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

Kate Cumming: A Journal of Hospital Life in the Confederate Army of Tennessee.

April 20.—When General Johnston took command of the army, he ordered that every tenth man should draw a two weeks’ furlough, and then, if they chose, could transfer it to any of their comrades, which is often done by those whose homes are in the enemy’s lines. There are many of the latter.

My brother has just called on his way to the army, having drawn a two weeks’ furlough and been to Mobile. While there, he went to a party every night. He brought a number of tobacco bags with him, given him by the ladies, for, to use his own words, “some poor fellows whose mothers and sisters are in the enemy’s lines.” Miss W. added to his stock, as the “poor fellows” are from Louisiana.

Lord John Russell has informed President Davis that he can not permit the building of rams for the “so-called” Confederate government, as that would be a breach of that neutrality which the British government has been so careful in keeping between the two nations. I think the less Lord Russell says on that subject the better; as, thanks to Smith O’Brien, and many others as good authority, we all know how that has been kept, and how Great Britain has aided the North in every possible way. If Britain feels that she can not consistently league with barbarians who have the crime of slavery dimming their national character, let her act honestly, and not cry neutrality with her voice while she is doing all in her power with her hands to aid our enemy: and to think how much stronger they are than we! I shall begin to think what I have often been told about Britain is true, that she is afraid of the North:

 

“Is it England mocks us with her grief!

Who hate but dare not chide the imperial thief!”

 

But from all we know, Lord Russell does not represent the feeling of the British people . Had they their way, we would have been recognized long ago.

President Davis’s answer is worthy of the upright man, which he is. He tells Lord Russell that it is useless for him to try and blind us, when not a day passes without ships, laden with deluded people, leaving Britain to aid our enemies. I am certain that Davis would not be guilty of resorting to such a subterfuge as this lord has, even to save the country and cause, which we all know he has so much at heart.

Sunday, April 10.—A real April day, cloud and sunshine. This morning Dr. A. preached a very interesting sermon. His text was, “Ye are my friends if ye do whatsoever I command you.” I think it is a pity that he is not a chaplain instead of a surgeon. I told him so, but he says his health will not permit it.

There is a religious revival here in which the citizens take very little interest, but the soldiers a great deal.

Dr. McFerrin, a Methodist preacher, is holding it. He is a chaplain, and his very soul seems to be in the work. He is one of the most earnest preachers I ever heard.

The people are very gay. Nearly every night a party is given. The gentlemen who attend them are the attachees of the hospital and the officers of the post.

April 5.—We have just returned from a concert given by the ladies of this place for the benefit of the wounded at the expected battle. There was no attempt at any thing extra.

One young lady sang some simple, old-fashioned ballads with a great deal of taste.

A German, who has charge of the linen-room in the Buckner Hospital, played the violin and piano very well, but the crowning feature of the whole was the singing of Mrs. Dr. Gamble. Her voice is one of the finest amateur ones to which I have ever listened, and is highly cultivated. She sang one song, its name I have forgotten, that brought tears to all eyes. Another, “Ranch Desvache,” was beautiful. She sang, with more taste than I have ever heard an American sing a Scotch song, the “Lass o’ Gowrie,” with which every one was so much pleased that many sent notes requesting her to repeat it, which she kindly did. Mrs. Bears, matron of the Buckner Hospital, sang “Home, Sweet Home,” with a great deal of feeling. It scarcely does to sing such a song at present, as it touches the heart a little too deeply.

Sunday, April 3.—A very lovely day. Troops are still passing. In the morning Mrs. W. and myself took a walk to the depot to see if any of our friends were among the soldiers. Mrs. W. was expecting to see Mr. Tylman, from Mobile, a member of the Eighth Alabama Regiment, on his way to Virginia.

In the afternoon Miss W. and I took a walk in the woods, in company with Mr. and Mrs. Bears and Dr. Hughes. “The hoary worshipers of Deity” were budding forth with all the freshness and beauty of young spring. The woods were filled with wild flowers, and there was a soft, balmy spirit sighing through the trees, casting a soothing influence over all, making us forget for awhile the cares and strife with which we are surrounded. We sat for some time on the logs, and sang hymns, among them “Old Hundred,” which brought memories of the past to us all. Dr. Hughes proved himself a very good singer. He is an enthusiastic southerner, over sixty years of age, and has left wife and home for the cause. He tells me that his daughters in Kentucky are indefatigable in working for the southern cause. They are very kind to our men who are in the northern prisons, as I am told that nearly all the women of that state are. They and many other ladies have made up thousands of suits of clothing for them, and taken them to the prisons in person. Dr. H. is an excellent hand at relating anecdotes, one of them I insert for the lesson it teaches: The infidelity of the witty Earl of Rochester is well known. On a festive occasion at court, Dr. Hammond, a learned divine, and the earl were guests. They were promenading, each accompanied by a few friends. The earl having often expressed a wish to see Dr. H., as the two were approaching each other a friend of the earl’s pointed the doctor out to him as that gentleman in black just before him. He desired an introduction. On receiving it with bowing forms, the salutations respectively ran thus:

R. How do you do, Dr. Hammond?

H. (bowing very gracefully) My lord, your humble servant.

R. (evidently chagrined at the advantage Dr. H. had in the first salutation). Yours, doctor, down to the ground.

H. (smiling). Yours, my lord, down to the antipodes.

R. (more mortified than at first.) Yours, Dr. H., down to the bottom of hell.

H. (assuming an air of serious dignity). And there, my lord, I leave you. I have answered a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own conceit; but I will not further answer a fool according to his folly, lest I be like unto him.

Bishop Burnet, who gives us this anecdote, says that the earl was in the habit of commenting on what he called biblical contradictions and inconsistencies, and he took pride in trying to puzzle clergymen; hence his desire to see Dr. Hammond. But he was never known afterward to bring up the verses in question, (Prov. xxvi, 4, 5,) nor would he permit his friends to refer to his rencontre with Dr. H.

Easter Sunday, March 27.—In the morning I went to the Coweta House to prayers. In the afternoon went to the Methodist Church, where the negroes had service. Mr. Holland preached a sermon suited to their understanding. After getting through he came down from the pulpit, and the negroes crowded around him, shaking his hands. They seemed perfectly happy; some of the older ones fairly dancing with joy. This excitement is in keeping with the excitable character of the negro—although we have an Episcopal Church in Mobile, which belongs to them, where they go through the service as solemnly as we do.

Good Friday, March 25.—It has poured down rain all day. Dr. Adams had prayers in the Coweta House.

I have bought a number of home-made socks and stockings. The socks cost two dollars per pair, and the stockings five dollars. Many of the poorer class of country people round here earn their living by knitting these articles and weaving cloth. There is no appearance of poverty among the people in this town. With the exception of tea, coffee, and fresh beef, they seem to want for nothing. Nearly all have plantations a short distance from town, on which they raise stock of all kinds. I believe it is the same in all of the small towns in Georgia where the enemy has not been.

We have a great deal of trouble at present about our money. Bills above five dollars are heavily discounted. We are to have a new issue soon. It is said it will be a great improvement on the old.

March 24.—Numbers of soldiers are constantly passing to reinforce Johnston’s army. They are mainly troops from Mobile. I have been told that the Seventeenth and Twenty-ninth Alabama Regiments are among them.

March 22.—Our most Christian enemy, profiting by the teaching of such men as Beecher, not content to employ the scum of the earth to destroy us, have formed a plot foul enough to blacken the name of a Nero. They sent a band of assassins into Virginia for the purpose of freeing the prisoners and setting them loose on the helpless inhabitants, with full power to do their worst and lay waste the whole country. Positive orders were given to give no quarter to President Davis and his cabinet. They were to be murdered. Richmond was to be left a mass of ruins. Colonel Dahlgren, one of the leaders in this dark conspiracy, has gone to his final account. Papers with the whole design and the names of his accomplices were found on his person. Some of the men in his command have been captured. Many of our people are insisting to have them hung as brigands, as they have forfeited all claim to be treated as prisoners of war; but our high-souled president is firm in his resolve not to have them punished. It is said that some of his cabinet have protested against this leniency, but to no effect.

We have had a very heavy fall of snow. All enjoyed it. Old and young were out snow-balling each other. Drs. H. and B. got up a very fine equipage in the way of a sleigh. The runners were made by one of the men, and the carriage part was a packing-box. Instead of furs, blankets were used. The whole affair would have been a most attractive turnout in Broadway. After giving some of the Newnan ladies a drive, Dr. H. called and took Miss W. On her return she gave me a ludicrous description of her ride; said that the doctor had to get out and push her, the sleigh, and horse along. I did not venture in it, as it gave signs of dissolution, and I did not like the idea of being dumped into a bed of slush, or being forced to walk home through it .

I have just received a letter from an officer who is in Longstreet’s corps. Ho says our army has fallen back from Knoxville to a place called Lick Creek, on the Virginia road. This gentleman says that East Tennessee is completely sacked, and that he thinks many of the inhabitants will die of starvation. He also says there has been a religious revival in the army. The whole of that corps has re-enlisted for the war, no matter how long it may last . Our whole army has done the same.

I have been told that nearly all of East Tennessee is Union. One of the soldiers informed me that while passing through portions of it with prisoners, the ladies gave the best they had to the prisoners; and although our men were as much in want of food, they would not give them a mouthful.

March 11.—We have very few patients at present. I have been very busy fixing up my old clothes. It takes much more time to make the old clothes look well than to make new ones. I often wonder what our Yankee sisters would say if they saw what shifts we are put to. I suppose they think it grieves us, but they are mistaken, for it is a subject of mirth, as we, like the men, have become philosophers.

Miss W.’s sister lately paid her a visit. She is a high-spirited Louisiana girl. She has just left school, and intends, after paying a visit to some relatives in East Georgia, to go with another lady and take charge of a hospital in West Point, Ga. Dr. Oslin, the surgeon in charge there, says he will have no ladies in his hospital excepting educated and refined ones. At present he has none. She is quite as enthusiastic as her sister on the subject of Louisiana, and quarreled with one of the nurses, a native of Georgia, but a member of a Louisiana regiment, because he called himself a Louisianian.

There has been a skirmish near Dalton. We drove the enemy back to their intrenchments.

March 3.—I returned to Newnan some few days ago. I had quite a pleasant time in Mobile; I found it gayer than ever. The excuse is, that there are so many soldiers there away from their homes, and the ladies say they must do what they can to entertain them. Quite a plausible reason!

I noticed that the privates and officers mingled together at the festivities.

At one party which I attended (indeed the only one) the order of things was reversed; the ladies waited on the gentlemen, as they say it is an honor to wait on soldiers. The refreshments consisted of coffee mixed with rye, with sugar and milk, wheat-bread, and butter. These are luxuries now.

While visiting, the whole topic of conversation is, What can be procured to eat? This pervades all classes of society, and has ceased to be a vulgarism. The greatest treat that can be given is a cup of coffee or tea, with milk and sugar.

They have a very nice oil, distilled from pitch, called Confederate, which is a great improvement on the “pine-knot” lights.

I went shopping with a lady, who paid eight dollars per yard for a calico dress, ten for a gingham, twenty for a common delaine; children’s boots fifty dollars; ladies’, seventy-five.

Many of the ladies were dressed in homespun, which makes very pretty street dresses when trimmed, but they are not economical, as they do not wash as well as calico.

Provisions are higher than ever. The most influential men we have, that is, among the non-combatants, have formed themselves into a society called the Supply Association, for the benefit of those who are short of means. They send agents around the country who buy as they can, and the food is retailed by these gentlemen at cost; and I believe besides they see that soldiers’ families who can not buy do not suffer for want of food.

They have what is called a free market; it is supported wholly by donations of money and provisions. Many of the planters send all kinds of vegetables to it.

I made the acquaintance of some members of the Twenty-ninth Alabama Regiment, with whom I was much pleased. I went to a review of the regiment; as it has never been in a battle, it was complete in every way. The men were a contrast with the war-worn veterans that I had been accustomed to see. As it was expected to be soon sent to the front, I could not help feeling sad when looking at the review. “For a field of the dead rushed red on my sight.”[1]

I never will look again on a regiment of soldiers with pleasure.

This regiment is commanded by Colonel Connelly. It was with General Bragg’s army at Pensacola, and when that army went to Mississippi, it was sent on duty to Mobile.

While I was in Mobile, the cry that “the enemy is coming” was raised two or three times. There was a report that an immense army was coming through Florida, another through Mississippi, and another by Pascagoola, and at the same time the fleet was to attack the forts down the bay. For a little while poor Mobile seemed as if it was going to be gobbled up all at once, but the enemy have found a few stumbling-blocks in their way. “All their views have come to naught,” and the Mobilians breathe free again; although I expect only for a little while, as I have no idea but what the enemy will honor it with a visit.

The mayor and General Maury had large bills posted, begging the people to leave, telling them they intended to defend the city at all hazards, but the people paid little heed to them, as the cry of wolf has been raised so often that this time they were determined to wait till he came. Many of them had gone, and, getting tired of waiting, had returned, and were not to be sent off so easily again.

I visited the fortifications, winch seem to be very formidable. The city is all cut up, and many a beautiful garden and tree has been demolished.

I also visited a very fine gun-boat—the Tennessee — said to be one of the largest afloat. Lieutenant Jordan, one of the officers, kindly showed us all over. It is a ram, and has many a dark-looking corner, where the men are to be stowed away in case of a battle. All looked very mysterious. I certainly felt I should not like to be one of the crew. There were a few more gun-boats nearly completed, but we did not go on board of them.

My old friend, Rev. Mr. Miller, is now post chaplain of Mobile. I visited a library which he has for the use of the soldiers.

Since my last visit to Mobile many of her brave sons have been laid low in the dust, and many a once happy home left desolate.

Mrs. Otis’s son, Mr. Bancroft, a member of the Third Alabama Regiment, was severely wounded at the battle of Chancellorville. His fate is still uncertain, as the tent he was in was set on fire by a shell, and many suppose he was burned up. What a terrible fate! How I do pity his poor mother; but her trust is in God.

Mrs. Wilson’s son, Eugene, a member of the Eighth Alabama Regiment, was killed at Gettysburg. I had known him when a little boy. He was a member of the “Mobile Blues,” and, like nearly all of that company, has offered up his young life on the altar of his country. His poor mother could not speak to me, her heart was so full. May God be with and strengthen all such!

On leaving Mobile, my friend, Mr. M., introduced me to his friend, Mr. Labuzan, who kindly offered to escort me as far as Montgomery. He was on his way to the interior of Alabama, in search of a home for his family, having decided to take them from the city. Mr. L. is one of many who have suffered by the war. He has three sons in the army; one, Catesby, was badly wounded at Missionary Ridge; he is now a prisoner, and his father has no idea at this moment that he lives. When his family last heard from him, his life was almost despaired of. I am told, a nobler boy never fought for his country.

On the cars from Montgomery to West Point, I met a very nice lady, Mrs. Davis, from Marion, Alabama. When she left that place she said there was great excitement there, expecting the enemy. She was then on her way to Georgia, where her father lives.

On the cars from West Point I met Lieutenant Sewell, of the Twenty-fourth Alabama Regiment, who had been on furlough to Mobile. He said he thought the times looked very gloomy. I asked him how long he had been in Mobile. He replied, “Two weeks.” I said, “Just long enough to be demoralized, as no one near or in the army ever spoke of gloomy times.” He answered, that was a fact; that the further he got from the army the more demoralized the people were. He then paid the usual compliments to the ladies. I told him of this talk I really had become weary, and I thought they did not deserve all that was said in their praise, and if we were whipped they would be to blame. I also said a man did not deserve the name of man, if he did not fight for his country; nor a woman, the name of woman, if she did not do all in her power to aid the men. Even when a woman does her best, it is a mite compared with what our men have to endure. He had the candor to acquiesce in all I said.

I found very few of my former patients here. Many of the very worst cases of gangrene are cured, and the subjects walking about. Some of the men have been furloughed, and gone home; others, whose homes are in the enemy’s lines, have gone to stay with friends. Mr. Moore, the lad who was wounded through the lungs at the battle of Chickamauga, is still unable to move himself, and he has scarcely ever been heard to murmur. He is a great sufferer, as he has a bad cough. We call him our pet. He is from North Carolina, and his people have suffered much from the enemy.

A number of our nurses and cooks have been sent to the front . I regret this, as they were nearly all good men. We have to go to work now and teach others.


[1] The records of nearly all our regiments have been lost, so that it is almost impossible to get a correct account of our losses. Captain Abernethy, who had command of this gallant regiment at the battle of Franklin, when but a remnant of it remained, told me that it went into that battle with twenty-three officers; after it was over, twenty of them and over two hundred privates lay prostrate on the field.