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diff --git a/34891-h/34891-h.htm b/34891-h/34891-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3a8de47 --- /dev/null +++ b/34891-h/34891-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,1717 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> + <head> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" /> + <title> + The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sketch of the First Kentucky Brigade, by G. B. Hodge. + </title> + <style type="text/css"> + p {margin-top: .75em; text-align: justify; margin-bottom: .75em;} + + h1 {text-align: center; clear:both; font-weight: normal;} + h2 {text-align: center; clear: both; padding-top: 2em;} + + div.spaced p {line-height: 2em;} + + body {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;} + + a {text-decoration: none;} + + .hidden {display: none;} + + .pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */ + /* visibility: hidden; */ + position: absolute; + left: 92%; + font-style: normal; + font-size: smaller; + text-align: right; + } /* page numbers */ + + .amends {margin-left: 8%; margin-right: 8%;} + + .bbox {border: 2px black solid; padding: 1em; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;} + + .center {text-align: center;} + + .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left;} + .poem br {display: none;} + .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;} + .poem span.i0 {display: block; margin-left: 0em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + + .cpoem {width: 60%; margin: 0 auto;} /* centers poem and maintains span indentation */ + + .lrgfont {font-size: 120%;} + .smlfont {font-size: 90%;} + .tinyfont {font-size: 50%;} + + .padtop {padding-top: 3em;} + .padbase {padding-bottom: 3em;} + + </style> + </head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +Project Gutenberg's Sketch of the First Kentucky Brigade, by George B. Hodge + +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: Sketch of the First Kentucky Brigade + +Author: George B. Hodge + +Release Date: January 8, 2011 [EBook #34891] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SKETCH OF FIRST KENTUCKY BRIGADE *** + + + + +Produced by Sam W. and the Online Distributed Proofreading +Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from +images generously made available by The Internet +Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + +</pre> + + + + + +<h1 class="padtop padbase">SKETCH<br /> +<br /> +<span class="tinyfont">OF THE</span><br /> +<br /> +<span class="lrgfont">FIRST KENTUCKY BRIGADE</span></h1> + + +<p class="center padtop padbase"><span class="smlfont">BY ITS</span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span class="lrgfont">ADJUTANT GENERAL, G. B. HODGE.</span></p> + + +<p class="center padtop padbase">FRANKFORT, KY.<br /> +<span class="smlfont">PRINTED AT THE KENTUCKY YEOMAN OFFICE.<br /> +MAJOR & JOHNSTON.<br /> +1874.</span></p> + + +<div class="spaced"> +<p class="center padtop padbase">TO<br /> +GENERAL JOHN C. BRECKINRIDGE,<br /> +ITS NOBLE COMMANDER,<br /> +TO THE<br /> +GALLANT SURVIVORS,<br /> +AND TO THE<br /> +MEMORY OF THE IMMORTAL DEAD<br /> +OF THE BRIGADE,<br /> +THIS SKETCH<br /> +IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED.</p> +</div> + + + + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>3]</a></span></p> + +<h2>SKETCH OF THE 1ST KENTUCKY BRIGADE.</h2> + + +<p>In the general history which will go down to posterity of such +immense bodies of men as were gathered under the banners of +the Confederate States of America, it is not likely that more than +a brief and cursory reference can or will be made to the services +of so small a force as composed the First Kentucky Brigade. +Yet the anomalous position which it occupied, in regard to the +revolution, in having revolted against both State and Federal +authority, exiling itself from home, from fortune, from kindred, +and from friends—abandoning everything which makes life desirable, +save honor—gave it an individuality which cannot fail to +attract the attention of the calm student, who, in coming years, +traces the progress of the mighty social convulsion in which it +acted no ignoble part. The State, too, from which it came, +whatever may be its destiny or its ultimate fate, will remember, +with melancholy and mournful interest, not, perhaps, unmingled +with remorse, the career of that gallant band of men, who, of +all the thousands in its borders inheriting the proud name and +lofty fame of Kentuckians, stood forth fearlessly by deeds to +express the sentiments of an undoubted majority of her people—disapprobation +of wrong and tyranny. Children now in their +cradles, youths as yet unborn, will inquire, with an earnest eagerness +which volumes of recital cannot satisfy, how their countrymen +demeaned themselves in the fierce ordeal which they had +elected as the test of their patriotism; how they bore themselves +on the march and in the bivouac; how in the trials of the long +and sad retreat; how amid the wild carnage of the stricken field. +Fair daughters of the State will oftentimes, even amid the rigid +censorship which forbids utterance of words, love to come in +thought and linger about the lonely graves where the men of +the Kentucky Brigade sleep, wrapped in no winding-sheets save +their battle-clothes, beneath no monuments save the trees of the +forest, torn and mutilated by the iron storm, in which the slumberers +met death. It has seemed to me not improper, therefore, +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>4]</a></span> +that the story should be told by one possessing peculiar facilities +for acquiring knowledge of the movements of detached portions +of the force, and who, in the capacity of a staff officer, under +the directions of its General, issued every order and participated +in every movement of the brigade, who had not only the +opportunity but the desire to do justice to all who composed it, +from him who bore worthily the truncheon of the General, to +those who not less worthily in their places bore their muskets as +privates. A deep interest will always be felt in the history of +the effort which was made, by men strong in their faith in the +correctness of republican forms of government, notwithstanding +the tyranny which the great experiment in the United States +had culminated in, to reconstruct from the shattered fragments +of free institutions upon which the armies of the Federal power +were trampling, a social and political fabric, under the shelter of +which they and their posterity might enjoy the rights of freemen. +When the first seven Southern States seceded, and President +Lincoln took the initial steps to coerce them, the Legislature +of Kentucky, by an almost unanimous vote of the House +of Representatives, declared that any attempt to do so by marching +troops over her soil would be resisted to the last extremity. +The Governor had refused to respond to the call of the Executive +for troops for this purpose. The Legislature approved his +course. But here unanimity ceased; effort after effort was made +in the Legislature to provide for the call of a sovereignty convention. +The majority steadily resisted it. As a compromise, +the neutrality of the State was assumed, acquiesced in by the +sympathizers with the North because they intended to violate it +when the occasion was ripe; acquiesced in by the Southern men +because, while their impulses all prompted them to make common +cause with their Southern brethren, they believed that the +neutrality of the State, in presenting an effective barrier of seven +hundred miles of frontier between the South and invasion, offered +her more efficient assistance than the most active co-operation +could have done. The Legislature adjourned; the canvass commenced +for a new General Assembly; delegates were elected, +pledged to strict neutrality; the Northern sympathizers had been +vigorous, active, and energetic, and unscrupulous. They had in +every county organized “Home Guards;” arms were, by their +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>5]</a></span> +connivance, introduced by the Federal Government in large +quantities. On the first Monday in September the Legislature +met, the mask was thrown off; neutrality was scouted; troops +were openly levied for the Northern army, and the outraged +Southern men revolted.</p> + +<p>Early in the summer of 1861, bodies of the young men of the +State had repaired to Camp Boone, in Tennessee, near the Kentucky +line, where were forming regiments to be mustered into +the service of the Confederate States. Most of these had been +previously members of the State Guard of Kentucky, and consequently +had enjoyed the advantage of systematic and scientific +drill. They were rapidly organized into three regiments of infantry, +known as the 2d, 3d, and 4th Kentucky Regiments of Volunteers, +the 2d having as its Colonel, J. M. Hawes, recently an +officer of the United States Army, but who, with a devotion +which almost invariably manifested itself among the officers of +Southern birth, promptly and cheerfully gave up the advantages +of a certain and fixed position in a regularly organized army, to +offer his sword and military knowledge to the cause of Southern +independence. He was soon succeeded by Colonel Roger +Hanson. The 3d had as its Colonel, Lloyd Tighlman, the 4th +Robert P. Trabue. Colonel Tighlman, before his regiment was +actively in service, was made a Brigadier, and its Lieut. Colonel, +Thompson, succeeded to the Colonelcy. These three regiments +formed the nucleus of a brigade, to the command of which Brigadier +General S. B. Buckner, recently Inspector General and +active Commander of the Kentucky State Guard, was assigned +by President Davis. To this command were afterwards added +the 5th Kentucky, commanded by Colonel Thomas Hunt, the +6th, commanded by Colonel Joseph Lewis, Cobb’s battery, and +Byrne’s battery of artillery.</p> + +<p>On the 17th of September, 1861, General Buckner, with some +Tennessee troops and the Kentucky regiments, moved to Bowling +Green, in Kentucky, and occupied it, fortifying it and fitting +it for the base of active operations of the Confederate armies in +Kentucky, which it became for some months. One regiment of +infantry and a battery of artillery was thrown forward to the +bridge on Green river, under command of Colonel Hawes—the +bridge, shortly after, was burned by the Confederate troops. +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>6]</a></span> +Capt. John Morgan, a few days subsequently to this, reached +this command with one hundred men from the interior of Kentucky. +These men were mounted, to serve as scouts; and here +commenced that career which afterwards gained for their fearless +leader a continental reputation as a bold, daring, and effective +partisan officer. Few men, indeed, with means so limited, and +in the midst of movements so grand and stupendous that the +career of general officers have been lost sight of, have won such +a name and reputation. Of a mild and unassuming demeanor, +gentle and affable in his manners, handsome in person, and possessed +of all that polish of address which is supposed to best +qualify men for the drawing-room and parlor, no enterprise, +however dangerous, no reconnoissance, however tiresome and +wearying, could daunt his spirits or deter him from his purpose. +For months, with his handful of men, he swept the northern +bank of Green river, cutting off the supplies of the enemy, +destroying bridges necessary for their transportation, capturing +their pickets, and harassing their flanks, moving with a celerity +and secrecy which defied pursuit or detection. No commander +of a detached post or guard of the enemy could flatter himself +that distance from Bowling Green or disagreeableness of weather +could protect him from a visit from Morgan. He was liable to be +called upon at any hour, in any weather, or at any point beyond +the intrenched camps of the Federal army. The earth might +be soaked with rain, which for days had been falling, the roads +might be impassable, the Green and Barren rivers with their +tributaries might be swollen far beyond their banks, but over +that earth and across those rivers, when least expected, came +Morgan as with the swoop of an eagle; and, after destroying +the munitions of the enemy, or capturing his guards, was away +again, leaving behind him a polite note intimating he would +call again soon, or perhaps telegraphing a dispatch to the nearest +Federal commander, giving him full and precise particulars +of the movements he had just made, and most provoking details +of the damage he had just committed. Long after the Confederate +army had retired from Kentucky, when the entire State +was in undisputed possession of the Northern armies, many a +Southern sympathizer found immunity and protection from maltreatment +and outrage by the significant threat that Morgan +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>7]</a></span> +would visit that neighborhood soon. And, indeed, during the +disastrous retreat from Nashville, the tireless partisan, passing +through Eastern Tennessee and Kentucky, far in the rear of the +Federal army, fell upon their train at Gallatin, Tennessee, and +lit up the spirits of the despondent Tennesseans by one of his +bold and daring strokes. Even when the Southern army had +passed the Tennessee river, when every available soldier of the +South was supposed to be at Corinth to meet the overwhelming +hosts of the invader, Morgan, gathering three or four hundred +of his men, recrossed the river, fell upon the railroad train at +Athens, Alabama, captured two hundred and eighty prisoners, +and destroyed the cars. Ambushed, defeated, cut to pieces, and +routed by greatly superior forces a few days afterwards, hardly +had the news reached Louisville of his disaster, when, collecting +two hundred of his scattered command, he fell like a thunderbolt +upon the railroad train at Cave City, in the centre of Kentucky, +capturing many prisoners, thousands of dollars in money, +and destroying forty-three baggage cars laden with the enemy’s +stores.</p> + +<p>Early in November, 1861, the Hon. John C. Breckinridge +arrived at Bowling Green, when he resigned his seat as Senator +from Kentucky, in the Federal Congress, and was immediately +commissioned as Brigadier General, and assigned to the command +of the Kentucky Brigade, General Buckner assuming +command of a division of which the Kentucky Brigade was a +component part. He assumed command on the 16th of November—having +as his Chief of Staff and A. A. General, Captain +George B. Hodge, and Aid-de-Camp, Thomas T. Hawkins. The +brigade was ordered to Oakland Station, on the Louisville and +Nashville Railroad, where, in connection with Hindman’s brigade, +it remained in observation of the movements of the enemy on +the north bank of the Green river, who was known to be in great +force at Munfordsville, and in his cantonments extending back +towards Elizabethtown, and was supposed to be only waiting the +completion of the Green river bridge, which he was repairing, +to advance his entire column, estimated at 80,000 men, on Bowling +Green and Nashville. Behind the curtain of the brigades of +Hindman and Breckinridge, Gen. Johnston was rapidly pushing +on the fortifications at Bowling Green; and by the latter part of +January, 1862, they had become quite formidable.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>8]</a></span> +It had, however, become doubtful whether the enemy would +attempt the passage of the Green river. It was certain, if he +did so, his true attack would be developed in a flank movement, +by way of Glasgow and Scottsville, on Nashville, while there +was left him the alternative of massing his troops at Paducah, +then in his possession, and availing himself of his enormous +supplies of water transportation, of moving by the Tennessee +and Cumberland rivers on Forts Henry and Donelson, by a successful +attack on those works, turning the flank of the Confederate +forces at Bowling Green, opening the way to Nashville, and +possibly enabling him to interpose between the Southern armies +and their base of operations. To guard against this latter movement, +the divisions of Generals Floyd and Pillow, and a portion +of the division of General Buckner, were, about the 20th of January, +moved, by way of Clarksville, to the support of Donelson. +With this force marched the 2d Kentucky Regiment, which, +after covering itself with imperishable glory in the terrible combat, +of three days, at Fort Donelson, was, on the 16th of February, +surrendered to the enemy; and passing into captivity, +ceased to participate in the campaign of the spring and summer +of 1862.</p> + +<p>By the 10th of February, definite information had been obtained +by General Johnston of the movements of the enemy. +He was convinced that an overpowering force had moved upon +Forts Donelson and Henry; that a heavy column was pursuing +Crittenden, after defeating and routing him at Fishing Creek, +threatening Nashville on that flank; and that a force almost as +large as the Confederate force at Bowling Green was held in +hand by the enemy, to be poured across Green river and attack +him in front, while the two bodies on his right and left united +at Nashville and closed upon his rear. With the promptness and +decision which characterized his high and serenely courageous +mind, General Johnston determined to retire from Bowling Green +and fall back on Nashville, where, uniting with the garrisons and +troops in defense of Forts Donelson and Henry, should those +places be found to be untenable, he could hold the divisions of +the Federal General, Grant, in check, while he went to the assistance +of Crittenden, and crushed the Federal column advancing +by way of Cumberland Gap. The fortifications of Bowling +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>9]</a></span> +Green were with every expedition dismantled; the government +stores shipped as rapidly as possible to Nashville, and on the +9th of February an order was issued by Major General Hardee, +commanding the central army of Kentucky, directing Generals +Hindman and Breckinridge to repass the Barren river and be +in Bowling Green by the night of the 10th. The admirable discipline +which General Breckinridge had exercised and maintained +in and over his command, enabled him to comply promptly with +the order, without confusion and with no loss of stores, equipments, +or supplies. His brigade, marching at 8 o’clock A. M., +on the 10th passed Barren river bridge at 3 P. M., and bivouacked +three miles south of Bowling Green for the night. Hindman, +being farther in the rear, lost a few of his scouts, and had hardly +time to blow up the bridges over Barren river when the head +of the enemy’s column came into sight, and immediately commenced +shelling the railroad depot and that portion of the track +on which were lying the freight trains. These they succeeded +in firing finally.</p> + +<p>When the retreat of the army commenced, Breckinridge’s brigade +was constituted the rear guard—General Hardee, however, +being still in rear with the cavalry and light artillery. Notwithstanding +the fact that cold, freezing, and intensely inclement +weather set in; notwithstanding the fact that evidences of the +demoralization which a retreat in the presence of an enemy +always produces were too apparent in many divisions of the +army, yet the soldierly manner in which Breckinridge brought +off his brigade, losing not a straggler from the ranks, not a +musket or a tent, speaks more creditably for him and for them +than the recital perhaps of their deeds of daring in the field +could do.</p> + +<p>In truth, history records no sadder tale than the retreat of the +Kentuckians from their native State. For the rest of the army +there was yet hope. Far to the South lay their homesteads, +and their families rested still in security. Between those homesteads +and those families and the advancing foe were innumerable +places where battle might be successfully offered, or where +at least the sons of the South might rear a rampart of their +bodies over which the invader could not pass. Time, political +complications, mutations of fortune, to which the most successful +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>10]</a></span> +commanders are liable, might at any time transform the +triumph of the Northmen into disaster and defeat. Months +must elapse before the advancing columns of the enemy could +reach the South, and ere that time arrived pestilence and malarious +disease would, amid the fens and swamps of the gulf States, +be crouching in their lair, ready to issue forth and grapple with +the rash intruders from a more salubrious clime. But for the +Kentuckians all was apparently lost. Behind their retiring regiments +were the graves of their fathers, and the hearthstones +about which clustered every happy memory of their childhood; +there, in the possession of the invader, were the rooftrees beneath +which were gathered wives who, with a wifely smile gleaming +even through their tears, had bidden their husbands go forth +to do battle for the right, promising to greet them with glad +hearts when they returned in the hour of triumph; there were +the fair faces which for many in that band had made the starlight +of their young lives; there were young and helpless children, +for whom the future promised but suffering, poverty, destitution, +and want; there, too, were the thousands who had with +anxious and waiting hearts, groaning beneath the yoke of the +oppressor, counted the hours until the footsteps of their deliverers +should be heard. On the 13th of February the brigade +crossed the line between Kentucky and Tennessee; a night in +which rain and sleet fell incessantly was succeeded by a day of +intense and bitter cold. Everything which could contribute to +crush the spirits and weaken the nerves of men, seemed to have +combined. But for those dauntless hearts, the bitterness of sacrifice, +the weakness of doubt and uncertainty had passed, when, +by a common impulse, the General, his staff, and the field officers +dismounted, and, placing themselves on foot at the head of +the column, with sad and solemn countenances, but with erect +and soldierly bearing, marched for hours in the advance; and +then was observed, for the first time in that brigade, through +every grade and every rank, the look of high resolve and stern +fortitude, which, amid all the vicissitudes of its fortunes characterized +the appearance of its members, and attracted the attention +and comment of observers in every State through which +it passed. Henceforth for them petty physical discomforts, inconveniences +of position, annoyances of inclement weather, +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>11]</a></span> +scantiness of supplies, rudeness of fare, were nothing; they felt +that they could not pass away until a great day should come +which they looked forward to with unshaken confidence, and +with patient watchfulness. They might never again dispense +in their loved native State the generous hospitality which had +become renowned throughout the continent; what remained +to them of life might be passed in penury and in exile. +Their countrymen might never know how they had lived or +where they had died; venal historians might even teach the +rising generation to brand their memories with the stigma of +treason and shame, but a day was yet to come of the triumph +of which they felt they could not be deprived; days, weeks, +months might elapse, they could bide their time. State after +State might have to be traversed, great rivers might have to be +passed, mountain ranges surmounted, hunger and thirst endured, +but the day and the hour would surely come when with serried +ranks they should meet the foe, and their hearts burning with +the memory of inexpiable wrongs, should, in the presence of the +God of battles, demand and exact a terrible reckoning for all +they had endured and all they had suffered.</p> + +<p>The night of the 14th was passed at Camp Trousdale, where +summer barracks, which had been erected to accommodate the +Tennessee volunteers stationed there for instruction, afforded +but inadequate protection against the bitter cold of the night. +These were the next night burned by the cavalry which covered +the retreat, and afforded to the people of Tennessee the first +evidence that their State was about to be invaded. The spirits +of the army, however, were cheered by the accounts which General +Johnston, with thoughtful care, forwarded, by means of +couriers, daily, of the successful resistance of Fort Donelson. +The entire army bivouacked in line of battle on the night of the +15th at the junction of the Gallatin and Nashville, and Bowling +Green and Nashville roads, about ten miles from Nashville. It +was confidently believed that by means of boats, a large portion +of the force would be sent to the relief of Fort Donelson. But +on the morning of the 16th, it began to be whispered, first, +among the higher officers, spreading thence, in spite of every +precaution, to the ranks, that Donelson not only had fallen, but +that the divisions of Floyd, Pillow, and Buckner had been +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>12]</a></span> +surrendered as prisoners of war. Rumors of the wildest nature flew +from regiment to regiment, the enemy were coming upon transports +to Nashville—the bridges were being destroyed—the forts +below the city were already surrendered—the retreat of the army +was cut off—and as if to confirm the rumors, during the entire +morning, the explosion of heavy artillery was heard in front +and in the direction of Nashville. This proved to be caused by +the firing of guns at Fort Zollicoffer, which, after having being +heavily charged, were, with their muzzles in the earth, exploded +to destroy them. At 4 P. M., on the 16th, the head of the +brigade came in sight of the bridges at Nashville, across which, +in dense masses, were streaming infantry, artillery, and transportation +and provision trains, but still with a regularity and order +which gave promise of renewed activity and efficiency in the +future. At nightfall General Johnston, who had established his +head-quarters at Edgefield, on the northern bank of the Cumberland, +saw the last of his wearied and tired columns defile +across and safely establish themselves beyond.</p> + +<p>Amid all the disasters and gloom of the retreat, the great +captain had abundant cause of self-gratulation and confidence. +He had reached Kentucky in October of the previous year to +find the plan of occupation of the State to be upon three parallel +lines of invasion, and yet all dependent upon a single point +as the base of operations and the depot of supplies. Vicious +and faulty as these unforeseen events proved it to have been, he +had made the most of the situation. He found an army of +hastily levied volunteers, badly equipped, miserably clad, fully +one half stricken down by disease, destitute of transportation, +and with barely the shadow of discipline. Never able to wield +more than eighteen thousand fighting men at and around Bowling +Green, with these men he held at bay a force of the enemy +of fully one hundred thousand men. The Southern States were +protected from invasion. Time was obtained to drill and consolidate +the volunteer force. The army was sustained in the fertile +and abundant grain-producing regions of Kentucky, transportation +gathered of the most efficient character, immense supplies of +beef, corn, and pork collected from the surrounding country and +safely garnered in depots further South for the coming summer +campaign; and when, finally, the defeat of Crittenden, and the +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>13]</a></span> +overwhelming attack on Donelson had apparently cut off his +retreat, leaving him eighty miles in front of his base of operations +and his magazines, he had with promptness, unrivaled +military sagacity, and yet with mingled caution and celerity, +dismantled his fortifications at Bowling Green, transmitted his +heavy artillery and ammunition to Nashville, and extricated his +entire army from the jaws of almost certain annihilation and +capture. The enemy came from the capture of Fort Donelson, +in which he had lost in killed and wounded a force equal to the +entire garrison of the place, to see, to his astonishment, an army +in his front undismayed, and held in hand by a General who +had just displayed to the world military qualities of the highest +order, and a genius for strategy which seemed to anticipate all +his plans and as readily to baffle them. In the capture of the +army defending Donelson the Confederacy lost, as prisoners of +war, the gallant and idolized Buckner, Hanson and his splendid +regiment, and many Kentuckians connected with the staff of +those officers.</p> + +<p>The night of February 16th found the army encamped safely +upon the Murfreesboro and Nashville road; but it found the city +of Nashville in a condition of wild and frantic anarchy.</p> + +<p>The Capital of Tennessee, Nashville, contained, ordinarily, a +population of about 30,000 souls. The revolution had made it +the rendezvous of thousands fleeing from Kentucky, Missouri, +and Western Virginia. So great was the throng of strangers, +that lodging could be with difficulty procured at any price. +Every house was filled and overflowing, boarding was held at +fabulous prices, and private citizens whose wealth would, under +most circumstances, have secured their domesticity from intrusion, +were, perforce, compelled to accommodate and shelter +strangers whom the misfortunes of exile and persecution had +thrown upon the world. Many business houses and warehouses +had been transformed into hospitals for the sick soldiery of the +forces in Kentucky. So great was the influx of invalids that in +many private families as many as three and four of the sick were +to be found. Here, too, were brought hundreds of artificers +and artisans, the government having established manufactories +of various kinds to supply the wants of the army. In no single +city of the Confederacy was to be found so large and so varied +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>14]</a></span> +a supply of all those articles which are essential to the maintenance +of a large and well-appointed army. During the fall and +winter, under government patronage and assistance, many thousands +of hogs and bullocks had been slaughtered and packed. +These were stored in the city. Immense magazines of ammunitions, +of arms, large and small, of ordnance stores, of clothing, +of camp equipage, were located here. Capacious warehouses +were filled with rice, flour, sugar, molasses, and coffee, to the +value of many millions of dollars. The Chief Quarter-Master +and Commissary were accustomed to fill at once the requisitions +of the armies of Kentucky and of Missouri, of Texas and the +Gulf. It may be safely estimated that, at the fall of Donelson, +Nashville had crowded within its limits not less than sixty thousand +residents. It never seems to have occurred to the citizens, +or, indeed, the government, that Nashville was really in danger. +A few unimportant and valueless earth-works had been thrown +up, looking to its defense, but no systematic plan of fortification +had been fixed upon or followed up; nothing but the situation +of Fort Donelson, on the State line, prevented the enemy’s gunboats, +or even his unarmed transports, from coming up to the +city and mooring at its wharves.</p> + +<p>On Sunday morning, as the citizens were summoned by the +church bells to the various houses of worship in the city, congratulations +were joyously exchanged upon the successful defense +of Fort Donelson. Ere the hours of morning devotion +had expired, the news of its fall came like a clap of thunder in +a summer sky. The most excited and improbable stories were +circulated, yet no exaggeration, no improbability, seemed too +monstrous to command credence. Donelson was more than an +hundred miles down the river, yet it was insisted that the enemy’s +boats were within a few miles of the city. The passage of +the army across the Cumberland and through the town added +to the general panic and confusion. Consternation, terror, and +shameful cowardice seemed to have seized alike upon the unthinking +multitude and the officers who were expected to evince +fortitude and manliness; and now commenced a wild and frantic +struggle for escape. Thousands who had never borne arms, +who were, by all the laws of civilized warfare, exempt from the +penalties of hostilities, were impressed with the conviction that +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>15]</a></span> +the safety of their lives depended upon escaping from the +doomed Capital. On all the railroads from the city trains were +hourly run, bearing fugitives a few miles into the interior. The +country roads were thronged with vehicles of every character +and description; the hire of hacks rose to ten, twenty, fifty, +even an hundred dollars for two or three hours’ use. Night +brought no cessation of the tumult. It rained in torrents, but +all through the night might be seen carriages, wagons, drays, +and tumbrils crowded with affrighted men and their families. +Tender and delicate women, feeble and carefully nurtured children, +were to be found, exposed to the inclemencies of the +weather, in open carts and wagons, abandoning luxurious and +costly houses for the precarious sustenance of doubtful and uncertain +charity in their flights. Nor was the disgraceful panic +confined to non-combatants or timid citizens. Men who had +gained high reputation for courage and presence of mind seemed +to have ignored every sentiment of manliness in their indecent +haste to secure safety; nay, some who were high in military +position, whose province and whose duty it was, peculiarly and +particularly, to guard public property and protect government +stores, used their official position to obtain trains of cars upon +which were packed their household furniture, their carriages, +their horses, and their private effects; and having effected this, +they made haste to be gone.</p> + +<p>Troops were left in the city by order of Gen. Johnston, but +the mob spirit rose triumphant. For many days the store-houses +of the government stood open and abandoned by their +proper custodians. Every one was at liberty to help himself +to what he desired; and it may well be supposed that the thousands +who crowded the streets were not slow to avail themselves +of the privilege. Not only were hundreds of thousands +of dollars’ worth of provisions carried away and sequestered, but +the very streets and highways were strewn with bales and packages +of raiment and clothing hastily taken away and as recklessly +abandoned. It was currently estimated that public property +to the value of at least five millions of dollars was dissipated +and destroyed in a few hours. There were not wanting, however, +noble and brilliant examples of firmness, courage, and forethought. +On Tuesday following the surrender, the wagonmaster +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>16]</a></span> +of the 2d Kentucky Regiment reached the head-quarters of +the Kentucky Brigade with fourteen empty wagons with which +he had escaped from Fort Donelson. These the gallant Breckinridge +loaded with supplies of subsistence and clothing, which +were the means of comfort to his command months after the +abandonment of Nashville. Even when the enemy was hourly +expected in the city he might have been seen on the northern +bank of the Cumberland superintending the transit of herds of +well kept cattle brought from Kentucky, that his command +might be furnished with fresh rations during their further retreat.</p> + +<p>Slowly and steadily the army fell back from Nashville until, +on the 22d of February, it reached Murfreesboro. Effecting +then a junction with the army of General Crittenden, which had +retreated from Fishing Creek, and for the first time since the +departure from Bowling Green, General Johnston found himself +in condition to offer and accept battle from the enemy.</p> + +<p>It was evident to the great man who commanded the department +of the West that he could not linger in Tennessee. He was +doubtless able to successfully resist the force under Gen. Buell +which had now occupied Nashville, but it was well known that +none of the force occupied in the reduction of Donelson had ascended +the river. With unlimited supplies of water transportation, +nothing was easier than for them to pass round the peninsula, +and, ascending the Tennessee river, land a force in his rear and +place him in the same dilemma from which he had just so skillfully +extracted his army. A retreat behind the Tennessee was +inevitable, and the strategical position he occupied at Murfreesboro +opened to him three routes. He might pass over to the +turnpike road from Nashville, through Columbia and Pulaski, +parallel with the railroad, and cross at Florence, or, throwing +himself into the mountain passes of Eastern Tennessee, in their +wild gorges and rugged ravines, he might defy pursuit and retreat +upon Chattanooga. This, however, would have been a +virtual abandonment of the Mississippi and its valley. Still a +third route was open. Due south from Murfreesboro ran a +road through a comparatively unfrequented country, passing +directly through Huntsville to Decatur, on the southern bank +of the Tennessee river. While this route offered the advantage +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>17]</a></span> +of a middle course between the two great lines of macadamized +roads east and west of him, enabling him, in case of necessity, +to pass over to either; it was not without objections. Lying, +for the most part, through cultivated and deep bottoms, on the +edge of Northern Alabama, it rises abruptly to cross the great +plateau thrown out from the Cumberland Mountains, here nearly +a thousand feet above the surrounding country, and full forty +miles in width, covered with dense forests of timber, yet barren +and sterile in soil, and wholly destitute of supplies for either +man or beast. Two weeks of unintermitting rain had softened +the earth until the surface resembled a vast swamp; but along +this route the Commander-in-Chief determined to pass; and, +after occupying a week in reorganizing his army, a cloud of +cavalry, consisting of Morgan’s Squadron, the 1st Kentucky +Cavalry, the Texas Rangers, Wirt Adams’, Scott’s, and Forrest’s +regiments were thrown out in the direction of the enemy, with +orders, as they fell back, to burn the cotton and destroy the +bridges; and the further retreat thus commenced.</p> + +<p>History records no example of a retreat conducted with such +success under such adverse circumstances. Rain continued to +fall almost without intermission; it was spring, the season most +unpropitious for transits over country roads, and the passage of +such numbers of horses and wagons, rendered the route literally +a river of liquid mud. For miles at times the wagons would be +submerged in ooze and mire up to the hubs of their wheels, +while the saturated condition of the earth rendered comfortable +encampments impossible. The ascent of the plateau, although +only about two miles of distance, consumed a day for each brigade, +and time was everything to men in their condition; yet +steadily, earnestly, hopefully, they toiled on until, on the 10th +of March, the head of the army had reached a point within +three miles of Decatur, but with the Tennessee swollen far beyond +its banks, flooding the country for miles in every direction, +and sweeping with resistless force over the roads and fords. +Happily, at this point, the Memphis and Charleston Railroad +crossed the Tennessee; and, as a precaution against its freshets, +the railroad company had constructed an embankment fifty feet +in height and two miles in length on which were laid their rails; +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>18]</a></span> +this embankment was still ten or twelve feet above the surrounding +waters, and reached to the terminus of the bridge. Its narrow +width of seven feet precluded the possibility of anything +like orderly movement; but over it were passed the infantry and +cavalry without cessation either day or night. The artillery and +baggage-wagons were placed on platform cars, and at a given +signal the track was cleared while they were run to and over +the bridge. Patience, perseverance, and indomitable will finally +accomplished the work, and on the 16th the Kentucky Brigade, +bringing up the rear of the army, marched through Decatur. +A month had elapsed since the fall of Donelson, but the army +was at last behind the Tennessee, and all was not yet lost. Still +the danger was not yet over. The enemy commanded the river +and might, by vigorous movements, prevent the junction of the +army of Central Kentucky with that of General Beauregard, +which had fallen back from Columbus, in Kentucky, and was +now endeavoring to unite with that under General Johnston. In +truth, it seemed that, if the enemy was prompt and vigorous in +his movements, this would be impossible. The Memphis and +Charleston Railroad runs nearly due east and west, pursuing for +ninety miles an almost parallel course with the Tennessee river—never +diverging from it more than twenty miles, and in many +places approaching to within eight or ten. Numerous streams +which drain the country and empty into the main river were +crossed by it, and on the margins of these streams are almost +invariably found swamps requiring heavy trestle-work to support +the rail. A little celerity on the part of the enemy might at +any hour enable him to destroy a section of this trestle-work, +and thus cut off the communication. To transport the army by +the country roads was impossible, the torrent-like rains which +had impeded the progress of the army through Tennessee had +continued to fall after the passage of the river. In many places +the country was covered with sheets of water too deep to be +forded, while the roads, not thus submerged, were impassable +for horsemen. It was difficult for the various corps to pass far +enough from Decatur to find encampments. Within a mile of +the town might be counted scores of wagons, on the various +roads, sunk to their beds in mire, and which the quagmire of +oozing earth around them prevented the possibility of unloading. +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>19]</a></span> +Hindman’s brigade of Arkansas troops was thrown forward +by rail to Courtland immediately. Crittenden was pushed +beyond him to Iuka, and on the 21st the Kentucky Brigade, +under General Breckinridge, was dispatched, with its field pieces, +ammunition, and baggage, to Burnsville, within fifteen miles of +Corinth, by cars, while the horses and wagons were sent to +struggle through as best they could on the dirt roads.</p> + +<p>The remainder of the army was gradually pushed on to Corinth, +meeting there the army of Beauregard, and confidence and +hope were once more restored. The danger of an immediate +surprise was over; but the greatest vigilance was necessary to +meet and prevent the enemy from landing in force, and, by +strength of numbers, accomplishing that which he had failed +to do by celerity of movement. For several days his gunboats +swept up and down the Tennessee river, shelling the banks, and +apparently seeking a favorable point to disembark from his +transports. The little village of Eastport, situated some eight +miles from Iuka, it was supposed, offered him peculiar advantages, +and preparations were made to resist him by throwing up +earth-works, and placing in position two thirty-two pounders. +He continued, however, to make feints, landing a few regiments +at various points, but almost immediately withdrawing them, +until information was received, which convinced the Commander-in-Chief +that the attack of the enemy would be on Corinth, +where is located the junction of the Mobile and Ohio Railroad +with the Charleston and Memphis Railroad. Meantime, the +greater portion of the division of General Crittenden, composed +of Statham’s brigade and Bowen’s brigade, was sent forward to +Burnsville, and ordered to report to General Breckinridge. Hindman’s +force had passed on to Corinth, and was now incorporated +with, and formed part of, the corps d’armee of General Hardee. +Scouts were kept constantly reconnoitering the roads leading to +the Tennessee river, and vigorous efforts made to bring the army +to a high state of efficiency in discipline and equipment. The +enemy, it was now known, had landed seven divisions of his +army, amounting to about forty-two thousand men, at a point +on the Tennessee river, near Pittsburg Landing, and was now +encamped in position, his right resting on a small stream called +Owl Creek, and his left on Lick Creek, the streams running +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>20]</a></span> +nearly parallel to each other, four miles apart. To meet and +crush this force, or cripple it before General Buell, with his +army, which was advancing through Tennessee, could reinforce +it, was the object of the Commander-in-Chief, preparatory to +which, his army was re-organized and cast into four divisions or +corps.</p> + +<p>The first, under General Bragg, consisted of 9,422 men.</p> + +<p>The second, under General Polk, numbered 4,855 men.</p> + +<p>The third corps was commanded by General Hardee, 15,524 +men.</p> + +<p>And the reserve, consisting of the Kentucky Brigade, Statham’s +brigade, and Bowen’s brigade, amounted, according to the +returns in the Adjutant General’s office, on the night of April +the 5th, to 6,894 men, commanded by Brigadier General John C. +Breckinridge. The cavalry amounted to three thousand.</p> + +<p>Two roads, the one from Corinth, the other from Burnsville, +lead to Pittsburg Landing; they unite on a ridge four miles from +the river, and thence the road, gradually descending a long slope, +leads to the Tennessee, along a spur of the hilly range, with +lateral slopes, to Lick Creek on the one side and Owl Creek on +the other. The whole tongue of land between these streams +is densely wooded with unbroken forests; and as it approaches +within a mile of the river, is covered, in addition, with a thick +mass of undergrowth sweeping to its banks. On this unfavorable +ground the battle was to be fought. On the morning of +April the 4th, at 3 o’clock, A. M., the reserve corps marched +from Burnsville, by way of Farmington and Monterey, expecting +to reach the point of junction of the two roads that night. +A heavy rain storm, however, obstructed its progress, as well as +that of the other divisions of the army, and it was not until the +night of the 5th of April that it reached the junction. Rations +had been provided for three days, but no tents and no baggage +were taken—the want of which added greatly to the discomfort +of the commands, and rendered many unfit for duty. The delay +and the tired condition of the troops on the night of the 5th +caused a difference of opinion to prevail at the council of war +as to the propriety of attacking; but General Johnston determined +to proceed. The other divisions had, on the night of the +5th, reached the positions assigned them, and were posted thus: +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>21]</a></span> +the third corps formed the first line of battle, its right resting on +Lick Creek and its left on Owl Creek, and bivouacked in order +of battle within half a mile of the enemy, who seems to have +been unconscious of the blow about to be struck. In rear of +that the first corps, under General Bragg, bivouacked in order of +battle a quarter of a mile distant. The second corps, under +General Polk, was massed in column of brigades on the road +from Corinth, immediately in rear of the junction with the +Monterey road, and had orders to move up and form in line of +battle as soon as the troops in advance had moved on sufficiently, +while the reserve corps, under General Breckinridge, was +massed in column of brigades on the Monterey road, with +orders to move when General Polk’s corps had passed, and hold +itself subject to the contingencies of the day. At 5 o’clock, A. M., +on the morning of April 6th, General Hardee drove in the +pickets of the enemy, and the terrible battle of Shiloh commenced. +Steadily and irresistibly he swept on, driving the +enemy before him, until the camps were reached, where the +resistance became most desperate. The second line of battle, +under General Bragg, had by this time been brought up and +intermingled with the first line, and the central advanced camp +of the enemy was abandoned by him only, however, that he +might make the more stubborn resistance behind it and in front +of the others. Observing an attempt of the enemy to flank on +the extreme left, General Beauregard sent orders to detach the +Kentucky Brigade, and send it to that point. This was done—the +command now devolving upon Colonel Robt. P. Trabue, +Colonel of the 4th Kentucky and senior Colonel of the brigade. +During the whole of that bloody day, from 9 o’clock, when it +became engaged, it maintained the reputation of its native State, +and slowly but surely pushed back the force opposed to it. It +never gave way or was broken, though terribly cut to pieces; +it never charged that it did not break the ranks of the army; +and it was found, when the action closed in the evening, after +ten hours of continuous fighting, in the front rank of the army. +It will be necessary to refer more particularly to its movements +as we progress. Owing to the dense mass of the undergrowth +the troops were brought in close proximity to each other, and +the firing was consequently destructive, murderous, and deadly.</p> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>22]</a></span> +Two o’clock had arrived; the whole army was and had been +engaged for hours, with the exception of Bowen’s and Statham’s +brigades of the reserve corps. The enemy had been driven +through, and from half of his camps, but refused to give back +further. Giving way on his right and left wings, he had massed +his force heavily in the centre, and poured an almost unintermitting +hail of fire, murderous beyond description, from his covert +of trees and bushes, when General Breckinridge was ordered up +to break his line. Having been most of the day in observation +on the Hamburg road, marching in column of regiments, the +reserve was now moved by the left flank, until opposite the +point of attack, rapidly deployed in line of battle, Statham’s brigade +forming the right and Bowen’s the left. The long slope +of the ridge was here abruptly broken by a succession of small +hills or undulations of about fifty feet in height, dividing the +rolling country from the river bottom, and behind the crest of +the last of these the enemy was concealed; opposite them, at +the distance of seventy-five yards, was another long swell or +hillock, the summit of which it was necessary to attain in order +to open fire; and to this elevation the reserve moved, in order +of battle, at a double-quick. In an instant the opposing height +was one sheet of flame. Battle’s Tennessee regiment, on the +extreme right, gallantly maintained itself, pushing forward under +a withering fire and establishing itself well in advance. Little’s +Tennessee regiment, next to it, delivered its fire at random and +inefficiently, became disordered, and retired in confusion down +the slope. Three times it was rallied by its Lieutenant Colonel, +assisted by Colonel T. T. Hawkins, Aid-de-Camp to General +Breckinridge, and by the Adjutant General, and carried up the +slope, only to be as often repulsed and driven back—the regiment +of the enemy opposed to it, in the intervals, directing an oblique +fire upon Battle’s regiment, now contending against overwhelming +odds. The crisis of the contest had come; there were no +more reserves, and General Breckinridge determined to charge. +Calling his staff around him, he communicated to them his intentions, +and remarked that he, with them, would lead it. They +were all Kentuckians, and although it was not their privilege to +fight that day with the Kentucky Brigade, they were men who +knew how to die bravely among strangers, and some, at least, +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>23]</a></span> +would live to do justice to the rest. The Commander-in-Chief, +General Albert Sidney Johnston, rode up at this juncture, and +learning the contemplated movement, determined to accompany +it. Placing himself on the left of Little’s regiment, his commanding +figure in full uniform, conspicuous to every eye, he +waited the signal. General Breckinridge, disposing his staff +along the line, rode to the right of the same regiment, and with +a wild shout, which rose high above the din of battle, on swept +the line, through a storm of fire, over the hill, across the intervening +ravine, and up the slope occupied by the enemy. Nothing +could withstand it. The enemy broke and fled for half a +mile, hotly pursued, until he reached the shelter of his batteries. +Well did the Kentuckians sustain that day their honor and their +fame. Of the little band of officers who started on that forlorn +hope, but one was unscathed, the gallant Breckinridge himself. +Colonel Hawkins was wounded in the face; Captain Allen’s leg +was torn to pieces by a shell; the horses of the fearless boy, +Cabell Breckinridge, and of the Adjutant General, were killed +under them, and General Johnston was lifted dying from his saddle. +It may well be doubted whether the success, brilliant as it +was, decisive as it was, compensated for the loss of the great +Captain.</p> + +<p>Few men have moved upon the stage of public life who have +been the peers of Albert Sidney Johnston. Tall and commanding +in person, of gentle and winning address, he was the most +unassuming of men; yet his mind was cast in nature’s largest +mould; possessed of that high and serene courage which no +reverses or trials could overcome, patient in difficulties, earnest +in effort, firm in purpose, he had been invested by the President +with the powers of a Pro-Consul. His sway extended from the +Alleghenies to the western confines of Texas. Supervising the +movements of five separate armies, in countries hundreds of +miles apart, his capacious mind embraced the details of all, +while exercising almost unlimited authority over four millions +of people. No stain of personal or selfish ambition rests upon +his noble character. The nation and the army felt that there +was always hope while Sidney Johnston lived, and yet his death +was not without a grand and crowning triumph. Well he knew +the battle must be won; fully as well he knew, to win the battle, +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>24]</a></span> +that charge must be successful. The last vision which fell +upon his glazing sight was the flying ranks of the enemy; the +last sound which struck upon his ears, now sealing in death, was +the exultant shouts of his army, telling him that the field was +won, which he believed secured the triumph of the cause for +which he offered up his life.</p> + +<div class="cpoem"> +<div class="poem"> +<div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">Pure and lofty had been the great soldier’s life;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">Grand and worthy even of himself was his death.<br /></span> +</div> +</div> +</div> + +<p>The general repulse of the enemy had now thrown the reserve +on the extreme right of the Confederate line. Far on the +left might be heard the musketry of the Kentucky Brigade and +the roar of its artillery as it pushed its columns forward. It was +fighting its way to its gallant General, and the hour was drawing +near when they were to meet in the pride of glorious success. +General Bragg, observing that behind the right flank of the enemy +dense masses of troops were massed, from which reserves +were drawn to sustain his line, concentrated the fire of his batteries, +loaded with spherical case and shell, upon them. The +effect was magical. The right of the enemy broke and fled, the +centre followed, then the left wing; and charging along the +whole line, the Confederate army swept through the camps of +the enemy, capturing three thousand prisoners and driving the +Federal force cowering beneath the shelter of the iron-clad gunboats; +and then and there, in the full fruition of success, the +Kentucky Brigade and its General met for the first time during +that bloody day since their separation in the morning, both covered +with glory; both proud of and gratified with each other. +The terrible day of reckoning so long and so patiently waited for +had come at last; and as they strode over the field of blood their +pathway to vengeance had been lit by the gleam of bayonets and +the lurid glare of the cannon’s flash. The greatest conflict which +as yet had taken place between the sections had been won by the +scorned and despised “Southern mob.” For fifteen hours they +steadily drove before them the finest army of the Federal Government. +Superior in numbers, in discipline, in arms, and +equipments, the army of Grant had lost its camps, its baggage, +provisions and supplies, and the panic-stricken remnant of it +huddled cowering under the banks of the Tennessee, only protected +from total annihilation by the gunboats lying in the +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>25]</a></span> +stream, a disorganized and terror-stricken mob, while its dead +and wounded lay in thousands for miles behind the Confederate +army. By some fatal misapprehension of those in authority, +which it is useless now to discuss, the full fruits of the victory were +not gathered. The Confederate army paused when it had only +to stretch forth its hands and grasp as prisoners of war the whole +hostile force. Night fell quickly over the scene of carnage, and +the tired heroes, worn out with the long and harassing march of +the preceding days, and the fifteen hours of mortal combat, sank, +by regiments and brigades, upon the blood-soaked earth, amid +the dead and dying, to sleep—a sleep so deep and profound that +not even the groans of the wounded, or the deep boom of the +heavy guns of the enemy, which were fired during the whole +night, could break or disturb it. No record exists of a contest +between such numbers of men in a country so densely wooded +and in a space so confined. Brilliant generalship General Johnston +undoubtedly displayed in surprising the enemy, and in the +skill with which he handled raw troops, hurling mass after mass +upon the enemy and beating him in detail; but there was neither +room nor opportunity for strategy or maneuvre—it was a death +grapple of man to man—stern and deadly combat in which the +men of the South maintained their long and proud pre-eminence.</p> + +<p>During the night, General Buell with a fresh army of twenty-five +thousand men, nearly as large as the Confederate army +originally was, came up, hastily crossed the river, and threw +himself in front of the army defeated on the 6th. The Confederate +army, in the meantime, after despoiling the Federal camps, +had been withdrawn beyond them and formed anew in order of +battle. Skirmishing commenced at 6 o’clock, A. M., but the +engagement did not become general until 9 o’clock, A. M., from +which time, until 2 P. M., the Northern armies were again, as +on the day before, steadily driven back through its camps and +forced towards the river. A heavy and continuous rain had +commenced falling at midnight after the battle of the 6th, and +continued until near daylight. The effect of this upon men +wearied and exhausted, as was the Southern army, was terrible. +The wounded who had fallen late in the evening, and near the +enemy’s lines, could not be recovered; they were consequently +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>26]</a></span> +exposed during the entire night, and endured sufferings of the +most agonizing character. It was impossible, too, in the darkness +and confusion, to reform the lines for a night bivouac with +that accuracy desirable in such critical circumstances, and the +proximity of the abandoned camps of the enemy afforded a +temptation to straggling which, in too many cases, proved irresistible, +and, as was seen during the battle of the next day, demoralized +many corps, and impaired the efficiency, to a great extent, +of the army, and it may, with truth, be said, led to the loss of the +second day’s battle. So great, indeed, had been the diminution +of the ranks by death, wounds, and straggling, that at no time +during the contest of the 7th was General Beauregard enabled to +bring more than fifteen thousand effective men to hand in battle. +The army of the enemy under General Grant had been totally +defeated, and had only escaped complete rout and annihilation +by its inability to cross the Tennessee river, and the protection +of the gunboats; thousands had been slain, thousands wounded, +thousands captured, and thousands demoralized, but in a force so +large as it originally was (estimated by its own officers at forty-two +thousand men) there were, of course, large masses capable +of effective service on Monday; to these was to be added the +force of Buell of twenty-five thousand fresh troops, and it may +be safely estimated that, notwithstanding the reverse of Sunday, +and the immense loss of the enemy on that day, he took the +field on Monday with quite forty thousand combatants, or nearly +three times the Southern force. The leaders of the Confederate +army were fully advised of the reinforcement, and of the peril +which threatened the Confederate army in a second conflict in +its exhausted condition, but they deemed it necessary to cripple +this force before withdrawing from the field.</p> + +<p>The Kentucky Brigade which had preserved, to a great extent, +its organization and discipline, was again stationed upon +the extreme left. Its battery of artillery, commanded by Capt. +Byrne (Cobb’s battery having on Sunday been destroyed in battle), +was engaged for three hours with two batteries of the enemy—firing +during the duel more than one thousand cartridges, +and finally silenced both. The infantry, drawn up in order of +battle as a support to the battery, stood enthusiastic spectators +of the tremendous cannonade; and, although frequently suffering +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>27]</a></span> +severely from the grape of the enemy, more than once broke +spontaneously into a shout of encouragement and admiration at +the gallant manner in which Byrne handled his guns. The enemy +hurled charge after charge of infantry against it, but unsuccessfully. +The fifth regiment of infantry, commanded by Col. +Thos. H. Hunt, charged in turn, routing the opposing force, but +with some loss to its force, losing many valuable officers. Colonel +Robert Trabue, of the 4th Kentucky Regiment, as senior +Colonel of the brigade, commanded it on this, as on the preceding +day, with conspicuous gallantry and marked soldiery ability.</p> + +<p>But there is a limit to human endurance. The battle of the +7th was fought by General Beauregard with but fifteen thousand +men. Exhausted by the struggle of the preceding day, he had +received no reinforcements, and he determined, at 2 o’clock, P. M., +to withdraw. In good order, and with the precision of a +parade, division after division was withdrawn. General Breckinridge, +with his own brigade and Statham’s brigade, bringing up +the rear, and bivouacking at the summit of the ridge, during the +night, within sight of the enemy’s lines. A soaking rain fell all +night upon the wearied troops of the rear guard, while the rest +of the army slowly made its way to Corinth.</p> + +<p>Many of the noblest of the sons of Kentucky had fallen; but +conspicuous in position and character were two men who, in +the same discharge, in the same regiment, and within a few feet +of each other, fell mortally wounded.</p> + +<p>George W. Johnson, of Scott county, Kentucky, had passed +more than forty years of his life in the peaceful pursuits of agriculture. +Singularly modest and retiring in demeanor, he had +seemed to scorn the turmoil of public life and the undignified +contest for public place. The soul of honor and high integrity, +he was respected by all who came in contact with him. Earnest +and sincere in purpose, his course in all things was open, to +a proverb; cultivated in mind, he was a profound thinker, if +not an active participator, in national politics. Early in the history +of secession he had arrived at the conclusion that the separation +was final; and with all the earnestness of his straightforward +nature he had urged that Kentucky should share the +fate and cast her fortunes with the South. When it was evident +that the Legislature of Kentucky had sold and bartered +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>28]</a></span> +her honor to the Federal Government, he promptly abandoned +home and its tranquil enjoyments to cast his lot with those of +his countrymen, who were gathering at Bowling Green to resist +the attempt at coercion; and yet in an act of revolution, the +strong reverence of the man for law, order, and regular government, +manifested itself. Mainly and almost wholly to his efforts +is due the formation of the Provisional Government of Kentucky, +of which he was elected the head; and when the army +retreated from Kentucky, gathering his Council around him, he +accompanied it in all its vicissitudes and movements. On Sunday, +during the battle of Shiloh, he served as a volunteer Aid-de-Camp +to the commanding officer of the Kentucky Brigade, +until his horse was killed under him, when, seizing a musket, he +took his place in the ranks of the 4th regiment and fought on +foot during the remainder of the day. Monday morning found +him in the same humble position, assuming all the duties and +sharing all the dangers of a simple private in the ranks. At +eleven o’clock he fell, shot through the body, remaining alone +and unaided on the field while the army fell back, and during +the long and inclement night which succeeded. He was found +on the morning of Tuesday by the enemy, and died in his camp. +None who knew him can doubt that through the long hours of +that day of agony, and the silent stillness of that night of suffering +and pain, his great heart was consoled by the conviction of +the swift coming independence of his country.</p> + +<p>Thos. B. Monroe had early entered public life. His firmness +of character, depth of information, and brilliancy of talent, indicated +him as a leader of men in the first hours of his manhood. +Called before he was thirty years of age to the Secretaryship of +State, he had zealously and determinedly advocated the secession +of the State. Disappointed, as were thousands of others, +at her lukewarmness, he had resigned the Secretaryship, and, +making his way through the lines of the Federal army to Bowling +Green, had been appointed Major of the 4th Kentucky Regiment. +The promise of his military career equaled that of his +civil life. A few weeks only was necessary to place him high in +the estimation of the senior officers of the army, and to win for +him the unbounded confidence of his men. He fell, mortally +wounded, within a few feet of Governor Johnson, and died on +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>29]</a></span> +the field of battle, bequeathing his sword to his infant son, and +with the last breath, requesting he might be told “his father had +died in defense of his honor and the rights of his country.”</p> + +<p>The morning of the 8th of April was consumed in falling back +to the junction of the Corinth and Burnsville roads, where General +Breckinridge stubbornly took his stand, with his force bivouacking +in the open air, sinking often to their boot-tops in mud, +drenched nightly with the rain, he and they obstinately refused +to move an inch until the wounded in the hospitals were removed. +Again and again the enemy sent out strong columns +to dislodge him. Sometimes these were charged by the cavalry +under Forrest and Adams, and driven back in disorder, losing +many prisoners; sometimes, overawed by his firm and dauntless +front, they retired without attacking. For five days he thus +held his position, his whole force subsisting on rations of damaged +bread and raw pork. When he did move every wounded +man had been sent forward; the army was safe in its lines at +Corinth. On the 13th of April he marched, at the head of his +band of heroes, wasted now to spectres, haggard with hunger +and suffering, into Corinth. He had won for himself, throughout +that entire army, the reputation of a skillful General, a brave +and courageous captain, and had now the ardent love and devotion +of strangers as well as friends, and was the idol of the Reserve. +At Corinth he received the just reward of his high and +soldierly conduct, the commission of a Major-General, and passed +to the command, permanently, of a division. Here appropriately +ends the history of these troops as a brigade. They served +throughout the war in other brigades and divisions, but no +longer continued to act as one organization.</p> + +<p>The cause of Southern independence has gone down in blood. +These men and their compeers had elected to try their cause in +the tribunal of last resort, the forum of battle. The verdict has +been rendered against them; there is no expectation, or, perhaps, +wish, for further appeal. Hanson fell mortally wounded at Murfreesboro, +Helm died at Chickamauga, Thompson was slain on +the very spot of his birth and his infancy in Kentucky, to which +he had returned after three stormy years of absence. Buckner +surrendered his sword, last of all of the commanders of the +South, in the extreme western confines of the Confederacy, and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>30]</a></span> +only when the advancing wave of Federal conquest, after sweeping +across the face of the continent, had borne to his very feet +the wreck of the nation whose soldier he deemed himself. +Breckinridge, in exile with saddened eyes, strives through the +mists of the great lakes of the north, to catch some glimpse of +the land he loved so fervently and served so faithfully. Of their +less distinguished comrades, hundreds are lying all along the +route of the sad retreat from Bowling Green, consigned to unconsecrated +earth, their requiem the sighs of their sorrowing +comrades. Many are resting by the lonely banks of the Tennessee +and beneath the deep shadows of the tropical foliage of +Baton Rouge. They will sleep none the less tranquilly in their +quiet and unmarked graves because the dear land for whose +deliverance they fought so long and so well, is ground by the +heel of centralized power. Some survive, their mutilated forms +monuments of a heroism which would have illustrated the days +of Bayard or of Coeur de Lion. The memory of neither the +living nor the dead “will be rendered infamous” until the peoples +of the earth have ceased to honor manliness of spirit, freedom +of thought, and heroism of deeds. Imbued with the loftiest +sentiments which ever animated the bosoms of men, they went +forth to poverty, to exile, to suffering, to battle, and to death, +for what they believed to be the maintenance of constitutional +liberty and free government.</p> + +<p>Selfish ambitions and personal aspirations had no abiding +place in their world. Men bore the firelock and served as subalterns, +who could, with brilliant genius, have wielded the baton +of Generals. Among them but one ambition existed, who +should most faithfully serve, who should most steadfastly die. +Kentucky has no cause to blush for them. The principles they +upheld had been taught them on her soil; they are embalmed +in the archives of her Legislatures, enunciated in manifestoes of +her conventions. Wayward though she may deem these children +in the assertion of her rights, they are still her sons. Not +now, perhaps, but in the fulness of coming time, the proud old +mother will, with an eager zeal, gather these her offspring to +rest in the only fitting place, her honored bosom. Not now, +perhaps, but in the coming time, on that monument which she +has erected at her Capital to those who have in the past, and +<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>31]</a></span> +will in the future, serve her, she will inscribe their names and +write beneath them, “these, too, were my children, and died in +what they believed was the defense of my honor.” We who +saw the gallant dead shrouded in their gory cerements, await +with calm confidence the coming of that time.</p> + + + +<div class="bbox"> +<p><b>Transcriber's Note</b></p> + +<p>Variable spelling is preserved as printed.</p> + +<p>Capitalisation of place names is preserved as printed.</p> + +<p>Page <a href="#Page_5">5</a>—the author refers to Colonel Lloyd Tighlman, rather than the +more usual spelling, Tilghman. This is preserved as printed.</p> + +<p>The following amendments have been made:</p> + +<div class="amends"> +<p>Page <a href="#Page_5">5</a>—Byrnes’ amended to Byrne’s—"... and Byrne’s battery of +artillery."</p> + +<p>Page <a href="#Page_7">7</a>—Hawkin amended to Hawkins—"... and Aid-de-Camp, Thomas T. +Hawkins."</p> + +<p>Page <a href="#Page_7">7</a>—conection amended to connection—"... where, in connection +with Hindman’s brigade, ..."</p> + +<p>Page <a href="#Page_24">24</a>—vengence amended to vengeance—"... their pathway to +vengeance had been lit ..."</p> + +<p>Page <a href="#Page_29">29</a>—Murfresboro amended to Murfreesboro—"Hanson fell mortally +wounded at Murfreesboro, ..."</p> + +<p>Page <a href="#Page_30">30</a>—requium amended to requiem—"... their requiem the sighs of +their sorrowing comrades."</p> +</div> +</div> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Sketch of the First Kentucky Brigade, by +George B. 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