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

May 2014

May 6, Friday. At the Cabinet-meeting each of the members read his opinion. There had, I think, been some concert between Seward and Stanton and probably Chase; that is, they had talked on the subject, although there was not coincidence of views on all respects. Although I was dissatisfied with my own, it was as well as most others.

Between Mr. Bates and Mr. Blair a suggestion came out that met my views better than anything that had previously been offered. It is that the President should by proclamation declare the officers who had command at the massacre outlaws, and require any of our officers who may capture them, to detain them in custody and not exchange them, but hold them to punishment. The thought was not very distinctly enunciated. In a conversation that followed the reading of our papers, I expressed myself favorable to this new suggestion, which relieved the subject of much of the difficulty. It avoids communication with the Rebel authorities. Takes the matter in our own hands. We get rid of the barbarity of retaliation.

Stanton fell in with my suggestion, so far as to propose that, should Forrest, or Chalmers, or any officer conspicuous in this butchery be captured, he should be turned over for trial for the murders at Fort Pillow. I sat beside Chase and mentioned to him some of the advantages of this course, and he said it made a favorable impression. I urged him to say so, for it appeared to me that the President and Seward did not appreciate it.

We get no tidings from the front. There is an impression that we are on the eve of a great battle and that it may already have commenced.

May 6th. At five o’clock this morning, the battle opened vigorously on the right, and soon heavy musketry firing rolled sonorously along the entire line. Hill’s corps attacked Sedgwick, and a fierce and bloody encounter took place. Getty, Mott, and Birney, of our corps, were soon involved, and heavy fighting raged on all sides except our own front. We were on the lookout for Longstreet, who was reported by prisoners taken as moving down the Cartharpin road and forming on the unfinished railroad in our front. At six o’clock Hancock ordered the line to advance to the Orange plank road and a desperate fight commenced. Wadsworth, with a division, was to the right of the road, and our three divisions to the left, and so they moved forward at right angles to it. For over an hour the fighting was about even; then Hill’s troops gave way and we advanced, capturing several hundred prisoners. From this time until nearly three o’clock, there was a lull in the fighting, our division closely watching for the advance of Longstreet’s men. All of a sudden, while Barlow followed by his staff was riding slowly along the Brock road towards the plank road, a tremendous fire opened all along our front and shortly afterwards some of our troops gave way and came rushing through the woods over the slight breastworks into the road. Mott’s troops behaved rather badly, and there was great confusion, but Brooke’s men stood firm in the woods and repelled all efforts to drive them back. I was with Brooke at the opening fire, which was something fearful. The horses plunged and reared; the balls whistled around our ears, and the noise was simply too terrible to describe, but the gallant Fourth brigade, standing firm, opened fire and never a rebel passed their line. On Birney’s front the enemy drove all before them, and for a few moments it looked as though we were in serious difficulty. The enemy came rushing up to our breastworks, some climbing over them. I saw a rebel officer mount the rampart with a flag in his hand, waving it over the heads of his men. The woods had taken fire in front and now spread to the log breastworks, which added renewed terrors and excitement to the situation. As the rebel flag was flaunting over the burning ramparts, Carrol’s brigade came sweeping up at the double quick, and with a wild hurrah drove the rebels back into the mass of flames and smoke and recovered everything that had been temporarily lost. This ended the day’s serious fighting, no further attempts being made by either side. Again the losses were heavy. General Wadsworth was killed on our side and General Longstreet badly wounded on the rebel side; besides many other officers killed, so we learned from the many prisoners we took. As soon as the enemy was driven back we devoted ourselves to saving the wounded from roasting to death in the woods in front.

This is one of the horrors of fighting in dense woods, where the bursting shells invariably in dry weather set fire to the dead leaves and branches.

by John Beauchamp Jones

            APRIL 6TH.(sic)—Bright, warm, beautiful.

            We have a sensation to-day, but really no excitement. A dispatch from Gen. Lee (dated last night) says the enemy opened the battle yesterday, and the conflict continued until night put an end to the carnage. He says we have many prisoners, captured four guns, etc., losing two generals killed, one, Gen. J. M. Jones. But our position was maintained, and the enemy repulsed. Doubtless the battle was renewed this morning.

            Some fifty-nine transports and several iron-clad gun-boats, monitors, etc., came up the James River yesterday and last night. A heavy force was landed at Bermuda Hundred, within a few miles of the railroad between Richmond and Petersburg.

            And the enemy likewise came up the Peninsula, and there was fighting this morning on the Chickahominy.

            Thus the plan of the enemy is distinctly pronounced, and the assaults were designed to be made simultaneously. Yet there is no undue excitement.

            A dispatch from Gen. Pickett at Petersburg, this morning, to Gen. Bragg, asked if he (Bragg) intended to defend the railroad between Richmond and Petersburg. He said, “the enemy will attack the road to-day, marching from Bermuda Hundred, I think.”

            At 3 P.M. we are waiting with anxiety for news from all quarters.

            Both my sons marched out in the Department Battalion. Two Tennessee regiments marched down to Drewry’s Bluff yesterday, and Hunton’s brigade, that left there yesterday, were ordered back again last night. It is said troops were passing south through the city all night. And I know heavy forces are on the way from North Carolina. Gen. Pickett likewise has the greater part of his division in supporting distance. So, if the enemy have not cut the road by this time, it is probably safe, and the expedition will be a failure. If Lee defeats Grant, the city will certainly be saved. All the local troops are out.

            Gen. Beauregard is expected to-day, but it is reported he is sick at Weldon. On the 3d inst. the following dispatch was received from him:

“KINSTON, N. C.

“GEN. COOPER.
            “Orders should be given for the immediate re-establishment of fisheries at Plymouth and Washington, also to get large supplies of pork in Hyde County and vicinity.
                                    “G. T. BEAUREGARD, General.”

            On this the Commissary-General indorsed that the matter had been attended to—had, indeed, been anticipated.

            The best indication of the day (to me) was the smiling face of Mr. Hunter as he came from the Secretary’s office. He said to me, “The ball is opening well.”

            The President and his aids rode over the river to-day: what direction they took I know not; but this I know, he has no idea of being taken by the enemy. And he cannot think the city will be taken, for in that event it would be difficult for him to escape.

May 5, Thursday. — From Prince’s to Camp Creek, twenty-five miles. Road blocked by chopping trees. Cleared by thirty or forty of our axemen as fast as the column needed to pass. We led off reaching Flat Top at 11 o’clock A. M.

Thursday, May 5th.

Turned out stiff and sore this morning, and drenched to the skin with dew, which falls so heavily here that in the morning the appearance of the tents and fields is very much like that after a severe storm. At five o’clock fell in line and, joining the Corps Headquarter’s train as a guard, we started for Orange Court House. After marching about a mile we began to hear occasional shots from the picket line which preceded us, as our skirmishers met those of the “Johnnies,” and soon we received orders to countermarch and park the train. Returning to the point whence we started we stacked arms in a meadow immediately in front of General Headquarters and awaited developments.

While on the march we met a body of prisoners, who, because we had cut loose from our communications and so could not safely send them to any point in our rear, were kept moving in a circle close to the army and under a strong guard. Among them was a young man of about my own age, a Captain in some Georgia regiment, and calling him aside we sat down for a few moments on a bank of clay while my company was passing. He was a member of the staff of some Georgia brigade, and was captured the night before on the picket line, where he ran into a Yankee picket post supposing it to be composed of his own men. He had read law at the Harvard Law School, which he left to join the Southern army, and was a typical southern aristocrat who looked upon Northerners as little better than the “poor whites” of the South. He was very bitter in his denunciation of the war, and utterly scorned the idea that the South could be “subjugated,” actually declaring with the utmost sincerity that the north was already tired of the effort, and that even now the grass was growing between the stones of the pavements on Broadway in the City of New York, and he showed a clipping from a southern paper in which that statement was actually made. I assured him that I had been in New York in the previous March, and that from the appearance of things there no one would suspect that a war was going on, but I could make no impression upon him whatever. As we parted he gave me his name, but as I did not make a note of it I forgot it before night, a fact for which I am very sorry as I would like to meet him again after the war is over.

The picket firing, which in the morning was light and desultory, gradually increased as the day advanced and seemed to draw nearer and extend to the right. Meantime numerous divisions, brigades and regiments are pressed hastily forward to various points, and as they are lost in the woods and come within range, the sound of musketry deepens until it resembles the roll of heavy thunder, particularly on the right and in front of our (Fifth) corps. Soon the stretcher-bearers, with their ghastly freight, begin to pass by us to the hospitals now established on the plank road in our rear, and returning, with their stretchers dripping with the blood of the last occupants, press to the front again for other wounded. Crowds of soldiers, slightly wounded and assisted by comrades, flock past, many of whom as they stop to rest entertain our boys with stories of the fearful slaughter. Sounds like these followed by sights like these are not, I am bound to say, calculated to screw one’s courage to the sticking point, and I am decidedly of opinion that in time of action, troops just out of range are in more danger of demoralization than those at the immediate front. The former see only the wounded, the dying and the dead, not the living. They hear the terrible sounds of the combat and the groans of the suffering, not the cheers of the victors. They listen to tales of bloody and disastrous defeat, not of the crowning victory. In short, every sense is absorbed in the contemplation of the horrors rather than the glories of war.

About one o’clock P. M. a little cannonading was heard, but the surface of the country is so broken and irregular, and the forests, with their undergrowth of saplings, vines and brambles are so dense, that but little use can be made of artillery. Lieut. Shelton, of our brigade, whom I saw riding gaily by yesterday, lost two guns to-day on a narrow road in our front and was himself taken prisoner. Various wild rumors are flying about, such as that two rebel brigades were completely annihilated this morning, but though the fighting has been very hot and the losses undoubtedly great on both sides, as the firing dies away I cannot learn that either side has attained any decided advantage. The movements would seem to indicate efforts on both sides to get control of commanding points preparatory to more bloody and decisive work. Just at night the Headquarters Train moved back a short distance across the plank road by which we came into the field, and parked in an old corn field, while our battalion pitched its tents near by. Just after I had crawled under my shelter tent I heard the familiar voice of Dr. Lawrence, one of our assistant surgeons, now of the First Battalion attached to the Sixth Corps, anxiously inquiring for my tent, and, having found it, he jumped from his horse and looking in inquired breathlessly if I was much hurt. I assured him that so far as I knew I was not yet very badly damaged, whereupon he expressed the greatest relief, and explained that he had ridden in great haste from the Sixth Corps headquarters, some three miles away, where he had been informed that I had been very dangerously wounded. Being assured of my safety, and showing me the instruments he had brought for the purpose of taking off my leg, arm or head, as the case might require, he remounted his horse and was soon lost in the darkness, but I shall not soon forget an act of such disinterested kindness on the part of the doctor, upon whom I had no sort of claim whatever, personal or professional.

Between Chattanooga and Rossville, May 5, 1864.

It has been a very warm day, and the 16 miles between 8 a, m. and 4 p.m. counts a hard march. The dust in many places has been ankle deep.

We again crossed the point of old Lookout. I think since yesterday morning at least 20 trains loaded with troops have passed us while in sight of the railroad, with from 15 to 20 cars in each train.

We hear to-day that Dalton is not yet ours, but Sherman only waits for his old corps before attacking.

Have sent everything back to Chattanooga to store. It is estimated that we will have over 100,000 men at Dalton day after to-morrow.

Will keep a diary and send every opportunity.

Colonel Lyon’s Letters.

Stevenson, Ala., May 5, 1864.—An immense number of troops has passed through here within two days, I think as many as 25,000 from Huntsville, Decatur, and that way. They are the 15th and 16th Army Corps. Generals Sherman, Logan, McPherson, Sickles, and lots more, have gone to the front, and there will probably be a heavy battle in the neighborhood of Dalton in a very few days. I have no reason to believe that we shall be there. We seem to be pretty firmly anchored here just at present.

We naturally have a great anxiety concerning the result of the expected battle. The enemy are no doubt in heavy force, and so are we. Our very best Generals, except Grant, are there; and I am very hopeful that we shall defeat them. If we do, it virtually puts an end to the war in this part of the country. A defeat for us is not so serious a matter as it would be for them; yet if we should be defeated it would prolong the war for many months. Our hope is in the justice of our cause, the blessing of God, and the courage and patriotism of our army.

Our wagon train has just got through, bringing our mess traps.

Thursday, 5th—Reveille sounded at 4 o’clock and by daylight we were on the boats. At 8 o’clock we started up the Tennessee river, our destination, we suppose, being Clifton, Tennessee. Our fleet consists of eleven transports and two gunboats, one of them in advance and the other taking the rear, so that if we should be attacked by light batteries from the bank, the gunboats would be ready for action and silence them. Then each transport has a squad of men with rifles in hand ready for action in case we should be fired upon by the guerrillas. The weather is pleasant and everything is working fine.

May 5th.—Thirty of Company F on picket two miles in front. Reported Federals advancing.

May 5th.

We left Rappahannock Station at 7 o’clock and crossed the Rapidan at 1 p. m. This is our “Rubicon,” or so I can but consider it, and Grant is our Caesar. Sharp cannonading could be heard in the distance. We kept on three miles further and stopped for coffee. We heard firing in our front, which grew fainter and fainter until at 5 o’clock it has ceased altogether.