Following the American Civil War Sesquicentennial with day by day writings of the time, currently 1863.

Friday, September 13, 2013

September 13.—Went to the Methodist Church; heard an excellent sermon.

All are on the tiptoe of expectation, watching the development of General Bragg’s movements. He is marching his army into Georgia, having abandoned Chattanooga and Cumberland Gap; the latter place has been given up without firing a gun. Tennessee is now wholly at the mercy of the enemy.

Hundreds of troops are daily passing from Virginia to reinforce Bragg, of whom many are now predicting great things, saying that all he needed was plenty of men, which he has never had, and that the general he has had to contend against here outwitted General Lee in Western Virginia. Besides, the troops our men have to fight against are the Western ones, in bravery much superior to those that are opposed to the Virginia army.

But I am satisfied that both armies are brave enough for our good, as our losses have proved, and opened our eyes to the disagreeable fact, that one of our men is not equal to five of the enemy, as we at first thought. No one for a moment will say that our troops have not fought with a determination and bravery that have never been surpassed perhaps in any army, and that they have not always been opposed to at least double their numbers. Still, “honor to whom honor is due.” I have never spoken to any of our men on the subject, who have not told me that the enemy have exhibited a bravery and determination worthy of a better cause.

I have wondered at this, as I thought the race to which we all belong—the Anglo-Saxon one—never could make good soldiers without they were fighting for principle; or, in other words, had good consciences, and felt that their honor was at stake. We all know that the enemy have nothing of that kind to fight for. We have never wished to subjugate them or to take away their liberties, but have begged like suppliants, to be left to ourselves, with the sin of slavery(?) on our own shoulders.

Mrs. W. and myself have determined, that no matter how fine our hospital may be, or nice the place, not to fix our hearts on it; for if we do, we shall certainly have to run; although I can not see how we are to move further south, for, as the saying is, we are almost at the “jumping-off place.” If we should make a move north, we would gladly leave a palace, no matter what trouble it would give; as then we should know our cause was succeeding.

It is rumored that Forrest has had a fight near Ringgold. We are quite anxious about some of our attendants and hospital stores, which were left behind.

Dr. Bemiss is very much annoyed about two of his men having deserted. One of them, from Tennessee, was an excellent man. I asked Dr. B. how he thought such a man could desert, he answered, nothing would have made him except an earnest appeal from his wife, and that the women were the cause of nearly all the desertions. This is certainly not very complimentary to us, nor to the women of ’76 and Sparta, to whom our men are constantly comparing us.

Sunday, 13th—Moved eight miles from Rome out on the Kingston road to where the 4th Tennessee camped near a mill on the river.

Colonel Lyons.

 

Stevenson, Ala., Sept. 13, 1863.—I arrived here last evening in company with Major Bigney, and we are waiting for a train to Larkinsville, which is twenty-four miles southwest of here on the Charleston & Memphis R. R.

Dr. Evans came here last night with a man from Company F, who is badly wounded in the leg by the accidental discharge of a gun. He reports the regiment well, that they will get to Larkinsville this afternoon, and that Jerry and Minerva are with them all right.

I went down to Murfreesboro on Friday and stayed there until yesterday. Saw Colonel Lowe, Dr. Wise, Adjutant Langdon and many others of the 5th Iowa. The regiment has been ordered to McMinnville. I spent some time with the 22d and saw many of my acquaintances there. Lieut.-Colonel Bloodgood is being tried by a Court-Martial. I was called in as a witness and testified to his previous good character as a soldier.

From Nashville here is 113 miles, and from Louisville to Nashville 185 miles, I think. The railroad from Nashville here runs through a fine country generally, until within twenty-five miles, where it strikes a rugged chain of mountains, passing through it for many miles. The road passes through a very long tunnel, the longest I ever passed through. The scenery is very grand. The mountains are all about us here, not such as I was familiar with in my boyhood, but still very respectable mountains.

There is a report, probably true, that General Thomas’ corps had a battle yesterday with Bragg somewhere south of Chattanooga; but with what results we do not know.

It is hard to guess anything about our future movements, but I do not think we shall be sent across the Tennessee river, unless General Rosecrans meets a check and needs reinforcements. The limits of the District of the Cumberland, which is held, you know, by the ‘Reserve Corps,’ under command of Major-General Gordon Granger, is extended to the Tennessee river. Some cavalry has been ordered from here to Larkinsville, and two of my companies, B and G, are stationed ten miles west of there to guard a railroad bridge. The regiment had to throw away lots of traps at Columbia for want of transportation. I do not know how much or what articles of mine were abandoned. The regiment was reduced to nine teams.

I am very glad that I went North when I did and had so delightful a visit. My only regret is that I was not with the boys in their long march, but they got along very well, as far as I can hear.

I do not give up the idea of having you come down and spend the winter with me. When this campaign is over, as it will be in a few weeks without doubt, the army will probably remain stationary for some time.

Colonel Bruce is relieved from the command of the First Brigade and sent to his regiment. I presume now that we are moved so far off that there will be a reorganization of the brigade. I hope that I shall have no command but my own regiment.

September 13 — This morning an hour before day we were roused from sleep by a blast from the bugle, and ordered to get ready to march at a minute’s notice, as the Yankees on our front manifested unerring signs of making a general advance in force. We hurriedly snatched a little breakfast, then packed up our all, and at daylight we moved Yankeeward with the battery, down toward Brandy Station. We went within a mile of Brandy and halted for fresh developments and further orders and remained there until about ten o’clock. Up to that time everything was as quiet and peaceful along the front as a sunbeam that kisses the cheek of a sleeping babe; in fact, a Sabbath calm and stillness had apparently settled down on the whole surrounding landscape. But as the storm king suddenly leaps from its mountain lair and sweeps across the bosom of a placid lake and rolls the glassy water into a thousand dashing waves, so the storm of battle broke the Sabbath calm and raged in roaring surges across the wavy fields of Culpeper.

A little after ten o’clock the Yanks made their first appearance, by debouching from a wood only about half a mile from our position. We quickly opened fire on them with two guns, to which they immediately replied with a brisk fire from a four-gun battery. That was the thundering introductory and overture to the first act in the opening scene of to-day’s real drama. The enemy advanced rapidly, with overwhelming numbers, and compelled us to abandon our first position in double-quick time, which we did, and fell back in the same manner. The broad rolling plain that spread out in our front was literally blue with Yanks, and we had comparatively very few forces to oppose the immense host that was advancing on us with flying banners. Yet we gave them the best and warmest that we had on hand, and fought them stubbornly nearly all day, obstinately disputing every inch of ground that they advanced over; however, they drove us about six miles.

Soon after the battle opened a small squad of Yankee horsemen appeared prominently on a hill within the range of our guns and in advance of the enemy’s line of fight. Captain Chew told me to try to scatter the little assembly that was congregated and boldly standing on the hilltop gazing intently toward Dixie.

I turned my gun on the little blue bunch and aimed it very carefully, and the first shell I fired exploded at the right place, and emptied at least one saddle. I saw the man fall, and the remainder of the squad suddenly disappeared from the hill and moved back to a healthier clime.

We held our position to-day just below Culpeper Court House until the dismounted sharpshooters advanced to within a hundred and fifty yards of us. They opened a hot fire on us, and the bullets sung and zipped around us like a swiftly moving colony of bees in a storm.

I saw three Yankees run across the field right in our front. They were running toward an old house that stood in the field about two hundred yards from our position. Just before they got to the house all three of them halted and fired right at the little squad of cannoneers around my gun. When I saw the three riflemen take aim at us a peculiar thrill of disquieting anxiety rushed all over me, as the chances were first class to receive a ticket to the silent city, and I was not quite ready for a journey of that strange and mysterious sort. The three men fired simultaneously. Two of the bullets whizzed harmlessly and unceremoniously past us without calling, but the third one struck one of my cannoneers — number three — in the ankle, making a very painful wound.

We were then shelling a body of cavalry that was moving around to our right flank, but when the line of dismounted sharpshooters in our front, backed by a body of cavalry, advanced on us, firing as they came, we turned our guns on them and opened a rapid fire with canister. I fired six rounds of canister, when we had to abandon our position and fall back double-quick to save ourselves from capture, for the enemy in our front was still pressing us, and their cavalry on our right flank were preparing to charge and cut us off. The Yankee cavalry fought well to-day; they meant business every time. However, they far outnumbered us, and they well knew it, and that alone bears with it a kind of intoxicating inspiration which makes men bold, and boldness in danger is the foundation element of bravery.

Near the middle of the day we drew near Culpeper Court House and the Yankees were still advancing and pressing us, and stubbornly refused to be checked. They had two or three batteries in commanding positions and were firing at everything they saw. One of our rifled pieces and one of Captain Moorman’s guns were in battery at the northern outskirts of Culpeper Court House, firing rapidly at the advancing cavalry. Eventually the guns drew the fire of the Yankee batteries, and for a while the artillery howled fiercely and the fight raged all along the line.

The Yankee gunners overshot our guns that were firing from the edge of town, and I saw the Yankee shell crashing through buildings and exploding all over and through the northern and eastern portion of town. I know that this was a wild and boisterous stirred-up Sunday that the citizens of Culpeper Court House will not forget for years to come. After a heavy artillery fire of about half an hour a body of blue cavalry charged the guns at edge of town and succeeded in capturing them. One gun, six men, and four horses of our battery were captured in the charge.

When the Yankee horsemen dashed on the guns they came firing their pistols, and some few had their sabers drawn. The fray soon became a mixed-up affair of firing pistols, flashing sabers, and excited men contending and wildly struggling like maddened demons in a furious melee for the mastery of the situation.

The first lieutenant of our company was emptying his pistol at the excited bluecoats when a Yankee officer shouted to his men to “shoot the damned Rebel officer,” but the Rebel officer deliberately emptied his pistol and came out without being touched by bullet or blade. While the spirited encounter was transpiring around the captured pieces the first section of our battery was hurriedly passing up the main street of Culpeper when a body of Yankee cavalry made a dashing charge at us through the street, and came very near being successful in gathering in another bunch of boarders for some of Uncle Sam’s magnificent boarding palaces, where they feast tamed and docile Rebels on oysters, beef a la mode, and fried eggs with ham. Nothing but good Rebel wind and first-class pluck for racing saved us from capture, for I heard a mighty clattering of sabers and scabbards, mingled with a din of rushing horses right close behind us, when we were running our best. The fight lasted till nearly night, and ended about three miles south of Culpeper Court House. We had two men of our company wounded in the fight, one mortally.

Late this evening the first section of our battery was detached and ordered to the Robinson River, with the Twelfth Virginia Cavalry, to guard the ford on the Orange Court House road. We arrived at the river at two o’clock to-night, and bivouacked near the ford.

Sunday, 13th.—Went to preaching to Mar’s Hill. Rev. Lockridge preached. Returned to Acworth late in the evening, after having spent a very pleasant time.

[Diary] Sunday, September 13, 1863.

To-day in church $107 was taken up for a monument on Fort Wagner to Colonel Shaw from black people alone, Ellen and I, however, each putting in something. Mr. Tomlinson told the people that the soldiers on Morris Island were suffering for fresh food, and wanted potatoes. The whole church responded that they would give the potatoes.

Sunday, 13th. Most of the boys wet, and orders to move before breakfast. Then stopped at noon and hurried off before boys had time to swallow coffee. Straggling. Things don’t seem to have been managed well for two days. Into and through Knoxville, then through again to our old camp north of town. C. G. F. back. Brought me letters from home and Fannie. Did me good. Can appreciate letters now—her vignette.

On the Mississippi, Sunday, Sept. 13. Boat left the woodyard at 10 o’clock last night, but lay on a sand bar most of the night. Slowly and carefully, like a thing of life, our palace picked her way up through bold sand bars. Motion was imperceptible and the banks but one monotonous belt of cotton-wood with here and there a chimney which we suppose is where some enterprising secesh is going to build. Struck shore at Providence 11 A. M. Many of the boys, supposing her stay to be more permanent, jumped ashore and put off, but the bell soon called them back, and a race for the boat ensued, but some were too late. The boat had swung off leaving them to the mercy of gunboats or guerrillas, there being no troops after these.

3 P. M. met “Gladiator” going down. Lashed to her, took on passenger and two hogshead of ice. Spent the day lying on deck amidst the muskets, haversacks, blankets and men. Deprived of the pleasure of writing home as usual.

London, Ky., September 13th, 1863.

We broke camp last Thursday morning, the tenth of September, bound for Cumberland Gap, ninety miles distant. The first day we marched eleven miles over a rough, broken country, and encamped for the night. The next morning we started at 5 o’clock and made eighteen miles; yesterday, nine miles— thirty-eight miles in three days, with eight days’ rations and our accoutrements. The second day we marched rapidly, making few halts, our business being urgent, for Burnside’s left was threatened, and we were hastening to the rescue. But, thanks to a kind Providence, a messenger met us at this place with the intelligence that the Rebels had suddenly left East Tennessee to join Bragg’s army at Lafayette, and the Gap was already in possession of our forces. There being no cause for haste, our commander decided to spend the Sabbath here, and give the poor, tired mules a chance to rest. We will probably resume our march in the morning and proceed leisurely to the Gap—perhaps to Knoxville. We have borne the fatigue thus far better than I expected.

It is a long time since I carried a knapsack, but the more I have to do, the more strength I have to do it with.

Sunday, 13th—There was regimental inspection this morning with accouterments on and in full dress. Some of the companies have the appearance of a “corporal’s guard.” Company E, being on picket, was not on inspection, but later they were relieved. The Thirteenth Iowa went down town to act as a provost guard. Our chaplain having resigned, we have no religious services at present.