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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Colonel Sion S. Bass, by Anonymous
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Colonel Sion S. Bass
-
-Author: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: July 28, 2021 [eBook #65940]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLONEL SION S. BASS ***
-
- [Illustration: COL. SION S. BASS]
-
-
-
-
- COLONEL
- SION S. BASS
- 1827-1862
-
-
- Prepared by the Staff of the
- Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County
- 1954
-
- [Illustration: Boards of the Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen
- County]
-
-One of a historical series, this pamphlet is published under the
-direction of the governing Boards of the Public Library of Fort Wayne
-and Allen County.
-
- BOARD·OF·TRUSTEES·OF·THE·SCHOOL·CITY·OF·FORT·WAYNE
-
- _Mrs. Sadie Fulk Roehrs_
- _B. F. Geyer, President_
- _Joseph E. Kramer, Secretary_
- _W. Page Yarnelle, Treasurer_
- _Willard Shambaugh_
-
- PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD FOR ALLEN COUNTY
-
-The members of this Board include the members of the Board of Trustees
-of the School City of Fort Wayne (with the same officers) together with
-the following citizens chosen from Allen County outside the corporate
-City of Fort Wayne:
-
- _James E. Graham_
- _Arthur Niemeier_
- _Mrs. Glenn Henderson_
- _Mrs. Charles Reynolds_
-
-
-
-
- FOREWORD
-
-
-At the time of the War Between the States the name of Colonel Sion S.
-Bass was well known in Fort Wayne; today few citizens of the Summit City
-recall his heroism. Only a bare outline of his life can be constructed
-from the meager information available. Grace Leslie Dickerson,
-grandniece of the Colonel, assembled most of the material for this
-biographical sketch. Supplementary details were found in the Fort Wayne
-newspapers of the Civil War years.
-
-The Boards and the Staff of the Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen
-County gratefully acknowledge the kindness of Mrs. Dickerson and other
-members of the Bass family. This biography is presented in the hope that
-the life and sacrifice of Colonel Bass, Civil War hero, will become more
-familiar to his fellow citizens.
-
-
-Not many years ago, the Fort Wayne post of the Grand Army of the
-Republic was an active organization. Today that post, named for Sion S.
-Bass, is no longer in existence. His name, as well as Civil War terms
-like Shiloh, United States Volunteers, and Copperhead, has almost lost
-its significance for the average citizen.
-
-The honorable causes espoused and defended in the tragic Civil War were
-championed by many men of heroic stature—men worthy of the unstinted
-admiration and respect of each succeeding generation. These were the
-soldiers who acquitted themselves honorably in fighting for the causes
-they believed just. Colonel Sion St. Clair Bass, a successful young man
-who could have avoided military service, was one of the many who gave
-their lives in the struggle.
-
-Colonel Bass was born on a farm near Salem, Kentucky, on January 6,
-1827. He was descended from a line of early settlers in Virginia, the
-Carolinas, and Kentucky. In 1805, at the age of three, Sion’s father had
-been taken by his parents from Virginia to the wilderness of Christian
-County, Kentucky. Sion’s mother, Jane Todd Bass, who had come with her
-family from Charleston, South Carolina, was also an early pioneer in the
-bluegrass country. In Kentucky, Sion’s father acquired large areas of
-farmland and became prominent in local affairs.
-
-The young Sion enjoyed a normal, happy childhood with his brothers, John
-and Jerden, and his sister, Emily Jane. The children helped to till the
-fields and performed their daily household chores. Their most exciting
-diversions were holiday journeys to nearby Paducah where they could
-watch the barges and steamboats on the Ohio and Tennessee rivers. The
-children were educated in the schools of Kentucky. Sion, the eldest,
-later attended Bartlett’s College of Commerce in Cincinnati.
-
-After his graduation in February, 1849, Sion followed his mother’s
-advice and came to Fort Wayne. Jane Bass believed that Fort Wayne,
-already a thriving town, would offer good business opportunities for her
-sons because of its favorable location at the confluence of the three
-rivers. Chicago, she believed, would soon grow too large. In Fort Wayne,
-Sion found employment with the great western fur traders, Ewing, Chute,
-and Company, and soon became a trusted confidential agent of the firm.
-In this position, he became acquainted at first hand with the dangers
-and privations of frontier life.
-
-Very little material can be found concerning his private life in Fort
-Wayne. It is recorded, however, that he married Eliza Bayles, and that
-they were the parents of two daughters, Georgia and Beverly. And we do
-know that the young man was a devout member of the Episcopal Church.
-
-In 1853 Sion became a member of Jones, Bass, and Company, which
-manufactured iron products. In 1857 the firm was sold to the Pittsburgh,
-Fort Wayne, and Chicago Railroad. In September of the same year, Sion
-Bass formed a partnership with William H. Jones. The partners
-established a new foundry and machine shop along the Pittsburgh, Fort
-Wayne, and Chicago Railroad and the Wabash Railroad. In 1858 a
-partnership, which had been formed by Edward Force and Sion’s brother
-John, leased the plant. And the following year, the plant was sold to
-the Fort Wayne Machine Works. The activities of Sion Bass cannot be
-traced from the completion of the sale negotiations until the onset of
-the War Between the States.
-
-In 1861 the Confederate forces opened fire on Fort Sumter in Charleston
-Harbor signaling the outbreak of bitter civil strife. Drafting of men
-for military service was not practiced in the United States at that
-time; both sides relied upon volunteers to fill their fighting ranks.
-Sion Bass found himself in a dilemma; he was torn between his fond
-attachment for the South, where he had spent his childhood and early
-youth, and his loyalty to the North. Because of his southern background,
-many Northerners did not trust him. Besides, he was the sole breadwinner
-of his family; his wife and two children were wholly dependent upon him.
-He could have refused to face the issue; he could have continued his
-daily routine as a civilian in the North. But his firm conviction of the
-moral wrong of slavery and his desire to fight for the Union overcame
-all his reservations. In response to President Lincoln’s call for
-volunteers, he enlisted in the Union Army.
-
-On September 12, 1861, Sion Bass received his appointment as colonel of
-the Thirtieth Regiment of Indiana Volunteers, which was then being
-recruited. By September 24, the quota for the regiment had been filled,
-and the Thirtieth was organized at Camp Allen in Fort Wayne. Although he
-was himself untrained for military service, Colonel Bass entered upon
-the task of disciplining and training his raw recruits with such energy
-and devotion to duty that he soon won the praise of his superior
-officers.
-
- [Illustration: _Georgia • Mrs. Eliza Bass • Beverly • Col. Sion S.
- Bass_]
-
-On October 2, the Thirtieth Indiana left Camp Allen and traveled to
-Indianapolis by special train on the Wabash Railroad. The train stopped
-en route at Peru, Indiana, where the ladies of the town met the regiment
-at the depot and provided an excellent dinner. This act of kindness,
-although not possible under the strict army regulations of our day, was
-typical of the spirit of the times and was much appreciated by the
-hungry soldiers.
-
-The Thirtieth remained in camp at Indianapolis only for a few days.
-During this time, the men underwent further training; arms, uniforms,
-and accouterments were issued to them. The unit was then ordered to
-proceed to Kentucky. On October 13, 1861, the regiment was assigned to
-the Fifth Brigade, Second Division in General Don Carlos Buell’s Army of
-the Ohio. For the next few months Colonel Bass and his Thirtieth Indiana
-Regiment marched with Buell’s army but saw little action.
-
-The anxiety which his family felt for him is shown in the following
-letter written by his mother to her younger son John:
-
- Salem, Lexington County, Kentucky
- November 29, 1861
-
- Dear Son,
-
- It is with great pleasure I write you hoping to hear from you soon, as
- I have not heard from you for months. I know not where your brother
- is. I hope he is not in Columbus. We hear the firing of cannons every
- day at Cairo, Columbus, Belmont, and several other places.
-
- We have had no FORT WAYNE TIMES for two weeks till yesterday. It gave
- an account of his being in Nevin, about the center of the state, where
- I think he will be killed.
-
- John, could you have no influence over him? Why did he go? What will
- become of his little children? Buckner and he will come in contact
- with each other soon, and what will be the event? God only knows. I
- never expect to see him again.
-
- Richard M. Ford was killed in the Battle of Belmont, six miles from
- Columbus. I expect his wife is in Texas. Ford Sterling was killed at
- Bowling Green. Mr. Pippen died the nineteenth of November, and you
- heard of the death of Mr. Barker.
-
- Beverly was here yesterday and says they are all well. Every person
- has left Salem except for a few families. Your Pa says, “I have done
- nothing in no way”; and he expects to stay at his home and do the best
- he can.
-
- All the ferryboats are sunk, and there is no way to cross the river.
- The troops pass through Salem—the Northerners and the Southerners. I
- am afraid of their meeting sometime in Salem.
-
- This may be the last letter you ever will get from me. I expect the
- mail will stop. Give my respects to Eliza and the children, and write
- often. Let me hear from your brother if you ever hear again.
-
- I close by saying,
-
- Your ever affectionate mother,
- Jane Bass
-
-In February, 1862, Buell attempted to march his army northward to
-reinforce General Grant’s Army of the Tennessee in the attack on Fort
-Donelson. Adverse weather conditions and impassable roads forced the men
-to return to camp after an advance of only fourteen miles. In March
-General Buell received orders from General Halleck to join Grant and the
-Army of the Tennessee at Pittsburg Landing near Shiloh. General Grant
-and his forces were to remain in camp at Pittsburg Landing while
-awaiting Buell’s arrival. It was planned that the two armies would join
-forces and then advance on Corinth. The delay thus necessitated in the
-Union advance afforded the scattered Confederate forces an opportunity
-to consolidate their strength. On the sixth of April, under the able
-leadership of General Albert Sidney Johnston, the Confederate troops
-launched a surprise attack against Grant’s encampment.
-
-The roar of cannon could be heard by the men of Buell’s advancing army
-although they were still many miles distant from the battlefield. Hour
-after hour, the men of the Thirtieth followed their commander southward
-through swampland to Savannah, Tennessee. Boats ferried them from that
-city across the Tennessee River to Pittsburg Landing. On the morning of
-the seventh, the Fifth Brigade, which included Colonel Bass’s regiment,
-was ordered into battle as a replacement for General Rousseau’s brigade,
-which had undergone murderous fire in defense of the road leading from
-the landing to the battlefield. The Thirtieth was engaged in mortal
-combat with the enemy. Confederate artillery to the right, left, and
-center maintained a continuous fire which inflicted heavy casualties.
-Colonel Bass led his regiment into battle and encouraged the men by his
-presence. Three times he led them impetuously against the foe; thrice
-his men were repelled. Yet at each command of its gallant Colonel, the
-Thirtieth again moved forward.
-
-Suddenly, the Colonel’s horse was wounded and became almost
-unmanageable. Colonel Bass dismounted to examine the wound. Just as he
-reached the ground, he was struck in the upper thigh by a musket ball.
-Nevertheless, he soothed his horse, remounted, and continued to fight.
-He rode calmly among his men and exhorted them to still greater efforts.
-But soon he became faint and could no longer sit in the saddle. The
-wound was a mortal one, but death did not come immediately. Colonel Bass
-was carried from the battlefield to a Tennessee River steamer and
-transported to Paducah, Kentucky. He passed away at St. Mark’s Hospital
-in that city a week after he had been wounded. His wife, mother, and
-brother were present at his bedside.
-
-After news of his death reached Fort Wayne, a meeting was called at the
-courthouse for the purpose of paying due honor to his memory. A
-committee of fifteen was appointed to meet the remains at Peru and to
-act as an escort to Fort Wayne. Mr. W. H. Withers proposed the following
-motion which was adopted:
-
-“RESOLVED, that while the remains are passing from the cars to his late
-residence, and during the funeral ceremonies of the lamented Colonel
-Bass, this meeting requests that all secular business be suspended, that
-the bells of the city be tolled, that the flags be hung at half-mast,
-and that the business houses of the city be closed during the funeral
-obsequies.”
-
-Another committee was appointed to draft resolutions expressing the loss
-sustained by the country and the community in the death of Colonel Bass.
-On April 21, 1862, these resolutions were published in DAWSON’S DAILY
-TIMES AND UNION:
-
- [Illustration: _Colonel Bass was struck by a musket ball_....]
-
-“RESOLVED, That the death of Colonel Sion S. Bass, distinguished alike
-for his social qualities, his noble and unselfish impulses, his
-stainless morality in private life, and his ability, humanity, and
-gallantry as a soldier, is a severe affliction to the community in which
-he lived. It is a calamity to the officers and privates under his
-command, for their confidence in him as a leader was equaled only by
-their love for him as a man. And it is a heavy loss to the country which
-he served and to the cause which he had so heartily espoused.
-
-“RESOLVED, That our grief for the death of Colonel Bass is aggravated by
-the reflection that perhaps he and thousands of other Federal soldiers
-who were slain or wounded in the Battle of Pittsburg Landing might today
-be standing with arms in their hands. They might still be ready to do
-battle in their country’s cause had it not been for the apparently
-inexcusable and unparalleled neglect of the commanding generals in not
-using those precautions against a ‘surprise’ which are always used by
-trustworthy commanders at the head of armies in the presence of active
-and powerful foes. Courage is only one qualification for a commander; to
-personal bravery there should be united military science and skill,
-vigilance, prudence, and self-control. Whenever it shall be discovered
-that any general in command of Federal forces is deficient in those
-indispensable qualifications, it is the imperative duty of the
-Administration to relieve him of his command.
-
-“RESOLVED, That, as Indiana has given without stint her noble and
-cherished sons to the nation to aid in crushing a monstrous and
-causeless rebellion, and as their blood has been freely shed on nearly
-every battlefield where success has attended the Federal arms, she has a
-right to demand and will demand that those who are still at their posts
-shall not be unnecessarily sacrificed through the incompetency or
-carelessness of commanding generals.
-
-“RESOLVED, That the citizens of this county, while they mourn over the
-untimely death of Colonel Bass, have the proud satisfaction of knowing
-that, although he was born and raised in a state of doubtful loyalty and
-although many of his early friends had joined in the great rebellion
-against the Constitution and the Union, his loyalty never faltered. He
-received his death wound while in the act of leading his men into the
-thickest of the fight and while cheering them on to danger and to
-victory.
-
-“RESOLVED, That, while the death of Colonel Bass is a deep affliction to
-all those who knew him, a calamity to the regiment he so ably commanded,
-and a heavy loss to the nation in whose service and in whose defense he
-so gloriously died, it is a terrible bereavement to his grief-stricken
-family. We tender to his widow, to his father and mother, the hearty
-sympathy of the entire community, which will ever cherish a fond
-interest in their welfare and in the welfare of his orphaned children.
-
-“RESOLVED, That the death of such soldiers as Colonel Bass, who have
-been slain in the dreadful war into which the government of the United
-States has been forced for the preservation of its existence, indicates
-the value that should be placed upon our free institutions.
-
-“RESOLVED, That, while lamenting the death of Colonel Bass and the
-officers and soldiers under his command who have fallen in defense of
-their country and its flag, and while congratulating the survivors on
-the reputation they so dearly earned on the bloody field of Pittsburg
-Landing, we are not unmindful of our fellow citizens of the Forty-fourth
-Regiment, who on that same field and at Fort Donelson proved their
-gallantry by deeds and losses almost unparalleled in modern warfare. We
-lament, also, their noble dead. We tender to their wounded and bereaved
-our sincere sympathy, and to their fearless and noble Colonel, Hugh B.
-Reed, and to the remnant of his regiment which still remains at the post
-of danger, our admiration for their valor and our gratitude for their
-services.
-
-“RESOLVED, That, with the daily accumulating proofs of the desolation
-and woe which mark the existence of civil war, we earnestly invoke the
-God of love and peace again to dispose the hearts of all the people of
-the United States to obedience to lawful authority, to fidelity to the
-Constitution and laws, and to the fraternal love and peace which in
-other years united them as fellow citizens and sharers of a once happy
-and prosperous but now deeply afflicted country.
-
-“RESOLVED, That a copy of this report and these resolutions, signed by
-the committee, be delivered to the widow and the father of the deceased
-Colonel Bass; and that the same be published in the newspapers of Fort
-Wayne and of the Tenth Congressional District of Indiana.
-
- HUGH McCULLOCH
- ALLEN HAMILTON
- J. K. EDGERTON
- SAMUEL HANNA
- I. D. G. NELSON
-
-Colonel Bass had won the confidence, love, and admiration of the people
-of his adopted city. The tragedy of his death was felt by the entire
-populace. An excerpt from DAWSON’S DAILY TIMES AND UNION, published on
-April 18, 1862, describes the arrival of the funeral train in the city:
-
-“The remains of Colonel Sion S. Bass reached here today at eleven
-o’clock over the Toledo and Western Railway. The committee in charge was
-sent from here and met the train at Huntington. A large concourse of
-people was at the depot to pay that mark of respect due their late
-fellow citizen. The coffin and hearse were properly decorated with the
-national colors. When the funeral cortege moved, guns were fired, bells
-tolled, and drums beat. The procession came down Calhoun Street to Wayne
-Street, and then turned in the direction of his residence.”
-
-He was interred in Lindenwood Cemetery on the following day. His final
-resting place is marked by a sandstone monument which bears the
-following inscription:
-
- IN MEMORY OF
- SION S. BASS
- COL. OF 30TH REG’T. IND. VOL.
- BORN AT SALEM, LIVINGSTON CO. KY.
- JAN’Y 6, 1827:
- DIED AT PADUCAH, KENTUCKY,
- APRIL 14, 1862,
- OF WOUNDS RECEIVED
- WHILE GALLANTLY LEADING HIS REGIMENT
- AT THE BATTLE OF SHILOH,
- APRIL 7, 1862
- ERECTED BY
- HIS REGIMENT AND FRIENDS.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-—Silently corrected a few typos.
-
-—Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook
- is public-domain in the country of publication.
-
-—In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by
- _underscores_.
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLONEL SION S. BASS ***
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Colonel Sion S. Bass, by Anonymous</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-</div>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Colonel Sion S. Bass</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Anonymous</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 28, 2021 [eBook #65940]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLONEL SION S. BASS ***</div>
-<div id="cover" class="img">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Colonel Sion S. Bass" width="600" height="914" />
-</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig1">
-<img src="images/p01.jpg" alt="" width="500" height="725" />
-<p class="pcap">COL. SION S. BASS</p>
-</div>
-<div class="box">
-<h1><span class="cur"><span class="smaller">COLONEL</span>
-<br />SION S. BASS
-<br /><span class="smallest">1827-1862</span></span></h1>
-<p class="tbcenter">Prepared by the Staff of the
-<br />Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County
-<br />1954</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_i">i</div>
-<div class="img">
-<img src="images/p02.jpg" id="ncfig1" alt="Boards of the Public Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County" width="600" height="874" />
-</div>
-<p class="smaller cur">One of a historical series, this pamphlet is published
-under the direction of the governing Boards of the Public
-Library of Fort Wayne and Allen County.</p>
-<p class="center"><span class="ssn">BOARD&middot;OF&middot;TRUSTEES&middot;OF&middot;THE&middot;SCHOOL&middot;CITY&middot;OF&middot;FORT&middot;WAYNE</span></p>
-<dl class="undent smallest"><dt><i>Mrs. Sadie Fulk Roehrs</i></dt>
-<dt><i>B. F. Geyer, President</i></dt>
-<dt><i>Joseph E. Kramer, Secretary</i></dt>
-<dt><i>W. Page Yarnelle, Treasurer</i></dt>
-<dt><i>Willard Shambaugh</i></dt></dl>
-<p class="center"><span class="ssn">PUBLIC LIBRARY BOARD FOR ALLEN COUNTY</span></p>
-<p class="smaller cur">The members of this Board include the members of the Board of Trustees of the
-School City of Fort Wayne (with the same officers) together with the following
-citizens chosen from Allen County outside the corporate City of Fort Wayne:</p>
-<dl class="undent smallest"><dt><i>James E. Graham</i></dt>
-<dt><i>Arthur Niemeier</i></dt>
-<dt><i>Mrs. Glenn Henderson</i></dt>
-<dt><i>Mrs. Charles Reynolds</i></dt></dl>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_ii">ii</div>
-<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">FOREWORD</span></h2>
-<p>At the time of the War Between the States the name of Colonel
-Sion S. Bass was well known in Fort Wayne; today few citizens
-of the Summit City recall his heroism. Only a bare outline of his
-life can be constructed from the meager information available.
-Grace Leslie Dickerson, grandniece of the Colonel, assembled
-most of the material for this biographical sketch. Supplementary
-details were found in the Fort Wayne newspapers of the Civil War
-years.</p>
-<p>The Boards and the Staff of the Public Library of Fort Wayne
-and Allen County gratefully acknowledge the kindness of Mrs.
-Dickerson and other members of the Bass family. This biography
-is presented in the hope that the life and sacrifice of Colonel Bass,
-Civil War hero, will become more familiar to his fellow citizens.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_1">1</div>
-<p class="tb">Not many years ago, the Fort Wayne post of the Grand Army
-of the Republic was an active organization. Today that post, named
-for Sion S. Bass, is no longer in existence. His name, as well as
-Civil War terms like Shiloh, United States Volunteers, and Copperhead,
-has almost lost its significance for the average citizen.</p>
-<p>The honorable causes espoused and defended in the tragic
-Civil War were championed by many men of heroic stature&mdash;men
-worthy of the unstinted admiration and respect of each succeeding
-generation. These were the soldiers who acquitted themselves
-honorably in fighting for the causes they believed just. Colonel
-Sion St. Clair Bass, a successful young man who could have avoided
-military service, was one of the many who gave their lives in the
-struggle.</p>
-<p>Colonel Bass was born on a farm near Salem, Kentucky, on
-January 6, 1827. He was descended from a line of early settlers
-in Virginia, the Carolinas, and Kentucky. In 1805, at the age of
-three, Sion&rsquo;s father had been taken by his parents from Virginia
-to the wilderness of Christian County, Kentucky. Sion&rsquo;s mother,
-Jane Todd Bass, who had come with her family from Charleston,
-South Carolina, was also an early pioneer in the bluegrass country.
-In Kentucky, Sion&rsquo;s father acquired large areas of farmland
-and became prominent in local affairs.</p>
-<p>The young Sion enjoyed a normal, happy childhood with his
-brothers, John and Jerden, and his sister, Emily Jane. The children
-helped to till the fields and performed their daily household
-chores. Their most exciting diversions were holiday journeys to
-nearby Paducah where they could watch the barges and steamboats
-on the Ohio and Tennessee rivers. The children were educated in
-the schools of Kentucky. Sion, the eldest, later attended Bartlett&rsquo;s
-College of Commerce in Cincinnati.</p>
-<p>After his graduation in February, 1849, Sion followed his
-mother&rsquo;s advice and came to Fort Wayne. Jane Bass believed that
-Fort Wayne, already a thriving town, would offer good business
-opportunities for her sons because of its favorable location at the
-confluence of the three rivers. Chicago, she believed, would soon
-grow too large. In Fort Wayne, Sion found employment with the
-great western fur traders, Ewing, Chute, and Company, and soon
-became a trusted confidential agent of the firm. In this position,
-he became acquainted at first hand with the dangers and privations
-<span class="pb" id="Page_2">2</span>
-of frontier life.</p>
-<p>Very little material can be found concerning his private life
-in Fort Wayne. It is recorded, however, that he married Eliza
-Bayles, and that they were the parents of two daughters, Georgia
-and Beverly. And we do know that the young man was a devout
-member of the Episcopal Church.</p>
-<p>In 1853 Sion became a member of Jones, Bass, and Company,
-which manufactured iron products. In 1857 the firm was sold to
-the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne, and Chicago Railroad. In September
-of the same year, Sion Bass formed a partnership with William H.
-Jones. The partners established a new foundry and machine shop
-along the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne, and Chicago Railroad and the
-Wabash Railroad. In 1858 a partnership, which had been formed
-by Edward Force and Sion&rsquo;s brother John, leased the plant. And
-the following year, the plant was sold to the Fort Wayne Machine
-Works. The activities of Sion Bass cannot be traced from the completion
-of the sale negotiations until the onset of the War Between
-the States.</p>
-<p>In 1861 the Confederate forces opened fire on Fort Sumter
-in Charleston Harbor signaling the outbreak of bitter civil strife.
-Drafting of men for military service was not practiced in the United
-States at that time; both sides relied upon volunteers to fill their
-fighting ranks. Sion Bass found himself in a dilemma; he was torn
-between his fond attachment for the South, where he had spent his
-childhood and early youth, and his loyalty to the North. Because
-of his southern background, many Northerners did not trust him.
-Besides, he was the sole breadwinner of his family; his wife and
-two children were wholly dependent upon him. He could have refused
-to face the issue; he could have continued his daily routine
-as a civilian in the North. But his firm conviction of the moral
-wrong of slavery and his desire to fight for the Union overcame
-all his reservations. In response to President Lincoln&rsquo;s call for
-volunteers, he enlisted in the Union Army.</p>
-<p>On September 12, 1861, Sion Bass received his appointment
-as colonel of the Thirtieth Regiment of Indiana Volunteers, which
-was then being recruited. By September 24, the quota for the
-regiment had been filled, and the Thirtieth was organized at Camp
-Allen in Fort Wayne. Although he was himself untrained for military
-service, Colonel Bass entered upon the task of disciplining
-and training his raw recruits with such energy and devotion to duty
-that he soon won the praise of his superior officers.</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_3">3</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig2">
-<img src="images/p03.jpg" alt="" width="925" height="600" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Georgia &#8226; Mrs. Eliza Bass &#8226; Beverly &#8226; Col. Sion S. Bass</i></p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_4">4</div>
-<p>On October 2, the Thirtieth Indiana left Camp Allen and traveled
-to Indianapolis by special train on the Wabash Railroad. The
-train stopped en route at Peru, Indiana, where the ladies of the
-town met the regiment at the depot and provided an excellent dinner.
-This act of kindness, although not possible under the strict
-army regulations of our day, was typical of the spirit of the times
-and was much appreciated by the hungry soldiers.</p>
-<p>The Thirtieth remained in camp at Indianapolis only for a
-few days. During this time, the men underwent further training;
-arms, uniforms, and accouterments were issued to them. The
-unit was then ordered to proceed to Kentucky. On October 13, 1861,
-the regiment was assigned to the Fifth Brigade, Second Division
-in General Don Carlos Buell&rsquo;s Army of the Ohio. For the next few
-months Colonel Bass and his Thirtieth Indiana Regiment marched
-with Buell&rsquo;s army but saw little action.</p>
-<p>The anxiety which his family felt for him is shown in the following
-letter written by his mother to her younger son John:</p>
-<blockquote>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">Salem, Lexington County, Kentucky</p>
-<p class="t0">November 29, 1861</p>
-</div>
-<div class="verse">
-<p class="t0">Dear Son,</p>
-</div>
-<p>It is with great pleasure I write you hoping to hear from you
-soon, as I have not heard from you for months. I know not where
-your brother is. I hope he is not in Columbus. We hear the firing
-of cannons every day at Cairo, Columbus, Belmont, and several
-other places.</p>
-<p>We have had no FORT WAYNE TIMES for two weeks till yesterday.
-It gave an account of his being in Nevin, about the center
-of the state, where I think he will be killed.</p>
-<p>John, could you have no influence over him? Why did he go?
-What will become of his little children? Buckner and he will come
-in contact with each other soon, and what will be the event? God
-only knows. I never expect to see him again.</p>
-<p>Richard M. Ford was killed in the Battle of Belmont, six
-miles from Columbus. I expect his wife is in Texas. Ford Sterling
-<span class="pb" id="Page_5">5</span>
-was killed at Bowling Green. Mr. Pippen died the nineteenth of
-November, and you heard of the death of Mr. Barker.</p>
-<p>Beverly was here yesterday and says they are all well. Every
-person has left Salem except for a few families. Your Pa says,
-&ldquo;I have done nothing in no way&rdquo;; and he expects to stay at his home
-and do the best he can.</p>
-<p>All the ferryboats are sunk, and there is no way to cross
-the river. The troops pass through Salem&mdash;the Northerners and
-the Southerners. I am afraid of their meeting sometime in Salem.</p>
-<p>This may be the last letter you ever will get from me. I
-expect the mail will stop. Give my respects to Eliza and the children,
-and write often. Let me hear from your brother if you ever
-hear again.</p>
-<p>I close by saying,</p>
-<p><span class="center">Your ever affectionate mother,</span>
-<span class="lr">Jane Bass</span></p>
-</blockquote>
-<p>In February, 1862, Buell attempted to march his army northward
-to reinforce General Grant&rsquo;s Army of the Tennessee in the
-attack on Fort Donelson. Adverse weather conditions and impassable
-roads forced the men to return to camp after an advance of
-only fourteen miles. In March General Buell received orders from
-General Halleck to join Grant and the Army of the Tennessee at
-Pittsburg Landing near Shiloh. General Grant and his forces were
-to remain in camp at Pittsburg Landing while awaiting Buell&rsquo;s arrival.
-It was planned that the two armies would join forces and
-then advance on Corinth. The delay thus necessitated in the Union
-advance afforded the scattered Confederate forces an opportunity
-to consolidate their strength. On the sixth of April, under the able
-leadership of General Albert Sidney Johnston, the Confederate
-troops launched a surprise attack against Grant&rsquo;s encampment.</p>
-<p>The roar of cannon could be heard by the men of Buell&rsquo;s advancing
-army although they were still many miles distant from the
-battlefield. Hour after hour, the men of the Thirtieth followed
-their commander southward through swampland to Savannah, Tennessee.
-Boats ferried them from that city across the Tennessee
-River to Pittsburg Landing. On the morning of the seventh, the
-Fifth Brigade, which included Colonel Bass&rsquo;s regiment, was ordered
-<span class="pb" id="Page_6">6</span>
-into battle as a replacement for General Rousseau&rsquo;s brigade,
-which had undergone murderous fire in defense of the road leading
-from the landing to the battlefield. The Thirtieth was engaged in
-mortal combat with the enemy. Confederate artillery to the right,
-left, and center maintained a continuous fire which inflicted heavy
-casualties. Colonel Bass led his regiment into battle and encouraged
-the men by his presence. Three times he led them impetuously
-against the foe; thrice his men were repelled. Yet at each
-command of its gallant Colonel, the Thirtieth again moved forward.</p>
-<p>Suddenly, the Colonel&rsquo;s horse was wounded and became almost
-unmanageable. Colonel Bass dismounted to examine the
-wound. Just as he reached the ground, he was struck in the upper
-thigh by a musket ball. Nevertheless, he soothed his horse, remounted,
-and continued to fight. He rode calmly among his men
-and exhorted them to still greater efforts. But soon he became
-faint and could no longer sit in the saddle. The wound was a mortal
-one, but death did not come immediately. Colonel Bass was
-carried from the battlefield to a Tennessee River steamer and
-transported to Paducah, Kentucky. He passed away at St. Mark&rsquo;s
-Hospital in that city a week after he had been wounded. His wife,
-mother, and brother were present at his bedside.</p>
-<p>After news of his death reached Fort Wayne, a meeting was
-called at the courthouse for the purpose of paying due honor to his
-memory. A committee of fifteen was appointed to meet the remains
-at Peru and to act as an escort to Fort Wayne. Mr. W. H.
-Withers proposed the following motion which was adopted:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, that while the remains are passing from the
-cars to his late residence, and during the funeral ceremonies of
-the lamented Colonel Bass, this meeting requests that all secular
-business be suspended, that the bells of the city be tolled, that the
-flags be hung at half-mast, and that the business houses of the city
-be closed during the funeral obsequies.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>Another committee was appointed to draft resolutions expressing
-the loss sustained by the country and the community in
-the death of Colonel Bass. On April 21, 1862, these resolutions
-were published in DAWSON&rsquo;S DAILY TIMES AND UNION:</p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_7">7</div>
-<div class="img" id="fig3">
-<img src="images/p04.jpg" alt="" width="600" height="923" />
-<p class="pcap"><i>Colonel Bass was struck by a musket ball</i>....</p>
-</div>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_8">8</div>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, That the death of Colonel Sion S. Bass, distinguished
-alike for his social qualities, his noble and unselfish
-impulses, his stainless morality in private life, and his ability,
-humanity, and gallantry as a soldier, is a severe affliction to the
-community in which he lived. It is a calamity to the officers and
-privates under his command, for their confidence in him as a
-leader was equaled only by their love for him as a man. And it is
-a heavy loss to the country which he served and to the cause which
-he had so heartily espoused.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, That our grief for the death of Colonel Bass
-is aggravated by the reflection that perhaps he and thousands of
-other Federal soldiers who were slain or wounded in the Battle of
-Pittsburg Landing might today be standing with arms in their hands.
-They might still be ready to do battle in their country&rsquo;s cause had
-it not been for the apparently inexcusable and unparalleled neglect
-of the commanding generals in not using those precautions against
-a &lsquo;surprise&rsquo; which are always used by trustworthy commanders at
-the head of armies in the presence of active and powerful foes.
-Courage is only one qualification for a commander; to personal
-bravery there should be united military science and skill, vigilance,
-prudence, and self-control. Whenever it shall be discovered
-that any general in command of Federal forces is deficient in those
-indispensable qualifications, it is the imperative duty of the Administration
-to relieve him of his command.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, That, as Indiana has given without stint her
-noble and cherished sons to the nation to aid in crushing a monstrous
-and causeless rebellion, and as their blood has been freely
-shed on nearly every battlefield where success has attended the
-Federal arms, she has a right to demand and will demand that those
-who are still at their posts shall not be unnecessarily sacrificed
-through the incompetency or carelessness of commanding generals.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, That the citizens of this county, while they
-mourn over the untimely death of Colonel Bass, have the proud
-satisfaction of knowing that, although he was born and raised in a
-state of doubtful loyalty and although many of his early friends had
-joined in the great rebellion against the Constitution and the Union,
-his loyalty never faltered. He received his death wound while in
-the act of leading his men into the thickest of the fight and while
-cheering them on to danger and to victory.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, That, while the death of Colonel Bass is a
-deep affliction to all those who knew him, a calamity to the regiment
-he so ably commanded, and a heavy loss to the nation in whose
-<span class="pb" id="Page_9">9</span>
-service and in whose defense he so gloriously died, it is a terrible
-bereavement to his grief-stricken family. We tender to his widow,
-to his father and mother, the hearty sympathy of the entire community,
-which will ever cherish a fond interest in their welfare
-and in the welfare of his orphaned children.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, That the death of such soldiers as Colonel
-Bass, who have been slain in the dreadful war into which the government
-of the United States has been forced for the preservation
-of its existence, indicates the value that should be placed upon our
-free institutions.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, That, while lamenting the death of Colonel
-Bass and the officers and soldiers under his command who have
-fallen in defense of their country and its flag, and while congratulating
-the survivors on the reputation they so dearly earned on the
-bloody field of Pittsburg Landing, we are not unmindful of our fellow
-citizens of the Forty-fourth Regiment, who on that same field
-and at Fort Donelson proved their gallantry by deeds and losses
-almost unparalleled in modern warfare. We lament, also, their
-noble dead. We tender to their wounded and bereaved our sincere
-sympathy, and to their fearless and noble Colonel, Hugh B. Reed,
-and to the remnant of his regiment which still remains at the post
-of danger, our admiration for their valor and our gratitude for
-their services.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, That, with the daily accumulating proofs of
-the desolation and woe which mark the existence of civil war, we
-earnestly invoke the God of love and peace again to dispose the
-hearts of all the people of the United States to obedience to lawful
-authority, to fidelity to the Constitution and laws, and to the fraternal
-love and peace which in other years united them as fellow
-citizens and sharers of a once happy and prosperous but now deeply
-afflicted country.</p>
-<p>&ldquo;RESOLVED, That a copy of this report and these resolutions,
-signed by the committee, be delivered to the widow and the
-father of the deceased Colonel Bass; and that the same be published
-in the newspapers of Fort Wayne and of the Tenth Congressional
-District of Indiana.</p>
-<p><span class="lr">HUGH McCULLOCH</span>
-<span class="lr">ALLEN HAMILTON</span>
-<span class="lr">J. K. EDGERTON</span>
-<span class="lr">SAMUEL HANNA</span>
-<span class="lr">I. D. G. NELSON</span></p>
-<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
-<p>Colonel Bass had won the confidence, love, and admiration
-of the people of his adopted city. The tragedy of his death was felt
-by the entire populace. An excerpt from DAWSON&rsquo;S DAILY TIMES
-AND UNION, published on April 18, 1862, describes the arrival
-of the funeral train in the city:</p>
-<p>&ldquo;The remains of Colonel Sion S. Bass reached here today at
-eleven o&rsquo;clock over the Toledo and Western Railway. The committee
-in charge was sent from here and met the train at Huntington.
-A large concourse of people was at the depot to pay that mark
-of respect due their late fellow citizen. The coffin and hearse
-were properly decorated with the national colors. When the funeral
-cortege moved, guns were fired, bells tolled, and drums beat.
-The procession came down Calhoun Street to Wayne Street, and
-then turned in the direction of his residence.&rdquo;</p>
-<p>He was interred in Lindenwood Cemetery on the following
-day. His final resting place is marked by a sandstone monument
-which bears the following inscription:</p>
-<p class="center">IN MEMORY OF
-<br />SION S. BASS
-<br />COL. OF 30TH REG&rsquo;T. IND. VOL.
-<br />BORN AT SALEM, LIVINGSTON CO. KY.
-<br />JAN&rsquo;Y 6, 1827:
-<br />DIED AT PADUCAH, KENTUCKY,
-<br />APRIL 14, 1862,
-<br />OF WOUNDS RECEIVED
-<br />WHILE GALLANTLY LEADING HIS REGIMENT
-<br />AT THE BATTLE OF SHILOH,
-<br />APRIL 7, 1862
-<br />ERECTED BY
-<br />HIS REGIMENT AND FRIENDS.</p>
-<h2 id="trnotes">Transcriber&rsquo;s Notes</h2>
-<ul>
-<li>Silently corrected a few typos.</li>
-<li>Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.</li>
-<li>In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.</li>
-</ul>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COLONEL SION S. BASS ***</div>
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