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

Monday, May 19, 2014

Thursday, 19th—We started our drove of cattle early this morning and the brigade broke camp at 8 o’clock and followed. We reached Pulaski at 2 o’clock, a distance of sixteen miles, and went into camp. Our road, rough and rocky, followed a winding creek which I think we had to wade twenty-four times during the day. I was corporal guard last night and having had no sleep, the hard day’s march has almost worn me out.

Good news came from the Eastern army, also from the Cumberland army. The report is that General Grant has had a six days’ fight at Richmond and that the rebels are whipped and on the retreat.

Thursday, 19th.—Got to sleep all night last night. Formed in line of battle in front of Cassville. General Johnston had circular read that we will now turn and fight. Big rumors from Virginia that thirty-one Yankee general officers had been killed, wounded, and captured. Loss in all, 45,000. (Don’t ask me what battle that was, for I don’t know. We are getting accustomed to such big rumors when they think a fight is coming on here.) Can see the Yanks forming in our front very plainly. 3 P. M., ordered back to Cassville; had gone but a short distance, until we were ordered back to our old line. While we were gone, Federals got a battery in position and shelled us very heavily. Just our brigade here. Out in an old field. Yanks advancing in sight on our front and both flanks. Lieutenant Park’s left hand shot off, and James White’s leg nearly so. I began to think we were about gone, but just as they were coming within rifle range, we were ordered to fall back, and I was “mighty” glad to hear it. We did not wait for a second order. Fell back in rear of Cassville, where our troops are fortifying. 5 P. M., Federals advanced to the other side of town, when an artillery duel was kept up until dark. We afterward learned somebody blundered and gave the wrong order, that sent us back to the old line, and came very near getting us all captured.

Thursday, May 19.—Corps started by 4 A.M. Drew in my pickets by 4.20 without any trouble. None of them were fired at. The corps marched three or four miles to the left, and took up its position on the left of the Sixth Corps, in front of Anderson’s house. We began to in-trench late in the evening. Had quite a strong position. Day pleasant. Saw Henry Dalton and breakfasted with him and General Russell. Heard of General Sedgwick’s death.[1]


[1] He was killed at Spottsylvania on May 9.

May 19 — Both armies are still in line, growling and skirmishing. It seems that General Grant is afraid to strike when he knows that General Lee is watching him. This afternoon our battery started on a reconnoissance with General Rosser’s brigade of cavalry, to the right and rear of the Yankee line. When he drew toward the rear of the enemy’s works some of General Ewell’s forces that were on a little flanking excursion, and feeling around some dangerous point, struck up a severe little battle with some Yankee infantry that were looking for Rebels in the rear. For about an hour the musketry was very heavy; we fired only two shots in the fray merely to cool the ardor of the Yankee infantry and to acquaint them of the fact that we had something around there a little heavier than a common musket. The encounter occurred late this evening, and immediately after the fight we started back to camp, where we arrived at midnight.

Huntsville, Thursday, May 19. A day of quiet rest to all that would. Sultry and cloudy. Health is good, but felt dull. Eyes pain me considerable. Advance of the 17th Corps, 4th Division, arrived and camped near our old camp on Russell Hill. Corps is to rendezvous here, reorganizing before they take the field. No train expected from Nashville for two days. A bridge is to be repaired, an unwelcome occurrence in these exciting times when all are breathlessly waiting for news. Five companies, 59th Indiana, went to relieve the 13th Illinois to go home. Expiration of term.

Diary And Memoranda, 1864

May 19th. (At home) The 1st Mass. H. A. in action. Co. B lost more than any company in the Regiment [53 killed and wounded]. George Bricket was killed.

[Up to this time, besides his duty as private in the ranks, he had also been serving as company clerk. He was at home on a veteran’s furlough in May, 1864, when the regiment was ordered to join the advance of the whole army under Grant, and he was obliged to read in the papers of the terrible loss it sustained in the battle of the Wilderness on May 19th, where, in the afternoon, while repulsing Ewell’s corps, the regiment lost in one short hour 898 men. His own Company, B, lost in killed and wounded over half of their entire number. In this battle his cousin George Wellington Brickett, of Company B, was instantly killed in the first charge made on the enemy, and another cousin, Asa Frye, was wounded. Fortunately, his brother, also a member of the company, but acting at the time as regimental bugler, escaped uninjured.

With these terrible facts before him, it required a great deal of courage to leave home to join the regiment, knowing that a severe campaign was before them. He rejoined the regiment during the last day of the battle of Cold Harbor, and was first under fire with the regiment, fighting as infantry, at the first assault on Petersburg by the Second Army Corps, to which the regiment was attached, on the evening of June 16, when the regiment again lost heavily. Leverett received a bullet through his shirt-sleeve which lodged in his coat, which was rolled on his back. The coat had some eight different holes in it, and was a wonderment to all those who saw it the next day, when it was exhibited.—Ed.]

Thursday, May 19th.

We were moved toward the right and rear of the army to-day, where we started to make camp and began to receive rations, but soon Cos. D and K were sent out on picket on a line nearly at right angles with the right of the army, and running back diagonally almost to the Fredericksburg road. About four o’clock P. M. my company, H, was sent out to relieve Co. D, which held the extreme right of the picket line. On arriving on the ground I found the line formed very much like a fish hook, and began establishing my picket posts, that furthest to the left in an open field, being near the extreme right one of Capt. Gould’s Co. K. I put Lieut. Edmonston in charge of that end of the line and Lieut. Carpenter in charge of the center, and posted the remaining men in squads along toward the right and into some woods. While this disposition was being made, I heard some scattering shots down toward the left. Leaving First Sergt. Theben in charge of the detachment on the right, I ran across the curve of the fish hook through the woods towards the center of my line, but before I reached it I saw a rebel picket line advancing across an open field in our front, and just behind it two lines of battle closely massed, with flags flying and officers on horseback, emerging from the woods in the rear of the field, but with their flanks so masked in woods on either side of the field that I could not see how far they extended. It was a magnificent sight, for the lines moved as steadily as if on parade, and if ever I longed for a battery of artillery with guns shotted with grape and canister, and my own men behind those guns, it was then and there, for I do not think the lines were more than two or three hundred yards from where I stood. There was a piece of swampy ground in their front, which I knew would most likely break up their regular formation and delay them a little, but I feared that their left flank, which I could not see, might extend so far to their left that it would overlap my right and give me trouble in the rear. However, it was no time to hesitate, and I determined to withdraw the center of my line slowly, firing as we fell back, keeping in touch with Company K, and straightening out my fish hook as far to my right as I could, all in the hope that we might hold the “Johnnies” until troops attracted by the noise we made should come to our assistance. By the time I reached his position in the center, Lieut. Carpenter, who had taken in the situation, was deploying the picket posts into line, as Lieut. Edmonston was also doing on the left, and both had given the order to commence firing. Giving orders for a slow and stubborn withdrawal of the line, I ran over to the right and deployed that flank also, and on returning to the open field I found the enemy struggling through the swamp and our boys peppering them as fast as they could load and fire, some lying down and some firing from behind stumps or from any other point offering the slightest protection. Looking down to the left near an old house, I thought I saw one of our officers, a short and stout young fellow, being escorted toward the enemy’s lines by two rebel pickets, and I extended a mental farewell to Edmonston, but later in the day was rejoiced to find that I was mistaken in the identity of the prisoner. As we reached the woods in our rear we fought back from tree to tree, endeavoring to hold the charging lines in the open field as long as possible, and we actually did hold them for three-quarters of an hour.

The enemy returned our fire very sharply, and in the midst of the excitement a big yellow dog, belonging to some one in the regiment, came out on the field and began to snap at and run after the “zips” made by passing bullets, his ears and tail up, and his whole appearance indicating the intensest interest in his pursuit of the imaginary birds. Suddenly one of the “birds” took off the end of his tail and down went his ears and the rest of his tail, and with intermittent but emphatic “ki-yis”, he went to the rear like a yellow streak.

By the time we had fallen back into the timber it was getting late in the afternoon and the shadows were gathering in the woods. The left flank of the enemy had lapped my right, as I had feared it might, and meeting no resistance as they reached the Fredericksburg road, the Rebs were climbing into the wagons, a train of which was on the road bringing up supplies, and the teamsters, or many of them, having cut their teams loose, were rushing through the woods in all directions. How far the main rebel lines had advanced into the woods at that point I do not know, but just as I began to fear that Co. H was going to be surrounded, a force of Union troops, probably a regiment, came charging through the woods parallel with the line of battle and caused great confusion among my men. Fortunately the Colonel passed near me and inquired where he could best go in, and I wheeled him at once to the left, and in less than two minutes there was the noisiest kind of a mix-up. Almost immediately another line of battle passed through us on the double-quick, this one going in the right direction, and some of my own men joined this line and went in with it. Volley after volley was discharged by each side, and the fighting was kept up until darkness settled down, when the rebels quietly withdrew under cover of it. My “bodyguard,” Lynch followed me about in the woods while I was trying to collect my men after the charges through us had scattered them, and was incessantly calling my attention to the shots which were striking the trees or whistling by between them, and I was finally obliged to order him to the rear, though I could not but appreciate his kindly anxiety for my personal safety. After the firing ceased I got a few of my men together, and while looking around for a place where we could safely lie down and go to sleep, I came upon my Quartermaster Sergt. Elijah F. Lock, a quiet, determined fellow, with two or three other men standing under a large pine tree. Telling him to “fall in” I was about to pass on when he said, “Captain, there’s a rebel sharpshooter up this tree, and just before dark I saw him shoot a major off his horse while that officer’s line was passing under the tree, and I am going to get him.” Many sharpshooters had climbed trees as soon as the Rebs entered the woods, and when their troops were driven back these men were left on their perches and annoyed us not a little, so, telling Lock that he had my best wishes for his success, I passed on and with my squad was soon asleep in a convenient little hollow.

19th. Went down with Thede to Spottsylvania. Visited all the fortifications. Went to the picket line. Could see the rebs very distinctly in rifle pits and works. Our fortifications only 1200 yds. apart. Train captured and recaptured.

May 19—Saw Darnell, of my company, to-day. He was just from the front. He brings us very bad news. Our General Daniels was killed, which is certainly a great loss to us, for he was a good and brave man, also our major of the 53d, Iredell, and my captain, White, all killed. Colonel Owens, my colonel, was mortally wounded, and quite a number of my company were killed and wounded. He says there is only seven of our company left, and that our Lieutenant-Colonel Morehead is commanding Daniels’ Brigade.

May 19, Thursday. The bogus proclamation has been the principal topic to-day. The knowledge that it is a forgery has not quieted the public mind.

There seems to be fighting both in front and on the James River, but nothing decisive is accomplished. I feel solicitous in regard to Butler, who, though a man of ability, has not the military knowledge and experience for so large and responsible a command.