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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 19:59:48 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 19:59:48 -0700
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+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Reply of the Philadelphia Brigade Association to the Foolish and Absurd Narrative of Lieutenant Frank A. Haskell, by The Philadelphia Brigade Association.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+ p {margin-top: .75em; text-align: justify; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+
+ body {margin-left: 12%; margin-right: 12%;}
+
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+
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+ .dent {padding-left: 1em; padding-right: 1em;}
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+ .blockquot {margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;}
+
+ .right {text-align: right;}
+ .center {text-align: center;}
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+ .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;}
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+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Reply of the Philadelphia Brigade
+Association to the Foolish and Absurd Narrative of Lieutenant Frank A. Haskell, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Reply of the Philadelphia Brigade Association to the Foolish and Absurd Narrative of Lieutenant Frank A. Haskell
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: August 30, 2010 [EBook #33585]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REPLY OF THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
+Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">BOWERS PRINTING COMPANY<br />PHILADELPHIA, PA.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="center">REPLY OF THE<br />PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE<br />ASSOCIATION<br /><br />
+TO THE<br /><br />FOOLISH and ABSURD NARRATIVE<br />OF<br />Lieutenant FRANK A. HASKELL<br /><br />
+WHICH APPEARS TO BE<br />ENDORSED BY<br />THE MILITARY ORDER OF THE<br />LOYAL LEGION<br />
+COMMANDRY OF MASSACHUSETTS<br /><br />
+AND<br /><br />THE WISCONSIN HISTORY<br />COMMISSION<br /><br />
+COMPLIMENTS OF THE<br />PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE ASSOCIATION<br />MARCH, 1910</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center">HEADQUARTERS,<br />PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE ASSOCIATION,<br />
+S. W. COR. FIFTH AND CHESTNUT STREETS,<br />PHILADELPHIA, PA.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>At the stated meeting of the Survivors of the Philadelphia Brigade, Second
+Brigade, Second Division, Second Corps, Army of the Potomac, held at the
+above place, Tuesday evening, September 7, 1909, letters were read from
+Gen. Alexander S. Webb, who commanded the Philadelphia Brigade at the
+Battle of Gettysburg, July 1, 2 and 3, 1863, requesting the consideration
+of the Brigade Association to the most astounding misstatements made by
+First Lieut. Frank Aretas Haskell, 6th Wisconsin Infantry, in a paper said
+to have been written by him under date of July 16, 1863, two weeks after
+the Battle of Gettysburg had been fought and addressed to his brother, who
+printed it for private circulation about fifteen years afterward.</p>
+
+<p>The letters of Gen. Webb were accompanied by a volume of 94 pages,
+containing the most absurd statements as to the action of the Philadelphia
+Brigade at the Battle of Gettysburg, which, upon being read, led to the
+unanimous adoption of the following preamble and resolution:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>&#8220;WHEREAS, in the &#8216;Narrative of the Battle of Gettysburg,&#8217; by Lieut. Frank
+A. Haskell, First Lieut. 6th Wisconsin Infantry, and an aide upon the
+staff of Gen. John Gibbon, said to have been written within a few days
+after the battle, and reprinted in 1898 as a part of the history of the
+Class of 1854, Dartmouth College, and republished in 1908 under the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>auspices of the Massachusetts Commandery of the Military Order of the
+Loyal Legion of the United States, the Philadelphia Brigade has been
+recklessly, and shamelessly, and grossly misrepresented; therefore, with
+the view of correcting these wilfull misstatements, it is</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;RESOLVED, That a committee consisting of the officers of the Philadelphia
+Brigade Association, together with two comrades from each of the four
+regiments of the Brigade, be appointed to carefully consider the matter,
+and, if deemed advisable by the committee, to publicly enter its protest
+against the malicious statements &#8216;reprinted in 1898 as a part of the
+history of the Class of 1854 of Dartmouth College,&#8217; and again republished
+by the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts in 1908, with a degree of
+recklessness and disregard for truth unparalleled in any publication
+relating to the Civil War; statements so false and malevolent as to be
+wholly unworthy of a class of Dartmouth College, or of a Commandery of the
+Loyal Legion of the United States; of the name of Capt. Daniel Hall, of
+General Howard&#8217;s staff&mdash;who prepared the story for publication&mdash;or of
+&#8216;Chas. Hunt, Captain U. S. V., Committee on Publication.&#8217;&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>The committee named under this resolution consists of these Comrades: Wm.
+G. Mason, Commander; John Quinton, Vice-Commander; Chas. W. Devitt,
+Quartermaster; John W. Frazier, Adjutant; John E. Reilly, Wm. S. Stockton,
+Joseph MacCarroll and James Thompson, Trustees, and Edward Thompson and
+James Duffy, 69th; John W. Dampman and Edward P. McMahon, 71st; John Reed
+and Thos. J. Longacre, 72d; Wm. H. Neiler and Thos. Thompson, 106th
+Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers.</p>
+
+<p>An examination by the Philadelphia Brigade Association of the records
+relating to the &#8220;Narrative&#8221; written by Lieut. Haskell, discloses these
+facts:</p>
+
+<p>First&mdash;That Lieut. Haskell entered the service in July, 1861, as First
+Lieutenant of the 6th Wisconsin Infantry,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span> and in June, 1862, became an
+Aide-de-Camp upon the Staff of Brigadier General John Gibbon, and was
+serving as such at the time he wrote his &#8220;Narrative&#8221; of the Battle of
+Gettysburg. On February 9, 1864, Haskell was commissioned Colonel of the
+36th Wisconsin Regiment, which at his request was assigned to the First
+Brigade, Second Division, Second Corps, Army of the Potomac. The Division
+was commanded by Gen. Gibbon, Gen. Hancock commanding the Corps. In the
+advance of Gibbon&#8217;s Division at the Battle of Cold Harbor, against a
+strongly intrenched position, Col. Henry McKeen, who commanded the First
+Brigade, was killed. Colonel Haskell succeeded to the command, and he,
+too, fell mortally wounded under the heavy artillery and musketry fire,
+against which his Brigade advanced. <ins class="correction" title="original: Haskell'">Haskell&#8217;s</ins> record as a soldier of the
+Civil War is, therefore, an enviable one; but as a writer of events of the
+war he was absurd, reckless and unreliable.</p>
+
+<p>Second&mdash;The manuscript alleged to have been prepared by Lieut. Haskell, as
+stated by him, &#8220;At the Headquarters, second Corps D&#8217;Armee, Army of the
+Potomac, near Harper&#8217;s Ferry, July 16, 1863,&#8221; was sent to his brother, who
+printed it about fifteen years later in a pamphlet of 72 pages for private
+circulation.</p>
+
+<p>Third&mdash;The book was reprinted in 1898 as part of the History of the Class
+of 1854, Dartmouth College, in honor of Colonel Haskell&#8217;s memory, but with
+certain omissions that severely reflected upon the Eleventh Corps, Gen.
+Sickles and President Lincoln, which are explained in a foot-note by Capt.
+Daniel Hall, a classmate of Haskell&#8217;s, who was an Aide upon the Staff of
+Gen. O. O. Howard, and who prepared the Haskell story for republication.</p>
+
+<p>Fourth&mdash;The pamphlet published in 1878, by Haskell&#8217;s family for private
+circulation, contained 72 pages; the costly volume published in 1908,
+under the auspices<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span> of the Commandery of Massachusetts, Loyal Legion of
+the United States, prepared by Captain Daniel Hall, an Aide upon the Staff
+of Gen. Howard, Commander of the Eleventh Corps, with the official
+endorsement of &#8220;Chas. Hunt, Captain, U. S. V., Committee on Publication&#8221;
+is a book of 94 pages; therefore, apparently containing much more matter
+than was originally published by the Haskell family in 1878.</p>
+
+<p>The charge of cowardice on the part of the Philadelphia Brigade, purported
+to have been made by Lieut. Haskell, is printed on pages 60, 61 and 62 of
+the volume published by the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts, and is in part
+as follows:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Unable to find my General, I gave up hunting as useless&mdash;I was
+convinced General Gibbon could not be on the field; I left him
+mounted; I could have easily found him now had he so remained, but
+now, save myself, there was not a mounted officer near the engaged
+lines&mdash;and was riding towards the right of the Second Division, with
+purpose to stop there, as the most eligible position to watch the
+further progress of the battle, then to be ready to take part,
+according to my own notions, wherever and whenever occasion
+presented. The conflict was tremendous, but I had seen no wavering in
+all our line. Wondering how long the rebel ranks, deep though they
+were, could stand our sheltered volleys, I had come near my
+destination, when&mdash;great heavens! were my senses mad?&mdash;the larger
+portion of Webb&#8217;s Brigade&mdash;my God, it was true&mdash;there by the group of
+trees and the angles of the wall, was breaking from the cover of the
+works, and without orders or reason, with no hand uplifted to check
+them, was falling back, a fear-stricken flock of confusion. The fate
+of Gettysburg hung upon a spider&#8217;s single thread. A great magnificent
+passion came on me at the instant; not one that overpowers and
+confounds, but one that blanches the face and sublimes <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>every sense
+and faculty. My sword that had always hung idle by my side, the sign
+of rank only, in every battle, I drew, bright and gleaming, the
+symbol of command. Was not that a fit occasion and those fugitives
+the men on whom to try the temper of the Solingen steel? All rules
+and proprieties were forgotten, all considerations of person and
+danger and safety despised; for as I met the tide of those rabbits,
+the damned red flags of the rebellion began to thicken and flaunt
+along the wall they had just deserted, and one was already waving
+over the guns of the dead Cushing. I ordered those men to &#8216;halt,&#8217; and
+&#8216;face about,&#8217; and &#8216;fire,&#8217; and they heard my voice and gathered my
+meaning, and obeyed my commands. On some unpatriotic backs, of those
+not quick of comprehension, the flat of my sabre fell, not lightly;
+and at its touch their love of country returned, and with a look at
+me as if I were the destroying angel, as I might have become theirs,
+they again faced the enemy. General Webb soon came to my assistance.
+He was on foot, but he was active, and did all that one could do to
+repair the breach or to avert its calamity.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Colonels O&#8217;Kane and Tschudy, of the 69th, were killed in action; Baxter,
+of the 72d, wounded and carried off the field; Morehead and his 106th
+Regiment had been sent by Gibbon to the support of Howard&#8217;s Corps, thereby
+materially weakening the Brigade; Col. R. Penn Smith, of the 71st, and
+Lieut. Col. Theo. Hesser, of the 72d, were with their commands&mdash;which they
+never left&mdash;encouraging their men to even greater deeds of heroism; Webb
+is yet living and in a supplemental paper to this Reply will state
+specifically where the Commander of the Brigade and his Adjutant were and
+what they did.</p>
+
+<p>While Haskell has long been dead&mdash;killed in action at Cold Harbor, in
+1864, and it seems cruel to speak harshly of the dead, yet duty to the
+living, and to the honored dead of the Philadelphia Brigade compels reply.
+The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> unreliability of Lieut. Haskell as a writer of military matters was
+equaled only by the egotism of the youthful Lieutenant. Thus this reckless
+First Lieutenant wrote of General Howard and General Doubleday, and thus
+he maligned the brave men of the Eleventh Corps:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;The two divisions of the Eleventh Corps commanded, by Generals
+Schurz and Barlow, making but feeble opposition to the advancing
+enemy, soon began to fall back. Back in disorganized masses they fled
+into the town, hotly pursued, and in lanes, in barns, in yards and
+cellars, throwing away their arms, they sought to hide like rabbits,
+and were captured unresisting by hundreds.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose our losses during the first day would exceed five
+thousand, of whom a large number were prisoners. Such usually is the
+kind of loss sustained by the Eleventh Corps.&#8221; (Haskell narrative,
+page 6.)</p></div>
+
+<p>The actual loss of the Eleventh Corps was 153 officers and 2,138 men
+killed and wounded, and 62 officers and 1,448 men captured and missing, a
+total of 3,801, thereby attesting that at least 2,291 brave men of the
+Eleventh Corps did not &#8220;hide like rabbits,&#8221; but that they fell like heroes
+facing the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>And thus of General Doubleday as to his action during Pickett&#8217;s Charge on
+the afternoon of the third day:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Doubleday on the left was too far off, and too slow. On another
+occasion I had begged him to send his idle regiments to support
+another line, battling with thrice its numbers, and the &#8216;Old Sumter
+Hero&#8217; had declined.&#8221; (Haskell narrative, page 62.)</p></div>
+
+<p>If Haskell, or any other first lieutenant, would dare to have had the
+impudence to direct a Major General, and he a graduate of West Point, a
+soldier of distinction in the Mexican War, and placed in command of the
+First Corps upon the death of Gen. Reynolds, is it not more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> than likely,
+indeed, does it not seem certain that such a presumptuous lieutenant would
+have been sent back to his command under guard, if not committed to the
+guard house?</p>
+
+<p>And did not Capt. Daniel Hall, an Aide upon General Howard&#8217;s Staff, who
+prepared the Haskell &#8220;Narrative&#8221; for republication; and the Military Order
+of the Loyal Legion, Commandery of Massachusetts, in publishing the
+Haskell &#8220;Narrative&#8221; become responsible for the Haskell slander upon
+Generals Howard and Doubleday, and the brave men of the gallant Eleventh
+Corps, and of the Philadelphia Brigade?</p>
+
+<p>The egotism and recklessness of Haskell are in evidence upon almost every
+page of his book. On page 39 he says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;I heard General Meade express dissatisfaction at General Geary for
+making his attack. I heard General Meade say that he sent an order to
+have the fight stopped, but I believe the order was not given to
+Geary until after the repulse of the enemy.&#8221; Is it not clear that if
+such an order had been sent and obeyed, the enemy would not have been
+repulsed? Is it anywhere upon record that General Meade sent such an
+order?</p></div>
+
+<p>On page 82 of the Haskell &#8220;Narrative&#8221; of the Battle of Gettysburg appears
+this silly statement:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;About six o&#8217;clock on the afternoon of the third of July, my duties
+done upon the field, I quitted it to go to the General (meaning
+Gibbon). My brave horse Dick&mdash;poor creature! his good conduct in the
+battle that afternoon had been complimented by a brigadier&mdash;was a
+sight to see. He was literally covered with blood. Struck repeatedly,
+his right thigh had been ripped open in a ghastly manner by a piece
+of shell, and three bullets were lodged deep in his body, and from
+his wounds the blood oozed and ran down his sides and legs, and with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+the sweat formed a bloody foam. To Dick belongs the honor of first
+mounting that stormy crest before the enemy, not forty yards away,
+whose bullets smote him, and of being the only horse there during the
+heat of that battle.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Haskell might, with equal truth and egotism, have written: &#8220;To Dick and
+his rider belong the honor of meeting and repulsing Pickett&#8217;s Division,&#8221;
+and who can say that it would not have been accorded equally as generous
+consideration by the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts, and the History
+Commission of Wisconsin, as was given to all the other nonsense he wrote
+of the Battle of Gettysburg.</p>
+
+<p>It has been said of Pickett&#8217;s Virginians, that accustomed to handling a
+gun, or rifle, from boyhood, any one of them could kill a jay bird at a
+distance of 150 yards, but not one of Pickett&#8217;s Division of 4,000 Veterans
+could kill that horse or that first lieutenant, and they the only horse
+and man in sight, and not forty yards away, parading between Hancock&#8217;s
+Corps of the Union Army and Longstreet&#8217;s Corps of the Confederate Army.</p>
+
+<p>Oh! Veterans of Pickett&#8217;s Division, you who killed or wounded 491 of our
+Comrades of the Philadelphia Brigade from the time you began one of the
+most desperate charges ever recorded in the history of wars, starting from
+Seminary Ridge, one mile distant from the Bloody Angle, until you reached
+the culminating point where the intrepid Armistead fell mortally wounded
+within the lines of the Philadelphia Brigade. You who made such slaughter
+in OUR RANKS AT LONG RANGE could not kill First Lieutenant Frank Aretas
+Haskell, or his horse, and they not forty yards distant from your firing
+line, and he &#8220;the one solitary horseman between the Second Division of
+Hancock&#8217;s Corps and Pickett&#8217;s Division of Longstreet&#8217;s Corps.&#8221;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> And the
+Military Order, Loyal Legion, Commandery of Massachusetts, and the History
+Commission of Wisconsin, as late as the year 1908 in expensive
+publications confirm the Haskell &#8220;Narrative&#8221; of his wild &#8220;Buffalo Bill&#8221;
+ride between the Union and Confederate lines, and depicting your skill as
+marksmen, with a horse and officer as the inviting target not forty yards
+distant&mdash;defying the bullets of the most skillful marksmen of the
+Confederate Army.</p>
+
+<p>Is there a veteran soldier of the Civil War, or even a thoughtful man in
+the United States, who believes this part of Haskell&#8217;s Narrative &#8220;of
+riding between the lines the one solitary horseman, and he not forty yards
+distant from the enemy?&#8221; Do Captains Daniel Hall and Charles Hunt, the
+Loyal Legion of Massachusetts, and Wisconsin History Commission,
+themselves endorsing it, really believe it?</p>
+
+<p>It was on the third day that &#8220;Dick&#8221; was plugged with enough of Confederate
+lead to have warranted Haskell in organizing a Company to mine the lead in
+&#8220;Dick&#8217;s&#8221; dead body. His horse &#8220;Billy&#8221; was pumped just as full of lead on
+the second day, as this absurd statement on page 37 attests:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;And my horse can hardly move. What can be the reason? I know that he
+has been touched by two of their bullets today, but not to wound or
+lame him to speak of. I foolishly spurred my horse again. No use&mdash;he
+would only walk. I dismounted; I could not lead him along. So, out of
+temper, I rode him to headquarters, which I reached at last. With a
+light I found what was the matter with &#8216;Billy.&#8217; A bullet had entered
+his chest just in front of my left leg as I was mounted, and the
+blood was running down all his side and leg, and the air from his
+lungs came out of the bullet hole. I rode him at the Second Bull Run,
+and at the First and Second Fredericksburg, and at Antietam<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> after
+brave &#8216;Joe&#8217; was killed, but I shall never mount him again. &#8216;Billy&#8217;s&#8217;
+battles are over.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Just one more instance of the scores of the colossal vanity of Haskell. It
+tells how General Meade turned the command of the Army of the Potomac over
+to the youthful First Lieutenant of Infantry&mdash;Frank Aretas Haskell. It is
+to be found on pages 69 and 70 of the Haskell &#8220;Narrative.&#8221; The battle had
+ended, and the Napoleon of Gettysburg, while patting himself on the back,
+was planting data in his mind for printing in his &#8220;Narrative,&#8221; and thus
+Paul planted, and the Apollos of Massachusetts and Wisconsin watered.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Would to heaven Generals Hancock and Gibbon could have stood where I
+did, and have looked upon that field. But they are both severely
+wounded and have been carried from the field. One person did come,
+and he was no less than Major-General Meade, who rode up accompanied
+alone by his son&mdash;an escort not large for a commander of such an
+army. As he arrived near me he asked, &#8216;How is it going here?&#8217; I
+answered, &#8216;I believe, General, the army is repulsed.&#8217; With a touch of
+incredulity he further asked, &#8216;What! IS THE ASSAULT ENTIRELY
+REPULSED?&#8217; I replied, &#8216;It is, sir.&#8217; And then his right hand moved as
+if he would have caught off his hat and waved it, but instead he
+waved his hand and said, &#8216;Hurrah!&#8217; He asked where Hancock and Gibbon
+were, but before I had time to answer that I did not know, he
+resumed, &#8216;No matter, I will give my orders to You, and YOU will see
+them executed.&#8217; He then gave directions that the troops should be
+reformed as soon as practicable, and kept in their places, as the
+enemy might be mad enough to attack again, adding, &#8216;IF THE ENEMY DOES
+ATTACK, CHARGE HIM IN THE FLANKS AND SWEEP HIM FROM THE FIELD&mdash;do you
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>understand?&#8217; The General then, a gratified man, galloped in the
+direction of his headquarters.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Of course, General Meade rode back to his headquarters a gratified man.
+Had he not just received the information from First Lieutenant Haskell
+that the enemy had been &#8220;entirely repulsed?&#8221; and had not Meade issued an
+order to this Wellington of Lee&#8217;s Waterloo to sweep the enemy from the
+field, if he were mad enough to renew the attack, by charging him on the
+flanks? General Meade&#8217;s order to Haskell was so sedately humorous as to
+leave us in doubt as to whether the First Lieutenant and his horse alone
+were to charge the enemy&#8217;s flanks, or for Lieutenant Napoleon Wellington
+Haskell to order the First, Eleventh and Twelfth Corps to charge his left
+flank, and the Third, Fifth and Sixth Corps his right flank, while Haskell
+and Dick swept his centre from the field.</p>
+
+<p>And this is the &#8220;narrative&#8221; that a Loyal Legion and a History Commission
+feel honored in publishing. If the object was to prove that they were just
+as vainglorious as Haskell, has not this fact been fully established by
+their published books? Vaccinated by the Haskell virus of vanity and
+venom, the buffoonery of Haskell has been transmitted by a Military Order
+of the Loyal Legion, and the History Commission of a great State, to their
+admiring friends and the public. Like Haskell, &#8220;A great, magnificent
+passion came on them that seemingly sublimed every sense and
+faculty&mdash;when, great heavens! their senses mad,&#8221; the Battle of Gettysburg,
+by Frank Aretas Haskell, First Lieutenant, Sixth Wisconsin Infantry, was
+&#8220;published under the auspices of the Commandery of the State of
+Massachusetts, Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States,
+and the Wisconsin History Commission.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>General Roy Stone, of Pennsylvania, commanded the Second Brigade, Third
+Division, First Corps, at <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>Gettysburg. Upon receiving serious wounds he
+was carried from the field, and Colonel Langhorne Wister, of Philadelphia,
+commanding the 150th Pennsylvania Regiment, succeeded to the command of
+the Brigade, and the Lieutenant-Colonel took command of the Regiment, and
+soon after was shot in the leg, remaining in command until his right arm
+was shattered. Carried into an adjacent barn, used temporarily as a
+hospital, the flow of blood was stopped by a tourniquet, and the arm
+bandaged&mdash;occupying about thirty minutes&mdash;after which he returned to his
+regiment and assumed command, maintaining the line held by it until the
+excruciating pain and faintness from shock and loss of blood compelled him
+to retire. The next day his arm was amputated at the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>For that&mdash;perhaps&mdash;unprecedented instance of heroism at Gettysburg the
+Lieutenant-Colonel of the 150th Pennsylvania was awarded a Congressional
+Medal of Honor; he was promoted for bravery on the field of battle, and
+this is what he, General Henry S. Huidekoper, of Philadelphia, a member of
+the Loyal Legion, Commandery of Pennsylvania, says of Haskell&#8217;s book:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;In the first print much of what Haskell said was suppressed, and we
+cannot but regret that any of it was made public, for, from a
+historical standpoint, the story is inaccurate and misleading, and
+from an ethical standpoint it is indecent, venomous, scandalous and
+vainglorious.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>And this is the &#8220;narrative&#8221; that the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of
+Massachusetts, and the History Commission of Wisconsin, have recently
+published in attractive and costly form, giving the same wide circulation,
+unmindful of the fact that thereby they are inflicting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> irreparable injury
+to both the living and the heroic dead.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Chas. H. Banes, late President of the Market Street National Bank,
+was a typical soldier of the Civil War; he was a leading member of the
+Baptist Church in Philadelphia, and was as devout as a Christian as he was
+heroic as a Volunteer Soldier. In 1876 Colonel Banes published an
+interesting volume, entitled, &#8220;History of the Philadelphia Brigade.&#8221; No
+man was as competent as he to write such a history, inasmuch as he had
+long been the Adjutant of the Brigade and in possession of all its
+records. In his preface to that book Colonel Banes says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;The four regiments of the Brigade were composed chiefly of
+Volunteers from the city of Philadelphia, and for that reason might
+properly be called the Philadelphia Brigade. It consisted of the
+69th, 71st, 72d, and 106th Regiments of Pennsylvania Volunteers. The
+command had from the first enrollment until the muster out 350 field,
+staff and line officers, and over 6,000 non-commissioned officers and
+privates. The officers and men of the regiments were equal in
+courage, endurance and discipline to the best commands of the army,
+and their soldierly bearing on the march and in battle helped to make
+the history of the Army of the Potomac.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>As to the charge of cowardice against a Brigade that lost 3,533 in killed,
+wounded, deaths from other causes, and missing, made under the auspices of
+Dartmouth College, and the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the
+United States, Commandery of Massachusetts, is so positive, so indecent,
+so scandalous, so brutal, and so absolutely false, the Philadelphia
+Brigade, in formulating a reply to these malicious and infamous
+violations<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span> of facts, has deemed it proper to submit, as briefly as
+possible, extracts from Colonel Banes&#8217; &#8220;History of the Philadelphia
+Brigade,&#8221; about what the Old Brigade did from the time it received the
+order to move from Falmouth, Va., until it met and turned backward the
+charge of Pickett&#8217;s Division at the &#8220;Bloody Angle&#8221; of Gettysburg, on the
+afternoon of July 3, 1863.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">BANES VERSUS HASKELL.</p>
+
+<p>That &#8220;History of the Philadelphia Brigade,&#8221; by Colonel Chas. H. Banes,
+which records with absolute truthfulness the part taken by the
+Philadelphia Brigade from Ball&#8217;s Bluff to Appomattox, was written with the
+calm deliberation and adherence to facts characteristic of the man who
+stood foremost among his fellow citizens of Pennsylvania for business
+integrity, Christian rectitude, and American manhood and honor, and
+sensitive in the highest degree of his honor, and herewith is what that
+manly man, comrade and companion, Colonel Chas. H. Banes, Adjutant of the
+Philadelphia Brigade, records in his history regarding the battle at the
+Bloody Angle of Gettysburg, and the march from Falmouth immediately
+preceding that great battle:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;On Sunday, June 14th, our Division was ordered to move at very short
+notice. At about midnight the Second Division, the last of the Army,
+moved from Falmouth, obstructing the roads behind the column. At
+noon, June 15th, the command reached Stafford Court House, where it
+halted two hours; then resuming the march bivouacked at night five
+miles from Dumfries. The day was very hot, the roads were filled with
+dust, and the march of 28 miles was so oppressive that a number of
+the men fell from sunstroke and exhaustion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;At about two A. M., on the 16th, the Brigade started from Dumfries,
+where we halted a few hours. After<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> taking up the march through Wolf
+Run Shoals, Occoquan Creek, we camped for the night on a fine farm
+belonging to an old bachelor named Steele, who was very anxious that
+we should raise money to pay for the damage to his crops. He did not
+succeed, his uninvited guests being ragged and penniless. On the 17th
+we reached Sangster&#8217;s Station, Orange and Alexandria Railroad. Here
+the Corps formed in line of battle, facing towards Bull Run.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;After maneuvering and countermarching the command started on the
+20th through Bull Run and Gainesville to Thoroughfare Gap, where we
+arrived at midnight. The last part of the march was very severe, and
+in the darkness men frequently stumbled over rocks, and into ditches.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Second Corps remained at this place guarding the pass until the
+morning of June 25th. Two miles below this point there was a less
+frequented road, but one easy of access, which was effectually
+blocked up for some time to come by a detachment from the Brigade,
+who were furnished with axes, with which trees were felled in large
+numbers and thrown across the road.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;After leaving Thoroughfare Gap the Division was assailed by a
+battery while marching through Hay Market. Before this was silenced a
+few of the command were killed and wounded. Passing through Cub Run
+the column crossed the Potomac at Edward&#8217;s Ferry at eleven o&#8217;clock on
+the night of June 26th.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The next day the march was continued beyond Barnestown, Maryland;
+and on the 28th our Corps arrived two miles from Frederick, where the
+Brigade was ordered to establish a picket covering the right of the
+Corps near the Monocacy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;On the day of our arrival at this point General Hooker, at his own
+request, was relieved from command, and Major-General George G.
+Meade, commanding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> the Fifth Corps, was designated as
+Commander-in-Chief in his stead. There were other changes made of
+subordinate commanders at the same time. Among these was the
+assignment of Brigadier-General Alexander S. Webb to command the
+Second Brigade as successor to Brigadier-General Owen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;General Webb, although an officer of note in the regular service,
+was unknown to the majority of the command, but his force of
+character and personal gallantry soon won the regard of the Brigade
+to as great an extent as that obtained by any of his predecessors.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The advance of the Second Corps was begun early on the morning of
+June 29th, and, with but few halts, it was continued throughout the
+day. After tramping through the stifling dust under a burning sun, in
+heavy marching order, a distance of more than 31 miles, Uniontown was
+reached, where the troops remained during the 30th. On July 1st the
+advance was again resumed until a point four miles from Gettysburg
+was reached, where a halt was made.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>Thus it was the Philadelphia Brigade reached Gettysburg, after marching
+about 170 miles from Falmouth to Gettysburg, in mid-summer, under a
+blazing sun, with dust ankle-deep, as the rear guard of the Army of the
+Potomac, obstructing roads while on the march, silencing batteries of the
+enemy, performing picket duty, and doing the rear-guard work for a great
+army, and when on the march making from 20 to 30 miles a day&mdash;on June 29th
+marching more than 31 miles&mdash;and on July 1st marching from Uniontown, 20
+miles distant, to within four miles of Gettysburg. On the morning of July
+2d, at early dawn, marched a distance of four miles, placed in position at
+Cemetery Ridge, and taking part in the second day&#8217;s battle, as herewith
+further described by Colonel Banes:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>&#8220;On July 2d, at early dawn, the Corps was moved to the front and
+placed in position along Cemetery Ridge, connecting on its right with
+the left of Howard&#8217;s Corps; while the Third Corps, under Sickles, was
+ordered to connect on the left and extend to Round Top.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Philadelphia Brigade, before taking its place in line, was
+massed on the edge of a wood, near the Taneytown Road, and a field
+return was made by the adjutant of each regiment. Out of the entire
+number present for duty when General Webb assumed command at
+Frederick, there were but 13 men absent without leave; and some of
+these, who had given out on the march, rejoined their comrades before
+the action.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By order of General Gibbon, commanding the Division, the
+Philadelphia Brigade was put in position at six and a half o&#8217;clock
+A. M. on the 2d, on Granite Ridge, on the right of the Division, its
+right resting on Cushing&#8217;s Battery A, Fourth United States Artillery,
+and its left on Battery B, First Rhode Island Artillery, Lieutenant
+Brown commanding. The 69th Regiment was placed behind a fence, a
+little in advance of the ridge, the remaining three regiments of the
+Brigade under cover of the hill in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Immediately after assuming this position, a detail, ordered from
+each regiment, was advanced as skirmishers beyond the Emmettsburg
+Road and parallel with the Confederate line of battle on Seminary
+Ridge. This disposition was scarcely completed before the enemy
+opened with sharpshooters and artillery.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A few hundred yards in front of our line of battle and towards the
+left, a farm house and buildings were located. To prevent these
+affording cover to the enemy, they were occupied by the Brigade
+pioneers, with orders to destroy them upon a signal from General
+Webb. During the fight of Sickles the Brigade skirmishers were
+engaged for an hour with those of the enemy, both parties suffering
+losses, but neither giving ground. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> contest was in full view of
+the entire Corps, and the manly bearing of their comrades was a
+matter of pride to the men of the Philadelphia Brigade. That portion
+of the field lying between Granite and Seminary Ridge being an open
+plain without trees or shelter, the contests of our skirmishers were
+literally a series of duels fought with rifles at an easy range.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8216;The enemy made the assault on the 2d at about six and a half P. M.
+Their line of battle advanced beyond one gun of Brown&#8217;s Battery,
+receiving at that point the fire of the 69th, of the 71st, advanced
+to the support of the 69th, of the 72d and of the 106th, which had
+previously been moved to the left by command of General Hancock.
+Colonel Baxter at this time was wounded. The enemy maneuvred and fell
+back, pursued by the 106th, 72d and part of the 71st. The 72d and
+106th followed them to the Emmettsburg Road, capturing and sending to
+the rear about 250 prisoners, among whom were one colonel, five
+captains and fifteen lieutenants.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The assault, thus officially reported by Webb, was executed with
+much celerity, and when the column of the enemy burst forth from the
+woods on Seminary Ridge, it seemed but a few moments before the
+Emmettsburg Road was crossed, and our skirmishers driven like leaves
+before the wind. As the Confederates advanced, Brown&#8217;s Battery, with
+the exception of one gun, was withdrawn to the rear of the 69th. Over
+this piece there was a fierce struggle, but the fire of the Brigade
+was terribly severe, causing the enemy to hesitate and then fall
+back. Those of the Confederates in the lead threw down their guns and
+cried out with an oath: &#8216;Get us out of this; it is too hot here.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And now a countercharge was made by the Philadelphia Brigade, along
+with those of other Brigades; the assaulting column was rolled back
+almost as quickly as it had advanced. The skirmish line was reformed
+on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> its old connection, and shortly after, night coming on, the fight
+on our portion of the line was over for the 2d of July.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The pioneers in their exposed position were made prisoners by the
+enemy, and the guard left by the captors remained at the farm house
+with their charge, intending to move to the rear as soon as the heavy
+firing was over. This decision was fortunate for our detail, but
+unfortunate for the enemy, as the advance of Webb&#8217;s regiments swept
+by the improvised guard house and changed the relation of its
+occupants.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The 106th Regiment was ordered to report to General Howard, who
+placed it on the right of the Baltimore Pike, near Rickett&#8217;s Battery,
+where it remained until the close of the battle. This regiment was
+highly complimented by General Howard.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;On the morning of July 3d the 69th Regiment occupied the same line
+at the fence in front of the clump of trees on the ridge that it held
+the day before, while the 71st was deployed and connected with its
+right. One wing of the 71st was stationed at the fence, while the
+other was behind a stone wall to the right and rear. The 72d was held
+in reserve, forming a second line to the left of Brown&#8217;s Battery, and
+in the rear of Colonel Hall&#8217;s Third Brigade.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;After the contest at Culp&#8217;s Hill there was a momentary pause in the
+operations of both armies. This unusual calm was only broken by an
+occasional gun, or the discharge of a sharpshooter&#8217;s rifle. About one
+o&#8217;clock, when the men were wondering what the next movement would be
+in this great battle, a single Whitworth gun was fired from the
+extreme left of Seminary Ridge, a distance of three miles. The bolt
+just reached the right of our Brigade. Then at intervals along the
+entire line solitary shots were fired, as if intended for signal guns
+of preparation. These were quickly <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>followed by others, and in a few
+moments there burst forth from the whole Confederate line a most
+terrific fire of artillery. One hundred and twenty guns concentrated
+their fire on that portion of Meade&#8217;s position held by the Second
+Division, Second Corps. Shell, round shot, Whitworth bolts, and
+spherical case were flying over and exploding about us at the same
+time. Almost every second ten of these missiles were in the air;
+each, as it went speeding on its message of death, indicating its
+form by a peculiar sound. The shrieking of shells, or the heavy thud
+of round shot, were easily distinguished from the rotary whizzing of
+the Whitworth bolt.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When these agents of destruction commenced their horrid work, no
+portion of the line, from the front to a point far in the rear of the
+Taneytown Road, afforded any protection against their fury. Men who
+had been struck while serving the guns and were limping towards the
+hospital, were frequently wounded again before they had gone a
+hundred yards.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;In spite of the ghastly forms of mangled men and horses, and in
+spite of the dismantled guns, exploding limbers, and other scenes of
+horror, produced by Lee&#8217;s attack, the guns of Meade roared back their
+defiance; while the infantry, powerless for the moment, rested on
+their arms awaiting the bayonet charge they knew was sure to follow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Webb reports: &#8216;By a quarter to three o&#8217;clock the enemy had silenced
+the Rhode Island Battery, all the guns but one of Cushing&#8217;s Battery,
+and had plainly shown, by his concentration of fire on this and the
+Third Brigade, that an important assault was to be expected. I had
+sent, at two P. M., the Adjutant-General of the Brigade for two
+batteries to replace Cushing&#8217;s and Brown&#8217;s. Just before the assault,
+Captain Wheeler&#8217;s First New York Artillery had got into position on
+the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span> left in the place occupied by the Rhode Island Battery, which
+had retired with the loss of all its officers but one.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;When the New York Battery arrived and went into action, Lieutenant
+Cushing had but one of his guns left, and it was served by men of the
+71st Regiment. The Lieutenant had been struck by a fragment of shell,
+but stood by his piece as calmly as if on parade, and as the
+Confederate infantry commenced to emerge from the woods opposite,
+Cushing quietly said, &#8216;Webb, I will give them one shot more;
+good-bye.&#8217; The gun was loaded by the California men, and run down to
+the fence near the 69th, and at the moment of the last discharge,
+just as the enemy reached the line, the brave Cushing fell mortally
+wounded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;At three o&#8217;clock the enemy&#8217;s line of battle left the woods in our
+front, moved in perfect order across the Emmettsburg Road, formed in
+the hollow of our immediate front several lines of battle under a
+fire of spherical case-shot from Wheeler&#8217;s Battery and Cushing&#8217;s gun,
+and advanced for the assault.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Union batteries increased their fire as rapidly as possible, but
+this did not for a moment delay the determined advance. The rude gaps
+torn by the shells and case-shot were closed as quickly as they were
+made. As new batteries opened, the additional fire created no
+confusion in the ranks of the enemy; its only apparent effect was to
+mark the pathway over the mile of advance with the dead and dying.
+None who saw this magnificent charge of Pickett&#8217;s column, composed of
+thousands of brave men, could refrain from admiring its grandeur. As
+they approached the rail fence their formation was irregular, and
+near the front and centre were crowded together the regimental colors
+of the entire division; the scene strangely illustrated the divine
+words, &#8216;Terrible as an army with banners.&#8217;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>&#8220;Now our men close up their ranks and await the struggle. The
+Seventy-second, by direction of Webb, is double-quicked from its
+position on the left and fills the gap on the ridge where Cushing&#8217;s
+Battery had been in action. Just at this moment Pickett&#8217;s men reach
+the line occupied by the Sixty-ninth and the left companies of the
+Seventy-first. General Armistead, commanding the leading brigade,
+composed principally of Virginians, in advance of his men, swinging
+his hat on his sword, cries out, &#8216;Boys, give them the cold steel!&#8217;
+Just then the white trefoil on the caps of our men is recognized, and
+Armistead&#8217;s men exclaim, &#8216;The Army of the Potomac! Do they call these
+militia?&#8217;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The final effort for success now commences. The advance companies of
+the Seventy-first are literally crowded out of their places by the
+enemy, and, with one company of the Sixty-ninth, they form with the
+remainder of Colonel Smith&#8217;s command at the stone fence. At the same
+instant Colonel Hall&#8217;s Third Brigade and the regiments of the First
+under Devereaux and other officers, as if by instinct, rush to Webb&#8217;s
+assistance, while Colonel Stannard moves two regiments of the Vermont
+Brigade to strike the attacking column in the flank.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And now is the moment when the battle rages most furiously.
+Armistead, with a hundred and fifty of his Virginians, is inside our
+lines; only a few paces from our Brigade Commander, they look each
+other in the face. The artillery of the enemy ceases to fire, and the
+gunners of their batteries are plainly seen standing on their
+caissons to view the result, hoping for success, while Pettigrew&#8217;s
+Division, failing to support Pickett, halts as if terrified at the
+scene. This is the soldiers&#8217; part of the fight; tactics and
+alignments are thrown to one side. No effort is made to preserve a
+formation. Union men are intermingled with the enemy, and in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span> some
+cases surrounded by them, but refusing to surrender. Rifles, bayonets
+and clubbed muskets are freely used, and men on both sides rapidly
+fall.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This struggle lasts but a few moments, when the enemy in the front
+throw down their arms, and rushing through the line of the
+Seventy-second, hasten to the rear as prisoners without a guard,
+while others of the column who might have escaped, unwilling to risk
+a retreat over the path by which they came, surrendered. The battle
+is over, the last attack of Lee at Gettysburg is repulsed, and the
+highest wave of the Rebellion has reached its farthest limit, ever
+after to recede.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;General Armistead, who was in the Confederate front, fell mortally
+wounded, close to the colors of the Seventy-second. One of the men of
+that regiment, who was near him, asked permission of the writer (Col.
+Chas. H. Banes, Adjutant Philadelphia Brigade), to carry him out of
+the battle, saying, &#8216;He has called for help as THE SON OF A WIDOW, an
+order was given to take him to an ambulance, and when his revolver
+was removed from his belt, it was seen that he had obeyed his own
+command, &#8216;to give them the cold steel,&#8217; as no shot had been fired
+from it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;At the close of Gen. Webb&#8217;s official report he states, &#8216;The Brigade
+captured nearly one thousand prisoners and six battle flags, and
+picked up fourteen hundred stand of arms and nine hundred sets of
+accoutrements. The loss was forty-three officers and four hundred and
+fifty-two men, and only forty-seven were missing. The conduct of this
+Brigade was most satisfactory.&#8217;&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>Compare the calm, temperate, lucid, truthful and dignified statement of
+Colonel Banes, who, as the Adjutant of the Philadelphia (Webb&#8217;s) Brigade,
+was more familiar with its every movement than any officer or private
+soldier could possibly be; a statement prepared with <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>deliberation by a
+man of mature years, and ripened judgment, with that of the raving,
+distracted, ridiculous utterances of the youthful Lieut. Haskell, in his
+book said to have been hastily written within two weeks after the battle,
+written between his hours of duty, while on the march from Gettysburg back
+to Harper&#8217;s Ferry, written by him while not yet fully recovered from the
+delirium of excitement that overcame him in the exalted position he claims
+to have assumed, that of Supersedeas Commander of the Army of the Potomac
+to annihilate the Confederate Army, in the event of its renewing the
+attack.</p>
+
+<p>It was the author Haskell who asked this question of Lieut. Haskell:</p>
+
+<p class="blockquot">&#8220;Great heavens! were my senses mad?&mdash;the larger portion of Webb&#8217;s
+Brigade&mdash;my God! it is true, was breaking from the cover of the works,
+without order or reason, with no hand uplifted to check them, was falling
+back a fear-stricken flock of confusion. A GREAT, MAGNIFICENT PASSION
+OVERCAME ME as I met the tide of these rabbits,&#8221; and a lot more of such
+incoherent, disconnected trash, from the young Lieutenant so OVERCOME WITH
+A MAGNIFICENT PASSION that the aberration of mind which followed while
+writing that narrative was inevitable.</p>
+
+<p>Col. Banes says, &#8220;This struggle lasted but a few moments, when the enemy
+in front threw down their arms, and, rushing through the lines of the
+Seventy-second hastened to the rear as prisoners without a guard.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was these men of Pickett&#8217;s Division hastening to the rear whom Haskell
+met, if ever he met any one fleeing to the rear on that occasion; but
+&#8220;Great heavens! his senses were mad.&#8221; A &#8220;Magnificent Passion&#8221; overcame
+him. He was in a delirium of vainglory, and he mistook the defeated
+Veterans of Pickett&#8217;s Division, seeking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> shelter from impending death, for
+the victorious Veterans of the Philadelphia Brigade, and the Military
+Order, Loyal Legion, Commandery of Massachusetts, and the History
+Commission of Wisconsin, also apparently overcome with a &#8220;Magnificent
+Passion&#8221; for book publishing, reprinted his &#8220;Narrative&#8221; to the world, as
+their adopted waif and heir.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<p>It has been asked, what could have been Haskell&#8217;s object in so perverting
+the facts of history relative to the Battle of Gettysburg? Gen. Henry S.
+Hindekoper, of Philadelphia, who won high renown in the battle, aptly
+answers the question in the statement made by him, wherein he said of
+Haskell&#8217;s &#8220;Narrative,&#8221; that &#8220;from a historical standpoint it is inaccurate
+and misleading, and from an ethical standpoint it is indecent, venemous,
+scandalous and VAINGLORIOUS.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>After describing the first day&#8217;s fight as minutely as though he had
+observed it all from the cupola of the Seminary Building on Seminary
+Ridge, Haskell thus seeks to acquit himself from all misstatements by
+saying: &#8220;Of the events of the first day of July I do not speak from
+personal knowledge.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At two o&#8217;clock in the afternoon of July 1st, Haskell was at Taneytown, 13
+miles distant from Gettysburg, and between 8 and 9 o&#8217;clock in the evening
+the Second Corps was halted four miles south of Gettysburg, where it, and
+Lieut. Haskell, biouvacked for the night; therefore&mdash;except detracting
+from officers and men who rendered heroic service&mdash;no glory came to
+Haskell on the first day. He &#8220;did not see what he thought he saw.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At early dawn on July 2d Hancock&#8217;s Corps was moved forward about four
+miles, and at 6.30 A. M. was placed in position on Cemetery Ridge. The
+Third Division (Hayes), on the right, connecting with the left of Howard&#8217;s
+Eleventh Corps; the First Division (Caldwell&#8217;s),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> on the left, connecting
+with the right of Sickles, Third Corps, and the Second Division (Gibbon),
+in the centre, and Haskell started in early on the second day to catch
+fame, and thus, according to his own &#8220;Narrative,&#8221; he succeeded:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;A bullet entered the chest of my horse, &#8216;Billy,&#8217; just in front of my
+left leg; a kick from a hitched horse in the dark that would likely
+have broken my ankle if it had not been for a very thick boot, but
+which did break my temper, and a bullet from a sharp shooter that
+hissed by my cheek so close that I felt the movement of the air
+distinctly.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>And thus the &#8220;Narrative&#8221; recites as to the third and last day of the
+battle:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;I had been struck upon the thigh by a bullet which I think must have
+glanced and partially spent its force upon my saddle. It had pierced
+the thick cloth of my trousers, and two thicknesses of underclothing,
+but had not broken the skin, leaving me with an enormous bruise, that
+for a time benumbed the entire leg. At the time of receiving it, I
+heard the thump, and noticed it, and the hole in the cloth into which
+I thrust my finger, and I experienced a feeling of relief when I
+found that my leg was not pierced.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>We shudder when we think what might have happened to that leg, if the
+bullet, when it saw Haskell, had not so kindly glanced and spent its force
+on his saddle before piercing the thick cloth of his breeches, and the two
+thicknesses of his underclothing.</p>
+
+<p>The second and third days brought scant renown to such an ambitious
+officer as First Lieut. Haskell, but immortal fame is very chary with her
+favors. She tries a man long, and she tries him hard, before wreathing his
+brow with the laurel of victory, and fitting him for a <ins class="correction" title="original: ">niche</ins> in the Temple
+of Fame. Haskell realized all this at the close of the battle on this
+afternoon of July third,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> and he evidently concluded to create a niche for
+himself in the holy of holies by a page or two of romance in his
+&#8220;Narrative,&#8221; and so he planned it all out.</p>
+
+<p>Haskell knew&mdash;none better than he&mdash;that the Philadelphia Brigade met and
+repulsed the brunt of the charge of Pickett&#8217;s Division, but he would
+immortalize himself as a hero by recording in his &#8220;Narrative,&#8221; that the
+Brigade broke from the &#8220;Bloody Angle&#8221; without orders or reason, with no
+uplifted hand of Webb, or Banes, or Dennis O&#8217;Kane, or Martin Tschudy, or
+R. Penn Smith, or Theodore Hesser to check them; that he, Haskell, met
+them, &#8220;a tide of rabbits,&#8221; and ordered them to halt, to about face, and to
+fire, and hearing his voice they obeyed his command, and he led them back
+to glorious victory, and that he&mdash;as the one solitary horseman between the
+lines, only 40 yards from the enemy&mdash;repulsed Longstreet&#8217;s Corps, and
+thereby, therein and thereon ended the great conflict at Gettysburg.</p>
+
+<p>It was such a ridiculous page of fiction that if Haskell had survived the
+vicissitudes of war, he would have eliminated it, and if he died before
+the close of the Civil War&mdash;as he did&mdash;he would trust to luck; he trusted
+aright, for a Loyal Legion concluded to continue the fiction, thereby
+placing its laurel on Haskell&#8217;s brow, crowning HIM the Hero of Gettysburg;
+and a State History Commission concluded to fill a niche in the Temple of
+the Immortals with the name and fame of First Lieutenant Frank Aretas
+Haskell, but not until fifty years after the fiction had been written,
+when few were left to refute that romance of the most vainglorious soldier
+of the Civil War.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">AN OFFICIAL STATEMENT OF THE LOSS OF THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE.</p>
+
+<p>The total number of officers and men present for duty of the Philadelphia
+Brigade, at the Battle of Gettysburg,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> was 1,573, and the total loss was
+491, given in detail, as to regiments in the annexed tables:</p>
+
+<p class="center"><br />NUMBER PRESENT FOR DUTY</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
+<tr><td class="btrl" align="center">REGIMENTS</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">OFFICERS</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">MEN</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">TOTAL</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="btrl">General Staff</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">4</span></td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">&mdash;</span></td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">4</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="brl">69th</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">22</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">312</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">344</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="brl">71st</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">27</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">366</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">393</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="brl">72nd</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">26</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">447</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">473</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="brl">106th</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">30</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">313</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">343</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bbrl">Brigade Band</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">&mdash;</span></td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">16</span></td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: 1em;">16</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bbrl"><span style="margin-left: 2em;">Totals</span></td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">119</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">1454</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">1573</td></tr></table>
+
+
+<p class="center"><br />LOSS OF PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE AND SECOND CORPS AT GETTYSBURG.</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
+<tr><td class="btr" align="center" rowspan="2">No.<br />of<br />Regt.</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" colspan="2">No. of Killed</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" colspan="2">No. of Wounded</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" colspan="2">Missing</td>
+ <td class="bt" align="center">Totals</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="btr" align="center">Officers</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Men</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Officers</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Men</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Officers</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Men</td>
+ <td class="bt">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="btr">69th</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">4</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">36</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">8</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">72</span></td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">2</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">15</td>
+ <td class="bt" align="center">137</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">71st</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">2</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">19</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">3</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">55</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">3</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">16</td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">98</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="br">72nd</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">2</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">42</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">7</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">139</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">2</span></td>
+ <td class="dent" align="center">192</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bbr">106th</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">1</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">8</span></td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">9</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">45</span></td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">&mdash;</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">1</span></td>
+ <td class="bb" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">64</span></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bbr" align="center">Totals</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">9</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">105</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">27</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">211</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">5</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">34</td>
+ <td class="bb" align="center">491</td></tr></table>
+
+
+<p class="center"><br />TOTAL LOSS SECOND CORPS.</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
+<tr><td class="btr" align="center" colspan="2">No. of Killed</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" colspan="2">No. of Wounded</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" colspan="2">Captured or Missing</td>
+ <td class="bt" align="center">Total</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="btr" align="center">Officers</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Men</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Officers</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Men</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Officers</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">Men</td>
+ <td class="bt">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bbtr" align="center">66</td>
+ <td class="bbtr" align="center">731</td>
+ <td class="bbtr" align="center">270</td>
+ <td class="bbtr" align="center">2923</td>
+ <td class="bbtr" align="center">13</td>
+ <td class="bbtr" align="center">365</td>
+ <td class="bbt">4369</td></tr></table>
+
+<p><br />The following table, furnished by our beloved Comrade, Sylvester Byrne,
+was the last letter the Philadelphia Brigade Association ever received
+from that noble<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> soul&mdash;that Comrade who loved his Regiment and Brigade
+with ardent and unfaltering affection. To the very last he was faithful to
+and watchful of his Command. The statement was furnished for the purpose
+of correcting some errors relative to the actual losses of the
+Philadelphia Brigade. The table is printed just as it was given by Comrade
+Byrne, and is regarded as his sacred contribution to the Brigade&#8217;s reply
+to Haskell&#8217;s charge of cowardice:</p>
+
+<p class="center"><br />TABLE SHOWING THE LOSSES OF THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE FROM 1861 TO 1865.</p>
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="table">
+<tr><td class="btrl" align="center" valign="bottom">Regt.</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" valign="bottom">Killed</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" valign="bottom">Wounded</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" valign="bottom">Missing</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" valign="bottom">Died of<br />Disease</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" valign="bottom">Died of<br />Other Causes</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center" valign="bottom">Total</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="btrl">69th</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">178</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">346</span></td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">185</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">91</span></td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">15</td>
+ <td class="btr" align="center">815</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="brl">71st</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">140</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">396</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">330</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">91</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">6</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">963</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="brl">72nd</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">195</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">558</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">165</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">60</span></td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">10</td>
+ <td class="br" align="center">988</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bbrl">106th</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">99</span></td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">416</span></td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">157</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center"><span style="margin-left: .5em;">81</span></td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">14</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">767</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="bbrl" align="center">Totals</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">612</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">1716</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">837</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">323</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">45</td>
+ <td class="bbr" align="center">3533</td></tr></table>
+
+<p><br />The total loss in killed, wounded and missing of the Philadelphia Brigade
+at Gettysburg was over 32 per cent., about one soldier slain to every
+three engaged in the battle. Call you this &#8220;running like rabbits?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The total loss of the Philadelphia Brigade during the Civil War was 3,533,
+of which number 545 were killed, wounded and missing at Antietam, the
+remaining loss of nearly three thousand was sustained in the 45
+engagements in which the Brigade took part, and yet with the evidence of
+this loss, furnished by the United States Government and easily accessible
+to all, and on file in the library of the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts,
+that Order appears to stand sponsor for a &#8220;Narrative&#8221; which falsely
+proclaimed to the world that the brave men of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> Philadelphia Brigade
+&#8220;ran like rabbits&#8221; from Pickett&#8217;s Division at Gettysburg.</p>
+
+<p>What more need be said to convince this Military Order of the Loyal Legion
+that from the beginning to the end, the Philadelphia Brigade was just as
+loyal, just as brave, just as heroic, as they, our comrades, and with this
+statement of facts the Association of Survivors of the Philadelphia
+Brigade calls upon the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, Commandery of
+Massachusetts, and the History Commission of Wisconsin, to retract the
+statement made in the volumes published by them during the year 1908, as
+to cowardice.</p>
+
+<p>In meeting and repulsing the charge of Pickett&#8217;s Division at the Bloody
+Angle of Gettysburg, the High Water Mark of the Civil War, the
+Philadelphia Brigade gained imperishable fame that will live in history as
+long as our country will exist as a nation, and that renown is so
+irrevocably fixed in the annals of the War that it can never be impaired
+while time itself shall last.</p>
+
+<p>Since the foregoing reply was formulated, to the charge of cowardice made
+under the auspices of the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts, the Philadelphia
+Brigade Association has received a book of 185 pages, entitled &#8220;The Battle
+of Gettysburg, by Frank Aretas Haskell, Wisconsin History Commission,
+Reprint No. 1,&#8221; an edition of 2,500 copies, printed under authority of the
+State of Wisconsin. In printing this book these words appear in the
+preface:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;The Wisconsin History Commission has, in accordance with its fixed
+policy, reverted to the original edition, which is here presented
+entire, exactly as first printed.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>And this is what that &#8220;History Commission&#8221; records on pages 9 and 10
+regarding the Eleventh Corps:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Between three and four o&#8217;clock in the afternoon the enemy, now in
+overwhelming force, resumed the battle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> with spirit. The portion of
+the Eleventh Corps making but feeble opposition to the advancing
+enemy, soon began to fall back. Back in disorganized masses they fled
+into the town, hotly pursued, and in lanes, in barns, in yards and
+cellars, throwing away their arms, they sought to hide like rabbits,
+and were captured, unresisting, by hundreds.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>The Loyal Legion of Massachusetts hadn&#8217;t the courage to print that
+paragraph in their book.</p>
+
+<p>These regiments formed the Eleventh Corps at Gettysburg: 17th Conn., 82d
+Ill., 33d Mass., 41st, 45th, 54th, 58th, 68th, 75th, 119th, 134th, 136th,
+154th and 157th New York; 27th, 73d, 74th and 153d Penna.; 25th, 55th,
+61st, 73d, 75th, 82d and 107th Ohio, and 26th Wisconsin. How do the
+Survivors of these Regiments regard the statement of the History
+Commission of Wisconsin, that &#8220;they sought to hide like rabbits?&#8221; and that
+the loss usually sustained by the Eleventh Corps was in prisoners?</p>
+
+<p>And this is how the great State of Wisconsin, through its History
+Commission, maligns General Sickles and President Lincoln, who put upon
+General Sickles&#8217; shoulders the stars of a Major-General. (Pages 40 and
+41.) The Loyal Legion of Massachusetts eliminated the slander against Gen.
+Sickles and President Lincoln.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;General Sickles commenced to advance his whole corps, from the
+general line, straight to the front, with a view to occupy the second
+ridge, along and near the road. What his purpose could have been is
+past conjecture. It was not ordered by General Meade, as I heard him
+say, and he disapproved as soon as it was made known to him. Generals
+Hancock and Gibbon, as they saw the move in progress, criticised its
+propriety sharply, as I know, and foretold quite accurately what
+would be the result. I suppose the truth probably is that General
+Sickles supposed he was doing for the best; but he was neither born<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+nor bred a soldier. But one can scarcely tell what may have been the
+motives of such a man, a politician, and some other things, exclusive
+of the BARTON KEY affair, a man after show and notoriety, and
+newspaper fame, and the adulation of the mob, there is a grave
+responsibility on those in whose hands are the lives of ten thousand
+men; AND ON THOSE WHO PUT STARS ON MEN&#8217;S SHOULDERS, TOO! Bah! I
+kindle when I see some things I have to see.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is understood in the Army that the President thanked the slayer
+of Barton Key for SAVING THE DAY at Gettysburg. Does the country know
+any better than the President that Meade, Hancock and Gibbon were
+entitled to some little share of such credit?&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>It is inconceivable that the great State of Wisconsin would in any way
+lend herself to the dissemination of what is not only untrustworthy, but
+absolutely scandalous, malevolent and false information, except it was
+done in ignorance of facts. It is still more inconceivable that the Loyal
+Legion of Massachusetts, soldiers themselves, would act as sponsors or in
+any way help, aid or assist in depriving fellow soldiers of the honors
+fairly and bravely won in a battle where their loss was 491 of a total of
+less than 1,500 men, except they had given no heed to the statements
+before publication.</p>
+
+<p>We believe that the State of Wisconsin and the Loyal Legion of
+Massachusetts can do no less as American citizens and soldiers than to
+promptly disclaim all responsibility for the statements set forth in
+Lieut. Haskell&#8217;s book. For however good Haskell&#8217;s record as a soldier is,
+yet the fact must clearly appear to every intelligent mind that a man who
+would speak falsely of his superior officers and even go so far&mdash;at least
+in one case (Sickles)&mdash;as to bring to life out of the long dead past, a
+sad, sad epoch, which was no fault of his&mdash;displays in such writing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> a
+spirit unworthy of any American; and his self laudation of what he
+did&mdash;would cause anyone who was ever on a field of battle to use one of
+Haskell&#8217;s expressions, &#8220;Bah.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A refusal to make this public disclaimer we feel would place both the
+State of Wisconsin and Loyal Legion of Massachusetts in a position which,
+to say it very mildly, would be the reverse of creditable, and put them in
+the attitude of sharing the ridicule and contempt which the narrative of
+Lieutenant Haskell deserves.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p class="center">NOTES, CORRESPONDENCE AND REMARKS.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">NOTE NO. 1.</p>
+
+<p>This letter from General Alex. S. Webb is made a part of this paper:</p>
+
+<p class="center">NEW YORK MONUMENTS COMMISSION<br />BATTLE FIELDS OF GETTYSBURG AND<br />
+CHATANOOGA<br />RIVERDALE-ON-HUDSON<br />NEW YORK.</p>
+
+<p class="right">September 7, 1909.</p>
+
+<p>My dear Frazier:</p>
+
+<p>I could not find your address, but I had Dampman&#8217;s, and wrote to him to
+try and obtain action on Haskell&#8217;s book which is now circulated by the
+thousands to take from our Brigade and its Commander all the glory and
+reputation we acquired at the Bloody Angle of Gettysburg.</p>
+
+<p>So make it certain that our answer to the Massachusetts Commandery be
+strong and clear. What Haskell wrote he wrote in ignorance. He paraded
+with the stragglers and prisoners behind a fighting Brigade and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> thought
+he was leading a Division.</p>
+
+<p>Now, Frazier, let this denial of Haskell&#8217;s claim be strong and yet
+courteous. He is dead. Gibbon is dead. Hancock dead. What a time to
+proclaim this falsehood.</p>
+
+<p><span style="margin-left: 4em;">Sincerely yours,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">(Signed) ALEX. S. WEBB,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Brevet Maj. General, U. S. A.</span></p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">NOTE NO. 2.</p>
+
+<p class="center">WHAT LINCOLN SAID.</p>
+
+<p>It was Abraham Lincoln who said at the dedication of the National Cemetery at Gettysburg:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we
+cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled
+here, have consecrated it far above our power to add or detract. The world
+will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never
+forget what they did here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And yet the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, Commandery of
+Massachusetts, and the Wisconsin History Commission, in so far as they
+authorized, or are responsible for the publication of the Haskell
+&#8220;Narrative&#8221; of the Battle of Gettysburg, are surely, surely doing what
+they can to detract from what the living and the dead did there.</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">NOTE NO. 3.</p>
+
+<p class="center">FOR CAREFUL CONSIDERATION.</p>
+
+<p>A typewritten copy of this reply of the Philadelphia Brigade Association,
+before being placed in the hands of the printer, was sent to the Military
+Order of the Loyal Legion, Commandery of Massachusetts; to the Wisconsin
+History Commission, and to the Governor of Wisconsin, asking if they had
+any explanation to make as to the statements contained in Haskell&#8217;s
+&#8220;Narrative,&#8221;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> advising them that we would gladly give it in our printed
+book.</p>
+
+<p>As yet no reply has been received from the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts,
+and for this grave discourtesy we are at a loss to account, unless it be
+that after consideration the facts submitted did not warrant them in
+defending the position in which they were placed, and to acknowledge
+themselves in error would, to some extent, at least, stultify themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The Governor of Wisconsin, who is an ex-officio member of the Wisconsin
+History Commission, writes under date of February 24, 1910, scarcely
+referring at all to the matter under consideration, i. e., the conduct of
+the Philadelphia Brigade in the Battle of Gettysburg. He does, however,
+say that the purpose of the Commission is to publish such material as from
+considerations of rarity or general excellence it is deemed desirable to
+disseminate. Haskell&#8217;s book certainly comes under one of these classes. We
+do not believe that among any writings of either Union men or Confederates
+in all the United States, such a rare book as Haskell&#8217;s can be found. The
+Governor of Wisconsin says that Haskell in his story to his brother puts
+down in his letter &#8220;what he saw, or thought he saw.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It would seem that comment on this is useless. That history should be what
+the writer &#8220;saw, OR THOUGHT HE SAW,&#8221; is at least novel.</p>
+
+<p>Chas. E. Estabrook, a Comrade of the Grand Army, and its representative on
+the Wisconsin History Commission, and its chairman, under date of February
+17, 1910, while writing a somewhat lengthy letter, neglects, also, to
+write of the matter under consideration, but says, among other things:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;The subject of the criticism of the Eleventh Corps, by Haskell, in
+his account of Gettysburg, was considered by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> me, and I contemplated
+writing notes, OR GIVING THE LATER, AND WHAT I THINK THE MORE
+ACCURATE VIEW. I, however, concluded, in view of the rule which we
+adopted, to have the other and later account of the Battle of
+Gettysburg prepared by a Wisconsin man, from the Wisconsin point of
+view, and some months ago asked a staff officer, who served in that
+Corps, to write an account of the Eleventh Corps at Gettysburg, which
+he consented to do. This will be published as soon as practicable
+after the same is delivered to the Commission.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>It would seem from this that Chairman Estabrook, Past Department
+Commander, of Wisconsin, Grand Army of the Republic, does not believe the
+statement made by Haskell in his &#8220;Narrative,&#8221; and that it is necessary to
+have another book published to state truthfully what the Eleventh Corps
+did. It would seem that it is also needless to make any comment on the
+position taken by Comrade Estabrook, Chairman of the Wisconsin History
+Commission. It is to be hoped that this staff officer&#8217;s book will be
+written from the stand-point of what he saw, and not from what he thought
+he saw.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center"><br />THE HISTORY COMMISSION&#8217;S VIEW.</p>
+
+<p>Reuben G. Thwaites, Secretary and Editor of the Wisconsin History
+Commission, speaking for the Commission, writes thus:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;OPINIONS, OR ERRORS OF FACT, on the part of the respective authors
+represented, both in original narratives and in reprints issued by
+the Commission HAVE NOT, NOR WILL THEY BE MODIFIED BY THE LATTER. For
+all statements of whatever character, the author alone is
+responsible.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Could any plainer statement than the foregoing be phrased in the
+English language, to indicate that this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> Commission certainly does
+not endorse whatever criticisms may have contemporaneously been
+offered by Lieutenant Haskell?&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>As the question has been asked us we reply: As Haskell has been dead for
+more than 45 years, and the foul slanders were made public by the
+Wisconsin History Commission in November, 1908, defaming President
+Lincoln, Generals Sickles, Howard, Doubleday, Barlow, Schurz, Geary, Webb,
+Banes and other officers, and thousands of brave soldiers, it certainly
+does look to the Comrades of the Philadelphia Brigade as though the
+Wisconsin History fully endorsed everything that Haskell wrote. Just how
+the Corps, Brigade and Regimental Associations, Grand Army Posts, Loyal
+Legion Commanderies, public libraries, the newspaper press, and others to
+whom this &#8220;Reply&#8221; will be sent will regard the actions of the Wisconsin
+Commission and the Massachusetts Loyal Legion has yet to be determined.</p>
+
+<p>Writing further, Secretary and Editor Thwaites says:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;If Haskell&#8217;s account was worth reprinting at all (and we thought it
+well worth doing), the only course open to us, as historians, was to
+present it just as it was originally issued, and not in the
+emasculated form adopted by the Dartmouth editor, and the
+Massachusetts Loyal Legion; changes of such character in a
+contemporary document are unwarranted, and utterly ruin it as
+historical material.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>As this seems to be a question of ethics between history makers, it is up
+to the Dartmouth editor, and the Massachusetts Loyal Legion to satisfy the
+Wisconsin Commission why the unwarranted emasculation was made of the
+Haskell &#8220;Narrative.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Wisconsin History Commission concludes its letter of explanation and
+excuse to the Philadelphia Brigade Association in these words:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>&#8220;In reprinting various other rare Wisconsin Civil War material, as we
+intend to do, it may happen that the original authors thus selected
+for treatment have criticised certain commands; it certainly would
+not tend to smooth the path of the Commission if each such command
+was thereupon to pass condemnatory resolutions. WE shall certainly
+hope to be spared such treatment.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>In reprinting the Haskell &#8220;Narrative&#8221; the Wisconsin History Commission
+invited the criticism it justly deserves, and must expect to receive; and
+in their reprints in the future, if it permits their authors to criticise
+other commands&mdash;as they intend to do&mdash;They cannot escape the condemnatory
+resolutions they hope to be spared.</p>
+
+<p>The Man of Nazareth said: Give, and it shall be given unto you; good
+measure, pressed down, and running over, shall men give into your bosom.
+For with the same measure that ye mete, withal it shall be measured to you
+again.</p>
+
+<p class="center"><br />LETTER FROM MAJOR ROBERTS.</p>
+
+<p>The following letter, under date of May 15, 1877, was written by Major
+Samuel Roberts, of the 72d Regiment, Pa. Vols., to a Comrade and friend:</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Webb&#8217;s Brigade was composed of the 69th, 71st, 72d and 106th
+Pennsylvania Regiments; the 106th Regiment had been sent to the right
+to reinforce Gen. Howard, leaving the other three Regiments of the
+Brigade to receive the shock of Pickett&#8217;s advance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Brigade was not entrenched, nor driven back and rallied by Webb.
+The left wing of the 71st Regiment fell back a few yards; the 69th
+maintained their position, as did the right wing of the 71st. The
+72d, which held a position to the left, and a short distance to the
+rear of the Brigade, moved by the right flank about one hundred
+yards, and came to a front about sixty yards in front of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> Armistead&#8217;s
+Confederate Brigade. Armistead fell only a few yards in front of the
+72d Regiment.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;With the exception of a slight change of position of the left wing
+of the 71st Regiment, the Brigade not only held its position, but
+advanced and captured several colors, and the prisoners taken
+exceeded in number what was left of the Brigade, which lost nearly
+fifty per cent. in killed and wounded&mdash;the killed and wounded of the
+72d was over fifty per cent.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Cushing&#8217;s Battery, which was attached to the Brigade, was served
+until men were not left sufficient to work the guns. Cushing obtained
+volunteers from the Brigade, who served the guns until Cushing was
+killed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Webb&#8217;s Brigade, called the Philadelphia Brigade, was originally
+commanded by Col. E. D. Baker, who was killed at Ball&#8217;s Bluff. It was
+the Second Brigade, Second Division, Second Corps, Army of the
+Potomac, and forms the prominent feature in Rothermel&#8217;s painting of
+the Battle of Gettysburg.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center">NOTE NO. 5.</p>
+
+<p class="center">GETTYSBURG BATTLE FIELD DISPATCHES.</p>
+
+<p>From official dispatches sent from Headquarters, Army of the Potomac, to
+the War Department, during the progress of the third day&#8217;s fighting, which
+were given out to the Associated Press about midnight, being held back
+until assured that the Union Army was victorious.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>&#8220;Gettysburg, July 3d, 3 P. M.&mdash;A great attack is now being made on
+our left center by a powerful column of Rebels. We can see them
+advancing in hosts. Their lines are half a mile in length. They have
+to march a mile before they can strike a line. All of our artillery
+has now opened on them and we can see them falling by hundreds. In a
+few minutes they will strike our line, and the fight will be at close
+quarters.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>&#8220;Gettysburg, July 3d, 4.30 P. M.&mdash;We have won a great victory. The
+fight is over and the Rebel lines hurled back in wild disorder.
+Longstreet&#8217;s whole Corps seems to have been swept away, from our
+fire. The field is covered with Rebel dead. Wild cheers ring out from
+every part of our lines. Thousands of Rebel prisoners are being
+brought in. Sheaves of battle flags and thousands of small arms are
+being gathered in by our men. The rejoicing among our men is
+indescribable.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Gettysburg, July 3d, 5 P. M.&mdash;Our victory is more complete than we
+could dare hope for. An immense column of the enemy, at least 20,000
+strong, attacked our left center and were utterly destroyed by our
+fire. The column consisted of Longstreet&#8217;s Corps, and but few of them
+are left. Nearly all were either killed, wounded, or are now
+prisoners in our hands. I hear that Hancock, Gibbon and Webb are
+severely wounded. The Philadelphia Brigade is almost destroyed. They
+met the most violent rush of the enemy and lost terribly. Col.
+O&#8217;Kane, of the 69th, is killed, and there is hardly a field officer
+left in the Brigade.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Gettysburg, July 3d, 10 P. M.&mdash;Our victory grows more complete as we
+get time to realize its magnitude. It looks as though nearly all of
+Longstreet&#8217;s Corps had been destroyed. The field in front of the
+Second Corps, where the brunt of the attack fell, is covered with
+Rebel dead. In front of the Philadelphia Brigade they lie in great
+piles. Hundreds of Rebel officers are among the fallen. Gen.
+Armistead, of Pickett&#8217;s Division, fell within our lines. He was shot
+through the body and is now dying. The Rebel Generals Garnet and
+Kemper, fell in front of the 69th and 71st Pennsylvania Volunteers.
+All the field officers of the former Regiment are killed. The
+slaughter on both sides has indeed been frightful. Our men are busy
+gathering in the wounded, many of whom must die during the night for
+want of proper attention.&#8221;</p></div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>NOTE NO. 6.</p>
+
+<p class="center">LETTER FROM AN INTIMATE FRIEND OF LIEUTENANT HASKELL.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p class="right">Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 19, 1910.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am in receipt of your favor and note what you say about the
+extract from the book published by the Wisconsin History Commission
+relative to the description of the Battle of Gettysburg, by Col.
+Haskell. It confirms what I stated in my letter to the &#8220;Public
+Ledger&#8221; in September last. My daughter, who resides in Milwaukee, has
+sent me a copy of the book that you mention. I knew Col. Haskell
+intimately and was confident from the intimation that I possessed
+that had Col. Haskell lived to see the end of the Civil War he would
+have modified his description of the battle, as compared to that
+shown in the publication made by the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts.</p>
+
+<p><span style="margin-left: 4em;">Yours very truly,</span><br />
+<span style="margin-left: 6em;">W. YATES SELLECK.&#8221;</span></p></div>
+
+<p>Mr. Selleck was the military agent at Washington for the State of
+Wisconsin. The remains of Col. Haskell were forwarded to Mr. Selleck, at
+Washington, D. C., who sent them by express, on June 7, 1864, to Haskell&#8217;s
+mother, at Portage City, Wisconsin. In Mr. Selleck&#8217;s letter to the &#8220;Public
+Ledger&#8221; of Philadelphia, under date of September 21, 1909, he said: &#8220;I was
+intimately acquainted with Haskell and had several conversations with him
+after the Battle of Gettysburg in regard to that battle, and I have good
+reason for stating that had Haskell lived until the close of the War the
+<ins class="correction" title="original: criticims">criticisms</ins> contained in his diary would not have been made public.&#8221;</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="center"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>NOTE NO. 7.</p>
+
+<p class="center">THE CONCLUDING NOTE.</p>
+
+<p>What amusing history makers the Companions of the Loyal Legion of
+Massachusetts and the Comrades of the Wisconsin History Commission are.
+The State of Wisconsin enacted a law creating a History Commission, and
+straightway it begins printing very costly books, which they claim to be
+&#8220;histories of great battles of the Civil War,&#8221; one of which &#8220;histories&#8221;
+the Governor of Wisconsin sententiously says: &#8220;Is what the author saw, OR
+THOUGHT HE SAW&#8221;; and because of its inaccuracy the chairman of that
+History Commission contemplated correcting by himself, &#8220;writing notes
+giving the more accurate view,&#8221; but instead engaged a staff officer, who
+really saw what he thought he saw, to write a book correcting the
+inaccuracies that Chairman and Comrade Estabrook himself contemplated
+doing; and in the meantime the Secretary and Editor of the Commission
+&#8220;intends reprinting other rare Wisconsin Civil War material,&#8221; regardless
+of the supremely ridiculous opinions or errors of facts of the authors,
+thereby continuing to hold the State of Wisconsin responsible for the
+ridicule and expense that attach to such so-called histories, one of which
+a distinguished officer of the Civil War pithily characterizes as
+&#8220;inaccurate, misleading, indecent, venomous, scandalous and vainglorious.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 25%;" />
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="5" summary="table">
+<tr><td>CAPT. EDWARD THOMPSON, 69th.<br />
+CAPT. JOHN D. ROGERS, 71st.<br />
+JOHN W. DAMPMAN, 71st.<br />
+THOS. H. EATON, 72d.<br />
+FRANK WEIBLE, 72d.<br />
+WM. H. NEILER, 106th.<br />
+JAMES THOMPSON, 106th.<br />
+<span style="margin-left: 8em;">Committee on Publication.</span></td></tr></table>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr style="width: 50%;" />
+<p><b>Transcriber&#8217;s Note:</b> Other than the corrections noted by hover information, inconsistencies in
+spelling and hyphenation have been retained from the original.</p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Reply of the Philadelphia Brigade
+Association to the Foolish and Absurd Narrative of Lieutenant Frank A. Haskell, by Various
+
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+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Reply of the Philadelphia Brigade
+Association to the Foolish and Absurd Narrative of Lieutenant Frank A. Haskell, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Reply of the Philadelphia Brigade Association to the Foolish and Absurd Narrative of Lieutenant Frank A. Haskell
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: August 30, 2010 [EBook #33585]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REPLY OF THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
+http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
+generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
+Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ The Battle of Gettysburg
+
+ How General Meade Turned the
+ Army of the Potomac over
+ to Lieutenant Haskell
+ See Page 10
+
+
+ PUBLISHED BY
+ THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE
+ ASSOCIATION
+
+
+
+
+ BOWERS PRINTING COMPANY
+ PHILADELPHIA, PA.
+
+
+
+
+ REPLY OF THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE ASSOCIATION
+ TO THE FOOLISH and ABSURD NARRATIVE
+ OF Lieutenant FRANK A. HASKELL
+
+ WHICH APPEARS TO BE ENDORSED BY
+ THE MILITARY ORDER OF THE LOYAL LEGION
+ COMMANDRY OF MASSACHUSETTS
+ AND THE WISCONSIN HISTORY COMMISSION
+
+ COMPLIMENTS OF THE
+ PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE ASSOCIATION
+ MARCH, 1910
+
+
+
+
+ HEADQUARTERS,
+ PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE ASSOCIATION,
+ S. W. COR. FIFTH AND CHESTNUT STREETS,
+ PHILADELPHIA, PA.
+
+
+At the stated meeting of the Survivors of the Philadelphia Brigade, Second
+Brigade, Second Division, Second Corps, Army of the Potomac, held at the
+above place, Tuesday evening, September 7, 1909, letters were read from
+Gen. Alexander S. Webb, who commanded the Philadelphia Brigade at the
+Battle of Gettysburg, July 1, 2 and 3, 1863, requesting the consideration
+of the Brigade Association to the most astounding misstatements made by
+First Lieut. Frank Aretas Haskell, 6th Wisconsin Infantry, in a paper said
+to have been written by him under date of July 16, 1863, two weeks after
+the Battle of Gettysburg had been fought and addressed to his brother, who
+printed it for private circulation about fifteen years afterward.
+
+The letters of Gen. Webb were accompanied by a volume of 94 pages,
+containing the most absurd statements as to the action of the Philadelphia
+Brigade at the Battle of Gettysburg, which, upon being read, led to the
+unanimous adoption of the following preamble and resolution:
+
+ "WHEREAS, in the 'Narrative of the Battle of Gettysburg,' by Lieut.
+ Frank A. Haskell, First Lieut. 6th Wisconsin Infantry, and an aide
+ upon the staff of Gen. John Gibbon, said to have been written within
+ a few days after the battle, and reprinted in 1898 as a part of the
+ history of the Class of 1854, Dartmouth College, and republished in
+ 1908 under the auspices of the Massachusetts Commandery of the
+ Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States, the
+ Philadelphia Brigade has been recklessly, and shamelessly, and
+ grossly misrepresented; therefore, with the view of correcting these
+ wilfull misstatements, it is
+
+ "RESOLVED, That a committee consisting of the officers of the
+ Philadelphia Brigade Association, together with two comrades from
+ each of the four regiments of the Brigade, be appointed to carefully
+ consider the matter, and, if deemed advisable by the committee, to
+ publicly enter its protest against the malicious statements
+ 'reprinted in 1898 as a part of the history of the Class of 1854 of
+ Dartmouth College,' and again republished by the Loyal Legion of
+ Massachusetts in 1908, with a degree of recklessness and disregard
+ for truth unparalleled in any publication relating to the Civil War;
+ statements so false and malevolent as to be wholly unworthy of a
+ class of Dartmouth College, or of a Commandery of the Loyal Legion of
+ the United States; of the name of Capt. Daniel Hall, of General
+ Howard's staff--who prepared the story for publication--or of 'Chas.
+ Hunt, Captain U. S. V., Committee on Publication.'"
+
+The committee named under this resolution consists of these Comrades: Wm.
+G. Mason, Commander; John Quinton, Vice-Commander; Chas. W. Devitt,
+Quartermaster; John W. Frazier, Adjutant; John E. Reilly, Wm. S. Stockton,
+Joseph MacCarroll and James Thompson, Trustees, and Edward Thompson and
+James Duffy, 69th; John W. Dampman and Edward P. McMahon, 71st; John Reed
+and Thos. J. Longacre, 72d; Wm. H. Neiler and Thos. Thompson, 106th
+Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteers.
+
+An examination by the Philadelphia Brigade Association of the records
+relating to the "Narrative" written by Lieut. Haskell, discloses these
+facts:
+
+First--That Lieut. Haskell entered the service in July, 1861, as First
+Lieutenant of the 6th Wisconsin Infantry, and in June, 1862, became an
+Aide-de-Camp upon the Staff of Brigadier General John Gibbon, and was
+serving as such at the time he wrote his "Narrative" of the Battle of
+Gettysburg. On February 9, 1864, Haskell was commissioned Colonel of the
+36th Wisconsin Regiment, which at his request was assigned to the First
+Brigade, Second Division, Second Corps, Army of the Potomac. The Division
+was commanded by Gen. Gibbon, Gen. Hancock commanding the Corps. In the
+advance of Gibbon's Division at the Battle of Cold Harbor, against a
+strongly intrenched position, Col. Henry McKeen, who commanded the First
+Brigade, was killed. Colonel Haskell succeeded to the command, and he,
+too, fell mortally wounded under the heavy artillery and musketry fire,
+against which his Brigade advanced. Haskell's record as a soldier of the
+Civil War is, therefore, an enviable one; but as a writer of events of the
+war he was absurd, reckless and unreliable.
+
+Second--The manuscript alleged to have been prepared by Lieut. Haskell, as
+stated by him, "At the Headquarters, second Corps D'Armee, Army of the
+Potomac, near Harper's Ferry, July 16, 1863," was sent to his brother, who
+printed it about fifteen years later in a pamphlet of 72 pages for private
+circulation.
+
+Third--The book was reprinted in 1898 as part of the History of the Class
+of 1854, Dartmouth College, in honor of Colonel Haskell's memory, but with
+certain omissions that severely reflected upon the Eleventh Corps, Gen.
+Sickles and President Lincoln, which are explained in a foot-note by Capt.
+Daniel Hall, a classmate of Haskell's, who was an Aide upon the Staff of
+Gen. O. O. Howard, and who prepared the Haskell story for republication.
+
+Fourth--The pamphlet published in 1878, by Haskell's family for private
+circulation, contained 72 pages; the costly volume published in 1908,
+under the auspices of the Commandery of Massachusetts, Loyal Legion of
+the United States, prepared by Captain Daniel Hall, an Aide upon the Staff
+of Gen. Howard, Commander of the Eleventh Corps, with the official
+endorsement of "Chas. Hunt, Captain, U. S. V., Committee on Publication"
+is a book of 94 pages; therefore, apparently containing much more matter
+than was originally published by the Haskell family in 1878.
+
+The charge of cowardice on the part of the Philadelphia Brigade, purported
+to have been made by Lieut. Haskell, is printed on pages 60, 61 and 62 of
+the volume published by the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts, and is in part
+as follows:
+
+ "Unable to find my General, I gave up hunting as useless--I was
+ convinced General Gibbon could not be on the field; I left him
+ mounted; I could have easily found him now had he so remained, but
+ now, save myself, there was not a mounted officer near the engaged
+ lines--and was riding towards the right of the Second Division, with
+ purpose to stop there, as the most eligible position to watch the
+ further progress of the battle, then to be ready to take part,
+ according to my own notions, wherever and whenever occasion
+ presented. The conflict was tremendous, but I had seen no wavering in
+ all our line. Wondering how long the rebel ranks, deep though they
+ were, could stand our sheltered volleys, I had come near my
+ destination, when--great heavens! were my senses mad?--the larger
+ portion of Webb's Brigade--my God, it was true--there by the group of
+ trees and the angles of the wall, was breaking from the cover of the
+ works, and without orders or reason, with no hand uplifted to check
+ them, was falling back, a fear-stricken flock of confusion. The fate
+ of Gettysburg hung upon a spider's single thread. A great magnificent
+ passion came on me at the instant; not one that overpowers and
+ confounds, but one that blanches the face and sublimes every sense
+ and faculty. My sword that had always hung idle by my side, the sign
+ of rank only, in every battle, I drew, bright and gleaming, the
+ symbol of command. Was not that a fit occasion and those fugitives
+ the men on whom to try the temper of the Solingen steel? All rules
+ and proprieties were forgotten, all considerations of person and
+ danger and safety despised; for as I met the tide of those rabbits,
+ the damned red flags of the rebellion began to thicken and flaunt
+ along the wall they had just deserted, and one was already waving
+ over the guns of the dead Cushing. I ordered those men to 'halt,' and
+ 'face about,' and 'fire,' and they heard my voice and gathered my
+ meaning, and obeyed my commands. On some unpatriotic backs, of those
+ not quick of comprehension, the flat of my sabre fell, not lightly;
+ and at its touch their love of country returned, and with a look at
+ me as if I were the destroying angel, as I might have become theirs,
+ they again faced the enemy. General Webb soon came to my assistance.
+ He was on foot, but he was active, and did all that one could do to
+ repair the breach or to avert its calamity."
+
+Colonels O'Kane and Tschudy, of the 69th, were killed in action; Baxter,
+of the 72d, wounded and carried off the field; Morehead and his 106th
+Regiment had been sent by Gibbon to the support of Howard's Corps, thereby
+materially weakening the Brigade; Col. R. Penn Smith, of the 71st, and
+Lieut. Col. Theo. Hesser, of the 72d, were with their commands--which they
+never left--encouraging their men to even greater deeds of heroism; Webb
+is yet living and in a supplemental paper to this Reply will state
+specifically where the Commander of the Brigade and his Adjutant were and
+what they did.
+
+While Haskell has long been dead--killed in action at Cold Harbor, in
+1864, and it seems cruel to speak harshly of the dead, yet duty to the
+living, and to the honored dead of the Philadelphia Brigade compels reply.
+The unreliability of Lieut. Haskell as a writer of military matters was
+equaled only by the egotism of the youthful Lieutenant. Thus this reckless
+First Lieutenant wrote of General Howard and General Doubleday, and thus
+he maligned the brave men of the Eleventh Corps:
+
+ "The two divisions of the Eleventh Corps commanded, by Generals
+ Schurz and Barlow, making but feeble opposition to the advancing
+ enemy, soon began to fall back. Back in disorganized masses they fled
+ into the town, hotly pursued, and in lanes, in barns, in yards and
+ cellars, throwing away their arms, they sought to hide like rabbits,
+ and were captured unresisting by hundreds.
+
+ "I suppose our losses during the first day would exceed five
+ thousand, of whom a large number were prisoners. Such usually is the
+ kind of loss sustained by the Eleventh Corps." (Haskell narrative,
+ page 6.)
+
+The actual loss of the Eleventh Corps was 153 officers and 2,138 men
+killed and wounded, and 62 officers and 1,448 men captured and missing, a
+total of 3,801, thereby attesting that at least 2,291 brave men of the
+Eleventh Corps did not "hide like rabbits," but that they fell like heroes
+facing the enemy.
+
+And thus of General Doubleday as to his action during Pickett's Charge on
+the afternoon of the third day:
+
+ "Doubleday on the left was too far off, and too slow. On another
+ occasion I had begged him to send his idle regiments to support
+ another line, battling with thrice its numbers, and the 'Old Sumter
+ Hero' had declined." (Haskell narrative, page 62.)
+
+If Haskell, or any other first lieutenant, would dare to have had the
+impudence to direct a Major General, and he a graduate of West Point, a
+soldier of distinction in the Mexican War, and placed in command of the
+First Corps upon the death of Gen. Reynolds, is it not more than likely,
+indeed, does it not seem certain that such a presumptuous lieutenant would
+have been sent back to his command under guard, if not committed to the
+guard house?
+
+And did not Capt. Daniel Hall, an Aide upon General Howard's Staff, who
+prepared the Haskell "Narrative" for republication; and the Military Order
+of the Loyal Legion, Commandery of Massachusetts, in publishing the
+Haskell "Narrative" become responsible for the Haskell slander upon
+Generals Howard and Doubleday, and the brave men of the gallant Eleventh
+Corps, and of the Philadelphia Brigade?
+
+The egotism and recklessness of Haskell are in evidence upon almost every
+page of his book. On page 39 he says:
+
+ "I heard General Meade express dissatisfaction at General Geary for
+ making his attack. I heard General Meade say that he sent an order to
+ have the fight stopped, but I believe the order was not given to
+ Geary until after the repulse of the enemy." Is it not clear that if
+ such an order had been sent and obeyed, the enemy would not have been
+ repulsed? Is it anywhere upon record that General Meade sent such an
+ order?
+
+On page 82 of the Haskell "Narrative" of the Battle of Gettysburg appears
+this silly statement:
+
+ "About six o'clock on the afternoon of the third of July, my duties
+ done upon the field, I quitted it to go to the General (meaning
+ Gibbon). My brave horse Dick--poor creature! his good conduct in the
+ battle that afternoon had been complimented by a brigadier--was a
+ sight to see. He was literally covered with blood. Struck repeatedly,
+ his right thigh had been ripped open in a ghastly manner by a piece
+ of shell, and three bullets were lodged deep in his body, and from
+ his wounds the blood oozed and ran down his sides and legs, and with
+ the sweat formed a bloody foam. To Dick belongs the honor of first
+ mounting that stormy crest before the enemy, not forty yards away,
+ whose bullets smote him, and of being the only horse there during the
+ heat of that battle."
+
+Haskell might, with equal truth and egotism, have written: "To Dick and
+his rider belong the honor of meeting and repulsing Pickett's Division,"
+and who can say that it would not have been accorded equally as generous
+consideration by the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts, and the History
+Commission of Wisconsin, as was given to all the other nonsense he wrote
+of the Battle of Gettysburg.
+
+It has been said of Pickett's Virginians, that accustomed to handling a
+gun, or rifle, from boyhood, any one of them could kill a jay bird at a
+distance of 150 yards, but not one of Pickett's Division of 4,000 Veterans
+could kill that horse or that first lieutenant, and they the only horse
+and man in sight, and not forty yards away, parading between Hancock's
+Corps of the Union Army and Longstreet's Corps of the Confederate Army.
+
+Oh! Veterans of Pickett's Division, you who killed or wounded 491 of our
+Comrades of the Philadelphia Brigade from the time you began one of the
+most desperate charges ever recorded in the history of wars, starting from
+Seminary Ridge, one mile distant from the Bloody Angle, until you reached
+the culminating point where the intrepid Armistead fell mortally wounded
+within the lines of the Philadelphia Brigade. You who made such slaughter
+in OUR RANKS AT LONG RANGE could not kill First Lieutenant Frank Aretas
+Haskell, or his horse, and they not forty yards distant from your firing
+line, and he "the one solitary horseman between the Second Division of
+Hancock's Corps and Pickett's Division of Longstreet's Corps." And the
+Military Order, Loyal Legion, Commandery of Massachusetts, and the History
+Commission of Wisconsin, as late as the year 1908 in expensive
+publications confirm the Haskell "Narrative" of his wild "Buffalo Bill"
+ride between the Union and Confederate lines, and depicting your skill as
+marksmen, with a horse and officer as the inviting target not forty yards
+distant--defying the bullets of the most skillful marksmen of the
+Confederate Army.
+
+Is there a veteran soldier of the Civil War, or even a thoughtful man in
+the United States, who believes this part of Haskell's Narrative "of
+riding between the lines the one solitary horseman, and he not forty yards
+distant from the enemy?" Do Captains Daniel Hall and Charles Hunt, the
+Loyal Legion of Massachusetts, and Wisconsin History Commission,
+themselves endorsing it, really believe it?
+
+It was on the third day that "Dick" was plugged with enough of Confederate
+lead to have warranted Haskell in organizing a Company to mine the lead in
+"Dick's" dead body. His horse "Billy" was pumped just as full of lead on
+the second day, as this absurd statement on page 37 attests:
+
+ "And my horse can hardly move. What can be the reason? I know that he
+ has been touched by two of their bullets today, but not to wound or
+ lame him to speak of. I foolishly spurred my horse again. No use--he
+ would only walk. I dismounted; I could not lead him along. So, out of
+ temper, I rode him to headquarters, which I reached at last. With a
+ light I found what was the matter with 'Billy.' A bullet had entered
+ his chest just in front of my left leg as I was mounted, and the
+ blood was running down all his side and leg, and the air from his
+ lungs came out of the bullet hole. I rode him at the Second Bull Run,
+ and at the First and Second Fredericksburg, and at Antietam after
+ brave 'Joe' was killed, but I shall never mount him again. 'Billy's'
+ battles are over."
+
+Just one more instance of the scores of the colossal vanity of Haskell. It
+tells how General Meade turned the command of the Army of the Potomac over
+to the youthful First Lieutenant of Infantry--Frank Aretas Haskell. It is
+to be found on pages 69 and 70 of the Haskell "Narrative." The battle had
+ended, and the Napoleon of Gettysburg, while patting himself on the back,
+was planting data in his mind for printing in his "Narrative," and thus
+Paul planted, and the Apollos of Massachusetts and Wisconsin watered.
+
+ "Would to heaven Generals Hancock and Gibbon could have stood where I
+ did, and have looked upon that field. But they are both severely
+ wounded and have been carried from the field. One person did come,
+ and he was no less than Major-General Meade, who rode up accompanied
+ alone by his son--an escort not large for a commander of such an
+ army. As he arrived near me he asked, 'How is it going here?' I
+ answered, 'I believe, General, the army is repulsed.' With a touch of
+ incredulity he further asked, 'What! IS THE ASSAULT ENTIRELY
+ REPULSED?' I replied, 'It is, sir.' And then his right hand moved as
+ if he would have caught off his hat and waved it, but instead he
+ waved his hand and said, 'Hurrah!' He asked where Hancock and Gibbon
+ were, but before I had time to answer that I did not know, he
+ resumed, 'No matter, I will give my orders to You, and YOU will see
+ them executed.' He then gave directions that the troops should be
+ reformed as soon as practicable, and kept in their places, as the
+ enemy might be mad enough to attack again, adding, 'IF THE ENEMY DOES
+ ATTACK, CHARGE HIM IN THE FLANKS AND SWEEP HIM FROM THE FIELD--do you
+ understand?' The General then, a gratified man, galloped in the
+ direction of his headquarters."
+
+Of course, General Meade rode back to his headquarters a gratified man.
+Had he not just received the information from First Lieutenant Haskell
+that the enemy had been "entirely repulsed?" and had not Meade issued an
+order to this Wellington of Lee's Waterloo to sweep the enemy from the
+field, if he were mad enough to renew the attack, by charging him on the
+flanks? General Meade's order to Haskell was so sedately humorous as to
+leave us in doubt as to whether the First Lieutenant and his horse alone
+were to charge the enemy's flanks, or for Lieutenant Napoleon Wellington
+Haskell to order the First, Eleventh and Twelfth Corps to charge his left
+flank, and the Third, Fifth and Sixth Corps his right flank, while Haskell
+and Dick swept his centre from the field.
+
+And this is the "narrative" that a Loyal Legion and a History Commission
+feel honored in publishing. If the object was to prove that they were just
+as vainglorious as Haskell, has not this fact been fully established by
+their published books? Vaccinated by the Haskell virus of vanity and
+venom, the buffoonery of Haskell has been transmitted by a Military Order
+of the Loyal Legion, and the History Commission of a great State, to their
+admiring friends and the public. Like Haskell, "A great, magnificent
+passion came on them that seemingly sublimed every sense and
+faculty--when, great heavens! their senses mad," the Battle of Gettysburg,
+by Frank Aretas Haskell, First Lieutenant, Sixth Wisconsin Infantry, was
+"published under the auspices of the Commandery of the State of
+Massachusetts, Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the United States,
+and the Wisconsin History Commission."
+
+General Roy Stone, of Pennsylvania, commanded the Second Brigade, Third
+Division, First Corps, at Gettysburg. Upon receiving serious wounds he
+was carried from the field, and Colonel Langhorne Wister, of Philadelphia,
+commanding the 150th Pennsylvania Regiment, succeeded to the command of
+the Brigade, and the Lieutenant-Colonel took command of the Regiment, and
+soon after was shot in the leg, remaining in command until his right arm
+was shattered. Carried into an adjacent barn, used temporarily as a
+hospital, the flow of blood was stopped by a tourniquet, and the arm
+bandaged--occupying about thirty minutes--after which he returned to his
+regiment and assumed command, maintaining the line held by it until the
+excruciating pain and faintness from shock and loss of blood compelled him
+to retire. The next day his arm was amputated at the shoulder.
+
+For that--perhaps--unprecedented instance of heroism at Gettysburg the
+Lieutenant-Colonel of the 150th Pennsylvania was awarded a Congressional
+Medal of Honor; he was promoted for bravery on the field of battle, and
+this is what he, General Henry S. Huidekoper, of Philadelphia, a member of
+the Loyal Legion, Commandery of Pennsylvania, says of Haskell's book:
+
+ "In the first print much of what Haskell said was suppressed, and we
+ cannot but regret that any of it was made public, for, from a
+ historical standpoint, the story is inaccurate and misleading, and
+ from an ethical standpoint it is indecent, venomous, scandalous and
+ vainglorious."
+
+And this is the "narrative" that the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of
+Massachusetts, and the History Commission of Wisconsin, have recently
+published in attractive and costly form, giving the same wide circulation,
+unmindful of the fact that thereby they are inflicting irreparable injury
+to both the living and the heroic dead.
+
+
+THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE.
+
+Colonel Chas. H. Banes, late President of the Market Street National Bank,
+was a typical soldier of the Civil War; he was a leading member of the
+Baptist Church in Philadelphia, and was as devout as a Christian as he was
+heroic as a Volunteer Soldier. In 1876 Colonel Banes published an
+interesting volume, entitled, "History of the Philadelphia Brigade." No
+man was as competent as he to write such a history, inasmuch as he had
+long been the Adjutant of the Brigade and in possession of all its
+records. In his preface to that book Colonel Banes says:
+
+ "The four regiments of the Brigade were composed chiefly of
+ Volunteers from the city of Philadelphia, and for that reason might
+ properly be called the Philadelphia Brigade. It consisted of the
+ 69th, 71st, 72d, and 106th Regiments of Pennsylvania Volunteers. The
+ command had from the first enrollment until the muster out 350 field,
+ staff and line officers, and over 6,000 non-commissioned officers and
+ privates. The officers and men of the regiments were equal in
+ courage, endurance and discipline to the best commands of the army,
+ and their soldierly bearing on the march and in battle helped to make
+ the history of the Army of the Potomac."
+
+As to the charge of cowardice against a Brigade that lost 3,533 in killed,
+wounded, deaths from other causes, and missing, made under the auspices of
+Dartmouth College, and the Military Order of the Loyal Legion of the
+United States, Commandery of Massachusetts, is so positive, so indecent,
+so scandalous, so brutal, and so absolutely false, the Philadelphia
+Brigade, in formulating a reply to these malicious and infamous
+violations of facts, has deemed it proper to submit, as briefly as
+possible, extracts from Colonel Banes' "History of the Philadelphia
+Brigade," about what the Old Brigade did from the time it received the
+order to move from Falmouth, Va., until it met and turned backward the
+charge of Pickett's Division at the "Bloody Angle" of Gettysburg, on the
+afternoon of July 3, 1863.
+
+
+BANES VERSUS HASKELL.
+
+That "History of the Philadelphia Brigade," by Colonel Chas. H. Banes,
+which records with absolute truthfulness the part taken by the
+Philadelphia Brigade from Ball's Bluff to Appomattox, was written with the
+calm deliberation and adherence to facts characteristic of the man who
+stood foremost among his fellow citizens of Pennsylvania for business
+integrity, Christian rectitude, and American manhood and honor, and
+sensitive in the highest degree of his honor, and herewith is what that
+manly man, comrade and companion, Colonel Chas. H. Banes, Adjutant of the
+Philadelphia Brigade, records in his history regarding the battle at the
+Bloody Angle of Gettysburg, and the march from Falmouth immediately
+preceding that great battle:
+
+ "On Sunday, June 14th, our Division was ordered to move at very short
+ notice. At about midnight the Second Division, the last of the Army,
+ moved from Falmouth, obstructing the roads behind the column. At
+ noon, June 15th, the command reached Stafford Court House, where it
+ halted two hours; then resuming the march bivouacked at night five
+ miles from Dumfries. The day was very hot, the roads were filled with
+ dust, and the march of 28 miles was so oppressive that a number of
+ the men fell from sunstroke and exhaustion.
+
+ "At about two A. M., on the 16th, the Brigade started from Dumfries,
+ where we halted a few hours. After taking up the march through Wolf
+ Run Shoals, Occoquan Creek, we camped for the night on a fine farm
+ belonging to an old bachelor named Steele, who was very anxious that
+ we should raise money to pay for the damage to his crops. He did not
+ succeed, his uninvited guests being ragged and penniless. On the 17th
+ we reached Sangster's Station, Orange and Alexandria Railroad. Here
+ the Corps formed in line of battle, facing towards Bull Run.
+
+ "After maneuvering and countermarching the command started on the
+ 20th through Bull Run and Gainesville to Thoroughfare Gap, where we
+ arrived at midnight. The last part of the march was very severe, and
+ in the darkness men frequently stumbled over rocks, and into ditches.
+
+ "The Second Corps remained at this place guarding the pass until the
+ morning of June 25th. Two miles below this point there was a less
+ frequented road, but one easy of access, which was effectually
+ blocked up for some time to come by a detachment from the Brigade,
+ who were furnished with axes, with which trees were felled in large
+ numbers and thrown across the road.
+
+ "After leaving Thoroughfare Gap the Division was assailed by a
+ battery while marching through Hay Market. Before this was silenced a
+ few of the command were killed and wounded. Passing through Cub Run
+ the column crossed the Potomac at Edward's Ferry at eleven o'clock on
+ the night of June 26th.
+
+ "The next day the march was continued beyond Barnestown, Maryland;
+ and on the 28th our Corps arrived two miles from Frederick, where the
+ Brigade was ordered to establish a picket covering the right of the
+ Corps near the Monocacy.
+
+ "On the day of our arrival at this point General Hooker, at his own
+ request, was relieved from command, and Major-General George G.
+ Meade, commanding the Fifth Corps, was designated as
+ Commander-in-Chief in his stead. There were other changes made of
+ subordinate commanders at the same time. Among these was the
+ assignment of Brigadier-General Alexander S. Webb to command the
+ Second Brigade as successor to Brigadier-General Owen.
+
+ "General Webb, although an officer of note in the regular service,
+ was unknown to the majority of the command, but his force of
+ character and personal gallantry soon won the regard of the Brigade
+ to as great an extent as that obtained by any of his predecessors.
+
+ "The advance of the Second Corps was begun early on the morning of
+ June 29th, and, with but few halts, it was continued throughout the
+ day. After tramping through the stifling dust under a burning sun, in
+ heavy marching order, a distance of more than 31 miles, Uniontown was
+ reached, where the troops remained during the 30th. On July 1st the
+ advance was again resumed until a point four miles from Gettysburg
+ was reached, where a halt was made."
+
+Thus it was the Philadelphia Brigade reached Gettysburg, after marching
+about 170 miles from Falmouth to Gettysburg, in mid-summer, under a
+blazing sun, with dust ankle-deep, as the rear guard of the Army of the
+Potomac, obstructing roads while on the march, silencing batteries of the
+enemy, performing picket duty, and doing the rear-guard work for a great
+army, and when on the march making from 20 to 30 miles a day--on June 29th
+marching more than 31 miles--and on July 1st marching from Uniontown, 20
+miles distant, to within four miles of Gettysburg. On the morning of July
+2d, at early dawn, marched a distance of four miles, placed in position at
+Cemetery Ridge, and taking part in the second day's battle, as herewith
+further described by Colonel Banes:
+
+ "On July 2d, at early dawn, the Corps was moved to the front and
+ placed in position along Cemetery Ridge, connecting on its right with
+ the left of Howard's Corps; while the Third Corps, under Sickles, was
+ ordered to connect on the left and extend to Round Top.
+
+ "The Philadelphia Brigade, before taking its place in line, was
+ massed on the edge of a wood, near the Taneytown Road, and a field
+ return was made by the adjutant of each regiment. Out of the entire
+ number present for duty when General Webb assumed command at
+ Frederick, there were but 13 men absent without leave; and some of
+ these, who had given out on the march, rejoined their comrades before
+ the action.
+
+ "By order of General Gibbon, commanding the Division, the
+ Philadelphia Brigade was put in position at six and a half o'clock
+ A. M. on the 2d, on Granite Ridge, on the right of the Division, its
+ right resting on Cushing's Battery A, Fourth United States Artillery,
+ and its left on Battery B, First Rhode Island Artillery, Lieutenant
+ Brown commanding. The 69th Regiment was placed behind a fence, a
+ little in advance of the ridge, the remaining three regiments of the
+ Brigade under cover of the hill in the rear.
+
+ "Immediately after assuming this position, a detail, ordered from
+ each regiment, was advanced as skirmishers beyond the Emmettsburg
+ Road and parallel with the Confederate line of battle on Seminary
+ Ridge. This disposition was scarcely completed before the enemy
+ opened with sharpshooters and artillery.
+
+ "A few hundred yards in front of our line of battle and towards the
+ left, a farm house and buildings were located. To prevent these
+ affording cover to the enemy, they were occupied by the Brigade
+ pioneers, with orders to destroy them upon a signal from General
+ Webb. During the fight of Sickles the Brigade skirmishers were
+ engaged for an hour with those of the enemy, both parties suffering
+ losses, but neither giving ground. This contest was in full view of
+ the entire Corps, and the manly bearing of their comrades was a
+ matter of pride to the men of the Philadelphia Brigade. That portion
+ of the field lying between Granite and Seminary Ridge being an open
+ plain without trees or shelter, the contests of our skirmishers were
+ literally a series of duels fought with rifles at an easy range.
+
+ "'The enemy made the assault on the 2d at about six and a half P. M.
+ Their line of battle advanced beyond one gun of Brown's Battery,
+ receiving at that point the fire of the 69th, of the 71st, advanced
+ to the support of the 69th, of the 72d and of the 106th, which had
+ previously been moved to the left by command of General Hancock.
+ Colonel Baxter at this time was wounded. The enemy maneuvred and fell
+ back, pursued by the 106th, 72d and part of the 71st. The 72d and
+ 106th followed them to the Emmettsburg Road, capturing and sending to
+ the rear about 250 prisoners, among whom were one colonel, five
+ captains and fifteen lieutenants.'"
+
+ "The assault, thus officially reported by Webb, was executed with
+ much celerity, and when the column of the enemy burst forth from the
+ woods on Seminary Ridge, it seemed but a few moments before the
+ Emmettsburg Road was crossed, and our skirmishers driven like leaves
+ before the wind. As the Confederates advanced, Brown's Battery, with
+ the exception of one gun, was withdrawn to the rear of the 69th. Over
+ this piece there was a fierce struggle, but the fire of the Brigade
+ was terribly severe, causing the enemy to hesitate and then fall
+ back. Those of the Confederates in the lead threw down their guns and
+ cried out with an oath: 'Get us out of this; it is too hot here.'
+
+ "And now a countercharge was made by the Philadelphia Brigade, along
+ with those of other Brigades; the assaulting column was rolled back
+ almost as quickly as it had advanced. The skirmish line was reformed
+ on its old connection, and shortly after, night coming on, the fight
+ on our portion of the line was over for the 2d of July.
+
+ "The pioneers in their exposed position were made prisoners by the
+ enemy, and the guard left by the captors remained at the farm house
+ with their charge, intending to move to the rear as soon as the heavy
+ firing was over. This decision was fortunate for our detail, but
+ unfortunate for the enemy, as the advance of Webb's regiments swept
+ by the improvised guard house and changed the relation of its
+ occupants.
+
+ "The 106th Regiment was ordered to report to General Howard, who
+ placed it on the right of the Baltimore Pike, near Rickett's Battery,
+ where it remained until the close of the battle. This regiment was
+ highly complimented by General Howard.
+
+ "On the morning of July 3d the 69th Regiment occupied the same line
+ at the fence in front of the clump of trees on the ridge that it held
+ the day before, while the 71st was deployed and connected with its
+ right. One wing of the 71st was stationed at the fence, while the
+ other was behind a stone wall to the right and rear. The 72d was held
+ in reserve, forming a second line to the left of Brown's Battery, and
+ in the rear of Colonel Hall's Third Brigade.
+
+ "After the contest at Culp's Hill there was a momentary pause in the
+ operations of both armies. This unusual calm was only broken by an
+ occasional gun, or the discharge of a sharpshooter's rifle. About one
+ o'clock, when the men were wondering what the next movement would be
+ in this great battle, a single Whitworth gun was fired from the
+ extreme left of Seminary Ridge, a distance of three miles. The bolt
+ just reached the right of our Brigade. Then at intervals along the
+ entire line solitary shots were fired, as if intended for signal guns
+ of preparation. These were quickly followed by others, and in a few
+ moments there burst forth from the whole Confederate line a most
+ terrific fire of artillery. One hundred and twenty guns concentrated
+ their fire on that portion of Meade's position held by the Second
+ Division, Second Corps. Shell, round shot, Whitworth bolts, and
+ spherical case were flying over and exploding about us at the same
+ time. Almost every second ten of these missiles were in the air;
+ each, as it went speeding on its message of death, indicating its
+ form by a peculiar sound. The shrieking of shells, or the heavy thud
+ of round shot, were easily distinguished from the rotary whizzing of
+ the Whitworth bolt.
+
+ "When these agents of destruction commenced their horrid work, no
+ portion of the line, from the front to a point far in the rear of the
+ Taneytown Road, afforded any protection against their fury. Men who
+ had been struck while serving the guns and were limping towards the
+ hospital, were frequently wounded again before they had gone a
+ hundred yards.
+
+ "In spite of the ghastly forms of mangled men and horses, and in
+ spite of the dismantled guns, exploding limbers, and other scenes of
+ horror, produced by Lee's attack, the guns of Meade roared back their
+ defiance; while the infantry, powerless for the moment, rested on
+ their arms awaiting the bayonet charge they knew was sure to follow.
+
+ "Webb reports: 'By a quarter to three o'clock the enemy had silenced
+ the Rhode Island Battery, all the guns but one of Cushing's Battery,
+ and had plainly shown, by his concentration of fire on this and the
+ Third Brigade, that an important assault was to be expected. I had
+ sent, at two P. M., the Adjutant-General of the Brigade for two
+ batteries to replace Cushing's and Brown's. Just before the assault,
+ Captain Wheeler's First New York Artillery had got into position on
+ the left in the place occupied by the Rhode Island Battery, which
+ had retired with the loss of all its officers but one.'
+
+ "When the New York Battery arrived and went into action, Lieutenant
+ Cushing had but one of his guns left, and it was served by men of the
+ 71st Regiment. The Lieutenant had been struck by a fragment of shell,
+ but stood by his piece as calmly as if on parade, and as the
+ Confederate infantry commenced to emerge from the woods opposite,
+ Cushing quietly said, 'Webb, I will give them one shot more;
+ good-bye.' The gun was loaded by the California men, and run down to
+ the fence near the 69th, and at the moment of the last discharge,
+ just as the enemy reached the line, the brave Cushing fell mortally
+ wounded.
+
+ "At three o'clock the enemy's line of battle left the woods in our
+ front, moved in perfect order across the Emmettsburg Road, formed in
+ the hollow of our immediate front several lines of battle under a
+ fire of spherical case-shot from Wheeler's Battery and Cushing's gun,
+ and advanced for the assault.
+
+ "The Union batteries increased their fire as rapidly as possible, but
+ this did not for a moment delay the determined advance. The rude gaps
+ torn by the shells and case-shot were closed as quickly as they were
+ made. As new batteries opened, the additional fire created no
+ confusion in the ranks of the enemy; its only apparent effect was to
+ mark the pathway over the mile of advance with the dead and dying.
+ None who saw this magnificent charge of Pickett's column, composed of
+ thousands of brave men, could refrain from admiring its grandeur. As
+ they approached the rail fence their formation was irregular, and
+ near the front and centre were crowded together the regimental colors
+ of the entire division; the scene strangely illustrated the divine
+ words, 'Terrible as an army with banners.'
+
+ "Now our men close up their ranks and await the struggle. The
+ Seventy-second, by direction of Webb, is double-quicked from its
+ position on the left and fills the gap on the ridge where Cushing's
+ Battery had been in action. Just at this moment Pickett's men reach
+ the line occupied by the Sixty-ninth and the left companies of the
+ Seventy-first. General Armistead, commanding the leading brigade,
+ composed principally of Virginians, in advance of his men, swinging
+ his hat on his sword, cries out, 'Boys, give them the cold steel!'
+ Just then the white trefoil on the caps of our men is recognized, and
+ Armistead's men exclaim, 'The Army of the Potomac! Do they call these
+ militia?'
+
+ "The final effort for success now commences. The advance companies of
+ the Seventy-first are literally crowded out of their places by the
+ enemy, and, with one company of the Sixty-ninth, they form with the
+ remainder of Colonel Smith's command at the stone fence. At the same
+ instant Colonel Hall's Third Brigade and the regiments of the First
+ under Devereaux and other officers, as if by instinct, rush to Webb's
+ assistance, while Colonel Stannard moves two regiments of the Vermont
+ Brigade to strike the attacking column in the flank.
+
+ "And now is the moment when the battle rages most furiously.
+ Armistead, with a hundred and fifty of his Virginians, is inside our
+ lines; only a few paces from our Brigade Commander, they look each
+ other in the face. The artillery of the enemy ceases to fire, and the
+ gunners of their batteries are plainly seen standing on their
+ caissons to view the result, hoping for success, while Pettigrew's
+ Division, failing to support Pickett, halts as if terrified at the
+ scene. This is the soldiers' part of the fight; tactics and
+ alignments are thrown to one side. No effort is made to preserve a
+ formation. Union men are intermingled with the enemy, and in some
+ cases surrounded by them, but refusing to surrender. Rifles, bayonets
+ and clubbed muskets are freely used, and men on both sides rapidly
+ fall.
+
+ "This struggle lasts but a few moments, when the enemy in the front
+ throw down their arms, and rushing through the line of the
+ Seventy-second, hasten to the rear as prisoners without a guard,
+ while others of the column who might have escaped, unwilling to risk
+ a retreat over the path by which they came, surrendered. The battle
+ is over, the last attack of Lee at Gettysburg is repulsed, and the
+ highest wave of the Rebellion has reached its farthest limit, ever
+ after to recede.
+
+ "General Armistead, who was in the Confederate front, fell mortally
+ wounded, close to the colors of the Seventy-second. One of the men of
+ that regiment, who was near him, asked permission of the writer (Col.
+ Chas. H. Banes, Adjutant Philadelphia Brigade), to carry him out of
+ the battle, saying, 'He has called for help as THE SON OF A WIDOW, an
+ order was given to take him to an ambulance, and when his revolver
+ was removed from his belt, it was seen that he had obeyed his own
+ command, 'to give them the cold steel,' as no shot had been fired
+ from it.
+
+ "At the close of Gen. Webb's official report he states, 'The Brigade
+ captured nearly one thousand prisoners and six battle flags, and
+ picked up fourteen hundred stand of arms and nine hundred sets of
+ accoutrements. The loss was forty-three officers and four hundred and
+ fifty-two men, and only forty-seven were missing. The conduct of this
+ Brigade was most satisfactory.'"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Compare the calm, temperate, lucid, truthful and dignified statement of
+Colonel Banes, who, as the Adjutant of the Philadelphia (Webb's) Brigade,
+was more familiar with its every movement than any officer or private
+soldier could possibly be; a statement prepared with deliberation by a
+man of mature years, and ripened judgment, with that of the raving,
+distracted, ridiculous utterances of the youthful Lieut. Haskell, in his
+book said to have been hastily written within two weeks after the battle,
+written between his hours of duty, while on the march from Gettysburg back
+to Harper's Ferry, written by him while not yet fully recovered from the
+delirium of excitement that overcame him in the exalted position he claims
+to have assumed, that of Supersedeas Commander of the Army of the Potomac
+to annihilate the Confederate Army, in the event of its renewing the
+attack.
+
+It was the author Haskell who asked this question of Lieut. Haskell:
+
+ "Great heavens! were my senses mad?--the larger portion of Webb's
+ Brigade--my God! it is true, was breaking from the cover of the
+ works, without order or reason, with no hand uplifted to check them,
+ was falling back a fear-stricken flock of confusion. A GREAT,
+ MAGNIFICENT PASSION OVERCAME ME as I met the tide of these rabbits,"
+ and a lot more of such incoherent, disconnected trash, from the young
+ Lieutenant so OVERCOME WITH A MAGNIFICENT PASSION that the aberration
+ of mind which followed while writing that narrative was inevitable.
+
+Col. Banes says, "This struggle lasted but a few moments, when the enemy
+in front threw down their arms, and, rushing through the lines of the
+Seventy-second hastened to the rear as prisoners without a guard."
+
+It was these men of Pickett's Division hastening to the rear whom Haskell
+met, if ever he met any one fleeing to the rear on that occasion; but
+"Great heavens! his senses were mad." A "Magnificent Passion" overcame
+him. He was in a delirium of vainglory, and he mistook the defeated
+Veterans of Pickett's Division, seeking shelter from impending death, for
+the victorious Veterans of the Philadelphia Brigade, and the Military
+Order, Loyal Legion, Commandery of Massachusetts, and the History
+Commission of Wisconsin, also apparently overcome with a "Magnificent
+Passion" for book publishing, reprinted his "Narrative" to the world, as
+their adopted waif and heir.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It has been asked, what could have been Haskell's object in so perverting
+the facts of history relative to the Battle of Gettysburg? Gen. Henry S.
+Hindekoper, of Philadelphia, who won high renown in the battle, aptly
+answers the question in the statement made by him, wherein he said of
+Haskell's "Narrative," that "from a historical standpoint it is inaccurate
+and misleading, and from an ethical standpoint it is indecent, venemous,
+scandalous and VAINGLORIOUS."
+
+After describing the first day's fight as minutely as though he had
+observed it all from the cupola of the Seminary Building on Seminary
+Ridge, Haskell thus seeks to acquit himself from all misstatements by
+saying: "Of the events of the first day of July I do not speak from
+personal knowledge."
+
+At two o'clock in the afternoon of July 1st, Haskell was at Taneytown, 13
+miles distant from Gettysburg, and between 8 and 9 o'clock in the evening
+the Second Corps was halted four miles south of Gettysburg, where it, and
+Lieut. Haskell, biouvacked for the night; therefore--except detracting
+from officers and men who rendered heroic service--no glory came to
+Haskell on the first day. He "did not see what he thought he saw."
+
+At early dawn on July 2d Hancock's Corps was moved forward about four
+miles, and at 6.30 A. M. was placed in position on Cemetery Ridge. The
+Third Division (Hayes), on the right, connecting with the left of Howard's
+Eleventh Corps; the First Division (Caldwell's), on the left, connecting
+with the right of Sickles, Third Corps, and the Second Division (Gibbon),
+in the centre, and Haskell started in early on the second day to catch
+fame, and thus, according to his own "Narrative," he succeeded:
+
+ "A bullet entered the chest of my horse, 'Billy,' just in front of my
+ left leg; a kick from a hitched horse in the dark that would likely
+ have broken my ankle if it had not been for a very thick boot, but
+ which did break my temper, and a bullet from a sharp shooter that
+ hissed by my cheek so close that I felt the movement of the air
+ distinctly."
+
+And thus the "Narrative" recites as to the third and last day of the
+battle:
+
+ "I had been struck upon the thigh by a bullet which I think must have
+ glanced and partially spent its force upon my saddle. It had pierced
+ the thick cloth of my trousers, and two thicknesses of underclothing,
+ but had not broken the skin, leaving me with an enormous bruise, that
+ for a time benumbed the entire leg. At the time of receiving it, I
+ heard the thump, and noticed it, and the hole in the cloth into which
+ I thrust my finger, and I experienced a feeling of relief when I
+ found that my leg was not pierced."
+
+We shudder when we think what might have happened to that leg, if the
+bullet, when it saw Haskell, had not so kindly glanced and spent its force
+on his saddle before piercing the thick cloth of his breeches, and the two
+thicknesses of his underclothing.
+
+The second and third days brought scant renown to such an ambitious
+officer as First Lieut. Haskell, but immortal fame is very chary with her
+favors. She tries a man long, and she tries him hard, before wreathing his
+brow with the laurel of victory, and fitting him for a niche in the Temple
+of Fame. Haskell realized all this at the close of the battle on this
+afternoon of July third, and he evidently concluded to create a niche for
+himself in the holy of holies by a page or two of romance in his
+"Narrative," and so he planned it all out.
+
+Haskell knew--none better than he--that the Philadelphia Brigade met and
+repulsed the brunt of the charge of Pickett's Division, but he would
+immortalize himself as a hero by recording in his "Narrative," that the
+Brigade broke from the "Bloody Angle" without orders or reason, with no
+uplifted hand of Webb, or Banes, or Dennis O'Kane, or Martin Tschudy, or
+R. Penn Smith, or Theodore Hesser to check them; that he, Haskell, met
+them, "a tide of rabbits," and ordered them to halt, to about face, and to
+fire, and hearing his voice they obeyed his command, and he led them back
+to glorious victory, and that he--as the one solitary horseman between the
+lines, only 40 yards from the enemy--repulsed Longstreet's Corps, and
+thereby, therein and thereon ended the great conflict at Gettysburg.
+
+It was such a ridiculous page of fiction that if Haskell had survived the
+vicissitudes of war, he would have eliminated it, and if he died before
+the close of the Civil War--as he did--he would trust to luck; he trusted
+aright, for a Loyal Legion concluded to continue the fiction, thereby
+placing its laurel on Haskell's brow, crowning HIM the Hero of Gettysburg;
+and a State History Commission concluded to fill a niche in the Temple of
+the Immortals with the name and fame of First Lieutenant Frank Aretas
+Haskell, but not until fifty years after the fiction had been written,
+when few were left to refute that romance of the most vainglorious soldier
+of the Civil War.
+
+
+AN OFFICIAL STATEMENT OF THE LOSS OF THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE.
+
+The total number of officers and men present for duty of the Philadelphia
+Brigade, at the Battle of Gettysburg, was 1,573, and the total loss was
+491, given in detail, as to regiments in the annexed tables:
+
+NUMBER PRESENT FOR DUTY
+
+ +---------------+----------+------+-------+
+ | REGIMENTS | OFFICERS | MEN | TOTAL |
+ +---------------+----------+------+-------+
+ | General Staff | 4 | -- | 4 |
+ | 69th | 22 | 312 | 344 |
+ | 71st | 27 | 366 | 393 |
+ | 72nd | 26 | 447 | 473 |
+ | 106th | 30 | 313 | 343 |
+ | Brigade Band | -- | 16 | 16 |
+ +---------------+----------+------+-------+
+ | Totals | 119 | 1454 | 1573 |
+ +---------------+----------+------+-------+
+
+LOSS OF PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE AND SECOND CORPS AT GETTYSBURG.
+
+ -------+----------------+----------------+----------------+--------
+ | | | Captured or |
+ No. | No. of Killed | No. of Wounded | Missing | Totals
+ of +----------+-----+----------+-----+----------+-----+--------
+ Regt. | Officers | Men | Officers | Men | Officers | Men |
+ -------+----------+-----+----------+-----+----------+-----+--------
+ 69th | 4 | 36 | 8 | 72 | 2 | 15 | 137
+ 71st | 2 | 19 | 3 | 55 | 3 | 16 | 98
+ 72nd | 2 | 42 | 7 | 139 | -- | 2 | 192
+ 106th | 1 | 8 | 9 | 45 | -- | 1 | 64
+ -------+----------+-----+----------+-----+----------+-----+--------
+ Totals | 9 | 105 | 27 | 211 | 5 | 34 | 491
+ -------+----------+-----+----------+-----+----------+-----+--------
+
+TOTAL LOSS SECOND CORPS.
+
+ ---------------+-----------------+----------------+-------
+ | | Captured or |
+ No. of Killed | No. of Wounded | Missing | Total
+ ---------+-----+----------+------+----------+-----+-------
+ Officers | Men | Officers | Men | Officers | Men |
+ ---------+-----+----------+------+----------+-----+-------
+ 66 | 731 | 270 | 2923 | 13 | 365 | 4369
+ ---------+-----+----------+------+----------+-----+-------
+
+The following table, furnished by our beloved Comrade, Sylvester Byrne,
+was the last letter the Philadelphia Brigade Association ever received
+from that noble soul--that Comrade who loved his Regiment and Brigade
+with ardent and unfaltering affection. To the very last he was faithful to
+and watchful of his Command. The statement was furnished for the purpose
+of correcting some errors relative to the actual losses of the
+Philadelphia Brigade. The table is printed just as it was given by Comrade
+Byrne, and is regarded as his sacred contribution to the Brigade's reply
+to Haskell's charge of cowardice:
+
+TABLE SHOWING THE LOSSES OF THE PHILADELPHIA BRIGADE FROM 1861 TO 1865.
+
+ +--------+--------+---------+---------+---------+--------------+-------+
+ | | | | | Died of | Died of | |
+ | Regt. | Killed | Wounded | Missing | Disease | Other Causes | Total |
+ +--------+--------+---------+---------+---------+--------------+-------+
+ | 69th | 178 | 346 | 185 | 91 | 15 | 815 |
+ | 71st | 140 | 396 | 330 | 91 | 6 | 963 |
+ | 72nd | 195 | 558 | 165 | 60 | 10 | 988 |
+ | 106th | 99 | 416 | 157 | 81 | 14 | 767 |
+ +--------+--------+---------+---------+---------+--------------+-------+
+ | Totals | 612 | 1716 | 837 | 323 | 45 | 3533 |
+ +--------+--------+---------+---------+---------+--------------+-------+
+
+The total loss in killed, wounded and missing of the Philadelphia Brigade
+at Gettysburg was over 32 per cent., about one soldier slain to every
+three engaged in the battle. Call you this "running like rabbits?"
+
+The total loss of the Philadelphia Brigade during the Civil War was 3,533,
+of which number 545 were killed, wounded and missing at Antietam, the
+remaining loss of nearly three thousand was sustained in the 45
+engagements in which the Brigade took part, and yet with the evidence of
+this loss, furnished by the United States Government and easily accessible
+to all, and on file in the library of the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts,
+that Order appears to stand sponsor for a "Narrative" which falsely
+proclaimed to the world that the brave men of the Philadelphia Brigade
+"ran like rabbits" from Pickett's Division at Gettysburg.
+
+What more need be said to convince this Military Order of the Loyal Legion
+that from the beginning to the end, the Philadelphia Brigade was just as
+loyal, just as brave, just as heroic, as they, our comrades, and with this
+statement of facts the Association of Survivors of the Philadelphia
+Brigade calls upon the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, Commandery of
+Massachusetts, and the History Commission of Wisconsin, to retract the
+statement made in the volumes published by them during the year 1908, as
+to cowardice.
+
+In meeting and repulsing the charge of Pickett's Division at the Bloody
+Angle of Gettysburg, the High Water Mark of the Civil War, the
+Philadelphia Brigade gained imperishable fame that will live in history as
+long as our country will exist as a nation, and that renown is so
+irrevocably fixed in the annals of the War that it can never be impaired
+while time itself shall last.
+
+Since the foregoing reply was formulated, to the charge of cowardice made
+under the auspices of the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts, the Philadelphia
+Brigade Association has received a book of 185 pages, entitled "The Battle
+of Gettysburg, by Frank Aretas Haskell, Wisconsin History Commission,
+Reprint No. 1," an edition of 2,500 copies, printed under authority of the
+State of Wisconsin. In printing this book these words appear in the
+preface:
+
+ "The Wisconsin History Commission has, in accordance with its fixed
+ policy, reverted to the original edition, which is here presented
+ entire, exactly as first printed."
+
+And this is what that "History Commission" records on pages 9 and 10
+regarding the Eleventh Corps:
+
+ "Between three and four o'clock in the afternoon the enemy, now in
+ overwhelming force, resumed the battle with spirit. The portion of
+ the Eleventh Corps making but feeble opposition to the advancing
+ enemy, soon began to fall back. Back in disorganized masses they fled
+ into the town, hotly pursued, and in lanes, in barns, in yards and
+ cellars, throwing away their arms, they sought to hide like rabbits,
+ and were captured, unresisting, by hundreds."
+
+The Loyal Legion of Massachusetts hadn't the courage to print that
+paragraph in their book.
+
+These regiments formed the Eleventh Corps at Gettysburg: 17th Conn., 82d
+Ill., 33d Mass., 41st, 45th, 54th, 58th, 68th, 75th, 119th, 134th, 136th,
+154th and 157th New York; 27th, 73d, 74th and 153d Penna.; 25th, 55th,
+61st, 73d, 75th, 82d and 107th Ohio, and 26th Wisconsin. How do the
+Survivors of these Regiments regard the statement of the History
+Commission of Wisconsin, that "they sought to hide like rabbits?" and that
+the loss usually sustained by the Eleventh Corps was in prisoners?
+
+And this is how the great State of Wisconsin, through its History
+Commission, maligns General Sickles and President Lincoln, who put upon
+General Sickles' shoulders the stars of a Major-General. (Pages 40 and
+41.) The Loyal Legion of Massachusetts eliminated the slander against Gen.
+Sickles and President Lincoln.
+
+ "General Sickles commenced to advance his whole corps, from the
+ general line, straight to the front, with a view to occupy the second
+ ridge, along and near the road. What his purpose could have been is
+ past conjecture. It was not ordered by General Meade, as I heard him
+ say, and he disapproved as soon as it was made known to him. Generals
+ Hancock and Gibbon, as they saw the move in progress, criticised its
+ propriety sharply, as I know, and foretold quite accurately what
+ would be the result. I suppose the truth probably is that General
+ Sickles supposed he was doing for the best; but he was neither born
+ nor bred a soldier. But one can scarcely tell what may have been the
+ motives of such a man, a politician, and some other things, exclusive
+ of the BARTON KEY affair, a man after show and notoriety, and
+ newspaper fame, and the adulation of the mob, there is a grave
+ responsibility on those in whose hands are the lives of ten thousand
+ men; AND ON THOSE WHO PUT STARS ON MEN'S SHOULDERS, TOO! Bah! I
+ kindle when I see some things I have to see.
+
+ "It is understood in the Army that the President thanked the slayer
+ of Barton Key for SAVING THE DAY at Gettysburg. Does the country know
+ any better than the President that Meade, Hancock and Gibbon were
+ entitled to some little share of such credit?"
+
+It is inconceivable that the great State of Wisconsin would in any way
+lend herself to the dissemination of what is not only untrustworthy, but
+absolutely scandalous, malevolent and false information, except it was
+done in ignorance of facts. It is still more inconceivable that the Loyal
+Legion of Massachusetts, soldiers themselves, would act as sponsors or in
+any way help, aid or assist in depriving fellow soldiers of the honors
+fairly and bravely won in a battle where their loss was 491 of a total of
+less than 1,500 men, except they had given no heed to the statements
+before publication.
+
+We believe that the State of Wisconsin and the Loyal Legion of
+Massachusetts can do no less as American citizens and soldiers than to
+promptly disclaim all responsibility for the statements set forth in
+Lieut. Haskell's book. For however good Haskell's record as a soldier is,
+yet the fact must clearly appear to every intelligent mind that a man who
+would speak falsely of his superior officers and even go so far--at least
+in one case (Sickles)--as to bring to life out of the long dead past, a
+sad, sad epoch, which was no fault of his--displays in such writing a
+spirit unworthy of any American; and his self laudation of what he
+did--would cause anyone who was ever on a field of battle to use one of
+Haskell's expressions, "Bah."
+
+A refusal to make this public disclaimer we feel would place both the
+State of Wisconsin and Loyal Legion of Massachusetts in a position which,
+to say it very mildly, would be the reverse of creditable, and put them in
+the attitude of sharing the ridicule and contempt which the narrative of
+Lieutenant Haskell deserves.
+
+
+
+
+NOTES, CORRESPONDENCE AND REMARKS.
+
+NOTE NO. 1.
+
+
+This letter from General Alex. S. Webb is made a part of this paper:
+
+ NEW YORK MONUMENTS COMMISSION
+ BATTLE FIELDS OF GETTYSBURG AND
+ CHATANOOGA
+ RIVERDALE-ON-HUDSON
+ NEW YORK.
+
+September 7, 1909.
+
+My dear Frazier:
+
+I could not find your address, but I had Dampman's, and wrote to him to
+try and obtain action on Haskell's book which is now circulated by the
+thousands to take from our Brigade and its Commander all the glory and
+reputation we acquired at the Bloody Angle of Gettysburg.
+
+So make it certain that our answer to the Massachusetts Commandery be
+strong and clear. What Haskell wrote he wrote in ignorance. He paraded
+with the stragglers and prisoners behind a fighting Brigade and thought
+he was leading a Division.
+
+Now, Frazier, let this denial of Haskell's claim be strong and yet
+courteous. He is dead. Gibbon is dead. Hancock dead. What a time to
+proclaim this falsehood.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ (Signed) ALEX. S. WEBB,
+ Brevet Maj. General, U. S. A.
+
+
+NOTE NO. 2.
+
+WHAT LINCOLN SAID.
+
+It was Abraham Lincoln who said at the dedication of the National Cemetery
+at Gettysburg:
+
+"But in a larger sense, we cannot dedicate, we cannot consecrate, we
+cannot hallow this ground. The brave men, living and dead, who struggled
+here, have consecrated it far above our power to add or detract. The world
+will little note nor long remember what we say here, but it can never
+forget what they did here."
+
+And yet the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, Commandery of
+Massachusetts, and the Wisconsin History Commission, in so far as they
+authorized, or are responsible for the publication of the Haskell
+"Narrative" of the Battle of Gettysburg, are surely, surely doing what
+they can to detract from what the living and the dead did there.
+
+
+NOTE NO. 3.
+
+FOR CAREFUL CONSIDERATION.
+
+A typewritten copy of this reply of the Philadelphia Brigade Association,
+before being placed in the hands of the printer, was sent to the Military
+Order of the Loyal Legion, Commandery of Massachusetts; to the Wisconsin
+History Commission, and to the Governor of Wisconsin, asking if they had
+any explanation to make as to the statements contained in Haskell's
+"Narrative," advising them that we would gladly give it in our printed
+book.
+
+As yet no reply has been received from the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts,
+and for this grave discourtesy we are at a loss to account, unless it be
+that after consideration the facts submitted did not warrant them in
+defending the position in which they were placed, and to acknowledge
+themselves in error would, to some extent, at least, stultify themselves.
+
+The Governor of Wisconsin, who is an ex-officio member of the Wisconsin
+History Commission, writes under date of February 24, 1910, scarcely
+referring at all to the matter under consideration, i. e., the conduct of
+the Philadelphia Brigade in the Battle of Gettysburg. He does, however,
+say that the purpose of the Commission is to publish such material as from
+considerations of rarity or general excellence it is deemed desirable to
+disseminate. Haskell's book certainly comes under one of these classes. We
+do not believe that among any writings of either Union men or Confederates
+in all the United States, such a rare book as Haskell's can be found. The
+Governor of Wisconsin says that Haskell in his story to his brother puts
+down in his letter "what he saw, or thought he saw."
+
+It would seem that comment on this is useless. That history should be what
+the writer "saw, OR THOUGHT HE SAW," is at least novel.
+
+Chas. E. Estabrook, a Comrade of the Grand Army, and its representative on
+the Wisconsin History Commission, and its chairman, under date of February
+17, 1910, while writing a somewhat lengthy letter, neglects, also, to
+write of the matter under consideration, but says, among other things:
+
+ "The subject of the criticism of the Eleventh Corps, by Haskell, in
+ his account of Gettysburg, was considered by me, and I contemplated
+ writing notes, OR GIVING THE LATER, AND WHAT I THINK THE MORE
+ ACCURATE VIEW. I, however, concluded, in view of the rule which we
+ adopted, to have the other and later account of the Battle of
+ Gettysburg prepared by a Wisconsin man, from the Wisconsin point of
+ view, and some months ago asked a staff officer, who served in that
+ Corps, to write an account of the Eleventh Corps at Gettysburg, which
+ he consented to do. This will be published as soon as practicable
+ after the same is delivered to the Commission."
+
+It would seem from this that Chairman Estabrook, Past Department
+Commander, of Wisconsin, Grand Army of the Republic, does not believe the
+statement made by Haskell in his "Narrative," and that it is necessary to
+have another book published to state truthfully what the Eleventh Corps
+did. It would seem that it is also needless to make any comment on the
+position taken by Comrade Estabrook, Chairman of the Wisconsin History
+Commission. It is to be hoped that this staff officer's book will be
+written from the stand-point of what he saw, and not from what he thought
+he saw.
+
+
+THE HISTORY COMMISSION'S VIEW.
+
+Reuben G. Thwaites, Secretary and Editor of the Wisconsin History
+Commission, speaking for the Commission, writes thus:
+
+ "OPINIONS, OR ERRORS OF FACT, on the part of the respective authors
+ represented, both in original narratives and in reprints issued by
+ the Commission HAVE NOT, NOR WILL THEY BE MODIFIED BY THE LATTER. For
+ all statements of whatever character, the author alone is
+ responsible.
+
+ "Could any plainer statement than the foregoing be phrased in the
+ English language, to indicate that this Commission certainly does
+ not endorse whatever criticisms may have contemporaneously been
+ offered by Lieutenant Haskell?"
+
+As the question has been asked us we reply: As Haskell has been dead for
+more than 45 years, and the foul slanders were made public by the
+Wisconsin History Commission in November, 1908, defaming President
+Lincoln, Generals Sickles, Howard, Doubleday, Barlow, Schurz, Geary, Webb,
+Banes and other officers, and thousands of brave soldiers, it certainly
+does look to the Comrades of the Philadelphia Brigade as though the
+Wisconsin History fully endorsed everything that Haskell wrote. Just how
+the Corps, Brigade and Regimental Associations, Grand Army Posts, Loyal
+Legion Commanderies, public libraries, the newspaper press, and others to
+whom this "Reply" will be sent will regard the actions of the Wisconsin
+Commission and the Massachusetts Loyal Legion has yet to be determined.
+
+Writing further, Secretary and Editor Thwaites says:
+
+ "If Haskell's account was worth reprinting at all (and we thought it
+ well worth doing), the only course open to us, as historians, was to
+ present it just as it was originally issued, and not in the
+ emasculated form adopted by the Dartmouth editor, and the
+ Massachusetts Loyal Legion; changes of such character in a
+ contemporary document are unwarranted, and utterly ruin it as
+ historical material."
+
+As this seems to be a question of ethics between history makers, it is up
+to the Dartmouth editor, and the Massachusetts Loyal Legion to satisfy the
+Wisconsin Commission why the unwarranted emasculation was made of the
+Haskell "Narrative."
+
+The Wisconsin History Commission concludes its letter of explanation and
+excuse to the Philadelphia Brigade Association in these words:
+
+ "In reprinting various other rare Wisconsin Civil War material, as we
+ intend to do, it may happen that the original authors thus selected
+ for treatment have criticised certain commands; it certainly would
+ not tend to smooth the path of the Commission if each such command
+ was thereupon to pass condemnatory resolutions. WE shall certainly
+ hope to be spared such treatment."
+
+In reprinting the Haskell "Narrative" the Wisconsin History Commission
+invited the criticism it justly deserves, and must expect to receive; and
+in their reprints in the future, if it permits their authors to criticise
+other commands--as they intend to do--They cannot escape the condemnatory
+resolutions they hope to be spared.
+
+The Man of Nazareth said: Give, and it shall be given unto you; good
+measure, pressed down, and running over, shall men give into your bosom.
+For with the same measure that ye mete, withal it shall be measured to you
+again.
+
+
+LETTER FROM MAJOR ROBERTS.
+
+The following letter, under date of May 15, 1877, was written by Major
+Samuel Roberts, of the 72d Regiment, Pa. Vols., to a Comrade and friend:
+
+ "Webb's Brigade was composed of the 69th, 71st, 72d and 106th
+ Pennsylvania Regiments; the 106th Regiment had been sent to the right
+ to reinforce Gen. Howard, leaving the other three Regiments of the
+ Brigade to receive the shock of Pickett's advance.
+
+ "The Brigade was not entrenched, nor driven back and rallied by Webb.
+ The left wing of the 71st Regiment fell back a few yards; the 69th
+ maintained their position, as did the right wing of the 71st. The
+ 72d, which held a position to the left, and a short distance to the
+ rear of the Brigade, moved by the right flank about one hundred
+ yards, and came to a front about sixty yards in front of Armistead's
+ Confederate Brigade. Armistead fell only a few yards in front of the
+ 72d Regiment.
+
+ "With the exception of a slight change of position of the left wing
+ of the 71st Regiment, the Brigade not only held its position, but
+ advanced and captured several colors, and the prisoners taken
+ exceeded in number what was left of the Brigade, which lost nearly
+ fifty per cent. in killed and wounded--the killed and wounded of the
+ 72d was over fifty per cent.
+
+ "Cushing's Battery, which was attached to the Brigade, was served
+ until men were not left sufficient to work the guns. Cushing obtained
+ volunteers from the Brigade, who served the guns until Cushing was
+ killed.
+
+ "Webb's Brigade, called the Philadelphia Brigade, was originally
+ commanded by Col. E. D. Baker, who was killed at Ball's Bluff. It was
+ the Second Brigade, Second Division, Second Corps, Army of the
+ Potomac, and forms the prominent feature in Rothermel's painting of
+ the Battle of Gettysburg."
+
+
+NOTE NO. 5.
+
+GETTYSBURG BATTLE FIELD DISPATCHES.
+
+From official dispatches sent from Headquarters, Army of the Potomac, to
+the War Department, during the progress of the third day's fighting, which
+were given out to the Associated Press about midnight, being held back
+until assured that the Union Army was victorious.
+
+ "Gettysburg, July 3d, 3 P. M.--A great attack is now being made on
+ our left center by a powerful column of Rebels. We can see them
+ advancing in hosts. Their lines are half a mile in length. They have
+ to march a mile before they can strike a line. All of our artillery
+ has now opened on them and we can see them falling by hundreds. In a
+ few minutes they will strike our line, and the fight will be at close
+ quarters."
+
+ "Gettysburg, July 3d, 4.30 P. M.--We have won a great victory. The
+ fight is over and the Rebel lines hurled back in wild disorder.
+ Longstreet's whole Corps seems to have been swept away, from our
+ fire. The field is covered with Rebel dead. Wild cheers ring out from
+ every part of our lines. Thousands of Rebel prisoners are being
+ brought in. Sheaves of battle flags and thousands of small arms are
+ being gathered in by our men. The rejoicing among our men is
+ indescribable."
+
+ "Gettysburg, July 3d, 5 P. M.--Our victory is more complete than we
+ could dare hope for. An immense column of the enemy, at least 20,000
+ strong, attacked our left center and were utterly destroyed by our
+ fire. The column consisted of Longstreet's Corps, and but few of them
+ are left. Nearly all were either killed, wounded, or are now
+ prisoners in our hands. I hear that Hancock, Gibbon and Webb are
+ severely wounded. The Philadelphia Brigade is almost destroyed. They
+ met the most violent rush of the enemy and lost terribly. Col.
+ O'Kane, of the 69th, is killed, and there is hardly a field officer
+ left in the Brigade."
+
+ "Gettysburg, July 3d, 10 P. M.--Our victory grows more complete as we
+ get time to realize its magnitude. It looks as though nearly all of
+ Longstreet's Corps had been destroyed. The field in front of the
+ Second Corps, where the brunt of the attack fell, is covered with
+ Rebel dead. In front of the Philadelphia Brigade they lie in great
+ piles. Hundreds of Rebel officers are among the fallen. Gen.
+ Armistead, of Pickett's Division, fell within our lines. He was shot
+ through the body and is now dying. The Rebel Generals Garnet and
+ Kemper, fell in front of the 69th and 71st Pennsylvania Volunteers.
+ All the field officers of the former Regiment are killed. The
+ slaughter on both sides has indeed been frightful. Our men are busy
+ gathering in the wounded, many of whom must die during the night for
+ want of proper attention."
+
+
+NOTE NO. 6.
+
+LETTER FROM AN INTIMATE FRIEND OF LIEUTENANT HASKELL.
+
+ Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 19, 1910.
+
+ "I am in receipt of your favor and note what you say about the
+ extract from the book published by the Wisconsin History Commission
+ relative to the description of the Battle of Gettysburg, by Col.
+ Haskell. It confirms what I stated in my letter to the "Public
+ Ledger" in September last. My daughter, who resides in Milwaukee, has
+ sent me a copy of the book that you mention. I knew Col. Haskell
+ intimately and was confident from the intimation that I possessed
+ that had Col. Haskell lived to see the end of the Civil War he would
+ have modified his description of the battle, as compared to that
+ shown in the publication made by the Loyal Legion of Massachusetts.
+
+ Yours very truly,
+ W. YATES SELLECK."
+
+Mr. Selleck was the military agent at Washington for the State of
+Wisconsin. The remains of Col. Haskell were forwarded to Mr. Selleck, at
+Washington, D. C., who sent them by express, on June 7, 1864, to Haskell's
+mother, at Portage City, Wisconsin. In Mr. Selleck's letter to the "Public
+Ledger" of Philadelphia, under date of September 21, 1909, he said: "I was
+intimately acquainted with Haskell and had several conversations with him
+after the Battle of Gettysburg in regard to that battle, and I have good
+reason for stating that had Haskell lived until the close of the War the
+criticisms contained in his diary would not have been made public."
+
+
+NOTE NO. 7.
+
+THE CONCLUDING NOTE.
+
+What amusing history makers the Companions of the Loyal Legion of
+Massachusetts and the Comrades of the Wisconsin History Commission are.
+The State of Wisconsin enacted a law creating a History Commission, and
+straightway it begins printing very costly books, which they claim to be
+"histories of great battles of the Civil War," one of which "histories"
+the Governor of Wisconsin sententiously says: "Is what the author saw, OR
+THOUGHT HE SAW"; and because of its inaccuracy the chairman of that
+History Commission contemplated correcting by himself, "writing notes
+giving the more accurate view," but instead engaged a staff officer, who
+really saw what he thought he saw, to write a book correcting the
+inaccuracies that Chairman and Comrade Estabrook himself contemplated
+doing; and in the meantime the Secretary and Editor of the Commission
+"intends reprinting other rare Wisconsin Civil War material," regardless
+of the supremely ridiculous opinions or errors of facts of the authors,
+thereby continuing to hold the State of Wisconsin responsible for the
+ridicule and expense that attach to such so-called histories, one of which
+a distinguished officer of the Civil War pithily characterizes as
+"inaccurate, misleading, indecent, venomous, scandalous and vainglorious."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ CAPT. EDWARD THOMPSON, 69th.
+ CAPT. JOHN D. ROGERS, 71st.
+ JOHN W. DAMPMAN, 71st.
+ THOS. H. EATON, 72d.
+ FRANK WEIBLE, 72d.
+ WM. H. NEILER, 106th.
+ JAMES THOMPSON, 106th.
+
+ Committee on Publication.
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes:
+
+The following misprints have been corrected:
+ "Haskell'" corrected to "Haskell's" (page 3)
+ "nitche" corrected to "niche" (page 26)
+ "criticims" corrected to "criticisms" (page 41)
+
+Other than the corrections listed above, inconsistencies in spelling and
+hyphenation have been retained from the original.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Reply of the Philadelphia Brigade
+Association to the Foolish and Absurd Narrative of Lieutenant Frank A. Haskell, by Various
+
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