avas Lieut.-
General Winfield Scott, Avhose military career had begun before most of the men of '61 had been born. Aged and infirm,
[144]
of their
same jocular
we
own
spirit.
see the
prowess.
There
is
Boys
in
Gray
Run had
The man
flourishing the
sword
bayonet and the one with the drawn dagger are marking with mock heroics their bravado toward the coming struggle, while the one
with the musket stands debonair as a comic-opera
of the officer, indicate that the group
is
of a
in the outfit of
soldier.
The
pipe-clay cross belt and breast plate, the cock plumes in the
later,
when
in existence at the
simplicity
"shapo"
day
in
camp.
There
he remained in Washington.
of the
War.
On-
Unused
of war,
many
of the
Copyright, 1906, by
Edward Bromley.
day
Colonel Gorman.
is
them
is
On
right
is
the Honorable
his left
Captain William
[a 10]
on Sanders'
its
Morton
S.
J.
SnelUng
hand
is
in 1861.
field of
Gettysburg, July
to
him
is
first
from the
Adjutant
W.
2,
1863.
left is Lieut.
B. Leach.
Colonel
Between
Mark Downie.
.\t
and
Wilkinson.
hand
of
Adjutant Leach
regiment
in its
is
Captain
Gettysburg charge.
Julv
IHfil
berries or
tempting
fruits
refill their
He won
the confidence of
newsboys were calling out in the emptjr streets the latest intelThe messenger rang the doorbell at a
ligence of the army.
house within a stone's throw of the White House and delivered
the scrap of paper to the only one in the city to whom it was
She hurriedly gave the youth his breakfast, wrote
intelligible.
in cipher the words, " Order issued for JNIcDowell to march
upon INIanassas to-night," and giving him the scrap of paper,
sent him on his way. That night the momentous bit of news
was in the hands of General Beam-egard. He instantly wired
[
148
J.
marched
lines of
Past this
hurrying troops.
little
stone church on the night of July 20, 1861, and long into the morning of the twenty-
Their blue uniforms were new, their muskets bright and polished, and though some faces were
pale their spirits were elated, for after their short training they were going to take part, for the
was the
first
move
New
They had
States.
conflict.
left
what
game
of war.
in.
It
The men
desk and shop and farm anrl forge, and with the tliought
first
exactly
in
at.
So on they went
in long lines
the road in the darkness of the night, chattering, laughing and talking carelessly, hardly realizing in the contagion of their patri-
grim meaning of
The
sied the
down
real war.
The
battle
had been
well planned,
of orders.'
The
press
and the
and whose
politicians
but who had had the experience, even among the leaders,
A lesson
lay before
demanded
action,
them and
it
July
1861
\\
upon
number
The Confederates, too, had suffered
army were killed. But patriotic enthusiasm
Union
the plain.
five
months
later,
was
to figure in a far
this
On
we
[150]
y/M/
A THREE MONTHS'
The Third Connecticut was
present on the
and
the South.
who
after the
war was
the world.
decided to move.
cross the
152]
BULL
21,
1861
Along Bull Run Creek on the morning of July 21st Tyler"s division vigorously attacked from the east the Confederates under Longstreet
and Beauregard on the western bank. By this attack McDowell hoped to succeed in falling unexpectedly on the rear of the Confederate
left with the force sent on a detour of some three miles to the north.
A charge of fresh troops brought forward by Beauregard in
person in the late afternoon started the panic of the raw Union volunteers.
had become
as hares fleeing
increased
carriages
The Confederates
old colonial mansion known as the McLean House was near Manassas station, not far from Blackburn's Ford, the
scene of a sharp encounter preliminary to the battle of Bull Run. Tyler's division of McDowell's army, finding the Confederates had
retreated from Centreville, attacked near here on the morning of July 18th.
A vigorous cannonade opened the action, and a shell
McLean house
July
1861
Evans'
field
line of defense.
With guns
charges into
watched the
line of
It
moved
WHERE
Sudley Church
man
July
This Methodist Episcopal church stood a half mile south of the ford by which Hunter and HeintzelThese troops crossed Cat Harpin Run, seen in the foreground, by the ford at the left, and marched southward
mile farther south Burnside's brigade engaged the Confederate troops led by Colonel Evans.
As Evans' men fell
21, 1861.
The remains
at the right of the picture are of the Sudley Sulphur Spring House.
RUNJULY
21,
1861
This house, which stood some three miles north of the battlefield of the afternoon, marked the northern point of the detour of the
divisions of Hunter and Heintzelman.
The Confederate Colonel Evans, who held the extreme left of Beauregard's line, and whose
suspicions had been aroused, marched upstream with half a brigade and confronted the turning column beyond the turnpike.
Instead
of deploying a line of battle.
new
it.
nil
Sun
01}^ Uulunt^^rB
and the
^ntt 3\xt
4-
Run,
and for the first time in the nation's history two hostile
American armies faced each other in battle array. At Fort
Sumter only the stone walls had suff'ered; not a drop of human
blood was shed. But here was to be a gigantic conflict, and
thousands of jieople believed that here on this field on this day
would be decided the fate of the Union and the fate of the
hill,
Confederacy.
With
clear
little
advantage
initial conflict, to
numbers
in breathless ex-
become known
as
came up;
General Bee, of South
Evans
in the face of a
heavy
one
hundred yards of the Federal lines. At this short range thousands of shots were fired and many brave men and boys were
stretched upon the green. The outcome at this point was uncertain until the Union forces were joined by Heintzelman
with heavy reenforcements and by Sherman with a portion of
[156
"Stonewall"
Jackson won
in increasing disorder,
It
his
name near
this
house early
in the
Meeting
he advanced with a battery to the ridge behind the Robinson House and held
"Look
just before he
fell,
Bee sent
this house, about a mile, the Confederate Colonel Evans met the columns of
advance south from Sudley Ford. Though reinforced by General Bee, he was driven back at noon to this
the valley near Young's Branch.
Here a vigorous Union charge swept the whole battle to the hill south of the stream. General
in their
July
1861
Tyler's division.
and
in
doing so
men
fell
\\
Cheer after
Union army.
INIeanwhile, Generals Beauregard and Jolinston had remained at the right of their line, near jNIanassas, nearly four
miles from the scene of action, still determined to press their
attack on the Federal left if the opportunity was offered. As
the morning passed and the sounds of conflict became louder
and extended further to the westward, it became evident to the
Confederate leaders that the Federals Avere massing all their
strength in an effort to crush the left of the Southern army.
Plans for an aggressive movement were then abandoned, the
commanders withdrawing all their reserve forces from the
positions where they had been held to follow up the Confederate attack, and sending them to the support of the small
force that was holding back the Federals. After dispatching
troops to threaten the Union left, Johnston and Beauregard
They
at the
men
his horse
his
boot he mounted
;
C"l'!ii
Henry House)
21,
t'll'l
I';/
I'olriotPub. Co.
1861
raw, undisciplined volunteers of both sides surged back and forward with the heroism and determined
courage of rugged veterans until the arrival of fresh Confederate troops turned the tide, and in the crowning hour of Union victory precipitated the flight and contagious panic.
by Ricketts and
Griffin
The Union
batteries
commanded
had moved across Young's Branch and taken up a position on the Henry
The City
of
off
till
Hill.
Thirteen
swarmed
nil
Sun
l&almtnvB 3ntt
iPtr^
At
half -past
two the
half,
time within three or four hours the Union troops raised the
shout of victory.
McDowell and his men Avere congratulating themselves on having won the battle, a faint cheering was heard from a Confederate army far across the hills.
At
It
and
nearer,
jDresently the
gray
lines
were
from which they had been driven. The tlu"illing cry then
passed through the Union ranks, " Johnston has come, Johnston has come! " and there was terror in the cry. They did not
know that Johnston, with two-thirds of his army, had arrived
the day before; but it was true that the remaining third,
twenty-three hundred fresh troops, had reached ISIanassas at
noon by rail, and after a forced march of three hours, under
the command of Kirby Smith, had just united with the army
of Beauregard. It was this that caused the cheering and determined Beauregard to make another attack on the Henry
jilateau.
hail of lead
and of bursting
shells;
they had
fall at
success.
in
But with
forced with fresh troops, their courage failed and they began to
retreat
down
the
hill.
With waving
it
officers
attempted to rally
his lines.
1
Only
his
the regulars,
July
1S61
modern
work
fight, and were called upon to defend themselves against aggression at the hands of an
was the lost chance many military writers aver they could have swept on to Washington. The Federals
fully expected them to do so and all was alarm and confusion within the city.
The North never quite got over the haunting fear
that the Confederate army would some day redeem that error and the defenses of the capital were made well nigh impregnable.
precisely as
enemy
if
to be feared."
It
Manassas Station. Part of the eastern defenses constructed by the Confederates after "Bull Run"
during the winter of 1801-2. Confederate troops had been withdrawn in March, 1802, as the first move in the spring campiiign.
This view, taken in August, 1802, after the Union occupation of the abandoned works, looks down the road towards Union Mills
ford.
At the close of Pope's disastrous campaign against Richmond the railroad again fell into the hands of Lee's army.
IT
July
1861
On
Henry
the
hill
mond
as a prisoner of war.
There
In
is
his report
little
more
McDowell
Run.
command
in person of
[162:
(,,,
/..;
1801-2
This almost circular fort was constructed in the village of Centreville, Va., by the Confederates during the winter of 1801-2. All
about it on the Nortli can be seen the quarters in which the Confederate troops wintered after their victory at Bull Run. This picture
was taken in March, 1802, when the Fetlerals had occupied the abandoned works. From Centreville McDowell sent a reconnaisance
in force July 18, 1801, under General D. Tyler to feel for the Confederate position.
A strong force under Longstreet was encountered
at Blackburn's Ford and a spirited engagement followed.
This was the prelude to the battle of July 21st.
Here
is
east of the
[a-11]
nil
Sun
Uulunt^rra 3ntt
all
3m
night, reaching
^
Wash-
The Confederate
victory at Bull
Run
injury in that
The
first
it.
War
brought
As
battle-grounds.
[164]
July
1861
Cup!/r:<jlil
AFTER
Bl LL
Charleston Zouave
organized in the
were
'adets
summer
of
We
of
the
battery
the
iS/ar
of
the
ar-
on
Sullivan's
during
the
bombardment
,,/
/,',
i,
,c,s
Co.
and
riving
stationed
ir
red fez
turned
West
see in the
picture how very young they
The company first went
were.
into active service on Morris
Island, January 1, 1861. and
was there on the 9th when the
guns
back
li,
1860,
of Charleston.
Ij;/
PRISONERS.
Island
of
THE PRISONERS
Henry House
hill.
They gave
l)efore
prisoners,
some
of
whom we
see
the battle.
The following October the
prisoners were exchanged.
At the beginning of the war the
possession of prisoners did not mean as much to the South as
it did later in
the struggle, when exchanges became almost
the last resource for recruiting the dwindling ranks.
Almost
every Southerner capable of bearing arms had already joined
the colors.
here a
month
after
106
fell
the responsibility of directing the Union armies at the outbreak of the Civil War.
command only to President Lincoln, his fine countenance and bearing betoken
made him one of the first commanders of his age. In active service for half a century, he had never lost
Born in Petersburg, \'irginia, in 1786, he was now in his seventy-fifth year. On his left in the picture stands Colonel E. D.
Townsend; on liis right, Henry Van Rensselaer. General Scott retired on October 31, 1801.
the soldierly qualities which
a battle.
170
PART
DOWN THE
II
MISSISSIPPI
VALLEY
FORT HENRY
AND
FORT DONELSON
MISSISSIPPI
Near here the citizens of St. Louis saw the first blood spilled in Missouri at the outbreak of the War. By
order of Governor Jackson, a camp had been formed in the western suburbs of the city for drilling the militia.
It was named in honor of the Governor, and was in command of General D. M. Frost.
Captain Nathaniel
Lyon was in command of the United States troops at the Arsenal in St. Louis. Lyon, on May 10th, marched
nearly five thousand strong, toward Camp Jackson, surrounded it, planted batteries on all the heights overlooking it, and set guards with fixed bayonets and muskets at half cock.
Meanwhile the inhabitants of
St. Louis had gathered in great crowds in the vicinity, hurrying thither in carriages, baggage-wagons, on
horses and afoot.
Many of the men had seized their rifles and shotguns and had come too late to the assistance of the State troops.
Greatly outnumbered by Lyon, General Frost surrendered his command, 689
in all.
The prisoners, surrounded by a line of United States soldiers, at half-past five in the afternoon
[
172
CAMP JACKSON,
ST. LOUIS,
MISSOURI, MAY,
1861
were marched out of camp, on the road leading to St. Louis, and halted. After a short wait the ominous
silence was suddenly broken by shots from the head of the column.
Some of Lyon's soldiers had been
pressed and struck by the crowd, and had discharged their pieces. No one was injured. Tranquillity was
apparently restored when volley after volley broke out from the rear ranks, and men, women, and children
were seen running frantically from the scene. It was said that Lyon's troops were attacked with stones
and that two shots were fired at them before they replied. Twenty-eight citizens chiefly bystanders
including women and children were killed.
As Lyon, with his prisoners, marched through the city to
the Arsenal, excitement ran high in St. Louis. A clash occurred next day between troops and citizens
and it was many weeks before the uproar over Lyon's seizure quieted down. Meanwhile Camp Jackson
became a drill-ground for Federal troops, as we see it in the picture.
ments, infantry,
[
m]
artillery,
and
of Grant.
By
had become
so apparent that he
edge of Springfield.
Missouri.
mander
On June
of the District
and Army
of
West Tennessee.
left
officer
Camp
ILLINOIS. IN
Camp
and
Yates on
Illinois
18G!2
tlie
compHmentary rank
of colonel.
Com-
MOUNTING ARTILLERY
IN FORT DARLING AT
CAMP DEFIANCE
ILL.
pictures the
are at
work rushing
In the latter
we
this brilliant
denly into
full
him major-general of
appointment.
Nicola//
and universal
The whole
and Hay,
recoirnition.
volunteers,
military
in " IJJe of
felt
the
inspiriting
event.
lAiicoln!'''
THE
destined to outshine
all
his
fellows
campaign
of Fort Donelson.
to the end.
[1781
CAIRO CITIZENS
With
his
hands thrust in
Cairo post-office.
The
Bob
day with
later,
pride.
THIS DAY
the whole world was ringing with his praises the citizens
Young Al
who chanced
to be in the gi-oup
doorway on Grant's
Jennings; then comes Dr. Taggart, then Thomas, the mason, and Jaques, the butcher.
Up
is
On
right,
George Olmstead and Will Smith. In his shirt sleeves, on General McClernand's left,
Munn, Fred Theobold, John Maxey, and Phil. Howard. Perhaps these
men told their children of the morning that Grant left his headquarters at the St. Charles Hotel and met them here. Wio knows?
is
young
is
C. C. Davidson.
Bill
[a 12]
Thomas.
in the
windows
sit
something be done. But while the pubhc was still waiting there
were two occurrences in the West that riveted the attention
of the nation, sending a thrill of gladness through the North
and a wave of depression over the Southland. These were the
fall of Fort Henry and of Fort Donelson.
After JNIissouri had been saved to the Union in spite of
the disaster at Wilson's Creek in August, 1861, a Union army
slowly gathered in southern Illinois. Its purpose was to dispute with the Confederates their hold on Kentucky, which had
not seceded, and to regain control of the
INIississippi.
To
river
180]
CAPTAIN CLARK
WINNING HIS
B.
LAGOW
DR.
AT CAIRO.
SPURvS
force
before
Few
recognize
will
nniisnal
this
in
pli()t()gra[)h
the
and
early
man who
striking
contrast
uniformed Lec.
his
full-dress
with
the
Confederate
fully
Confederates,
approach-
arrive.
the
at
JAMES SIMONS.
lines
Kentucky and
in
in
Washington to be allowed to
Brigadier-General's uni-
maneuvers.
'>arry
out
command
made
southern
ing
Illinois,
September
1861.
of
his
of reorganization,
chosen
staff.
assisted
in
4,
made
w^as
advantage
the
well-
from
of tlie post.
for per-
tain Hillyer
nmch
Ca])tain
lifted
of the routine
aides-de-camp.
BRIGADIER-GENERAL
HILLYER
his shoulders
war.
Assistant
work
S.
of
the
Without waiting
CAPTAIN WILLIAM
arena
by a
of the West,
outlying
Captain Rawlins
this
U.
S.
GRANT
Cop>/ri</fit
/i//
CAPTAIN JOHN
Ret'ii/w of
A.
Reviews Co
RAWLINS.
Feb.
1862
battle,
but
the people
its
effect
first
George H. Thomas.
was now February, 1862.
general,
General U.
Grant was
in command of the Union forces in Avestern Kentucky and
Tennessee.
The opposing commander was Albert Sidney
It
S.
At
thirty thousand
men. Believing, perhaps, that he could not hold Kentucky, he determined to save Tennessee for the South and took his stand at
Nashville.
On
It covered
erate cause, the following year, near Vicksburg.
about three acres and mounted seventeen heavy guns. Grant's
plan of attack was to land his army four miles below the fort,
to move across the country and seize the road leading to Fort
Donelson, while Foote should move vip the river with his fleet
and turn his guns on the Confederate batteries.
On
February
the ironclads
6th,
Foote formed
two
lines,
mander W. D.
Porter
David D.
Porter,
and
Porter.
of
Admiral
father
commanded
Fifteen
of
the
the
shots
War
of
Commander
Porter's conduct
He
Again
in
lie
to such
tempted
after the
Wrong-
others.
calumny.
named
twenty-seven
of the war,
Com-
son of Admiral
brother
were
David
as
command
of
in July, 1862.
unsuccessfully
to
destroy
the
his
1812.
His
fleet.
shells
her
middle
standing
was
boiler.
among
his
terribly scalded
Commander
men
Porter,
Arkansas
repulse
COMMANDER
W. D. PORTER
Mav
Copyriyht
ni/
1,
the
following
1864.
jittitu
:jj
neviews Co,
day.
the
of the
He
died
l}t
Jail 0f Jfnrl
down
^mx^ mh
iFort
ion^lBcn
fire.
man who
served
it.
A great
10-inch
which opened
Foote,
Fort
lies
Henry
in
the
first
the
February Cth,
the flagship
attack on
movement
of the
army.
was one
the
in chorus,
arrival
of
clads built
before
victory
with
the
Missouri, and
Mound
effect
the
iron rain
began to
upon the
Carondelet,
and the
At a range
little
colors
of
Officer
tachment
troops.
Arriving before
Fort Henry on
Foote.
When
it
to Flag-
After
transports,
St.
fall
Cincinnati,
squadron.
com-
and an
telling
Essex,
Lnnis,
naval
intrepid
to
and won
the
fort to
FLAG-OFFICER FOOTE
disabled gunboats.
\}t
and
Feb.
1862
JNIcCler-
The
rifle.
As
hill,
firing as
from
la
terrific
this battery
of bullets cut
fearful
slaughter.
return-
[180]
A GALLANT GUNBOATTHE
With
tlic
shots
fri)iii
ST. LOUIS.
and bounding
off
her iron plates, this gallant gunboat that Foote hatl eliosen for his flagship, entered tlie zone of fire at Kort Donelson.
heavy broadsides as
was good.
Fifty-nine times
the
Froiu them
ship
firing
was
this
Hut
her armoreil sides withstood the heavy shocks although the plating,
tlented
and
the forts as up the narrow cliainiel the flag-ship led the way, the Louisville,
heights,
fire
at the
wooded
Con-
share.
Tp
brave
the
and on the
" texas," as the upper deck was called, within speaking distance of him,
stood Foote himself.
struck the
frail pilot-house.
It
was as
if
the pilot's
He
fell
river
die.
by a fragment
of the shell
covered.
of action; later, in
Meanwhile on
shore.
a big battle.
The
make the
still
and
St. Loui.s'
convoy
to
fully re-
bow around,
down
the stream
Pitt.fbiiryk to escort
the transports.
them.
Assail-
ing Grant's right wing that held a strong position, on the 1.5th of
February, 19,000
in
surrendered.
was nearly
3,000,
and that
of the
186i2,
the river
LOUISVILLEA FIGHTER AT
THE FORT
made
October,
fleet
The Federal
less.
major-general.
loss
For
The
In
as there
St. Ljouis
was another
At
Fort Henry, she went into action lashed to the Carondelet on account of
the narrowness of the stream; and later again, the gallant gunboat
laurels at Island
No.
10,
won
\)t
riven
with
the
shrieks
of their
crept and
they lay."
Thus ended
river
army
at
floated
Now
Feb.
1862
THE TYLER
A sister-ship
of the Conestoga.
and Buckner,
to attack the
Union
right at
dawn on
the 15th.
he could not hold his position for half an hour in the morning.
of Forts Henry
Uonelson. It reciuires as much moral
courage to decide ii|)on a surrender, even when
odds are overwhehniuf,', as it does physical
bravery, in maintaining; a useless (i{;ht to the
death. Hrigadier-Cieneral Tilghman, who commanded tlie Confederate Fort Henry on the
Teimessee and General Simon Bolivar Ihiekner
in command of the Confederate Fort Donelson
It
antl
friendshij) are
is
and
especially
tlie
conquered.
lighting foes
become
thu.s united.
make
its
flotilla of
in
General
senior
Both had
kind of courage.
the misfortune to hold untenable jxisitions.
former
Scene
this
Pillow,
liis
that the
all sides,
boat
Essex,
piercing
own
who
some
in
her
in the
three
flung
Most
of the prisoners
roled.
his personal
baggage, and the officers to
keep their side arms. Grant
lowed to retain
known
had
eighty-four men as
Here we
prisoners of war.
see him
a brave figure of
a man clad in the uniform
of
a Southern Colonel.
There was never the slightest doubt of his courage or
of his proper discretion in
and
Buckner
in
makingthissurrender. Only
was he held
a prisoner, when he was
for a short time
twice
President,
not,
men
number, had
command. He did
out in a desperate
Donelson,
reached Fort
twelve milesaway General
Tilghman hauled down his
surrendering himself
flag,
tant
way
with
the rear
the
President
ordered to depart
War under
boilers,
all sides,
although
conun;inder,
He was
trapped
but he would not give way without
Before the firing bea display of resistance.
gan, he had sent off most of the garrison and
maintained the imequal combat with the gunboats for an hour and a quarter with less than
a hundred men, of whom he lost twenty-one.
Well did this handful serve
the guns on the river bank.
One shot struck the gun-
of
on
Secretary
gunboats
fort
first
its
river,
to be coped with
Floyd,
the
was im-
It
sessed
battlefield ties of
'
;/
failed
in
Buckner
one
of his pallbearers.
iPall
He
of Jort ^tnx^
mh
3tixt
declared that he must not be taken, and that with his Vir-
ginia troops he
little
from Nashville in the morning. He passed the comto Pillow, and Pillow, declaring that he too would
escape, passed it on to Buckner. Floyd and Pillow with their
men made good their escaj^e; so did Colonel Forrest, the cavalry leader, and his mounted force.
In the early morning Buckner sent a note to Grant offering to capitulate.
The answer is well known. Grant de"
manded unconditional surrender," and added, " I propose
to move immediately on your works." Buckner was too good
a soldier to sacrifice his men in needless slaughter. His men
were so worn with eighty-four hours of fighting and watching
that many of them had fallen asleej) while standing in battleline and under fire.
He accepted the " ungenerous and unchivalrous terms," as he pronounced them, and surrendered
Fort Donelson and the army, consisting of at least fourteen
thousand men, with all its stores of ammunition. The Union
loss was over twenty-eight hundred men.
The Confederate
loss, killed and wounded, was about two thousand.
The capture of Fort Donelson did three things. First,
it opened up the way for the Federal army to penetrate the
heart of the western South and gave it control of Kentucky
and of western Tennessee. Second, it electrified the North
with confident hopes of ultimate success. It was the first great
victory for the North in the war. Bull Run had been a moral
victory to the South, but the vanquished were weakened
scarcely more than the victors. At Donelson, the victors gained
control of an extensive territory and captured a noble army
which could ill be spared by the South and which could not be
Third, the capture of Donelson forced before the
replaced.
arrive
mand
Sonplaon
nation a
new man
Ulysses
S. Grant.
Feb.
1862
PART
DOWN THE
II
MISSISSIPPI
VALLEY
SHILOH
THE P^IRST
GRAND BATTLE
THE PLUCKY LITTLE WOODEN GUNBOAT " TYLER " ITS FLANKING FIRE
ON THE CONFEDERATE TROOPS CHARGING ACROSS THE RAVINE OF DILl's
BRANCH, CLOSE BY' THE RIVER, GREATLY ASSISTED HURLBUT, COMMANDER
OF THE FEDERAL LEFT, IN HOLDING OFF WITHERS* GALLANT ATTACK
(5,
by the retirement
Encouraged by
Onward swept
18C2.
tliis
moved from
this success
till
194
in the
the Confederates toward a grim line of batteries, which Colonel Webster, of Grant's
The
line of artillery
left of
staff,
of his division.
line.
of
li
federates.
In the face of
this,
of the
to retire.
two brigades.
The gunboats
of General Beauregard.
Ia-i:j]
fire
of the
advancing Con-
although finding himself unsupported save by Gage's battery, Withers led on his men.
its
Only after
To
his
Down
men working
The
division
way up
men alone
their
No
Confederate
who fought
field
easy to
Colonel
assail.
WilUam Preston
Shiloh).
'////
f/fi
Napoleon.
try,
scattered forces
and
to
disaster of Donelson.
make
He had
now
Next
command
Johnston was General Beauregard who fought at Bull Run, and who had come
from Virginia to aid Johnston. There also came Braxton
Bragg, whose name had become famous through the laconic
expression, "
little more grape. Captain Bragg," uttered by
Zachary Taylor at Buena Vista; Leonidas Polk who, though
a graduate of West Point, had entered the church and for
twenty years before the war had been Episcopal bishop of
Louisiana, and John C. Breckinridge, former Vice President
of the United States.
The legions of the South were gathCorinth, Mississippi.
in
to
num-
'i
7W///A
9'
A brilliant
loss
was a
knew the
the
A West
he had led a
life.
and
in
worth,
his
At once he
War
would have
and
his
he
made
An
Utah.
district of
his
him
a.s-
of General.
The
an
or-
way
from the
GENERAL
A. S.
JOHNSTON,
C. S. A.
in the
in
fame
due to
his
of
meeting
attested
it
Struck by a minie
ball,
by heart and
close to
le<l
history.
bravery.
ardent Southerner,
was
he
leadership.
of the military
conscience,
'CI
he had
In
Confederacy.
In the
lo.ss
Iianl
to
his
he kept
and dying
loss of blood.
April, 1861, he
He was
upon
He was
tribute than to
in counsel
and
in
man
emergency,
and engineer,
his
experience
practical
valuable executive.
of leading
An
men and
training
inspiring confidence.
show the
trust
in
General
all
In
of
Tennessee.
in the
De-
Later he was
Thomas
and conhim.
of
in the face of
fidence
He remained Chief of
1862.
On October
6th.
Confederate attack
won
on April
partment
of his superiors
final
14th, he
and
He had
Landing
artillery officer
military
at Shiloh where he
to be
13, 1865,
BRIG.-GEN.
J.
D.
WEBSTER
On March
General of Volunteers.
I|tlolt
iSlxt
in the future.
At
the daw7i of
6th, magnificent
battle-lines,
[198]
name
of the
Washington
Artillery, of
New
It
was composed of the best blood of the city, the dandies of their day. Here we see the officers of the Fifth Company, in the first year
Under the command of Captain W. Irving
of the war while uniforms were bright, sword-belts pipe-clayed, and buttons glistening.
Hodgson, this company made its name from the very first.
SOUTHERN BOYS
Here we see plainly shown the extreme youth
the lads here jjietured
is
of
some
of the enlisted
BATTLE
men
of the
Washington
how young
Artillery of
New
Orleans.
Not one
of
and the records can show it. At Shiloh, with Anderson's brigade of brave fighters, these young cannoneers answered to the call.
Anderson was first in the second line of battle at the beginning. Before the action was twenty minutes old he was at the front; and
with the advance, galloping over the rough ground, came the Washington Artillery.
enter.
it
sequence it
throughout the day.
General Hardee's corps, forming the
the
first line
of battle,
Prentiss, of
West
Vir-
200
render.
Time
it
upon
spot came to be
known
his
This
as the "
of victor}^
encouragement
and
above the din of battle. Presently his voice became faint, a
He was lifted from his
deadly pallor blanched his cheek.
horse, but it was too late.
In a few minutes the great commander was dead, from loss of blood.
The death of Johnston, in the belief of many, changed the
result at Shiloh and prevented the vitter rout or capture of
Grant's army. One of Johnston's subordinates wrote: " JohnsSometimes the
ton's death was a tremendous catastrophe.
hopes of millions of people depend upon one head and one arm.
The West perished with Albert Sidney Johnston and the
Southern country followed." Jefferson Davis afterward declared that " the fortunes of a country hung by a single thread
on the life that was yielded on the field of Shiloh."
Beauregard succeeded to the command on the fall of
Johnston and the carnage continued all the day till darkness was falling over the valleys and the hills. The final charge
continued in the saddle, raising his voice in
"
202
The
assistance rendered
immense importance
which
lies
become a great
fight began.
as to
It
of the battle,
Grant transferred
his
right
is
At one
o'clock General Buell, pushing ahead of his troops, reached the river
bank, and the two leaders held a conference on the upper deck of the Tigress.
It
the troops fighting in the forest, beyond the landing, could hold their ground.
'
Johnston, in forming his plans, had intended to leave an ojjening that would temjjt the hard-pressed Federal
army
to retreat
down
the river.
But, instead, they massed solidly back on Pittsburg Landing, huddled to-
tlicir
into ferrj'-boats,
and
all
As soon
'
'
April
1862
made by
attack
all
along
his lines, to
suspend operations
till
morning.
Federal army.
When
\\
he inquired
if
him of Beauregard's
" Yes,"
it
to the other
order,
com-
" If
of rain,
cided effect
day
at Shiloh.
Whatever
of victory there
204
was
this first
at the
bloody
end of the
where
two small
the action.
in
In
the
early
morn-
sound
How
the
battle
The
Tyler,
commanded by Lieutenant
Con-
After
With-
federate
toward
this point.
son's brigades
Dill's
Chalmers' and
.Jack-
Federal
gunboats and
silenced
Gage's
batteries
battery,
of
of the
which
only one
the
THE LEXINGTON
ment, and in connection with the
less
field batteries
the
afternoon, until
sailors
the rest of
All
nightfall,
the
river
The daunt-
brigade of Chalmers, whose brave Southerners held their ground near the foot of the ravine and maintained the conflict after the
battle
was ended
the gunboats'
elsewliere,
fire.
When
was swept by
Buell's
army,
that
Gwin
who had
General Nelson,
just arrived,
It
and
now be
of
for the
terrific
combat.
In
during the night, and that every ten minutes an 8-inch shell should be launched in
the direction
With
of
camp.
the Confederate
Gwin
great precision
Through the
this course.
followed out
Confederates,
limbs upon
showering
branches
slept,
little rest,
and
and
The
and
re-
rest
the
captain's gig
Caught unawares,
Though pressed back from
the
a noble stand.
their jjosition and obliged to huddle for the night around the
200
To
the Ninth Indiana belongs the banner record, on the Federal side, at bloody Shiloh.
engaged
in action, to receive
words
of
It
still
on the
firing-line.
decorated with the medal of lionor, individuals have been so rewarded for deeds of l)ravery and prowess, but to the Ninth Regiment
fell
Posted on the
them two
to one
it
line of
rail
when
in the
Army
of the
it
Ohio at that
killed or
wounded.
first
in the
The Fourth
on the
list
fire.
if
And
command
and wounded
In
in,
left
many
rail fence, in
numbers
it
it
of
And
any regiment
November
rifles,
of the
Army
of officers killed
depleted companies.
or
looked as
gallant showing.
The percentage
battle.
fill
it
little
fighters, too,
them under
deserved, for they saved the flank of Hazen's brigade hy stubborn bravery that has hardly
all
of
told.
Irtlol)
the
that
heroic valor.
The deafening
April
1862
"Boots and Saddles!" might summon them to fight, or to watch the movements of the active Confederates, Van Dorn
was largely due to their daring and bravery that the Confederate forces were held back from the Mississippi so as not
to embarrass the movements of Grant and the gunboats. Of this unattached cavalry of the Army of the Ohio were the men in the
upper picture Company D, Fourth Kentucky Volunteers, enlisted at Louisville, December, 186L
The bugle
and
Price.
call,
It
his headquarters.
Hour
after hour
first
one then
it.
At
field
An
eye-witness described
it
in the following
language
" I
army was
body.
In
this ride of
main
army, I saw more of human agony and woe than I trust I will
ever again be called upon to witness.
The retreating host
v.ound along a narrow and almost impassable road, extending
J.
work on
them an enormous
it
this bridge,
making
task.
Buell's
of
army was
The
of vital necessity.
Supplies had to be
not only slow but almost impossible for wagon trains to keep in touch with the base.
Over the
Central Alabama (Nashville and Decatur Railroad) food and other necessities for the army's very exist[212]
l)e
transported.
Among
those workers
who
artisans of the
first class.
construction, aided
They
by an infantry
detail
working as laborers.
its
enlisted
and crossed the Elk River at a point where the water was over 20
feet deep.
in its
At the
three of the engineer officers are consulting together, and to the left a squad of infantry are marching to their
])()sition as
bridge guards.
Here
is
to which fighting
is
l)tloI|
4^
April
1862
officer;
it
test.
///
ffm/
74^
PART
DOWN THE
II
MISSISSIPPI
VALLEY
NEW MADRID
ISLAND
No. 10
NEW ORLEANS
CAIRO IN
1862
ISLAND NO.
10
American navy, init was in tlie early sixties, the North could
hardly have succeeded in the great war. The blockade was
necessary to success, and without the navy the blockade would
has been truly
IT significant
as
We
have
now
down
the
[216]
On
1802, the
4,
on Island No.
her
on
out
darkness
10,
the
Mississii)pi,
offered
at
down
proceeding
knew
the
river.
down
The
men on
of
single
man
scratch.
commander
army
Pope's crossing
after
The
received
without
to the
had begun.
float-
She arrived
opposition.
little
New Madrid
having
Tli(\\-
support of General
dreaded
past
flicktT of flames
escape
itself,
made good
off,
On
Aiming
rattle of
the
bosom
the
of
river.
fire,
evacuated.
but the
That
very
must be
night,
en-
delet,
was
she, held
Carondelet,
for
Commander Walke.
his
men
answering shot.
send
to
Confederates,
on Island No.
In the pilot-house he
directed
by
fitful
river
of
the
lightning of a
10.
below.
one
in
full
crossing of
retreat,
by Paine's
dawn
division
of
Heaven
moment
the
to
those
Carondelet
were
and
of April 8th.
At
in
surrendered, before
the
hemmed
the
The
single
the
it
The
sped home.
off in their
The daring
of
Commander Walke
first
danger
('"l"/rii/h!
NO.
10
March
1862
then handed them over to the Government and waited for his
pay until after they had won their famous victories down the
river.
Their
first
'
Stonewall
'
double curve of the JNIississippi, about forty miles below Columbus. It had been strongly fortified by General Beauregard, but Beauregard was called to Corinth and Shiloh and he
turned the conmiand over to General Mackall with about seven
It
'
Hollins'
activity
The
Flag-ship of
Island No.
10.
N. IloUins, with
in
Mcliac
force
of
masthead
of
the
all
The
McRac
boats,
making
flag
at
their
the
(|uickly signaled
side.
fleet
vessels.
mortar
the
inferior
the
This opposing
and
was at once
Eads gunboats
All
Commodore George
fleet.
Commodore
Confederate Fleet at
tlie
vigilant
stream, confined
its activities to
down-
storming
Pope's
below
and anchored
at the
most
effective points.
ing
batteries
threaten-
the with-
When
Carondcht
the
accomplished
her
Ajjril
ttli,
convoys, the
loose
from
down
to
the
it
off
their
creeping stealthily by
moorings
protection
of
and
from
it
Commodore
Commodore
'
cut
drifted
river,
ing
seize
and hold
i
Below
Madrid on
island, a
this
the
few
miles,
IVIissoiiri shore,
now
isolated, indeed.
Above
the
it
They determined
to reimain
At
this
flee.
The
!220
J,
May
pearance of
9,
1862,
by her
Commodore
in the operations
officers
A. H. Foote.
H. Davis.
At
sight of
tars
command
swung
their
hats and burst into loud huzzas, which quickly gave place to moist eyes
trickling
An
mander's
failing voice.
Benton.
filled
till
distance
men on
and
from
March
1862
at work in relays of three hunAfter cutting off the trees above the water they cut the
stumps beneath the water and just above the ground by means
of hand-saws attached to pivots. After nineteen days of vigorous toil a channel was cut through the forest six miles long,
fifty feet wide, and four and a half feet deep.
The flat-bottomed transports could pass through this channel and they
quickly did so quickly, because the river was falling and the
opportunity would soon pass. They were soon safely lodged
at New Madrid without having come within range of the heavy
guns of Island No. 10.
But the ironclad gunboats what could be done with
them? They drew too much water to be taken through the
newly-made channel. Above the fortified island lay the Eads
in the
dred.
MM/
fleet,
as
owned
it
it
should be called
There
still
Avere the
Benton, the flag-ship, the Carondclct, the St. Louis, the Cincinnati, the Pittsburgh, the Mound City, and eleven mortarboats. But these vessels could do something they could shoot,
and they did on INIarch 17th. On that day they trained their
guns on the island; for nine long hours the boom of cannon
was continuous. The results were slight. Beauregard, who
had not yet departed for Corinth, wired to Richmond that
his batteries were not damaged and but one man was killed.
General Pope was sorely in need of a gunboat or two to
silence a number of batteries guarding the Tiptonville road,
on the east side of the river. Could he get possession of that
road the last hope of escape from the island would be lost
///>
and
ere long
its
Pope
believed
it
it
the channel.
222
f/.i
W2
with him that the running of the batteries was too great a risk,
except one Henry Walke, commander of the Carondelet.
"
of
"
Are you wilhng to try it with your vessel? " asked Foote,
Commander
alke, in the presence of the other officers.
it was agreed that the Caronrun the batteries. The next few days
were sjient in preparing the vessel for the ordeal. Chains,
hawsers, and cables were wound around the pilot-house and
coal barge loaded with
other vulnerable parts of the vessel.
coal and hay was lashed to the side where there was no iron
The steam escape was led
protection for the magazine.
through the wheel-house so as to avoid the puffing sound
through the smokestack. The sailors were armed to resist
boarding jjarties, and sharpshooters were placed on board.
The night of April 4th was chosen for this daring adventure. At ten o'clock the moon had set and the sky was overcast with dark clouds.
The Carondelet began her perilous
journey in total darkness. But presently a terrific thunderstorm swejjt up the river and the vivid flashes of lightning
rendered it imjjossible for the gunboat to pass the island
unseen. Presently when near the hostile island the vessel was
discovered. Next moment the heavy gims began to roar, as if
to answer the thunders of the sky; the flashes from the burning
powder commingled with the vivid lightning, the whole pre-
guns could
not be sufficiently depressed, and they overshot the mark.
About midnight the gunboat reached New JVIadrid uninjured.
fact that she ran so near the island that the great
Two
10.
The two vessels soon reduced the batteries along the
bank of the river to silence. Pope's army crossed and occupied the Tiptonville road. The Confederate garrison of several
thousand men could only surrender, and this they did, while
the second day's battle was raging at Shiloh April 7, 1862.
No.
east
224
THE
surrender of
New
first
New
Such
[226]
Porter's mor-
The
New
Orleans.
ship to fly his flag, he picked out a craft that for her type (a steam frigate of the second class) was as fine as could be found in
navy
period between
could
in the world;
sail
with
all
masts were the inheritance of former days; her engines were merely auxiliary factors, for she
New
sails, top-sails,
command
tall
been told to "look out for the Hartford and the Brooklyn."
the guns afloat and ashore
made everything
It
was the
war that
this
mistake was
in
rectified,
line of fire.
The
By some
first
first
It
as bright as day.
level
Here we
In pass-
her upper yards had been sent down, and with her engines doing
of
any
her canvas set and the proper wind to drive her faster than she could steam under the best conditions.
Her
and steam.
sail
in
division,
composed
fire-rafts,
under
St. Philip
had
sent to Washington of
and many
of eight vessels
led.
was not
It
of the passing of
The
flag,
under Commander Wainwright; the Brooklyn, under Captain T. T. Craven, and the Richmond,
under Commander
In the
to
J.
fire for
Alden.
them steam
It
The
of
The
the shore, but was obliged to sheer across the stream in an attempt to dodge a fire-raft that was pushed by the Con-
shot.
first
all
The Mosher
all
little
but succeeded in setting the flag-ship in flames, and was sunk by a well-directed
Brooklyn, after a slight collision with the Kinco, one of the vessels of Bailey's division,
in the obstructions,
was
hit
[a 15]
little
more and
this
and almost
....
.-
=ir
April
1862
No
expedition.
on
in secrecy.
Almost from
preparation became
effort
its
felt,
known throughout
the
New
Every
commanders to
South.
the formidable forts St. Philip and Jackson that faced one
building at
New
If
New
heavy guns, well j^rotected by armor. Up the river, at ]Memphis, the Arkansas was being prepared for active service; and
on the various tributaries were being built several iron-clad
vessels.
No
wooden
Against
this
attacking
fleet
men
"
that
THE RICHMOND
The Third Ship
Center Division
of the
<at
to foam,
bow pointed up
fleet is
them
the slowest of
would be under
by the
and reported.
little
It
was feared at
seven 100-pounder
rifles
in
it,
all
for
It
she
The
first
of the North,
Only the
of the
in
vessels of the third di^-ision passed her; but at last, with her
made
to
way
fleet
city of
rifles,
New
and apparently,
to signals
Al-
three 9-inch
would be at night, no
lights
shell
guns,
four
Certainly
smooth-bores,
8-inch
and
in
out of the river, but that she would be able to paralyze the whole of the wooden navy
in the darkness.
Northern Atlantic
at the fort,
match wooden
fire
and
cities
under contribution.
drifted a
more favorable.
it
Commander
Alden,
J.
Cables were slung over the side to protect her vulnerable parts, sand
hammocks and
were allowed.
Richmond, was on the quarterdeck throughout the action and had seen to
every
hammered hard
batteries, she
ity."
fight.
At the
when
they also have to be taken into consideration for their brave and
fleet,
sixteen guns.
literally to
they had been assisted by the unfinished ironclads they might have borne different results, for the Louisiana,
had to be taken
The
forts.
probably the most successful, and certainly the boldest, attempt ever
from the
Just as she neared the passageway through the obstructions her boilers began
all.
fire
just about
and
rigged,
visible
Farragut's orders had concluded with the following weighty sentence: "I shall expect the most prompt attention
The Richmond
lost
either
two men
in
fleet,
who,
the action.
it will
be understood in
all cases,
acts
by
my
author-
April
18C2
^mmm
chains), the odds were greatly in favor of the Confederate
defenses."
The defenders
that the fleet
would never
pass.
bend of the
the
first
opened, each vessel firing at the rate of one shell every ten
minutes.
divisions, they
were anchored
were near a stretch of woods and their tall masts they were
mostly schooners were dressed with branches of trees in order
to disguise their position from the Confederate guns.
For
almost eight days, at varying intervals even at night, the
twenty boats of this flotilla rained their hail of death and destruction on the forts. Brave and hardy must have been the
men who
i/iM,
The commanders
of both the
of the
zines
casemates, or
son.
shell,
we should have
was seven
230
W.Ay.,
David G.
manded
the Fleets at
No man
leans.
in impressing his
and infusing
Who Com-
Farragiit,
New
lower
Or-
erate
personality
and
David
of Farragut's plan
what seemed
own
Nothing
was
science devise."
well
or
provide,
forts
neglected
ships
Farragut was
aware of the
results
and when
he
waiting,
and
skill
his defeat
But
and
ordeal,
and
in
his
was
Calm
a well-studied, well-thought-out
plan.
failure
was
its effect; it
have
The
his
river,
would
His attack
draw almost
to
undoubtedly
In drawing
Glasgow Farragut.
to
command
Government
and
his confidence
of the
complete,
if
ever succeeded
own
Mississippi,
his
saw
safe
above the
vessels
Bailey's
his other
a success.
that
of the
North rose
mean complete
in elation at the
possession.
Rouge.
He
news
of the capture of
New
river after
mouth
of the
the long line of the river and the land on either side was yet
a reconnaissance at Vicksburg.
On May
off
reported to Williams that a body of irregular Confederate cavalry had fired into one of his boats, woimding an officer
his batteries
upon the
shore.
Rouge
in force.
On
the
morning of the
24th,
when
upon
made
it
fire,
M. L.
General
New
when
it
with the
ram Manassas.
COALING
FARRAGUT'S FLEET
AFTER
NEW ORLEANS
If
and a few days after New Orleans, Farragut's vessels faced a serious crisis.
Captain A. T. Mahan has summed it up in the following words: "... The maintenance of the coal supply
for a large squadron, five hundred miles up a crooked river in a hostile country, was in itself no small anxiety,
involving as it did carriage of the coal against the current, the provision of convoys to protect the supply
vessels against guerillas, and the employment of pilots, few of whom were to be found, as they naturally
of heart-blood, nerves, or muscles;
The river was drawing near the time of lowest water, and the
aground under very critical circumstances, having had to take out her coal and shot,
and had even begun on her guns, two of which were out when she floated ofl^." Many of the up-river gunboats could burn wood, and so, at a pinch and for a short time, could the smaller steamers with Farragut.
But the larger vessels required coal, and at first there was not much of it to be had, although there were
some colliers with the fleet and more were dispatched later. In the two pictures of this page we are shown
scenes along the levee in 1862, at Baton Rouge, and out in the river, a part of the fleet. The vessel with
sails let down to dry is the sloop-of-war Mississippi; ahead of her and a little inshore, about to drop her
anchor, is one of the smaller steamers that composed the third division of the fleet. Nearby lies a mortar
schooner and a vessel laden with coal. Baton Rouge, where Farragut had hoisted his flag over the arsenal,
was policed by a body of foreigners employed by the municipal authority. The mayor had declared that
the guerilla bands which had annoyed the fleet were beyond his jurisdiction, saying that he was responsible
only for order within the city limits. There was some coal found in the city belonging to private owners,
and the lower picture shows the yards of Messrs. Hill and Markham, who, through the medium of Mr.
Bryan, the Mayor, opened negotiations with Farragut for its sale.
favored the enemy, and had gone away.
flag-ship herself got
THE
COALING YARD
AT
BATON ROUGE
April
1862
liis
upon her, in order to avoid being turned over like a log, the
ram took to the shore, where her crew escaped. Subsequently,
having received two broadsides from the Mississippi, she slid
off the bank and drifted in flames down with the current.
By
234
'"Si-
rrT.,'i.'-V,',;
''Z-'Sg'
PART
DOWN THE
II
MISSISSIPPI
VALLEY
FORT PILLOW
AND
MEMPHIS
ACCIDENTALLY STRUCK
MEMPHIS,
New
and undisciplined
At Memphis,
force.
month
mutual support.
in
it,
later,
and at
attack and of
On
require of them
it is
illy
Waters.''''
little
The
an organization had
I rely,
I shall
Secretary of War.
[236]
the
usual
fort,
and then
Fort Pillow.
inflicted
curious
see tied
picture.
that
one
up to the wharf
Secure
Federal
land
the eight
knowledge
ujion
quickly
General
<)I)ened
the
slipped
her
tinued
the fight.
his
works,
the
GENERAL
J.
THE DEFENDER
B.
VILLEPIGUE
re-
tile
ap-
called urgently
and
latter
moorings,
General Price
Villepigue,
The
disajipeared
General
her
down
bearing
Cincinnati.
above
the Federal ironclad, turned and
struck her a violent blow on the starAfter that the Bragg
l)()ard ((uarter.
picture.
last
the
sound of bursting shells which a Federal mortar boat was rapidly droi)ping
over his ramparts. Every day thereafter, Flag-Officer Foote continued to
pay compliments to Fort Pillow by
At
appeared
sending
shelling
to the edge of
ex[)cctedly
had precluded
attack.
for
up
River Defense
lower
presence with a
the
in the
the
in
Beauregard's
which we
of
tied
position
The wounded
Cincinnati
and sunk.
The other Federal ironclad had now
OF FORT PILLOW
come upon the scene and the melee
became general. The General Van Dorn rammed the Mound
City so severely that she was compelled to run on the
Arkansas shore. After that the Confederate rams returned to
Fort Pillow and the half hour's thrilling" fight was over.
was helped
to the shore
Copyriijht by Review of
Bent a ^
ort
June
1862
\aisMMISMsm
the fleet
command
fleet,
known
Montgomery,
them was a powerful
side-wheel steam ram, the General Bragg, which made for the
Ciricinnati.
The latter opened fire, but the shots could not
of Captain J. E.
Among
battle.
shell-
Before the
wounded
away
she
The smoke
dense cloud.
cleared
away
There was a
lull in
the firing,
down the stream to Fort Pillow, and the battle was over.
For two or three days after this battle long-range firing
was kept up, the Union fleet lying a mile or more up the river,
the Confederate vessels being huddled under the guns of Fort
Pillow.
On
arise
from the
fort,
and
terrific
[238
///
7f
THE VESSEL WITH THE ARMED PROW. THE FEDERAL RAM VINDICATOR
An excellent example of
As
far
back as the
Jr.,
the place
The Federal
flotilla on the JMississippi had, some days bebeen reenforced by four small steam rams under the command of Colonel Charles Ellet, Jr. Ellet was not by profession a military man, but a distinguished civil engineer. He had
convinced the Government of the value of the steam ram as a
weapon of war, and was given a colonel's commission and au-
fore,
thority to
He
fit
out a
cooperated
M'ith,
His
His
fleet
of rams.
vessels
240]
June
1862
PILOT W.
AUSLINTY
J.
knew every
To
the hands
the Federal
gunboats
men
like these
owed the
hearts
under
safe
more
fire
the
commanders
conduct of their
fearless nor
Standing
silently
masters
or
No
navy.
murky
night,
intimate
them
and
they
felt
whose
the
frail
first
pilot
who knew
hither
full of holes.
knowledge
of
the
river
difficult
pilots
of
the
their
admitted
most secret
river pilot
Such valuable
Even when
safe.
passing up
singing
some
of the
sharpshooters'
river
the
bullet
the banks
uniform
pilot house.
wore the
and
and unprotected
navy the
the
way
of
Peering
their
to that
recognized
at the wheel,
shell.
army
mates
masters'
of all
of the
into
vessels.
either side.
of
of
current and
The
of
men were
among
mortality
hills
and one can imagine how their emotion rose and fell as the tide
of battle ebbed and flowed on the river below.
It was at 5 :00 a.m. that INIontgomery moved up the stream
and fired the first gun. At this opening Colonel Ellet sprang
forward on the hurricane deck, waved his hat, and shouted to
his brother: " Round out and follow me. Now is our chance."
The Queen instantly moved toward the Confederate fleet;
the Federal ironclads followed, but already both fleets were en-
gaged
:242]
June
1862
Four
But
Union
on them
and three of them turned to the Arkansas shore in the hope that
the crews might make their escape. In the lead was the General
perate effort to escape.
the
2-14
fleet closed in
Ci>pyriiiht
hy
Itri'ieto
of Reviews Co.
little
"tinclaii"
minor service
is
Mosquito
Fleet, officially
Up narrow
tributaries
known
and
in
and out
of tortuous
size,
or boldly en-
gaging the infantry and even the field-batteries of the enemy, which were always eagerly pressing the shores to annoy the invading
fleet.
vessels,
To
most
of
command on
owed the
navy.
Covered to a height of
eleven feet above the water line with railroad iron a half to three-quarters of an inch thick, and with their boilers
tected, they were able to stand
by the
well-directed
fire of
up to the
fire of
some
of the tinclads
were equipped.
still
forts
further pro-
was
silencetl
'1
its
kind on
\\
of the fiercest of
killed
[246]
June
1862
GENERAL
C. C.
Wisconsin sent ninety thousand of her sons into the struggle, and her infantry and cavalry
won
records
"East" and
Union
forces
On
the troops
on the
the
tliat
river
to
command
New
General
of
Thomas Williams
drawn from
his
work
Van Dorn
General
morning of August
J.
C.
ofiicers.
its
On
the
were attacked.
Williams,
all
killed
who had
a drawn
bravely led
men
fell
The
in gray.
sippi
the
At once, Williams
right wing.
fire
The Federal
on Breckinridge's
lines
ville,
Louisiana, a
loss of the
led
General
artillery transport
New
Orleans
Oneida
retired to Port
brave
had previously
also,
action was
on an
back
fell
The
but in the
relief,
fight,
who slow-
upon
fierce rushes of
men, he was
his
field
had
six
its
and
all
five
Twenty-first
between
some
fighting in
The
refusing
5,
and the
had with-
hand-to-hand.
cases
his arrival at
in front of Vicksburg,
General
latter
signal
The
Farragut proceeding
river,
Baton Rouge.
forces
at
fleet
off
Donaldson-
Baton Rouge
Breckinridge
Hudson.
i'opyri'jht
hij
l-icvicw of
Reviews Co.
THE ARTILLERY TRANSPORT THAT WAS SUNK OFF DONALDSOWTLLE, LOUISIANA. WITH GENERAL
WILLIAMS' BODY ON BOARD.AUGUST. 1862
[250
PART
"
III
YORKTOWN
UP THE
PENINSULA
upyriylit
Inj
that
He
By
his
much
Army
of the
one stroke, and scatter the routed Confederate army into the Southwest.
by a
McClellan devoted
illustrated
all
a force
by Battery No.
4,
one of
fifteen batteries
distant.
[
252
It
was planned
to
his
own.
had
shells
just
in
at
Monroe,
Richmond
at Fortress
rivers, seize
Potomac
been placed
Yorktown.
in position
is
well
The
May
4,
1862.
Section,
Three Mortars
of
if
4.
(2)
(1)
the Confederates had not evacuated, and (3) the temporary bridge crossing the narrow
branch that runs into a northern arm of Wormley's Creek at this point.
By
this bridge
communication
any attempt
of the
The heavy stockade was intended to forestall
Confederate infantry to rush the battery. The mortars shown in this photograph are 13-inch sea-coast
mortars and exceeded in weight any guns previously placed in siege batteries. The first of these mortars
was landed at daybreak on April 27th and the whole battery was ready to open bombardment in a week's time.
A SHATTERED
artil-
HOW
Copyright by Review
oj
Hemtan
oo.
WASTED TRANSPORTATION
Both Sections of Union Battery No. 4. The heavy barge at the landing transported the ten huge mortars, with their ammunition, all
the way from Fortress Monroe up the York River and Wormley's Creek to the position of the battery. There they were laboriously
On the day of the evacuation the six batteries equipped were in
set up, and, without firing a shot, were as laboriously removed.
condition to throw one hundred and seventy-five tons of metal daily into the Confederate defenses around Yorktown.
0rkt0tun
Hp
X\\t
p^nmsula
Alav
1862
weapon, which
later in the
coming winter.
Potomac." The winter months
Public
wear on and
Opinion is growing restless. " Why does
not the army move? " Across the country, thirty miles away,
is the Confederate army, flushed with its July
under the command of General Joseph E. Johnston.
It was the 8th of JNIarch, 1862. As the Union army looked
toward JNIanassas, down along the horizon line, clouds of
smoke were seen ascending. It was from the burning huts.
The Confederates were abandoning JNIanassas. Johnston was
evacuating his camp. The next day orders came for the Amiy
of the Potomac to move.
Through the morning mists was
heard the bustle of activity. Across the Long Bridge the
at JNIanassas,
victory,
many
of
its
possibihties
by the Confederate
256
One
retreat
lost
from
fall
of 1861,
left),
when
INIcClellan
commanding
was
George W. Morell
stationed on the defenses of Washington at Minor's Hill in Virginia, and General McClellan was engaged
in
Army
popularity. He
transforming the raw recruits in the camps near the national capital into the finished soldiers of the
of the
Potomac.
"Little
Mac,"
was
Lieut. -Cols.
whom
Sweitzer
Count de
Paris,
Campaign
the
"when hard
riding
is
A. V. Colburn and N. B.
required."
who wears
He
staff,
The other was determined on. Soon the Potomac will swarm with every description of water craft. It is
to be the prelude to another drama on the military stage. On
the placid river there come canal-boats, flat-bottoms, barges,
INIanassas.
On
The army
men
is
seen.
Armed
guns flashing in the sunlight, march and countermarch; thousands of horsemen with shining arms fill the meadows to the
right; to the left are many batteries; beyond these, a long line
of marching men stretch from the hills to the streets of Alexandria; regimental bands play familiar tunes, and flags and
banners are waving over all. It is a magnificent pageant
far difi^erent scene from that, three years hence, when many of
these depleted, war-worn regiments, with tattered flags, will
pass in grand review through the avenues of the capital.
Here upon
this
and with the precision of a well-oiled machine, one hundred and twenty-one thousand men, with all the equipment for
war, including fourteen thousand horses and mules, forty-four
batteries, wagons, pontoon bridges, and boats are loaded.
It
hundred
vessels.
board
comprises a fleet of four
On
men are
swarming like ants; they unmoor from the landings and lazily
sion
float
away
down
the river.
in the distance.
economy and
celerity of
movement
is
Mathout a parallel on
its
258]
entire equipage
YORKTOWN
Camp
camp from near McClellan's headquarters. Little hardships had these troops
and fat, the men happy and well sheltered in comfortable tents.
[a-17]
seen as yet.
:\iav
1862
wmmmm:
The army had already been divided into four corps,
commanded, respectively, by Generals ^McDowell, Sumner,
Heintzelman, and Keyes, but at the last moment INIcDowell
had been detached by President Lincoln. The van was led hy
General Hamilton's division of the Third Corps.
afternoon of the second day the
first
On
the
Hampton.
But
the
[2601
ii
it.
orktomu
Hp
tl\t
P^nmHula
4^
The
Again
Army
one.
march, the
men
soon
fell
At
to him.
left at
the
The Union
Lee's
jNIills.
right
Now
its
first
Yorktown, the
time in the campaign
disputed.
wing was
for the
way
[262]
in front of
May
1862
War
of 1812,
by the defenders
no
fortification
of
New
was ever
Confederates
The gun
position to
fall
Before the end of the Civil War, cotton was worth $1.00 a pound, gold.
Orleans.
in the center,
It is
though
of archaic pattern,
FORTIFICATIONS OF
Earthworks
of the
Revolution Used
in the Civil
War.
The
ditch,
dug by Cornwallis
TWO WARS
in 1781,
of
left of
in 1862.
the Confederates as
the picture.
May
1862
from the rifle-pits. It was returned with equal force and here
on the historic soil of Yorktown men of North and South stood
opposed, where eighty-one years before their fathers had stood
together in the
making
of the Nation.
line
waded
emerging
rifle-pits.
For one
it
It could not be
lel line
1 '^"m
mil
Yorktown.)
It
(Hasty
fcirtiticali.uis ul
fortifications
as
ANOTHER
WRECKED
THE
Y'orktnwn.)
VOICELE.-^S
GUN.
.32-pounder
RIFLE.
federates at Y'orktown.)
The
shells
Cupijruilit
h,j
I'alniit
Pub. Co.
(Battery
man
now
skill,
as at ]Manassas.
The troops
toward Williamsburg.
Soon the Federals were in hot pursviit. General Stonewith cavalry and horse artillery followed along the Wil-
were even
in full retreat
266
Federal Battery No. 1 Before Yorktown. Never before had so heavy a siege battery been mounted. It was placed half a mile farther
down the York River than Battery No. 4. From its six Parrott guns, five lOO-pounders and one !200-pounder, it could at a single firIt opened up on May 1,
ing drop 700 pounds of shot and shell upon the fortifications and landing at Yorktown, two miles away.
1862, with such telling effect that the evacuation of the town was greatly hastened, occurring two days later.
These Parrott guns
were in many cases failures. The reinforcement of the breach was not properly placed to stand the heavy charges and many burst,
killing the artillerymen and wrecking everything in close vicinity.
The life of these guns was short.
200-pounder Parrott Gun. This, at the time, mammoth piece of ordnance stood in the center of Battery No. 1, which was located
on the west bank of the Y'ork River at the mouth of Wormley's Creek. The range of the battery was upstream toward Y'orktown,
and this huge Parrott gun in the very center of the battery was much relied upon by the Federals to do heavy damage. Here we see
how carefully McClellan's engineers did their work. The wickerwork bastions were reinforced by tiers of sand bags. Well-constructed
wooden stands were made for the gunners to facilitate the loading and swabbing. This battery was near the Farenholdt House.
\
,
4^
4}^
4^
May
4^
1862
liamsburg road, which was httered with the debris of a retreating army.
Six miles from WilHamsburg the pursuing
cavahymen came to a sudden halt. The rear guard of the
Confederates had been overtaken. On the brow of the hill, in
The
//////'/
'11
'////,
even into the night the forces of Sumner and Hooker, floundering in the mud, were arriving on the scene of the next day's
battle.
It was a drenched and bedraggled army that slept on
[268]
///,
SILLNT AFTER
TWO
DAYS'
WORK
Union Battery No. 1, Two Miles Below Yorktown. This section of the Parrott guns was in the peach orchard of the Farenholdt
House. Never had so heavy a battery been set up before in siege work. McClellan hoped by it to silence the "impregnable" water
After two
batteries of the Confederates by dropping shot and shell upon Yorktown wharf and within the defenses on the bluff.
days of action it was rendered useless by the evacuation of Yorktown, and had to be transported up the river after the change of the
base. The Farenholilt mansion, a hand.some old Colonial structure, was just in the rear of this battery, and frcn its roof the work of
the shells could be cli-arly observed. The good shots were cheered and the men stationed here were in holiday mood no Confeder^
ate
fire
Moore's House, about a Mile Southea.st of the Town. Near here, in 1781, Cornwallis laid down his arms to Washington and in this
house the terms of the surrender which established the independence of America were drawn up. The damage to the house is the
effect of the Revolutionary guns and not those of McClellan.
The guns of Battery No. 1 fired their heavy shells over this house.
Near here also many of the Continentals were buried, <and across their graves and the old camp of Cornwallis's beleagured troops the
messengers of destruction hurtled through the air. The Federal fleet was anchored near where the Comte de Grasse's ships lay at
the time of the surrender.
May
1862
it
wood
in the rear.
270
Near the Center of Yorktown. Far from being the almost impregnable fortified city which McClellan appeared to think it, Yorktown was but a small village, to which the occupation by Cornwallis in 1781 had given an exaggerated strategic importance. It consisted chiefly of a single street, seen in the picture.
Here a group of residents had gathered after the evacuation curious for a sight
of the entering Union troops.
A most remarkable thing to be noticed is the unharmed condition of most of the houses. The casualties among noncombatants were almost nothing.
The food supply at this time was plentiful, the South as a whole had not begun
to feel the pinch of hunger that it endured so bravely and so unflinchingly during the dark days of '64.
nrktnmn
lip
tl}t
l^nxmmln
4-
May
1862
Up
cokimn swept. On
the crest of the hill stood Hancock's men
sixteen hundred
strong Avaiting for the charge. In front of his soldiers, with
drawn sword, stood the man who later would display a similar
courage on the field of Gettysburg. On came the Southerners'
rush.
The sword of Hancock gleamed in the light. Quick
and decisive came the order to charge, and the trained soldiers,
with the coolness of veterans, hurled themselves upon the Confederate column. Down by the stream, the gallant ISIcRae of
the Fifth North Carolina, seeing what was happening, dashed
forward to take part in the fight. The Northern musketry
fire sang in the afternoon air.
So close did the opposing columns come to each other that the bayonets were used with
deadly effect. The slaughter of the Fifth North Carolina regiment was appalling. The lines of the South began to waver,
then broke and fled down the hill, leaving over five hundred
men on the bloody field.
Now the sound of battle began to grow fainter in front
of Fort Magruder. The Confederates were falling back behind its protecting walls. The Federal troops, wet and weary
and hungry, slejjt on the field with their fallen comrades, and
Hancock held undisputed sway during the starless night.
But it was not too dark for Longstreet's command to
retreat once more in the direction of Richmond. It was a perilous road through the flat, swampy lowlands, with rain falling
at every step of the way as they hastened toward the Chickahominy.
The Union troops, too, had reason to remember
into the attack.
this night as
The dead
in all the
mud.
Many
of the
wounded
^1
Federal Ordnance Ready for Transportation from Yorktown. Tlie artillery thus parked at the rear of the lower wharf was by no means
all that McClellan deemed necessary to overcome the resistance at Yorktown.
In the center are the Parrott guns. In the background, at the upper wharf, are the transports ready for the embarkation of the troops. The little mortars in the foreground were
known as coehorns. They could be lifted by half a dozen men and transported by hand to any part of the entrenchments. Their
range was only a few hundred yards, but with small charges they could quite accurately drop shells at almost a stone's throw.
During the siege of Petersburg they were used by both armies. Here we see troops and artillery ready for the forward move. The
Louisiana Tigers had been encamped here before McClellan's army took possession.
\\nart at \orktow n.
The steamer Robert Morris ready to depart, waiting for the embarkation of that portion of the Army
Potomac which went up the York River to the mouth of the Paniunkey from Yorktown, May 6th, after the evacuation.
Already
the dismantling of both the Confederate and the Federal forts had begun. One sees gun-carriages, mortars, and tons of shot and
shell, ready to be taken up the river for the operations against Richmond.
The Lower
of the
'ON
MAY,
at
burg broken down, the Army of the Potomac was now ready for the final
rush upon Richmond.
The gatlicriii^' of the Union army of forty thousand men at White Hou.se. near ( 'unilifrland, was felt to be the beginning
of the expected victorious advance.
That part of the army not at York-
town and Williamsburg was moved up the Peninsula as fast as the conditions of the road would permit.
After the affair at Williamsburg the
troops there joined the main army before the advance to the Chickahominy.
Here we see but part of that camp the first to be established on
a large scale, in the Penin.sula campaign
looking north at the bend
of the
Pamunkej-.
WHERE
Three quarters
south bank of the Pamunkey, looking northwest across the lower camp.
In this bend of the river was gathered the nondescript fleet of transports,
steamers, barges, and schooners that conveyed Federal array supplies up
to this point from Fortress Monroe, via York River.
(Cumbcrlaml Landing.)
from the landing, looking north to%vard the
haze
of smoke from thousands
river.
The distance is obscured by the
Every bit of dried wood had been collected and consumed,
of camp-fires.
was
in
all
directions.
felled
and standing timber
of a mile
[274
.SUPPLIE.s
The
berland Landing.)
The Army
of
Poto-
the
IDLE DAYS
Richmond before the end of June, and no one dreamed that the great campaign would come to nothing.
,\T
impatient, waiting
men
sat
idl.v
C T ,M BKK L.\N D.
by the
Everyone expected
The
to be in
The Army of the Potomac encamped in readimovement on Richmond. These comfortable canvas
houses were transported by the army wagons. The Confederates had no
such complete shelter during the spring of 1862, which was remarkable for
ness for the forward
(White House on
This house, the residence of W. H. F. Lee, son of General R. E. Lee, looked east over the river, which flows south at this point.
It was burned in June, 1862, when the Federal army base was changed to
the James River by order of General McClellan.
the Pamunkey.)
[a-18]
In
May,
news
the
1862,
spread
led
by the dread
River.
city
it
Mean-
while
the
Confederate
forces
suc-
were
command the
river.
hastily
gotten into
vessels
channel;
were
torpedoes
and every
possible
Richmond.
sunk
in
the
were anchored,
obstruction
op-
When
the
Richmond breathed
what a mass
missiles
of
fort, at
were
the heads of
The
boats
when
them
river.
May
15,
1862
responded with
make
it
possible to proceed
The
James.
fort
was not
up the
silenced,
its
seriously attempt
to
pass
it.
Fort
Richmond
made
it
while
it
.April,
abandoned,
Connecticut
Heavy
This
1865, after
Artillery.
and
First
The
cabin seen in the picture was the quarters of the regimental chaplain.
PART
111
FAIR
OAKS
THE
FARM-HOUSE SERVING AS
1,
HOSPITAL
1862
[280]
it is
true, rudely
checked on their
left
colors to
show
field,
their
and they
1'he net result of the battle, in spite of the captured trophies, was un-
doubtedly
favorable
to
Federal
the
...
arms.
It
remained for
General McClellan to
all
of
it
whom
John
C. Ropes, "
The
Stoi'ij
of the Civil
cam-
War,''"'
WITH Yorktown
again
its
Army
of the
Pamunkey,
its
Potomac took up
Landing toward
tapony forms the York. Not all the troops, however, were at
Cumberland Landing and INIcClellan had first to bring up the
remainder of his forces from Yorktown and Williamsburg.
Some came by water up the York, some by land. The march
was a pictin-esque one, through a magnificent country arrayed
in all the
wooded
hills.
its
meadows
could be seen the mansions of planters, with their slave quarters in the rear.
still
continued at
intervals.
282
Mc-
18G'2,
and
seemed
it
the
In
get a near
and
as a Capitol
fall
oi
the
In this
of
of
afar,
with
it
of the
so.
When
building in
Lincoln entered
1865,
by the blockade as
the Confederate
Government, many
see the
the Con-
and archives
Richmond from
hill.
done
by the Confederate
we
mond, part
Below,
we
18G5.
city of
Ajtril,
The
during
lost
tions of
which were
much
by the opera-
erate attack
Oaks.
two military
in the
Confed-
fighting
first
of the
leaders
Sum-
ground.
Had
command
GENERAL
G. W.
SMITH,
C. S. A.
in
GENERAL
D. H. HILL, C.
S.
A.
Mav
18G2
fields
of wheat, and,
Avere
it
up
his
It
Richmond.
In the Confederate
As
jNIcClellan took
the retreating
army
capital a panic
many
would not
fight.
The
fear
in,
But
it
was not
strategic policy of
Northern army.
Fortunately for him, the rainy weather
proved a powerful ally. The time had now come when he
should change his position from the defensive to the offensive.
The Army of Northern Virginia had been brought to bay, and
it now turned to beat off the invaders and save its capital.
On the historic Peninsula lay two of the greatest and
most S2)lendid armies that had ever confronted each other
on the field of battle. The engagement, now imminent, was
to be the first in that series of contests, between the Army of
the Potomac and the Army of Northern Virginia, ending
three years thereafter, at Appomattox, when the war-worn
veterans of gray should lay down their arms, in honor, to the
war-worn veterans of blue.
The Union advance was retarded by the condition of
the weather and the roads. Between JNIcClellan's position at
White House and the Avaiting Confederate army lay the
Chickahominy, an erratic and sluggish stream, that spreads
itself out in wooded swamps and flows around many islands,
forming a valley from half a mile to a mile Avide, bordered
by loAv bluffs. In dry Aveather it is but a mere brook, but a
moderate shoAver Avill cause it to rise quickly and to offer
army seeking
is
covered
its
passage.
The
284
m
W
9
(Jo.
Who Won
Campaign
name
There
is
we
Tidball's
first
in the Petersburg
on the
May
1862
all
eitlier
JNIechanicsville,
and
it
was
eral
VM.
portion of the
Union
ISlean while.
General
"
One
of these
is
the Williams-
The
supphes.
soil
we
move
way
army and
its
White House and across the river to the army, corduroy approaches to the bridges had to be built. It was well that the men got this
early practice in road-building. Thanks Lo the work kept up, McCIellan was able to unite the divided wings of the army almost at will.
Copijiujht
"
Pennington, Tidball,
are
Edm. Pendleton,
P. C.
lit/
A. C.
had, by
'65,
five of his
officers.
j!
From
left
to right (standing)
i|
May
1862
Oaks
division
clearing.
The plans
On
army should
enlisted
the battle-field.
is
on opposite
one of the
staff, later
academy
together.
Casey's pickets.
Later
Beside him
On
the morning of
in the
day
his
May
many
instances.
sits
fighter.
On
the
War met
left sits
its
vicissitudes
J.
B. Washington, C. S. A.,
S.
who
Cavalry, aide on
Both men were West Point graduates and had attended the
upon
^
Lieutenant
of
mill-
!f
if
General
former classmate ran across him and a dramatic meeting was thus recorded by the camera.
i,
!'
morass.
From mud-soaked
morning
to battle.
Owing
early as intended.
move
so
in readi-
by eight o'clock. Hour after hour the forces of Longstreet and Hill awaited the sound of the signal-gun that would
tell them General Huger was in his position to march.
Still
they waited. It was near noon before General Hill, weary of
waiting, advanced to the front, preceded by a line of skirmishers, along the Williamsburg road.
The Union pickets
ness
were lying at the edge of the forest. The soldiers in the pits
had been under arms for several lioio's awaiting the attack.
Suddenly there burst through the woods the soldiers of the
South.
shower of bullets fell beneath the trees and the
Union j)ickets gave way. On and on came the lines of gray
In front of the abatis had been planted a
in close columns.
of
four
battery
guns. General Naglee with four regiments,
the Fifty-sixth and One hundredth New York and Eleventh
]Maine and One hundred and fourth Pennsylvania, had gone
forward, and in the open field met the attacking army. The
contest was a stubborn one. Naglee's men charged with their
bayonets and j^ressed the gray lines back again to the edge
of the woods. Here they were met by a furious fire of musketry and quickly gave way, seeking the cover of the riflepits at Fair Oaks Farm. The Confederate infantrymen came
rushing on.
But again they were held in check. In this position, for
nearly three hours the Federals waged an unequal combat
against three times their number. Then, suddenly a galling
fire plowed in on them from the left.
It came from Rains'
brigade, which had executed a flank movement. At the same
290
and a
half,
and the
artillery of
Casey's
"
May 31st, at Fair Oaks, the Confederates were driving the Federal soldiers through the woods in disorder when
(McCarthy's) together with Miller's battery opened up with so continuous and severe a fire that the Federals were able to
make a stand and hold their own for the rest of the day. The guns grew so hot from constant firing that it was only with the greatest
care that they could be swabbed and loaded.
These earthworks were thrown up for McCarthy's Battery, Company C, 1st Pennsylvania Artillery, near Savage's Station. The soldiers nicknamed it the "Redhot Battery."
[a-19]
the afternoon of
this battery
May
1862
\emMMsmm
This move was not too soon. In another
in their retreat.
minute they would have been entirely surrounded and capThe gray lines pressed on. The next stand would be
tured.
at
Seven Pines, where Couch was stationed. The forces
made
here had been weakened by sending relief to Casey. The situation of the Federals was growing critical. At the same time
General Longstreet sent reenforcements to General Hill.
Couch was forced out of his position toward the right in the
direction of Fair Oaks Station and was thus separated from
the main body of the army, then in action.
The Confederates pushed strongly against the Federal
center.
Heintzelman came to the rescue. The fight waged
Avas a gallant one.
For an hour and a half the lines of blue
and gray surged back and forth. The Federals were gradually giving way. The left wing, alone, next to the White Oak
Swamp, was holding its own.
At the same time over at Fair Oaks Station Avhither
Couch had been forced, were new developments. He was
about to strike the Confederate army on its left flank, but just
when the guns were being trained, there burst across the road
the troops of General G. W. Smith, who up to this time had
been inactive. These men were fresh for the fight, superior in
number, and soon overpowered the Northerners. It looked
for a time as if the whole Union armj^ south of the Chickahominy was doomed.
Over at Seven Pines the center of ]McClellan's army was
about to be routed. Now it was that General Heintzelman
personally collected about eighteen hundred men, the fragments of the broken regiments, and took a decided stand at
the edge of the timber. He was determined not to give way.
But this alone would not nor did not save the day. To the
right of this new line of battle, there was a rise of ground.
From
inevitable.
[292]
If this ele-
all
would be
of General
II
m
WU'i
'Aw
was
began.
Silas
left
Three
to
Active
service
in
two exacting
appearance,
He had
in the
been with
had rushed
The woods
were
and back
of them, massing
filled
overpowering
before
with sharpshooters,
his forces
came
on
his front,
numbers.
Fighting
arms
General
sits
his troops
in
At Fair Oaks
Naglee.
West
of
division,
it
men
brunt
of
the
first
Confederate attack.
possession
of
his
camp
General Stoneman
Before
before
were opposed
GENERAL
riders
SILAS CASEY
Copyright by Fali
iot
Fub. Co.
1862
Keyes took
reach the
He
in the situation.
hill
battle-lines.
would
The
men between
the
left; to
The Southern
made
a dash for
On
294
"
Not long
eral
commander.
Confederate
leaders
that with the downpour then failing the stream
the
know
the gallant
\ aikenbiirgli,
soldier leaning on his saher,
his arm thrust into his eoat,
rise.
ately, but
FedWell did
m akH 3n
^tgttt
of Utrljntnnb
At
last the
The
men
fall.
it
it
till
down between
the army had
[296]
FLTLL
He stands above
in the Peninsula
air
akB
pushed
in
g>tgl|t
to the front.
nf iStrI|mnnb
May
1862
wooded
among
field.
Here and
General Johnston
few minutes later
ordered his troops to sleep on the field.
he was struck by a rifle-ball and almost immediately a shell
hit him, throwing him from his horse, and he was borne off
ing a diligent search for the Avounded.
the
The
field.
The
first
day of the
disability of the
battle
Mas
over.
it
possi-
of the
Army
[2981
J.
Copi/rit/ht
by Patriot Pub. Co
the
bridges and
build
entrenchments before advancing.
This delay gave the Confederates time to reorganize their
forces and place them under the new conmiander, Robert
E. Lee,
who while McClellan
lay
inactive eff'ected a
junction
with
"Stonewall" Jackson.
Then during the
Seven
Days'
Battles
of
Rail-
Clellan
soon
come to cease firing at the
end of the second day's fight-
which was to
drive the Confederates back to
Richmond. McClellan did not
pursue.
The heavy rainstorm
on the night of May 30th had
made the movement of artil-
lery
the right.
Copyright by Patriot Pub. Co.
ranks.
It immediately filled.
woods and
as they entered
The
its
forest,
trees.
The
among
the
din and the clash and roar of battle were heard for
miles.
Bayonets were brought into use. It was almost a
hand-to-hand combat in the heavy forest and tangled slashings.
The sound
was
fight
'i/M
WW''
over.
The Confederate
Federal troops could
forces withdrew
toward Richmond.
The
strewn with the dead and the dying. Many of the wounded
were compelled to lie under the scorching sun for hours before
help reached them. Every farmhouse became an improvised
hospital where the suffering soldiers lay.
upon
cars
federacy.
P:
[300]
PAur
III
THE
SHENANDOAH
VALLEY
IN
damage done
day
LOSE
fearless
Confederate leader.
both by land and water in May, 1862, Johnston sent Jackson to create a diversion and alarm the Federal capital.
the Valley of the Shenandoah, his forces threatened to cut
treat.
It
off
an
insignificant
of General Banks,
threatened
Rushing down
a re-
became a race between the two armies down the Valley toward Winchester and Harper's Ferry. Forced marches, sometimes
as long as thirty-five miles a day, were the portion of both during the four weeks in which Jackson led his forces after the retreating
I
302
Cupi/i tuhl by
them
in six actions
to the
in the vicinity of
doah Valley
and two
Washington
until McClellan's
battles, in all of
which he came
off victorious.
Then again by
the A alley to join Lee in teaching the overcon^'dent Union administration that
costly fighting
But a year
later the
Once more a panic spread through the North, and both the troops
Potomac.
Confederacy
He had
of
held
to be
men
in the
Shenan-
disappeared up
won without
long and
own
force
crush
it.
if
follow.
The
other rule
is,
never fight
on only a part, and that the weakest part, of your enemy and
Such
tactics will
StoneicaW'' Jackson.
all
of the
The
Along
[304]
OPYRIGHT,
"
1911,
It is
the great good fortune of American hero-lovers that they can gaze here upon
the features of
Campaign"
silence
as
deep as
his
known even
to approach this
mastery of warfare.
first
won
to himself.
nates,
to
of 1862.
Army
to his
and deadly
figures.
man, whose
immediate subordi-
him
the utter confidence of his ragged troops; and their marvelous forced
if
under
his guidance,
put into
his
hands
a living weapon such as no other leader in the mighty conflict had ever wielded.
army ajjproaching the head, why should the Federal commander even think about this insignificant fragment of his foe?
But the records of war have shown that a small force, guided
by a master mind, sometimes accomplishes more in effective
results than ten times the number under a less active and able
commander.
The presence
to
Woodstock,
of
fifty miles
south of Winchester.
to
withdraw
If JNIcClellan
and
thousand
men
When
McClellan's forces.
Shields hastened to his station at Winchester, and Jack-
on the 23d of
jNlarch,
audacious attack.
halted on
its
way
to Winchester.
[300
Corps
of 37,000
ministration that
March
real
to remain at
[a 20]
for
Army
Lincoln had
Richmond.
Washington.
By
the
If
he
capital.
The
reverse at Kerns-
failed,
Richmond from the west while McClellan was approaching from the North.
of this event
before
23d, in the Valley of Virginia, Jackson, though defeated, so alarmed the Ad-
him
But Jackson, on
Richmond.
move up
May
to
23d and
At the news
AVashington.
\\t
g>l|^nanii0al|
Alarm
au&
May
at IfflaHlitngton
1862
urn
miles a day.
On May
Union
flank near
Newtown,
and
inflicting
heavy loss and taking many prisoners. Altogether, three thousand of Banks' men fell into Jackson's hands.
This exploit was most opportune for the Southern arms.
It caused the final ruin of McClellan's hopes.
Banks
received
VI.
and wrote the President that his losses, though serious enough,
might have been far worse " considering the very great disparity of forces engaged, and the long-matured plans of the
enemy, which aimed at nothing less than entire capture of our
Lincoln
now
force."
]Mr.
Dowell
to IVIcClellan.
that he
[310]
^^^^
rm//,
t
,'1/
/A
\/M<y
PAliT
III
lilClIMOXI)
THE
SEVEN DAYS
BATTLES
niaix'li
And
to the skill
and
of what he had
utterly un-
army
in "
War.''''
into a siege,
who
to
number
Every man
Richmond.
their appear-
appearance of a
fortified
camp.
Army
of the
summer.
The whole
alike to
left),
be brothers.
who had
They were
so in arms, at
West
Point, in
1869.
the possibilities of
the situation
command
of the
army
The
General
promptness and completeness with which he blighted McClellan's high hopes of reaching Richmond showed at one stroke that the Confederacy had found
rival
him
its
in the field.
great general.
It
North at
last
turn Sag0
Ip (HmfthnuU
Now that
Olapttal
June
1862
S>mth
June was coming on, the malarious swamps were fountains of disease. The
polluted waters of the sluggish streams soon began to tell on
the health of the men. JVIalaria and typhoid were jDrevalent;
the hospitals were crowded, and the death rate was appalling.
Such conditions were not inspiring to either general or
army. INIcClellan was still hoping for substantial reenforcements.
ISIcDowell, with his forty thousand men, had been
promised him, but he was doomed to disaj)pointment from that
source.
Yet in the existing state of affairs he dared not be
inactive.
South of the Chickahominy, the army was almost
secure from surprise, owdng to well-protected rifle-pits flanked
by marshy thickets or covered with felled trees. But the Federal forces were still divided by the fickle stream, and this was
a constant source of anxiety to the commander. He proceeded
to transfer all of his men to the Richmond side of the river,
excepting the corps of Franklin and Fitz John Porter. About
veritable bog.
thousand men joined the Federal army north of the Chickahominy, bringing the entire fighting strength to about one
hundred and five thousand. So long as there remained the
slightest hope of additional soldiers, it was imjiossible to with-
draw
it
all
of the
army from
the
York
and
remained divided.
That was a
Confederate gen-
eral
12, 1862, in the direction of Fredericksburg as if to reenforce " Stonewall " Jackson. The first
June
No
fires
were kindled, and when the morning dawned, his men swung
upon their mounts without the customary bugle-call of " Boots
and Saddles." Turning to the east, he surprised and captured
a Federal picket; swinging around a corner of the road, he
^^^^
O)
nykl
bij
White House, Virginia, June 27, 1862. Up the James and the Paraunkey to White House Landing came the steam and sailing vessels
laden with supplies for McClellan's second attempt to reach Richmond. Tons of ammunition and thousands of rations were sent forward from here to the army on the Chickahominy in June, 1862. A short month was enough to cause McClellan to again change his
plans, and the army base was moved to the James River.
The Richmond and York Railroad was lit up by burning cars along its
course to the Chickahominy. Little was left to the Confederates save the charred ruins of the White House itself.
mm Saga
June
186a
^^^^^^
suddenly came upon a squadron of Union cavalry.
The Con-
federate yell rent the air and a swift, bold charge by the South-
to the
Union troops came thundering along, apI^roaching the station. The engineer, taking in the situation
at a glance, put on a full head of steam and made a rush for
train bearing
was
easily
brushed
aside.
As
the train
ELLERSOX
Not
June
men were
withdrew.
The
victory was of
little
the
MILL
WllKUK
IIJLL ASSALLTKl).
strongly entrenched.
Till 9 o'clock at
Time
ground we see
night they continued to pour volleys at the position, and then at last
use to the Federals, for Jackson on the morrow, having executed one of the flanking night
fell
at Gaines' Mill.
Co,yr,,M
Pa.... ^u..
Railroad trains loaded with tons of food and ammunition were run deliberately at
foreground.
on the south bank of tlie river, haste was made for the confines of Richmond, where, at dawn of the following day, the
troopers dropped from their saddles, a weary but happy body
of cavalry.
own
mond were
INIeanwhile his
steadily increasing.
forces in
He
Army
of the Potomac.
new
IMcClellan was
which the
Army
of
the
Potomac was
[318]
famous,
for
would be
mil'
The
'
i
June
1862
its
sheets of fire
of their antagonists.
the
afi'air
of
Oak Grove
to the
steep
bluff',
strong
jjosition,
to
13201
Cnpijri'jhl
]'h. Co.
h,, I'.lln'nl
means
of
When
army
moved
army on
the bridge
men.
The
named
for their
its
field of
it
would
Gaines'
Woodbury's engineers
commander proved
this bridge,
among them
McClellan's
the right wing, under General Fitz John Porter, was engaged on the
Federal troops
most
serviceable.
severe.
It
was nine
o'clock
when Hill
finally
drew back
his
many
this position
on June
29, ISG'i,
times repulsed in his attempt to seize the supplies which McClellan was shifting to his
of that day.
and was as
new
position.
back
from the Williamsburg Road, along which the Federal wagon trains were attempting to move toward
Savage's Station.
same day,
after
The
corps of
Magruder 's
were marching swiftly and silently toward Savage's Station, leaving behind large quantities of supplies
which
fell
[..-21]
toll, in
dead
and wounded, paid for its efforts to break down the Union
Dropping back to the rear this ill-fated regiment
attempted to re-form its broken ranks, but its officers were all
among those who had fallen. Both armies now prepared for
another day and a renewal of the conflict.
The action at Beaver Dam Creek convinced JMcClellan
that Jackson was really apj^roaching with a large force, and
he decided to begin his change of base from the Pamunkey
to the James, leaving Porter and the Fifth Corps still on the
left bank of the Chickahominy, to prevent Jackson's fresh
troops from interrupting this great movement. It was, indeed,
a gigantic undertaking, for it involved marching an army of
a hundred thousand men, including cavalry and artillery,
across the marshy peninsula.
train of five thousand heavily
loaded wagons and many siege-guns had to be transported;
nearly three thousand cattle on the hoof had to be driven.
From White House the supplies could be shipped by the York
River Railroad as far as Savage's Station. Thence to the
James, a distance of seventeen miles, they had to be carried
overland along a road intersected by many others from which
General Casey's
a watchful opponent might easily attack.
troops, guarding the supplies at White House, were transferred by way of the York and the James to Harrison's Landing on the latter river. The transports were loaded with all
the material they could carry.
The rest was burned, or put
in cars. These cars, with locomotives attached, were then run
position.
On
During
quietly
moved
wagon
trains
Oak Swamp,
them
see
We
they could.
blow at
its
Wagon
untenable position.
itself
in the picture.
see the
The
camp near
Army
of the
Potomac had
wagon
fall
field of
must
of necessity be left
White
relief
But attention
to these
by
('../'
flat
Their hopes of
Thither on
while the troops were striving to hold Savage's Station to protect the movement.
wounded as we
ties as
telling
men were
l'"lri<it
I'ub. Co.
fell
rifled
and had to be
left
managed
29, 1862.
ground
till
They turned
nightfall,
its
& York
deadly
when hundreds
flat cars.
fire
steadily
in the
picture,
on
the
The
field
rum lays
dnnfrbfratp
QIatittal
equally alert, for about the same time they opened a heavy
This march of
June
1862
^aurb *
fire
was a
five miles
ahominy
The morning
as the
new
men
it
of the
230sition.
made;
new
heights.
The
selection of this
occupied a series
a sickle-shaped stream.
The
m
II
the
many
Around
wood densely
Union position were
this
the
tanalso
men
To
protect
The Confederate front recoiled from the incessant outpour of grape, canister, and shell. The heavy cloud of battle
[
326
&!
'
A GRIM CAPTURE
Army repelled a desperate attack of General Magruder at SavThe next day they disappeared, plunging into the depths of White Oak Swamp,
leaving only the brave medical officers behind, doing what they could to relieve the sufferings of the men
that had to be abandoned. Here we see them at work upon the wounded, who have been gathered from
the field. Nothing but the strict arrest of the stern sergeant Death can save these men from capture, and
when the Confederates occupied Savage's Station on the morning of June 30th, twenty-five hundi-ed sick
and wounded men and their medical attendants became prisoners of war. The Confederate hospital facil-
ities
full
men were
The
confronted on that day with the prospect of lingering for months in the military prisons of the South.
brave soldiers lying helpless here were wounded at Gaines' Mill on June 27th and removed to the great
field-hospital established at Savage's Station.
The photograph was taken just before Sumner and Franklin
tnm iaga
fllnufi^brrat^
Capital S>aur&
trees
momentum
itself
among
the
The tremendous
and
men
them forward,
but, reserving the Fourth Texas for his immediate command,
he marched it into an open field, halted, and addressed it, giving instructions that no man should fire until ordered and that
Hood,
all
disjiosing his
line.
the intrepid
Hood,
leading his men, started for the LTnion breastworks eight hun-
They moved
328
shell.
As
At
they
June
1862
Through
this well-nigh
On
Oak Swamp,
army was
hastily
tyxm Saga
\mMMMMim.
reached the crest of a small ridge, one hundred and
line,
fifty
yards
depleted
files.
They quickened
their
Not
battle,
all,
[3301
COLONEL JAMLs
11.
<
IIILDS
mu Bays
SIl]^
(HBuUhn^tt
Olapital
Bnmh
as he stood in the
open
field
near Savage's Station he looked out over the plain and saw
with satisfaction the last of the ambulances and wagons making their
way toward
the
new haven on
the James.
332
J. II.
1862.
1,
Fitz
Corps, bore the brunt of battle at Malvern Hill where the troops of McClellan withstood the
superior forces.
Fiery "Prince
was met and repulsed through the long hot summer afternoon.
and
its
won
after
terrific
left of
division,
Fourth
the Federal
line,
and
Martindale's brigade of the Fifth Corps was early called into action,
tlie
brevet of Major-General.
'n,
,,,, ,, ,1,1
I,;,
l',ilr,,it
I'tih.
Cn.
march
across
Monitor at Malvern
of
Hill.
Malvern
Hill,
Army
of the
on the James.
Potomac
It told
as they
emerged from
their perilous
pre-
went aboard the Galena to consult with Commodore John Rodgers about a suitable base on the James.
The gunboats
supported the flanks of the army during the battle and are said to have silenced one of the Confederate batteries
of the fleet
tmn lays
^awh ^
\sssimMmm
fought not more than two miles away, but he was powerless
to give aid.
McCall.
own
behalf.
The Eleventh
June
1862
up
without
was the
here
liad
army
his
shifting
twiee,
The
the James.
lield
Malvern
on
abandoned
of
July
1,
where
to a
the
heavy
point
danger
and
Landing
selected,
army
the
next step.
his
to
historic
he
service
Below we
mansion
as
supplies
ian's
the
most
ers.
For
the Seven
efficient
his
did
Porter's
McClellan
of
command-
services during
Major-Ceneral
James,
during the
see the
which
General
of
was
Volunteers.
his
men and
and
recuperated,
vias
new base
losses
made
of
victory
and
1862,
down
the
Hill
the
after
army marched
farther
position
be
Harrison's
delay.
time at Harrison's
this
Days could
Seven
friend.
lifelong
June
1862
last of the
The
wagon
trains
had
and the smoke had scarcely lifted from the blood-soaked field,
when the Union forces were again in motion toward the James.
By noon on July 1st the last division reached the position
where jNIcClellan decided to turn again upon his assailants.
He had not long to wait, for the Confederate columns, led by
Longstreet, were close on his trail, and a march of a few miles
brought them to the Union outposts. They found the Army
of the
Potomac admirably
broad, with
its
Along
commanded a view of
army must af)proach.
is
James River; on
the
by a thick forest. Around the summit of the hill, General JNIcClellan had placed tier after tier of batteries, arranged like an
amjjhitheater.
Surmounting these on the crest were massed
seven of his heaviest siege-guns. His army surrounded this
hill, its left flank being j^rotected by the gunboats on the river.
The morning and early afternoon were occupied with
many Confederate
ture,
The Confederate
orders were to
advance when the signal, a yell, cheer, or shout from the men
of Armistead's brigade, was given.
Late in the afternoon General D. H. Hill heard some
shouting, followed by a roar of musketry. Xo other general
seems to have heard it, for Hill made his attack alone. It was
gallantlj' done, but no army could have withstood the galling
fire of the batteries of the Army of the Potomac as they were
massed upon INIalvern Hill. All during the evening, brigade
The gunners
after brigade tried to force the Union lines
[
336
ON DARING DUTY
It
Aide-de-Camp
of General McClellan's.
difficult
fields of battle
to
Here
is
the bold
make
division
vern
was retreating from White Oak Swamp, and then to carry orders to Sumner to
Hill.
of quick
fell
in his efforts to
The
back on Mal-
Necessarily a
man
the loss of a battle; the failure to arrive in the nick of time with despatches might
army.
fall
mean
might mean
The Confederwere not able to make concerted efforts, but the battle
waxed hot nevertheless. They were forced to breast one of
the most devastating storms of lead and canister to which an
assaulting army has ever been subjected. The round shot and
grape cut through the branches of the trees and the battle-field
was soon in a cloud of smoke. Column after column of Southern soldiers rushed up to tlie death-dealing cannon, only to be
mowed down. The thinned and ragged lines, with a valor born
of desj^eration, rallied again and again to the charge, but to
no avail. The batteries on the heights still hurled their missiles
of death.
The field below was covered with the dead and
ates
more awe-
through the
forest,
Their heavy
and great limbs were torn
Cop!/rii/ht
liji
W. W.
jiosition
This
army
2, 186'-2,
to Harrison's Landing.
off
to
It
fall
was
his
trains
and troops.
He had
not
When
with his cavalry horses, making the Confederates believe that artillery was being brought up.
With ap-
parent reluctance he agreed to a truce of two hours in which the Confederates might bury the dead they
left
for
on the
hillside the
that the
Army
of the
day
before.
show
Just before they expired, Frank's Battery arrived to his support, with the news
Potomac was
safe.
it
without the
loss of a
man.
[a-22]
mu Says
Richmond had been
And
[340]
tell,
June
1862
of the
occupation of Harrison's Landing, McClellan's position had become so strong that the Federal
deemed
it
commanded by
commander no
General Lee saw that his opponent was flanked on each side by a creek and
the guns in the entrenchments and those of the Federal navy in the river.
Lee there-
inexpedient to attack, especially as his troops were in poor condition owing to the incessant marching and fighting of the
Seven Days. Rest was what both armies needed most, and on July 8th the Confederate forces returned to the vicinity of Richmond.
McClellan scoured the country before he was satisfied of the Confederate withdrawal. The Third and Fourth Pennsylvania cavalry
made a reconnaisance to Charles City Court House and beyonfl, and General Averell reported on July 11th that there were no Southern
troops south of the lower Chickahorainj'. His scouting expeditions extended in the direction of Richmond and up the Chickahominy.
CoiiyriylU by Patriot
1862
Pub. Co.
VI
War
ENGAGEMENTS OF THE
WAR
CIVIL
sn:)ES
August, 18G2
CHRONOLOGICAIj
War
in
and compiled by
official records of the Union and Confederate
Minor engagements
States War Department.
cerning which statistics, especially Confederate,
losses
and
casualties, collated
of
FEBRUARY,
1860.
Secession
adopted
by
J'~T5^!'''^^?*^'*f'^'o
*
Lontederate btates
'
a
A.\
Soutii Carolina.
1-
1861.
.
ot
organized
visionallv
at
^
America
iiroMontgomery,
.
Ala.
JANUARY,
9.-U.
S.
upon
1861.
9.
1^"^*
in
.
'f^"
r'lorida seceded.
11. Alabama seceded.
19. Georgia seceded.
26. Louisiana seceded.
and
13.
S.
C.
S. C. Art.
14.
Evacuation
U.
by
17.
No
1st
MARCH,
Abraham
.^
President
1861.
MAY,
1861.
U.
of
S.
Fort
Art.
Sumter,
Confed.
casualties.
Arkansas seceded.
10. Camp Jackson, Mo.,
occupied by Mo.
by Union 1st, Sd, and 4tli
Mo. Reserve Corps, 3d Mo. Vols. 639
militia, seized
of Fort Sumter, S. C, by
Losses: Union 1 killed, 5 wounded
premature explosion of cannon in
Union 6th
Baltimore, Md.
Mass., 27th Pa. Baltimoreans, Citizens
Losses: Union 4 killed,
of Baltimore.
Citizens, 12 killed.
36 wounded.
23. Co. A 8th U. S. Infantry captured at
San Antonio, Tex., by a company of or-
1861.
6.
S.
Riots
St.
Louis.
27
in
20.
Mo.
Louis,
Mo., U.
inaugurated
'
Bombardment
Union
Davis
^'
10.
12
APRIL,
^'^^^
Jctierson
Carolina troops
1
1
Tvr.
Mississippi seceded.
.
Jefferson Davis
S.
killed.
North
Carolina seceded.
THE
THREATENED
FORT
Attempts
11th.
to
by Con-
federates gathered in
the
ing
to
were held
off
only by
Never was a
perilous
gunboats
gallant-
forcements
position
ly held
more
Pickens by Lieutenant
A.
J.
Sleramer and
garrison
little
liis
from
North.
to
reen-
from the
failed
in
with
and
it
remained
Federals
throughout
Con-
the war.
In the lower
con-
picture
large force of
federates
we
see one of
menacing the
Slemmer discov-
stantly
fort.
were
McRee, which
Pickens
of a
thousand of them
from
fired
on
across
the channel.
Engagm^ntjs nf
JUNE,
1. Fairfax
S.
1861.
killed, 14
6.
Middle
10.
7.
Monroe
killed.
Losses:
27.
Union
killed,
Carrick's
17.
Fulton,
killed.
18.
wounded.
5.
1861.
Falling
Waters,
also
called
Md.,
Haynesville or Martinsburg, Md. Union,
Ist'Wis., 11th Pa.
Confed., Va. Vols.
Losses: Union 8 killed, 15 wounded.
Confed. 31 killed, 50 wounded.
Carthage or Dry Forks, Mo.
Union,
3d and 5th Mo., one battery of Mo.
Artil. Confed., Mo. State Guard. Losses:
Union 13 killed, 31 wounded. Confed.
30 killed, 125 wounded, 45 prisoners.
Newport News, Va. Union, 1 Co. ,9th
N. Y. Confed., Stanard's Va. Battery,
La. Battalion, Crescent Rifles, Collins'
21.
No
B.
16.
3.
Ford, W. Va.
Union, Gen.
McClellan's command.
ConLosses:
fed., Gen. R. E. Lee's command.
Union 13 killed, 40 wounded. Confed.
20 killed, 10 wounded, 50 prisoners.
Confed. Gen. R. S. Garnett killed.
Millsville or Wentzville, Mo.
Losses
Union 7 killed, 1 wounded. Confed. 7
Geo.
Mathias
JULY,
Union, 8th,
19th Ohio.
Con-
prisoners.
13.
wounded.
W. Va.
Ind.,
Mountain,
and 13th
fed.,
26.
Station, Mo.
Losses: Union 3
Confed. 4 killed, 20 wounded,
75 prisoners.
Rich
11.
10th,
Va.
Union, 11th Ind.
Va. Vols.
Losses
Union 1
wounded. Confed. 2 killed, 1 wounded.
Vienna, Va. Union, 1st Ohio. Confed.,
1st S. C.
Losses: Union 5 killed, 6
wounded. Confed. 6 killed.
Booneville, Mo. Union, 2d i\Io. (three
months') Volunteers, Detachments 1st,
Totten's Battery Mo. Light Artil. ConMo. Militia.
Losses: Union 3
fed.,
killed, 8 wounded.
Confed. (*).
Edwards Ferry, Md. Union, 1st Pa.
Losses: Union 1
Confed., Va. Vols.
killed, 4 wounded.
Confed. 15 killed.
Patterson Creek or Kelley's Island, Va.
Union, 11th Ind.
Confed., Va. Vols.
W.
wounded.
10.
wounded.
-Romney, W.
Confed.,
wounded.
17.
Mar
:
3. Philippi, W. Va.
13.-
dtuil
Union, Co. B 2d U.
Losses:
Confed., Va. Vols.
killed, 4 wounded.
Confed. 1
C. H., Va.
Cav.
Union
tlj?
record found.
[348]
At
Harbor
war was
on.
The
had been
were to be
Johnson
flag
summoned on
of the
of the first
and hundreds
of
ized world
battlefields.
fii'st
blow
of the civil-
The
upon
his decision.
first
He
the
the
flag.
of
in the great-
lives
the end
thousands of
four years into the sobs of a nation whose best and bravest.
little
gar-
of war.
U.
S. Artil.,
Battery E, 3d
Artil.,
F 2d U.
Battery
S. Artil.
Confed., 1st, 3d, 4th,
5th Mo. State Guard, Graves' Infantry,
Bledsoe's Battery, Cawthorn's Brigade,
Kelly's Infantry, Brown's Cavalry, Burbridge's Infantry, 1st Cavalry, Hughes',
Thornton's, Wingo's, Foster's Infantry,
Rives', Campbell's Cavalry, 3d, 4th, 5th
Ark., 1st Cavalry, Woodruff's, Reid's
Battery,
1st,
2d Mounted Riflemen,
2d,
4.th,
S.
1st,
11th
18th
2d, 4th,
killed.
23.
17.
27.
AUGUST,
3.
-Charleston
or
Bird's
Point,
Mo.
Losses: Union 1 killed, 6 wounded.
Confed. 40 killed.
20.
Hawk's Nest, W. Va. Losses: Union 3
wounded. Confed. 1 killed, 3 wounded.
26.
Cross Lanes or Summerville, W. Va.
Losses
Union 5 killed, 40 wounded,
200 captured.
27.
Ball's Cross Roads, Va.
Losses: Union
19.-
1861.
Dug
killed, 14
Point
N. Y.
killed, 2
wounded.
31.
SEPTEMBER,
2.
10.
Mo. Light
Artil.,
No
Carnifex
Ferry,
W.
Va.
Union,
9th,
Confed. (*).
11.
Battery
*
Mills,
1st
1861.
field
Guards,
F.
Bennett's
W.
1.
7.
wounded.
Union, 28th
of Rocks, Md.
Confed. (*) Losses: Confed. 3
wounded.
Confed.
talion,
5.
killed, 2
28
Lewinsville,
Va.
Union, 19th Ind., 3d
79th N. Y., 1st U. S. Chasseurs,
Griffin's Battery, detachment of Cavalry.
Confed., 13th Va., Rosser's BatVt.,
record found.
[350]
~^
r-
.-.~.<r^irw^
Lw^
-^C^L^-^
/^J
^'
Y.-M^^J"
The shooting
of this
young
and
opening of the
Colonel Ellsworth had organized a Zouave regiment in Chicago, and in April, 1861, he organized another from the Fire De-
partment in New York City. Colonel Ellsworth, on May 24, 1861, led his Fire Zouaves to Alexandria, Virginia, seized the city, and with
Descending the stairs with the flag in his hand, he
his own hands pulled down a Southern flag floating over the Marshall House.
"Behold mine!" came the reply from the proprietor of the hotel, .James T. Jackson, as he emptied
cried, "Behold my trophy!"
a shotgun into Ellsworth's breast. Jackson was immediately shot dead by Private Brownell.
tery, detachments
of
25
Losses
Cavalry.
OCTOBER,
and Clark's
Losses: Union 42
missing
1,624
Confed. 25 killed, 75
batteries.
108
wounded,
and captured.
wounded.
13.
Booneville, Mo.
Union, Mo. Home
Guards.
Confed., Gen. Price's Mo.
Losses: Union 1 killed,
State Guard.
4 wounded.
Confed. 12 killed, SO
wounded.
14.
Confederate Privateer Judali destroyed
near Pensacola, Fla., by the U. S. FlagLosses: Union 3 killed,
ship Colorado.
15 wounded.
15.
Pritchard's Mills, Md., or Darnestown,
Union, detachments 13th Mass.,
Md.
28th Pa., 9th N. Y. Battery. Confed.*
Losses: Union 1 killed, 3 wounded.
Confed. (estimate) 18 killed, 25 wounded.
17. Morristown, Mo. Union, 5th, 6th, 9th
Kan. Cav., 1st Kan. Battery. Confed.*
Losses: Union 2 killed, 6 wounded.
and
wounded.
9. Santa Rosa,
19.
killed.
13.
14.
fer's
brigade.
wounded.
wounded.
1
-Losses:
Confed.
Union
2
killed,
killed,
Romney
23.
15*
16.
Mo.
No
1st
Co.'s
Mills,
14th, 15th,
Ind.,
Confed. 7
17th
24th, 25th,
Battery G, 4th U. S.
Artil., Battery A 1st Mich. Artil.
Confed., Va. Vols, of Gen. W. W. Loring's
command. Losses Union 8 killed, 32
wounded.
100
killed,
Confed.
75
Blue
N. Mex.
1861.
Ft. Craig,
U.
Fla.
S. Artil., Co.
C and E
Bolivar
Heights,
Va.
ments of 28th
Pa.,
ing (estimate).
21.
Ball's
ry,
record found.
[352]
of the
in
P.
BLAIR,
Member
and
call
try)
Captain Lyon, U.
When Governor
of Congress.
S. A., in the
capture of
Camp
The First
Jackson,
May
command
men
Jr., of St.
When, through
10, 1861.
The
itself for
This
Blair's influence,
affair at
Governor
General I^yon when he went to Booneville and dispersed over a thousand volunteers
Jackson and General Sterling Price at once ordered the militia to prepare
side,
AND STAFF
JR.,
Louis, a
ni /,,,,,,,
Booneville practically
accompanied
on
when General
his right
is
9,
Blair
1864, from
of the
Seventeenth
Army Corps
in 1864-65.
is
of his aides-de-camp:
from right to
left,
Steele.)
The composition
of
1::
EngagmmtH
Con fed.,
of
tl|^ Olttitl
.S;?
missing.
Baker killed.
23. West Liberty, Ky.
9.
Union, 2d Ohio,
Konkle's Battery, Laughlin's Cavalry.
Confed., Capt. May's command. Losses
Union 2 wounded.
Confed. 10 killed,
5
25.
26.
wounded.
Springfield,
tured.
Mo.
" Zagonyi's
Charge."
Union,
Fremont's Body Guard and
White's
Prairie
Scouts.
Confed.*
Losses: Union 18 killed, 37 wounded.
Confed. 106 killed (estimate).
Romney or Mill Creek Mills, W. Va.
Union,' 4th and 8th Ohio, 7th W. Va.,
Md. Volunteers, 2d Regt. of Potomac
Home Guards and Ringgold (Pa.) Cav.
Confed., Va. Vols, commanded by Gen.
Losses: Union 2 killed,
J. B. Floyd.
15 wounded.
Confed. 20 killed, 15
wounded, 50 captured.
Saratoga, Ky.
Union, 9th 111. ConLosses
fed., Capt. Wilcox's Cavalry.
Union 1 wounded. Confed. 8 killed, 17
wounded.
10. Guyandotte, W.
Va.
Union,
Confed., Jenkins' Cav.
Vols.
Union 7
20 wounded. Confed. 3
wounded.
Occoquan River and Pohick Church, Va.
Union, 2d, 3d, 5th Mich., 37th N. Y.,
4th Me., 2 cos. 1st N. Y. Cav., Randolph's and Thompson's Batteries U. S.
Art.
Confed., outposts of Gen. Beauregard's
command.
Losses:
Union 3
killed, 1 wounded.
killed,
23.
Ft.
in
Fort
Losses:
wounded. Confed.
Drainesville, Va.
Confed., Stuart's
teries.
NOVEMBER,
Belmont,
1861.
26.
Mo.
Union
wounded.
3.
Salem,
4.
Seizure
dell,
of Jas.
Sli-
No
killed,
93 wounded.
1861.
Mo.
Union, 1st Battalion Mo.
Cav.
Confed., Freeman's and Turner's
Cav. Losses: Union 3 killed, 9 wounded.
Confed. 16 killed, 20 wounded.
Anandale, Va. Union, 45th N. Y. ConLosses Union 1 killed,
fed., Va. Cav.
14 missing. Confed. 3 killed, 2 missing.
Camp Allegheny or Buffalo Mountain,
W. Va. Union 9th and 13th Ind., 25th
and 32 Ohio, 2d W. Va., Confed., 12th
Ga., 25th, 31st and 52d Va., Lee's and
Miller's Art.
Losses: Union 20 killed,
107 wounded.
Confed. 20 killed, 98
17.
Rowlett's
wounded.
18.
354]
Mumfords-
Union, 32d
Ind.
Col.
Terry's
Texas
Confed.,
Rangers.
Losses: Union 10 killed, 22
wounded. Confed. S3 killed, 50 wounded.
Milford, also called Shawnee Mound, or
Union, 8th la., 7th
Blackwater, Mo.
ville
record found.
[
shore bat-
13.
ing.
8.
5 killed,
DECEMBER,
Royal, S. C.
Capture of Fort
Beauregard and Fort Walker (Confederate).
Union, Du Font's fleet, 17
vessels, and 3 brigades of land forces
Union
captured.
Port
Va.
Losses:
9th
killed, 10
12.
7.
Wnr
or Woodsonville, Ky.
in
November,
12, COO
1861, their
for
GENERAL ISAAC
[a 23]
I.
iEttgag^m^ntH nf
tli^ Oltutl
Mo.
FEBRUARY,
6.
Fort
8.
Roanoke
killed,
wounded.
wounded.
wounded.
JANUARY,
111.
Confed.,
:
4 wounded.
7.
Vols.
Losses:
Confed.
15
killed.
Charleston,
Fanny,
Hanging
roe's
seur.
Col. Loring's
3 killed, 3
111.,
by Commodore W.
13.
coffer killed.
No
rec
[
wounded.
wounded.
F.
ing.
14-16.
Fort
Island, N. C.
Union, 21st,
23d, 24th, 25th and 27th Mass., 10th
Conn., 9th, 51st, and 5Sd N. Y., 9th N.
J., 51st Pa., 4th and 5th R. I., U. S.
Gunboats Southfield, Delaware, Stars and
Stripes, Louisiana, Iletzel, Commodore
Perry, Underwriter, Valley City, ComCeres,
modore Barney, Hunchback,
Putnam, Morse, Lockrvood, Seymour,
Granite, Brinker, Whitehead, Shawseen,
Pickett, Pioneer, Hussar, Vidette, Chas-
1862.
Union, 39th
4. Bath, Va.
1863.
Henry, Tenn.
Union, Gunboats
Essex, Carondelet, St. Louis, Cincinnati,
Conesioga, Tyler, and Lexington.
Confed., 10th, 48th, 51st Tenn., 15th Ark.,
4th Miss., 27th Ala., B. 1st Tenn. Art.
Culbcrtson's and Crain's Art., Milner's
and Milton's Cavalry.
Losses: Union
40 wounded.
Confed. 5 killed, 11
sion.
War
d found.
3]
THE
The Capture
On
lina.
of the
10-INCH
Pont
men-of-war commanded by
fitted
Flag-Officer
out in American
scarcely
Samuel F. Du-
Royal
miles
north
mouth
the
of
vember
1st,
ofT
body
the
fleet
able
to
harbor
entrance,
At the
was
again
but
by
united
it
while
third
main
passed
round of
the
the
ships
could
erates
be
Confed-
seen
leaving
of
half-
On No-
Com-
scattered,
7th the
shore were
Hatteras,
The men on
reply
the forts.
On November
caliber.
twenty
Harbor,
Federal
in the
least
Hampton
Federal
on the ramparts.
flag
was much
the 4th
was
at
it
likewise
This
deserted.
the bar
the
The harbor
had
fortifications
been
Confederates
affairs.
Head
erected
were
no
of
the
finest
Coosaw River,
the
ferry
over
the
small
near
Port
Royal, showing
Each had
at
on
site
of
Fort Beauregard.
one
which
by
North
Stevens, January
1,
1862.
I. I.
lEngagm^ntfi of t^t
D
talion.
wounded,
8.
Logan wounded.
Sugar
1st,
21.
Hampton
Roads, Va.
First battle between iron-clad warships.
Union, The
9.
14.
11.
Paris,
ing.
la.
MARCH,
1.
6,
1862.
Landing, Tenn.
Union, 32d
111. and U. S. Gunboats Lexington and
Tyler.
Confed., Gen. Daniel Ruggles'
Losses: Union 5 killed, 5
command.
killed,
200
20
wounded.
Confed.
wounded.
Pea Ridge, Ark., including
7, and 8.
engagements at Bentonville, Leetown,
and Elkhorn Tavern. Union, 25th, 35th,
36th, 37th, 44th, and 59th 111., 2d, 3d,
12th, 15th, 17th, 24th, and Phelps' Mo.,
8th, 18th, and 22d Ind., 4th and 9th Iowa,
3d Iowa Cav., 3d and 15th 111. Cav., 1st,
Union,
Bulliss'
Mo.
Hart's,
ls
Battalion
5th
Art.
Confed.,
Losses: Union
10
Confed.
wounded.
killed,
3
5
woimded.
Bombardment
13-14. New Madrid, Mo.
and capture by Gen. Jno. Pope's command. Union, 10th and l6th 111., 27th,
39th, 43d, and 63d Ohio, 3d Mich.
Cav., 1st U. S. Inft, Bissell's Mo. Engineers.
100 wounded.
14. Newberne, N. C. Union, 51st N. Y., 8th,
10th, and 11th Conn., 21st, 23d, 24th,
25th, and 27th Mass., 9th N. J., 51st
Pa., 4th and 5th R. I.
Confed., 7th,
Losses: Union
26th, 33d, 35th N. C.
Confed. 64
91 killed, 466 wounded.
killed, 106 wounded, 413 captured.
16.
Pound Gap, Tenn. Union, Detachs. of
22d Ky., 40th and 42d Ohio Vols., and
1st Ohio Cav. Confed., 21st Va. Losses:
MacDon-
ald's,
Tenn.
Cav.,
Pittsburg
Mar
by's
111.
17.
Qltutl
Confed. 7
18.
!]
Salem,
killed.
Ionian,
or Spring River, Ark.
Detachments 6th Mo., 3d la. Cav.
of the
manor house
of
ofiF
the
CaroHna
coast.
It is
now
in possession of
the Federal troops, but the fine old house was unharmed, and the garden, although not in luxuriant bloom, gives an idea of
beauty.
picture
its
own
In the distance are seen the slave quarters, and some of the old plantation servants have mingled with the troops when the
Observe the
little
colored boy saluting on the pedestal against which leans a Federal officer.
at Hilton
it
lEugagm^ntfi
22.
23.
tl|^ Oltutl
Brig.-Gen. T. L. Crittenden, 21st Brigade of the 6th Div., Gunboats Tijler and
Lexington. Confed., Army of the Mississippi, couunanded by Gen. Albert Sidney Jolniston, as follows: 1st Corps,
Maj.-Gen. Leonidas Polk; 2d Corps,
Maj.-Gen. Braxton Bragg; 3d Corps,
Maj.-Gen. Wm. J. Hardee; Reserve
Corps, Brig.-Gen. John C. Breckinridge;
P'orrest's, Wharton's and Clanton's Cavalry.
Losses: Union 1,754 killed, 8,408
wounded, 2,885 captured. Confed. 1,728
killed, 8,012 wounded, 959 captured.
Union Brig.-Gen. W. T. Sherman and
W. H. L. Wallace wounded and B. M.
Prentiss captured.
Confed. Gen. A. S.
Johnston and Brig.-Gen. A. H. Gladden
killed; Maj.-Gen. AV. S. Cheatham and
Brig.-Gens. C. Clark, B. R. Jolinson,
Ohio
prisoners.
Humansville, Mo.
26.
APRIL,
5.
Confed.,
and 7. Shiloh
Bowen wounded.
U.
No
rec
[
Crew
of U. S. S.
Wabash.
prisoners.
14.
Montevallo,
16.
Mo.
Union, 2 cos. 1st
Iowa Cav. Confed.* Losses: Union 2
killed, 4 wounded.
Confed. 22 captured.
Whitcmarsh or Wilmington Island, Ga.
Union, 8th Mich., Battery of R. I. Light
Confed., 13th Ga. Losses: Union
10 killed, 35 wounded. Confed. 4 killed,
Pittsburg
S. Inft.,
Landing,
Tenn. Union, Army of Western Tennessee, commanded by
Maj.-Gen. U. S.
Grant, as follows: 1st Div., Maj.-Gen.
J. A. McClernand; 2d Div., Maj.-Gen.
C. F. Smith; 3d Div., Brig.-Gen. Lew
Wallace; 4th Div., Brig.-Gen. S. A. Hurlor
J. S.
Army commanded by
and
7
1862.
Warwick
Clellan.
Mar
Artil.
15 wounded.
Lee's
Mills, Va.
Union, 3d, 4th, and
6th Vt., 3d N. Y. Battery and Battery of
5th U. S. Artil. Confed., Gen. J. B. Ma-
d foimd.
3]
terrific
punishment was
inflicted
We
Tybee
Island,
of the fort
Charleston.
bardment.
Government
On
thirty-six
heavy
rifled
supreme authority along the Atlantic coast from Wassaw Sound, below Savannah, north to
of Fort Pulaski
For two days the gallant garrison held out and then finding the
efi'ectually to close
1862
and by the gunboats which had found a channel enabling them to get
by the
li,
and when
it
traffic.
lEngagm^ntH of
gruder's division, Yorktown garrison.
Losses: Union 35 killed, 129 wounded.
Confed. 20 killed, 75 wounded, 50 cap-
tlft
5.
Commodore
Farragut's fleet of gunand mortar boats under Commander D. D. Porter. Confed., Gen. ISIansfield
Lovell's army, fleet of gunboats. Losses
Union 36 killed, 193 wounded. Confed.
185 killed, 197 wounded, tOO captured.
Camden, N. C, also called South Mills.
Union, 9th and 89th N. Y., 21st Mass.,
51st Pa., 6th N. H.
Confed., 3d Ga.,
boats,
25.
McComas'
Art.,
Union 12
killed,
co.
Cavalry.
7.
Losses:
98 wounded. Confed.
6 killed, 19 wounded.
Fort Macon, N. C. Union, U. S. Gimboats Daylight, State of Georgia, Chippewa, the Bark Gemsbok, and Gen.
division.
Parke's
Confed., Garrison
commanded by Col. M. J. White.
Losses
Union 1 killed, 1 1 wounded.
Confed. 7 killed, 18 wounded, 450 cap-
Union
Losses:
wounded, 21 missing.
talion.
8.
fed.,
9.
MAY,
10.
Johnston.
rec
[
Plum
Gunboat
No
1862.
Farmington,
killed,
Union,
or Bull Pasture, Va.
25th, S2d, 75th, and 82d Ohio, 3d W. Va.,
1st W. Va. Cav., 1st Conn. Cav., 1st Ind.
Battery.
Confed., 12th Ga., 10th, 21st,
23d, 25th, 31st, 37th, 42d, 44th, 48th,
52d, 58th, Va., 1st Va. (Irish) Battalion.
Neosho,
McDowell
tured.
26.
Tenn.
Union, 1st, 4th, and
5th Ky. Cav., Detachment of 7th Pa.
Confed., Col. J. H. Morgan's Ky. Cavalry.
Losses:
Union 6 killed, 25
wounded. Confed. 66 prisoners.
Lockridge Mills or Dresden, Ky.
Union, 5th Iowa Cav.
Confed., 6th
Confederate Cav.
Losses: Union 4
killed, l6 wounded, 71 missing.
Williamsburg, Va.
Union, 3d and 4th
Corps, Army of the Potomac. Confed.,
Gen. James Longstreet's, Gen. D. Hill's
Division of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston's
army, J. E. B. Stuart's Cavalry Brigade.
Losses: Union 456 killed, 1,400 wounded,
372 missing.
Confed.
1,000 killed,
wounded, and captured.
West Point or Eltham's Landing, Va.
Union, I6th, 27th, 31st, and 32d N. Y.,
95th and 96th Pa., 5th Maine, 1st Mass.
ConArtil., Battery D 2d U. S. Artil.
fed., Gen. Wade Hampton's Brigade,
Gen. J. B. Hood's Texan Brigade.
Losses: Union 49 killed, 104 wounded,
41 missing. Confed. 8 killed, 40 wounded.
Union, 13th
Somerville Heights, Va.
Ind.
Confed. Maj. Wheat's La. Bat-
3 killed, 8 captured.
18 to 28. Forts Jackson and St. Philip, and
the capture of New Orleans, La.
Union,
War
Lebanon,
tured.
17 to 19. Falmouth
19.
Qltml
ir
d found.
32]
battle.
'
OHIO SOLDIERS
The Forty-second
States.
Oliio Infantry
General
Army
of the Ohio,
put
it
its
borders although
it
command
of
James A.
Kentucky
and
lines of railway,
in
order to ob-
in
'.'/
from the
taken
was one
I'uriulil
10,
1802.
in
mont
portion of
presidential
candidate
Republican
party
(in
first
of
the
1856),
and Fre-
upon him
called
to enable
it
enlist
men
The
Treasurer
in the
for
him
a
to
Federal cause.
refused,
but
war, hastened
rope to take
command
ceremony,
of the
He was
nah, Georgia.
Virginian,
and
his
mother a
his
tempera-
impetuosity
ancestry.
St.
Upon
of
such
Cairo,
all
an
see borders,
his arrival in
confusion.
and
The Mis-
of the
West
in
Fremont had
fifty-six
S.
of the South-
unwilling to reenlist.
were
strations
great
funds
turned over.
born in Savan-
Frenchman and
the
The U.
November, 1861,
raised an
army
of
pedition
down
the Mississippi.
Union 4 wounded.
Confed. 2
wounded.
Norfolk and Portsmouth, Va., occupied by Union forces under Gen. Wool.
Losses:
killed,
11.
Confederate
Ram
J'irginia destroyed in
Hampton Roads by
15.
24 to 31. Retreat
lier
commander,
to
pre\fnt capture.
Darling, James River, Va. Union,
Gunboats Galena, Port Hoi/al, Xaugatuck. Monitor, and Aroostook.
Confed.
Garrison in Fort Darling.
Losses:
Union 12 killed, 11 wounded. Confed.
Fort
7 killed, 8 wounded.
Bluffs, Mo.
Chalk
23
Battalion,
6th,
Union 32
killed,
ing.
24.
and
7th,
8th
La.
Losses:
Confed.*
F.llerson's
Mill, Mechanicsville,
Bridge, Va. Union, 33d, 49th,
77th N. Y., 7th Me., 4th Mich., Tidball's Battery.
Confed., 8th, 9th, 10th
Ga., part of' 1st and 4th Va. Cav., 5th
La., battery La. Art., squadron La. Cav.
Losses
Union 7 killed, 30 wounded.
Confed. 27 killed, 35 wounded, 43 cap-
and
New
N.
P.
Banks'
2,000 prisoners.
Corinth,
]\Iiss.
Evacuation by Con-
Gen.
of
on
file.)
Front
Royal, Va.
Union, 4th, 8th
Ohio, 14th ind., detachment 1st R. L
Cav.
Confed., 8th La., 12th Ga., Ashby's Va. Cav. Losses: Union 8 killed, 7
wounded. Confed. 156 captured.
31 and June 1. Seven Pines and Fair Oaks,
Va. Union, 2d Corps, 3d Corps, and 4th
Corps, Army of the Potomac. Confed.,
Army commanded by Gen. Joseph E.
Johnston, as follows Gen. James Longstreet's Division; Gen. D. H. Hill's Division; Gen. Benjamin Huger's Division;
Losses:
Gen. G. W. Smith's Division.
Union 790 killed, 3,627 wounded, 647
missing.
Confed. 980 killed, 4,749
Union Brig.wounded, 405 missing.
Gen'ls O. O. Howard, Naglee, and Wessells wounded. Confed. Brig.-Gen. Hatton killed. Gen. J. E. Johnston and
Brig.-Gen. Rodes wounded, Brig.-Gen.
Pettigrew captured.
JUNE,
1862.
3. Legare's
Point,
tured.
rd found.
34]
C.
Union, 28th
100th Pa.
Confed.,
S.
of Vickshurg
fall
minent
in July, 18G;{,
Most
and
see-
termined
to
herculean
make one
General Samuel
who
(lie
near
Holmes hurled
his forces
fields,
upon
trol.
entirely
tions.
Not
Confederates
fort,
but
the
his
only
expecta-
were
the
fire
from the
river
was impossible
left
march
to with-
that time
until
it
July
prin-
commands
stubbornly
across
Ar-
13, 1862,
and be-
Helena.
From
to fortify
The day
of
Grant;
five
days
of
Confederates.
six
the
later, after
On
the
of
After
sissippi,
gan
the
mowed down by
border,
contested
with a resistance
beyond
Pea
18(53,
He was met
close
at
Missouri
Confederate
cipal
In the
4,
battle
by the transfer
him with a
of July
the
erate reverse
dawn
the
at
The
early
Missouri
of 18(11.
Prentiss opposed
assumed
west
fen.se of
named for
Ryan Curtis,
command of
last
retain
to
effort
of the
was im-
east
a siege
passed forever
lEngagmmta nf
tlft Qltutl
wounded.
to
Fitch.
Creek, N. C.
Union, 24th
Mass., Co. I 3d N. Y. Cav.
Avery's
Battery Marine Art. Confed.* Losses:
6.
fense
Carondelef,
Cairo,
Union!, 1st N. J.
wounded.
Republic,
Va.
Union,
5th,
7th,
U.
S.
and
and
1st
Ohio
Artil.
and
W.
8tli
Va.
Confed., 1st Md. and 58th Va.
Losses: Union 63 missing.
Confed. 17
killed,
50 wounded.
Gen.
Confed.
Port
Con-
16.
killed, 8
Secessionville
Island, S.
C.
Joseph
25.
Oak
or
No
called
Kings
wounded.
18.
Evacuation of Cumberland Gap,
Tenn., by Confederates of Gen. C. L.
Stevenson's command, and occupation by
Gen. G. W. Morgan's Federal division.
Williamsburg Road, Va. Union, l6th
Mass.
Losses:
Confed.*
Union
17
killed, 28 wounded, 14 captured.
Con-
18.
Union 4
Lieut.
tured.
Va.
9.
by
killed
Confed.,
commanded
Harrisonburg,
fleet
fed. 80
tured.
8.
17.
Tranter's
5.
War
record found.
[366]
These
fearless leaders
by
their i)romi)t
and
Captain
Nathaniel Lyon, U.
a veteran of the
S. A.,
was to
Franz
in St.
the
Sigel,
in
command
St. Louis.
in 1858,
and
in
May,
1861, raised
came
its
At
dissension.
Louis
Kansas
war he was
by
in
be-
colonel.
Camp
to capture
BRIGADIER-GENERAL
NATHANIEL LYON
made
fifty
of the Federal
to
Department
the
an{l
Lyon
14th.
dispersed
and
17th,
troops,
State"
the
Springs,
on
the
own
on August 2d.
men
Sigel
MAJOR-GENERAL
JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE
Cabell Breckinridge,
ter-
John
the youngest
mined to
risk
met
attacked
and
August
was
in the struggle
on April
6,
State.
many
re-
brigadier-general in
appointed to the
Kentucky
command
of a brigade in the
commanded
battle.
Wilson's
1861,
He
Con-
the
Creek,
where he
General Johnston
1862.
When
cruits to the
at
10,
their
killed.
He
and although
five
Confederacy.
by Gen-
federates
into
l)een joined
forces
at
and was
McCul-
eral Price,
Confederate
McCulloch,
had
loch
.]u\y L'Jth,
by Lyon.
later joined
followed,
militia
other
under
he arrived on
left
Booneville,
for
ca]}ital
June
tlie
of
the invasion of
Dug
command
the
MAJOR-GENERAL
FRANZ SIGEL
1861,
1,
calling for
brigadier-general,
Governor Jackson,
the
On June
the Confederate
army
Western army
from
Baton
retired
Breckinridge
the break-up of
he went to
failed, to
Rouge
on
Louisiana,
drive General
August
5th.
Second
At the
the reserve
doah campaign
of 1864,
at
Stone's
1,581
missing.
missing.
ISIaj
killed, 2,1()0
JULY,
Booneville,
1863.
Union, 2d la., 2d
Mich. Cav. Confed., Gen. Chalmers' Cav.
Losses: Union 45 killed and wounded.
Confed. 17 killed, 65 wounded.
4 to 28. Gen. Morgan's raid in Kentucky.
6.
Grand Prairie, near Aberdeen, Ark.
Union, detachment of the 24th Ind.
Confed.* Losses: Union 1 killed, 21
wounded.
Confed. 84 killed, wounded,
and missing (estimate).
7.
Bayou Cache, also called Cotton Plant,
Miss.
Round
captured.
Cynthiana,
Ky.
Union, 18th Ky., 7th
Ky. Cav., Cynthiana, Newport, Cincinnati, and Bracken Co. Home Guards
(Morgan's Raid). Confed., Morgan's
Cav.
Losses:
Union 17 killed, 34
wounded. Confed. 8 killed, 29 wounded.
18.
Memphis, Mo. Union, 2d Mo., 11th
Mo. Cav. Opponents, Porter's independent forces. Losses: Union 83 killed
and wounded. Porter's loss, 23 killed.
21.
Hartsville Road, near Gallatin, Tenn.
Union, detachments 2d Ind., 4th, 5th
Ky., 7th Pa. Cav.
Confed., Morgan's
Cav.
Losses:
Union 30 killed, 50
wounded, 75 captured. Confed.*
Nashville Bridge, Tenn.
Union, 2d
Ky. Confed., Forrest's Cav. Losses
Union 3 killed, 97 captured. Confed.*
25.
Courtland Bridge and Trinity, Ala.
Union, 10th Ky., 10th Ind., 31st Ohio.
Cow/ef/., Armstrong's Cav. Losses: Union
2 killed, l6 wounded, 138 captured.
Confed. 3 killed, 5 wounded.
28. Moore's Mills, Mo. Union, 9th Mo., 3d
la. Cav., 2d Mo. Cav., 3d Ind. Battery.
Opponents, Porter's independent forces.
Losses: Union 13 killed, 55 wounded.
Porter's loss, 30 killed, 100 wounded.
17.
missing.
1.
and Bayou
No
recc d found.
[3(