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

Reminiscences of the Civil War, William and Adelia Lyon

To Mrs. Lyon

February 6, 1863.—We received the intelligence on Tuesday afternoon at one o’clock that the rebels were advancing on Donelson. The only forces there were the 83d Illinois, Colonel Harding, and Flood’s 2d Illinois Battery of four pieces. Colonel Harding had also a 32pounder siege gun in position. One of his companies was absent, so that the whole defensive force there was less than 700 men, with five pieces of artillery.

We could not ascertain whether the rebels were in large force, and we apprehended that the attack there was only a feint, and that the real point of attack would be Fort Henry. Colonel Lowe hesitated, therefore, to send reinforcements until the necessity was apparent.

Finally we got a dispatch that the battle had commenced, and I was ordered to push rapidly over there (it is fifteen miles from here) with the Thirteenth. Soon after we left the telegraph wire was cut, which showed that the enemy were in our path. Colonel Lowe started reinforcements to me. Six miles this side of Fort Donelson my advance guard was fired into and fell back to the main body. This was after dark. I formed a line of battle and reconnoitered in front. The first men that advanced in front of our lines were fired upon and wounded. We reconnoitered carefully in front, and hearing heavy firing renewed at Donelson, I pushed on with the main body, moving slowly, with skirmishers deployed to the front .

In the meantime Colonel Lowe learned that we were attacked and sent me three pieces of artillery and more infantry. I moved slowly and cautiously to within two miles of Donelson, occasionally sending couriers in advance to ascertain the situation of things at the fort, for up to this time we had no intelligence from there. We passed the point where the rebel force on our road had been stationed. We learned from citizens that they had 300 or 400 men there, who retreated on our approach.

About midnight one of our couriers returned with intelligence that the road was clear, and we moved on to the fort. We found, when we arrived there, that the place was attacked between one and two o’clock by at least four thousand rebels with from ten to thirteen pieces of artillery. They were commanded by a Major General Wheeler and two Brigadiers, Forrest and Wharton. The fight lasted until night. The rebels surrounded the place, their lines running from the river bank above to the river bank below the town, which is surrounded by high hills. What is called Fort Donelson is really the village of Dover. The fortifications are abandoned and did not figure in the fight . They charged repeatedly upon our men, but were invariably repulsed. The history of this war shows no such fighting as was done by the 83d Illinois and Flood’s Battery. Without fortifications, except slight breastworks improvised for the occasion, inferior in artillery, and 700 against 4,000, they fought for hours, through ravines, over hills, through the streets of the village, behind houses, in companies, by squads, and often single-handed, they contested every inch of ground until night ended the conflict. And to render the condition of these gallant men more desperate, at four o’clock the battery was out of ammunition.

The regiment was never in battle before, but every man fought like a veteran. At night, with their lines drawn closely around the town, and their batteries all in position to renew the attack in the morning, the enemy sent in a demand to Colonel Harding to surrender the place or take the consequences. The Colonel replied that it was against his orders to surrender and he must therefore ‘take the consequences.’ All the time I knew, as did also Colonel Harding, that several gunboats were on their way up the Cumberland river and would reach Donelson on Tuesday evening. The rebels knew nothing of this.

The gunboats arrived about eight o’clock and opened fire with eight-inch Dahlgrens upon the rebels, scattering them in dismay out of our reach. Early in the morning we found that they were rapidly retreating southeast, in the direction from whence they came. The slaughter amongst them was terrible. The morning after we arrived there I looked over the ground and dead bodies could be seen in every direction. Up to Wednesday evening our men had buried 125 dead rebels, and they were still being found and brought in. We find the houses all along the line of their retreat filled with their wounded, and they took off all that they could move. Their killed will, I think, amount to 200 and their wounded to 600 or 800. The most remarkable circumstance of the whole affair is that the loss on our side was only 11 killed and 41 wounded!

This battle was fought a mile or more from old Fort Donelson. We have since learned that it was their intention to capture Fort Donelson and then move their whole force on to Fort Henry and take that fort also. There are great stores of supplies and provisions, as well as arms, here. Hence they threw out a strong force on the Fort Henry road to retard the advance of reinforcements from here; and then when they got Fort Donelson they could throw their whole force on us, they thought, and exterminate us. It was well planned—the theory was perfect—but it did not work well.

Yesterday we returned to our old quarters. Before leaving Donelson, however, we saw the Twenty-Second Wisconsin, which, with 20,000 to 30,000 other troops, were there on their way to Nashville and Murfreesboro. They have buried 70 men and left 150 sick behind them. The regiment is not in a good condition. I marched the Thirteenth down to the boat on which was the Twenty-Second, drew up in line, gave them a few rounds of cheers, said ‘Good-bye,’ and left for home.

They got news in camp after we left for Fort Donelson that we were fighting, and the fact that Colonel Lowe was constantly pushing reinforcements to me seemed to confirm it, and the women got quite nervous about us.

Mrs. Lyon’s Diary

Fort Henry, Tenn., Feb. 4—A dispatch from Colonel Lowe yesterday called the Thirteenth to Fort Donelson. We had a night of great excitement. All the men went out of camp except the sick, and all that could stand up on their feet followed. We heard that the Thirteenth was fighting about six miles out. We could hear the cannon boom once in a while. After dark, and all night, the couriers were running. They brought news that some of the officers were killed. I had to bear this alone, for I could not tell the wives, and thought it might not be true; and if it was I did not want to be the one to tell them. We packed up everything, and were ready to start at a moment’s notice. We were to take the boat and go down the river a few miles. After midnight the ladies all got together in our tent and talked. They seemed to depend upon me. I felt myself a very weak stick—I knew of these reports, and felt so nervous.

To Mrs. Lyon

Feb. 3, 1863.—Our mails are very irregular. All the steamers are used by the Government to carry troops to Vicksburg and Nashville. There are no signs of our being ordered away from here at present, although I should not be surprised if we had a march and a fight soon. We get intelligence that the rebels in large force are preparing to obstruct the passage of the Cumberland river between Donelson and Clarksville. If so, they must be dislodged, as the use of the Cumberland is indispensible to General Rosecrans. A late order transfers us from General Grant’s to General Rosecrans’ command.

From Mrs. Lyon’s Diary

Jan. 27, 1863.—We had a pleasure excursion down the river on the Nevada. Went fourteen miles, to the Dutch grocery. Took a long tramp in the woods. Two negroes cut down two hickory trees for us to gather the nuts. We had to return to the boat on account of rain. There has been a terrible battle at Murfreesboro, we hear.

Attended a pleasant dancing party given by Mrs. Lowe on the boat Ewing. We all enjoyed it very much, it was such a new experience. We did not go back to camp until after ten o’clock (after taps they call it), and not one of the officers had the countersign, so when we got to the picket there were a number of officers waiting for the Colonel to give them the countersign. In his hurry to get ready he had not thought to get it, but I had opened the note and was, therefore, the only one in the crowd who knew it, so I had to whisper it to the guard before they would let us pass. I often go to the hospital and take some little good thing to the sick boys. They appreciate it, I can tell you.

From Mrs. Lyon’s Diary

Fort Henry, January 21, 1863.—Trying to clear off. Company H, Captain Noyes, has gone up the river on a scout. The Tennessee has risen from ten to fifteen feet in two days, and if this snow should go off with rain it would rise considerably more. We have been perfectly comfortable in our tent. A gunboat and three transports loaded with hospital supplies were captured on the Cumberland river the same night we were in Donelson.

William sent to Paducah for two chairs for us. We had to sit on cracker boxes before. One of the soldiers says that he will put some rockers on mine.

From Mrs. Lyon’s Diary

Jan. 18, 1862.—It rained all day the 14th and to the 16th, when it turned to snow. The snow is eighteen inches deep, but I do not think it will last. It is not cold. The river is high and rising fast. Our camp is on an elevation above high-water mark.

From Mrs. Lyon’s Diary

Fort Henry, Tenn., Jan. 14, 1863.—A party of twenty of us went to Fort Donelson, returning the same day. While going there the carriage in which I rode broke down, upset and rolled us all out in the road in fine confusion. Except a few slight bruises nobody was injured. Mrs. Stanton fainted away and we had to take her into a house. Here we saw for the first time the filthy habit of dipping. They take a small stick and chew the end of it into a brush, then stick it into Scotch snuff and rub it all around their teeth.

From Mrs. Lyon’s Diary

Fort Henry, Tenn., Jan. 5, 1863.—The last time I wrote, William was off on the second expedition. They returned on Wednesday, dissatisfied at not being allowed to go into Paris. They were ordered to stay eight miles this side, as the rumors were that Forrest had too many men for our forces to fight. Our pickets were driven in, but they captured four horses and arms.

We have just heard the good that the expedition did. The rebels did not know how much force we had, but heard and imagined that there were four times as many as there were. So they turned and went the other way and so came in contact with General Dodge and his army, and had a battle and were badly beaten.

Forrest and Napier had joined forces. Napier was killed and we have taken 900 prisoners, so report says. I expect the Thirteenth will be ordered away from here before long, as General Ransom is determined to have them.

From Mrs. Lyon’s Diary

Dec. 28.—The regiment returned from their recent expedition, all safe, not having found the enemy at all. We made up our minds that we were now going to have a good visit, but a dispatch arrived from Colonel Lowe with orders for the Thirteenth to go to Paris, as there is a strong force of rebels there, to prevent the Unionists from voting for their Congressional member. They are to have their election today. I fear our men will not get off so easily again. The men are completely tired out from their march, being in camp only one night. They started from here about five o’clock p. m., and will have to march all night to get there. This expedition is entirely under William’s supervision. His orders were to disembark at Paris Landing, and after that to do what seemed proper to him. He has two companies of cavalry with him. When he told me yesterday that they were going, I told him that I intended to go home on the gunboat, but he begged so hard for me to stay that I told him I would stay unless I heard bad news from home. He feels as badly as I do that he can not be with me, and says that they will surely be back in a few days.

The weather is perfectly beautiful. It is so warm that I do not pretend to put anything around me when I go out. The birds are singing as they do with us in the spring. The Eighty-Third Illinois Regiment from Fort Donelson has just passed, to join the Thirteenth in the expedition.

From Mrs. Lyon’s Diary

Dec. 25, 1862.—The ladies all joined and got up a Christmas dinner for the officers.