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+<HEAD>
+<TITLE>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Military Reminiscences of the Civil War V1, by Jacob Dolson Cox</TITLE>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Military Reminiscences of the Civil War V1
+by Jacob Dolson Cox
+
+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: Military Reminiscences of the Civil War V1
+
+Author: Jacob Dolson Cox
+
+Release Date: May 5, 2007 [EBook #6961]
+[This file was first posted in etext 04 as 8mcw110h.htm on February 17, 2003
+and updated in November, 2004 ]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MILITARY REMINISCENCES OF THE CIVIL WAR V1***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Steve Schulze, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team. This file was produced from images generously
+made available by the CWRU Preservation Department Digital Library.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<p style="text-align: center; font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big><br>
+</big></big></big></p>
+<p style="text-align: center; font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>MILITARY
+REMINISCENCES <br>
+OF THE CIVIL WAR</big></big></big></p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><small>BY</small></p>
+<p style="text-align: center; font-weight: bold;">JACOB DOLSON COX,
+A.M., LL.D.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><i>Formerly Major-General commanding
+Twenty-Third Army Corps</i></p>
+<p style="text-align: center; font-weight: bold;">VOLUME I.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;">APRIL 1861--NOVEMBER 1863<br>
+<img src="images/front.png" title="Jacob Dolson Cox"
+ alt="Jacob Dolson Cox" style="width: 456px; height: 756px;"><br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
+<p><br>
+<span style="font-weight: bold;">PREFACE</span></p>
+<p>My aim in this book has been to reproduce my own experience in our
+Civil War in such a way as to help the reader understand just how the
+duties and the problems of that great conflict presented themselves
+successively to one man who had an active part in it from the beginning
+to the end. In my military service I was so conscious of the benefit it
+was to me to get the personal view of men who had served in our own or
+other wars, as distinguished from the general or formal history, that I
+formed the purpose, soon after peace was restored, to write such a
+narrative of my own army life. My relations to many prominent officers
+and civilians were such as to give opportunities for intimate knowledge
+of their personal qualities as well as their public conduct. It has
+seemed to me that it might be useful to share with others what I thus
+learned, and to throw what light I could upon the events and the men of
+that time.</p>
+<p>As I have written historical accounts of some campaigns separately,
+it may be proper to say that I have in this book avoided repetition, and
+have tried to make the personal narrative supplement and lend new
+interest to the more formal story. Some of the earlier chapters appeared
+in an abridged form in "Battles and Leaders of the Civil War," and the
+closing chapter was read before the Ohio Commandery of the Loyal Legion.
+By arrangements courteously made by the Century Company and the
+Commandery, these chapters, partly re-written, are here found in their
+proper connection.</p>
+<p>Though my private memoranda are full enough to give me reasonable
+confidence in the accuracy of these reminiscences, I have made it a duty
+to test my memory by constant reference to the original contemporaneous
+material so abundantly preserved in the government publication of the
+Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Where the series
+of these records is not given, my references are to the First Series,
+with the abbreviation O. R., and I have preferred to adhere to the
+official designation of the volumes in parts, as each volume then
+includes the documents of a single campaign.</p>
+<p>J. D. C.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p>NOTE.--The manuscript of this work had been completed by General
+Cox, and placed in the hands of the publishers several weeks before his
+untimely death at Magnolia, Mass., August 4, 1900. He himself had read
+and revised some four hundred pages of the press-work. The work of
+reading and revising the remaining proofs and of preparing a general
+index for the work was undertaken by the undersigned from a deep sense
+of obligation to and loving regard for the author, which could not find
+a more fitting expression at this time. No material changes have been
+made in text or notes. Citations have been looked up and references
+verified with care, yet errors may have crept in, which his well-known
+accuracy would have excluded. For all such and for the imperfections of
+the index, the undersigned must accept responsibility, and beg the
+indulgence of the reader, who will find in the text itself enough of
+interest and profit to excuse many shortcomings.</p>
+<p>WILLIAM C. COCHRAN. CINCINNATI, October 1, 1900.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;">CONTENTS<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p><a href="#CHAPTER_I"><span style="font-weight: bold;">CHAPTER I</span></a><br>
+</p>
+<p>THE OUTBREAK OF THE WAR</p>
+<p>Ohio Senate, April 12--Sumter bombarded--"Glory to God!"--The
+surrender--Effect on public sentiment--Call for troops--Politicians
+changing front--David Tod--Stephen A. Douglas--The insurrection must be
+crushed--Garfield on personal duty--Troops organized by the States--The
+militia--Unpreparedness--McClellan at Columbus--Meets Governor
+Dennison--Put in command--Our stock of munitions--Making
+estimates--McClellan's plan--Camp Jackson--Camp Dennison--Gathering of
+the volunteers--Garibaldi uniforms--Officering the troops--Off for
+Washington--Scenes in the State Capitol--Governor Dennison's
+labors--Young regulars--Scott's policy--Alex. McCook--Orlando Poe--Not
+allowed to take state commissions.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a></p>
+<p>CAMP DENNISON</p>
+<p>Laying out the camp--Rosecrans as engineer--A comfortless
+night--Waking to new duties--Floors or no floors for the huts--Hardee's
+Tactics--The watersupply--Colonel Tom Worthington--Joshua Sill--Brigades
+organized--Bates's brigade--Schleich's--My own--McClellan's
+purpose--Division organization--Garfield disappointed--Camp
+routine--Instruction and drill--Camp cookery--Measles--Hospital
+barn--Sisters of Charity--Ferment over re-enlistment--Musters by Gordon
+Granger--"Food for powder"--Brigade staff--De Villiers--"A Captain of
+Calvary"--The "Bloody Tinth"--Almost a row--Summoned to the field.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a></p>
+<p>McCLELLAN IN WEST VIRGINIA</p>
+<p>Political attitude of West Virginia--Rebels take the
+initiative--McClellan ordered to act--Ohio militia cross the river--The
+Philippi affair--Significant dates--The vote on secession--Virginia in
+the Confederacy--Lee in command--Topography--The mountain
+passes--Garnett's army--Rich Mountain position--McClellan in the
+field--His forces--Advances against Garnett--Rosecrans's proposal--His
+fight on the mountain--McClellan's inaction--Garnett's retreat--Affair
+at Carrick's Ford--Garnett killed--Hill's efforts to intercept--Pegram
+in the wilderness--He surrenders--Indirect results
+important--McClellan's military and personal traits.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a></p>
+<p>THE KANAWHA VALLEY</p>
+<p>Orders for the Kanawha expedition--The troops and their
+quality--Lack of artillery and cavalry--Assembling at
+Gallipolis--District of the Kanawha--Numbers of the opposing
+forces--Method of advance--Use of steamboats--Advance guards on river
+banks--Camp at Thirteen-mile Creek--Night alarm--The river
+chutes--Sunken obstructions--Pocotaligo--Affair at Barboursville--Affair
+at Scary Creek--Wise's position at Tyler Mountain--His precipitate
+retreat--Occupation of Charleston--Rosecrans succeeds McClellan--Advance
+toward Gauley Bridge--Insubordination--The Newspaper
+Correspondent--Occupation of Gauley Bridge.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a></p>
+<p>GAULEY BRIDGE</p>
+<p>The gate of the Kanawha valley--The wilderness beyond--West Virginia
+defences--A romantic post--Chaplain Brown--An adventurous
+mission--Chaplain Dubois--"The river path"--Gauley Mount--Colonel
+Tompkins's home--Bowie-knives--Truculent resolutions--The
+Engineers--Whittlesey, Benham, Wagner--Fortifications--Distant
+reconnoissances--Comparison of forces--Dangers to steamboat
+communications--Allotment of duties--The Summersville post--Seventh Ohio
+at Cross Lanes--Scares and rumors--Robert E. Lee at Valley
+Mountain--Floyd and Wise advance--Rosecrans's orders--The Cross Lanes
+affair--Major Casement's creditable retreat--Colonel Tyler's
+reports--Lieutenant-Colonel Creighton--Quarrels of Wise and
+Floyd--Ambushing rebel cavalry--Affair at Boone Court House--New attack
+at Gauley Bridge--An incipient mutiny--Sad result--A notable
+court-martial--Rosecrans marching toward us--Communications
+renewed--Advance toward Lewisburg--Camp Lookout--A private sorrow.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a></p>
+<p>CARNIFEX FERRY--TO SEWELL MOUNTAIN AND BACK </p>
+<p>Rosecrans's march to join me--Reaches Cross Lanes--Advance against
+Floyd--Engagement at Carnifex Ferry--My advance to Sunday
+Road--Conference with Rosecrans--McCook's brigade joins me--Advance to
+Camp Lookout--Brigade commanders--Rosecrans's personal
+characteristics--Hartsuff--Floyd and Wise again--"Battle of
+Bontecou"--Sewell Mountain--The equinoctial--General Schenck
+arrives--Rough lodgings--Withdrawal from the mountain--Rear-guard
+duties--Major Slemmer of Fort Pickens fame--New positions covering
+Gauley Bridge--Floyd at Cotton Mountain--Rosecrans's methods with
+private soldiers--Progress in discipline.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a></p>
+<p>COTTON MOUNTAIN</p>
+<p>Floyd cannonades Gauley Bridge--Effect on Rosecrans--Topography of
+Gauley Mount--De Villiers runs the gantlet--Movements of our
+forces--Explaining orders--A hard climb on the mountain--In the post at
+Gauley Bridge--Moving magazine and telegraph--A balky
+mule-team--Ammunition train under fire--Captain Fitch a model
+quartermaster--Plans to entrap Floyd--Moving supply trains at
+night--Method of working the ferry--Of making flatboats--The Cotton
+Mountain affair--Rosecrans dissatisfied with Benham--Vain plans to reach
+East Tennessee.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a></p>
+<p>WINTER-QUARTERS</p>
+<p>An impracticable country--Movements suspended--Experienced troops
+ordered away--My orders from Washington--Rosecrans objects--A
+disappointment--Winter organization of the Department--Sifting our
+material--Courts-martial--Regimental schools--Drill and picket duty--A
+military execution--Effect upon the army--Political sentiments of the
+people--Rules of conduct toward them--Case of Mr. Parks--Mr.
+Summers--Mr. Patrick--Mr. Lewis Ruffner--Mr. Doddridge--Mr. B. F.
+Smith--A house divided against itself--Major Smith's journal--The
+contrabands--A fugitive-slave case--Embarrassments as to military
+jurisdiction.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a></p>
+<p>VOLUNTEERS AND REGULARS</p>
+<p>High quality of first volunteers--Discipline milder than that of the
+regulars--Reasons for the difference--Practical efficiency of the
+men--Necessity for sifting the officers--Analysis of their defects--What
+is military aptitude?--Diminution of number in ascending scale--Effect
+of age--Of former life and occupation--Embarrassments of a new
+business--Quick progress of the right class of young men--Political
+appointments--Professional men--Political leaders naturally prominent in
+a civil war--"Cutting and trying"--Dishonest methods--An excellent army
+at the end of a year--The regulars in 1861--Entrance examinations for
+West Point--The curriculum there--Drill and experience--Its
+limitations--Problems peculiar to the vast increase of the
+army--Ultra-conservatism--Attitude toward the Lincoln
+administration--"Point de z&ecirc;le"--Lack of initiative--Civil work of
+army engineers--What is military art?--Opinions of experts--Military
+history--European armies in the Crimean War--True generalship--Anomaly
+of a double army organization.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a></p>
+<p>THE MOUNTAIN DEPARTMENT--SPRING CAMPAIGN</p>
+<p>Rosecrans's plan of campaign--Approved by McClellan with
+modifications--Wagons or pack-mules--Final form of plan--Changes in
+commands--McClellan limited to Army of the Potomac--Halleck's Department
+of the Mississippi--Fr&eacute;mont's Mountain Department--Rosecrans
+superseded--Preparations in the Kanawha District--Batteaux to supplement
+steamboats--Light wagons for mountain work--Fr&eacute;mont's plan--East
+Tennessee as an objective--The supply question--Banks in the Shenandoah
+valley--Milroy's advance--Combat at McDowell--Banks
+defeated--Fr&eacute;mont's plans deranged--Operations in the Kanawha
+valley--Organization of brigades--Brigade commanders--Advance to Narrows
+of New River--The field telegraph--Concentration of the enemy--Affair at
+Princeton--Position at Flat-top Mountain.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a></p>
+<p>POPE IN COMMAND--TRANSFER TO WASHINGTON</p>
+<p>A key position--Crook's engagement at Lewisburg--Watching and
+scouting--Mountain work--Pope in command--Consolidation of
+Departments--Suggestions of our transfer to the East--Pope's Order No.
+11 and Address to the Army--Orders to march across the
+mountains--Discussion of them--Changed to route by water and
+rail--Ninety-mile march--Logistics--Arriving in Washington--Two
+regiments reach Pope--Two sent to Manassas--Jackson captures
+Manassas--Railway broken--McClellan at Alexandria--Engagement at Bull
+Run Bridge--Ordered to Upton's Hill--Covering Washington--Listening to
+the Bull Run battle--Ill news travels fast.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a></p>
+<p>RETREAT WITHIN THE LINES--REORGANIZATION--HALLECK AND HIS
+SUBORDINATES</p>
+<p>McClellan's visits to my position--Riding the lines--Discussing the
+past campaign--The withdrawal from the James--Prophecy--McClellan and
+the soldiers--He is in command of the defences--Intricacy of official
+relations--Reorganization begun--Pope's army marches through our
+works--Meeting of McClellan and Pope--Pope's characteristics--Undue
+depreciation of him--The situation when Halleck was made
+General-in-Chief--Pope's part in it--Reasons for dislike on the part of
+the Potomac Army--McClellan's secret service--Deceptive information of
+the enemy's force--Information from prisoners and citizens--Effects of
+McClellan's illusion as to Lee's strength--Halleck's previous
+career--Did he intend to take command in the field?--His abdication of
+the field command--The necessity for a union of forces in
+Virginia--McClellan's inaction was Lee's opportunity--Slow transfer of
+the Army of the Potomac--Halleck burdened with subordinate's
+work--Burnside twice declines the command--It is given to
+McClellan--Pope relieved--Other changes in
+organization--Consolidation--New campaign begun.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a></p>
+<p>SOUTH MOUNTAIN</p>
+<p>March through Washington--Reporting to Burnside--The Ninth
+Corps--Burnside's personal qualities--To Leesboro--Straggling--Lee's
+army at Frederick--Our deliberate advance--Reno at New Market--The march
+past--Reno and Hayes--Camp gossip--Occupation of Frederick--Affair with
+Hampton's cavalry--Crossing Catoctin Mountain--The valley and South
+Mountain--Lee's order found--Division of his army--Jackson at Harper's
+Ferry--Supporting Pleasonton's reconnoissance--Meeting Colonel Moor--An
+involuntary warning--Kanawha Division's advance--Opening of the
+battle--Carrying the mountain crest--The morning fight--Lull at
+noon--Arrival of supports--Battle renewed--Final success--Death of
+Reno--Hooker's battle on the right--His report--Burnside's
+comments--Franklin's engagement at Crampton's Gap.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a></p>
+<p>ANTIETAM: PRELIMINARY MOVEMENTS</p>
+<p>Lee's plan of invasion--Changed by McClellan's advance--The position
+at Sharpsburg--Our routes of march--At the Antietam--McClellan
+reconnoitring--Lee striving to concentrate--Our delays--Tuesday's
+quiet--Hooker's evening march--The Ninth Corps command--Changing our
+positions--McClellan's plan of battle--Hooker's evening
+skirmish--Mansfield goes to support Hooker--Confederate
+positions--Jackson arrives--McLaws and Walker reach the field--Their
+places.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</a></p>
+<p>ANTIETAM: THE FIGHT ON THE RIGHT</p>
+<p>Hooker astir early--The field near the Dunker Church--Artillery
+combat--Positions of Hooker's divisions--Rocky ledges in the
+woods--Advance of Doubleday through Miller's orchard and garden--Enemy's
+fire from West Wood--They rush for Gibbon's battery--Repulse--Advance of
+Patrick's brigade--Fierce fighting along the turnpike--Ricketts's
+division in the East Wood--Fresh effort of Meade's division in the
+centre--A lull in the battle--Mansfield's corps reaches the
+field--Conflicting opinions as to the hour--Mansfield killed--Command
+devolves on Williams--Advance through East Wood--Hooker wounded--Meade
+in command of the corps--It withdraws--Greene's division reaches the
+Dunker Church--Crawford's in the East Wood--Terrible effects on the
+Confederates--Sumner's corps coming up--Its formation--It moves on the
+Dunker Church from the east--Divergence of the divisions--Sedgwick's
+passes to right of Greene--Attacked in flank and broken--Rallying at the
+Poffenberger hill--Twelfth Corps hanging on near the church--Advance of
+French's division--Richardson follows later--Bloody Lane reached--The
+Piper house--Franklin's corps arrives--Charge of Irwin's brigade.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a></p>
+<p>ANTIETAM: THE FIGHT ON THE LEFT</p>
+<p>Ninth Corps positions near Antietam Creek--Rodman's division at
+lower ford--Sturgis's at the bridge--Burnside's headquarters on the
+field--View from his place of the battle on the right--French's
+fight--An exploding caisson--Our orders to attack--The hour--Crisis of
+the battle--Discussion of the sequence of events--The Burnside
+bridge--Exposed approach--Enfiladed by enemy's artillery--Disposition of
+enemy's troops--His position very strong--Importance of Rodman's
+movement by the ford--The fight at the bridge--Repulse--Fresh
+efforts--Tactics of the assault--Success--Formation on further
+bank--Bringing up ammunition--Willcox relieves Sturgis--The latter now
+in support--Advance against Sharpsburg--Fierce combat--Edge of the town
+reached--Rodman's advance on the left--A. P. Hill's Confederate division
+arrives from Harper's Ferry--Attacks Rodman's flank--A raw regiment
+breaks--The line retires--Sturgis comes into the gap--Defensive position
+taken and held--Enemy's assaults repulsed--Troops sleeping on their
+arms--McClellan's reserve--Other troops not used--McClellan's idea of
+Lee's force and plans--Lee's retreat--The terrible casualty lists.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</a></p>
+<p>McCLELLAN AND POLITICS--HIS REMOVAL AND ITS CAUSE</p>
+<p>Meeting Colonel Key--His changes of opinion--His relations to
+McClellan--Governor Dennison's influence--McClellan's attitude toward
+Lincoln--Burnside's position--The Harrison Landing letter--Compared with
+Lincoln's views--Probable intent of the letter--Incident at McClellan's
+headquarters--John W. Garrett--Emancipation Proclamation--An
+after-dinner discussion of it--Contrary influences--Frank
+advice--Burnside and John Cochrane--General Order 163--Lincoln's visit
+to camp--Riding the field--A review--Lincoln's desire for continuing the
+campaign--McClellan's hesitation--His tactics of discussion--His
+exaggeration of difficulties--Effect on his army--Disillusion a slow
+process--Lee's army not better than Johnston's--Work done by our Western
+army--Difference in morale--An army rarely bolder than its
+leader--Correspondence between Halleck and McClellan--Lincoln's
+remarkable letter on the campaign--The army moves on November 2--Lee
+regains the line covering Richmond--McClellan relieved--Burnside in
+command.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</a></p>
+<p>PERSONAL RELATIONS OF McCLELLAN, BURNSIDE, AND PORTER</p>
+<p>Intimacy of McClellan and Burnside--Private letters in the official
+files--Burnside's mediation--His self-forgetful devotion--The movement
+to join Pope--Burnside forwards Porter's dispatches--His double refusal
+of the command--McClellan suspends the organization of wings--His
+relations to Porter--Lincoln's letter on the subject--Fault-finding with
+Burnside--Whose work?--Burnside's appearance and bearing in the field.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</a></p>
+<p>RETURN TO WEST VIRGINIA</p>
+<p>Ordered to the Kanawha valley again--An unwelcome surprise--Reasons
+for the order--Reporting to Halleck at Washington--Affairs in the
+Kanawha in September--Lightburn's positions--Enemy under Loring
+advances--Affair at Fayette C. H.--Lightburn retreats--Gauley Bridge
+abandoned--Charleston evacuated--Disorderly flight to the Ohio--Enemy's
+cavalry raid under Jenkins--General retreat in Tennessee and
+Kentucky--West Virginia not in any Department--Now annexed to that of
+Ohio--Morgan's retreat from Cumberland Gap--Ordered to join the Kanawha
+forces--Milroy's brigade also--My interviews with Halleck and
+Stanton--Promotion--My task--My division sent with me--District of West
+Virginia--Colonel Crook promoted--Journey westward--Governor
+Peirpoint--Governor Tod--General Wright--Destitution of Morgan's
+column--Refitting at Portland, Ohio--Night drive to Gallipolis--An
+amusing accident--Inspection at Point Pleasant--Milroy ordered to
+Parkersburg--Milroy's qualities--Interruptions to movement of troops--No
+wagons--Supplies delayed--Confederate retreat--Loring relieved--Echols
+in command--Our march up the valley--Echols retreats--We occupy
+Charleston and Gauley Bridge--Further advance stopped--Our forces
+reduced--Distribution of remaining troops--Alarms and minor
+movements--Case of Mr. Summers--His treatment by the Confederates.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</a></p>
+<p>WINTER QUARTERS, 1862-63--PROMOTIONS AND POLITICS</p>
+<p>Central position of Marietta, Ohio--Connection with all parts of
+West Virginia--Drill and instruction of troops--Guerilla
+warfare--Partisan Rangers--Confederate laws--Disposal of
+plunder--Mosby's Rangers as a type--Opinions of Lee, Stuart, and
+Rosser--Effect on other troops--Rangers finally abolished--Rival
+home-guards and militia--Horrors of neighborhood war--Staff and staff
+duties--Reduction of forces--General Cluseret--Later connection with the
+Paris Commune--His relations with Milroy--He resigns--Political
+situation--Congressmen distrust Lincoln--Cutler's diary--Resolutions
+regarding appointments of general officers--The number authorized by
+law--Stanton's report--Effect of Act of July, 1862--An excess of nine
+major-generals--The legal questions involved--Congressional patronage
+and local distribution--Ready for a "deal"--Bill to increase the number
+of generals--A "slate" made up to exhaust the number--Senate and House
+disagree--Conference--Agreement in last hours of the session--The new
+list--A few vacancies by resignation, etc.--List of those dropped--My
+own case--Faults of the method--Lincoln's humorous comments--Curious
+case of General Turchin--Congestion in the highest
+grades--Effects--Confederate grades of general and
+lieutenant-general--Superiority of our system--Cotemporaneous reports
+and criticisms--New regiments instead of recruiting old ones--Sherman's
+trenchant opinion.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</a></p>
+<p>FAREWELL TO WEST VIRGINIA--BURNSIDE IN THE DEPARTMENT OF THE OHIO</p>
+<p>Desire for field service--Changes in the Army of the
+Potomac--Judgment of McClellan at that time--Our defective
+knowledge--Changes in West Virginia--Errors in new
+organization--Embarrassments resulting--Visit to General Schenck--New
+orders from Washington--Sent to Ohio to administer the draft--Burnside
+at head of the department--District of Ohio--Headquarters at
+Cincinnati--Cordial relations of Governor Tod with the military
+authorities--System of enrolment and draft--Administration by Colonel
+Fry--Decay of the veteran regiments--Bounty-jumping--Effects on
+political parties--Soldiers voting--Burnside's military plans--East
+Tennessee--Rosecrans aiming at Chattanooga--Burnside's business
+habits--His frankness--Stories about him--His personal
+characteristics--Cincinnati as a border city--Rebel sympathizers--Order
+No. 38--Challenged by Vallandigham--The order not a new
+departure--Lincoln's proclamation--General Wright's circular.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</a></p>
+<p>THE VALLANDIGHAM CASE--THE HOLMES COUNTY WAR</p>
+<p>Clement L. Vallandigham--His opposition to the war--His theory of
+reconstruction--His Mount Vernon speech--His arrest--Sent before the
+military commission--General Potter its president--Counsel for the
+prisoner--The line of defence--The judgment--Habeas Corpus
+proceedings--Circuit Court of the United States--Judge Leavitt denies
+the release--Commutation by the President--Sent beyond the
+lines--Conduct of Confederate authorities--Vallandigham in
+Canada--Candidate for Governor--Political results--Martial
+law--Principles underlying it--Practical application--The intent to aid
+the public enemy--The intent to defeat the draft--Armed resistance to
+arrest of deserters, Noble County--To the enrolment in Holmes County--A
+real insurrection--Connection of these with Vallandigham's speeches--The
+Supreme Court refuses to interfere--Action in the Milligan case after
+the war--Judge Davis's personal views--Knights of the Golden Circle--The
+Holmes County outbreak--Its suppression--Letter to Judge Welker.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</a></p>
+<p>BURNSIDE AND ROSECRANS--THE SUMMER'S DELAYS</p>
+<p>Condition of Kentucky and Tennessee--Halleck's instructions to
+Burnside--Blockhouses at bridges--Relief of East Tennessee--Conditions
+of the problem--Vast wagon-train required--Scheme of a railroad--Surveys
+begun--Burnside's efforts to arrange co-operation with Rosecrans--Bragg
+sending troops to Johnston--Halleck urges Rosecrans to
+activity--Continued inactivity--Burnside ordered to send troops to
+Grant--Rosecrans's correspondence with Halleck--Lincoln's
+dispatch--Rosecrans collects his subordinates' opinions--Councils of
+war--The situation considered--Sheridan and Thomas--Computation of
+effectives--Garfield's summing up--Review of the situation when
+Rosecrans succeeded Buell--After Stone's River--Relative
+forces--Disastrous detached expeditions--Appeal to ambition--The
+major-generalship in regular army--Views of the President
+justified--Burnside's forces--Confederate forces in East
+Tennessee--Reasons for the double organization of the Union armies.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</a></p>
+<p>THE MORGAN RAID</p>
+<p>Departure of the staff for the field--An amusingly quick
+return--Changes in my own duties--Expeditions to occupy the
+enemy--Sanders' raid into East Tennessee--His route--His success and
+return--The Confederate Morgan's raid--His instructions--His reputation
+as a soldier--Compared with Forrest--Morgan's start delayed--His
+appearance at Green River, Ky.--Foiled by Colonel Moore--Captures
+Lebanon--Reaches the Ohio at Brandenburg--General Hobson in
+pursuit--Morgan crosses into Indiana--Was this his original
+purpose?--His route out of Indiana into Ohio--He approaches
+Cincinnati--Hot chase by Hobson--Gunboats co-operating on the
+river--Efforts to block his way--He avoids garrisoned posts and
+cities--Our troops moved in transports by water--Condition of Morgan's
+jaded column--Approaching the Ohio at Buffington's--Gunboats near the
+ford--Hobson attacks--Part captured, the rest fly northward--Another
+capture--A long chase--Surrender of Morgan with the remnant--Summary of
+results--A burlesque capitulation.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</a></p>
+<p>THE LIBERATION OF EAST TENNESSEE</p>
+<p>News of Grant's victory at Vicksburg--A thrilling scene at the
+opera--Burnside's Ninth Corps to return--Stanton urges Rosecrans to
+advance--The Tullahoma manoeuvres--Testy correspondence--Its real
+meaning--Urgency with Burnside--Ignorance concerning his situation--His
+disappointment as to Ninth Corps--Rapid concentration of other
+troops--Burnside's march into East Tennessee--Occupation of
+Knoxville--Invests Cumberland Gap--The garrison surrenders--Good news
+from Rosecrans--Distances between armies--Divergent lines--No railway
+communication--Burnside concentrates toward the Virginia line--Joy of
+the people--Their intense loyalty--Their faith in the future.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</a></p>
+<p>BURNSIDE IN EAST TENNESSEE</p>
+<p>Organizing and arming the loyalists--Burnside concentrates near
+Greeneville--His general plan--Rumors of Confederate
+reinforcements--Lack of accurate information--The Ninth Corps in
+Kentucky--Its depletion by malarial disease--Death of General Welsh from
+this cause--Preparing for further work--Situation on 16th
+September--Dispatch from Halleck--Its apparent purpose--Necessity to
+dispose of the enemy near Virginia border--Burnside personally at the
+front--His great activity--Ignorance of Rosecrans's peril--Impossibility
+of joining him by the 20th--Ruinous effects of abandoning East
+Tennessee--Efforts to aid Rosecrans without such abandonment--Enemy
+duped into burning Watauga bridge themselves--Ninth Corps
+arriving--Willcox's division garrisons Cumberland Gap--Reinforcements
+sent Rosecrans from all quarters--Chattanooga made safe from attack--The
+supply question--Meigs's description of the roads--Burnside halted near
+Loudon--Halleck's misconception of the geography--The people imploring
+the President not to remove the troops--How Longstreet got away from
+Virginia--Burnside's alternate plans--Minor operations in upper Holston
+valley--Wolford's affair on the lower Holston.<br>
+<br>
+</p>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#APPENDIX_A">APPENDIX A</a></p>
+<p><span style="font-weight: bold;"><a href="#APPENDIX_B">APPENDIX B</a><br>
+</span></p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
+<p style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"><br>
+</span> </p>
+<p style="text-align: center; font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big><big><big>MILITARY
+REMINISCENCES <br>
+OF THE CIVIL WAR</big></big></big></big></big></p>
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<p><br>
+<span style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</span></p>
+<p>THE OUTBREAK OF THE WAR</p>
+<p>Ohio Senate April 12--Sumter bombarded--"Glory to God!"--The
+surrender--Effect on public sentiment--Call for troops--Politicians
+changing front--David Tod--Stephen A. Douglas--The insurrection must be
+crushed--Garfield on personal duty--Troops organized by the States--The
+militia--Unpreparedness--McClellan at Columbus--Meets Governor
+Dennison--Put in command--Our stock of munitions--Making
+estimates--McClellan's plan--Camp Jackson--Camp Dennison--Gathering of
+the volunteers--Garibaldi uniforms--Officering the troops--Off for
+Washington--Scenes in the State Capitol--Governor Dennison's
+labors--Young regulars--Scott's policy--Alex. McCook--Orlando Poe--Not
+allowed to take state commissions.</p>
+<p>On Friday the twelfth day of April, 1861, the Senate of Ohio was in
+session, trying to go on in the ordinary routine of business, but with a
+sense of anxiety and strain which was caused by the troubled condition
+of national affairs. The passage of Ordinances of Secession by one after
+another of the Southern States, and even the assembling of a provisional
+Confederate government at Montgomery, had not wholly destroyed the hope
+that some peaceful way out of our troubles would be found; yet the
+gathering of an army on the sands opposite Fort Sumter was really war,
+and if a hostile gun were fired, we knew it would mean the end of all
+effort at arrangement. Hoping almost against hope that blood would not
+be shed, and that the pageant of military array and of a rebel
+government would pass by and soon be reckoned among the disused scenes
+and properties of a political drama that never pretended to be more than
+acting, we tried to give our thoughts to business; but there was no
+heart in it, and the morning hour lagged, for we could not work in
+earnest and we were unwilling to adjourn.</p>
+<p>Suddenly a senator came in from the lobby in an excited way, and
+catching the chairman's eye, exclaimed, "Mr. President, the telegraph
+announces that the secessionists are bombarding Fort Sumter!" There was
+a solemn and painful hush, but it was broken in a moment by a woman's
+shrill voice from the spectators' seats, crying, "Glory to God!" It
+startled every one, almost as if the enemy were in the midst. But it was
+the voice of a radical friend of the slave, who after a lifetime of
+public agitation believed that only through blood could freedom be won.
+Abby Kelly Foster had been attending the session of the Assembly, urging
+the passage of some measures enlarging the legal rights of married
+women, and, sitting beyond the railing when the news came in, shouted a
+fierce cry of joy that oppression had submitted its cause to the
+decision of the sword. With most of us, the gloomy thought that civil
+war had begun in our own land overshadowed everything, and seemed too
+great a price to pay for any good; a scourge to be borne only in
+preference to yielding the very groundwork of our republicanism,--the
+right to enforce a fair interpretation of the Constitution through the
+election of President and Congress.</p>
+<p>The next day we learned that Major Anderson had surrendered, and the
+telegraphic news from all the Northern States showed plain evidence of a
+popular outburst of loyalty to the Union, following a brief moment of
+dismay. Judge Thomas M. Key of Cincinnati, chairman of the Judiciary
+Committee, was the recognized leader of the Democratic party in the
+Senate, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Afterward
+aide-de-camp and acting judge-advocate on McClellan's staff.]</span> and
+at an early hour moved an adjournment to the following Tuesday, in
+order, as he said, that the senators might have the opportunity to go
+home and consult their constituents in the perilous crisis of public
+affairs. No objection was made to the adjournment, and the
+representatives took a similar recess. All were in a state of most
+anxious suspense,--the Republicans to know what initiative the
+Administration at Washington would take, and the Democrats to determine
+what course they should follow if the President should call for troops
+to put down the insurrection.</p>
+<p>Before we meet again, Mr. Lincoln's proclamation and call for
+seventy-five thousand militia for three months' service were out, and
+the great mass of the people of the North, forgetting all party
+distinctions, answered with an enthusiastic patriotism that swept
+politicians off their feet. When we met again on Tuesday morning, Judge
+Key, taking my arm and pacing the floor outside the railing in the
+Senate chamber, broke out impetuously, "Mr. Cox, the people have gone
+stark mad!" "I knew they would if a blow was struck against the flag,"
+said I, reminding him of some previous conversations we had had on the
+subject. He, with most of the politicians of the day, partly by sympathy
+with the overwhelming current of public opinion, and partly by reaction
+of their own hearts against the false theories which had encouraged the
+secessionists, determined to support the war measures of the government,
+and to make no factious opposition to such state legislation as might be
+necessary to sustain the federal administration.</p>
+<p>The attitude of Mr. Key is only a type of many others, and makers
+one of the most striking features of the time. On the 8th of January the
+usual Democratic convention and celebration of the Battle of New Orleans
+had taken place, and a series of resolutions had been passed, which were
+drafted, as was understood, by Judge Thurman. In these, professing to
+speak in the name of "two hundred thousand Democrats of Ohio," the
+convention had very significantly intimated that this vast organization
+of men would be found in the way of any attempt to put down secession
+until the demands of the South in respect to slavery were complied with.
+A few days afterward I was returning to Columbus from my home in
+Trumbull County, and meeting upon the railway train with David Tod, then
+an active Democratic politician, but afterward one of our loyal "war
+governors," the conversation turned on the action of the convention
+which had just adjourned. Mr. Tod and I were personal friends and
+neighbors, and I freely expressed my surprise that the convention should
+have committed itself to what must be interpreted as a threat of
+insurrection in the North if the administration should, in opposing
+secession by force, follow the example of Andrew Jackson, in whose honor
+they had assembled. He rather vehemently reasserted the substance of the
+resolution, saying that we Republicans would find the two hundred
+thousand Ohio Democrats in front of us, if we attempted to cross the
+Ohio River. My answer was, "We will give up the contest if we cannot
+carry your two hundred thousand over the heads of your leaders."</p>
+<p>The result proved how hollow the party professions had been; or
+perhaps I should say how superficial was the hold of such party
+doctrines upon the mass of men in a great political organization. In the
+excitement of political campaigns they had cheered the extravagant
+language of party platforms with very little reflection, and the leaders
+had imagined that the people were really and earnestly indoctrinated
+into the political creed of Calhoun; but at the first shot from
+Beauregard's guns in Charleston harbor their latent patriotism sprang
+into vigorous life, and they crowded to the recruiting stations to
+enlist for the defence of the national flag and the national Union. It
+was a popular torrent which no leaders could resist; but many of these
+should be credited with the same patriotic impulse, and it made them
+nobly oblivious of party consistency. Stephen A. Douglas passed through
+Columbus on his way to Washington a few days after the surrender of
+Sumter, and in response to the calls of a spontaneous gathering of
+people, spoke to them from his bedroom window in the American House.
+There had been no thought for any of the common surroundings of a public
+meeting. There were no torches, no music. A dark crowd of men filled
+full the dim-lit street, and called for Douglas with an earnestness of
+tone wholly different from the enthusiasm of common political
+gatherings. He came half-dressed to his window, and without any light
+near him, spoke solemnly to the people upon the terrible crisis which
+had come upon the nation. Men of all parties were there: his own
+followers to get some light as to their duty; the Breckinridge Democrats
+ready, most of them, repentantly to follow a Northern leader, now that
+their recent candidate was in the rebellion; <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Breckinridge did not
+formally join the Confederacy till September, but his accord with the
+secessionists was well known.]</span> the Republicans eagerly anxious to
+know whether so potent an influence was to be unreservedly on the side
+of the country. I remember well the serious solicitude with which I
+listened to his opening sentences as I leaned against the railing of the
+State House park, trying in vain to get more than a dim outline of the
+man as he stood at the unlighted window. His deep sonorous voice rolled
+down through the darkness from above us,--an earnest, measured voice,
+the more solemn, the more impressive, because we could not see the
+speaker, and it came to us literally as "a voice in the night,"--the
+night of our country's unspeakable trial. There was no uncertainty in
+his tone: the Union must be preserved and the insurrection must be
+crushed,--he pledged his hearty support to Mr. Lincoln's administration
+in doing this. Other questions must stand aside till the national
+authority should be everywhere recognized. I do not think we greatly
+cheered him,--it was rather a deep Amen that went up from the crowd. We
+went home breathing freer in the assurance we now felt that, for a time
+at least, no organized opposition to the federal government and its
+policy of coercion would be formidable in the North. We did not look for
+unanimity. Bitter and narrow men there were whose sympathies were with
+their country's enemies. Others equally narrow were still in the chains
+of the secession logic they had learned from the Calhounists; but the
+broader-minded men found themselves happy in being free from disloyal
+theories, and threw themselves sincerely and earnestly into the popular
+movement. There was no more doubt where Douglas or Tod or Key would be
+found, or any of the great class they represented.</p>
+<p>Yet the situation hung upon us like a nightmare. Garfield and I were
+lodging together at the time, our wives being kept at home by family
+cares, and when we reached our sitting-room, after an evening session of
+the Senate, we often found ourselves involuntarily groaning, "Civil war
+in <i>our</i> land!" The shame, the outrage, the folly, seemed too great
+to believe, and we half hoped to wake from it as from a dream. Among the
+painful remembrances of those days is the ever-present weight at the
+heart which never left me till I found relief in the active duties of
+camp life at the close of the month. I went about my duties (and I am
+sure most of those I associated with did the same) with the half-choking
+sense of a grief I dared not think of: like one who is dragging himself
+to the ordinary labors of life from some terrible and recent bereavement.</p>
+<p>We talked of our personal duty, and though both Garfield and myself
+had young families, we were agreed that our activity in the organization
+and support of the Republican party made the duty of supporting the
+government by military service come peculiarly home to us. He was, for
+the moment, somewhat trammelled by his half-clerical position, but he
+very soon cut the knot. My own path seemed unmistakably clear. He, more
+careful for his friend than for himself, urged upon me his doubts
+whether my physical strength was equal to the strain that would be put
+upon it. "I," said he, "am big and strong, and if my relations to the
+church and the college can be broken, I shall have no excuse for not
+enlisting; but you are slender and will break down." It was true that I
+looked slender for a man six feet high (though it would hardly be
+suspected now that it was so), yet I had assured confidence in the
+elasticity of my constitution; and the result justified me, whilst it
+also showed how liable to mistake one is in such things. Garfield found
+that he had a tendency to weakness of the alimentary system which broke
+him down on every campaign in which he served and led to his retiring
+from the army much earlier than he had intended. My own health, on the
+other hand, was strengthened by out-door life and exposure, and I served
+to the end with growing physical vigor.</p>
+<p>When Mr. Lincoln issued his first call for troops, the existing laws
+made it necessary that these should be fully organized and officered by
+the several States. Then, the treasury was in no condition to bear the
+burden of war expenditures, and till Congress could assemble, the
+President was forced to rely on the States to furnish the means
+necessary for the equipment and transportation of their own troops. This
+threw upon the governors and legislatures of the loyal States
+responsibilities of a kind wholly unprecedented. A long period of
+profound peace had made every military organization seem almost
+farcical. A few independent military companies formed the merest shadow
+of an army; the state militia proper was only a nominal thing. It
+happened, however, that I held a commission as Brigadier in this state
+militia, and my intimacy with Governor Dennison led him to call upon me
+for such assistance as I could render in the first enrolment and
+organization of the Ohio quota. Arranging to be called to the Senate
+chamber when my vote might be needed upon important legislation, I gave
+my time chiefly to such military matters as the governor appointed.
+Although, as I have said, my military commission had been a nominal
+thing, and in fact I had never worn a uniform, I had not wholly
+neglected theoretic preparation for such work. For some years the
+possibility of a war of secession had been one of the things which would
+force itself upon the thoughts of reflecting people, and I had been led
+to give some careful study to such books of tactics and of strategy as
+were within easy reach. I had especially been led to read military
+history with critical care, and had carried away many valuable ideas
+from this most useful means of military education. I had therefore some
+notion of the work before us, and could approach its problems with less
+loss of time, at least, than if I had been wholly ignorant. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I have treated this subject
+somewhat more fully in a paper in the "Atlantic Monthly" for March,
+1892, "Why the Men of '61 fought for the Union."]</span> </p>
+<p>My commission as Brigadier-General in the Ohio quota in national
+service was dated on the 23d of April, though it had been understood for
+several days that my tender of service in the field would be accepted.
+Just about the same time Captain George B. McClellan was requested by
+Governor Dennison to come to Columbus for consultation, and by the
+governor's request I met him at the railway station and took him to the
+State House. I think Mr. Larz Anderson (brother of Major Robert
+Anderson) and Mr. L'Hommedieu of Cincinnati were with him. The
+intimation had been given me that he would probably be made
+major-general and commandant of our Ohio contingent, and this,
+naturally, made me scan him closely. He was rather under the medium
+height, but muscularly formed, with broad shoulders and a well-poised
+head, active and graceful in motion. His whole appearance was quiet and
+modest, but when drawn out he showed no lack of confidence in himself.
+He was dressed in a plain travelling suit, with a narrow-rimmed soft
+felt hat. In short, he seemed what he was, a railway superintendent in
+his business clothes. At the time his name was a good deal associated
+with that of Beauregard; they were spoken of as young men of similar
+standing in the Engineer Corps of the Army, and great things were
+expected of them both because of their scientific knowledge of their
+profession, though McClellan had been in civil life for some years. His
+report on the Crimean War was one of the few important memoirs our old
+army had produced, and was valuable enough to give a just reputation for
+comprehensive understanding of military organization, and the promise of
+ability to conduct the operations of an army.</p>
+<p>I was present at the interview which the governor had with him. The
+destitution of the State of everything like military material and
+equipment was very plainly put, and the magnitude of the task of
+building up a small army out of nothing was not blinked. The governor
+spoke of the embarrassment he felt at every step from the lack of
+practical military experience in his staff, and of his desire to have
+some one on whom he could properly throw the details of military work.
+McClellan showed that he fully understood the difficulties there would
+be before him, and said that no man could wholly master them at once,
+although he had confidence that if a few weeks' time for preparation
+were given, he would be able to put the Ohio division into reasonable
+form for taking the field. The command was then formally tendered and
+accepted. All of us who were present felt that the selection was one
+full of promise and hope, and that the governor had done the wisest
+thing practicable at the time.</p>
+<p>The next morning McClellan requested me to accompany him to the
+State Arsenal, to see what arms and material might be there. We found a
+few boxes of smooth-bore muskets which had once been issued to militia
+companies and had been returned rusted and damaged. No belts,
+cartridge-boxes, or other accoutrements were with them. There were two
+or three smooth-bore brass fieldpieces, six-pounders, which had been
+honeycombed by firing salutes, and of which the vents had been worn out,
+bushed, and worn out again. In a heap in one corner lay a confused pile
+of mildewed harness, which had probably been once used for artillery
+horses, but was now not worth carrying away. There had for many years
+been no money appropriated to buy military material or even to protect
+the little the State had. The federal government had occasionally
+distributed some arms which were in the hands of the independent
+uniformed militia, and the arsenal was simply an empty storehouse. It
+did not take long to complete our inspection. At the door, as we were
+leaving the building, McClellan turned, and looking back into its
+emptiness, remarked, half humorously and half sadly, "A fine stock of
+munitions on which to begin a great war!" We went back to the State
+House, where a room in the Secretary of State's department was assigned
+us, and we sat down to work. The first task was to make out detailed
+schedules and estimates of what would be needed to equip ten thousand
+men for the field. This was a unit which could be used by the governor
+and legislature in estimating the appropriations needed then or
+subsequently. Intervals in this labor were used in discussing the
+general situation and plans of campaign. Before the close of the week
+McClellan drew up a paper embodying his own views, and forwarded it to
+Lieutenant-General Scott. He read it to me, and my recollection of it is
+that he suggested two principal lines of movement in the West,--one, to
+move eastward by the Kanawha valley with a heavy column to co-operate
+with an army in front of Washington; the other, to march directly
+southward and to open the valley of the Mississippi. Scott's answer was
+appreciative and flattering, without distinctly approving his plan; and
+I have never doubted that the paper prepared the way for his appointment
+in the regular army which followed at so early a day. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I am not aware that
+McClellan's plan of campaign has been published. Scott's answer to it is
+given in General Townsend's "Anecdotes of the Civil War," p. 260. It
+was, with other communications from Governor Dennison, carried to
+Washington by Hon. A. F. Perry of Cincinnati, an intimate friend of the
+governor, who volunteered as special messenger, the mail service being
+unsafe. See a paper by Mr. Perry in "Sketches of War History" (Ohio
+Loyal Legion), <i>vol. iii.</i> p. 345.]</span> </p>
+<p>During this week McClellan was invited to take the command of the
+troops to be raised in Pennsylvania, his native State. Some things
+beside his natural attachment to Pennsylvania made the proposal an
+attractive one to him. It was already evident that the army which might
+be organized near Washington would be peculiarly in the public eye, and
+would give to its leading officers greater opportunities of prompt
+recognition and promotion than would be likely to occur in the West. The
+close association with the government would also be a source of power if
+he were successful, and the way to a chief command would be more open
+there than elsewhere. McClellan told me frankly that if the offer had
+come before he had assumed the Ohio command, he would have accepted it;
+but he promptly decided that he was honorably bound to serve under the
+commission he had already received and which, like my own, was dated
+April 23.</p>
+<p>My own first assignment to a military command was during the same
+week, on the completion of our estimates, when I was for a few days put
+in charge of Camp Jackson, the depot of recruits which Governor Dennison
+had established in the northern suburb of Columbus and had named in
+honor of the first squelcher of secessionism. McClellan soon determined,
+however, that a separate camp of instruction should be formed for the
+troops mustered into the United States service, and should be so placed
+as to be free from the temptations and inconveniences of too close
+neighborhood to a large city, whilst it should also be reasonably well
+placed for speedy defence of the southern frontier of the State. Other
+camps could be under state control and used only for the organization of
+regiments which could afterward be sent to the camp of instruction or
+elsewhere. Railway lines and connections indicated some point in the
+Little Miami valley as the proper place for such a camp; and Mr.
+Woodward, the chief engineer of the Little Miami Railroad, being taken
+into consultation, suggested a spot on the line of that railway about
+thirteen miles from Cincinnati, where a considerable bend of the Little
+Miami River encloses wide and level fields, backed on the west by gently
+rising hills. I was invited to accompany the general in making the
+inspection of the site, and I think we were accompanied by Captain
+Rosecrans, an officer who had resigned from the regular army to seek a
+career as civil engineer, and had lately been in charge of some coal
+mines in the Kanawha valley. Mr. Woodward was also of the party, and
+furnished a special train to enable us to stop at as many eligible
+points as it might be thought desirable to examine. There was no doubt
+that the point suggested was best adapted for our work, and although the
+owners of the land made rather hard terms, McClellan was authorized to
+close a contract for the use of the military camp, which, in honor of
+the governor, he named Camp Dennison.</p>
+<p>But in trying to give a connected idea of the first military
+organization of the State, I have outrun some incidents of those days
+which are worth recollection. From the hour the call for troops was
+published, enlistments began, and recruits were parading the streets
+continually. At the Capitol the restless impulse to be doing something
+military seized even upon the members of the legislature, and a large
+number of them assembled every evening upon the east terrace of the
+State House to be drilled in marching and facing, by one or two of their
+own number who had some knowledge of company tactics. Most of the
+uniformed independent companies in the cities of the State immediately
+tendered their services, and began to recruit their numbers to the
+hundred men required for acceptance. There was no time to procure
+uniform, nor was it desirable; for these independent companies had
+chosen their own, and would have to change it for that of the United
+States as soon as this could be furnished. For some days companies could
+be seen marching and drilling, of which part would be uniformed in some
+gaudy style, such as is apt to prevail in holiday parades in time of
+peace, whilst another part would be dressed in the ordinary working garb
+of citizens of all degrees. The uniformed files would also be armed and
+accoutred; the others would be without arms or equipments, and as
+awkward a squad as could well be imagined. The material, however, was
+magnificent, and soon began to take shape. The fancy uniforms were left
+at home, and some approximation to a simple and useful costume was made.
+The recent popular outburst in Italy furnished a useful idea, and the
+"Garibaldi uniform" of a red flannel shirt with broad falling collar,
+with blue trousers held by a leathern waist-belt, and a soft felt hat
+for the head, was extensively copied, and served an excellent purpose.
+It could be made by the wives and sisters at home, and was all the more
+acceptable for that. The spring was opening, and a heavy coat would not
+be much needed, so that with some sort of overcoat and a good blanket in
+an improvised knapsack, the new company was not badly provided. The warm
+scarlet color, reflected from their enthusiastic faces as they stood in
+line, made a picture that never failed to impress the mustering officers
+with the splendid character of the men.</p>
+<p>The officering of these new troops was a difficult and delicate
+task, and so far as company officers were concerned, there seemed no
+better way at the beginning than to let the enlisted men elect their
+own, as was in fact done. In most cases where entirely new companies
+were raised, it had been by the enthusiastic efforts of some energetic
+volunteers who were naturally made the commissioned officers. But not
+always. There were numerous examples of self-denying patriotism which
+stayed in the ranks after expending much labor and money in recruiting,
+modestly refusing the honors, and giving way to some one supposed to
+have military knowledge or experience. The war in Mexico in 1847 was the
+latest conflict with a civilized people, and to have served in it was a
+sure passport to confidence. It had often been a service more in name
+than in fact; but the young volunteers felt so deeply their own
+ignorance that they were ready to yield to any pretence of superior
+knowledge, and generously to trust themselves to any one who would offer
+to lead them. Hosts of charlatans and incompetents were thus put into
+responsible places at the beginning, but the sifting work went on fast
+after the troops were once in the field. The election of field officers,
+however, ought not to have been allowed. Companies were necessarily
+regimented together, of which each could have but little personal
+knowledge of the officers of the others; intrigue and demagogy soon came
+into play, and almost fatal mistakes were made in selection. After a
+time the evil worked its own cure, but the ill effects of it were long
+visible.</p>
+<p>The immediate need of troops to protect Washington caused most of
+the uniformed companies to be united into the first two regiments, which
+were quickly despatched to the East. It was a curious study to watch the
+indications of character as the officers commanding companies reported
+to the governor, and were told that the pressing demand from Washington
+made it necessary to organize a regiment or two and forward them at
+once, without waiting to arm or equip the recruits. Some promptly
+recognized the necessity and took the undesirable features as part of
+the duty they had assumed. Others were querulous, wishing some one else
+to stand first in the breach, leaving them time for drill, equipment,
+and preparation. One figure impressed itself very strongly on my memory.
+A sturdy form, a head with more than ordinary marks of intelligence, but
+a bearing with more of swagger than of self-poised courage, yet
+evidently a man of some importance in his own community, stood before
+the seat of the governor, the bright lights of the chandelier over the
+table lighting strongly both their figures. The officer was wrapped in a
+heavy blanket or carriage lap-robe, spotted like a leopard skin, which
+gave him a brigandish air. He was disposed to protest. "If my men were
+hellions," said he, with strong emphasis on the word (a new one to me),
+"I wouldn't mind; but to send off the best young fellows of the county
+in such a way looks like murder." The governor, sitting with pale,
+delicate features, but resolute air, answered that the way to Washington
+was not supposed to be dangerous, and the men could be armed and
+equipped, he was assured, as soon as they reached there. It would be
+done at Harrisburg, if possible, and certainly if any hostility should
+be shown in Maryland. The President wanted the regiments at once, and
+Ohio's volunteers were quite as ready to go as any. He had no choice,
+therefore, but to order them off. The order was obeyed; but the
+obedience was with bad grace, and I felt misgivings as to the officer's
+fitness to command,--misgivings which about a year afterward were
+vividly recalled with the scene I have described.</p>
+<p>No sooner were these regiments off than companies began to stream in
+from all parts of the State. On their first arrival they were quartered
+wherever shelter could be had, as there were no tents or sheds to make a
+camp for them. Going to my evening work at the State House, as I crossed
+the rotunda, I saw a company marching in by the south door, and another
+disposing itself for the night upon the marble pavement near the east
+entrance; as I passed on to the north hall, I saw another, that had come
+a little earlier, holding a prayer-meeting, the stone arches echoing
+with the excited supplications of some one who was borne out of himself
+by the terrible pressure of events around him, whilst, mingling with his
+pathetic, beseeching tones as he prayed for his country, came the shrill
+notes of the fife, and the thundering din of the inevitable bass drum
+from the company marching in on the other side. In the Senate chamber a
+company was quartered, and the senators were there supplying them with
+paper and pens, with which the boys were writing their farewells to
+mothers and sweethearts whom they hardly dared hope they should see
+again. A similar scene was going on in the Representatives' hall,
+another in the Supreme Court room. In the executive office sat the
+governor, the unwonted noises, when the door was opened, breaking in on
+the quiet business-like air of the room,--he meanwhile dictating
+despatches, indicating answers to others, receiving committees of
+citizens, giving directions to officers of companies and regiments,
+accommodating himself to the wilful democracy of our institutions which
+insists upon seeing the man in chief command and will not take its
+answer from a subordinate, until in the small hours of the night the
+noises were hushed, and after a brief hour of effective, undisturbed
+work upon the matters of chief importance, he could leave the glare of
+his gas-lighted office, and seek a few hours' rest, only to renew the
+same wearing labors on the morrow.</p>
+<p>On the streets the excitement was of a rougher if not more intense
+character. A minority of unthinking partisans could not understand the
+strength and sweep of the great popular movement, and would sometimes
+venture to speak out their sympathy with the rebellion or their sneers
+at some party friend who had enlisted. In the boiling temper of the time
+the quick answer was a blow; and it was one of the common incidents of
+the day for those who came into the State House to tell of a knockdown
+that had occurred here or there, when this popular punishment had been
+administered to some indiscreet "rebel sympathizer."</p>
+<p>Various duties brought young army officers of the regular service to
+the state capital, and others sought a brief leave of absence to come
+and offer their services to the governor of their native State. General
+Scott, too much bound up in his experience of the Mexican War, and not
+foreseeing the totally different proportions which this must assume,
+planted himself firmly on the theory that the regular army must be the
+principal reliance for severe work, and that the volunteers could only
+be auxiliaries around this solid nucleus which would show them the way
+to perform their duty and take the brunt of every encounter. The young
+regulars who asked leave to accept commissions in state regiments were
+therefore refused, and were ordered to their own subaltern positions and
+posts. There can be no doubt that the true policy would have been to
+encourage the whole of this younger class to enter at once the volunteer
+service. They would have been the field officers of the new regiments,
+and would have impressed discipline and system upon the organization
+from the beginning. The Confederacy really profited by having no regular
+army. They gave to the officers who left our service, it is true,
+commissions in their so-called "provisional army," to encourage them in
+the assurance that they would have permanent military positions if the
+war should end in the independence of the South; but this was only a
+nominal organization, and their real army was made up (as ours turned
+out practically to be) from the regiments of state volunteers. Less than
+a year afterward we changed our policy, but it was then too late to
+induce many of the regular officers to take regimental positions in the
+volunteer troops. I hesitate to declare that this did not turn out for
+the best; for although the organization of our army would have been more
+rapidly perfected, there are other considerations which have much
+weight. The army would not have been the popular thing it was, its close
+identification with the people's movement would have been weakened, and
+it perhaps would not so readily have melted again into the mass of the
+nation at the close of the war.</p>
+<p>Among the first of the young regular officers who came to Columbus
+was Alexander McCook. He was ordered there as inspection and mustering
+officer, and one of my earliest duties was to accompany him to Camp
+Jackson to inspect the cooked rations which the contractors were
+furnishing the new troops. I warmed to his earnest, breezy way, and his
+business-like activity in performing his duty. As a makeshift, before
+camp equipage and cooking utensils could be issued to the troops, the
+contractors placed long trestle tables under an improvised shed, and the
+soldiers came to these and ate, as at a country picnic. It was not a bad
+arrangement to bridge over the interval between home life and regular
+soldiers' fare, and the outcry about it at the time was senseless, as
+all of us know who saw real service afterward. McCook bustled along from
+table to table, sticking a long skewer into a boiled ham, smelling of it
+to see if the interior of the meat was tainted; breaking open a loaf of
+bread and smelling of it to see if it was sour; examining the coffee
+before it was put into the kettles, and after it was made; passing his
+judgment on each, in prompt, peremptory manner as we went on. The food
+was, in the main, excellent, though, as a way of supporting an army, it
+was quite too costly to last long.</p>
+<p>While mustering in the recruits, McCook was elected colonel of the
+First Regiment Ohio Volunteers, which had, I believe, already gone to
+Washington. He was eager to accept, and telegraphed to Washington for
+permission. Adjutant-General Thomas replied that it was not the policy
+of the War Department to permit it. McCook cut the knot in gallant
+style. He immediately tendered his resignation in the regular army,
+taking care to say that he did so, not to avoid his country's service or
+to aid her enemies, but because he believed he could serve her much more
+effectively by drilling and leading a regiment of Union volunteers. He
+notified the governor of his acceptance of the colonelcy, and his <i>coup-de-main</i>
+was a success; for the department did not like to accept a resignation
+under such circumstances, and he had the exceptional luck to keep his
+regular commission and gain prestige as well, by his bold energy in the
+matter.</p>
+<p>Orlando Poe came about the same time, for all this was occurring in
+the last ten days of April. He was a lieutenant of topographical
+engineers, and was stationed with General (then Captain) Meade at
+Detroit, doing duty upon the coast survey of the lakes. He was in person
+the model for a young athlete, tall, dark, and strong, with frank, open
+countenance, looking fit to repeat his ancestor Adam Poe's adventurous
+conflicts with the Indians as told in the frontier traditions of Ohio.
+He too was eager for service; but the same rule was applied to him, and
+the argument that the engineers would be especially necessary to the
+army organization kept him for a time from insisting upon taking
+volunteer service, as McCook had done. He was indefatigable in his
+labors, assisting the governor in organizing the regiments, smoothing
+the difficulties constantly arising from lack of familiarity with the
+details of the administrative service of the army, and giving wise
+advice to the volunteer officers who made his acquaintance. I asked him,
+one day, in my pursuit of practical ideas from all who I thought could
+help me, what he would advise as the most useful means of becoming
+familiar with my duties. Study the Army Regulations, said he, as if it
+were your Bible! There was a world of wisdom in this: much more than I
+appreciated at the time, though it set me earnestly to work in a right
+direction. An officer in a responsible command, who had already a fair
+knowledge of tactics, might trust his common sense for guidance in an
+action on the field; but the administrative duties of the army as a
+machine must be thoroughly learned, if he would hope to make the
+management of its complicated organization an easy thing to him.</p>
+<p>Major Sidney Burbank came to take McCook's place as mustering
+officer: a grave, earnest man, of more age and more varied experience
+than the men I have named. Captain John Pope also visited the governor
+for consultation, and possibly others came also, though I saw them only
+in passing, and did not then get far in making their acquaintance.</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</p>
+<p>CAMP DENNISON</p>
+<p>Laying out the camp--Rosecrans as engineer--A comfortless
+night--Waking to new duties--Floors or no floors for the huts--Hardee's
+Tactics--The water-supply--Colonel Tom. Worthington--Joshua
+Sill--Brigades organized--Bates's brigade--Schleich's--My
+own--McClellan's purpose--Division organization--Garfield
+disappointed--Camp routine--Instruction and drill--Camp
+cookery--Measles--Hospital barn--Sisters of Charity--Ferment over
+re-enlistment--Musters by Gordon Granger--"Food for powder"--Brigade
+staff--De Villiers--"A Captain of Calvary"--The "Bloody Tinth"--Almost a
+row--Summoned to the field.</p>
+<p>On the 29th of April I was ordered by McClellan to proceed next
+morning to Camp Dennison, with the Eleventh and half of the Third Ohio
+regiments. The day was a fair one, and when about noon our railway train
+reached the camping ground, it seemed an excellent place for our work.
+The drawback was that very little of the land was in meadow or pasture,
+part being in wheat and part in Indian corn, which was just coming up.
+Captain Rosecrans met us, as McClellan's engineer (later the well-known
+general), coming from Cincinnati with a train-load of lumber. He had
+with him his compass and chain, and by the help of a small detail of men
+soon laid off the ground for the two regimental camps, and the general
+lines of the whole encampment for a dozen regiments. It was McClellan's
+purpose to put in two brigades on the west side of the railway, and one
+on the east. My own brigade camp was assigned to the west side, and
+nearest to Cincinnati. The men of the two regiments shouldered their
+pine boards and carried them up to the line of the company streets,
+which were close to the hills skirting the valley, and which opened into
+the parade and drill ground along the railway.</p>
+<p>A general plan was given to the company officers by which the huts
+should be made uniform in size and shape. The huts of each company faced
+each other, three or four on each side, making the street between, in
+which the company assembled before marching to its place on the
+regimental color line. At the head of each street were the quarters of
+the company officers, and those of the "field and staff" still further
+in rear. The Regulations were followed in this plan as closely as the
+style of barracks and nature of the ground would permit. Vigorous work
+housed all the men before night, and it was well that it did so, for the
+weather changed in the evening, a cold rain came on, and the next
+morning was a chill and dreary one. My own headquarters were in a little
+brick schoolhouse of one story, which stood (and I think still stands)
+on the east side of the track close to the railway. My improvised camp
+equipage consisted of a common trestle cot and a pair of blankets, and I
+made my bed in the open space in front of the teacher's desk or pulpit.
+My only staff officer was an aide-de-camp, Captain Bascom (afterward of
+the regular army), who had graduated at an Eastern military school, and
+proved himself a faithful and efficient assistant. He slept on the floor
+in one of the little aisles between the pupils' seats. One lesson
+learned that night remained permanently fixed in my memory, and I had no
+need of a repetition of it. I found that, having no mattress on my cot,
+the cold was much more annoying below than above me, and that if one
+can't keep the under side warm, it doesn't matter how many blankets he
+may have atop. I procured later an army cot with low legs, the whole of
+which could be taken apart and packed in a very small parcel, and with
+this I carried a small quilted mattress of cotton batting. It would have
+been warmer to have made my bed on the ground with a heap of straw or
+leaves under me; but as my tent had to be used for office work whenever
+a tent could be pitched, I preferred the neater and more orderly
+interior which this arrangement permitted. This, however, is
+anticipating. The comfortless night passed without much refreshing
+sleep, the strange situation doing perhaps as much as the limbs aching
+from cold to keep me awake. The storm beat through broken window-panes,
+and the gale howled about us, but day at last began to break, and with
+its dawning light came our first reveille in camp. I shall never forget
+the peculiar plaintive sound of the fifes as they shrilled out on the
+damp air. The melody was destined to become very familiar, but to this
+day I can't help wondering how it happened that so melancholy a strain
+was chosen for the waking tune of the soldiers' camp. The bugle reveille
+is quite different; it is even cheery and inspiriting; but the
+regulation music for the drums and fifes is better fitted to waken
+longings for home and all the sadder emotions than to stir the host from
+sleep to the active duties of the day. I lay for a while listening to
+it, finding its notes suggesting many things and becoming a thread to
+string my reveries upon, as I thought of the past which was separated
+from me by a great gulf, the present with its serious duties, and the
+future likely to come to a sudden end in the shock of battle. We roused
+ourselves; a dash of cold water put an end to dreaming; we ate a
+breakfast from a box of cooked provisions we had brought with us, and
+resumed the duty of organizing and instructing the camp. The depression
+which had weighed upon me since the news of the opening guns at Sumter
+passed away, never to return. The consciousness of having important work
+to do, and the absorption in the work itself, proved the best of all
+mental tonics. The Rubicon was crossed, and from this time out, vigorous
+bodily action, our wild outdoor life, and the strenuous use of all the
+faculties, mental and physical, in meeting the daily exigencies, made up
+an existence which, in spite of all its hardships and all its
+discouragements, still seems a most exhilarating one as I look back on
+it across a long vista of years.</p>
+<p>The first of May proved, instead, a true April day, of the most
+fickle and changeable type. Gusts of rain and wind alternated with
+flashes of bright sunshine. The second battalion of the Third Regiment
+arrived, and the work of completing the cantonments went on. The huts
+which were half finished yesterday were now put in good order, and in
+building the new ones the men profited by the experience of their
+comrades. We were however suddenly thrown into one of those small
+tempests which it is so easy to get up in a new camp, and which for the
+moment always seems to have an importance out of all proportion to its
+real consequence. Captain Rosecrans, as engineer, was superintending the
+work of building, and finding that the companies were putting floors and
+bunks in their huts, he peremptorily ordered that these should be taken
+out, insisting that the huts were only intended to take the place of
+tents and give such shelter as tents could give. The company and
+regimental officers loudly protested, and the men were swelling with
+indignation and wrath. Soon both parties were before me; Rosecrans hot
+and impetuous, holding a high tone, and making use of General
+McClellan's name in demanding, as an officer of his staff, that the
+floors should be torn out, and the officers of the regiments held
+responsible for obedience to the order that no more should be made. He
+fairly bubbled with anger at the presumption of those who questioned his
+authority. As soon as a little quiet could be got, I asked Rosecrans if
+he had specific orders from the general that the huts should have no
+floors. No, he had not, but his staff position as engineer gave him
+sufficient control of the subject. I said I would examine the matter and
+submit it to General McClellan, and meanwhile the floors already built
+might remain, though no new ones should be made till the question was
+decided. I reported to the general that, in my judgment, the huts should
+have floors and bunks, because the ground was wet when they were
+built,--they could not be struck like tents to dry and air the earth,
+and they were meant to be permanent quarters for the rendezvous of
+troops for an indefinite time. The decision of McClellan was in
+accordance with the report. Rosecrans acquiesced, and indeed seemed
+rather to like me the better on finding that I was not carried away by
+the assumption of indefinite power by a staff officer.</p>
+<p>This little flurry over, the quarters were soon got in as
+comfortable shape as rough lumber could make them, and the work of drill
+and instruction was systematized. The men were not yet armed, so there
+was no temptation to begin too soon with the manual of the musket, and
+they were kept industriously employed in marching in single line, by
+file, in changing direction, in forming columns of fours from double
+line, etc., before their guns were put in their hands. Each regiment was
+treated as a separate camp, with its own chain of sentinels, and the
+officers of the guard were constantly busy teaching guard and picket
+duty theoretically to the reliefs off duty, and inspecting the sentinels
+on post. Schools were established in each regiment for field and staff
+and for the company officers, and Hardee's Tactics was in the hands of
+everybody who could procure a copy. It was one of our great
+inconveniences that the supply of the authorized Tactics was soon
+exhausted, and it was difficult to get the means of instruction in the
+company schools. An abridgment was made and published in a very few days
+by Thomas Worthington, a graduate of West Point in one of the earliest
+classes,--of 1827, I think,--a son of one of the first governors of
+Ohio. This eccentric officer had served in the regular army and in the
+Mexican War, and was full of ideas, but was of so irascible and
+impetuous a temper that he was always in collision with the powers that
+be, and spoiled his own usefulness. He was employed to furnish water to
+the camp by contract, and whilst he ruined himself in his efforts to do
+it well, he was in perpetual conflict with the troops, who capsized his
+carts, emptied his barrels, and made life a burden to him. The quarrel
+was based on his taking the water from the river just opposite the camp,
+though there was a slaughter-house some distance above. Worthington
+argued that the distance was such that the running water purified
+itself; but the men wouldn't listen to his science, vigorously enforced
+as it was by idiomatic expletives, and there was no safety for his
+water-carts till he yielded. He then made a reservoir on one of the
+hills, filled it by a steam-pump, and carried the water by pipes to the
+regimental camps at an expense beyond his means, and which, as it was
+claimed that the scheme was unauthorized, was never half paid for. His
+subsequent career as colonel of a regiment was no more happy, and
+talents that seemed fit for highest responsibilities were wasted in
+chafing against circumstances which made him and fate seem to be
+perpetually playing at cross purposes. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: He was later colonel of the
+Forty-sixth Ohio, and became involved in a famous controversy with
+Halleck and Sherman over his conduct in the Shiloh campaign and the
+question of fieldworks there. He left the service toward the close of
+1862.]</span> </p>
+<p>A very different character was Joshua W. Sill, who was sent to us as
+ordnance officer. He too had been a regular army officer, but of the
+younger class. Rather small and delicate in person, gentle and refined
+in manner, he had about him little that answered to the popular notion
+of a soldier. He had resigned from the army some years before, and was a
+professor in an important educational institution in Brooklyn, N. Y.,
+when at the first act of hostility he offered his services to the
+governor of Ohio, his native State. After our day's work, we walked
+together along the railway, discussing the political and military
+situation, and especially the means of making most quickly an army out
+of the splendid but untutored material that was collecting about us.
+Under his modest and scholarly exterior I quickly discerned a fine
+temper in the metal, that made his after career no enigma to me, and his
+heroic death at the head of his division in the thickest of the strife
+at Stone's River no surprise.</p>
+<p>The two regiments which began the encampment were quickly followed
+by others, and the arriving regiments sometimes had their first taste of
+camp life under circumstances well calculated to dampen their ardor. The
+Fourth Ohio, under Colonel Lorin Andrews, President of Kenyon College,
+came just before a thunderstorm one evening, and the bivouac that night
+was as rough a one as his men were likely to experience for many a day.
+They made shelter by placing boards from the fence tops to the ground,
+but the fields were level and soon became a mire, so that they were a
+queer-looking lot when they crawled out next morning. The sun was then
+shining bright, however, and they had better cover for their heads by
+the next night. The Seventh Ohio, which was recruited in Cleveland and
+on the Western Reserve, sent a party in advance to build some of their
+huts, and though they too came in a rain-storm, they were less
+uncomfortable than some of the others. Three brigades were organized
+from the regiments of the Ohio contingent, exclusive of the two which
+had been hurried to Washington. The brigadiers, beside myself, were
+Generals Joshua H. Bates and Newton Schleich. General Bates, who was the
+senior, was a graduate of West Point, who had served some years in the
+regular army, but had resigned and adopted the profession of the law. He
+lived at Cincinnati, and organized his brigade in that city. They
+marched to Camp Dennison on the 20th of May, when, by virtue of his
+seniority, General Bates assumed command of the camp in McClellan's
+absence. His brigade consisted of the Fifth, Sixth, Ninth, and Tenth
+regiments, and encamped on the east side of the railroad in the bend of
+the river. General Schleich was a Democratic senator, who had been in
+the state militia, and was also one of the drill-masters of the
+legislative squad which had drilled upon the Capitol terrace. His
+brigade included the Third, Twelfth, and Thirteenth regiments, and, with
+mine, occupied the fields on the west side of the railroad close to the
+slopes of the hills. My own brigade was made up of the Fourth, Seventh,
+Eighth, and Eleventh regiments, and our position was the southernmost in
+the general camp. McClellan had intended to make his own headquarters in
+the camp; but the convenience of attending to official business in
+Cincinnati kept him in the city. His purpose was to make the brigade
+organizations permanent, and to take them as a division to the field
+when they were a little prepared for the work. Like many other good
+plans, it failed to be carried out. I was the only one of the brigadiers
+who remained in the service after the first enlistment for ninety days,
+and it was my fate to take the field with new regiments, only one of
+which had been in my brigade in camp. Schleich did not show adaptation
+to field work, and though taken into West Virginia with McClellan in
+June, he was relieved of active service in a few weeks. He afterward
+sought and obtained the colonelcy of the Sixty-first Ohio; but his
+service with it did not prove a success, and he resigned in September,
+1862, under charges. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. ii. pp. 308-310.]</span> General Bates
+had some reason to expect an assignment to staff duty with McClellan,
+and therefore declined a colonelcy in the line at the end of the three
+months' service. He was disappointed in this expectation after waiting
+some time for it, and returned to civil life with the regrets of his
+comrades. There were some disappointments, also, in the choice of
+regimental officers who were elected in the regiments first organized,
+but were afterward appointed by the governor. The companies were
+organized and assigned to regiments before they came to camp, but the
+regimental elections were held after the companies were assembled.
+Garfield was a candidate for the colonelcy of the Seventh Regiment, but
+as he was still engaged in important public duties and was not connected
+with any company, he was at a disadvantage in the sort of competition
+which was then rife. He was defeated,--a greater disappointment to me
+than to him, for I had hoped that our close friendship would be made
+still closer by comradeship in the field. In a few weeks he was made
+colonel of the Forty-second Ohio, in the second levy.</p>
+<p>Up to the time that General Bates relieved me of the command of the
+camp, and indeed for two or three days longer, the little schoolhouse
+was my quarters as well as telegraph and express office. We had cleared
+out most of the desks and benches, but were still crowded together, day
+and night, in a way which was anything but comfortable or desirable.
+Sheds for quartermaster's and subsistence stores were of first
+necessity, and the building of a hut for myself and staff had to be
+postponed till these were up. On the arrival of General Bates with two
+or three staff officers, the necessity for more room could not be longer
+ignored, and my own hut was built on the slope of the hillside behind my
+brigade, close under the wooded ridge, and here for the next six weeks
+was my home. The morning brought its hour of business correspondence
+relating to the command; then came the drill, when the parade ground was
+full of marching companies and squads. Officers' drill followed, with
+sword exercise and pistol practice. The day closed with the inspection
+of the regiments in turn at dress parade, and the evening was allotted
+to schools of theoretic tactics, outpost duty, and the like. Besides
+their copies of the regulation tactics, officers supplied themselves
+with such manuals as Mahan's books on Field Fortifications and on
+Outpost Duty. I adopted at the beginning a rule to have some military
+work in course of reading, and kept it up even in the field, sending
+home one volume and getting another by mail. In this way I gradually
+went through all the leading books I could find both in English and in
+French, including the whole of Jomini's works, his histories as well as
+his "Napoleon" and his "Grandes Op&eacute;rations Militaires." I know of
+no intellectual stimulus so valuable to the soldier as the reading of
+military history narrated by an acknowledged master in the art of war.
+To see what others have done in important junctures, and to have both
+their merits and their mistakes analyzed by a competent critic, rouses
+one's mind to grapple with the problem before it, and begets a generous
+determination to try to rival in one's own sphere of action the
+brilliant deeds of soldiers who have made a name in other times. Then
+the example of the vigorous way in which history will at last deal with
+those who fail when the pinch comes, tends to keep a man up to his work
+and to make him avoid the rock on which so many have split, the
+disposition to take refuge in doing nothing when he finds it difficult
+to decide what should be done.</p>
+<p>The first fortnight in camp was the hardest for the troops. The
+ploughed fields became deep with mud, which nothing could remove but the
+good weather which should allow them to pack hard under the continued
+tramp of thousands of men. The organization of the camp kitchens had to
+be learned by the hardest also, and the men in each company who had some
+aptitude for cooking had to be found by a slow process of natural
+selection, during which many an unpalatable meal had to be eaten. A
+disagreeable bit of information came to us in the proof that more than
+half the men had never had the contagious diseases of infancy. The
+measles broke out, and we had to organize a camp hospital at once. A
+large barn near by was taken for this purpose, and the surgeons had
+their hands full of cases which, however trivial they might seem at
+home, were here aggravated into dangerous illness by the unwonted
+surroundings and the impossibility of securing the needed protection
+from exposure. As soon as the increase of sickness in the camp was known
+in Cincinnati, the good women of that city took promptly in hand the
+task of providing nurses for the sick, and proper diet and delicacies
+for hospital uses. The Sisters of Charity, under the lead of Sister
+Anthony, a noble woman, came out in force, and their black and white
+robes harmonized picturesquely with the military surroundings, as they
+flitted about under the rough timber framing of the old barn, carrying
+comfort and hope from one rude couch to another. As to supplies, hardly
+a man in a regiment knew how to make out a requisition for rations or
+for clothing, and easy as it is to rail at "red tape," the necessity of
+keeping a check upon embezzlement and wastefulness justified the staff
+bureaus at Washington in insisting upon regular vouchers to support the
+quartermaster's and commissary's accounts. But here, too, men were
+gradually found who had special talent for the work.</p>
+<p>The infallible newspapers had no lack of material for criticism.
+There were plenty of real blunders to invite it, but the severest blame
+was quite as likely to be visited upon men and things which did not
+deserve it. The governor was violently attacked for things which he had
+no responsibility for, or others in which he had done all that
+forethought and intelligence could do. When everybody had to learn a new
+business, it would have been miraculous if grave errors had not
+frequently occurred. Looking back at it, the wonder is that the blunders
+and mishaps had not been tenfold more numerous than they were. By the
+middle of May the confusion had given place to reasonable system, but we
+were now obliged to meet the embarrassments of reorganization for three
+years, under the President's second call for troops. We had more than
+ten thousand men who had begun to know something of their duties, and it
+was worth a serious effort to transfer them into the permanent service;
+but no one who did not go through the ordeal can imagine how trying it
+was. In every company some discontented spirits wanted to go home,
+shrinking from the perils to which they had committed themselves in a
+moment of enthusiasm. For a few to go back, however, would be a
+disgrace; and every dissatisfied man, to avoid the odium of going alone,
+became a mischief-maker, seeking to prevent the whole company from
+re-enlisting. The recruiting of a majority was naturally made the
+condition of allowing the company organization to be preserved, and a
+similar rule applied to the regiment. The growing discipline was relaxed
+or lost in the solicitations, the electioneering, the speech-making, and
+the other common arts of persuasion. After a majority had re-enlisted
+and an organization was secure, it would have been better to have
+discharged the remaining three months' men and to have sent them home at
+once; but authority for this could not be got, for the civil officers
+could not see, and did not know what a nuisance these men were.
+Dissatisfied with themselves for not going with their comrades, they
+became sulky, disobedient, complaining, trying to make the others as
+unhappy as themselves by arguing that faith was not kept with them, and
+doing all the mischief it was possible to do.</p>
+<p>In spite of all these discouragements, however, the daily drills and
+instruction went on with some approach to regularity, and our raw
+volunteers began to look more like soldiers. Captain Gordon Granger of
+the regular army came to muster the re-enlisted regiments into the three
+years' service, and as he stood at the right of the Fourth Ohio, looking
+down the line of a thousand stalwart men, all in their Garibaldi shirts
+(for we had not yet received our uniforms), he turned to me and
+exclaimed: "My God! that such men should be food for powder!" It
+certainly was a display of manliness and intelligence such as had hardly
+ever been seen in the ranks of an army. There were in camp at that time
+three if not four companies, in different regiments, that were wholly
+made up of undergraduates of colleges who had enlisted together, their
+officers being their tutors and professors; and where there was not so
+striking evidence as this of the enlistment of the best of our youth,
+every company could still show that it was largely recruited from the
+best-nurtured and most promising young men of the community.</p>
+<p>Granger had been in the Southwest when the secession movement began,
+had seen the formation of military companies everywhere, and the
+incessant drilling which had been going on all winter, whilst we, in a
+strange condition of political paralysis, had been doing nothing. His
+information was eagerly sought by us all, and he lost no opportunity of
+impressing upon us the fact that the South was nearly six months ahead
+of us in organization and preparation. He did not conceal his belief
+that we were likely to find the war a much longer and more serious piece
+of business than was commonly expected, and that unless we pushed hard
+our drilling and instruction we should find ourselves at a disadvantage
+in our earlier encounters. What he said had a good effect in making
+officers and men take more willingly to the laborious routine of the
+parade ground and the regimental school; for such opinions as his soon
+ran through the camp, and they were commented upon by the enlisted men
+quite as earnestly as among the officers. Still, hope kept the upper
+hand, and if the question had been put to vote, I believe that
+three-fourths of us still cherished the belief that a single campaign
+would end the war.</p>
+<p>In the organization of my own brigade I had the assistance of
+Captain McElroy, a young man who had nearly completed the course at West
+Point, and who was subsequently made major of the Twentieth Ohio. He was
+sent to the camp by the governor as a drill officer, and I assigned him
+to staff duty. For commissary, I detailed Lieutenant Gibbs, who
+accompanied one of the regiments from Cincinnati, and who had seen a
+good deal of service as clerk in one of the staff departments of the
+regular army. I had also for a time the services of one of the
+picturesque adventurers who turn up in such crises. In the Seventh Ohio
+was a company recruited in Cleveland, of which the nucleus was an
+organization of Zouaves, existing for some time before the war. It was
+made up of young men who had been stimulated by the popularity of
+Ellsworth's Zouaves in Chicago to form a similar body. They had had as
+their drill master a Frenchman named De Villiers. His profession was
+that of a teacher of fencing; but he had been an officer in Ellsworth's
+company, and was familiar with fancy manoeuvres for street parade, and
+with a special skirmish drill and bayonet exercise. Small, swarthy, with
+angular features, and a brusque, military manner, in a showy uniform and
+jaunty <i>k&eacute;pi</i> of scarlet cloth, covered with gold lace, he
+created quite a sensation among us. His assumption of knowledge and
+experience was accepted as true. He claimed to have been a surgeon in
+the French army in Algiers, though we afterward learned to doubt if his
+rank had been higher than that of a barber-surgeon of a cavalry troop.
+From the testimonials he brought with him, I thought I was doing a good
+thing in making him my brigade-major, as the officer was then called
+whom we afterward knew as inspector-general. He certainly was a most
+indefatigable fellow, and went at his work with an enthusiasm that made
+him very useful for a time. It was worth something to see a man who
+worked with a kind of dash,--with a prompt, staccato movement that
+infused spirit and energy into all around him. He would drill all day,
+and then spend half the night trying to catch sentinels and officers of
+the guard at fault in their duty. My first impression was that I had got
+hold of a most valuable man, and others were so much of the same mind
+that in the reorganization of regiments he was successively elected
+major of the Eighth, and then colonel of the Eleventh. We shall see more
+of him as we go on; but it turned out that his sharp discipline was not
+steady or just; his knowledge was only skin-deep, and he had neither the
+education nor the character for so responsible a situation as he was
+placed in. He nearly plagued the life out of the officers of his
+regiment before they got rid of him, and was a most brilliant example of
+the way we were imposed upon by military charlatans at the beginning. He
+was, however, good proof also of the speed with which real service weeds
+out the undesirable material which seemed so splendid in the days of
+common inexperience and at a distance from danger. We had visits from
+clerical adventurers, too, for the "pay and emoluments of a captain of
+cavalry" which the law gave to a chaplain induced some to seek the
+office who were not the best representatives of their profession. One
+young man who had spent a morning soliciting the appointment in one of
+the regiments, came to me in a shamefaced sort of way before leaving
+camp and said, "General, before I decide this matter, I wish you would
+tell me just what are the pay and emoluments of a <i>Captain of Calvary!</i>"
+Though most of our men were native Ohioans, General Bates's brigade had
+in it two regiments made up of quite contrasted nationalities. The Ninth
+Ohio was recruited from the Germans of Cincinnati, and was commanded by
+Colonel "Bob" McCook. In camp, the drilling of the regiment fell almost
+completely into the hands of the adjutant, Lieutenant Willich (afterward
+a general of division), and McCook, who humorously exaggerated his own
+lack of military knowledge, used to say that he was only "clerk for a
+thousand Dutchmen," so completely did the care of equipping and
+providing for his regiment engross his time and labor. The Tenth was an
+Irish regiment, and its men used to be proud of calling themselves the
+"Bloody Tinth." The brilliant Lytle was its commander, and his control
+over them, even in the beginning of their service and near the city of
+their home, showed that they had fallen into competent hands. It
+happened, of course, that the guard-house pretty frequently contained
+representatives of the Tenth who, on the short furloughs that were
+allowed them, took a parting glass too much with their friends in the
+city, and came to camp boisterously drunk. But the men of the regiment
+got it into their heads that the Thirteenth, which lay just opposite
+them across the railroad, took a malicious pleasure in filling the
+guard-house with the Irishmen. Some threats had been made that they
+would go over and "clean out" the Thirteenth, and one fine evening
+these came to a head. I suddenly got orders from General Bates to form
+my brigade, and march them at once between the Tenth and Thirteenth to
+prevent a collision which seemed imminent. My brigade was selected
+because it was the one to which neither of the angry regiments
+belonged, the others being ordered into their quarters. My little
+Frenchman, De Villiers, covered himself with glory. His horse flew,
+under the spur, to the regimental headquarters, the long roll was
+beaten as if the drummers realized the full importance of the first
+opportunity to sound that warlike signal, and the brigade-major's
+somewhat theatrical energy was so contagious that many of the companies
+were assembled and ready to file out of the company streets before the
+order reached them. We marched by the moonlight into the space between
+the belligerent regiments; but Lytle had already got his own men under
+control, and the less mercurial Thirteenth were not disposed to be
+aggressive, so that we were soon dismissed with a compliment for our
+promptness. I ordered the colonels to march the regiments back to the
+camps separately, and with my staff rode through that of the Thirteenth,
+to see how matters were there. All was quiet, the men being in their
+quarters; so, turning, I passed along near the railway, in rear of the
+quartermaster's sheds. In the shadow of the buildings I had nearly
+ridden over some one on foot, when he addressed me, and I recognized an
+officer of high rank in that brigade. He was in great agitation, and
+exclaimed, "Oh, General, what a horrible thing that brothers should be
+killing each other!" I assured him the danger of that was all over, and
+rode on, wondering a little at his presence in that place under the
+circumstances.</p>
+<p>The six weeks of our stay in Camp Dennison seem like months in the
+retrospect, so full were they crowded with new experiences. The change
+came in an unexpected way. The initiative taken by the Confederates in
+West Virginia had to be met by prompt action, and McClellan was forced
+to drop his own plans to meet the emergency. The organization and
+equipment of the regiments for the three years' service were still
+incomplete, and the brigades were broken up, to take across the Ohio the
+regiments best prepared to go. One by one my regiments were ordered
+away, till finally, when on the 3d of July I received orders to proceed
+to the Kanawha valley, I had but one of the four regiments to which I
+had been trying to give something of unity and brigade feeling, and that
+regiment (the Eleventh Ohio) was still incomplete. General Bates fared
+even worse; for he saw all his regiments ordered away, whilst he was
+left to organize new ones from freshly recruited companies that were
+sent to the camp. This was discouraging to a brigade commander, for even
+with veteran troops mutual acquaintance between the officer and his
+command is a necessary condition of confidence and a most important
+element of strength. My own assignment to the Great Kanawha district was
+one I had every reason to be content with, except that for several
+months I felt the disadvantage I suffered from assuming command of
+troops which I had never seen till we met in the field.</p>
+<p>The period of organization, brief as it was, had been valuable to
+the regiments, and it had been of the utmost importance to secure the
+re-enlistment of those which had received some instruction. It had been,
+in the condition of the statute law, from necessity and not from choice
+that the Administration had called out the state militia for ninety
+days. The new term of enrolment was for "three years or the war," and
+the forces were now designated as United States Volunteers. It would
+have been well if the period of apprenticeship could have been
+prolonged; but events would not wait. All recognized the necessity, and
+thankful as we should have been for a longer preparation and more
+thorough instruction, we were eager to be ordered away.</p>
+<p>McClellan had been made a major-general in the regular army, and a
+department had been placed under his command which included the States
+of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, to which was added a little later West
+Virginia north of the Great Kanawha. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: McClellan's Report and
+Campaigns (New York, 1864), p. 8. McClellan's Own Story, p. 44. Official
+Records, vol. ii. p. 633.]</span> Rosecrans was also appointed a
+brigadier-general in the regulars, and there was much debate at the time
+whether the Administration had intended this. Many insisted that he was
+nominated for the volunteer service, and that the regular appointment
+was a clerical mistake in the bureaus at Washington. There was no solid
+foundation for this gossip. A considerable increase of the regular army
+was authorized by law, and corresponding appointments were made, from
+major-general downward. It was at this time that Sherman was made
+colonel of one of the new regiments of regulars. It would perhaps have
+been wiser to treat the regular commissions as prizes to be won only by
+conspicuous and successful service in the field, as was done later; but
+this policy was not then adopted, and the newly created offices were
+filled in all grades. They were, of course, given to men from whom great
+services could reasonably be expected; but when none had been tested in
+the great operations of war, every appointment was at the risk that the
+officer might not show the special talent for command which makes a
+general. It was something of a lottery, at best; but the system would
+have been improved if a method of retiring inefficient officers had been
+adopted at once. The ostensible reason for the different organization of
+volunteers and regulars was that the former, as a temporary force to
+meet an exigency, might be wholly disbanded when the war should end,
+without affecting the permanent army, which was measured in size by the
+needs of the country in its normal condition.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</p>
+<p>MCCLELLAN IN WEST VIRGINIA.</p>
+<p>Political attitude of West Virginia--Rebels take the
+initiative--McClellan ordered to act--Ohio militia cross the river--The
+Philippi affair--Significant dates--The vote on secession--Virginia in
+the Confederacy--Lee in command--Topography--The mountain
+passes--Garnett's army--Rich mountain position--McClellan in the
+field--His forces--Advances against Garnett--Rosecrans's proposal--His
+fight on the mountain--McClellan's inaction--Garnett's retreat--Affair
+at Carrick's Ford--Garnett killed--Hill's efforts to intercept--Pegram
+in the wilderness--He surrenders--Indirect results
+important--McClellan's military and personal traits.</p>
+<p>The reasons which made it important to occupy West Virginia were
+twofold, political and military. The people were strongly attached to
+the Union, and had generally voted against the Ordinance of Secession
+which by the action of the Richmond Convention had been submitted to a
+popular vote on May 23d. Comparatively few slaves were owned by them,
+and their interests bound them more to Ohio and Pennsylvania than to
+eastern Virginia. Under the influence of Mr. Lincoln's administration,
+strongly backed and chiefly represented by Governor Dennison of Ohio, a
+movement was on foot to organize a loyal Virginia government,
+repudiating that of Governor Letcher and the state convention as
+self-destroyed by the act of secession. Governor Dennison, in close
+correspondence with the leading loyalists, had been urging McClellan to
+cross the Ohio to protect and encourage the loyal men, when on the 26th
+of May news came that the Secessionists had taken the initiative, and
+that some bridges had been burned on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad a
+little west of Grafton, the crossing of the Monongahela River where the
+two western branches of the road unite as they come from Wheeling and
+Parkersburg. The great line of communication between Washington and the
+West had thus been cut, and action on our part was necessary. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. ii.
+p. 44.]</span> </p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/1-03-1.jpg"
+ title="CAMPAIGNS IN WEST VIRGINIA 1861."
+ alt="CAMPAIGNS IN WEST VIRGINIA 1861."
+ style="width: 1000px; height: 584px;"><br>
+</p>
+<p>Governor Dennison had anticipated the need of more troops than the
+thirteen regiments which had been organized as Ohio's quota under the
+President's first call, and had enrolled nine other regiments, numbering
+them consecutively with the others. These last he had put in camps near
+the Ohio River, where at a moment's notice they could occupy Wheeling,
+Parkersburg, and the mouth of the Great Kanawha. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 46, 47.]</span>
+Two Union regiments were also organizing in West Virginia itself, of
+which the first was commanded by Colonel B. F. Kelley of Wheeling. The
+left bank of the Ohio was in McClellan's department, and on the 24th
+General Scott, having heard that two Virginia companies had occupied
+Grafton, telegraphed the fact to McClellan, directing him to act
+promptly in counteracting the effect of this movement. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 648.]</span> </p>
+<p>On the 27th Colonel Kelley was sent by rail from Wheeling to drive
+off the enemy, who withdrew at his approach, and the bridges were
+quickly rebuilt. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 46, 49, 655.]</span> Several of the Ohio regiments were ordered
+across the river at the same time, and an Indiana brigade under General
+Thomas A. Morris of that State was hurried forward from Indianapolis. As
+the Ohio troops at Camp Dennison which had been mustered into national
+service were in process of reorganizing for the three years' term,
+McClellan preferred not to move them till this was completed. He also
+adhered to his plan of making his own principal movement in the Great
+Kanawha valley, and desired to use there the Ohio division at our camp. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 50, 656,
+674.]</span> The Ohio regiments first sent into West Virginia were not
+mustered in, and were known as State troops. General Morris reached
+Grafton on the 1st of June, and was intrusted with the command of all
+the troops in West Virginia. He found that Colonel Kelley had already
+planned an expedition against the enemy, who had retired southward to
+Philippi, about fifteen miles in a straight line, but some twenty-five
+by the crooked country roads. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. ii. p. 66.]</span> Morris approved the plan, but
+enlarged it by sending another column, under Colonel E. Dumont of the
+Seventh Indiana, to co-operate with Kelley. Both columns were directed
+to make a night march, starting from points on the railroad about twelve
+miles apart and converging on Philippi, which they were to attack at
+daybreak on June 3d. Each column consisted of about fifteen hundred men,
+and Dumont had also two smooth six-pounder cannon. The Confederate force
+was commanded by Colonel G. A. Porterfield, and was something less than
+a thousand strong, one-fourth cavalry. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 70, 72.]</span> </p>
+<p>The night was dark and stormy, and Porterfield's raw troops had not
+learned picket duty. The concerted movement against them was more
+successful than such marches commonly are, and Porterfield's first
+notice of danger was the opening of the artillery upon his sleeping
+troops. It had been expected that the two columns would enclose the
+enemy's camp and capture the whole; but, though in disorderly rout,
+Porterfield succeeded, by personal coolness and courage, in getting them
+off with but few casualties and the loss of a few arms. The camp
+equipage and supplies were, of course, captured. Colonel Kelley was
+wounded in the breast by a pistol-shot which was at first supposed to be
+fatal, though it did not turn out so, and this was the only casualty
+reported on the National side. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Colonel Kelley was a man already of middle age, and a leading citizen
+of northwestern Virginia. His whole military career was in that region,
+where his services were very valuable throughout the war. He was
+promoted to brigadier-general among the first, and was
+brevet-major-general when mustered out in 1865.]</span> No prisoners were
+taken, nor did any dead or wounded fall into our hands. Porterfield
+retreated to Beverly, some thirty miles further to the southeast, and
+the National forces occupied Philippi. The telegraphic reports had put
+the Confederate force at 2000, and their loss at 15 killed. This implied
+a considerable list of wounded and prisoners, and the newspapers gave it
+the air of a considerable victory. The campaign thus opened with
+apparent <i>&eacute;clat</i> for McClellan (who was personally at
+Cincinnati), and the "Philippi races," as they were locally called,
+greatly encouraged the Union men of West Virginia and correspondingly
+depressed the Secessionists. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. ii. pp. 64-74.]</span> </p>
+<p>Nearly a month elapsed, when, having received reports that large
+forces of the enemy were gathered at Beverly, McClellan determined to
+proceed in person to that region with his best prepared troops,
+postponing his Kanawha campaign till northwestern Virginia should be
+cleared of the enemy.</p>
+<p>Military affairs in West Virginia had been complicated by the
+political situation, and it is necessary to recollect the dates of the
+swift following steps in Virginia's progress into the Confederacy.
+Sumter surrendered on Saturday, the 13th of April, and on Monday the
+15th President Lincoln issued his first call for troops. On Wednesday
+the 17th the Virginia Convention passed the Ordinance of Secession in
+secret session. On Friday the 19th it was known in Washington, and on
+Saturday Lee and Johnston resigned their commissions in the United
+States Army, sorrowfully "going with their State." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Johnston's Narrative, p. 10.
+Townsend's Anecdotes of the Civil War, p. 31. Long's Memoirs of Lee, pp.
+94, 96.]</span> On the following Tuesday (23d) the chairman of the
+Virginia Convention presented to Lee his commission as Major-General and
+Commander of the Virginia Forces. On the same day Governor Dennison
+handed to McClellan his commission to command the Ohio forces in the
+service of the Union. Although the Confederate Congress at Montgomery
+admitted Virginia to the Confederacy early in May, this was not formally
+accepted in Virginia till after the popular vote on secession (May 23d)
+and the canvassing of the returns of that election. Governor Letcher
+issued on June 8th his proclamation announcing the result, and
+transferring the command of the Virginia troops to the Confederate
+Government. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. ii. p. 911.]</span> During the whole of May, therefore,
+Virginia's position was unsettled. Her governor, by the authority of the
+convention, regarded her as independent of the United States, but by an
+inchoate act of secession which would not become final till ratified by
+the popular vote. The Virginia troops were arrayed near the Potomac to
+resist the advance of national forces; but Confederate troops had been
+welcomed in eastern Virginia as early as the 10th of May, and President
+Davis had authorized Lee, as Commander of the Virginia forces, to assume
+control of them. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 827.]</span> </p>
+<p>It was well known that the prevailing sentiment in West Virginia was
+loyal to the Union, and each party avoided conflict there for fear of
+prejudicing its cause in the election. Hence it was that as soon as the
+vote was cast, the aggressive was taken by the Virginia government in
+the burning of the bridges near Grafton. The fire of war was thus
+lighted. The crossing of the Ohio was with a full understanding with
+Colonel Kelley, who recognized McClellan at once as his military
+commander. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I treated
+the relations of Lee and Virginia to the Confederacy in a paper in "The
+Nation," Dec. 23, 1897, entitled "Lee, Johnston, and Davis."]</span> The
+affair at Philippi was, in form, the last appearance of Virginia in the
+role of an independent nation, for in a very few days Lee announced by a
+published order that the absorption of the Virginia troops into the
+Confederate Army was complete. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. ii. p. 912.]</span> It will be well to understand
+the topography of the Virginia mountains and their western slope, if we
+would reach the reasons which determined the lines of advance chosen by
+the Confederates and the counter moves of McClellan. The Alleghany range
+passing out of Pennsylvania and running southwest through the whole
+length of Virginia, consists of several parallel lines of mountains
+enclosing narrow valleys. The Potomac River breaks through at the common
+boundary of Virginia and Maryland, and along its valley runs the
+National Road as well as the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal. The Baltimore
+and Ohio Railroad also follows this natural highway, which is thus
+indicated as the most important line of communication between Washington
+and the Ohio valley, though a high mountain summit must be passed, even
+by this route, before the tributaries of the Ohio can be reached.
+Half-way across the State to the southward, is a high watershed
+connecting the mountain ridges and separating the streams tributary to
+the Potomac on the north from those falling into the James and New
+rivers on the south. The Staunton and Parkersburg turnpike follows the
+line of this high "divide" looking down from among the clouds into the
+long and nearly straight defiles on either hand, which separate the
+Alleghany Mountains proper from the Blue Ridge on the east and from
+Cheat Mountain and other ranges on the west. Still further to the
+southwest the James River and the New River interlace their headwaters
+among the mountains, and break out on east and west, making the third
+natural pass through which the James River and Kanawha turnpike and
+canal find their way. These three routes across the mountains were the
+only ones on which military operations were at all feasible. The
+northern one was usually in the hands of the National forces, and the
+other two were those by which the Confederates attempted the invasion of
+West Virginia. Beverly, a hundred miles from Staunton, was near the gate
+through which the Staunton road passes on its way northwestward to
+Parkersburg and Wheeling, whilst Gauley Bridge was the key-point of the
+Kanawha route on the westerly slope of the mountains.</p>
+<p>General Lee determined to send columns upon both these lines.
+General Henry A. Wise (formerly Governor of Virginia) took the Kanawha
+route, and General Robert S. Garnett (lately Lee's own adjutant-general)
+marched to Beverly. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. ii. pp. 908, 915.]</span> Upon Porterfield's
+retreat to Beverly, Garnett, who had also been an officer in the United
+States Army, was ordered to assume command there and to stimulate the
+recruiting and organization of regiments from the secession element of
+the population. Some Virginia regiments raised on the eastern slope of
+the mountains were sent with him, and to these was soon added the First
+Georgia. On the 1st of July he reported his force as 4500 men, but
+declared that his efforts to recruit had proven a complete failure, only
+23 having joined. The West Virginians, he says, "are thoroughly imbued
+with an ignorant and bigoted Union sentiment." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 239.]</span>
+Other reinforcements were promised Garnett, but none reached him except
+the Forty-fourth Virginia Regiment, which arrived at Beverly the very
+day of his engagement with McClellan's troops, but did not take part in
+the fighting. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 240, 274.]</span> </p>
+<p>Tygart's valley, in which Beverly lies, is between Cheat Mountain on
+the east, and Rich Mountain on the west. The river, of the same name as
+the valley, flows northward about fifteen miles, then turns westward,
+breaking through the ridge, and by junction with the Buckhannon River
+forms the Monongahela, which passes by Philippi and afterward crosses
+the railroad at Grafton. The Staunton and Parkersburg turnpike divides
+at Beverly, the Parkersburg route passing over a saddle in Rich
+Mountain, and the Wheeling route following the river to Philippi. The
+ridge north of the river at the gap is known as Laurel Mountain, and the
+road passes over a spur of it. Garnett regarded the two positions at
+Rich Mountain and Laurel Mountain as the gates to all the region beyond
+and to the West. A rough mountain road, barely passable, connected the
+Laurel Mountain position with Cheat River on the east, and it was
+possible to go by this way northward through St. George to the
+Northwestern turnpike, turning the mountain ranges.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/1-03-2.png"
+ title="COMBAT AT RICH MOUNTAIN." alt="COMBAT AT RICH MOUNTAIN."
+ style="width: 572px; height: 920px;"><br>
+</p>
+<p>Garnett thought the pass over Rich Mountain much the stronger and
+more easily held, and he therefore intrenched there about 1300 of his
+men and four cannon, under command of Lieutenant-Colonel Pegram. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. ii.
+p. 268.]</span> The position chosen was on a spur of the mountain near
+its western base, and it was rudely fortified with breastworks of logs
+covered with an abatis of slashed timber along its front. The remainder
+of his force he placed in a similar fortified position on the road at
+Laurel Mountain, where he also had four guns, of which one was rifled.
+Here he commanded in person. His depot of supplies was at Beverly, which
+was sixteen miles from the Laurel Mountain position and five from that
+at Rich Mountain. He was pretty accurately informed of McClellan's
+forces and movements, and his preparations had barely been completed by
+the 9th of July, when the Union general appeared in his front. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 241, 248.]</span> </p>
+<p>McClellan entered West Virginia in person on the 21st of June, and
+on the 23d issued from Grafton a proclamation to the inhabitants. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 194, 196.]</span>
+He had gradually collected his forces along the Baltimore and Ohio
+Railroad, and these, at the time of the affair at Rich Mountain,
+consisted of sixteen Ohio regiments, nine from Indiana, and two from
+West Virginia; in all, twenty-seven regiments with four batteries of
+artillery of six guns each, two troops of cavalry, and an independent
+company of riflemen. Of his batteries, one was of the regular army, and
+another, a company of regulars (Company I, Fourth U. S. Artillery), was
+with him awaiting mountain howitzers, which arrived a little later. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: As part of the troops were
+State troops not mustered into the United States service, no report of
+them is found in the War Department; but the following are the numbers
+of the regiments found named as present in the correspondence and
+reports,--viz., 3d, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 13th, 14th,
+15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th, and 22d Ohio; 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th,
+10th, 11th, 13th, 14th, 15th Indiana, and 1st and 2nd Virginia; also
+Howe's United States Battery, Barnett's Ohio Battery, Loomis's Michigan
+Battery, and Daum's Virginia Battery; the cavalry were Burdsal's Ohio
+Dragoons and Barker's Illinois Cavalry. VOL. I.--4]</span> The regiments
+varied somewhat in strength, but all were recently organized, and must
+have averaged at least 700 men each, making the whole force about
+20,000. Of these, about 5000 were guarding the railroad and its bridges
+for some two hundred miles, under the command of Brigadier-General C. W.
+Hill, of the Ohio Militia; a strong brigade under Brigadier-General
+Morris of Indiana, was at Philippi, and the rest were in three brigades
+forming the immediate command of McClellan, the brigadiers being General
+W. S. Rosecrans, U. S. A., General Newton Schleich of Ohio, and Colonel
+Robert L. McCook of Ohio. On the date of his proclamation McClellan
+intended, as he informed General Scott, to move his principal column to
+Buckhannon on June 25th, and thence at once upon Beverly; <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. ii.
+p. 195.]</span> but delays occurred, and it was not till July 2nd that he
+reached Buckhannon, which is twenty-four miles west of Beverly, on the
+Parkersburg branch of the turnpike. Before leaving Grafton the rumors he
+heard had made him estimate Garnett's force at 6000 or 7000 men, of
+which the larger part were at Laurel Mountain in front of General
+Morris. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p.
+205.]</span> On the 7th of July he moved McCook with two regiments to
+Middle Fork bridge, about half-way to Beverly, and on the same day
+ordered Morris to march with his brigade from Philippi to a position one
+and a half miles in front of Garnett's principal camp, which was
+promptly done. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 200.]</span> Three days later, McClellan concentrated the three
+brigades of his own column at Roaring Creek, about two miles from
+Colonel Pegram's position at the base of Rich Mountain. The advance on
+both lines had been made with only a skirmishing resistance, the
+Confederates being aware of McClellan's great superiority in numbers,
+and choosing to await his attack in their fortified positions. The
+National commander was now convinced that his opponent was 10,000
+strong, of which about 2000 were before him at Rich Mountain. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 203, 204.]</span>
+A reconnoissance made on the 10th showed that Pegram's position would be
+difficult to assail in front, but preparations were made to attack the
+next day, while Morris was directed to hold firmly his position before
+Garnett, watching for the effect of the attack at Rich Mountain. In the
+evening Rosecrans took to McClellan a young man named Hart, whose father
+lived on the top of the mountain two miles in rear of Pegram, and who
+thought he could guide a column of infantry to his father's farm by a
+circuit around Pegram's left flank south of the turnpike. The paths were
+so difficult that cannon could not go by them, but Rosecrans offered to
+lead a column of infantry and seize the road at the Hart farm. After
+some discussion McClellan adopted the suggestion, and it was arranged
+that Rosecrans should march at daybreak of the 11th with about 2000 men,
+including a troop of horse, and that upon the sound of his engagement in
+the rear of Pegram McClellan would attack in force in front. By a
+blunder in one of the regimental camps, the reveill&eacute; and assembly
+were sounded at midnight, and Pegram was put on the <i>qui vive</i>.
+He, however, believed that the attempt to turn his position would be by
+a path or country road passing round his right, between him and Garnett
+(of which the latter had warned him), and his attention was diverted
+from Rosecrans's actual route, which he thought impracticable. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. ii.
+pp. 215, 256, 260. Conduct of the War, vol. vi. (Rosecrans), pp. 2,3.]</span>
+The alert which had occurred at midnight made Rosecrans think it best to
+make a longer circuit than he at first intended, and it took ten hours
+of severe marching and mountain climbing to reach the Hart farm. The
+turning movement was made, but he found an enemy opposing him. Pegram
+had detached about 350 men from the 1300 which he had, and had ordered
+them to guard the road at the mountain summit. He sent with them a
+single cannon from the four which constituted his only battery, and they
+threw together a breastwork of logs. The turnpike at Hart's runs in a
+depression of the summit, and as Rosecrans, early in the afternoon, came
+out upon the road, he was warmly received by both musketry and cannon.
+The ground was rough, the men were for the first time under fire, and
+the skirmishing combat varied through two or three hours, when a charge
+by part of Rosecrans's line, aided by a few heavy volleys from another
+portion of his forces which had secured a good position, broke the
+enemy's line. Reinforcements from Pegram were nearly at hand, with
+another cannon; but they did not come into action, and the runaway team
+of the caisson on the hill-top, dashing into the gun that was coming up,
+capsized it down the mountain-side where the descending road was scarped
+diagonally along it. Both guns fell into Rosecrans's hands, and he was
+in possession of the field. The march and the assault had been made in
+rain and storm. Nothing was heard from McClellan; and the enemy,
+rallying on their reinforcements, made such show of resistance on the
+crest a little further on, that Rosecrans directed his men to rest upon
+their arms till next morning. When day broke on the 12th, the enemy had
+disappeared from the mountain-top, and Rosecrans, feeling his way down
+to the rear of Pegram's position, found it also abandoned, the two
+remaining cannon being spiked, and a few sick and wounded being left in
+charge of a surgeon. Still nothing was seen of McClellan, and Rosecrans
+sent word to him, in his camp beyond Roaring Creek, that he was in
+possession of the enemy's position. Rosecrans's loss had been 12 killed
+and 49 wounded. The Confederates left 20 wounded on the field, and 63
+were surrendered at the lower camp, including the sick. No trustworthy
+report of their dead was made. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. ii pp. 215, 260, 265. C. W., vol. vi.
+(Rosecrans) pp. 3-5.]</span> </p>
+<p>The noise of the engagement had been heard in McClellan's camp, and
+he formed his troops for attack, but the long continuance of the
+cannonade and some signs of exultation in Pegram's camp seem to have
+made him think Rosecrans had been repulsed. The failure to attack in
+accordance with the plan has never been explained. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: C. W., vol. vi. p. 6.
+McClellan seems to have expected Rosecrans to reach the rear of Pegram's
+advanced work before his own attack should be made; but the
+reconnoissance of Lieutenant Poe, his engineer, shows that this work
+could be turned by a much shorter route than the long and difficult one
+by which Rosecrans went to the mountain ridge. See Poe's Report,
+Official Records, vol. li. pt. i. p. 14.]</span> Rosecrans's messengers
+had failed to reach McClellan during the 11th, but the sound of the
+battle was sufficient notice that he had gained the summit and was
+engaged; and he was, in fact, left to win his own battle or to get out
+of his embarrassment as he could. Toward evening McClellan began to cut
+a road for artillery to a neighboring height, from which he hoped his
+twelve guns would make Pegram's position untenable; but his lines were
+withdrawn again beyond Roaring Creek at nightfall, and all further
+action postponed to the next day.</p>
+<p>About half of Pegram's men had succeeded in passing around
+Rosecrans's right flank during the night and had gained Beverly. These,
+with the newly arrived Confederate regiment, fled southward on the
+Staunton road. Garnett had learned in the evening, by messenger from
+Beverly, that Rich Mountain summit was carried, and evacuated his camp
+in front of Morris about midnight. He first marched toward Beverly, and
+was within five miles of that place when he received information (false
+at the time) that the National forces already occupied it. He then
+retraced his steps nearly to his camp, and, leaving the turnpike at
+Leadsville, he turned off upon a country road over Cheat Mountain into
+Cheat River valley, following the stream northward toward St. George and
+West Union, in the forlorn hope of turning the mountains at the north
+end of the ridges, and regaining his communications by a very long
+detour. He might have continued southward through Beverly almost at
+leisure, for McClellan did not enter the town till past noon on the 12th.</p>
+<p>Morris learned of Garnett's retreat at dawn, and started in pursuit
+as soon as rations could be issued. He marched first to Leadsville,
+where he halted to communicate with McClellan at Beverly and get further
+orders. These reached him in the night, and at daybreak of the 13th he
+resumed the pursuit. His advance-guard of three regiments, accompanied
+by Captain H. W. Benham of the Engineers, overtook the rear of the
+Confederate column about noon and continued a skirmishing pursuit for
+some two hours. Garnett himself handled his rear-guard with skill, and
+at Carrick's Ford a lively encounter was had. A mile or two further, at
+another ford and when the skirmishing was very slight, he was killed
+while withdrawing his skirmishers from behind a pile of driftwood which
+he had used as a barricade. One of his cannon had become stalled in the
+ford, and with about forty wagons fell into Morris's hands. The direct
+pursuit was here discontinued, but McClellan had sent a dispatch to
+General Hill at Grafton, to collect the garrisons along the railroad and
+block the way of the Confederates where they must pass around the
+northern spurs of the mountains. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Reports of Morris and Benham, Official Records, vol. ii. pp. 220, 222.]</span> </p>
+<p>His military telegraph terminated at the Roaring Creek camp, and the
+dispatch written in the evening of the 12th was not forwarded to Hill
+till near noon of the 13th. This officer immediately ordered the
+collection of the greater part of his detachments at Oakland, and called
+upon the railway officials for special trains to hurry them to the
+rendezvous. About 1000 men under Colonel James Irvine of the Sixteenth
+Ohio were at West Union, where the St. George road reaches the
+Northwestern Turnpike, and Hill's information was that a detachment of
+these held Red House, a crossing several miles in advance, by which the
+retreating enemy might go. Irvine was directed to hold his positions at
+all hazards till he could be reinforced. Hill himself hastened with the
+first train from Grafton to Oakland with about 500 men and three cannon,
+reached his destination at nightfall, and hurried his detachment forward
+by a night march to Irvine, ten or twelve miles over rough roads. It
+turned out that Irvine did not occupy Red House, and the prevalent
+belief that the enemy was about 8000 in number, with the uncertainty of
+the road he would take, made it proper to keep the little force
+concentrated till reinforcements should come. The first of these reached
+Irvine about six o'clock on the morning of the 14th, raising his command
+to 1500; but a few moments after their arrival he learned that the enemy
+had passed Red House soon after daylight. He gave chase, but did not
+overtake them.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile General Hill had spent the night in trying to hasten
+forward the railway trains, but none were able to reach Oakland till
+morning, and Garnett's forces had now more than twenty miles the start,
+and were on fairly good roads, moving southward on the eastern side of
+the mountains. McClellan still telegraphed that Hill had the one
+opportunity of a lifetime to capture the fleeing army, and that officer
+hastened in pursuit, though unprovided with wagons or extra rations.
+When however the Union commander learned that the enemy had fairly
+turned the mountains, he ordered the pursuit stopped. Hill had used both
+intelligence and energy in his attempt to concentrate his troops, but it
+proved simply impossible for the railroad to carry them to Oakland
+before the enemy had passed the turning-point, twenty miles to the
+southward. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Report of
+Hill, Official Records, vol. ii. p. 224.]</span> </p>
+<p>During the 12th Pegram's situation and movements were unknown. He
+had intended, when he evacuated his camp, to follow the line of retreat
+taken by the detachment already near the mountain-top, but, in the
+darkness of the night and in the tangled woods and thickets of the
+mountain-side, his column got divided, and, with the rear portion of it,
+he wandered all day of the 12th, seeking to make his way to Garnett. He
+halted at evening at the Tygart Valley River, six miles north of
+Beverly, and learned from some country people of Garnett's retreat. It
+was still possible to reach the mountains east of the valley, but beyond
+lay a hundred miles of wilderness and half a dozen mountain ridges on
+which little, if any, food could be found for his men. He called a
+council of war, and, by advice of his officers, sent to McClellan, at
+Beverly, an offer of surrender. This was received on the 13th, and
+Pegram brought in 30 officers and 525 men. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Report of Pegram, Official
+Records, vol. ii. pp. 265, 266.]</span> McClellan then moved southward
+himself, following the Staunton road, by which the remnant of Pegram's
+little force had escaped, and on the 14th occupied Huttonsville. Two
+regiments of Confederate troops were hastening from Staunton to
+reinforce Garnett. These were halted at Monterey, east of the principal
+ridge of the Alleghanies, and upon them the retreating forces rallied.
+Brigadier-General H. R. Jackson was assigned to command in Garnett's
+place, and both Governor Letcher and General Lee made strenuous efforts
+to increase this army to a force sufficient to resume aggressive
+operations. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 247, 254.]</span> On McClellan's part nothing further was attempted
+till on the 22d he was summoned to Washington to assume command of the
+army which had retreated to the capital after the panic of the first
+Bull Run battle.</p>
+<p>The affair at Rich Mountain and the subsequent movements were among
+the minor events of a great war, and would not warrant a detailed
+description, were it not for the momentous effect they had upon the
+conduct of the war, by being the occasion of McClellan's promotion to
+the command of the Potomac army. The narrative which has been given
+contains the "unvarnished tale," as nearly as official records of both
+sides can give it, and it is a curious task to compare it with the
+picture of the campaign and its results which was then given to the
+world in the series of proclamations and dispatches of the young
+general, beginning with his first occupation of the country and ending
+with his congratulations to his troops, in which he announced that they
+had "annihilated two armies, commanded by educated and experienced
+soldiers, intrenched in mountain fastnesses fortified at their leisure."
+The country was eager for good news, and took it as literally true.
+McClellan was the hero of the moment, and when, but a week later, his
+success was followed by the disaster to McDowell at Bull Run, he seemed
+pointed out by Providence as the ideal chieftain who could repair the
+misfortune and lead our armies to certain victory. His personal
+intercourse with those about him was so kindly, and his bearing so
+modest, that his dispatches, proclamations, and correspondence are a
+psychological study, more puzzling to those who knew him well than to
+strangers. Their turgid rhetoric and exaggerated pretence did not seem
+natural to him. In them he seemed to be composing for stage effect
+something to be spoken in character by a quite different person from the
+sensible and genial man we knew in daily life and conversation. The
+career of the great Napoleon had been the study and the absorbing
+admiration of young American soldiers, and it was perhaps not strange
+that when real war came they should copy his bulletins and even his
+personal bearing. It was, for the moment, the bent of the people to be
+pleased with McClellan's rendering of the r&ocirc;le; they dubbed him
+the young Napoleon, and the photographers got him to stand with folded
+arms, in the historic pose. For two or three weeks his dispatches and
+letters were all on fire with enthusiastic energy. He appeared to be in
+a morbid condition of mental exaltation. When he came out of it, he was
+as genial as ever. The assumed dash and energy of his first campaign
+made the disappointment and the reaction more painful when the excessive
+caution of his conduct in command of the Army of the Potomac was seen.
+But the Rich Mountain affair, when analyzed, shows the same
+characteristics which became well known later. There was the same
+over-estimate of the enemy, the same tendency to interpret unfavorably
+the sights and sounds in front, the same hesitancy to throw in his whole
+force when he knew that his subordinate was engaged. If Garnett had been
+as strong as McClellan believed him, he had abundant time and means to
+overwhelm Morris, who lay four days in easy striking distance, while the
+National commander delayed attacking Pegram; and had Morris been beaten,
+Garnett would have been as near Clarksburg as his opponent, and there
+would have been a race for the railroad. But, happily, Garnett was less
+strong and less enterprising than he was credited with being. Pegram was
+dislodged, and the Confederates made a precipitate retreat.</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</p>
+<p>THE KANAWHA VALLEY</p>
+<p>Orders for the Kanawha expedition--The troops and their
+quality--Lack of artillery and cavalry--Assembling at
+Gallipolis--District of the Kanawha--Numbers of the opposing
+forces--Method of advance--Use of steamboats--Advance guards on river
+banks--Camp at Thirteen-mile Creek--Night alarm--The river
+chutes--Sunken obstructions--Pocotaligo--Affair at Barboursville--Affair
+at Scary Creek--Wise's position at Tyler Mountain--His precipitate
+retreat--Occupation of Charleston--Rosecrans succeeds McClellan--Advance
+toward Gauley Bridge--Insubordination--The Newspaper
+Correspondent--Occupation of Gauley Bridge.</p>
+<p>When McClellan reached Buckhannon, on the 2d of July, the rumors he
+heard of Garnett's strength, and the news of the presence of General
+Wise with a considerable force in the Great Kanawha valley, made him
+conclude to order a brigade to that region for the purpose of holding
+the lower part of the valley defensively till he might try to cut off
+Wise's army after Garnett should be disposed of. This duty was assigned
+to me. On the 22d of June I had received my appointment as
+Brigadier-General, U. S. Volunteers, superseding my state commission. I
+had seen the regiments of my brigade going one by one, as fast as they
+were reorganized for the three years' service, and I had hoped to be
+ordered to follow them to McClellan's own column. The only one left in
+camp was the Eleventh Ohio, of which only five companies were present,
+though two more companies were soon added.</p>
+<p>McClellan's letter directed me to assume command of the First and
+Second Kentucky regiments with the Twelfth Ohio, and to call upon the
+governor for a troop of cavalry and a six-gun battery: to expedite the
+equipment of the whole and move them to Gallipolis <i>via</i> Hampden
+and Portland, stations on the Marietta Railroad, from which a march of
+twenty-five miles by country roads would take us to our destination. At
+Gallipolis was the Twenty-first Ohio, which I should add to my command
+and proceed at once with two regiments to Point Pleasant at the mouth of
+the Kanawha, five miles above. When all were assembled, one regiment was
+to be left at Point Pleasant, two were to be advanced up the valley to
+Ten-mile Creek, and the other placed at an intermediate position. "Until
+further orders," the letter continued, "remain on the defensive and
+endeavor to induce the rebels to remain at Charleston until I can cut
+off their retreat by a movement from Beverly." Captain W. J. Kountz, an
+experienced steamboat captain, was in charge of water-transportation,
+and would furnish light-draught steamboats for my use. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: What purports to be
+McClellan's letter to me is found in the Records (Official Records, vol.
+ii. pt. i. p. 197), but it seems to be only an abstract of it, made to
+accompany his dispatch to Washington (<i>Id</i>., p. 198), and by a
+clerical error given the form of the complete letter. It does not
+contain the quotation given above, which was reiterated before the
+letter was closed, in these words: "Remember that my present plan is to
+cut them off by a rapid march from Beverly after driving those in front
+of me across the mountains, and do all you can to favor that by avoiding
+offensive movements."</span></p>
+<p>After the printing of the earlier volumes of the Records, covering
+the years 1861-1862, I learned that the books and papers of the
+Department of the Ohio had not been sent to Washington at the close of
+the war, but were still in Cincinnati. I brought this fact to the
+attention of the Adjutant-General, and at the request of that officer
+obtained and forwarded them to the Archives office. With them were my
+letter books and the original files of my correspondence with McClellan
+and Rosecrans in 1861 and 1862. Colonel Robert N. Scott, who was then in
+charge of the publication, informed me that the whole would be prepared
+for printing and would appear in the supplemental volumes, after the
+completion of the rest of the First Series. Owing to changes in the
+Board of Publication in the course of twenty years, there were errors in
+the arrangement of the matter for the printer, and a considerable part
+of the correspondence between the generals named and myself was
+accidentally omitted from the supplemental volume (Official Records,
+vol. li. pt. i.) in which it should have appeared. The originals are no
+doubt in the files of the Archives office, and for the benefit of
+investigators I give in Appendix A a list of the numbers missing from
+the printed volume, as shown by comparison with my retained copies.] </p>
+<p>Governor Dennison seconded our wishes with his usual earnestness,
+and ordered the battery of artillery and company of cavalry to meet me
+at Gallipolis; but the guns for the battery were not to be had, and a
+section of two bronze guns (six-pounder smooth-bores rifled) was the
+only artillery, whilst the cavalry was less than half a troop of raw
+recruits, useful only as messengers. I succeeded in getting the Eleventh
+Ohio sent with me, the lacking companies to be recruited and sent later.
+The Twelfth Ohio was an excellent regiment which had been somewhat
+delayed in its reorganization and had not gone with the rest of its
+brigade to McClellan. The Twenty-first was one of the regiments enlisted
+for the State in excess of the first quota, and was now brought into the
+national service under the President's second call. The two Kentucky
+regiments had been organized in Cincinnati, and were made up chiefly of
+steamboat crews and "longshoremen" thrown out of employment by the
+stoppage of commerce on the river. There were in them some companies of
+other material, but these gave the distinctive character to the
+regiments. The colonels and part of the field officers were Kentuckians,
+but the organizations were Ohio regiments in nearly everything but the
+name. The men were mostly of a rough and reckless class, and gave a good
+deal of trouble by insubordination; but they did not lack courage, and
+after they had been under discipline for a while, became good fighting
+regiments. The difficulty of getting transportation from the railway
+company delayed our departure. It was not till the 6th of July that a
+regiment could be sent, and another followed in two or three days. The
+two Kentucky regiments were not yet armed and equipped, but after a day
+or two were ready and were ordered up the river by steamboats. I myself
+left Camp Dennison on the evening of Sunday the 7th with the Eleventh
+Ohio (seven companies) and reached Gallipolis in the evening of the 9th.
+The three Ohio regiments were united on the 10th and carried by steamers
+to Point Pleasant, and we entered the theatre of war. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. li.
+pt. i. p. 416: my report to McClellan.]</span> </p>
+<p>My movement had been made upon a telegram from General McClellan,
+and I found at Gallipolis his letter of instructions of the 2d, and
+another of the 6th which enlarged the scope of my command. A territorial
+district was assigned to me, including the southwestern part of Virginia
+below Parkersburg on the Ohio, and north of the Great Kanawha, reaching
+back into the country as I should occupy it. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The territorial boundary of
+McClellan's Department had been placed at the Great Kanawha and the Ohio
+rivers, probably with some political idea of avoiding the appearance of
+aggression upon regions of doubtful loyalty.]</span> The directions to
+restrict myself to a defensive occupation of the Lower Kanawha valley
+were changed to instructions to march on Charleston and Gauley Bridge,
+and, with a view to his resumption of the plan to make this his main
+line of advance, to "obtain all possible information in regard to the
+roads leading toward Wytheville and the adjacent region." I was also
+ordered to place a regiment at Ripley, on the road from Parkersburg to
+Charleston, and advised "to beat up Barbonsville, Guyandotte, etc, so
+that the entire course of the Ohio may be secured to us." Communication
+with Ripley was by Letart's Falls on the Ohio, some thirty miles above
+Gallipolis, or by Ravenswood, twenty miles further. Guyandotte was a
+longer distance below Gallipolis, and Barboursville was inland some
+miles up the Gurandotte River. As to General Wise, McClellan wrote:
+"Drive Wise out and catch him if you can. If you do catch him, send him
+to Colombus penitentiary." A regiment at Parkersburg and another at
+Roane Court House on the northern border of my district were ordered to
+report to me, but I was not authorized to move them from the stations
+assigned them, and they were soon united to McClellan's own column.</p>
+<p>At Gallipolis I heard that a steamboat on the Ohio had been boarded
+by a rebel party near Guyandotte, and the news giving point to
+McClellan's suggestion to "beat up" that region, I dispatched a small
+steamboat down the river to meet the Kentucky regiments with orders for
+the leading one to land at Guyandotte and suppress any insurgents in
+that neighborhood. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. Ii. pt. i. p. 417.]</span> It was hazardous to
+divide my little army into three columns on a base of a hundred miles,
+but it was thought wise to show some Union troops at various points on
+the border, and I purposed to unite my detachments by early convergent
+movements forward to the Kanawha valley as soon as I should reach Red
+House, thirty-two miles up the river, with my principal column.</p>
+<p>Before I reached Charleston I added to my artillery one iron and one
+brass cannon, smooth six-pounders, borrowed from the civil authorities
+at Gallipolis; but they were without caissons or any proper equipment,
+and were manned by volunteers from the infantry. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Ibid.]</span> My total force,
+when assembled, would be a little over 3000 men, the regiments having
+the same average strength as those with McClellan. The opposing force
+under General Wise was 4000 by the time the campaign was fully opened,
+though somewhat less at the beginning. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Wise reported his force on
+the 17th of July as 3500 "effective" men and ten cannon, and says he
+received "perhaps 300" in reinforcements on the 18th. When he abandoned
+the valley ten days later, he reported his force 4000 in round numbers.
+Official Records, vol. ii. pp. 290, 292; 1011.]</span> </p>
+<p>The Great Kanawha River was navigable for small steamboats about
+seventy miles, to a point ten or twelve miles above Charleston, the only
+important town of the region, which was at the confluence of the Kanawha
+and Elk rivers. Steamboats were plenty, owing to the interruption of
+trade, and wagons were wholly lacking; so that my column was accompanied
+and partly carried by a fleet of stern-wheel steamers.</p>
+<p>On Thursday the 11th of July the movement from Point Pleasant began.
+An advance-guard was sent out on each side of the river, marching upon
+the roads which were near its banks. The few horsemen were divided and
+sent with them to carry messages, and the boats followed, steaming
+slowly along in rear of the marching men. Most of two regiments were
+carried on the steamers, to save fatigue to the men, who were as yet
+unused to their work, and many of whom were footsore from their first
+long march of twenty-five miles to Gallipolis from Hampden station,
+where they had been obliged to leave the railway. The arrangement was
+also a good one in a military point of view, for if an enemy were met on
+either bank of the stream, the boats could land in a moment and the
+troops disembark without delay.</p>
+<p>Our first day's sail was thirteen miles up the river, and it was the
+very romance of campaigning. I took my station on top of the pilot-house
+of the leading boat, so that I might see over the banks of the stream
+and across the bottom lands to the high hills which bounded the valley.
+The afternoon was a lovely one. Summer clouds lazily drifted across the
+sky, the boats were dressed in their colors and swarmed with the men
+like bees. The bands played national tunes, and as we passed the houses
+of Union citizens, the inmates would wave their handkerchiefs to us, and
+were answered by cheers from the troops. The scenery was picturesque,
+the gently winding river making beautiful reaches that opened new scenes
+upon us at every turn. On either side the advance-guard could be seen in
+the distance, the main body in the road, with skirmishers exploring the
+way in front, and flankers on the sides. Now and then a horseman would
+bring some message to the bank from the front, and a small boat would be
+sent to receive it, giving us the rumors with which the country was
+rife, and which gave just enough of excitement and of the spice of
+possible danger to make this our first day in an enemy's country key
+everybody to just such a pitch as apparently to double the vividness of
+every sensation. The landscape seemed more beautiful, the sunshine more
+bright, and the exhilaration of out-door life more joyous than any we
+had ever known.</p>
+<p>The halt for the night had been assigned at a little village on the
+right (northern) bank of the stream, which was nestled beneath a ridge
+which ran down from the hills toward the river, making an excellent
+position for defence against any force which might come against it from
+the upper valley. The sun was getting low behind us in the west, as we
+approached it, and the advance-guard had already halted. Captain
+Cotter's two bronze guns gleamed bright on the top of the ridge beyond
+the pretty little town, and before the sun went down, the new white
+tents had been carried up to the slope and pitched there. The steamers
+were moored to the shore, and the low slanting rays of the sunset fell
+upon as charming a picture as was ever painted. An outpost with pickets
+was set on the southern side of the river, both grand and camp guards
+were put out also on the side we occupied, and the men soon had their
+supper and went to rest. Late in the evening a panic-stricken countryman
+came in with the news that General Wise was moving down upon us with
+4000 men. The man was evidently in earnest, and was a loyal one. He
+believed every word he said, but he had in fact seen only a few of the
+enemy's horsemen who were scouting toward us, and believed their
+statement that an army was at their back. It was our initiation into an
+experience of rumors that was to continue as long as the war. We were to
+get them daily and almost hourly; sometimes with a little foundation of
+fact, sometimes with none; rarely purposely deceptive, but always
+grossly exaggerated, making chimeras with which a commanding officer had
+to wage a more incessant warfare than with the substantial enemy in his
+front. I reasoned that Wise's troops were, like my own, too raw to
+venture a night attack with, and contented myself with sending a strong
+reconnoitring party out beyond my pickets, putting in command of it
+Major Hines of the Twelfth Ohio, an officer who subsequently became
+noted for his enterprise and activity in charge of scouting parties. The
+camp rested quietly, and toward morning Hines returned, reporting that a
+troop of the enemy's horse had come within a couple of miles of our
+position in search of information about us and our movement. They had
+indulged in loud bragging as to what Wise and his army would do with us,
+but this and nothing more was the basis of our honest friend's fright.
+The morning dawned bright and peaceful, the steamers were sent back for
+a regiment which was still at Point Pleasant, and the day was used in
+concentrating the little army and preparing for another advance.</p>
+<p>On July 13th we moved again, making about ten miles, and finding the
+navigation becoming difficult by reason of the low water. At several
+shoals in the stream rough wing-dams had been built from the sides to
+concentrate the water in the channel, and at Knob Shoals, in one of
+these "chutes" as they were called, a coal barge had sometime before
+been sunk. In trying to pass it our leading boat grounded, and, the
+current being swift, it was for a time doubtful if we should get her
+off. We finally succeeded, however, and the procession of boats slowly
+steamed up the rapids. We had hardly got beyond them when we heard a
+distant cannon-shot from our advance-guard which had opened a long
+distance between them and us during our delay. We steamed rapidly ahead.
+Soon we saw a man pulling off from the south bank in a skiff. Nearing
+the steamer, he stood up and excitedly shouted that a general engagement
+had begun. We laughingly told him it couldn't be very general till we
+got in, and we moved on, keeping a sharp outlook for our parties on
+either bank. When we came up to them, we learned that a party of
+horsemen had appeared on the southern side of the river and had opened a
+skirmishing fire, but had scampered off as if the Old Nick were after
+them when a shell from the rifled gun was sent over their heads. The
+shell, like a good many that were made in those days, did not explode,
+and the simple people of the vicinity who had heard its long-continued
+scream told our men some days after that they thought it was "going yet."</p>
+<p>From this time some show of resistance was made by the enemy, and
+the skirmishing somewhat retarded the movement. Still, about ten miles
+was made each day till the evening of the 16th, when we encamped at the
+mouth of the Pocotaligo, a large creek which enters the Kanawha from the
+north. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. li. pt. i. p. 418.]</span> The evening before, we had had
+one of those incidents, not unusual with new troops, which prove that
+nothing but habit can make men cool and confident in their duties. We
+had, as usual, moored our boats to the northern bank and made our camp
+there, placing an outpost on the left bank opposite us supporting a
+chain of sentinels, to prevent a surprise from that direction. A report
+of some force of the enemy in their front made me order another
+detachment to their support after nightfall. The detachment had been
+told off and ferried across in small boats. They were dimly seen
+marching in the starlight up the river after landing, when suddenly a
+shot was heard, and then an irregular volley was both seen and heard as
+the muskets flashed out in the darkness. A supporting force was quickly
+sent over, and, no further disturbance occurring, a search was made for
+an enemy, but none was found. A gun had accidentally gone off in the
+squad, and the rest of the men, surprised and bewildered, had fired,
+they neither knew why nor at what. Two men were killed, and several
+others were hurt. This and the chaffing the men got from their comrades
+was a lesson to the whole command. The soldiers were brave enough, and
+were thoroughly ashamed of themselves, but they were raw; that was all
+that could be said of it. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. li. pt. i. p. 421.]</span> </p>
+<p>We were here overtaken by the Second Kentucky, which had stopped at
+Guyandotte on its way up the river, and had marched across the country
+to join us after our progress had sufficiently covered that lower
+region. From Guyandotte a portion of the regiment, under command of
+Lieutenant-Colonel Neff, had gone to Barboursville and had attacked and
+dispersed an encampment of Confederates which was organizing there. It
+was a very creditable little action, in which officers and men conducted
+themselves well, and which made them for the time the envy of the rest
+of the command.</p>
+<p>The situation at "Poca," as it was called in the neighborhood, was
+one which made the further advance of the army require some
+consideration. Information which came to us from loyal men showed that
+some force of the enemy was in position above the mouth of Scary Creek
+on the south side of the Kanawha, and about three miles from us. We had
+for two days had constant light skirmishing with the advance-guard of
+Wise's forces on the north bank of the river, and supposed that the
+principal part of his command was on our side, and not far in front of
+us. It turned out in fact that this was so, and that Wise had placed his
+principal camp at Tyler Mountain, a bold spur which reaches the river on
+the northern side (on which is also the turnpike road), about twelve
+miles above my position, while he occupied the south side with a
+detachment. The Pocotaligo, which entered the river from the north at
+our camp, covered us against an attack on that side; but we could not
+take our steam-boats further unless both banks of the river were
+cleared. We had scarcely any wagons, for those which had been promised
+us could not yet be forwarded, and we must either continue to keep the
+steamboats with us, or organize wagon transportation and cut loose from
+the boats. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. li. pt. i. p. 420; dispatch of 17th also.]</span> My urgent
+dispatches were hurrying the wagons toward us, but meanwhile I hoped the
+opposition on the south bank of the river would prove trifling, for
+artillery in position at any point on the narrow river would at once
+stop navigation of our light and unarmed transports. On the morning of
+the 17th a reconnoitering party sent forward on the south side of the
+river under command of Lieutenant-Colonel White of the Twelfth Ohio,
+reported the enemy about five hundred strong intrenched on the further
+side of Scary Creek, which was not fordable at its mouth, but could be
+crossed a little way up the stream. Colonel Lowe of the Twelfth
+requested the privilege of driving off this party with his regiment
+accompanied by our two cannon. He was ordered to do so, whilst the
+enemy's skirmishers should be pushed back from the front of the main
+column, and it should be held ready to advance rapidly up the north bank
+of the river as soon as the hostile force at Scary Creek should be
+dislodged.</p>
+<p>The Twelfth and two companies of the Twenty-first Ohio were ferried
+over and moved out soon after noon. The first reports from them were
+encouraging and full of confidence, the enemy were retreating and they
+had dismounted one of his guns; but just before evening they returned,
+bringing the account of their repulse in the effort to cross at the
+mouth of the creek, and their failure to find the ford a little higher
+up. Their ammunition had run short, some casualties had occurred, and
+they had become discouraged and given it up. Their loss was 10 men
+killed and 35 wounded. If they had held on and asked for assistance, it
+would have been well enough; but, as was common with new troops, they
+passed from confidence to discouragement as soon as they were checked,
+and they retreated.</p>
+<p>The affair was accompanied by another humiliating incident which
+gave me no little chagrin. During the progress of the engagement Colonel
+Woodruff and Lieutenant-Colonel Neff of the Second Kentucky, with
+Colonel De Villiers of the Eleventh Ohio, rode out in front, on the
+north bank of the river, till they came opposite the enemy's position,
+the hostile party on our side of the stream having fallen back beyond
+this point. They were told by a negro that the rebels were in retreat,
+and they got the black man to ferry them over in a skiff, that they
+might be the first to congratulate their friends. To their amazement
+they were welcomed as prisoners by the Confederates, who greatly enjoyed
+their discomfiture. The negro had told the truth in saying that the
+enemy had been in retreat; for the fact was that both sides retreated,
+but the Confederates, being first informed of this, resumed their
+position and claimed a victory. The officers who were captured had gone
+out without permission, and, led on by the hare-brained De Villiers, had
+done what they knew was foolish and unmilitary, resulting for them in a
+severe experience in Libby Prison at Richmond, and for us in the
+momentary appearance of lack of discipline and order which could not
+fairly be charged upon the command. I reported the facts without
+disguise or apology, trusting to the future to remove the bad impression
+the affair must naturally make upon McClellan.</p>
+<p>The report of the strength of the position attacked and our
+knowledge of the increasing difficulty of the ground before us, led me
+to conclude that the wisest course would be to await the arrival of the
+wagons, now daily expected, and then, with supplies for several days in
+hand, move independent of the steamers, which became only an
+embarrassment when it was advisable to leave the river road for the
+purpose of turning a fortified position like that we had found before
+us. We therefore rested quietly in our strong camp for several days,
+holding both banks of the river and preparing to move the main column by
+a country road leading away from the stream on the north side, and
+returning to it at Tyler Mountain, where Wise's camp was reported to be.
+I ordered up the First Kentucky from Ravenswood and Ripley, but its
+colonel found obstacles in his way, and did not join us till we reached
+Charleston the following week.</p>
+<p>On the 23d of July I had succeeded in getting wagons and teams
+enough to supply the most necessary uses, and renewed the advance. We
+marched rapidly on the 24th by the circuitous route I have mentioned,
+leaving a regiment to protect the steamboats. The country was very
+broken and the roads very rough, but the enemy had no knowledge of our
+movement, and toward evening we again approached the river immediately
+in rear of their camp at Tyler Mountain. When we drove in their pickets,
+the force was panic-stricken and ran off, leaving their camp in
+confusion, and their supper which they were cooking but did not stop to
+eat. A little below the point where we reached the river, and on the
+other side, was the steamboat "Maffet" with a party of soldiers
+gathering the wheat which had been cut in the neighboring fields and was
+in the sheaf. I was for a moment doubtful whether it might not be one of
+our own boats which had ventured up the river under protection of the
+regiment left behind, and directed our skirmishers who were deployed
+along the edge of the water to hail the other side. "Who are you?" was
+shouted from both banks simultaneously. "United States troops," our men
+answered. "Hurrah for Jeff Davis!" shouted the others, and a rattling
+fire opened on both sides. A shell was sent from our cannon into the
+steamer, and the party upon her were immediately seen jumping ashore,
+having first set fire to her to prevent her falling into our hands. The
+enemy then moved away on that side, under cover of the trees which lined
+the river bank. Night was now falling, and, sending forward an
+advance-guard to follow up the force whose camp we had surprised, we
+bivouacked on the mountain side.</p>
+<p>In the morning, as we were moving out at an early hour, we were met
+by the mayor and two or three prominent citizens of Charleston who came
+to surrender the town to us, Wise having hurriedly retreated during the
+night. He had done a very unnecessary piece of mischief before leaving,
+in partly cutting off the cables of a fine suspension bridge which spans
+the Elk River at Charleston. As this stream enters the Kanawha from the
+north and below the city, it may have seemed to him that it would delay
+our progress; but as a large number of empty coal barges were lying at
+the town, it took our company of mechanics, under Captain Lane of the
+Eleventh Ohio, but a little while to improvise a good floating bridge,
+and part of the command passed through the town and camped beyond it. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. li.
+pt. i. p. 425.]</span> One day was now given to the establishment of a
+depot of supplies at Charleston and to the organization of regular
+communication by water with Gallipolis, and by wagons with such
+positions as we might occupy further up the river. Deputations of the
+townspeople were informed that it was not our policy to meddle with
+private persons who remained quietly at home, nor would we make any
+inquisition as to the personal opinions of those who attended strictly
+to their own business; but they were warned that any communication with
+the enemy would be remorselessly punished.</p>
+<p>We were now able to get more accurate information about Wise's
+forces than we could obtain before, and this accorded pretty well with
+the strength which he reported officially. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ante</i>, p. 63 note.]</span>
+His infantry was therefore more than equal to the column under my
+command in the valley, whilst in artillery and in cavalry he was greatly
+superior. Our continued advance in the face of such opposition is
+sufficient evidence that the Confederate force was not well handled, for
+as the valley contracted and the hills crowded in closer to the river,
+nearly every mile offered positions in which small numbers could hold at
+bay an army. Our success in reaching Charleston was therefore good
+ground for being content with our progress, though I had to blame myself
+for errors in the management of my part of the campaign at Pocataligo. I
+ought not to have assumed as confidently as I did that the enemy was
+only five hundred strong at Scary Creek and that a detachment could
+dispose of that obstacle whilst the rest of the column prepared to
+advance on our principal line. Wise's force at that point was in fact
+double the number supposed. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. ii. p. 1011.]</span> It is true it was very
+inconvenient to ferry any considerable body of troops back and forth
+across the river; but I should nevertheless have taken the bulk of my
+command to the left bank, and by occupying the enemy's attention at the
+mouth of Scary Creek, covered the movement of a sufficient force upon
+his flank by means of the fords farther up that stream. This would have
+resulted in the complete routing of the detachment, and it is nearly
+certain that I could have pushed on to Charleston at once, and could
+have waited there for the organization of my wagon train with the
+prestige of victory, instead of doing so at 'Poca' with the appearance
+of a check.</p>
+<p>McClellan recognized the fact that he was asking me to face the
+enemy with no odds in my favor, and as soon as he heard that Wise was
+disposed to make a stand he directed me not to risk attacking him in
+front, but rather to await the result of his own movement toward the
+Upper Kanawha. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Dispatches of July 16 and 20.]</span> Rosecrans did the same when he
+assumed command; but I knew the hope had been that I would reach Gauley
+Bridge, and I was vexed that my movement should have the appearance of
+failing when I was conscious that we had not fairly measured our
+strength with my opponent. As soon, therefore, as the needful
+preparations could be made, I decided upon the turning movement which I
+have already described, and our resolute advance seems to have thrown
+Wise into a panic from which he did not recover till he got far beyond
+Gauley Bridge.</p>
+<p>At Charleston I learned of the Bull Run disaster, and that McClellan
+had been ordered to Washington, leaving Rosecrans in command of our
+department. The latter sent me orders which implied that to reach
+Charleston was the most he could expect of me, and directing me to
+remain on the defensive if I should succeed in getting so far, whilst he
+should take up anew McClellan's plan of reaching the rear of Wise's
+army. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Dispatches of
+July 26 and 29.]</span> His dispatches, fortunately, did not reach me
+till I was close to Gauley Bridge and was sure of my ability to take
+possession of that defile, some forty miles above Charleston. An
+additional reason for my prompt advance was that the Twenty-first Ohio
+was not yet re-enlisted for the war, was only a "three months" regiment
+whose time was about to expire, and Governor Dennison had telegraphed me
+to send it back to Ohio. I left this regiment as a post-garrison at
+Charleston till it could be relieved by another, or till my success in
+reaching Gauley Bridge should enable me to send back a detachment for
+that post, and, on the 26th July, pushed forward with the rest of my
+column, which, now that the First Kentucky had joined me, consisted of
+four regiments. Our first night's encampment was about eleven miles
+above Charleston in a lovely nook between spurs of the hills. Here I was
+treated to a little surprise on the part of three of my subordinates
+which was an unexpected enlargement of my military experience. The camp
+had got nicely arranged for the night and supper was over, when these
+gentlemen waited upon me at my tent. The one who had shown the least
+capacity as commander of a regiment was spokesman, and informed me that
+after consultation they had concluded that it was foolhardy to follow
+the Confederates into the gorge we were travelling, and that unless I
+could show them satisfactory reasons for changing their opinion they
+would not lead their commands further into it. I dryly asked if he was
+quite sure he understood the nature of his communication. There was
+something probably in the tone of my question which was not altogether
+expected, and his companions began to look a little uneasy. He then
+protested that none of them meant any disrespect, but that as their
+military experience was about as extensive as my own, they thought I
+ought to make no movements but on consultation with them and by their
+consent. The others seemed to be better pleased with this way of putting
+it, and signified assent. My answer was that their conduct very plainly
+showed their own lack both of military experience and elementary
+military knowledge, and that this ignorance was the only thing which
+could palliate their action. Whether they meant it or not, their action
+was mutinous. The responsibility for the movement of the army was with
+me, and whilst I should be inclined to confer very freely with my
+principal subordinates and explain my purposes, I should call no
+councils of war, and submit nothing to vote till I felt incompetent to
+decide for myself. If they apologized for their conduct and showed
+earnestness in military obedience to orders, what they had now said
+would be overlooked, but on any recurrence of cause for complaint I
+should enforce my power by the arrest of the offender at once. I
+dismissed them with this, and immediately sent out the formal orders
+through my adjutant-general to march early next morning. Before they
+slept one of the three had come to me with earnest apology for his part
+in the matter, and a short time made them all as subordinate as I could
+wish. The incident could not have occurred in the brigade which had been
+under my command at Camp Dennison, and was a not unnatural result of the
+sudden assembling of inexperienced men under a brigade commander of whom
+they knew nothing except that at the beginning of the war he was a
+civilian like themselves. These very men afterward became devoted
+followers, and some of them life-long friends. It was part of their
+military education as well as mine. If I had been noisy and blustering
+in my intercourse with them at the beginning, and had done what seemed
+to be regarded as the "regulation" amount of cursing and swearing, they
+would probably have given me credit for military aptitude at least; but
+a systematic adherence to a quiet and undemonstrative manner evidently
+told against me, at first, in their opinion. Through my army life I met
+more or less of the same conduct when assigned to a new command; but
+when men learned that discipline would be inevitably enforced, and that
+it was as necessary to obey a quiet order as one emphasized by
+expletives, and especially when they had been a little under fire, there
+was no more trouble. Indeed, I was impressed with the fact that after
+this acquaintance was once made, my chief embarrassment in discipline
+was that an intimation of dissatisfaction on my part would cause deeper
+chagrin and more evident pain than I intended or wished.</p>
+<p>The same march enabled me to make the acquaintance of another army
+"institution,"--the newspaper correspondent. We were joined at
+Charleston by two men representing influential Eastern journals, who
+wished to know on what terms they could accompany the column. The answer
+was that the quartermaster would furnish them with a tent and
+transportation, and that their letters should be submitted to one of the
+staff, to protect us from the publication of facts which might aid the
+enemy. This seemed unsatisfactory, and they intimated that they expected
+to be taken into my mess and to be announced as volunteer aides with
+military rank. They were told that military position or rank could only
+be given by authority much higher than mine, and that they could be more
+honestly independent if free from personal obligation and from
+temptation to repay favors with flattery. My only purpose was to put the
+matter upon the foundation of public right and of mutual self-respect.
+The day before we reached Gauley Bridge they opened the subject again to
+Captain McElroy, my adjutant-general, but were informed that I had
+decided it upon a principle by which I meant to abide. Their reply was,
+"Very well; General Cox thinks he can get along without us, and we will
+show him. We will write him down."</p>
+<p>They left the camp the same evening, and wrote letters to their
+papers describing the army as demoralized, drunken, and without
+discipline, in a state of insubordination, and the commander as totally
+incompetent. As to the troops, more baseless slander was never uttered.
+Their march had been orderly. No wilful injury had been done to private
+property, and no case of personal violence to any non-combatant, man or
+woman, had been even charged. Yet the printing of such communications in
+widely read journals was likely to be as damaging as if it all were
+true. My nomination as Brigadier-General of U. S. Volunteers was then
+before the Senate for confirmation, and "the pen" would probably have
+proved "mightier than the sword" but for McClellan's knowledge of the
+nature of the task we had accomplished, as he was then in the flood-tide
+of power at Washington, and expressed his satisfaction at the
+performance of our part of the campaign which he had planned. By good
+fortune also, the injurious letters were printed at the same time with
+the telegraphic news of our occupation of Gauley Bridge and the retreat
+of the enemy out of the valley. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+As one of these correspondents became a writer of history, it is made
+proper to say that he was Mr. William Swinton, of whom General Grant has
+occasion to speak in his "Personal Memoirs" (vol. ii. p. 144), and whose
+facility in changing his point of view in historical writing was shown
+in his "McClellan's Military Career Reviewed and Exposed," which was
+published in 1864 by the Union Congressional Committee (first appearing
+in the "New York Times" of February, March, and April of that year),
+when compared with his "History of the Army of the Potomac" which
+appeared two years later. Burnside accused him of repeated instances of
+malicious libel of his command in June, 1864. Official Records, vol.
+xxxvi. pt. iii. p. 751.]</span> I was, however, deeply convinced that my
+position was the right one, and never changed my rule of conduct in the
+matter. The relations of newspaper correspondents to general officers of
+the army became one of the crying scandals and notorious causes of
+intrigue and demoralization. It was a subject almost impossible to
+settle satisfactorily; but whoever gained or lost by cultivating this
+means of reputation, it is a satisfaction to have adhered throughout the
+war to the rule I first adopted and announced.</p>
+<p>Wise made no resolute effort to oppose my march after I left
+Charleston, and contented himself with delaying us by his rear-guard,
+which obstructed the road by felling trees into it and by skirmishing
+with my head of column. We however advanced at the rate of twelve or
+fifteen miles a day, reaching Gauley Bridge on the morning of the 29th
+of July. Here we captured some fifteen hundred stands of arms and a
+considerable store of munitions which the Confederate general had not
+been able to carry away or destroy. It is safe to say that in the wild
+defile which we had threaded for the last twenty miles there were as
+many positions as there were miles in which he could easily have delayed
+my advance a day or two, forcing me to turn his flank by the most
+difficult mountain climbing, and where indeed, with forces so nearly
+equal, my progress should have been permanently barred. At Gauley Bridge
+he burned the structure which gave name to the place, and which had been
+a series of substantial wooden trusses resting upon heavy stone piers.
+My orders definitively limited me to the point we had now reached in my
+advance, and I therefore sent forward only a detachment to follow the
+enemy and keep up his precipitate retreat. Wise did not stop till he
+reached Greenbrier and the White Sulphur Springs, and there was abundant
+evidence that he regarded his movement as a final abandonment of this
+part of West Virginia. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Floyd's Dispatches, Official Records, vol. li. pt. ii. pp. 208, 213.]</span>
+A few weeks later General Lee came in person with reinforcements over
+the mountains and began a new campaign; but until the 20th of August we
+were undisturbed except by a petty guerilla warfare.</p>
+<p>McClellan telegraphed from Washington his congratulations, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Dispatch of August 1.]</span>
+and Rosecrans expressed his satisfaction also in terms which assured me
+that we had done more than had been expected of us. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Dispatch of July 31.]</span>
+The good effect upon the command was also very apparent; for our success
+not only justified the policy of a determined advance, but the officers
+who had been timid as to results were now glad to get their share of the
+credit, and to make amends for their insubordination by a hearty change
+in bearing and conduct. My term of service as a brigadier of the Ohio
+forces in the three months' enrolment had now ended, and until the
+Senate should confirm my appointment as a United States officer there
+was some doubt as to my right to continue in command. My embarrassment
+in this regard was very pleasantly removed by a dispatch from General
+Rosecrans in which he conveyed the request of Lieutenant-General Scott
+and of himself that I should remain in charge of the Kanawha column. It
+was only a week, however, before notice of the confirmation was
+received, and dropping all thoughts of returning home, I prepared my
+mind for continuous active duty till the war should end.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</p>
+<p>GAULEY BRIDGE</p>
+<p>The gate of the Kanawha valley--The wilderness beyond--West Virginia
+defences--A romantic post--Chaplain Brown--An adventurous
+mission--Chaplain Dubois--"The River Path"--Gauley Mount--Colonel
+Tompkins's home--Bowie-knives--Truculent resolutions--The
+Engineers--Whittlesey, Benham, Wagner--Fortifications--Distant
+reconnoissances--Comparison of forces--Dangers to steamboat
+communications--Allotment of duties--The Summersville post--Seventh Ohio
+at Cross Lanes--Scares and rumors--Robert E. Lee at Valley
+Mountain--Floyd and Wise advance--Rosecrans's orders--The Cross Lanes
+affair--Major Casement's creditable retreat--Colonel Tyler's
+reports--Lieutenant-Colonel Creighton--Quarrels of Wise and
+Floyd--Ambushing rebel cavalry--Affair at Boone Court House--New attack
+at Gauley Bridge--An incipient mutiny--Sad result--A notable
+court-martial--Rosecrans marching toward us--Communications
+renewed--Advance toward Lewisburg--Camp Lookout--A private sorrow.</p>
+<p>The position at Gauley Bridge was an important one from a military
+point of view. It was where the James River and Kanawha turnpike, after
+following the highlands along the course of New River as it comes from
+the east, drops into a defile with cliffs on one side and a swift and
+unfordable torrent upon the other, and then crosses the Gauley River,
+which is a stream of very similar character. The two rivers, meeting at
+a right angle, there unite to form the Great Kanawha, which plunges over
+a ledge of rocks a mile below and winds its way among the hills, some
+thirty miles, before it becomes a navigable stream even for the lightest
+class of steamboats. From Gauley Bridge a road runs up the Gauley River
+to Cross Lanes and Carnifex Ferry, something over twenty miles, and
+continuing northward reaches Summersville, Sutton, and Weston, making
+almost the only line of communication between the posts then occupied by
+our troops in northwestern Virginia and the head of the Kanawha valley.
+Southwestward the country was extremely wild and broken, with few and
+small settlements and no roads worthy the name. The crossing of the
+Gauley was therefore the gate through which all important movements from
+eastern into southwestern Virginia must necessarily come, and it formed
+an important link in any chain of posts designed to cover the Ohio
+valley from invasion. It was also the most advanced single post which
+could protect the Kanawha valley. Further to the southeast, on Flat-top
+Mountain, was another very strong position, where the principal road on
+the left bank of New River crosses a high and broad ridge; but a post
+could not be safely maintained there without still holding Gauley Bridge
+in considerable force, or establishing another post on the right bank of
+New River twenty miles further up. All these streams flow in rocky beds
+seamed and fissured to so great a degree that they had no practicable
+fords. You might go forty miles up New River and at least twenty up the
+Gauley before you could find a place where either could be passed by
+infantry or wagons. The little ferries which had been made in a few
+eddies of the rivers were destroyed in the first campaign, and the post
+at the Gauley became nearly impregnable in front, and could only be
+turned by long and difficult detours.</p>
+<p>An interval of about a hundred miles separated this mountain
+fastness from the similar passes which guarded eastern Virginia along
+the line of the Blue Ridge. This debatable ground was sparsely settled
+and very poor in agricultural resources, so that it could furnish
+nothing for subsistence of man or beast. The necessity of transporting
+forage as well as subsistence and ammunition through this mountainous
+belt forbade any extended or continuous operations there; for actual
+computation showed that the wagon trains could carry no more than the
+food for the mule teams on the double trip, going and returning, from
+Gauley Bridge to the narrows of New River where the Virginia and
+Tennessee Railroad crossed upon an important bridge which was several
+times made the objective point of an expedition. This alone proved the
+impracticability of the plan McClellan first conceived, of making the
+Kanawha valley the line of an important movement into eastern Virginia.
+It pointed very plainly, also, to the true theory of operations in that
+country. Gauley Bridge should have been held with a good brigade which
+could have had outposts several miles forward in three directions, and,
+assisted by a small body of horse to scour the country fifty miles or
+more to the front, the garrison could have protected all the country
+which we ever occupied permanently. A similar post at Huttonsville with
+detachments at the Cheat Mountain pass and Elkwater pass north of
+Huntersville would have covered the only other practicable routes
+through the mountains south of the line of the Baltimore and Ohio
+Railway. These would have been small intrenched camps, defensive in
+character, but keeping detachments constantly active in patrolling the
+front, going as far as could be done without wagons. All that ever was
+accomplished in that region of any value would thus have been attained
+at the smallest expense, and the resources that were for three years
+wasted in those mountains might have been applied to the legitimate
+lines of great operations from the valley of the Potomac southward.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/1-05-1.png"
+ title="GAULEY BRIDGE &amp; VICINITY." alt="GAULEY BRIDGE &amp; VICINITY."
+ style="width: 572px; height: 670px;"><br>
+</p>
+<p>Nothing could be more romantically beautiful than the situation of
+the post at Gauley Bridge. The hamlet had, before our arrival there,
+consisted of a cluster of two or three dwellings, a country store, a
+little tavern, and a church, irregularly scattered along the base of the
+mountain and facing the road which turns from the Gauley valley into
+that of the Kanawha. The lower slope of the hillside behind the houses
+was cultivated, and a hedgerow separated the lower fields from the upper
+pasturage. Above this gentler slope the wooded steeps rose more
+precipitately, the sandstone rock jutting out into crags and walls, the
+sharp ridge above having scarcely soil enough to nourish the
+chestnut-trees, here, like Mrs. Browning's woods of Vallombrosa,
+literally "clinging by their spurs to the precipices." In the angle
+between the Gauley and New rivers rose Gauley Mount, the base a
+perpendicular wall of rocks of varying height, with high wooded slopes
+above. There was barely room for the road between the wall of rocks and
+the water on the New River side, but after going some distance up the
+valley, the highway gradually ascended the hillside, reaching some
+rolling uplands at a distance of a couple of miles. Here was Gauley
+Mount, the country-house of Colonel C. Q. Tompkins, formerly of the Army
+of the United States, but now the commandant of a Confederate regiment
+raised in the Kanawha valley. Across New River the heavy masses of
+Cotton Mountain rose rough and almost inaccessible from the very water's
+edge. The western side of Cotton Mountain was less steep, and buttresses
+formed a bench about its base, so that in looking across the Kanawha a
+mile below the junction of the rivers, one saw some rounded foothills
+which had been cleared on the top and tilled, and a gap in the
+mountainous wall made room on that side for a small creek which
+descended to the Kanawha, and whose bed served for a rude country road
+leading to Fayette C. H. At the base of Cotton Mountain the Kanawha
+equals the united width of the two tributaries, and flows foaming over
+broken rocks with treacherous channels between, till it dashes over the
+horseshoe ledge below, known far and wide as the Kanawha Falls. On
+either bank near the falls a small mill had been built, that on the
+right bank a saw-mill and the one on the left for grinding grain.</p>
+<p>Our encampment necessarily included the saw-mill below the falls,
+where the First Kentucky Regiment was placed to guard the road coming
+from Fayette C. H. Two regiments were encamped at the bridge upon the
+hillside above the hedgerow, having an advanced post of half a regiment
+on the Lewisburg road beyond the Tompkins farm, and scouting the country
+to Sewell Mountain. Smaller outposts were stationed some distance up the
+valley of the Gauley. My headquarters tents were pitched in the
+door-yard of a dwelling-house facing the Gauley River, and I occupied an
+unfurnished room in the house for office purposes. A week was spent,
+without molestation, exploring the country in all directions and
+studying its topography. A ferry guided by a cable stretching along the
+piers of the burnt bridge communicated with the outposts up the New
+River, and a smaller ferry below the Kanawha Falls connected with the
+Fayette road. Systematic discipline and instruction in outpost duty were
+enforced, and the regiments rapidly became expert mountaineers and
+scouts. The population was nearly all loyal below Gauley Bridge, but
+above they were mostly Secessionists, a small minority of the wealthier
+slaveholders being the nucleus of all aggressive secession movements.
+These, by their wealth and social leadership, overawed or controlled a
+great many who did not at heart sympathize with them, and between
+parties thus formed a guerilla warfare became chronic. In our scouting
+expeditions we found little farms in secluded nooks among the mountains,
+where grown men assured us that they had never before seen the American
+flag, and whole families had never been further from home than a church
+and country store a few miles away. From these mountain people several
+regiments of Union troops were recruited in West Virginia, two of them
+being organized in rear of my own lines, and becoming part of the
+garrison of the district in the following season.</p>
+<p>I had been joined before reaching Gauley Bridge by Chaplain Brown of
+the Seventh Ohio, who had obtained permission to make an adventurous
+journey across the country from Sutton to bring me information as to the
+position and character of the outposts that were stretching from the
+railway southward toward our line of operations. Disguised as a
+mountaineer in homespun clothing, his fine features shaded by a slouched
+felt hat, he reported himself to me in anything but a clerical garb.
+Full of enterprise as a partisan leader of scouts could be, he was yet a
+man of high attainments in his profession, of noble character and real
+learning. When he reached me, I had as my guest another chaplain who had
+accepted a commission at my suggestion, the Rev. Mr. Dubois, son-in-law
+of Bishop McIlvaine of Ohio, who had been leader of the good people at
+Chillicothe in providing a supper for the Eleventh Ohio as we were on
+our way from Camp Dennison to Gallipolis. He had burned to have some
+part in the country's struggle, and became a model chaplain till his
+labors and exposure broke his health and forced him to resign. The
+presence of two such men gave some hours of refined social life in the
+intervals of rough work. One evening walk along the Kanawha has ever
+since remained in my memory associated with Whittier's poem "The River
+Path," as a wilder and more brilliant type of the scene he pictured. We
+had walked out beyond the camp, leaving its noise and its warlike
+associations behind us, for a turn of the road around a jutting cliff
+shut it all out as completely as if we had been transported to another
+land, except that the distant figure of a sentinel on post reminded us
+of the limit of safe sauntering for pleasure. My Presbyterian and
+Episcopalian friends forgot their differences of dogma, and as the sun
+dropped behind the mountain tops, making an early twilight in the
+valley, we talked of home, of patriotism, of the relation of our
+struggle to the world's progress, and other high themes, when</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; "Sudden our pathway turned from night,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The hills swung open to the light;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Through their green gates the sunshine showed,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; A long, slant splendor downward flowed.<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Down glade and glen and bank it rolled;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; It bridged the shaded stream with gold;<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And borne on piers of mist, allied<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The shadowy with the sunlit side!"</p>
+<p>The surroundings, the things of which we talked, our own sentiments,
+all combined to make the scene stir deep emotions for which the poet's
+succeeding lines seem the only fit expression, and to link the poem
+indissolubly with the scene as if it had its birth there.</p>
+<p>When Wise had retreated from the valley, Colonel Tompkins had been
+unable to remove his family, and had left a letter commending them to
+our courteous treatment. Mrs. Tompkins was a lady of refinement, and her
+position within our outposts was far from being a comfortable one. She,
+however, put a cheerful face upon her situation, showed great tact in
+avoiding controversy with the soldiers and in conciliating the good-will
+of the officers, and remained with her children and servants in her
+picturesque home on the mountain. So long as there was no fighting in
+the near vicinity, it was comparatively easy to save her from annoyance;
+but when a little later in the autumn Floyd occupied Cotton Mountain,
+and General Rosecrans was with us with larger forces, such a household
+became an object of suspicion and ill-will, which made it necessary to
+send her through the lines to her husband. The men fancied they saw
+signals conveyed from the house to the enemy, and believed that secret
+messages were sent, giving information of our numbers and movements. All
+this was highly improbable, for the lady knew that her safety depended
+upon her good faith and prudence; but such camp rumor becomes a power,
+and Rosecrans found himself compelled to end it by sending her away. He
+could no longer be answerable for her complete protection. This,
+however, was not till November, and in August it was only a pleasant
+variation, in going the rounds, to call at the pretty house on Gauley
+Mount, inquire after the welfare of the family, and have a moment's
+polite chat with the mistress of the mansion.</p>
+<p>For ten days after we occupied Gauley Bridge, all our information
+showed that General Wise was not likely to attempt the reconquest of the
+Kanawha valley voluntarily. His rapid retrograde march ended at White
+Sulphur Springs and he went into camp there. His destruction of bridges
+and abandonment of stores and munitions of war showed that he intended
+to take final leave of our region. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+My report to Rosecrans, Official Records, vol. li. pt. i. p. 40. Wise
+to Lee, <i>Id</i>., vol. ii. p. 1012; vol. v. p. 769.]</span> The
+contrast between promise and performance in his case had been ludicrous.
+When we entered the valley, we heard of his proclamations and orders,
+which breathed the spirit of desperate hand-to-hand conflict. His
+soldiers had been told to despise long-range fire-arms, and to trust to
+bowie-knives, which our invading hordes would never dare to face. We
+found some of these knives among the arms we captured at the
+Gauley,--ferocious-looking weapons, made of broad files ground to a
+double edge, fitted with rough handles, and still bearing the
+cross-marking of the file on the flat sides. Such arms pointed many a
+sarcasm among our soldiers, who had found it hard in the latter part of
+our advance to get within even the longest musket-range of the enemy's
+column. It was not strange that ignorant men should think they might
+find use for weapons less serviceable than the ancient Roman
+short-sword; but that, in the existing condition of military science,
+officers could be found to share and to encourage the delusion was
+amusing enough! With the muskets we captured, we armed a regiment of
+loyal Virginians, and turned over the rest to Governor Peirpoint for
+similar use. <br>
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: In some documents which
+fell into our hands we found a series of resolutions passed at a meeting
+in the spring at which one of the companies now with Wise was organized.
+It shows the melodramatic truculence which was echoed in the
+exhortations of the general and of other men who should have had more
+judgment. The resolutions were these:--</span></p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">"Resolved: 1. That this company was
+formed for the defence of this Commonwealth against her enemies of the
+North, and for no other purpose.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Resolved: 2. That the so-called
+President of the United States by his war policy has deliberately
+insulted the people of this Commonwealth, and if blood he wants, blood
+he can have.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Resolved: 3. That we are ready to
+respond to the call of the Governor of this Commonwealth for resisting
+Abraham Lincoln and the New York stock-jobbers, and all who sympathize
+with them.</p>
+<p><span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Resolved:</span><span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);"> 4. That we have not forgotten Harper's
+Ferry and John Brown."]</span> </p>
+<p>On the 5th of August Lieutenant Wagner of the Engineers arrived at
+Gauley Bridge with instructions from General Rosecrans to superintend
+the construction of such fortifications as might be proper for a post of
+three regiments. I had already with me Colonel Whittlesey, Governor
+Dennison's chief engineer, an old West Point graduate, who had for some
+years been devoting himself to scientific pursuits, especially to
+geology. In a few days these were joined by Captain Benham, who was
+authorized to determine definitely the plans of our defences. I was thus
+stronger in engineering skill than in any other department of staff
+assistants, though in truth there was little fortifying to be done
+beyond what the contour of the ground indicated to the most ordinary
+comprehension. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The
+cause of this visit of the Engineers is found in a dispatch sent by
+McClellan to Rosecrans, warning him that Lee and Johnston were both
+actually in march to crush our forces in West Virginia, and directing
+that Huttonsville and Gauley Bridge be strongly fortified. Official
+Records, vol. v. p. 555; <i>Id</i>., vol. ii. pt.. 445, 446.]</span> </p>
+<p>Benham stayed but two or three days, modified Wagner's plans enough
+to feel that he had made them his own, and then went back to Rosecrans's
+headquarters, where he was met with an appointment as brigadier-general,
+and was relieved of staff duty. He was a stout red-faced man, with a
+blustering air, dictatorial and assuming, an army engineer of
+twenty-five years' standing. He was no doubt well skilled in the routine
+of his profession, but broke down when burdened with the responsibility
+of conducting the movement of troops in the field. Wagner was a recent
+graduate of the Military Academy, a genial, modest, intelligent young
+man of great promise. He fell at the siege of Yorktown in the next year.
+Whittlesey was a veteran whose varied experience in and out of the army
+had all been turned to good account. He was already growing old, but was
+indefatigable, pushing about in a rather prim, precise way, advising
+wisely, criticising dryly but in a kindly spirit, and helping bring
+every department into better form. I soon lost both him and McElroy, my
+adjutant-general, for their three months' service was up, and they were
+made, the one colonel, and the other major of the Twentieth Ohio
+Regiment, of which my friend General Force was the lieutenant-colonel.</p>
+<p>We fortified the post by an epaulement or two for cannon, high up on
+the hillside covering the ferry and the road up New River. An infantry
+trench, with parapet of barrels filled with earth, was run along the
+margin of Gauley River till it reached a creek coming down from the
+hills on the left. There a redoubt for a gun or two was made, commanding
+a stretch of road above, and the infantry trench followed the line of
+the creek up to a gorge in the hill. On the side of Gauley Mount facing
+our post, we slashed the timber from the edge of the precipice nearly to
+the top of the mountain, making an entanglement through which it was
+impossible that any body of troops should move. Down the Kanawha, below
+the falls, we strengthened the saw-mill with logs, till it became a
+block-house loopholed for musketry, commanding the road to Charleston,
+the ferry, and the opening of the road to Fayette C. H. A single cannon
+was here put in position also.</p>
+<p>All this took time, for so small a force as ours could not make very
+heavy details of working parties, especially as our outpost and
+reconnoitring duty was also very laborious. This duty was done by
+infantry, for cavalry I had none, except the squad of mounted
+messengers, who kept carefully out of harm's way, more to save their
+horses than themselves, for they had been enlisted under an old law
+which paid them for the risk of their own horses, which risk they
+naturally tried to make as small as possible. My reconnoitring parties
+reached Big Sewell Mountain, thirty-five miles up New River,
+Summersville, twenty miles up the Gauley, and made excursions into the
+counties on the left bank of the Kanawha, thirty or forty miles away.
+These were not exceptional marches, but were kept up with an industry
+that gave the enemy an exaggerated idea of our strength as well as of
+our activity.</p>
+<p>About the 10th of August we began to get rumors from the country
+that General Robert E. Lee had arrived at Lewisburg to assume direction
+of the Confederate movements into West Virginia. We heard also that
+Floyd with a strong brigade had joined that of Wise, whose "legion" had
+been reinforced, and that this division, reported to be 10,000 or 12,000
+strong, would immediately operate against me at Gauley Bridge. We
+learned also of a general stir among the Secessionists in Fayette,
+Mercer, and Raleigh counties, and of the militia being ordered out under
+General Chapman to support the Confederate movement by operating upon my
+line of communications, whilst Floyd and Wise should attack in front.</p>
+<p>The reported aggregate of the enemy's troops was, as usual,
+exaggerated, but we now know that it amounted to about 8000 men, a force
+so greatly superior to anything I could assemble to oppose it, that the
+situation became at once a very grave one for me. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: On the 14th of August Wise
+reported to General Lee that he had 2000 men ready to move, and could
+have 2500 ready in five days; that 550 of his cavalry were with Floyd,
+besides a detachment of 50 artillerists. This makes his total force
+3100. At that time he gives Floyd's force at 1200 with two strong
+regiments coming up, besides 2000 militia under General Chapman. The
+aggregate force operating on the Kanawha line he gives as 7800.
+(Official Records vol. v. p. 787.)]</span> To resist this advance, I
+could keep but two regiments at Gauley Bridge, an advance-guard of eight
+companies vigorously skirmishing toward Sewell Mountain, a regiment
+distributed on the Kanawha to cover steamboat communications, and some
+companies of West Virginia recruits organizing at the mouth of the
+Kanawha. By extreme activity these were able to baffle the enemy, and
+impose upon him the belief that our numbers were more than double our
+actual force.</p>
+<p>Small hostile parties began to creep in toward the navigable part of
+the Kanawha, and to fire upon the steamboats, which were our sole
+dependence for supplying our depots at Charleston and at the head of
+navigation. General Rosecrans informed me of his purpose to march a
+sufficiently strong column to meet that under Lee as soon as the purpose
+of the latter should be developed, and encouraged me to hold fast to my
+position. I resolved, therefore, to stand a siege if need be, and pushed
+my means of transportation to the utmost, to accumulate a store of
+supplies at Gauley Bridge. I succeeded in getting up rations sufficient
+to last a fortnight, but found it much harder to get ammunition,
+especially for my ill-assorted little battery of cannon.</p>
+<p>The Twenty-sixth Ohio came into the Kanawha valley on the 8th
+through a mistake in their orders, and their arrival supplied for a few
+days the loss of the Twenty-first, which had gone home to be mustered
+out and reorganized. Some companies of the newly forming Fourth Virginia
+were those who protected the village of Point Pleasant at the mouth of
+the river, and part of the Twelfth and Twenty-sixth Ohio were in
+detachments from Charleston toward Gauley Bridge, furnishing guards for
+the steamboats and assisting in the landing and forwarding of supplies.
+The Eleventh Ohio, under Lieutenant-Colonel Frizell, which still had
+only eight companies, had the task of covering and reconnoitring our
+immediate front, and was the advance-guard already mentioned. Part of
+the Twelfth under Major Hines did similar work on the road to
+Summersville, where Rosecrans had an advanced post, consisting of the
+Seventh Ohio (Colonel E. B. Tyler), the Thirteenth (Colonel Wm. Sooy
+Smith), and the Twenty-third (Lieutenant-Colonel Stanley Matthews). On
+the 13th of August the Seventh Ohio, by orders from Rosecrans, marched
+to Cross Lanes, the intersection of the read from Summersville to Gauley
+Bridge, with one from Carnifex Ferry, which is on the Gauley near the
+mouth of Meadow River. A road called the Sunday Road is in the Meadow
+River valley, and joins the Lewisburg turnpike about fifteen miles in
+front of Gauley Bridge. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+See Official Atlas, Plate IX. 3, and map, p. 106, <i>post</i>]</span> To
+give warning against any movement of the enemy to turn my position by
+this route or to intervene between me and Rosecrans's posts at
+Summersville and beyond, was Tyler's task. He was ordered to picket all
+crossings of the river near his position, and to join my command if he
+were driven away. I was authorized to call him to me in an emergency.</p>
+<p>On the 15th Tyler was joined at Cross Lanes by the Thirteenth and
+Twenty-third Ohio, in consequence of rumors that the enemy was advancing
+upon Summersville in force from Lewisburg. I would have been glad of
+such an addition to my forces, but knowing that Rosecrans had stationed
+them as his own outpost covering the Sutton and Weston road, I ordered
+Tyler to maintain his own position, and urged the others to return at
+once to Summersville. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. li. pt. i. pp. 449, 453, 454.]</span> The road by
+which they had expected the enemy was the Wilderness road, which crossed
+the Gauley at Hughes' Ferry, six miles above Carnifex. If attacked from
+that direction, they should retire northward toward Rosecrans, if
+possible.</p>
+<p>Rosecrans gave orders to the same effect as soon as he heard of the
+movement, saying that his intention had been to station Smith and
+Matthews at Sutton, where their retreat toward him in case of necessity
+would be assured. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Dispatch of August 16.]</span> His orders for Tyler were that he should
+scout far toward the enemy, "striking him wherever he can," and "hold
+his position at the ferries as long as he can safely do it, and then
+fall back, as directed," toward Gauley Bridge. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Dispatch of August 17.]</span>
+The incident throws important light upon the situation a week later,
+when Tyler was attacked by Floyd.</p>
+<p>Floyd and Wise were now really in motion, though General Lee
+remained at Valley Mountain near Huntersville, whence he directed their
+movements. On the 17th they had passed Sewell Mountain, but made slow
+progress in the face of the opposition of the Eleventh Ohio, which kept
+up a constant skirmish with them. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. v. pp. 792, 799; <i>Id</i>., vol. li. pt. i.
+pp. 450-453.]</span> On the 19th Floyd's advance-guard passed the mouth
+of the Sunday Road on the turnpike, and on the 20th made so determined a
+push at my advance-guard that I believed it a serious effort of the
+whole Confederate column. I strengthened my own advance-guard by part of
+the Twelfth Ohio, which was at hand, and placed them at Pig Creek, a
+mile beyond the Tompkins place, where the turnpike crossed a gorge
+making a strongly defensible position. The advance-guard was able to
+withstand the enemy alone, and drove back those who assaulted them with
+considerable loss. It has since appeared that this movement of the enemy
+was by Wise's command making a direct attack upon my position, whilst
+Floyd was moving by the diagonal road to Dogwood Gap on the Sunday Road
+where it crosses the old State Road. There he encamped for the night,
+and next day continued his march to the mouth of Meadow River near
+Carnifex Ferry. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+vol. v. p.800.]</span> It was an affair of advance-guards in which Wise
+was satisfied as soon as he found serious resistance, and he retired
+during the night. On the first evidence of the enemy's presence in
+force, I called Tyler from Cross Lanes to Twenty-mile Creek, about six
+miles from Gauley Bridge, where it was important to guard a road passing
+to my rear, and to meet any attempt to turn my flank if the attack
+should be determinedly made by the whole force of the enemy. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Dispatch of August 20.]</span>
+As soon as the attack was repulsed, Tyler was ordered to return to Cross
+Lanes and resume his watch of the roads and river crossings there. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. li. pt. i.
+p. 454.]</span> He was delayed by the issue of shoes and clothing to his
+men, and when he approached his former position on the 24th, he found
+that Floyd was reported to have crossed the Gauley at Carnifex Ferry.
+Without waiting to reconnoitre the enemy at all, Tyler retreated to
+Peters Creek, several miles. Floyd had in fact succeeded in raising two
+small flatboats which Tyler had sunk but had not entirely destroyed.
+With these for a ferry, he had crossed and was intrenching himself where
+he was afterward attacked by Rosecrans.</p>
+<p>In the hope that only a small force had made the crossing, I ordered
+Tyler to "make a dash at them, taking care to keep your force well in
+hand so as to keep your retreat safe." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Dispatch of August 24.]</span>
+I added: "It is important to give them such a check as to stop their
+crossing." Meanwhile my advance-guard up New River was ordered to
+demonstrate actively in front and upon the Sunday Road, so as to
+disquiet any force which had gone towards Tyler, and I also sent forward
+half a regiment to Peters Creek (six miles from Cross Lanes) to hold the
+pass there and secure his retreat in case of need. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. li.
+pt. i. p. 457.]</span> </p>
+<p>But Tyler was new to responsibility, and seemed paralyzed into
+complete inefficiency. He took nearly the whole of the 25th to move
+slowly to Cross Lanes, though he met no opposition. He did nothing that
+evening or night, and his disposal of his troops was so improper and
+outpost duty so completely neglected that on the morning of the 26th,
+whilst his regiment was at breakfast, it was attacked by Floyd on both
+flanks at once, and was routed before it could be formed for action.
+Some companies managed to make a show of fighting, but it was wholly in
+vain, and they broke in confusion. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 458, 459, 461.]</span> About 15 were killed and 50 wounded, the
+latter with some 30 others falling into the enemy's hands. Tyler, with
+his lieutenant-colonel, Creighton, came into Gauley Bridge with a few
+stragglers from the regiment. Others followed until about 200 were
+present. His train had reached the detachment I had sent to Peters
+Creek, and this covered its retreat to camp, so that all his wagons came
+in safely. He reported all his command cut to pieces and captured except
+the few that were with him, and wrote an official report of the
+engagement, giving that result.</p>
+<p>On the 28th, however, we heard that Major Casement had carried 400
+of the regiment safely into Charleston. He had rallied them on the hills
+immediately after the rout, and finding the direct road to Gauley Bridge
+intercepted, had led them by mountain paths over the ridges to the
+valley of Elk River, and had then followed that stream down to
+Charleston without being pursued. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. li. pt. i. p. 462.]</span> This put a new face on
+the business, and Tyler in much confusion asked the return of his report
+that he might re-write it. I looked upon his situation as the not
+unnatural result of inexperience, and contented myself with informing
+General Rosecrans of the truth as to the affair. Tyler was allowed to
+substitute a new report, and his unfortunate affair was treated as a
+lesson from which it was expected he would profit. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Rosecrans's dispatch, <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 460.]</span> It made trouble in the regiment, however, where the line
+officers did not conceal their opinion that he had failed in his duty as
+a commander, and he was never afterward quite comfortable among them.</p>
+<p>The lieutenant-colonel, Creighton, was for a time in the abyss of
+self-reproach. The very day they reached Gauley Bridge in their
+unceremonious retreat, he came to me, crying with shame, and said,
+"General, I have behaved like a miserable coward, I ought to be
+cashiered," and repeated many such expressions of remorse. I comforted
+him by saying that the intensity of his own feeling was the best proof
+that he had only yielded to a surprise and that it was clear he was no
+coward. He died afterward at the head of his regiment in the desperate
+charge up the hills at Ringgold, Georgia, in the campaign following that
+of Chickamauga in the autumn of 1863, having had the command for two
+years after Tyler became a brigadier. During those two years the Seventh
+had been in numberless engagements, and its list of casualties in
+battle, made good by recruiting, was said to have reached a thousand.
+Better soldiers there were none, and Creighton proved himself a lion in
+every fight.</p>
+<p>Casement, who rallied and led the most of the regiment from Cross
+Lanes over the mountains to Charleston, became afterward colonel of the
+One Hundred and Third Ohio. He came again under my command in East
+Tennessee in the winter of 1863, and continued one of my brigade
+commanders to the close of the war. He was a railway builder by
+profession, had a natural aptitude for controlling bodies of men, was
+rough of speech but generous of heart, running over with fun which no
+dolefulness of circumstance could repress, as jolly a comrade and as
+loyal a subordinate as the army could show.</p>
+<p>After the Cross Lanes affair I fully expected that the Confederate
+forces would follow the route which Casement had taken to Charleston.
+Floyd's inactivity puzzled me, for he did no more than make an
+intrenched camp at Carnifex Ferry, with outposts at Peters Mountain and
+toward Summersville. The publication of the Confederate Archives has
+partly solved the mystery. Floyd called on Wise to reinforce him; but
+the latter demurred, insistent that the duty assigned him of attacking
+my position in front needed all the men he had. Both appealed to Lee,
+and Lee decided that Floyd was the senior and entitled to command the
+joint forces. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. v. pp. 155-165, 800, 802-813.]</span> The letters of Wise
+show a capacity for keeping a command in hot water which was unique. If
+he had been half as troublesome to me as he was to Floyd, I should
+indeed have had a hot time of it. But he did me royal service by
+preventing anything approaching to co-operation between the two
+Confederate columns. I kept my advance-guards constantly feeling of
+both, and got through the period till Rosecrans joined me with nothing
+more serious than some sharp affairs of detachments.</p>
+<p>I was not without anxiety, however, and was constantly kept on the
+alert. Rosecrans withdrew the Twelfth Ohio from my command, excepting
+two companies under Major Hines, on the 19th of August, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: My dispatch to Rosecrans of
+August 19; also Official Records, vol. li. pt. i. p. 454.]</span> and the
+imperative need of detachments to protect the river below me was such
+that from this time till the middle of September my garrison at Gauley
+Bridge, including advance-guards and outposts, was never more than two
+and a half regiments or 1800 men. My artillerists were also ordered back
+to Ohio to reorganize, leaving the guns in the hands of such infantry
+details as I could improvise. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 462.]</span> I was lucky enough, however, to get a very good troop of
+horse under command of Captain Pfau in place of the irregular squad I
+had before. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 464.]</span> </p>
+<p>On the 25th my advance-guard under Lieutenant-Colonel Frizell very
+cleverly succeeded in drawing into an ambuscade a body of Floyd's
+cavalry under Colonel A. G. Jenkins. The principal body of our men lined
+a defile near the Hawk's Nest, and the skirmishers, retreating before
+the enemy, led them into the trap. Our men began firing before the enemy
+was quite surrounded, and putting their horses upon the run, they dashed
+back, running the gantlet of the fire. Wise reported that he met men
+with their subordinate officers flying at four miles' distance from the
+place of the action, and so panic-stricken that they could not be
+rallied or led back. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+vol. v. p. 816; <i>Id</i>., vol. li. pt. i. p. 457.]</span> Jenkins was
+hurt by the fall of his horse, but he succeeded in getting away; for, as
+we had no horsemen to pursue with, even the wounded, except one, could
+not be overtaken. Hats, clothing, arms, and saddles were left scattered
+along the road in as complete a breakneck race for life as was ever
+seen. The result, if not great in the list of casualties, which were
+only reported at 10 or 15 by the enemy, was so demoralizing in its
+influence upon the hostile cavalry that they never again showed any
+enterprise in harassing our outposts, whilst our men gained
+proportionally in confidence.</p>
+<p>About the 30th of August we heard of an encampment of Confederate
+militia at Boone C. H. which was so situated, southwest of the Kanawha
+River, as to menace our communications with the Ohio. I sent
+Lieutenant-Colonel Enyart with half of the First Kentucky Regiment to
+beat up this encampment, and he did so on the 2d of September,
+completely routing the enemy, who left 25 dead upon the field. Enyart's
+march and attack had been rapid and vigorous, and the terror of the blow
+kept that part of the district quiet for some time afterward. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: C. R., vol. li. pt. i. pp.
+465, 468, 472.]</span> </p>
+<p>We had heard for some days the news of the assembling of a
+considerable force of Confederate militia at Fayette C. H. under General
+Chapman and Colonel Beckley. They were reported at 2500, which was a
+fair estimate of the numbers which answered to the call. On the 3d of
+September a pretty well combined attack was made by Wise and this force;
+Wise pushing in sharply upon the turnpike, whilst Chapman, assisted by
+part of Wise's cavalry, drove back our small outpost on the Fayette
+road. Wise was met at Pig Creek as in his former attack, the eight
+companies of the Eleventh Ohio being strengthened by half of the
+Twenty-sixth Ohio, which was brought from below for this purpose. The
+effort was somewhat more persistent than before, and Wise indulged in
+considerable noisy cannonading; but the pickets retreated to the creek
+without loss, and the whole advance-guard, keeping under good cover
+there, repelled the attack with less than half a dozen casualties on our
+side, none being fatal. Wise retreated again beyond Hawk's Nest. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. li.
+pt. i. pp. 468, 470. Wise's Report, <i>Id</i>., vol. v. p. 124.]</span>
+The irregular troops on the Fayette road were more boldly led, and as
+there was no defensible position near the river for our outposts, these
+fell slowly back after a very warm skirmish, inflicting a loss, as
+reported by prisoners, of 6 killed among the enemy. I expected Floyd to
+move at the same time, and was obliged to continue upon the defensive by
+reason of his threatening position up the Gauley River; I, however, sent
+Major Hines with his two companies in that direction, and Floyd appeared
+to be impressed with the idea that my whole force was moving to attack
+him and attempted nothing aggressive. As at this time Wise, in his
+letters to General Lee, puts Floyd's force at 5600, and his own at 2200, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. v. p. 840.]</span>
+I had good reason, therefore, to feel satisfied with being able to keep
+them all at bay.</p>
+<p>In the midst of the alarms from every side, my camp itself was
+greatly excited by an incident which would have been occasion for regret
+at any time, but which at such a juncture threatened for a moment quite
+serious consequences. The work of intrenching the position was going on
+under the direction of Lieutenant Wagner as rapidly as the small working
+parties available could perform it. All were overworked, but it was the
+rule that men should not be detailed for fatigue duty who had been on
+picket the preceding night. On August 28th, a detail had been called for
+from the Second Kentucky, which lay above the hedge behind my
+headquarters, and they had reported without arms under a sergeant named
+Joyce. A supply of intrenching tools was stacked by the gate leading
+into the yard where my staff tents were pitched, and my aide, Lieutenant
+Conine, directed the sergeant to have his men take the tools and report
+to Mr. Wagner, the engineer, on the line. The men began to demur in a
+half-mutinous way, saying they had been on picket the night before.
+Conine, who was a soldierly man, informed them that that should be
+immediately looked into, and if so, they would be soon relieved, but
+that they could not argue the matter there, as their company commander
+was responsible for the detail. He therefore repeated his order. The
+sergeant then became excited and said his men should not obey.
+Lieutenant Gibbs, the district commissary, was standing by, and drawing
+his pistol, said to Joyce, "That's mutiny; order your men to take the
+tools or I'll shoot you." The man retorted with a curse, "Shoot!" Gibbs
+fired, and Joyce fell dead. When the sergeant first refused to obey,
+Conine coolly called out, "Corporal of the guard, turn out the guard!"
+intending very properly to put the man in arrest, but the shot followed
+too quick for the guard to arrive. I was sitting within the house at my
+camp desk, busy, when the first thing which attracted my attention was
+the call for the guard and the shot. I ran out, not stopping for arms,
+and saw some of the men running off shouting, "Go for your guns, kill
+him, kill him!" I stopped part of the men, ordered them to take the
+sergeant quickly to the hospital, thinking he might not be dead. I then
+ordered Gibbs in arrest till an investigation should be made, and ran at
+speed to a gap in the hedge which opened into the regimental camp. It
+was not a moment too soon. The men with their muskets were already
+clustering in the path, threatening vengeance on Mr. Gibbs. I ordered
+them to halt and return to their quarters. Carried away by excitement,
+they levelled their muskets at me and bade me get out of their way or
+they would shoot me. I managed to keep cool, said the affair would be
+investigated, that Gibbs was already under arrest, but they must go back
+to their quarters. The parley lasted long enough to bring some of their
+officers near. I ordered them to come to my side, and then to take
+command of the men and march them away. The real danger was over as soon
+as the first impulse was checked. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Dispatch to Rosecrans, August 29.]</span> The men then began to feel
+some of their natural respect for their commander, and yielded probably
+the more readily because they noticed that I was unarmed. I thought it
+wise to be content with quelling the disturbance, and did not seek out
+for punishment the men who had met me at the gap. Their excitement had
+been natural under the circumstances, which were reported with
+exaggeration as a wilful murder. If I had been in command of a larger
+force, it would have been easy to turn out another regiment to enforce
+order and arrest any mutineers; but the Second Kentucky was itself the
+only regiment on the spot. The First Kentucky was a mile below, and the
+Eleventh Ohio was the advance-guard up New River. Surrounded as we were
+by so superior a force of the enemy with which we were constantly
+skirmishing, I could not do otherwise than meet the difficulty instantly
+without regard to personal risk.</p>
+<p>The sequel of the affair was not reached till some weeks later when
+General Rosecrans assembled a court-martial at my request. Lieutenant
+Gibbs was tried and acquitted on the plain evidence that the man killed
+was in the act of mutiny at the time. The court was a notable one, as
+its judge advocate was Major R. B. Hayes of the Twenty-third Ohio,
+afterwards President of the United States, and one of its members was
+Lieutenant-Colonel Stanley Matthews of the same regiment, afterwards one
+of the Justices of the Supreme Court. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Some twenty years later a
+bill passed the House of Representatives pensioning the mother of the
+man killed, under the law giving pensions to dependent relatives of
+those who died in the line of duty! It could only have been smuggled
+through by concealment and falsification of facts, and was stopped in
+the Senate.]</span> </p>
+<p>The constant skirmishing with the enemy on all sides continued till
+the 10th of September, when General Rosecrans with his column reached
+Cross Lanes and had the action at Carnifex Ferry which I shall describe
+in the next chapter. I had sent forward half a regiment from my little
+command to open communication with him as soon as possible. On September
+9th a party from this detachment had reached Cross Lanes and learned
+that Floyd was keeping close within his lines on the cliffs of Gauley
+above Carnifex Ferry. They, however, heard nothing of Rosecrans, and the
+principal body of their troops heard no sound of the engagement on the
+10th, though within a very few miles. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. li.
+pt. i. p. 478.]</span> On the 12th communication was opened, and I
+learned of Floyd's retreat across the Gauley. I immediately moved
+forward the Eleventh and Twenty-sixth Ohio to attack Wise, who retreated
+from Hawk's Nest to the mouth of the Sunday Road, and upon my closer
+approach retired to Sewell Mountain. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 479, 481.]</span>
+At the Sunday Road I was stopped by orders from Rosecrans, who thought
+it unwise to advance further till he had made a ferry at the Gauley and
+succeeded in getting his command over; for Floyd had again sunk the
+flatboats within reach, and these had to be a second time raised and
+repaired. At his request I visited the General at Carnifex Ferry, and
+then got permission to move my column forward a few miles to Alderson's,
+or Camp Lookout as we dubbed it, where a commanding position controlled
+the country to the base of Sewell Mountain. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 482.]</span>
+I was now able to concentrate the Seventh Ohio at Gauley Bridge, and
+ordered forward the Second Kentucky to join me in the new camp.</p>
+<p>The period of my separate responsibility and of struggle against
+great odds was not to close without a private grief which was the more
+poignant because the condition of the campaign forbade my leaving the
+post of duty. On the day I visited General Rosecrans at Carnifex Ferry I
+got news of the critical illness of my youngest child, a babe of eight
+months old, whom I had seen but a single day after his birth, for I had
+been ordered into camp from the legislature without time to make another
+visit to my family. The warning dispatch was quickly followed by another
+announcing the end, and I had to swallow my sorrows as well as I could
+and face the public enemy before us, leaving my wife uncomforted in her
+bereavement and all the more burdened with care because she knew we were
+resuming active operations in the field.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</p>
+<p>CARNIFEX FERRY--TO SEWELL MOUNTAIN AND BACK</p>
+<p>Rosecrans's march to join me--Reaches Cross Lanes--Advance against
+Floyd--Engagement at Carnifex Ferry--My advance to Sunday
+Road--Conference with Rosecrans--McCook's brigade joins me--Advance to
+Camp Lookout--Brigade commanders--Rosecrans's personal
+characteristics--Hartsuff--Floyd and Wise again--"Battle of
+Bontecou"--Sewell Mountain--The equinoctial--General Schenck
+arrives--Rough lodgings--Withdrawal from the mountain--Rear-guard
+duties--Major Slemmer of Fort Pickens fame--New positions covering
+Gauley Bridge--Floyd at Cotton Mountain--Rosecrans's methods with
+private soldiers--Progress in discipline.</p>
+<p>General Rosecrans had succeeded McClellan as ranking officer in West
+Virginia, but it was not until the latter part of September that the
+region was made a department and he was regularly assigned to command. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v.
+pp. 604, 616, 647.]</span> Meanwhile the three months' enlistments were
+expiring, many regiments were sent home, new ones were received, and a
+complete reorganization of his forces took place. Besides holding the
+railroad, he fortified the Cheat Mountain pass looking toward Staunton,
+and the pass at Elkwater on the mountain summit between Huttonsville and
+Huntersville. My own fortifications at Gauley Bridge were part of the
+system of defensive works he had ordered. By the middle of August he had
+established a chain of posts, with a regiment or two at each, on a line
+upon which he afterwards marched, from Weston by way of Bulltown,
+Sutton, and Summersville to Gauley Bridge.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/1-06-1.png"
+ title="Affair At Carnifex Ferry" alt="Affair At Carnifex Ferry"
+ style="width: 582px; height: 896px;"><br>
+</p>
+<p>As soon as he received the news of Floyd's attack upon Tyler at
+Cross Lanes, he hastened his preparations and began his march southward
+from Clarksburg with three brigades, having left the Upper Potomac line
+in command of General Kelley, and the Cheat Mountain region in command
+of General J. J. Reynolds. His route (already indicated) was a rough
+one, and the portion of it between Sutton and Summersville, over Birch
+Mountain, was very wild and difficult. He crossed the mountain on the
+9th, and left his bivouac on the morning of the 10th of September,
+before daybreak. Marching through Summersville, he reached Cross Lanes
+about two o'clock in the afternoon. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. v. p. 129.]</span> Floyd's position was now about
+two miles distant, and, waiting only for his column to close up, he
+again pressed forward. General Benham's brigade was in front, and soon
+met the enemy's pickets. Getting the impression that Floyd was in
+retreat, Benham pressed forward rather rashly, deploying to the left and
+coming under a sharp fire from the right of the enemy's works. Floyd had
+intrenched a line across a bend of the Gauley River, where the road from
+Cross Lanes to Lewisburg finds its way down the cliffs to Carnifex
+Ferry. His flanks rested upon precipices rising abruptly from the
+water's edge, and he also intrenched some rising ground in front of his
+principal line. Benham's line advanced through dense and tangled woods,
+ignorant of the enemy's position till it was checked by the fire from
+his breastworks. It was too late for a proper reconnoissance, and
+Rosecrans could only hasten the advance and deployment of the other
+brigades under Colonels McCook and Scammon. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: For organization of
+Rosecrans's forces, see Id., vol. li. pt. i. p. 471.]</span> Benham had
+sent a howitzer battery and two rifled cannon with his head of column at
+the left, and these soon got a position from which, in fact, they
+enfiladed part of Floyd's line, though it was impossible to see much of
+the situation. Charges were made by portions of Benham's and McCook's
+brigades as they came up, but they lacked unity, and Rosecrans was
+dissatisfied that his head of column should be engaged before he had
+time to plan an attack. Colonel Lowe of the Twelfth Ohio had been killed
+at the head of his regiment, and Colonel Lytle of the Tenth had been
+wounded; darkness was rapidly coming on, and Rosecrans ordered the
+troops withdrawn from fire till positions could be rectified, and the
+attack renewed in the morning. Seventeen had been killed, and 141 had
+been wounded in the sharp but irregular combat. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v. p.
+146.]</span> Floyd, however, had learned that his position could be
+subjected to destructive cannonade; he was himself slightly wounded, and
+his officers and men were discouraged. He therefore retreated across the
+Gauley in the night, having great difficulty in carrying his artillery
+down the cliffs by a wretched road in the darkness. He had built a
+slight foot-bridge for infantry in the bit of smooth water known as the
+Ferry, though both above and below the stream is an impassable mountain
+torrent. The artillery crossed in the flatboats. Once over, the bridge
+was broken up and the ferry-boats were sunk. He reported but twenty
+casualties, and threw much of the responsibility upon Wise, who had not
+obeyed orders to reinforce him. His hospital, containing the wounded
+prisoners taken from Tyler, fell into Rosecrans's hands. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: A very graphic description
+of this engagement and of Floyd's retreat fell into my hands soon
+afterward. It was a journal of the campaign written by Major Isaac Smith
+of the Twenty-second Virginia Regiment, which he tried to send through
+our lines to his family in Charleston, W. Va., but which was
+intercepted. A copy is on file in the War Archives. See also Floyd's
+report, <i>Id.</i>, vol. v. pp. 146-148.]</span> </p>
+<p>General Rosecrans found the country so difficult a one that he was
+in no little doubt as to the plan of campaign it was now best to follow.
+It was out of the question to supply his column by wagon trains over the
+mountainous roads from Clarksburg, and the Kanawha River must therefore
+be made the line of communication with his base, which had to be
+transferred to Gallipolis. In anticipation of this, I had accumulated
+supplies and ordnance stores at Gauley Bridge as much as possible with
+my small wagon trains, and had arranged for a larger depot at the head
+of steamboat navigation. I was ready therefore to turn over the control
+of my supply lines to Rosecrans's officers of the quartermaster and
+commissary departments as soon as his wagon trains could be transferred.
+It was to consult in regard to these matters, as was as in regard to the
+future conduct of the campaign, that the general directed me to visit
+his headquarters at Carnifex Ferry. I rode over from my camp at the
+Sunday Road junction on the morning of the 15th, found that one of the
+little flatboats had been again raised and repaired at Carnifex, and
+passing through the field of the recent combat, reached the general's
+headquarters near Cross Lanes. I was able from personal observation to
+assure him that it was easy for his command to follow the line of the
+march on which Floyd had retreated, if better means of crossing the
+Gauley were provided; but when they should join me on the Lewisburg
+turnpike, that highway would be the proper line of supply, making Gauley
+Bridge his depot. He hesitated to commit himself to either line for
+decisive operations until the Gauley should be bridged, but on my
+description of the commodious ferry I had made at Gauley Bridge by means
+of a very large flatboat running along a hawser stretched from bank to
+bank, he determined to advance, and to have a bridge of boats made in
+place of my ferry. McCook's brigade was ordered to report to me as soon
+as it could be put over the river, and I was authorized to advance some
+six miles toward the enemy, to Alberson's or Spy Rock, already mentioned
+beyond which Big Sewell Mountain is fourteen miles further to the
+southwest. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records vol. v. p. 602.]</span> </p>
+<p>At Cross Lanes I met the commanders of the other brigades who were
+called in by General Rosecrans of an informal consultation based upon my
+knowledge of the country and the enemy. I naturally scanned them with
+some interest, and tried to make the most of the opportunity to become
+acquainted with them. General Benham I knew already, from his visit to
+me at Gauley Bridge in his capacity of engineer officer. I had met
+Colonel Robert McCook at Camp Dennison, and now that it was intimated
+that he would be for some days under my command, I recalled a scene I
+had witnessed there which left many doubts in my mind whether he would
+prove an agreeable subordinate. I had gone, one morning, to General
+Bates's office, and as I entered found McCook expressing himself with
+more vigor than elegance in regard to some order which had been issued
+respecting his regiment. My presence did not seem to interfere with the
+fluency of his remarks or the force of his expletives, but after a
+moment or two he seemed to notice a look of surprise in my face, and his
+own broadened humorously as his manner changed from vehemence to
+geniality. General Bates and he were familiar acquaintances at the bar
+in Cincinnati, and McCook had evidently presumed upon this as a warrant
+for speaking his mind as he pleased. When he reported to me at this
+later period, I found a hearty and loyal character under his bluff
+exterior and rough speech, with real courage, a quick eye for
+topography, and no lack of earnest subordination when work was to be
+done. Although our service together was short, I learned to have real
+respect for him, and sincerely mourned his loss when, later in the war,
+he met his tragic death. The other brigade commander was <i>Colonel E.
+P. Scammon </i> of the Twenty-third Ohio. He had graduated from West
+Point in 1837, and had served in the Topographical Engineers of the
+regular army and as instructor in the Military Academy. In the Mexican
+War he had been aide-de-camp to General Scott. He had been out of the
+army for some years before the rebellion, and was acting as professor of
+mathematics in St. Xavier's College, Cincinnati, when he was appointed
+to the colonelcy of the Twenty-third Ohio upon Rosecrans's promotion.
+Like Rosecrans, he was a Roman Catholic, though himself of Puritan
+descent. It seems that at the time of the Puseyite movement in England
+and in this country there had been a good many conversions to Romanism
+among the students and teachers at West Point, under the influence of
+the chaplain of the post, and Scammon, among a number of young men who
+subsequently became distinguished officers, was in this number. It need
+hardly be said that Scammon was well instructed in his profession. He
+was perhaps too much wedded to the routine of the service, and was
+looked upon by his subordinates as a martinet who had not patience
+enough with the inexperience of volunteer soldiers. He was one of the
+older men of our army, somewhat under the average height and weight,
+with a precise politeness of manner which reminded one of a Frenchman,
+and the resemblance was increased by his free use of his snuff-box. His
+nervous irritability was the cause of considerable chafing in his
+command, but this left him under fire, and those who had been with him
+in action learned to admire his courage and conduct. He was with me
+subsequently at South Mountain and Antietam, and still later had the
+misfortune to be one of those prisoners in the Confederates' hands who
+were exposed to the fire of our batteries in front of Charleston, S. C.</p>
+<p>But being a subordinate, I was most interested in the
+characteristics of our commander. Our Camp Dennison acquaintance had
+been a pleasant one, and he greeted me with a cordiality that was
+reassuring. His general appearance was attractive. He was tall but not
+heavy, with the rather long head and countenance that is sometimes
+called Norman. His aquiline nose and bright eyes gave him an incisive
+expression, increased by rapid utterance in his speech, which was apt to
+grow hurried, almost to stammering, when he was excited. His
+impulsiveness was plain to all who approached him; his irritation
+quickly flashed out in words when he was crossed, and his social
+geniality would show itself in smiles and in almost caressing gestures
+when he was pleased. In discussing military questions he made free use
+of his theoretic knowledge, often quoted authorities and cited maxims of
+war, and compared the problem before him to analogous cases in military
+history. This did not go far enough to be pedantic, and was full of a
+lively intelligence; yet it did not impress me as that highest form of
+military insight and knowledge which solves the question before it upon
+its own merits and without conscious comparison with historical
+examples, through a power of judgment and perception ripened and
+broadened by the mastery of principles which have ruled the great
+campaigns of the world. He was fond of conviviality, loved to banter
+good-humoredly his staff officers and intimates, and was altogether an
+attractive and companionable man, with intellectual activity enough to
+make his society stimulating and full of lively discussion. I could
+easily understand Garfield's saying, in his letter to Secretary Chase
+which afterward became the subject of much debate, that he "loved every
+bone in his body." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: An
+anecdote told at my table in 1890 by the Rev. Dr. Morris, long Professor
+in Lane Theological Seminary, Cincinnati, is so characteristic of
+Rosecrans that it is worth repeating. After the battle of Stone's River
+(January, 1863) Dr. Morris, who was then minister of a Presbyterian
+church in Columbus, was made by Governor Tod a member of a commission
+sent to look after the wounded soldiers. He called on General Rosecrans
+at his headquarters in Murfreesboro, and among others met there Father
+Tracy, the general's chaplain, a Roman Catholic priest. During the visit
+Rosecrans was called aside (but in the same room) by a staff officer to
+receive information about a spy who had been caught within the lines.
+The general got quite excited over the information, talked loudly and
+hurriedly in giving directions concerning the matter, using some profane
+language. It seemed suddenly to occur to him that the clergymen were
+present, and from the opposite side of the room he turned toward them,
+exclaiming apologetically, "Gentlemen, I sometimes <i>swear</i>, but I never <i>blaspheme!</i>"]</span></p>
+<p>Rosecrans's adjutant-general was Captain George L. Hartsuff, an
+officer of the regular army, who was well qualified to supplement in
+many ways the abilities and deficiencies of his chief. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Hartsuff was appointed
+brigadier-general of volunteers in the next year and was severely
+wounded at Antietam, after which he was made major-general and commanded
+the Twenty-third Army Corps in Burnside's campaign of East Tennessee.]</span>
+He was a large man, of heavy frame; his face was broad, and his bald
+head, tapering high, gave a peculiar pyramidal appearance to his figure.
+He was systematic and accurate in administrative work, patient and
+insistent in bringing the young volunteer officers in his department
+into habits of order and good military form. His coolness tempered the
+impulsiveness of his chief, and as they were of similar age and had
+about the same standing in the army before the war, the familiarity
+between them was that of comrades and equals more than of commander and
+subordinate.</p>
+<p>My intercourse with these officers on the occasion of my visit to
+Cross Lanes was only the beginning of the acquaintance on which I based
+the estimate of them which I have given; but it was a good beginning,
+for the cordial freedom of thought and speech in the conference was such
+as to bring out the characteristics of the men. I rode back to my camp
+in the evening, feeling a sense of relief at the transfer of
+responsibility to other shoulders. The command of my brigade under the
+orders of Rosecrans seemed an easy task compared with the anxieties and
+the difficulties of the preceding three months. And so it was. The
+difference between chief responsibility in military movements and the
+leadership even of the largest subordinate organizations of an army is
+heaven-wide; and I believe that no one who has tried both will hesitate
+to say that the subordinate knows little or nothing of the strain upon
+the will and the moral faculties which the chief has to bear.</p>
+<p>McCook's brigade joined me on the 16th, and we immediately marched
+to Alderson's, where we made a camp afterward known as Camp Lookout. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. ii.
+pt. i. p. 481.]</span> I was able to bring up the Second Kentucky
+Regiment from Gauley Bridge, giving me in hand three regiments of my own
+brigade. I sent forward Major Hines with five companies as an
+advance-guard, and with these he scouted the country as far as the top
+of Big Sewell Mountain, and was able to give us definite information
+that Floyd had retreated as far as Meadow Bluff, where the Wilderness
+road joins the turnpike. Wise halted at Big Sewell Mountain and
+persisted in keeping his command separate from Floyd, who ordered him to
+join the rest of the column at Meadow Bluff. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v.
+pp. 854,855,862.]</span> On the 20th September my advance-guard occupied
+the crest of the mountain, whilst Wise withdrew to a parallel ridge a
+mile beyond, and loudly insisted that Floyd should join him there
+instead of concentrating the Confederate force at Meadow Bluff. General
+Lee reached the latter place in person on the 21st, but found Wise's
+headstrong and captious spirit hardly more amenable to his discipline
+than to Floyd's. He shared Floyd's opinion that it was better to await
+Rosecrans's advance at Meadow Bluff, throwing upon the National forces
+the burden of transportation over the extended line, whilst guarding
+against a possible turning movement by the Wilderness road. But Wise was
+so noisy in his assertions that his was the only position in which to
+fight, that Lee hesitated to order him back peremptorily, and finally
+yielded to his clamor and directed Floyd to advance to Wise's position. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp.
+868,874,878,879.]</span> The scandal of the quarrel between the two
+officers had, however, become so notorious that the Richmond government
+had authorized Lee to send Wise elsewhere, and, probably on his advice,
+the Confederate War Department ordered Wise to report at Richmond in
+person. The last scene in the comedy was decidedly amusing. Wise
+appealed passionately to Lee to say whether his military honor did not
+require that he should disobey the order till the expected battle should
+be fought, and Lee, no doubt in dismay lest he should still fail to get
+rid of so intractable a subordinate, gravely advised him that both honor
+and duty would be safe in obeying promptly the order. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v. p.
+879.]</span> </p>
+<p>Whilst waiting at Camp Lookout for authority to move forward, an
+incident occurred which gave us a little excitement and amusement, and
+which shows, better than much explanation could do, the difficult and
+intricate character of the country in which we were operating. A
+wagon-master from our camp had gone out hunting for forage, which was
+very scarce. He soon came back in excitement, reporting that he had come
+upon an encampment of a regiment of the enemy between our camp and New
+River and somewhat in our rear. His report was very circumstantial, but
+was so improbable that I was confident there was some mistake about it.
+He was, however, so earnest in his assertions that he could not be
+mistaken, that McCook, in whose brigade he was, sent out an officer with
+some men, guided by the wagon-master, to verify the report. The story
+was confirmed, and the matter was brought to me for action. Puzzled but
+not convinced, and thinking that as McCook's command was new to the
+country, it would be better to send some one who was used to scouting in
+the mountains, I ordered a lieutenant named Bontecou, of the Second
+Kentucky Regiment, to take a small party and examine the case anew.
+Bontecou had done a good deal of successful work in this line, and was
+regarded as a good woodsman and an enterprising scout. He too came back
+at nightfall, saying that there could be no mistake about it. He had
+crept close to the sentinels of the camp, had counted the tents, and
+being challenged by the guard, had made a run for it through the
+thicket, losing his hat. The position of the enemy was, by all the
+reports, about three miles from us, diagonally in rear of our right
+flank. It now seemed that it must be true that some detachment had been
+delayed in joining the retreating column, and had found itself thus
+partly cut off by our advance. I therefore ordered McCook to start at
+earliest peep of day, upon the Chestnutburg road (on which the
+wagon-master had been foraging), and passing beyond the hostile
+detachment, attack from the other side, it being agreed by all the
+scouting parties that this would drive the enemy toward our camp. My own
+brigade would be disposed of to intercept the enemy and prevent escape.
+McCook moved out as ordered, and following his guides came by many
+devious turns to a fork in the road, following which, they told him, a
+few minutes would bring him upon the enemy. He halted the column, and
+with a small skirmishing party went carefully forward. The guides
+pointed to a thicket from which the Confederates could be seen. His
+instinct for topography had made him suspect the truth, as he had noted
+the courses in advancing, and crawling through the thicket, he looked
+out from the other side upon what he at once recognized as the rear of
+his own camp, and the tents of the very regiment from which he had sent
+an officer to test the wagon-master's report. All the scouts had been so
+deceived by the tangle of wooded hills and circling roads that they
+fully believed they were still miles from our position; and, bewildered
+in the labyrinth, they were sure the tents they saw were the enemy's and
+not ours. The march had been through rain and mist, through dripping
+thickets and on muddy roads, and the first impulse was wrath at the
+erring scouts; but the ludicrous side soon prevailed, and officers and
+men joined in hearty laughter over their wild-goose chase. They dubbed
+the expedition the "Battle of Bontecou," and it was long before the
+lieutenant heard the last of the chaffing at his talents as a scout. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. li.
+pt. i. pp. 484, 485.]</span> </p>
+<p>Major Hines's reports of the strength of the position on Sewell
+Mountain which the enemy had occupied, and my own reconnoissance of the
+intervening country, satisfied me that if we meant to advance on this
+line, we ought not to give the enemy time to reconsider and to reoccupy
+the mountain top from which he had retreated. On representing this to
+General Rosecrans, he authorized me to advance twelve miles to the
+Confederate camp on Big Sewell, directing me, however, to remain upon
+the defensive when there, and to avoid bringing on any engagement till
+he could bring up the rest of the column. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. li.
+pt. i. pp. 484, 486.]</span> His means of crossing at Carnifex Ferry were
+so poor that what he had thought would be done in two or three days from
+the time McCook joined me, took a full fortnight to accomplish.</p>
+<p>I marched with my own and McCook's brigades on the 23d September,
+but when I reached the Confederate camp where Hines with the
+advance-guard awaited me, it was evident at a glance that we must go
+further. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 487.]</span> The position was a very strong one for resisting an
+approach from our direction, but was commanded by higher ground beyond.
+The true crest of the mountain was two miles further on, and there alone
+could we successfully bar the way against a superior force coming from
+the east. I therefore marched rapidly forward and occupied the crest in
+force. It was impossible to hide the whole of our camp from view and
+properly hold the position, but we made use of such cover as we could
+find, and prepared to defend the pass against all comers, since it was
+vain to attempt to mystify the enemy as to our advance in force.</p>
+<p>On the 24th we had a lively skirmish with Wise's legion in front,
+and forced it to retire to a ridge out of range of our artillery. We
+dismounted one of his howitzers in the engagement, but contented
+ourselves with making him yield the ground which would interfere with
+our easy holding of our own position and the spurs of the mountain
+directly connected with it. Wise had learned that Rosecrans was not with
+my column, and on the supposition that the advance was made by my
+brigade only, Lee concluded to order Floyd to Wise's camp, being now
+satisfied that no movement of our troops had been made by way of the
+Wilderness road. It was at this time that Wise was relieved of command
+and ordered to Richmond, and Lee found it advisable to unite his forces
+and take command in person.</p>
+<p>The relations of these three distinguished Virginians had not begun
+with this campaign, but dated back to the capture of John Brown at
+Harper's Ferry. Wise was then the governor of his State, and received
+from Lee the prisoner whose execution at Charlestown was to become an
+historical event. Floyd, who himself had once been governor of Virginia,
+was then Buchanan's Secretary of War, and ordered Lee with the
+detachment of marines to Harper's Ferry, where they stormed the
+engine-house which Brown had made his fort. Dealing with such men as his
+subordinates, and with such a history behind them, it can easily be
+understood that Lee would feel no ordinary delicacy in asserting his
+authority, and no common embarrassment at their quarrels.</p>
+<p>Rosecrans was at first disturbed at my going further than had been
+expected; <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Rosecrans's
+Dispatches, Official Records, vol. li. pt. i. pp. 486, 487.]</span> but
+he was soon satisfied that nothing better could have been done. It is
+true that I was thirty-five miles from the supports in the rear, whether
+at Carnifex Ferry or Gauley Bridge; but the position was almost
+impregnable in front, and by watchfulness I should know of any attempt
+to turn it in time to make safe my retreat to Camp Lookout. On the 26th
+Scammon's brigade came within easy supporting distance, and General
+Rosecrans came in person to my camp. He had not been able to bring up
+his headquarters train, and was my guest for two or three days, sharing
+my tent with me. Cold autumnal rains set in on the very day the general
+came to the front, and continued almost without intermission. In the
+hope of still having some favorable weather for campaigning, the other
+brigades were brought forward, and the whole force was concentrated at
+the mountain except the necessary garrisons for the posts in the rear.
+Brigadier-General Robert C, Schenck reported for duty in the evening of
+a fearfully stormy day whilst Rosecrans was still my tent-mate. He had
+heard rumors of fighting at the front, and had hurried forward with a
+couple of staff officers, but without baggage. My staff officers were
+sharing their shelter with the gentlemen who had accompanied Rosecrans,
+but the new-comers were made heartily welcome to what we had. In my own
+tent General Rosecrans occupied my camp cot; I had improvised a rough
+bunk for myself on the other side of the tent, but as General Schenck
+got in too late for the construction of any better resting-place, he was
+obliged to content himself with a bed made of three or four camp-stools
+set in a row. Anything was better than lying on the damp ground in such
+a storm; but Schenck long remembered the aching weariness of that night,
+as he balanced upon the narrow and unstable supports which threatened to
+tumble him upon the ground at the least effort to change the position of
+stiffened body and limbs. One could not desire better companionship than
+we had during our waking hours, for both my guests had had varied and
+interesting experience and knew how to make it the means of delightful
+social intercourse and discussion. The chilly temperature of the tent
+was pleasantly modified by a furnace which was the successful invention
+of the private soldiers. A square trench was dug from the middle of the
+tent leading out behind it; this was capped with flat stones three or
+four inches thick, which were abundant on the mountain. At the end of
+it, on the outside, a chimney of stones plastered with mud was built up,
+and the whole topped out by an empty cracker-barrel by way of
+chimney-pot. The fire built in the furnace had good draught, and the
+thick stones held the heat well, making, on the whole, the best means of
+warming a tent which I ever tried. The objection to the little
+sheet-iron stoves furnished with the Sibley tent is that they are cold
+in a minute if the fire dies out.</p>
+<p>The rains, when once they began, continued with such violence that
+the streams were soon up, the common fords became impassable, and the
+roads became so muddy and slippery that it was with the utmost
+difficulty our little army was supplied. The four brigades were so
+reduced by sickness and by detachments that Rosecrans reported the whole
+as making only 5200 effective men. Every wagon was put to work hauling
+supplies and ammunition, even the headquarters baggage wagons and the
+regimental wagons of the troops, as well those stationed in the rear as
+those in front. We were sixty miles from the head of steamboat
+navigation, the wagon trains were too small for a condition of things
+where the teams could hardly haul half loads, and by the 1st of October
+we had demonstrated the fact that it was impossible to sustain our army
+any further from its base unless we could rely upon settled weather and
+good roads.</p>
+<p>Lee had directed an effort to be made by General Loring, his
+subordinate, on the Staunton line, to test the strength of the posts
+under Reynolds at Cheat Mountain and Elkwater, and lively combats had
+resulted on the 12th, and 14th of September. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v.
+pp. 185-193.]</span> Reynolds held firm, and as Rosecrans was not
+diverted from his plans and was pushing forward on the Lewisburg line,
+Lee ordered Loring to report to him with most of his command. Reynolds,
+in return, made a forced reconnoissance upon the Confederate position at
+Greenbrier River on October 2d, but found it too strong to be carried.
+The reinforcement by Loring gave Lee a very positive advantage in
+numbers, but the storms and foundering roads paralyzed both armies,
+which lay opposite each other upon the crests of Big Sewell separated by
+a deep gorge. On the 5th of October the condition of the Kanawha valley
+had become such that Rosecrans felt compelled to withdraw his forces to
+the vicinity of Gauley Bridge. The freshet had been an extraordinary
+one. At Charleston the Kanawha River usually flows in a bed forty or
+fifty feet below the plateau on which the town is built; but the waters
+now rose above these high banks and flooded the town itself, being four
+or five feet deep in the first story of dwelling-houses built in what
+was considered a neighborhood safe from floods. The inundation almost
+stopped communication, though our quartermasters tried to remedy part of
+the mischief by forcing light steamers up as near to the Kanawha Falls
+as possible. But it was very difficult to protect the supplies landed
+upon a muddy bank where were no warehouses, and no protection but canvas
+covers stretched over the piles of barrels and boxes of bread and sacks
+of grain. There was enormous waste and loss, but we managed to keep our
+men in rations, and were better off than the Confederates, in regard to
+whom Floyd afterward reported to his government that the eleven days of
+cold storms at Sewell Mountain had "cost more men, sick and dead, than
+the battle of Manassas Plains."</p>
+<p>It has been asserted by Confederate writers that Lee was executing a
+movement to turn Rosecrans's left flank when the latter marched back
+from Sewell Mountain. If so, it certainly had not gone far enough to
+attract our attention, and from my own knowledge of the situation, I do
+not believe it had passed beyond the form of discussion of a possible
+movement when the weather should become settled. Such plans were
+discussed on both sides, but the physical condition of the country was
+an imperative veto upon aggressive action.</p>
+<p>During the 5th of October our sick and spare baggage were sent back
+to Camp Lookout. Tents were struck at ten o'clock in the evening, and
+the trains sent on their way under escort at eleven. The column moved as
+soon as the trains were out of the way, except my own brigade, to which
+was assigned the duty of rear-guard. We remained upon the crest of the
+hill till half-past one, the men being formed in line of battle and
+directed to lie down till the time for them to march. Our sentinels had
+been posted with extra precaution, so that they might be withdrawn an
+hour or two after the brigade should move. Extra reserves were assigned
+to them, and Major Hines put in command of the whole detachment, with
+orders to keep in communication with me at the extreme rear of the
+marching column. It was interesting to observe the effect of this night
+movement upon the men. Their imagination was excited by the novelty of
+the situation, and they furnished abundant evidence that the unknown is
+always, in such cases, the wonderful. The night had cleared off and the
+stars were out. The Confederate position was eastward from us, and as a
+bright star rose above the ridge on which the enemy was, we could hear
+soldiers saying in a low tone to each other, "There goes a fire
+balloon--it must be a signal--they must have discovered what we are
+doing!" The exaggerated parallax at the horizon made the rising star
+seem to move rapidly for the first few minutes, and men, ignorant of
+this, naturally mistook its character. In a similar way an occasional
+shot on the picket line would be the cause of a subdued excitement. I
+doubt if soldiers ever make a night movement in an enemy's presence
+without being under a nervous strain which exaggerates the importance of
+everything they see and hear, and this gives uncertainty and increases
+the difficulty of such duty. It is no small part of the duty of
+officers, in such cases, to allay this tendency to excitement, to
+explain the situation, and by a wise mixture of information and
+discipline to keep the men intelligently cool and in full command of
+their faculties.</p>
+<p>General Rosecrans had gone with the head of the column, and had left
+with me Major Slemmer, his inspector-general, to bring him word when the
+rear of the column should be in march. Slemmer was the officer who, as a
+lieutenant, had distinguished himself by holding Fort Pickens in
+Pensacola harbor at the outbreak of the rebellion. He was a man of
+marked character, and in view of his experience it may easily be
+understood that we had no lack of interesting matter for conversation as
+we paced in rear of the reclining men during the midnight hours. His
+failing health prevented his taking the prominent part in the war that
+his abilities warranted, but I have retained, from that evening's work
+together, a pleasing impression of his character and a respect for his
+military knowledge and talents. In impressing on me the fact that my
+position was the one of special honor in this movement, he expressed the
+wish that Rosecrans had himself remained there; but the result showed
+that hardly less than the commanding general's own authority and energy
+could have got the column forward in the mud and darkness. The troops
+had marched but a mile or two when they overtook part of the wagon train
+toiling slowly over the steep and slippery hills. Here and there a team
+would be "stalled" in the mud, and it looked as if daylight would
+overtake us before even a tolerably defensive position would be reached.
+Rosecrans now gave his personal supervision to the moving of the wagons
+and artillery,--wagon-master's work, it maybe said, but it was work
+which had to be done if the little army was not to be found in the
+morning strung out and exposed to the blows of the enemy if he should
+prove enterprising.</p>
+<p>We who were at the rear did not know of the difficulty the column
+was having, and when my messenger reported the rear of the preceding
+brigade a mile or more from the camp, I gave the order to march, and my
+men filed into the road. Slemmer went forward to inform the general that
+we were in movement, and I remained with Major Hines till all was quiet,
+when he was directed to call in his pickets and sentinels and follow. I
+had gone hardly a mile when we were brought to a halt by the head of the
+brigade overtaking those who had preceded us. Word was brought back that
+the artillery was finding great difficulty in getting over the first
+considerable hill west of the mountain. We ourselves were upon the
+downward road from the mountain crest, but our way led along the side of
+a spur of the mountain which towered above us on our left. We were in a
+dense wood that shut out the stars, and in darkness that could almost be
+felt. I rode back a little to meet Hines and to keep some distance
+between the column and his little rear-guard. We sent a chain of
+sentinels over the hill commanding the road, and waited, listening for
+any evidence that the enemy had discovered our movement and followed. An
+hour passed in this way, and the column moved on a short distance. Again
+there was a halt, and again a deployment of our sentries. When at last
+day broke, we were only three or four miles from our camp of the evening
+before; but we had reached a position which was easily defensible, and
+where I could halt the brigade and wait for the others to get entirely
+out of our way. The men boiled their coffee, cooked their breakfast, and
+rested. Early in the forenoon a small body of the enemy's cavalry
+followed us, but were contented with very slight skirmishing, and we
+marched leisurely to Camp Lookout before evening. Such night marches
+from the presence of an enemy are among the most wearing and trying in
+the soldier's experience, yet, in spite of the temptation to invest them
+with extraordinary peril, they are rarely interfered with. It is the
+uncertainty, the darkness, and the effect of these upon men and
+officers that make the duty a delicate one. The risk is more from panic
+than from the foe, and the loss is more likely to be in baggage and in
+wagons than in men. I have several times been in command of rear-guards
+on such occasions, and I believe that I would generally prefer an open
+withdrawal by day. It is not hard to hold even a bold enemy at bay by a
+determined brigade or division, and a whole army may be saved from the
+exhaustion and exposure which rapidly fill the hospitals, and may cost
+more than several combats between rear and advance guards.</p>
+<p>My brigade remained two or three days at Camp Lookout, where we were
+put upon the alert on the 7th by a reported advance of the enemy, but it
+amounted to nothing more than a lively skirmish of some cavalry with our
+outposts. Lee was glad to move back to Meadow Bluff to be nearer his
+supplies, and Rosecrans encamped his troops between Hawk's Nest and the
+Tompkins farm, all of them being now within a few miles of Gauley
+Bridge. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. v. p. 253. See also Official Atlas, pl. ix.]</span> Part of
+my brigade garrisoned the post at the bridge, but by Rosecrans's
+direction my own headquarters tents were pitched near his own upon the
+Tompkins farm. Both parties now remained in observation till near the
+end of October. Floyd, more enterprising in plans than resolute or
+skilful in carrying them out, had obtained Lee's consent to make an
+attempt to render our position untenable by operations on the opposite
+side of New River. Lee had intended to co-operate by moving against us
+with the rest of his force, but on the 20th of October the reports from
+the Staunton region were so threatening that he determined to send
+Loring back there, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 908.]</span> and this, of course, settled it that Lewisburg would be
+covered in front only by Wise's Legion, commanded by Colonel Davis.
+Although Floyd complained of this change of plan, he did not abandon his
+purpose, but ordering the militia on that side of the river to
+reassemble, he marched to Fayette C. H. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v. p.
+286.]</span> </p>
+<p>Rosecrans had distributed his brigades in <i>echelon</i> along the
+turnpike,--Schenck's, the most advanced, being ten miles from Gauley
+Bridge; McCook's eight miles, where the road from Fayette C. H. by way
+of Miller's Ferry comes in across New River; Benham's six miles, whilst
+of my own one regiment at the Tompkins farm guarded headquarters, and
+the rest were at Gauley Bridge and lower posts where they could protect
+the navigation of the Kanawha. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 253.]</span> McCook by Rosecrans's direction marched to Fayette C. H.
+about the 20th of October, and on his return reported that only guerilla
+parties were abroad in that vicinity. Rosecrans seems to have expected
+that at least a foothold would be kept on the other side of New River at
+Miller's Ferry, but McCook left nothing there, and when he tried to
+place a detachment on that side about the 25th, the shore and cliffs
+were found to be held by a force of sharpshooters. This marked the
+advance of Floyd, who established his camp in front of Fayette C. H. at
+the forking of the roads to Miller's Ferry and to Gauley Bridge. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 285.]</span>
+For a few days he made no serious demonstration, and Rosecrans hastened
+forward the work of clothing and paying his men, recruiting his teams
+and bringing back to the ranks the soldiers whom exposure had sent to
+the hospital. He had heard in a trustworthy way of Lee's intention to
+move against us by the turnpike whilst Floyd advanced on the other side
+of the river, but Tie had not yet learned of the withdrawal of Lee with
+Loring's troops. He therefore remained quiet and expectant, awaiting the
+definite development of events.</p>
+<p>As this had been my first service in the field as part of a larger
+command, I was keenly alive to the opportunity of comparing the progress
+we had made in discipline and instruction with that of other brigades,
+so that I might cure defects in my own methods and improve the soldierly
+character as well as the administration of my own command. I was
+gratified to see in my troops evidence of a pride in their own
+organization and a wholesome emulation, which made them take kindly to
+the drill and discipline which were necessary to improvement. I was
+particularly interested in observing Rosecrans's methods with the men.
+His standard of soldierly excellence was high, and he was earnest in
+insisting that his brigadiers and his staff officers should co-operate
+vigorously in trying to attain it. His impulsiveness, however, led him
+sometimes into personal efforts at discipline where the results were at
+least doubtful. He would sometimes go out through the camps in the
+evening, and if he saw a tent lighted after "taps," or heard men singing
+or talking, he would strike loudly on the canvas with the flat of his
+sword and command silence or the extinguishment of the light. The men,
+in good-humored mischief, would try different ways of "getting even"
+with him. One that gave much amusement to the camp was this: the men in
+a tent thus attacked pretended to believe that their regimental
+wagon-master was playing a practical joke on them, and shouted back to
+him all sorts of rough camp chaff. When the exasperated general appeared
+at the door of the tent, they were, of course, overwhelmed with the most
+innocent astonishment, and explained that that wagon-master was in the
+habit of annoying them, and that they really had not heard the "taps." I
+have been with the general in approaching a picket, when he would hotly
+lecture a sentinel who showed ignorance of some of his duties or
+inattention to them. I thought I could see in all such cases that it
+would have been wiser to avoid any unnecessary collision with the
+privates, but to take the responsible officer aside and make him
+privately understand that he must answer for such lack of instruction or
+of discipline among his men. An impulsive man is too apt to meddle with
+details, and so to weaken the sense of responsibility in the
+intermediate officers, who hate to be ignored or belittled before the
+soldiers. But if Rosecrans's method was not an ideal one, it was at
+least vigorous, and every week showed that the little army was improving
+in discipline and in knowledge of duty.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</p>
+<p>COTTON MOUNTAIN</p>
+<p>Floyd cannonades Gauley Bridge--Effect on Rosecrans--Topography of
+Gauley Mount--De Villiers runs the gantlet--Movements of our
+forces--Explaining orders--A hard climb on the mountain--In the post at
+Gauley Bridge--Moving magazine and telegraph--A balky
+mule-team--Ammunition train under fire--Captain Fitch a model
+quartermaster--Plans to entrap Floyd--Moving supply trains at
+night--Method of working the ferry--of making flatboats--The Cotton
+Mountain affair--Rosecrans dissatisfied with Benham--Vain plans to reach
+East Tennessee.</p>
+<p>On the 1st of November the early morning was fair but misty, and a
+fog lay in the gorge of New River nearly a thousand feet below the
+little plateau at the Tompkins farm, on which the headquarters tents
+were pitched. General Rosecrans's tents were not more than a hundred
+yards above mine, between the turnpike and the steep descent to the
+river, though both our little camps were secluded by thickets of young
+trees and laurel bushes. Breakfast was over, the fog was lifting out of
+the valley, and I was attending to the usual morning routine of clerical
+work, when the report and echo of a cannon-shot, down the gorge in the
+direction of Gauley Bridge, was heard. It was unusual, enough so to set
+me thinking what it could mean, but the natural explanation suggested
+itself that it was one of our own guns, perhaps fired at a target. In a
+few moments an orderly came in some haste, saying the general desired to
+see me at his tent. As I walked over to his quarters, another shot was
+heard. As I approached, I saw him standing in front of his tent door,
+evidently much excited, and when I came up to him, he said in the rapid,
+half-stammering way peculiar to him at such times: "The enemy has got a
+battery on Cotton Mountain opposite our post, and is shelling it! What
+d' ye think of that?" The post at the bridge and his headquarters were
+connected by telegraph, and the operator below had reported the fact of
+the opening of the cannonade from the mountain side above him, and added
+that his office was so directly under fire that he must move out of it.
+Indeed he was gone and communication broken before orders could be sent
+to him or to the post. The fact of the cannonade did not disturb me so
+much as the way in which it affected Rosecrans. He had been expecting to
+be attacked by Lee in front, and knew that McCook was exchanging shots
+across the river with some force of the enemy at Miller's Ferry; but
+that the attack should come two miles or more in our rear, from a point
+where artillery had a plunging fire directly into our depot of supplies
+and commanded our only road for a half-mile where it ran on a narrow
+bench along New River under Gauley Mountain cliffs, had been so
+startling as to throw him decidedly off his balance. The error in not
+occupying Cotton Mountain himself was now not only made plain, but the
+consequences were not pleasant to contemplate. I saw that the best
+service I could render him for the moment was to help him back into a
+frame of mind in which cool reasoning on the situation would be
+possible. I have already stated the contrast between my own sense of
+care when in sole command and the comparative freedom from it when a
+senior officer came upon the field; and I now realized how much easier
+it was for a subordinate to take things coolly. I therefore purposely
+entered into a discussion of the probabilities of the situation, and
+drew it out at length enough to assist the general in recovering full
+control of himself and of his own faculties. We could not, from where we
+stood, see the post at Gauley Bridge nor even the place on Cotton
+Mountain where the enemy's battery was placed, and we walked a little
+way apart from our staff officers to a position from which we could see
+the occasional puffs of white smoke from the hostile guns. From our camp
+the road descended sharply along the shoulders of steep hills covered
+with wood for a mile and a half, till it reached the bottom of the New
+River gorge, and then it followed the open bench I have mentioned till
+it reached the crossing of the Gauley. On the opposite side of New River
+there was no road, the mass of Cotton Mountain crowding close upon the
+stream with its picturesque face of steep inclines and perpendicular
+walls of rock. The bridge of boats which Rosecrans had planned at Gauley
+Bridge had not been built, because it had been found impossible to
+collect or to construct boats enough to make it. We were therefore still
+dependent on the ferry. Whilst the general and I were talking, Colonel
+De Villiers galloped up, having crossed at the ferry and run the
+gantlet of skirmishers whom he reported as lining the other side of New
+River opposite the unsheltered part of our road. He had recently
+reported for duty, having, as he asserted, escaped in a wonderful way
+from captivity in Libby Prison at Richmond. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The Confederates claimed
+that he had been allowed to act as hospital attendant on parole, and
+that he violated his obligation in escaping. We had no means of
+verifying the facts in the case.]</span> His regiment was at the bridge
+and he was the senior officer there; but, in his characteristic
+light-headed way, instead of taking steps to protect his post and
+re-establish the telegraph communications, he had dashed off to report
+in person at headquarters. As he was willing to take the risks of the
+race back again, he was allowed to go, after being fully instructed to
+set up a new telegraph office in a ravine out of range of fire, to put
+the ferry-boat out of danger as soon as he should be over, and prepare
+the ordnance stores to be moved into the valley of Scrabble Creek at
+night. I begged the general to be allowed to go back with De Villiers,
+as the thing I most feared was some panic at the post which might result
+in the destruction of our stores in depot there. He, however, insisted
+on my staying at headquarters for a time at least.</p>
+<p>Information of the attack was sent to the brigades up the river, and
+Schenck, who was farthest up, was directed to push out scouting parties
+and learn if there was any advance of the enemy from Sewell Mountain.
+Benham, who was nearest, was ordered to send down part of his brigade to
+meet the efforts of the enemy to stop our communication with Gauley
+Bridge. The battery of mountain howitzers under Captain Mack of the
+regular army was also ordered to report at headquarters, with the
+intention of placing it high up on Gauley cliffs, where it could drop
+shells among the enemy's skirmishers on the opposite bank of the river.
+An hour or two passed and the detachment from Benham's brigade
+approached. It was the Thirteenth Ohio, led by one of its field
+officers, who halted the column and rode up to General Rosecrans for
+orders. The general's manner was still an excited one, and in the
+rapidity with which his directions were given the officer did not seem
+to get a clear idea of what was required of him. He made some effort to
+get the orders explained, but his failure to comprehend seemed to
+irritate Rosecrans, and he therefore bowed and rode back to his men with
+a blank look which did not promise well for intelligent action. Noticing
+this, I quietly walked aside among the bushes, and when out of sight
+hurried a little in advance and waited at the roadside for the column. I
+beckoned the officer to me, and said to him, "Colonel, I thought you
+looked as if you did not fully understand the general's wishes." He
+replied that he did not, but was unwilling to question him as it seemed
+to irritate him. I said that was a wrong principle to act on, as a
+commanding officer has the greatest possible interest in being clearly
+understood. I then explained at large what I knew to be Rosecrans's
+purposes. The officer thanked me cordially and rode away. I have
+ventured to give this incident with such fulness, because subsequent
+events in Rosecrans's career strengthened the impression I formed at the
+time, that the excitability of his temperament was such that an
+unexpected occurrence might upset his judgment so that it would be
+uncertain how he would act,--whether it would rouse him to a heroism of
+which he was quite capable, or make him for the time unfit for real
+leadership by suspending his self-command. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: See Crittenden's testimony
+in Buell Court of Inquiry, Official Records, vol. xvi. pt. i. p. 578.
+Cist's account of Chickamauga, Army of the Cumberland, p. 226, and chap,
+xxvii., <i>post</i>.]</span> </p>
+<p>Soon after noon I obtained permission to go to Gauley Bridge and
+assume command there; but as the road along New River was now
+impracticable by reason of the increased fire of the enemy upon it, I
+took the route over the top of Gauley Mountain, intending to reach the
+Gauley River as near the post as practicable. I took with me only my
+aide, Captain Christie, and an orderly. We rode a little beyond the top
+of the mountain, and sending the orderly back with the horses, proceeded
+on foot down the northern slope. We soon came to the slashing which I
+had made in August to prevent the enemy's easy approach to the river
+near the post. The mist of the morning had changed to a drizzling rain.
+We had on our heavy horsemen's overcoats with large capes, cavalry boots
+and spurs, swords and pistols. This made it toilsome work for us. The
+trees had been felled so that they crossed each other in utmost
+confusion on the steep declivity. Many of them were very large, and we
+slid over the great wet trunks, climbed through and under branches, let
+ourselves down walls of natural rock, tripped and hampered by our
+accoutrements, till we came to the end of the entanglement at what we
+supposed was the edge of the river. To our dismay we found that we had
+not kept up stream far enough, and that at this point was a sheer
+precipice some thirty feet high. We could find no crevices to help us
+climb down it. We tried to work along the edge till we should reach a
+lower place, but this utterly failed. We were obliged to retrace our
+steps to the open wood above the slashing. But if the downward climbing
+had been hard, this attempt to pull ourselves up again,--</p>
+<p>"... superasque evadere ad auras,"--</p>
+<p>was labor indeed. We stopped several times from sheer exhaustion, so
+blown that it seemed almost impossible to get breath again. Our clothes
+were heavy from the rain on the outside and wet with perspiration on the
+inside. At last, however, we accomplished it, and resting for a while at
+the foot of a great tree till we gained a little strength, we followed
+the upper line of the slashing till we passed beyond it, and then turned
+toward the river, choosing to reach its banks high up above the camp
+rather than attempt again to climb through the fallen timber. Once at
+the water's edge we followed the stream down till we were opposite the
+guard post above the camp, when we hailed for a skiff and were ferried
+over.</p>
+<p>It was now almost dark, but the arrangements were soon made to have
+wagons ready at the building on the Kanawha front used as a magazine,
+and to move all our ammunition during the night to the place I had
+indicated in the ravine of Scrabble Creek, which runs into the Gauley.
+The telegraph station was moved there and connection of wires made. We
+also prepared to run the ferry industriously during the night and to put
+over the necessary trainloads of supplies for the troops above. A place
+was selected high up on the hill behind us, where I hoped to get up a
+couple of Parrott guns which might silence the cannon of the enemy on
+Cotton Mountain. I was naturally gratified at the expressions of relief
+and satisfaction of the officers of the post to have me in person among
+them. They had already found that the plunging fire from the heights
+across the river was not a formidable thing, and that little mischief
+would happen if the men were kept from assembling in bodies or large
+groups within range of the enemy's cannon.</p>
+<p>The fatigues of the day made sleep welcome as soon as the most
+pressing duties had been done, and I went early to rest, giving orders
+to the guard at my quarters to call me at peep of day. The weather
+cleared during the night, and when I went out in the morning to see what
+progress had been made in transferring the ammunition to a safe place, I
+was surprised to find the train of wagons stopped in the road along the
+Gauley in front of the camp. General Rosecrans's ordnance officer was of
+the regular army, but unfortunately was intemperate. He had neglected
+his duty during the night, leaving his sergeant to get on without
+guidance or direction. The result was that the ordnance stores had not
+been loaded upon the waiting wagons till nearly daylight, and soon after
+turning out of the Kanawha road into that of the Gauley, the mules of a
+team near the head of the train balked, and the whole had been brought
+to a standstill. There was a little rise in the road on the hither side
+of Scrabble Creek, where the track, cutting through the crest of a
+hillock, was only wide enough for a single team, and this rise was of
+course the place where the balky animals stopped. The line of the road
+was enfiladed by the enemy's cannon, the morning fog in the valley was
+beginning to lift under the influence of the rising sun, and as soon as
+the situation was discovered we might reckon upon receiving the fire of
+the Cotton Mountain battery. The wagon-drivers realized the danger of
+handling an ammunition train under such circumstances and began to be
+nervous, whilst the onlookers not connected with the duty made haste to
+get out of harm's way. My presence strengthened the authority of the
+quartermaster in charge, Captain E. P. Fitch, helped in steadying the
+men, and enabled him to enforce promptly his orders. He stopped the
+noisy efforts to make the refractory mules move, and sent in haste for a
+fresh team. As soon as it came, this was put in place of the balky
+animals, and at the word of command the train started quickly forward.
+The fog had thinned enough, however, to give the enemy an inkling of
+what was going on, and the rattling of the wagons on the road completed
+the exposure. Without warning, a ball struck in the road near us and
+bounded over the rear of the train, the report of the cannon following
+instantly. The drivers involuntarily crouched over their mules and
+cracked their whips. Another shot followed, but it was also short, and
+the last wagon turned the shoulder of the hill into the gorge of the
+creek as the ball bounded along up the Gauley valley. It was perhaps
+fortunate for us that solid shot instead of shrapnel were used, but it
+is not improbable that the need of haste in firing made the battery
+officer feel that he had no time to cut and adjust fuses to the
+estimated distance to our train; or it is possible that shells were used
+but did not explode. It was my first acquaintance with Captain Fitch,
+who had accompanied Rosecrans's column, and his cool efficiency was so
+marked that I applied for him as quartermaster upon my staff. He
+remained with me till I finally left West Virginia in 1863, and I never
+saw his superior in handling trains in the field. He was a West
+Virginian, volunteering from civil life, whose outfit was a good
+business education and an indomitable rough energy that nothing could
+tire.</p>
+<p>During the evening of the 1st of November General Benham's brigade
+came to the post at Gauley Bridge to strengthen the garrison, and was
+encamped on the Kanawha side near the falls, where the widening of the
+valley put them out of range of the enemy's fire. The ferry below the
+falls was called Montgomery's and was at the mouth of Big Falls Creek,
+up which ran the road to Fayette C. H. A detachment of the enemy had
+pushed back our outposts on this road, and had fired upon our lower camp
+with cannon, but the position was not a favorable one for them and they
+did not try to stay long. After a day or two we were able to keep
+pickets on that side with a flatboat and hawser to bring them back,
+covered by artillery on our side of the Kanawha.</p>
+<p>During November 2d Rosecrans matured a plan of operations against
+Floyd, who was now definitely found to be in command of the hostile
+force on Cotton Mountain. It was also learned through scouting parties
+and the country people that Lee had left the region, with most of the
+force that had been at Sewell Mountain. It seemed possible therefore to
+entrap Floyd, and this was what Rosecrans determined to attempt. Benham
+was ordered to take his brigade down the Kanawha and cross to the other
+side at the mouth of Loup Creek, five miles below. Schenck was ordered
+to prepare wagon bodies as temporary boats, to make such flatboats as he
+could, and get ready to cross the New River at Townsend's Ferry, about
+fifteen miles above Gauley Bridge. McCook was ordered to watch Miller's
+Ferry near his camp, and be prepared to make a dash on the short road to
+Fayette C. H. I was ordered to hold the post at Gauley Bridge, forward
+supplies by night, keep down the enemy's fire as far as possible, and
+watch for an opportunity to co-operate with Benham by way of
+Montgomery's Ferry. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. v. p. 254.]</span> Benham's brigade was
+temporarily increased by 1500 picked men from the posts between Kanawha
+Falls and Charleston. He was expected to march up Loup Creek and cut off
+Floyd's retreat by way of Raleigh C. H., whilst Schenck should
+co-operate from Townsend's Ferry. On the 5th the preparations had been
+made, and Benham was ordered to cross the Kanawha. He did so on the
+night of the 6th, but except sending scouting parties up Loup Creek, he
+did nothing, as a sudden rise in New River made Rosecrans suspend the
+concerted movement, and matters remained as they were, awaiting the fall
+of the river, till the 10th.</p>
+<p>For a week after the 1st, Floyd's battery on Cotton Mountain fired
+on very slight provocation, and caution was necessary in riding or
+moving about the camp. The houses of the hamlet were not purposely
+injured, for Floyd would naturally be unwilling to destroy the property
+of West Virginians, and it was a safe presumption that we had removed
+the government property from buildings within range of fire, as we had
+in fact done. Our method of forwarding supplies was to assemble the
+wagon trains near my lower camp during the day, and push them forward to
+Gauley Mount and Tompkins farm during the night. The ferry-boat at
+Gauley Bridge was kept out of harm's way in the Gauley, behind the
+projection of Gauley Mount, but the hawser on which it ran was not
+removed. At nightfall the boat would be manned, dropped down to its
+place, made fast to the hawser by a snatch-block, and commence its
+regular trips, passing over the wagons. The ferries, both at the bridge
+and at Montgomery's, were under the management of Captain Lane of the
+Eleventh Ohio and his company of mechanics. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Captain P. P. Lane of
+Cincinnati, later colonel of the regiment.]</span> We had found at points
+along the Kanawha the gunwales of flatboats, gotten out by lumbermen in
+the woods and brought to the river bank ready to be put into boats for
+the coal trade, which had already much importance in the valley. These
+gunwales were single sticks of timber, sixty or eighty feet long, two or
+three feet wide, and say six inches thick. Each formed the side of a
+boat, which was built by tying two gunwales together with cross timbers,
+the whole being then planked. Such boats were three or four times as
+large as those used for the country ferries upon the Gauley and New
+rivers, and enabled us to make these larger ferries very commodious. Of
+course the enemy knew that we used them at night, and would fire an
+occasional random shot at them, but did us no harm.</p>
+<p>The enemy's guns on the mountain were so masked by the forest that
+we did not waste ammunition in firing at them, except as they opened,
+when our guns so quickly returned their fire that they never ventured
+upon continuous action, and after the first week we had only occasional
+shots from them. We had planted our sharpshooters also in protected
+spots along the narrower part of New River near the post, and made the
+enemy abandon the other margin of the stream, except with scattered
+sentinels. In a short time matters thus assumed a shape in which our
+work went on regularly, and the only advantage Floyd had attained was to
+make us move our supply trains at night. His presence on the mountain
+overlooking our post was an irritation under which we chafed, and from
+Rosecrans down, everybody was disgusted with the enforced delay of
+Benham at Loup Creek. Floyd kept his principal camp behind Cotton
+Mountain, in the position I have already indicated, in an inaction which
+seemed to invite enterprise on our part. His courage had oozed out when
+he had carried his little army into an exposed position, and here as at
+Carnifex Ferry he seemed to be waiting for his adversary to take the
+initiative.</p>
+<p>To prepare for my own part in the contemplated movement, I had
+ordered Captain Lane to build a couple of flatboats of a smaller size
+than our large ferry-boats, and to rig these with sweeps or large oars,
+so that they could be used to throw detachments across the New River to
+the base of Cotton Mountain, at a point selected a little way up the
+river, where the stream was not so swift and broken as in most places.
+Many of our men had become expert in managing such boats, and a careful
+computation showed that we could put over 500 men an hour with these
+small scows.</p>
+<p>From the 5th to the both Rosecrans had been waiting for the waters
+to subside, and pressing Benham to examine the roads up Loup Creek so
+thoroughly that he could plant himself in Floyd's rear as soon as orders
+should be given. Schenck would make the simultaneous movement when
+Benham was known to be in march, and McCook's and my own brigade would
+at least make demonstrations from our several positions. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v.
+pp. 255, 261-265.]</span> From my picket post at Montgomery's Ferry I had
+sent scouts up the Fayette road, and by the 9th had discovered such
+symptoms of weakness in the enemy that I thought the time had come to
+make an effort to dislodge the battery and get command of the crest of
+Cotton Mountain overlooking my camp. On the both I made a combined
+movement from both my upper and lower camps. Colonel De Villiers was
+ordered to take all of the Eleventh Ohio fit for duty (being only 200
+men), and crossing by the small boats, make a vigorous reconnoissance
+over the New River face of Cotton Mountain, reaching the crest if
+possible. Lieutenant-Colonel Enyart of the First Kentucky was directed
+to cross below the falls with a similar force, and push a reconnoissance
+out on the Fayette road, whilst he also should try to co-operate with De
+Villiers in clearing the enemy from the heights opposite Gauley Bridge.
+The place at which De Villiers crossed was out of sight and range from
+the enemy's battery. His first boat-load of forty men reached the
+opposite shore safely, and dividing into two parties, one pushed up the
+New River to a ravine making a somewhat easy ascent toward the crest,
+whilst the others skirmished up the almost perpendicular face of the
+rocks where they landed. The remainder of the men of the Eleventh were
+put over as fast as possible, and joined their colonel in the ravine
+mentioned, up which they marched to a little clearing high up the hill,
+known as Blake's farm, where the advanced party had found the enemy. The
+battery was withdrawn as soon as De Villiers' approach at the Blake farm
+was known, supports being sent to the outpost there to check our
+advance. The men of the Eleventh, led by Major Coleman, attacked
+sharply, drove back the enemy, and succeeded in extending their right to
+the crest above the recent position of the battery. They were of course
+stretched out into a mere skirmish line, and I directed them to hold the
+crest without advancing further till Enyart should be heard from. He
+also found the enemy indisposed to be stubborn, and skirmished up the
+opposite side of the mountain till he joined hands with De Villiers on
+the top. The enemy seemed to be increasing before them, and our men held
+their position as directed, having relieved us from the hostile
+occupation of ground commanding our camps. Enyart's reconnoitring party
+sent toward Fayette advanced a mile on that road and remained in
+observation, finding no enemy. I reported our success to Rosecrans, and
+doubtful whether he wished to press the enemy in front till Benham and
+Schenck should be in his rear, I asked for further instructions. General
+Rosecrans authorized me to take over the rest of my available force and
+press the enemy next day, as he was very confident that Benham would by
+that time be in position to attack him in rear. Accordingly I passed the
+Second Kentucky regiment over the river during the night and joined them
+in person on the crest at daybreak. The remainder of the First
+Kentucky, under Major Lieper, was ordered to cross at Montgomery's Ferry
+later in the day, and advance upon the Fayette road as far as possible.
+My climb to the crest of Cotton Mountain was a repetition of the
+exhausting sort of work I had tried on Gauley Mount on the 1st. I took
+the short route straight up the face of the hill, clambering over rocks,
+pulling myself up by clinging to the laurel bushes, and often literally
+lifting myself from one great rocky step to another. This work was
+harder upon officers who were usually mounted than upon the men in the
+line, as we were not used to it, and the labor of the whole day was
+thus increased, for of course we could take no horses. Resuming the
+advance along the mountain crest, the enemy made no serious resistance,
+but fell back skirmishing briskly, till we came to more open ground
+where the mountain breaks down toward some open farms where detachments
+of Floyd's forces had been encamped. Their baggage train was seen in the
+distance, moving off upon the Fayette turnpike. As we were now in the
+close neighborhood of the whole force of the enemy, and those in our
+presence were quite as numerous as we, I halted the command on the
+wooded heights commanding the open ground below, till we should hear
+some sound from Benham's column. Toward evening Major Lieper came up on
+our right to the place where the Fayette road passes over a long spur of
+the mountain which is known in the neighborhood as Cotton Hill. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v.
+pp. 272-275, and map, p. 82, <i>ante</i>. The greater mass in the angle
+of the rivers was not uniformly called Cotton Mountain then, and in my
+report I spoke of passing along those crests toward Cotton Hill,
+meaning this elevation on the Fayette road.]</span> Here he was halted,
+and nothing being heard from co-operating columns, the troops bivouacked
+for the night.</p>
+<p>Rosecrans had informed Benham of my advance and ordered him to push
+forward; but he spent the day in discussing the topography which he was
+supposed to have learned before, and did not move. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 266-268.]</span>
+Schenck had not been put across New River at Townsend's Ferry, because
+Rosecrans thought it hazardous to do this whilst Floyd was near that
+point in force, and he intended that when Floyd should be forced to
+attack Benham (whose command was now equal to two brigades), it would
+withdraw the enemy so far that Schenck would have room to operate after
+crossing. But as Benham had not advanced, toward evening of the 11th
+Rosecrans sent him orders to march immediately up the Kanawha to my
+position and follow Major Lieper on the road that officer had opened to
+the top of Cotton Hill, and as much further toward Fayette C. H. as
+possible, taking Lieper's detachment with him; meanwhile I was ordered
+to keep the remainder of my troops on the mountain in the position
+already occupied. Benham was expected to reach Lieper's position by ten
+o'clock that evening, but he did not reach there in fact till three
+o'clock in the following afternoon (12th). <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v.
+pp. 256, 273.]</span> After some skirmishing with an outpost of the enemy
+at Laurel Creek behind which Major Lieper had been posted, nothing more
+was done till the evening of the 13th. Floyd's report shows that he
+retired beyond Fayette C. H. on the 12th, having conceived the mistaken
+idea that Benham's column was a new reinforcement of 5000 men from Ohio. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 287.]</span>
+Abandoning the hope of using Schenck's brigade in a movement from
+Townsend's Ferry, Rosecrans now ordered him to march to Gauley Bridge on
+the 13th, and joining Benham by a night march, assume command of the
+moving column. Schenck did so, but Floyd was now retreating upon Raleigh
+C. H. and a slight affair with his rear-guard was the only result.
+Fayette C. H. was occupied and the campaign ended. It would appear from
+official documents that Floyd did not learn of Benham's presence at the
+mouth of Loup Creek till the 12th, when he began his retreat, and that
+at any time during the preceding week a single rapid march would have
+placed Benham's brigade without resistance upon the line of the enemy's
+communications. Rosecrans was indignant at the balking of his elaborate
+plans, and ordered Benham before a court-martial for misconduct; <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v. p.
+669.]</span> but I believe that McClellan caused the proceedings to be
+quashed to avoid scandal, and Benham was transferred to another
+department. It is very improbable that Schenck's contemplated movement
+across New River at Townsend's Ferry could have been made successfully;
+for his boats were few and small, and the ferrying would have been slow
+and tedious. Floyd would pretty surely learn of it soon after it began,
+and would hasten his retreat instead of waiting to be surrounded. It
+would have been better to join Schenck to Benham by a forced march as
+soon as the latter was at the mouth of Loup Creek, and then to push the
+whole to the Fayette and Raleigh road, Rosecrans leading the column in
+person. As Floyd seems to have been ignorant of what was going on in
+Loup Creek valley, decisive results might have followed from
+anticipating him on his line of retreat. Capturing such a force, or, as
+the phrase then went, "bagging it," is easier talked of than done; but
+it is quite probable that it might have been so scattered and
+demoralized as to be of little further value as an army, and
+considerable parts of it might have been taken prisoners.</p>
+<p>Rosecrans had begun the campaign in August with the announced
+purpose of marching to Wytheville and Abingdon in the Holston valley,
+and thence into East Tennessee. McClellan had cherished the idea of
+making the Kanawha line the base of operations into the same region;
+still later Fremont, and after him Halleck did the same. Looking only at
+the map, it seemed an easy thing to do; but the almost wilderness
+character of the intervening country with its poor and sparsely
+scattered people, the weary miles of steep mountain-roads becoming
+impassable in rainy weather, and the total absence of forage for
+animals, were elements of the problem which they all ignored or greatly
+underestimated. It was easy, sitting at one's office table, to sweep the
+hand over a few inches of chart showing next to nothing of the
+topography, and to say, "We will march from here to here;" but when the
+march was undertaken, the natural obstacles began to assert themselves,
+and one general after another had to find apologies for failing to
+accomplish what ought never to have been undertaken. After a year or
+two, the military advisers of the War Department began to realize how
+closely the movements of great bodies of soldiers were tied to rivers
+and railways; but they seemed to learn it only as the merest civilian
+could learn it, by the experience of repeated failures of plans based on
+long lines of communication over forest-clad mountains, dependent upon
+wagons to carry everything for man and beast.</p>
+<p>Instead of reaching Wytheville or Abingdon, Rosecrans found that he
+could not supply his little army even at Big Sewell Mountain; and except
+for a few days, he occupied no part of the country in advance of my
+positions in August, then held by a single brigade in the presence of
+the same enemy. It was not Floyd's army, but the physical obstacles
+presented by the country that chained him to Gauley Bridge. I shall have
+occasion hereafter to note how the same ignoring of nature's laws came
+near starving Burnside's command in East Tennessee, where the attempt to
+supply it by wagon trains from Lexington in Kentucky or from Nashville
+failed so utterly as to disappear from the calculation of our problem of
+existence through the winter of 1863-64.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</p>
+<p>WINTER-QUARTERS</p>
+<p>An impracticable country--Movements suspended--Experienced troops
+ordered away--My orders from Washington--Rosecrans objects--A
+disappointment--Winter organization of the Department--Sifting our
+material--Courts-martial--Regimental schools--Drill and picket duty--A
+military execution--Effect upon the army--Political sentiments of the
+people--Rules of conduct toward them--Case of Mr. Parks--Mr.
+Summers--Mr. Patrick--Mr. Lewis Ruffner--Mr. Doddridge--Mr. B. F.
+Smith--A house divided against itself--Major Smith's journal--The
+contrabands--A fugitive-slave case--Embarrassments as to military
+jurisdiction.</p>
+<p>Floyd's retreat was continued to the vicinity of Newberne and Dublin
+Depot, where the Virginia and East Tennessee Railway crosses the upper
+waters of New River. He reported the country absolutely destitute of
+everything and the roads so broken up that he could not supply his
+troops at any distance from the railroad. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v.
+pp. 287,288.]</span> Rosecrans was of a similar opinion, and on the 19th
+of November signified to General McClellan <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>id</i>., p. 657.]</span>
+his purpose to hold Gauley Bridge, Cheat Mountain, and Romney as the
+frontier of his department, and to devote the winter to the instruction
+and discipline of his troops, and the sifting out of incompetent
+officers. About the 1st of December he fixed his headquarters at
+Wheeling, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 669, 685. On January 21 I called attention to the anomaly of
+bounding the department by the Kanawha River on the south, and
+correction was at once made by General McClellan. <i>Id</i>., p. 706.]</span>
+assigning the District of the Kanawha to my command, with headquarters
+at Charleston. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 670, 691.]</span> This gave me substantially the same territorial
+jurisdiction I had in the summer, but with a larger body of troops.</p>
+<p>Before we left Gauley Bridge, however, I received orders direct from
+army headquarters at Washington to take my three oldest Ohio regiments
+and report to General Buell in Kentucky. This was exactly in accordance
+with my own strong desire to join a large army on one of the principal
+lines of operation. I therefore went joyfully to Rosecrans, supposing,
+of course, that he also had received orders to send me away. To my
+intense chagrin I found that he not only was without such orders, but
+that he was, naturally enough, disposed to take umbrage at the sending
+of orders direct to me. He protested against the irregularity, and
+insisted that if his forces were to be reduced, he should himself
+indicate those which were to go. He carried his point on the matter, and
+was directed to send eight regiments to Buell. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v. p.
+671.]</span> He insisted that I should stay, and whilst the reasons he
+gave were sufficiently complimentary, it was none the less a great
+disappointment to have to abandon the hope of service in a more
+important field. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id.</i>
+pp. 259, 657.]</span> There was nothing to be done but to summon
+philosophy to my aid, and to hope that all would turn out for the best.
+Before Rosecrans left Gauley Bridge four more regiments were added to
+the eight already ordered away, together with four batteries of
+artillery. Some new regiments had joined us, and the aggregate of troops
+remaining was perhaps not much below the number present when Rosecrans
+reached Carnifex Ferry in September; but most of them were freshly
+organized regiments, with whom the work of drill and discipline had to
+begin at first lessons. Three of the batteries taken away were regulars,
+and the other was Loomis's Michigan battery, one of the oldest and best
+instructed of our volunteer batteries. The places of these were not
+supplied. The good policy of these reductions is not to be questioned;
+for it was agreed that nothing aggressive could be done in the mountains
+during the winter, and it was wise to use part of the forces
+elsewhere.--Yet for those of us who had hoped to go with the troops, and
+now found ourselves condemned to the apparently insignificant duty of
+garrisoning West Virginia, the effect was, for the time, a very
+depressing one.</p>
+<p>General Schenck had left us on account of sickness, and did not
+return. His brigade was again commanded by Colonel Scammon, as it had
+been at Carnifex Ferry, and was stationed at Fayette C. H. One regiment
+was at Tompkins farm, another at Gauley Bridge, two others at intervals
+between that post and Charleston, where were three regiments out of what
+had been my own brigade. Three partially organized West Virginia
+regiments of infantry and one of cavalry were placed at recruiting
+stations in the rear, and one Ohio regiment was posted at Barboursville.
+The chain of posts which had been established in the summer between
+Weston and Cross Lanes was not kept up; but the Thirty-sixth Ohio,
+Colonel George Crook, was stationed at Cross Lanes, reporting to me, as
+did all the other troops enumerated above.</p>
+<p>The Cheat Mountain district continued in command of General Milroy,
+his principal posts being at Beverly and Huttonsville, with small
+garrisons holding the mountain passes. General Kelley remained also in
+command of the railroad district covering the communication with
+Washington by the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. General J. J. Reynolds
+was assigned to command a new division organizing at Romney, but was
+soon transferred to another department.</p>
+<p>Such was the general organization of the department for the winter,
+and we soon settled down to regular work in fitting the troops for the
+next campaign. Courtsmartial were organized to try offenders of all
+grades, and under charges of conduct prejudicial to good order and
+military discipline, worthless officers were driven from the service and
+negligent ones disciplined. Regimental schools were opened, and
+strenuous efforts were made to increase the military knowledge and skill
+of the whole command. Careful drill was enforced, and picket and outpost
+duty systematically taught. Each post became a busy camp of instruction,
+and the regiments repeated under more favorable circumstances the work
+of the original camp in Ohio.</p>
+<p>The work of the military courts gave me one very unpleasant duty to
+perform, which, happily, was of rare occurrence and never again fell to
+my lot except on a single occasion in North Carolina near the close of
+the war. A soldier of the First Kentucky Volunteers was condemned to
+death for desertion, mutiny, and a murderous assault upon another
+soldier. The circumstances were a little peculiar, and gave rise to
+fears that his regiment might resist the execution. I have already
+mentioned the affair of Captain Gibbs <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Appointed Captain and
+Assistant Commissary of Subsistence, U. S. Vols., October 1.]</span> who
+had shot down a mutinous man of the Second Kentucky at Gauley Bridge in
+the summer, and who had been acquitted by a court-martial. The camp is
+very like a city in which popular impressions and rumors have quick
+circulation and large influence. The two Kentucky regiments were so
+closely related as to be almost one, and were subject to the same
+influences. A bitter feeling toward Captain Gibbs prevailed in them
+both, and camp demagogues busied themselves in trying to make mischief
+by commenting on the fact that the officer was acquitted whilst the
+private was condemned. There was not a particle of justice in this, for
+the one had simply suppressed a mutiny, whereas the other was inciting
+one. But it is not necessary for complaints to be just among those who
+are very imperfectly informed in regard to the facts, and very
+unpleasant reports were received as to the condition of things in the
+regiment to which the condemned man belonged.</p>
+<p>It is the military custom, in executions by shooting, to select the
+firing party from the regiment to which the condemned man belongs. To
+have changed the rule would have looked like timidity, and I determined
+that it must not be done, but resolved upon an order of procedure which
+would provide, as far as possible, against the chances of interference.
+On such occasions the troops are usually paraded upon three sides of a
+hollow square, without arms, the place of execution being in the middle
+of the open side, where the prisoner kneels upon his coffin. The place
+chosen was in the meadows on the lower side of the Elk River, opposite
+Charleston, a short distance from the regimental camp. The camps of two
+other regiments at the post were half a mile from the place of
+execution. These regiments were, therefore, marched to the field with
+their arms. That to which the prisoner belonged was marched without arms
+to its position as the centre of the parade, and the others were formed
+on their right and left at right angles, thus forming the three sides of
+the enclosure. The arms of these last regiments were stacked immediately
+behind them where they could be seized in a moment, but the parade was
+formed without muskets. Captain Gibbs was on duty as commissary at my
+headquarters, and his appearance with the staff would have been
+unpleasant to himself as well as a possible cause of excitement in the
+Kentucky regiment. To solve the difficulty without making a significant
+exception, I ordered only the personal staff and the adjutant-general
+with the chief surgeon to accompany me, leaving out the administrative
+officers of both quartermaster's and commissary's departments.</p>
+<p>When the parade was formed, I took my place with my staff at the
+right of the line, and, as upon a review, rode slowly down the whole
+line, on the inside of the square. In going along the front of the First
+Kentucky, I took especial pains to meet the eyes of the men as they were
+turned to me in passing, desirous of impressing them with my own feeling
+that it was a solemn but inevitable duty. Immediately after we returned
+to our places, the music of the dead-march was heard, and an ambulance
+was seen approaching from the camp, escorted by the provost-marshal and
+the execution party with the music. The solemn strains, the slow
+funereal step of the soldiers, the closed ambulance, the statue-like
+stillness of the paraded troops made an impression deeper and more awful
+than a battle scene, because the excitement was hushed and repressed.
+The ambulance stopped, the man was helped out at the back, and led by
+the provost-marshal to his place upon the coffin, where he was
+blindfolded. The firing party silently took its place. The muskets were
+cocked and aimed, while the noise of the retiring ambulance covered the
+sound. The provost-marshal, with a merciful deception, told the prisoner
+he must wait a moment and he would return to him before the final order,
+but stepping quickly out of the range of the muskets, he gave the signal
+with his handkerchief, and the man fell dead at the volley, which
+sounded like a single discharge. The detail of soldiers for the firing
+had been carefully instructed that steadiness and accuracy made the most
+merciful way of doing their unwelcome duty. The surgeon made his
+official inspection of the body, which was placed in the coffin and
+removed in the ambulance. The drums and fifes broke the spell with quick
+marching music, the regiments took their arms, sharp words of command
+rattled along the lines, which broke by platoons into column and moved
+rapidly off the field.</p>
+<p>I confess it was a relief to have the painful task ended, and
+especially to have it ended in the most perfect order and discipline.
+The moral effect was very great, for our men were so intelligent that
+they fully appreciated the judicial character of the act, and the
+imposing solemnity of the parade and execution made the impression all
+the more profound. As it was accompanied and followed by a searching
+test of the capacity and character of their officers, of which they
+daily saw the effects in the retirement of some from the service and in
+the increased industry and studious devotion to duty of all, it gave a
+new tone to the whole command. I spared no effort to make the feeling
+pervade every regiment and company, that the cause of the country, their
+own success and honor, and even their own personal safety depended upon
+their entering the next campaign with such improved discipline and
+instruction as should make them always superior to an equal number of
+the enemy. Leaves of absence and furloughs were limited as closely as
+possible, and I set the example of remaining without interruption on
+duty, though there were many reasons why a visit home was very
+desirable. My wife made me a visit at Charleston in mid-winter, and this
+naturally brought me into more frequent social relations to the people,
+and led me to observe more closely their attitude to the government and
+its cause.</p>
+<p>Before the secession of Virginia a very large majority of the
+inhabitants of the Kanawha valley were Unionists; but the attachment to
+the state organization had become so exaggerated in all slave-holding
+communities, that most of the well-to-do people yielded to the plea that
+they must "go with their State." The same state pride led this class of
+people to oppose the division of Virginia and the forming of the new
+State on the west of the mountains. The better class of society in
+Charleston, therefore, as in other towns, was found to be disloyal, and
+in sympathy with the rebellion. The young men were very generally in the
+Confederate army; the young women were full of the most romantic
+devotion to their absent brothers and friends, and made it a point of
+honor to avow their sentiments. The older people were less
+demonstrative, and the men who had a stake in the country generally
+professed acquiescence in the position of West Virginia within the
+Union, and a desire to bring back their sons from the Confederate
+service. The necessity of strict watch upon the communications sent
+through the lines brought to my notice a great deal of family history
+full of suffering and anxiety, and showed that that was indeed a fearful
+situation for a family when its young men were not only separated from
+them by military service in the field, but could only be heard from by
+the infrequent chances of communication under flags of truce, and with
+all the restrictions and reserves necessary to the method. The rule I
+adopted in dealing personally with non-combatants of either sex was to
+avoid all controversy or discussion, to state with perfect frankness but
+courteously my own attitude and sense of duty, and to apply all such
+stringent rules as a state of war compels with an evenness of temper and
+tone of dispassionate government which should make as little chafing as
+possible. Most intelligent people, when they are not excited, are
+disposed to recognize the obligations imposed upon a military officer in
+such circumstances, and it was rarely the case that any unpleasant
+collisions occurred.</p>
+<p>The following incident will illustrate some of the embarrassments
+likely to occur. When I reached Charleston in July previous, I was
+visited by the wife of a gentleman named Parks, who told me that her
+husband had left the valley with General Wise, but not in any military
+capacity, being fearful that he might suffer arrest at our hands on
+account of his sympathy with the Confederates. I told her, what I had
+told to a formal deputation of citizens, that I did not propose to
+meddle with non-combatants if they in good faith remained at home,
+minding their own business, and carefully abstaining from giving aid or
+information to the enemy. I had, on general principles, a dislike for
+test oaths, and preferred to make conduct the test, and to base my
+treatment of people on that, rather than on oaths which the most
+unscrupulous would be first to take. Had her husband known this, she
+said, he would not have left home, and begged that she might be allowed
+to send an open letter through the lines to him to bring him back. I
+allowed her to do so at the first proper opportunity, and Mr. Parks at
+once returned. In the latter part of September, however, Governor
+Peirpoint of West Virginia thought it necessary to arrest some prominent
+citizens, known as Secessionists, and hold them as hostages for Union
+men that the Confederate troops had seized and sent to Richmond. It
+happened that Mr. Parks was arrested as one of these hostages, without
+any knowledge on the part of the civil authorities of the circumstances
+under which he had returned home. I was ignorant of his arrest till I
+received a letter from the lady, complaining bitterly of what seemed to
+her a breach of faith. I was at Sewell Mountain at the time, but lost no
+time in writing her a careful explanation of the complete disconnection
+between his arrest by the civil authorities as a hostage, and a promise
+of non-interference with him on my part as an officer of the United
+States army. I also showed her that the arrest of non-combatant Union
+men by the Confederate forces was the real cause of her husband's
+unpleasant predicament. In view of the circumstances, however, I thought
+it right to request the Governor to substitute some other hostage for
+Mr. Parks, so that there might not be the least question whether the
+letter or the spirit of my military safeguard had been broken, and the
+result was that the gentleman was very soon at home again.</p>
+<p>The most prominent citizen of the valley was the Hon. George
+Summers, who had represented it in the Congress of the United States,
+and had opposed secession in the Virginia Convention with a vigor that
+had brought him into personal peril. When, however, secession was an
+accomplished fact, his ideas of allegiance to his State so far
+influenced him that he was unwilling to take active part in public
+affairs, and sought absolute retirement at his pleasant home a little
+below Charleston on the Kanawha. His house was on a hill overlooking the
+beautiful valley, broad enough at this point to give room for ample
+fields in the rich bottom lands. I had called upon him, as I passed with
+my troops when I went up the valley. He was a dignified and able man,
+just past middle life, but in full physical and mental force, and
+capable of exerting a very great influence if he could have thrown
+himself heartily into public activity. But he was utterly saddened and
+depressed by the outbreak of civil war, and deliberately chose the part
+of suffering in seclusion whatever it might bring, unable to rouse
+himself to a combative part. As a slave-holder, he was bitter against
+the anti-slavery movement, and as a Unionist he condemned the
+Secessionists. He was very glad to have the Kanawha valley in the
+possession of the National troops, now that Wise had made the effort to
+occupy it for the Confederacy; though he had tried to procure the
+adoption of a policy which should leave it neutral ground,--a policy as
+impossible here as in Kentucky. The result was that he was distrusted by
+both sides, for in civil war each acts upon the maxim that "he that is
+not for us is against us." I renewed my acquaintance with him in the
+winter, making his house the limit of an occasional ride for exercise. I
+appreciated his feelings, and respected his desire to set an example of
+obedient private citizenship with renunciation of all other or more
+active influence.</p>
+<p>There were other men of social prominence who had less hesitation in
+throwing themselves actively upon the National side. Mr. Patrick was an
+elderly man, of considerable wealth, whose home was a very similar one
+to Mr. Summers', a little nearer to Charleston upon the same road. His
+wife was of old Virginia stock, a relative of Chief Justice Marshall,
+and a pronounced Southern woman, though too good a wife to make her
+sympathies give annoyance to her husband or his guests. Lewis Ruffner
+was also a prominent Union man, and among the leaders of the movement to
+make West Virginia a separate State. Mr. Doddridge, long the cashier and
+manager of the Bank at Charleston, whose family was an old and
+well-known one, was an outspoken Unionist, and in the next year, when
+the war put an end for the time to banking in the valley, he became a
+paymaster in the National army. Colonel Benjamin F. Smith was a
+noteworthy character also. He was a leading lawyer, a man of vigorous
+and aggressive character, and of tough fibre both physically and
+mentally. He shared the wish of Summers to keep West Virginia out of the
+conflict if possible, but when we had driven Wise out of the valley, he
+took a pronounced position in favor of the new state movement. A little
+afterward he was appointed District Attorney for the United States.
+Although the loyal people had such competent leaders, the majority of
+the men of wealth and of the families recognized as socially eminent
+were avowed Secessionists. They were a small minority of the whole
+people, but in all slave-holding communities social rank is so powerful
+that their influence was out of proportion to their numbers. Even the
+leaders of the Unionists found their own "house divided against itself,"
+for scarce one of them but had a son in Wise's legion, and the
+Twenty-second Virginia Regiment was largely composed of the young men of
+Charleston and the vicinity. I have already referred to the journal of
+Major Smith which fell into my hands as "captured rebel mail," and its
+pages are full of pathetic evidence of the conflicting emotions which
+such a situation excited. He was the son of B. F. Smith, whom I have
+just mentioned, and whilst in Floyd's camp in front of us at Sewell
+Mountain he wrote: "My source of constant trouble is that my father will
+be in danger. Wicked and unscrupulous men, with whom he has lived in
+friendship for years, absolutely thirst for his blood, as I truly
+believe. He and Summers, as one of their friends remarked to me to-day,
+are especial objects of hatred and aversion to men here. I am actually
+leading a set of men one of whose avowed objects is the arrest and the
+judicial or lynch murder of my father!" In the next month he heard "the
+startling news" that his father had fully identified himself with the
+new state movement, and writes: "Those with whom I was connected, call
+and curse him as a traitor,--and he knew it would be so! Why my dear
+father has chosen to place me in this terrible situation is beyond my
+comprehension. I have been shocked beyond description in contemplating
+the awful consequences to the peace, safety, and happiness of both of
+us!" The family distress and grief revealed by accident in this case is
+only an example of what was common in all the families of prominent
+Union men. In some cases, as in that of Major Smith, the young men
+resigned their commissions and made their way home, finding the mental
+and moral strain too great to bear; but in many more, pride and the
+influence of comrades kept them in the Confederate service with the
+enlisted men who could not resign, and with hearts sorely torn by
+conflicting duties, they fought it out to the end.</p>
+<p>The slavery question was the vexed one which troubled the relations
+of the army and the people in all the border States. My own position was
+that of the party which had elected Mr. Lincoln. We disclaimed any
+purpose of meddling with the institution in the States which remained
+loyal to the Union, whilst we held it to be within the war powers of the
+government to abolish it in the rebellious States. We also took
+satisfaction in enforcing the law which freed the "contrabands" who were
+employed by their masters in any service within the Confederate armies.
+These principles were generally understood and acquiesced in by the West
+Virginians; but it was impossible to come to any agreement in regard to
+fugitive slaves who took refuge in our camps. The soldiers and many of
+the officers would encourage the negroes to assert their freedom, and
+would resist attempts to recapture them. The owners, if Union men, would
+insist that the fugitives should be apprehended and restored to them by
+military authority. This was simply impossible, for the public sentiment
+of the army as a whole was so completely with the slaves that any such
+order would have been evaded and made a farcical dead letter. The
+commanders who made such orders uniformly suffered from doing it; for
+the temper of the volunteer army was such that the orders were looked
+upon as evidence of sympathy with the rebellion, and destroyed the
+usefulness of the general by creating an incurable distrust of him among
+his own men. Yet nearly all the department commanders felt obliged at
+first, by what they regarded as the letter of the law, to order that
+fugitive slaves claimed by loyal citizens should be arrested, if within
+the camps, and delivered up.</p>
+<p>Within the district of the Kanawha I tried to avoid the difficulty
+by stringent orders that slaves should be kept out of the camps; but I
+declined to order the troops to arrest and return them. I had two little
+controversies on the subject, and in both of them I had to come in
+collision with Colonel Benjamin Smith. After they were over we became
+good friends, but the facts are too important an illustration of the
+war-time and its troubles to be omitted.</p>
+<p>The first raised the question of "contraband." A negro man was
+brought into my camp by my advance-guard as we were following Floyd to
+Sewell Mountain in September. He was the body-servant of Major Smith,
+and had deserted the major, with the intention of getting back to his
+family at Charleston. In our camp he soon learned that he was free,
+under the Act of Congress, and he remained with us, the servants about
+headquarters giving him food. When I returned to Gauley Bridge, Mr.
+Smith appeared and demanded the return of the man to him, claiming him
+as his slave. He, however, admitted that he had been servant to Major
+Smith in the rebel army with his consent. The man refused to go with
+him, and I refused to use compulsion, informing Mr. Smith that the Act
+of Congress made him free. The claimant then went to General Rosecrans,
+and I was surprised by the receipt, shortly after, of a note from
+headquarters directing the giving up of the man. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Letter of Major Darr, acting
+A. A. G., November 18.]</span> On my stating the facts the matter was
+dropped, and I heard no more of it for a month, the man meanwhile
+disappearing. Soon after my headquarters were moved to Charleston, in
+December, I received another note from headquarters, again directing the
+delivery of the fugitive. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Letter of Captain Hartsuff, A. A. G., December 13.]</span> Again I gave
+a temperate and clear statement of the facts, adding that I had reason
+to believe the man had now taken advantage of his liberty to go to Ohio.
+Mr. Smith's case thus ended, but it left him with a good deal of
+irritation at what he thought a wrong done to him as well as
+insubordination on my part.</p>
+<p>In March following, another case arose, and I received a paper from
+headquarters containing an alleged statement of the facts, and referred
+to me in usual course for report. I had been absent from Charleston when
+the incidents occurred, but made careful inquiry satisfying myself of
+the truth, and perhaps cannot give an intelligent explanation better
+than by quoting the report itself, for its tone shows the sort of
+annoyance I felt, and it exhibits some of the conditions of an army
+command involving administrative duties that were far from pleasant.</p>
+<p>I said: "The document is in the handwriting of B. F. Smith, Esq., U.
+S. District Attorney, residing here, though signed only by John Slack,
+Jr., and William Kelly; the former an acting deputy U. S. marshal, the
+latter the jailer at the county jail. Its composition is so peculiar
+that it is difficult to tell what part of the statement is Slack's or
+Kelly's and what is Colonel Smith's, and therefore I do not know whom to
+hold responsible for the misstatements contained in it.</p>
+<p>"Mr. Slack is a respectable young man, who I believe would do his
+duty as far as he understands it, but who has not energy enough to keep
+him from being the tool of others. Mr. Kelly, the jailer, is
+sufficiently described when I state the fact that he has attempted to
+add to his profits as turnkey by selling bad whisky to soldiers put in
+his calaboose, at the rate of five dollars per pint bottle. Mr. Smith,
+the District Attorney, has lost no opportunity of being annoying to the
+military officers here, since the controversy about the negro man
+captured from his son, Major Isaac Smith of the rebel army. This
+reference to the parties concerned is necessary to enable the commanding
+general to understand the <i>animus</i> of their complaints.</p>
+<p>"The facts are substantially as follows: Henry H. Hopkins is a
+notorious Secessionist living near Coal River, and a man of considerable
+property. Some time before his arrest he sent the negro man mentioned in
+the complaint <i>South</i>, in charge of some Logan County
+'bushwhackers.' On his way and in McDowell County the man managed to
+escape and returned into Hopkins's neighborhood, near Boone C. H., where
+he took his wife and three children alleged to have been the property of
+a woman named Smoot, and brought them to this post. Upon his
+representation that he had escaped from armed rebels in McDowell County,
+and without further knowledge of the facts, the Post Quartermaster set
+him at work. About the 19th of February Hopkins came to town with Mrs.
+Smoot, and without notice to the quartermaster or any color of authority
+by any civil process, procured the aid of Kelly, the jailer, seized the
+negro and took him to Wright's hotel. The provost-marshal, knowing that
+Hopkins was an active Secessionist and that he had been personally
+engaged in the combat at Boone C. H. last fall, ordered his arrest.
+Shortly after, he was waited upon by B. F. Smith, Esq., U. S. District
+Attorney, who stated that he had known Mr. Hopkins for a good many years
+and was confident he was a good Union man, although in fact the
+deputy-marshal at the very time held a warrant for the arrest of Hopkins
+for treason and conspiracy, under an indictment found in the U. S.
+Court, of which, to say the least of it, it is very strange Mr. Smith
+should have been ignorant. At the request of the provost-marshal, the
+warrant was served on Hopkins, who was admitted to bail in the sum of
+$2000, which is most inadequate security for the appearance of a man of
+Hopkins's wealth and influence, accused of such a crime. After the
+arrest of Hopkins, the negro being left to himself returned to his
+quarters, but sometime during the night stole a skiff and attempted to
+escape with his family down the Kanawha River. The circumstances of his
+accident in the river, the drowning of his family and his subsequent
+capture, I have not been able to investigate fully.</p>
+<p>"The only matter of controversy now is in regard to the horse. The
+bar-keeper at the tavern denies that he has said it was taken by
+Wagon-master West (a man who has since been discharged by the Post
+Quartermaster), and I have been unable to trace it, although every
+effort has been made in perfect good faith to do so. The man West was
+put under arrest, to see if that would make him admit anything with
+regard to it, but without effect. I advised Slack to procure some one
+who knew the horse to pass through the government stables and teams, and
+if he recognized the animal to let me know at once, and I would give an
+order to him to obtain it. The statement that 'Slack says he told Cox he
+could not find him, that a soldier or employee in his command got him,
+and if proper measures were taken he could be had,' is both impudent and
+false, and I respectfully submit that it is not, in matter or manner,
+such a complaint as the Commanding General should call upon me to reply
+to.</p>
+<p>"The statement of these civil officials at once gives me the
+opportunity and makes it my duty to state to the Commanding General that
+the only occasions on which these gentlemen show any vitality, is when
+some Secessionist's runaway negroes are to be caught. For any purpose of
+ordinary municipal magistracy they seem utterly incompetent. I have
+urged the organization of the county and of the town, but to no effect.
+Every street that is mended, every bridge that is repaired, or wharf
+that is put in order, must be done by the army at the expense of the U.
+S. government. They will not elect officers to look after the poor, but
+leave us to feed the starving near our camps. They will establish no
+police, and by force of public opinion keep suitors out of the courts
+ordered to be held by Governor Peirpoint. Yet a U. S. Commissioner,
+without any warrant or even pretended jurisdiction, will stop any
+vagrant negro, drive him through the streets in person, and say that he
+does it as a U. S. officer! Of course we simply look on and have had no
+controversy with them, unless driven to it by direct efforts on their
+part to interfere with our necessary regulations.</p>
+<p>"The simple fact is that a few men of property who are avowed
+Secessionists control the town and make its public sentiment. By this
+means they practically control these officers also. Many of the negroes
+employed at the salt-works, and under hire in other capacities in the
+vicinity, are the slaves of rebels who are either in the rebel army or
+fled with it from the valley. The great problem upon which the
+Secessionists remaining here are exercising their ingenuity is to find
+the means of using the U. S. Commissioner and Marshal to secure to them
+the services of these persons without cost or legitimate contract of
+hiring, for the present profit of these gentlemen here, and the future
+advantage of their compatriots across the lines.</p>
+<p>"Colonel Smith and Mr. Slack say that they made the statement at the
+express request of Major Darr of the Commanding General's staff. A
+simple inquiry by the Major would have saved me the necessity of writing
+this long letter."</p>
+<p>It is due to General Rosecrans to say that although he had been
+anything but an anti-slavery man before the war, he made no pressure
+upon me to violate my own sense of right in these or similar cases, and
+they ended with my reports of the facts and of my reasons for the course
+I pursued. The side lights thrown upon the situation by the letter last
+quoted will be more instructive than any analysis I could now give, and
+the spice of flavor which my evident annoyance gave it only helps to
+revive more perfectly the local color of the time. In the case of Mr.
+Smith's "negro boy Mike," I had the satisfaction of finding in the
+intercepted correspondence of his son the major, the express recognition
+of the man's right to liberty by reason of his use in the enemy's
+service, and could not deny myself the pleasure of calling attention to
+it in my letters to headquarters.</p>
+<p>My experience during the winter begot in me a rooted dislike for the
+military administration of the border districts, and strengthened my
+wish to be in the most active work at the front, where the problems were
+the strictly military ones of attack and defence in the presence of the
+armed enemy. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I did not
+lack evidence that a steady rule, based on principles frankly avowed and
+easily understood, was rapidly bringing the people to be content to be
+in the Union, even those most inclined to secession. This result I am
+gratified to find attested by General Lee and General Floyd, who in
+dispatches very lately printed confessed the effect my administration
+had in quieting the valley during the first months of my occupation.
+Official Records, vol. li. pt. ii. pp. 220, 225.]</span> Not that the
+winter was without compensating pleasures, for we were recipients of
+much social attention of a very kindly and agreeable sort, and carried
+away cherished memories of refined family circles in which the collision
+of opinions and the chafing of official relations were forgotten in
+hearty efforts to please. With the unconditionally loyal people our
+sympathies were very deep, for we found them greatly torn and disturbed
+in the conflict of duties and divided affections, where scarce a single
+household stood as a unit in devotion to the cause, and where the
+triumph of either side must necessarily bring affliction to some of them.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</p>
+<p>VOLUNTEERS AND REGULARS</p>
+<p>High quality of first volunteers--Discipline milder than that of the
+regulars--Reasons for the difference--Practical efficiency of the
+men--Necessity for sifting the officers--Analysis of their defects--What
+is military aptitude?--Diminution of number in ascending scale--Effect
+of age--Of former life and occupation--Embarrassments of a new
+business--Quick progress of the right class of young men--Political
+appointments--Professional men--Political leaders naturally prominent in
+a civil war--"Cutting and trying"--Dishonest methods--An excellent army
+at the end of a year--The regulars in 1861--Entrance examinations for
+West Point--The curriculum there--Drill and experience--Its
+limitations--Problems peculiar to the vast increase of the
+army--Ultra-conservatism--Attitude toward the Lincoln
+administration--"Point de z&eacute;le"--Lack of initiative--Civil work
+of army engineers--What is military art?--Opinions of experts--Military
+history--European armies in the Crimean War--True generalship--Anomaly
+of a double army organization.</p>
+<p>The work of sifting the material for an army which went on through
+the winter of 1861-62, naturally suggests an analysis of the classes of
+men who composed both parts of the military force of the nation,--the
+volunteers and the regulars. I need add nothing to what I have already
+said of the unexampled excellence of the rank and file in the regiments
+raised by the first volunteering. Later in the war, when "bounty
+jumping" and substitution for conscripts came into play, the character
+of the material, especially that recruited in the great cities and
+seaports, was much lower. I think, however, that the volunteers were
+always better men, man for man, than the average of those recruited for
+the regular army. The rigidity of discipline did not differ so much
+between good volunteer regiments and regulars, as the mode of enforcing
+it. There were plenty of volunteer regiments that could not be excelled
+in drill, in the performance of camp duty, or in the finish and
+exactness of all the forms of parades and of routine. But it was
+generally brought about by much milder methods of discipline. A captain
+of volunteers was usually followed by his neighbors and relatives. The
+patriotic zeal of the men of the company as well as their self-respect
+made them easily amenable to military rule so far as it tended to fit
+them better to do the noble work they had volunteered for, and on which
+their hearts were as fully set as the hearts of their colonels or
+generals. In the regular army, officers and men belonged to different
+castes, and a practically impassable barrier was between them. Most of
+the men who had enlisted in the long years of domestic peace were, for
+one cause or another, outcasts, to whom life had been a failure and who
+followed the recruiting sergeant as a last desperate resource when every
+other door to a livelihood was shut. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Since inducements to enlist
+have been increased by offering the chance to win a commission, I
+believe the quality of the rank and file of the regulars has been much
+improved, and as a natural consequence the officers have found it easy
+to enforce discipline by less arbitrary methods.]</span> The war made
+some change in this, but the habits and methods of the officers had been
+formed before that time and under the old surroundings. The rule was
+arbitrary, despotic, often tyrannical, and it was notorious that the
+official bearing and the language used toward the regular soldiers was
+out of the question in a volunteer organization. Exceptions could be
+found in both parts of the service, but there could be no doubt as to
+the custom and the rule. To know how to command volunteers was
+explicitly recognized by our leading generals as a quality not found in
+many regular officers, and worth noting when found. A volunteer regiment
+might have a "free and easy" look to the eye of a regular drill
+sergeant, but in every essential for good conduct and ready manoeuvre on
+the field of battle, or for heroic efforts in the crisis of a desperate
+engagement, it could not be excelled if its officers had been reasonably
+competent and faithful. There was inevitable loss of time in the
+organization and instruction of a new army of volunteers; but after the
+first year in the field, in every quality which tends to give victory in
+battle to a popular cause, the volunteer regiment was, in my judgment,
+unquestionably superior. It is necessary to say this, because there has
+been a fashion of speaking of regular regiments or brigades in the civil
+war as though they were capable of accomplishing more in proportion to
+their numbers or on some occasion of peculiar peril than the volunteers.
+I did not find it so.</p>
+<p>The material in the line, then, was as good as could be; the
+weakness was in the officers, and it was here that the sifting was
+necessary. Most of these officers had themselves enlisted as privates,
+and their patriotic zeal was not to be questioned. They had been chosen
+to be lieutenants, captains, and even colonels by their men because of
+faith in their ability to lead, or to recognize their influence in
+raising the troops. Yet a considerable part of them proved incompetent
+to command. The disqualifications were various. Some lacked physical
+strength and stamina. Some had or quickly developed intemperate habits.
+Some lacked the education and intelligence needful for official
+responsibility. Some were too indolent to apply themselves to the work
+of disciplining themselves or their men. Fitness for command is a very
+general term, yet it implies a set of qualities which intelligent people
+easily understand and attach to the phrase. Self-command is proverbially
+one of the chief. Courage and presence of mind are indispensable.
+Ability to decide and firmness to stick to a decision are necessary.
+Intelligence enough to understand the duties demanded of him and to
+instruct his subordinates in theirs is another requisite. But beside all
+these, there is a constitution of body and mind for which we can find no
+better name than military aptitude. For lack of it many estimable,
+intelligent, and brave men failed as officers. Again, not every good
+captain made a good colonel, and not every good brigade commander was
+fit for a division or a larger command. There was a constantly widening
+test of capacity, and a rapid thinning of the numbers found fit for
+great responsibilities until the command of great armies was reached,
+when two or three names are all that we can enumerate as having been
+proven during the four years of our civil strife to be fully equal to
+the task.</p>
+<p>Besides the indications of unfitness for the subordinate commands
+which I have mentioned, another classification may be made. In an
+agricultural community (and the greater part of our population was and
+is agricultural), a middle-aged farmer who had been thrifty in business
+and had been a country magistrate or a representative in the
+legislature, would be the natural leader in his town or county, and if
+his patriotism prompted him to set the example of enlisting, he would
+probably be chosen to a company office, and perhaps to a field office in
+the regiment. Absolutely ignorant of tactics, he would find that his
+habits of mind and body were too fixed, and that he could not learn the
+new business into which he had plunged. He would be abashed at the very
+thought of standing before a company and shouting the word of command.
+The tactical lessons conned in his tent would vanish in a sort of
+stage-fright when he tried to practise them in public. Some would
+overcome the difficulty by perseverance, others would give it up in
+despair and resign, still others would hold on from pride or shame,
+until some pressure from above or below would force them to retire. Some
+men of this stamp had personal fighting qualities which kept them in the
+service in spite of their tactical ignorance, like brave old Wolford of
+Kentucky, of whom it used to be jocosely said, that the command by which
+he rallied his cavalry regiment was "Huddle on the Hill, boys!"</p>
+<p>A man wholly without business training would always be in
+embarrassment, though his other qualifications for military life were
+good. Even a company has a good deal of administrative business to do.
+Accounts are to be kept, rations, clothing, arms, accoutrements, and
+ammunition are to be receipted and accounted for. Returns of various
+kinds are to be made, applications for furlough, musters, rolls, and the
+like make a good deal of clerical work, and though most of it may fall
+on the first sergeant, the captain and commissioned officers must know
+how it should be done and when it is well done, or they are sure to get
+into trouble. It was a very rare thing for a man of middle age to make a
+good company officer. A good many who tried it at the beginning had to
+be eliminated from the service in one way or another. In a less degree
+the same was found to hold true of the regimental field officers. Some
+men retain flexibility of mind and body longer than others, and could
+more easily adapt themselves to new circumstances and a new occupation.
+Of course such would succeed best. But it is also true that in the
+larger and broader commands solidity of judgment and weight of character
+were more essential than in the company, and the experience of older men
+was a more valuable quality. Such reasons will account for the fact that
+youth seemed to be an almost essential requisite for a company officer,
+whilst it was not so in the same degree in the higher positions.</p>
+<p>It was astonishing to see the rapidity with which well-educated and
+earnest young men progressed as officers. They were alert in both mind
+and body. They quickly grasped the principles of their new profession,
+and with very little instruction made themselves masters of tactics and
+of administrative routine. Add to this, bravery of the highest type and
+a burning zeal in the cause they were fighting for, and a campaign or
+two made them the peers of any officers of their grade in our own or any
+other army.</p>
+<p>Another class which cannot be omitted and which is yet very hard to
+define accurately, is that of the "political appointments."</p>
+<p>Of the learned professions, the lawyers were of course most strongly
+represented among officers of the line. The medical men were so greatly
+needed in their own professional department that it was hard to find a
+sufficient number of suitable age and proper skill to supply the
+regiments with surgeons and the hospitals with a proper staff. The
+clergy were non-combatants by profession, and a few only were found in
+other than chaplain's duty. Civil engineers, railroad contractors,
+architects, and manufacturers were well represented and were valuable
+men. Scarce any single qualification was more useful in organizing the
+army than that of using and handling considerable bodies of men such as
+mechanics and railway employees.</p>
+<p>The profession of the law is in our country so closely allied to
+political activity that the lawyers who put on the uniform were most
+likely to be classed among political appointments. The term was first
+applied to men like Banks, Butler, Baker, Logan, and Blair, most of whom
+left seats in Congress to serve in the army. If they had not done so, it
+would have been easy for critics to say that the prominent politicians
+took care to keep their own bodies out of harm's way. Most of them won
+hard-earned and well-deserved fame as able soldiers before the war was
+over. In an armed struggle which grew out of a great political contest,
+it was inevitable that eager political partisans should be among the
+most active in the new volunteer organizations. They called meetings,
+addressed the people to rouse their enthusiasm, urged enlistments, and
+often set the example by enrolling their own names first. It must be
+kept constantly in mind that we had no militia organization that bore
+any appreciable proportion to the greatness of the country's need, and
+that at any rate the policy of relying upon volunteering at the
+beginning was adopted by the government. It was a foregone conclusion
+that popular leaders of all grades must largely officer the new troops.
+Such men might be national leaders or leaders of country neighborhoods;
+but big or little, they were the necessity of the time. It was the
+application of the old Yankee story, "If the Lord <i>will</i> have a
+church in Paxton, he must take <i>sech as ther' be</i> for deacons."</p>
+<p>I have, in a former chapter, given my opinion that the government
+made a mistake in following General Scott's advice to keep its regular
+army intact and forbid its officers from joining volunteer regiments;
+but good or bad, that advice was followed at the beginning, and the only
+possible thing to do next was to let popular selection and natural
+leadership of any sort determine the company organizations. The
+governors of States generally followed a similar rule in the choice of
+field officers, and selected the general officers from those in the
+state militia, or from former officers of the army retired to civil
+life. In one sense, therefore, the whole organization of the volunteer
+force might be said to be political, though we heard more of "political
+generals" than we did of political captains or lieutenants. When the
+organization of the United States Volunteers took the place of the state
+contingents which formed the "three months' service," the appointments
+by the President were usually selections from those acting already under
+state appointment. The National Government was more conservative than
+the Confederacy in this respect. Our service was always full of colonels
+doing duty as brigadiers and brigadiers doing duty as major-generals,
+whilst the Southern army usually had a brigadier for every brigade and a
+major-general for every division, with lieutenant-generals and generals
+for the highest commands. If some rigid method had been adopted for
+mustering out all officers whom the government, after a fair trial, was
+unwilling to trust with the command appropriate to their grade, there
+would have been little to complain of; but an evil which grew very great
+was that men in high rank were kept upon the roster after it was proven
+that they were incompetent, and when no army commander would willingly
+receive them as his subordinates. Nominal commands at the rear or of a
+merely administrative kind were multiplied, and still many passed no
+small part of the war "waiting orders." As the total number of general
+officers was limited by law, it followed, of course, that promotion had
+to be withheld from many who had won it by service in the field. This
+evil, however, was not peculiar to the class of appointments from civil
+life. The faults in the first appointments were such as were almost
+necessarily connected with the sudden creation of a vast army. The
+failure to provide for a thorough test and sifting of the material was a
+governmental error. It was palliated by the necessity of conciliating
+influential men, and of avoiding antagonisms when the fate of the nation
+trembled in the balance; but this was a political motive, and the evil
+was probably endured in spite of its well-known tendency to weaken the
+military service.</p>
+<p>A few months' campaigning in the field got us rid of most of the
+"town-meeting style" of conducting military affairs in the army itself,
+though nothing could cure the practice on the part of unscrupulous men
+of seeking reputation with the general public by dishonest means. The
+newspapers were used to give fictitious credit to some and to injure
+others. If the regular correspondents of the press had been excluded
+from the camps, there would no doubt have been surreptitious
+correspondence which would have found its way into print through private
+and roundabout channels. But this again was not a vice peculiar to
+officers appointed from civil life. It should be always remembered that
+honorable conduct and devoted patriotism was the rule, and self-seeking
+vanity and ambition the exception; yet a few exceptions would be enough
+to disturb the comfort of a large command. To sum up, the only fair way
+to estimate the volunteer army is by its work and its fitness for work
+after the formative period was passed, and when the inevitable mistakes
+and the necessary faults of its first organization had been measurably
+cured. My settled judgment is that it took the field in the spring of
+1862 as well fitted for its work as any army in the world, its superior
+excellences in the most essential points fully balancing the defects
+which were incident to its composition.</p>
+<p>This opinion is not the offspring of partiality toward the volunteer
+army on the part of one himself a volunteer. It was shared by the most
+active officers in the field who came from the regular service. In their
+testimony given in various ways during the war, in their Official
+Records, and in their practical conduct in the field which showed best
+of all where their reliance was placed, these officers showed their full
+faith in and admiration for the volunteer regiments. Such an opinion was
+called out by the Committee on the Conduct of the War in its examination
+of General Gibbon in regard to the Gettysburg campaign, and his judgment
+may fairly be taken as that of the better class of the regular officers.
+He declared of some of these regiments in his division, that they were
+as well disciplined as any men he ever wished to see; that their
+officers had shown practical military talent; that a young captain from
+civil life, whom he instanced, was worthy to be made a general. He named
+regiments of volunteers which he said were among the finest regiments
+that ever fought on any field, and in which every officer was appointed
+from civil life. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Report
+of Committee on Conduct of the War, vol. iv. pp. 444-446.]</span> He
+added the criticism which I have above made, that no proper method of
+getting rid of incompetent officers and of securing the promotion of the
+meritorious had been adopted; but this in no way diminishes the force of
+his testimony that every kind of military ability was abundantly found
+in our volunteer forces and needed only recognition and encouragement.
+It would be easy to multiply evidence on this subject. General Grant is
+a witness whose opinion alone may be treated as conclusive. In his
+Personal Memoirs <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant, vol. i. p. 573.]</span> he explicitly
+and unqualifiedly says that at the close of the Vicksburg campaign his
+troops fulfilled every requirement of an army, and his volunteer
+officers were equal to any duty, some of them being in his judgment
+competent to command an independent army in the field. Sherman fully
+shared this opinion. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Letter to Halleck, Official Records, vol. xxxix. pt. iii. p. 413.]</span> </p>
+<p>In trying to form a just estimate of the officers of the regular
+army in 1861, we have to consider not only their education, but the
+character of their military life and experience up to that time. It is,
+on the whole, a salutary popular notion that "professionals" in any
+department of work are more likely to succeed than amateurs. At the
+beginning of the Civil War our only professional soldiers were the
+officers of our little regular army, nearly all of whom were graduates
+of the West Point Military Academy. Since the Mexican War of 1848, petty
+conflicts with Indians on the frontier had been their only warlike
+experience. The army was hardly larger than a single division, and its
+posts along the front of the advancing wave of civilization from the
+mouth of the Rio Grande to the Canada border were so numerous that it
+was a rare thing to see more than two or three companies of soldiers
+together. To most of the officers their parade of the battalion of
+cadets at West Point was the largest military assemblage they had ever
+seen. Promotion had been so slow that the field officers were generally
+superannuated, and very few who had a rank higher than that of captain
+at the close of 1860 did any active field work on either side during the
+Civil War. The total number of captains and lieutenants of the line
+would hardly have furnished colonels for the volunteer regiments of the
+single State of New York as they were finally mustered into the National
+service during the war; and they would have fallen far short of it when
+their own numbers were divided by the rebellion itself.</p>
+<p>Our available professional soldiers, then, were captains and
+subalterns whose experience was confined to company duty at frontier
+posts hundreds of miles from civilization, except in the case of the
+engineers, the staff corps, and some of the artillery in sea-coast
+forts. With the same exceptions, the opportunities for enlarging their
+theoretic knowledge had been small. It was before the days of post
+libraries, and books of any sort were a rarity at the garrisons. In the
+first year of the war, I expressed to General Gordon Granger my surprise
+at finding how little most line officers had added to the theoretic
+reading they got at the academy. "What could you expect," he said in his
+sweeping way, "of men who have had to spend their lives at a two-company
+post, where there was nothing to do when off duty but play draw-poker
+and drink whiskey at the sutler's shop?" This was, of course, meant to
+be picturesquely extravagant, but it hit the nail on the head, after
+all. Some of the officers of the old regime did not conceal their
+contempt for books. It was a stock story in the army that when the Utah
+expedition was fitting out in 1856, General Henry Hunt, chief of
+artillery of the army of the Potomac, then a young artillery officer,
+applied to General Twiggs, from whose command part of the expedition was
+making up, for leave to take a little box of military books. "No, sir,"
+was the peremptory response; "no room in the train for such nonsense."
+Hunt retired chop-fallen; but soon after another officer came in, with
+"General, our mess has a keg of very nice whiskey we don't want to lose;
+won't you direct the quartermaster to let it go in the wagons?" "Oh yes,
+sir. Oh yes, anything in reason!" If not true, the story is good enough
+to be true, as its currency attests; but whether true or no, the "fable
+teaches" that post-graduate study in the old army was done under
+difficulties.</p>
+<p>The course of study at West Point had narrower limitations than most
+people think, and it would be easy to be unfair by demanding too much of
+the graduates of that military college. The course of study was of four
+years, but the law forbade any entrance examinations on subjects outside
+of the usual work done in the rural common schools. The biographies of
+Grant, of Sherman, of Sheridan, of Ormsby Mitchell, and of others show
+that they in fact had little or no other preparatory education than that
+of the common country school. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Grant, in his Personal Memoirs (vol. i. p. 24), says of the school in
+his early Ohio home, that the highest branches taught there were "the
+three R's,--Reading, 'Riting, and 'Rithmetic. I never saw," he says, "an
+algebra or other mathematical work higher than the arithmetic, in
+Georgetown, until after I was appointed to West Point. I then bought a
+work on algebra in Cincinnati, but having no teacher it was Greek to
+me."]</span> The course of study and amount of education given must
+necessarily be limited, therefore, to what boys of average ability and
+such preparation could accomplish in the four years. They were no
+further advanced, on entering, than they would have to be to enter any
+ordinary fitting school for one of our first-class colleges, or the high
+schools in the graded systems of public schools in our cities. Three
+years of study would put them abreast of students entering college
+elsewhere, and four years would carry them about as far as the end of
+the Freshman year in Yale, Harvard, or Princeton. The corps of
+professors and teachers at West Point has always deservedly ranked high
+as instructors, but there is no "royal road" to knowledge, and it cannot
+be claimed that three or four years at the Military Academy would count
+for more, as general education, than the same period spent in any other
+good school. A very few men of high standing in the classes supplemented
+their education by obtaining appointments as temporary instructors in
+the academy after graduating, but most of them left their books behind
+them and began at once the subaltern's life at the distant frontier post.</p>
+<p>If we analyze the course of study they pursued, we find that it
+covered two years' work in mathematics, one in physics and chemistry,
+and one in construction of fortifications. This was the scientific part,
+and was the heaviest part of the curriculum. Then, besides a little
+English, mental philosophy, moral philosophy, and elementary law, there
+were two years' study of the French and one of Spanish. This was the
+only linguistic study, and began with the simplest elements. At the
+close of the war there was no instruction in strategy or grand tactics,
+in military history, or in what is called the Art of War. The little
+book by Mahan on Out-post Duty was the only text-book in Theory, outside
+the engineering proper. At an earlier day they had used Jomini's
+introduction to his "Grandes Op&eacute;rations Militaires," and I am
+unable to say when its use was dropped. It is not my wish to criticise
+the course of study; on the other hand, I doubt if it could be much
+improved for boys who had only the preparation required by the law. But
+since we are trying to estimate its completeness as professional
+education fitting men to command armies in the field, it is absolutely
+necessary to note the fact that it did not pretend to include the
+military art in that sense. Its scientific side was in the line of
+engineering and that only. Its prize-men became engineers, and success
+at the academy was gauged by the student's approach to that coveted
+result.</p>
+<p>That the French which was learned was not enough to open easily to
+the young lieutenant the military literature which was then found most
+abundantly in that language, would seem to be indicated by the following
+incident. In my first campaign I was talking with a regular officer
+doing staff duty though belonging in the line, and the conversation
+turned on his West Point studies. The little work of Jomini's mentioned
+above being casually referred to as having been in his course, I asked
+him if he had continued his reading into the History of the Seven Years'
+War of Frederick the Great, to which it was the introduction. He said
+no, and added frankly that he had not read even the Introduction in the
+French, which he had found unpleasantly hard reading, but in the English
+translation published under the title of the Art of War. This officer
+was a thoroughly estimable, modest, and intelligent man, and seemed in
+no way inferior to other line officers of his age and grade. It would of
+course be true that some men would build industriously upon the
+foundation laid at the academy, and perfect themselves in those things
+of which they had only acquired the elements; but the surroundings of
+frontier life at a post were so unfavorable that I believe few in fact
+did so. The officers of the engineer corps and the ordnance were
+specifically devoted to scientific careers, and could go steadily
+forward to expertness in their specialties. Those who were permanently
+attached to the staff corps or to bureaus at Washington had also
+opportunity to enlarge their professional knowledge by study if they
+were so inclined. But all these were exceptionally situated, and do not
+help us answer the question What kind and amount of military education
+was implied in the fact that a man had graduated at West Point and been
+sent to serve in the line? I have purposely omitted for the present to
+consider the physical training and the practical instruction in tactics
+by means of drill, because the question is in terms one of science, not
+of practice; that will come later. The conclusion is that the
+intellectual education at the Military Academy was essentially the same,
+as far as it went, as that of any polytechnic school, the peculiarly
+military part of it being in the line of engineering. In actual warfare,
+the laying out and construction of regular forts or the conduct of a
+regular siege is committed to professional engineers. For field work
+with an army, therefore, the mental furnishing of the West Point man was
+not superior to that of any other liberally educated man. In some of our
+volunteer regiments we had whole companies of private soldiers who would
+not have shunned a competitive examination with West Point classes on
+the studies of the Military Academy, excepting the technical
+engineering of fortifications. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+It must not be forgotten that my criticisms are strictly confined to
+the condition of military education in our Civil War period. Since that
+time some excellent work has been done in post-graduate schools for the
+different arms of the service, and field manoeuvres have been practised
+on a scale never known in our army prior to 1861. A good beginning has
+also been made, both here and in England, toward giving the young
+soldier a military library of English books.]</span> </p>
+<p>Let us look now at the physical and practical training of the cadet.
+The whole period of his student life at West Point had more or less of
+this. He was taken as a raw recruit would be, taught the school of the
+soldier in marching, in the manual of arms, and in personal carriage. He
+passed on to the drill of the squad, the platoon, the company. The
+tactics of the battalion came last, and the cadet might become a
+corporal, sergeant, lieutenant, or captain in the corps if he showed
+aptitude for drill and tactics. It is noticeable, however, that Grant
+and Sheridan remained privates during their whole cadetship, and
+Sherman, though once he became sergeant, was put back in the ranks. The
+fair conclusion is that this part of the cadet discipline is not very
+closely connected with generalship, though it is important as
+preparation for the ready handling of a company or a battalion. Sherman
+tells us, in his Memoirs, that he studied evolutions of the line out of
+the books, as a new subject, when he was in camp in front of Washington,
+after the first battle of Bull Run. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Memoirs, vol. i. p. 220.]</span> The tactical education of the cadet
+stopped at the evolutions of the battalion, and for nearly all of them
+it was, even in that respect, the education of the soldier in the ranks
+and not of the officer, since a very small proportion became officers in
+the cadet corps.</p>
+<p>This practical drill was, of course, the same as that which was used
+in organized militia regiments, and the famous Ellsworth Zouaves of
+Chicago, the New York Seventh Regiment, with a number of other militia
+regiments in different States, were sufficient proof that this training
+could be made as exact outside of the cadet corps as in it. It certainly
+was enough for the practical handling of the company and the regiment
+under the simplified tactics which not only prevailed during the war
+itself, but, with Upton's Manual as a basis, has been authoritatively
+adopted as an improvement upon the older and more complicated methods.
+It must not be forgotten that although our militia system had fallen
+into scandalous neglect, the voluntary efforts of citizen soldiers had
+kept many good independent companies organized everywhere, as well as
+full regiments in most of the older States; so that there were in fact
+more well-drilled regiments in the militia than there were in the little
+regular army. It was the small ratio all these, of both classes, bore to
+the demands of the gigantic war that was upon us, which made the problem
+so troublesome. The officers of the organized militia regiments, before
+the end of the three months' service, did what I have said it was
+desirable that those of the regular regiments should have done,--they
+scattered from their original commands and were active in organizing the
+new volunteer regiments. General De Trobriand, who went out as Colonel
+of the Fifty-fifth New York, says that the New York Seventh Regiment
+furnished three hundred officers to volunteer regiments. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: De Trobriand, Four Years
+with Potomac Army, p. 64.]</span> In a similar way, though not to the
+same extent, the other organized and disciplined militia, in both
+Eastern and Western States, furnished the skeletons of numerous new
+regiments.</p>
+<p>The really distinguishing feature in the experience of the regular
+officers of the line was their life in garrison at their posts, and
+their active work in guarding the frontier. Here they had become
+familiar with duty of the limited kind which such posts would afford.
+This in time became a second nature to them, and to the extent it
+reached, was, as other men's employments are, their business. They
+necessarily had to learn pretty thoroughly the army regulations, with
+the methods and forms of making returns and conducting business with the
+adjutant-general's office, with the ordnance office, the quartermaster's
+and subsistence departments, etc. In this ready knowledge of the army
+organization and its methods their advantage over the new volunteer
+officers was more marked, as it seemed to me, than in any and all other
+things. The routine of army business and the routine of drill had to be
+learned by every army officer. The regular officer of some years'
+standing already knew, as a matter of course, what a new volunteer
+officer must spend some time in learning. There is something of value
+also in the habit of mind formed in actual service, even if the service
+is in subaltern grades and on a petty scale. Familiarity with danger and
+with the expectation of danger is acquired, both by the Indian wars of
+the frontier and by the hunting and field sports which fill more or less
+of the leisure of garrison life.</p>
+<p>But there were some drawbacks upon the value of the preparation for
+war which these officers possessed. There was a marked conservatism as
+to military methods and arms, and an almost slavish reverence for things
+which were sanctioned by European authority, especially that of the
+second French Empire. American invention was never more fruitful than
+when applied to military weapons. Repeating and magazine small arms,
+breach-loading cannon, and Gatling guns with other repeating artillery,
+were brought out or improved with wonderful variety of form and of
+demonstrable excellence. The regular army influence was generally
+against such innovations. Not once, but frequently, regular army
+officers argued to me that the old smooth-bore musket with "buck and
+ball" cartridge was the best weapon our troops could desire. We went
+through the war with a muzzle-loading musket, the utmost that any
+commander could do being to secure repeating rifles for two or three
+infantry regiments in a whole army. Even to the end the "regular" chiefs
+of artillery insisted that the Napoleon gun, a light smooth-bore
+twelve-pounder cannon, was our best field-piece, and at a time when a
+great campaign had reduced our forces so that a reduction of artillery
+was advisable, I received an order to send to the rear my three-inch
+rifled ordnance guns and retain my Napoleons. The order was issued by a
+regular officer of much experience, but I procured its suspension in my
+own command by a direct appeal to the army commander. There was no more
+doubt then than there is to-day of the superiority of rifled guns,
+either for long-range practice with shells or in close work with
+canister. They were so much lighter that we could jump them across a
+rough country where the teams could hardly move a Napoleon. We could
+subdue our adversaries' fire with them, when their smooth-bores could
+not reach us. Yet we were ordered to throw away our advantages and
+reduce ourselves to our enemy's condition upon the obstinate prejudice
+of a worthy man who had had all flexibility drilled out of him by
+routine. Models of automatic rapid-fire and repeating field-pieces were
+familiar objects "at the rear," but I saw none of them in action in any
+army in which I served. The conservatism of the old army must be held
+responsible for this.</p>
+<p>The question of zeal and devotion to the cause for which we fought
+cannot be ignored in such a war as ours was. It is notorious that
+comparatively few of the regular officers were political friends of Mr.
+Lincoln's administration at the beginning. Of those who did not "go with
+the South" but remained true to the National flag, some were full of
+earnest patriotism, like the young officers whom I have mentioned as
+volunteering to assist the governors of States in organizing their
+contingents and as seeking places in volunteer regiments. There were
+others who meant to do their duty, but began with little hopefulness or
+zeal. There were still others who did not hesitate to predict defeat and
+to avow that it was only for professional honor or advancement that they
+continued to serve under the National flag. These last were confessedly
+soldiers of fortune. The war was an education for all who were in it,
+and many a man began with reluctance and half-heartedness who was
+abundantly radical before the conflict was over. There was, however, a
+considerable class who practised on Talleyrand's diplomatic motto,
+"point de z&egrave;le," and limited their efforts to the strict
+requirement of duty. Such men would see disaster occur for lack of a
+little spontaneity on their part, and yet be able to show that they
+literally obeyed every order received. I was once ordered to support
+with my command a movement to be made by another. It was an important
+juncture in a campaign. Wondering at delay, I rode forward and found the
+general officer I was to support. I told him I was ordered to support
+him in doing what we both saw was needing to be done; but he had no
+explicit orders to begin the movement. I said that my orders to support
+him were sufficient to authorize his action, and it was plain that it
+would be unfortunate if the thing were not done at once. He answered
+cynically, "If you had been in the army as long as I have, you would be
+content to do the things that are ordered, without hunting up others."
+The English regulars, also, have a saying, "Volunteering brings bad
+luck."</p>
+<p>There was altogether too much of this spirit in the army, and one
+who can read between the lines will see it in the history of many a
+campaign. It did not necessarily mean wavering loyalty. It was sometimes
+the mental indecision or timidity which shrinks from responsibility. It
+was sometimes also the result of education in an army on the peace
+establishment, where any spontaneity was snubbed as an impertinence or
+tyrannically crushed as a breach of discipline. I would not be
+understood to make more of these things than is necessary to a just
+estimate of the situation, but it seems to me an entirely fair
+conclusion that with us in 1861 as with the first French republic, the
+infusion of the patriotic enthusiasm of a volunteer organization was a
+necessity, and that this fully made up for lack of instruction at the
+start. This hasty analysis of what the actual preparation for war was in
+the case of the average line officer of the regular army will show, to
+some extent, the basis of my judgment that there was nothing in it which
+a new volunteer officer, having what I have called military aptitude,
+should not learn in his first campaign.</p>
+<p>How far the officers of the engineers and of the staff corps applied
+themselves to general military study, would depend upon their taste and
+their leisure. Their opportunities for doing so were much better than
+those of line officers, but there was also a tendency to immerse
+themselves in the studies of their special department of work. Very
+eminent officers of engineers have told me since the war that the
+pressure of their special professional work was such that they had found
+no time to read even the more noteworthy publications concerning the
+history of our own great struggle. The surveys of the great lakes and
+the coast, the engineering problems of our great rivers, etc., have both
+formerly and in recent years absorbed their time and their strength. The
+ordnance and the staff corps, also, had abundant special duties. Still
+it may reasonably be assumed that officers of the classes mentioned have
+usually made themselves somewhat familiar with the best writings on
+military art. If we had in the country in 1861 a class of men who could
+be called educated soldiers in the scientific sense, we certainly should
+find them in the several corps just referred to.</p>
+<p>Here, however, we have to meet the question What is military art as
+applied to the problem of winning battles or campaigns? We are obliged
+to answer that outside of the business administration and supply of an
+army, and apart from the technical knowledge of engineering and the
+construction of fire-arms and ammunition, it consists in the tactical
+handling of bodies of men in accordance with very few and very simple
+principles of strategy. The literature of the subject is found in the
+history of wars analyzed by competent men like Napoleon, Jomini, the
+Archduke Charles, Sir William Napier, Clausewitz, Moltke, Hamley, and
+others; but it may be broadly said that the principles of this criticism
+and analysis may be so briefly stated as to be printed on the back of a
+visiting-card. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Prince
+Hohenlohe-Ingelfingen, in his admirable "Letters on Strategy," states
+them in five brief primary axioms. Letters on Strategy, vol. i. pp. 9,
+10.]</span> To trace the campaigns of great soldiers under the guidance
+of such a critic as Jomini is full of interest to any intelligent
+person, and there is nothing in the subject of the slightest difficulty
+of comprehension if full and authentic topographical maps are before the
+reader. To make much instructive use of military history in this way
+demands a good deal of voluminous reading and the command of charts and
+maps extensive enough to allow the presentation of the face of a country
+on a large scale. With these advantages all wars, both ancient and
+modern, are full of instructive examples of the application of the
+simple principles of strategy under innumerable varying circumstances
+and situations; and this union of simple theory in ever-changing
+practical application is what constitutes the theoretic knowledge of the
+general as distinguished from the tactical and administrative duties of
+the subordinate. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Jomini
+expresses it thus: "J'en couclus que l'histoire militaire
+raisonn&egrave;e de plusieurs campagnes, seront la meilleure Ecole pour
+apprendre et par cons&eacute;quent pour enseigner la grande guerre: <i>la
+science des g&eacute;neraux.</i>" Grandes Operations Militaires, vol.
+i. p. 7.]</span> It was the very simplicity of the principles that made
+many successful generals question whether there was any art in the
+matter, except to use courage and natural sagacity in the actual
+situation in which the commander found himself and the enemy. Marshal
+Saxe asserted in his "R&ecirc;veries" that down to his time there had
+been no formulation of principles, and that if any had been recognized
+as such in the minds of commanders of armies, they had not made it
+known. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Jomini, in the
+work already cited, quotes Marshal Saxe thus: "Que toutes les sciences
+avaient des principes, mais que la guerre seule n'en avait point encore;
+si ces principes ont exist&eacute; dans la t&ecirc;te de quelques
+g&eacute;n&eacute;raux, nulle part ils n'ont &eacute;t&eacute;
+indiqu&eacute;s ou d&eacute;velopp&eacute;s." The same idea has been put
+quite as trenchantly by one of the most recent writers of the English
+Army, Colonel J. F. Maurice, R. A. Professor in the Farnborough Staff
+College. In the able article on "War" in the last edition of the
+Encyclopaedia Britannica, he says, "it must be emphatically asserted
+that there does not exist, and never except by pedants of whom the most
+careful students of war are more impatient than other soldiers, has
+there ever been supposed to exist, an 'art of war' which was something
+other than the methodic study of military history."]</span> </p>
+<p>It was precisely in this department of military history
+"raisonn&eacute;e" that frontier garrison life shut the young army
+officer out from the opportunities of profiting by his leisure. The
+valuable books were all foreign publications in costly form with folio
+atlases, and were neither easy to procure nor easily carried about with
+the limited means and the rigid economy of transportation which marked
+army life in the far West. That this was true even in the artillery is
+indicated by General Gibbon before the Committee on the Conduct of the
+War when questioned in reference to the relative amount of artillery
+used at Gettysburg as compared with great European battles; that
+distinguished officer having himself been in the artillery when the
+Civil War began. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+"Question. You have studied the history of battles a great deal: Now, in
+the battles of Napoleon, had they at any time half as many artillery
+engaged as there were at Gettysburg? Answer. I am not sufficiently
+conversant with military history to tell you that. I think it very
+doubtful whether more guns were ever used in any one battle before. I do
+not believe Napoleon ever had a worse artillery fire." Testimony of
+General John Gibbon, Committee on Conduct of the War, vol. iv. p. 444.
+At Gettysburg the whole number of cannon employed was about two hundred.
+Compare this with Leipzig, for instance, the "battle of the giants,"
+where <i>two thousand</i> were employed! Thiers says, "de Leipzig
+&agrave; Sch&ouml;nfeld au nord, de Sch&ouml;nfeld &agrave; Probstheyda
+&agrave; l'est, de Probstheyda &agrave; Connewitz au sud, une cannonade
+de deux mille bouches &agrave; feu termina cette bataille dit des
+g&eacute;ants, et jusqu'ici la plus grande, certainement, de tous les
+siecles." Thiers, Consulat et l'Empire, vol. xvi. p. 607.]</span> </p>
+<p>If then the officers of the regular army, as a body, were not in
+fact deeply read in what, as we have seen, Jomini calls "the science of
+generals," their advantage over equally well-educated civilians is
+reduced to a practical knowledge of the duties of the company and the
+petty post, and in comparison with the officers of well-drilled militia
+companies it amounted to little more than a better knowledge of the army
+regulations and the administrative processes. It is no reproach to them
+that this was so, for it resulted from the operation of law in the
+course of education at the Military Academy and the insignificant size
+of our army in times of peace. It had been the peculiar blessing of our
+country that a great standing army was unnecessary, and it would be
+foolish to regret that our little army could not have the experience
+with great bodies of troops and the advantages of theoretical
+instruction which are part of the life of officers in the immense
+establishments of Continental Europe. My only purpose is to make an
+approximately true balance sheet of the actual advantages of the two
+parts of our National army in 1861. Whilst on the subject, however, I
+will go a little further and say that prior to our Civil War, the
+history of European conflicts proves that there also the theoretic
+preparation of military men had not, up to that time, saved them from
+the necessity of learning both generalship and army administration in
+the terrible school of experience, during their first year in the field
+when a new war broke out after a long interval of peace.</p>
+<p>The first volume of Kinglake's "Crimean War" appeared in 1863, and I
+immediately and eagerly devoured it for the purpose of learning the
+lesson it could teach. It was one of the memorable sensations of a
+lifetime, to find that the regular armies of England, of France, and of
+Russia had had to learn their lesson anew when they faced each other on
+the shore of the Euxine, and that, whether in matters of transportation,
+of subsistence, of the hospital, of grand tactics, or of generalship,
+they had no advantage over our army of volunteers fresh from their
+peaceful pursuits. The photographic fidelity to detail on the part of
+the historian, and his apparent unconsciousness of the sweeping
+conclusions to be drawn from his pictures, made the lesson all the more
+telling. I drew a long breath of relief, and nothing which happened to
+me in the whole war so encouraged me to hopeful confidence in the
+outcome of it, as the evidence I saw that our blunders at the beginning
+had been no greater than those of old standing armies, and that our
+capacity to learn was at least as quick as theirs. Their experience,
+like ours, showed that the personal qualities of a commanding officer
+counted for much more than his theoretic equipment, and that a bold
+heart, a cool head, and practical common-sense were of much more
+importance than anything taught at school. With these, a brief
+experience would enable an intelligent man to fill nearly any
+subordinate position with fair success; without them any responsibility
+of a warlike kind would prove too heavy for him. The supreme
+qualification of a general-in-chief is the power to estimate truly and
+grasp clearly the situation on a field of operations too large to be
+seen by the physical eye at once, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Wellington said the great task of his military life was "trying to make
+out what was behind the hill."]</span> and the undaunted temper of will
+which enables him to execute with persistent vigor the plan which his
+intellect approves. To act upon uncertainties as if they were sure, and
+to do it in the midst of carnage and death when immeasurable results
+hang upon it,--this is the supreme presence of mind which marks a great
+commander, and which is among the rarest gifts even of men who are
+physically brave. The problem itself is usually simple. It is the
+confusing and overwhelming situation under which it must be solved that
+causes timidity or dismay. It is the thought of the fearful consequences
+of the action that begets a nervous state of hesitation and mental
+timidity in most men, and paralyzes the will. No education will ensure
+this greatest and most essential quality. It is born in a man, not
+communicated. With it his acquired knowledge will be doubly useful, but
+without it an illiterate slave-trader like Forrest may far outshine him
+as a soldier. Nor does success as a subordinate give any certain
+assurance of fitness for supreme command. Napoleon's marshals generally
+failed when trusted with an independent command, as Hooker did with us;
+and I do not doubt that many men, like McClellan, who failed as
+generals-in-chief, would have made brave and good subordinates. The test
+of quality is different in kind, and, as I have said, the only proof of
+its possession is in the actual trial. It is safe to say that a timid
+subordinate will not be a good commander, but it cannot be affirmed that
+a bold one will, though there are more chances in his favor.</p>
+<p>The education of peril is so powerful in bringing out the qualities
+that can master it, and for any one who has true military courage the
+acquirement of skill in the more mechanical part of his duty in war is
+so rapid, that my experience has led me to reckon low, in the
+comparison, the value of the knowledge a soldier gains in times of
+peace. I say "in the comparison." Tactics are essential to the handling
+of large bodies of men, and must be learned. But the zealous young
+soldier with aptitude for his work will learn this part of his duty so
+fast that a single campaign will find him abreast of any. At the
+beginning of a great war and in the organization of a great army, the
+knowledge of routine and of details undoubtedly saves time and saves
+cost both of treasure and of life. I am therefore far from arguing that
+the knowledge which was found in the regular army should not be made the
+most of. I have already said that it should have been scattered through
+the whole volunteer organization. So I also say that it was quite right
+to look for the higher qualities for command in those who had the
+technical information and skill. But I reckon patriotic zeal and
+devotion so high that I have no hesitation in adding, that our army as a
+whole would have been improved if the distinction between regular and
+volunteer had been abolished, and, after the first beginnings, a freer
+competition for even the highest commands had been open to all. To keep
+up the regular army organization was practically to say that a captaincy
+in it was equivalent to a brigade command in the volunteers, and to be a
+brigadier in it was a reward which regular officers looked forward to as
+a result of the successful conduct of a great campaign as
+general-in-chief of an army. The actual command in war was thus
+ridiculously belittled in the official scale in comparison with grades
+of a petty peace establishment, and the climax of absurdity was reached
+when, at the close of hostilities, men who had worthily commanded
+divisions and corps found themselves reduced to subordinate places in
+regiments, whilst others who had vegetated without important activity in
+the great struggle were outranking them by virtue of seniority in the
+little army which had existed before the Rebellion!<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</p>
+<p>THE MOUNTAIN DEPARTMENT--SPRING CAMPAIGN</p>
+<p>Rosecrans's plan of campaign--Approved by McClellan with
+modification--Wagons or pack-mules--Final form of plan--Changes in
+commands--McClellan limited to Army of the Potomac--Halleck's Department
+of the Mississippi--Fremont's Mountain Department--Rosecrans
+superseded--Preparations in the Kanawha District--Batteaux to supplement
+steamboats--Light wagons for mountain work--Fremont's plan--East
+Tennessee as an objective--The supply question--Banks in the Shenandoah
+valley--Milroy's advance--Combat at McDowell--Banks defeated--Fremont's
+plans deranged--Operations in the Kanawha valley--Organization of
+brigades--Brigade commanders--Advance to Narrows of New River--The field
+telegraph--Concentration of the enemy--Affair at Princeton--Position at
+Flat-top Mountain.</p>
+<p>As the spring of 1862 approached, the discussion of plans for the
+opening of a new campaign was resumed. Rosecrans had suggested, early in
+February, that he would prefer to attempt reaching the Virginia and East
+Tennessee Railroad by two columns moving simultaneously upon Abingdon in
+the Holston valley. One of these would start from Gauley Bridge and go
+by way of Fayette, Raleigh, and Princeton; the other would leave some
+point in the Big-Sandy valley on the common boundary of Kentucky and
+Virginia, and march by most direct route to Abingdon. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v. p.
+721.]</span> If this plan were approved, he asked that the west side of
+the Big-Sandy valley be added to his department. He proposed to depend
+largely upon pack-mule trains in place of wagons, to substitute the
+French shelter tent for the larger tents still in use, and to carry
+hand-mills by which the soldiers might grind into meal the Indian corn
+to be found in the country. McClellan, as general-in-chief, gave his
+approval, suggesting a modification in regard to the column to move from
+the Big-Sandy valley. His information led him to believe that the
+Big-Sandy River could be relied upon as navigable to Prestonburg, which
+was seventy miles from Abingdon by what was supposed to be a good road.
+He thought, therefore, that it would be easier to make Prestonburg the
+base and to use wagons. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+O, R., vol. v. p. 722.]</span> On investigation Rosecrans reported that
+the most feasible route in that region was by steamboat transportation
+to Pikeville, twenty-five miles above Prestonburg, in the Big-Sandy
+valley, and thence up the Louisa Fork of the Big-Sandy by way of Pound
+Gap to the Holston valley; but there would still be eighty-eight miles
+of marching after leaving the steamboats, and navigation on the
+Big-Sandy was limited to brief and infrequent periods of high water.</p>
+<p>On the 12th of March he submitted his modified plan to the
+adjutant-general of the army. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 744.]</span> It had grown more complex with the passage of time. The
+eastern line of the department had been moved forward so as to bring the
+South Branch of the Potomac and the Cow-pasture branch of the James
+River under Rosecrans's command. He now planned four separate columns.
+The first was to move up the south branch of the Potomac with a view to
+turn and to capture the enemy's position at Alleghany Summit or Monterey
+on the Staunton turnpike. The second and third were to be in my
+district, and to move toward the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad on the
+two sides of New River. The fourth should march from the Big-Sandy
+valley on the line indicated above. Rosecrans seems to have limited his
+plan to the occupation of the mountain valleys as far east as the Blue
+Ridge, and did not submit any scheme for uniting his columns for further
+work. He asked for reinforcements to the extent of six regiments of
+infantry, one of cavalry, and two field batteries to enable him to
+perform his task. The use of pack trains was given up, as they required
+a greater number of animals than could be procured. In fact, it was
+never found to be an economical use of mule power, and important
+movements were always confined to lines upon which wheel vehicles could
+be used. A rapid cavalry raid could be thus supplied, but heavy columns
+of infantry and artillery demanded wagon trains.</p>
+<p>The weakness of Rosecrans's scheme is found in the wide separation
+of parallel columns, which could never have co-operated with success,
+and which had no common object had success been possible. To be sure, it
+was presumed that McClellan with the Army of the Potomac, and Banks in
+the Shenandoah valley, would be operating in eastern Virginia; but as
+McClellan was already bent on making Chesapeake Bay his base, and
+keeping as far as possible from the mountains, there was no real
+connection or correlation between his purposed campaign and that of the
+others. Indeed, had he succeeded in driving Lee from Richmond toward the
+west, as Grant did three years later, the feeble columns of National
+troops coming from West Virginia would necessarily have fallen back
+again before the enemy. If the general scheme had been planned by Lee
+himself, it could not have secured for him more perfectly the advantage
+of interior lines. Yet it was in substance that which was tried when the
+spring opened.</p>
+<p>When Rosecrans's letter, enclosing his final plan, reached
+Washington, McClellan had taken the field, and President Lincoln had
+made use of the occasion to relieve him from the direction of all other
+forces, so that he might give undivided attention to his campaign with
+the Potomac army. This was done by an executive order on March 11, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. v. p.
+54.]</span> which assigned General Halleck to the command of everything
+west of a line drawn north and south through Knoxville, Tennessee, and
+formed the Mountain Department from the territory between Halleck and
+McClellan. This last department was put under the command of
+Major-General John C. Fr&eacute;mont. General Banks was commanding in
+the Shenandoah valley, but he was at this time subordinate to McClellan.
+These changes were unexpected to both McClellan and Rosecrans. The
+change in McClellan's relations to the whole army was the natural result
+of his inactivity during the autumn of 1861, and the consequent loss of
+confidence in him. The union of Buell's and Halleck's commands in the
+west was the natural counterpart to the concentration of Confederate
+armies under A. S. Johnston at Corinth, Miss., and was a step in the
+right direction. There was, however, a little too much sentiment and too
+little practical war in the construction of the Mountain Department out
+of five hundred miles of mountain ranges, and the appointment of the
+"path-finder" to command it was consistent with the romantic character
+of the whole. The mountains formed a natural and admirable barrier, at
+which comparatively small bodies of troops could cover and protect the
+Ohio valley behind them; but, for reasons which I have already pointed
+out, extensive military operations across and beyond the Alleghanies
+from west or east were impracticable, because a wilderness a hundred
+miles wide, crossed by few and most difficult roads, rendered it
+impossible to supply troops from depots on either side.</p>
+<p>Such assurances of other satisfactory employment seem to have been
+given Rosecrans that he acquiesced without open complaint, and prepared
+to turn over his command to Fr&eacute;mont when the latter should arrive
+in West Virginia. Political motives had, no doubt, much to do with
+Fr&eacute;mont's appointment. The President had lost faith in his
+military capacity as well as in his administrative ability, but the
+party which elected Mr. Lincoln had not. The Republicans of the Northern
+States had a warm side for the man they had nominated for the Presidency
+in 1856, and there was a general feeling among them that Fr&eacute;mont
+should have at least another opportunity to show what he could do in the
+field. I myself shared that feeling, and reported to him as my immediate
+superior with earnest cordiality. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. p. 35.]</span> </p>
+<p>In my own district, preparations had been made during the winter for
+the expected advance in the spring. I had visited Rosecrans at Wheeling,
+and he had conversed freely upon his plans for the new campaign. Under
+his directions the old piers of the turnpike bridge across the Gauley
+had been used for a new superstructure. This was a wire suspension
+bridge, hung from framed towers of timber built upon the piers. Instead
+of suspending the roadway from the wire cables by the ordinary
+connecting rods, and giving stiffness to it by a trussed railing, a
+latticed framing of wood hung directly from the cables, and the timbers
+of the roadway being fastened to this by stirrups, the wooden lattice
+served both to suspend and to stiffen the road. It was a serviceable and
+cheap structure, built in two weeks, and answered our purposes well till
+it was burned in the next autumn, when Colonel Lightburn retreated
+before a Confederate invasion. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 99.]</span> </p>
+<p>The variable position of the head of steamboat navigation on the
+Kanawha made it impossible to fix a permanent depot as a terminus for
+our wagon trains in the upper valley. My own judgment was in favor of
+placing it at Kanawha Falls, a mile below Gauley Bridge, and within the
+limits of that post. To connect this with the steamboats wherever the
+shoaling water might force them to stop, I recommended the use of
+batteaux or keelboats, a craft which a natural evolution had brought
+into use in the changeable mountain rivers. They were a canoe-shaped
+open boat, sixty feet long by eight wide, and were pushed up the stream
+by quants or poles. They required a crew of five men,--four to do the
+poling, and a steersman. In the swiftest "chutes" they carried a line
+ashore and made fast to a tree, then warped the boat up to quieter water
+and resumed the poling. Each boat would carry eight tons, and, compared
+with teaming over roads of which the "bottom had dropped out," it proved
+a most economical mode of transport. The batteaux dropped alongside the
+steamer wherever she had to stop, the freight was transferred to them
+directly, covered with tarpaulins, and the boats pushed off. The number
+of hands was no greater than for teaming, and the whole cost of the
+teams and their forage was saved. I had built two of these early in the
+winter and they were in successful operation. Two more were partly done
+when Fr&eacute;mont assumed command, and I urgently recommended a fleet
+of fifteen or twenty as an auxiliary to our transportation when active
+operations should be resumed. By their use Gauley Bridge could be made
+the practical depot of supply, and from ten to twenty miles of wretched
+and costly wagoning be saved. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. pp. 45-48.]</span> </p>
+<p>I became satisfied, also, that the regulation army wagon was too
+heavy for the difficult mountain roads, and recommended a strong but
+much lighter farm wagon, in which four mules could draw nearly or quite
+as much as six usually drew in the heavier wagon. This became a matter
+of great consequence in a country where forage could not be found, and
+where the wagon had to be loaded with the food for the team as well as
+the rations and ordnance stores for the men.</p>
+<p>It had already been determined to substitute the shelter tent for
+other forms in the principal armies, and the change soon became general.
+We, however, had to wait our turn after more important columns were
+supplied, and our turn did not come till the campaign was over. Even our
+requisitions for ammunition were not filled, our artillery was not
+reduced to uniformity, and we could not secure muskets enough of any one
+calibre for a single regiment. We made the best of the situation, and
+whilst keeping "headquarters" informed of our lack, were ready to do our
+best with the means we had. No attention was paid, perhaps none could be
+paid, to our recommendations for any special supplies or means adapted
+to the peculiar character of our work. We received, in driblets, small
+supplies of the regulation wagons, some droves of unbroken mules, some
+ordnance stores, and a fair amount of clothing. Subsistence stores had
+never been lacking, and the energy of the district quartermaster and
+commissary kept our little army always well fed.</p>
+<p>The formal change in department commanders took place on the 29th of
+March, Fr&eacute;mont having reached Wheeling the day before. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. i. p. 4.]</span> Mr. Lincoln's desire by some means to free the loyal
+people of East Tennessee from the oppressive sway of the Confederates
+showed itself in the instructions given to all the military officers in
+the West. He had been pressing the point from the beginning. It had
+entered into McClellan's and Rosecrans's plans of the last campaign. It
+had been the object of General George H. Thomas's organization of troops
+at Camp Dick Robinson in Kentucky. For it General Ormsby Mitchell had
+labored to prepare a column at Cincinnati. It was not accomplished till
+the autumn of 1863, when Rosecrans occupied Chattanooga and Burnside
+reached Knoxville; but there had never been a day's cessation of the
+President's urgency to have it accomplished. It was prominent in his
+mind when he organized the Mountain Department, and Fr&eacute;mont was
+called upon to suggest a plan to this end as soon as he was appointed.
+His choice was to assemble the forces of his department in Kentucky at
+the southern terminus of the Central Kentucky Railroad, at
+Nicholasville, and to march southward directly to Knoxville, upon what
+was substantially the line taken by Burnside a year and a half later. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. i. p. 7.]</span> Fr&eacute;mont was mistaken, however, in saying that
+from Nicholasville to Knoxville supplies could be "transported over
+level and good roads." General Buell had, on the 1st of February, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>., vol. vii. p. 931.]</span>
+reported that line to be some two hundred miles long from the end of the
+railway to Knoxville, the whole of it mountainous, and the roads bad. He
+estimated a train of a thousand wagons, constantly going and returning,
+as needful to supply ten thousand men at Knoxville after allowance was
+made for what could be gathered from the country. General Buell was
+unquestionably correct in his view of the matter, but the strong
+political reasons for liberating East Tennessee made the President
+unwilling to be convinced that it was then impracticable. He, however,
+could not furnish the transportation required for the movement proposed
+by Fr&eacute;mont, and hesitated to interfere further with the conduct
+of military affairs within Buell's territorial limits. Besides this,
+Rosecrans's plan had found such favor with the Secretary of War that it
+was laid before Fr&eacute;mont with official approval. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. xii. pt,
+iii. p. 8.]</span> The stripping of West Virginia of troops to make a
+column in Kentucky seemed too hazardous to the government, and
+Fr&eacute;mont changed his plan so as to adopt that of Rosecrans with
+some modifications.</p>
+<p>He proposed to leave General Kelley with sufficient troops to
+protect the line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, and with Blenker's
+division (which was taken from the Army of the Potomac and given to him)
+to advance from Romney in the valley of the South Branch of the Potomac,
+ascending this valley toward the south, picking up Schenck's and
+Milroy's brigades in turn, the latter joining the column at Monterey on
+the great watershed by way of the Cheat Mountain pass. From Monterey
+Fr&eacute;mont purposed to move upon Staunton, and thence, following the
+southwestern trend of the valleys, to the New River near Christiansburg.
+Here he would come into communication with me, whose task it would have
+been to advance from Gauley Bridge on two lines, the principal one by
+Fayette and Raleigh C. H. over Flat-top Mountain to Princeton and the
+Narrows of New River, and a subordinate one on the turnpike to
+Lewisburg. His plan looked to continuing the march with the whole column
+to the southwest, down the Holston valley, till Knoxville should be
+reached, the last additions to the force to be from the troops in the
+Big-Sandy valley. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. i. p. 7.]</span> </p>
+<p>General Garfield (then colonel of the Forty-second Ohio) had already
+been sent by General Buell with a brigade into the Big-Sandy valley, and
+General George W. Morgan was soon to be sent with a division to
+Cumberland Gap. Although these were in Fr&eacute;mont's department, the
+War Department issued an order that they should continue under General
+Buell's command at least until Fr&eacute;mont should by his operations
+come into their vicinity and field of work. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>, vol. xii. pt.
+iii. pp. 14, 119.]</span> They would, of course, co-operate with him
+actively if he should reach the Holston valley. When he should form his
+junction with me, he expected to supply the whole column from my depots
+in the Kanawha valley, and when he reached Knoxville he would make his
+base on the Ohio River, using the line of supply he first suggested, by
+way of central Kentucky.</p>
+<p>The plan was an improvement upon Rosecrans's in arranging for a
+progressive concentration of his forces into one column led by himself;
+but it would probably have failed, first, from the impossibility of
+supplying the army on the route, and second, because the railroads east
+of the mountains ran on routes specially well adapted to enable the
+enemy quickly to concentrate any needed force at Staunton, at Lynchburg,
+at Christiansburg, or at Wytheville, to overpower the column. The Union
+army would be committed to a whole season of marching in the mountains,
+while the Confederates could concentrate the needed force and quickly
+return it to Richmond when its work was done, making but a brief episode
+in a larger campaign. But the plan was not destined to be thoroughly
+tried. Stonewall Jackson, after his defeat by Kimball at Kernstown,
+March 23d, had retired to the Upper Shenandoah valley with his division,
+numbering about 10,000 men; Ewell, with his division, was waiting to
+co-operate with him at the gaps of the Blue Ridge on the east, and
+Edward Johnson was near Staunton with a similar force facing Milroy. In
+April General N. P. Banks, commanding the National forces in the
+Shenandoah valley, had ascended it as far as Harrisonburg, and Jackson
+observed him from Swift-Run Gap in the Blue Ridge, on the road from
+Harrisonburg to Gordonsville. Milroy also pushed eastward from Cheat
+Mountain summit, in which high region winter still lingered, and had
+made his way through snows and rains to McDowell, ten miles east of
+Monterey, at the crossing of Bull-Pasture River, where he threatened
+Staunton. But Banks was thought to be in too exposed a position, and was
+directed by the War Department to fall back to Strasburg. On the 5th of
+May he had retired in that direction as far as New-Market. Blenker's
+division had not yet reached Fr&eacute;mont, who was waiting for it in
+Hardy County at Petersburg. Jackson saw his opportunity and determined
+to join General Johnson by a rapid march to Staunton, to overwhelm
+Milroy first, and then return to his own operations in the Shenandoah.
+Moving with great celerity, he attacked Milroy at McDowell on the 8th,
+the latter calling upon Fr&eacute;mont for help. Schenck was sent
+forward to support him, and reached McDowell after marching thirty-four
+miles in twenty-four hours. Jackson had not fully concentrated his
+forces, and the Union generals held their ground and delivered a sharp
+combat in which their casualties of all kinds numbered 256, while the
+Confederate loss was 498, General Johnson being among the wounded.
+Schenck, as senior, assumed the command, and on the 9th began his
+retreat to Franklin, abandoning the Cheat Mountain road. Franklin was
+reached on the 11th, but Jackson approached cautiously, and did not
+reach there till the 12th, when, finding that Fr&eacute;mont had united
+his forces, he did not attack, but returned to McDowell, whence he took
+the direct road to Harrisonburg, and then marched to attack Banks at
+Strasburg, Ewell meeting and joining him in this movement.</p>
+<p>Fr&eacute;mont resumed preparations for his original campaign, but
+Banks's defeat deranged all plans, and those of the Mountain Department
+were abandoned. A month passed in efforts to destroy Jackson by
+concentration of McDowell's, Banks's, and Fr&eacute;mont's troops; but
+it was too late to remedy the ill effects of the division of commands at
+the beginning of the campaign. On the 26th of June General John Pope was
+assigned to command all the troops in northern Virginia, Fr&eacute;mont
+was relieved at his own request, and the Mountain Department ceased to
+exist.</p>
+<p>My own operations in the Kanawha valley had kept pace with those in
+the northern portion of the department. The early days of April were
+spent by Fr&eacute;mont in obtaining reports of the condition of the
+several parts of his command. My report of the condition of affairs in
+the Kanawha valley was made on the 5th of April. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. p. 45.]</span> In it I called attention to the necessities of my
+troops and to the equipment necessary for any extended campaigning.
+Requisitions for supplies and transportation had been sent to the proper
+staff departments during the winter, but had not yet been filled. My
+forces consisted of eleven regiments of Ohio infantry, three new and
+incomplete regiments of West Virginia infantry, one regiment of cavalry
+(the Second West Virginia) with three separate cavalry troops from other
+commands, and, nominally, three batteries of artillery. One of the
+batteries was of mountain howitzers, and the other two of mixed
+smooth-bore and rifled guns of different calibres. My force at the
+opening of the campaign numbered 8500 present for duty. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. p. 121. The regiments of the command were the 11th, 12th, 23d,
+28th, 30th, 34th, 36th, 37th, 44th, 47th Ohio, the 4th, 8th, 9th West
+Virginia, the 2d West Virginia Cavalry. Of these the 11th Ohio had only
+nine companies and did not get the tenth till the autumn following. The
+8th West Virginia passed from the command before active operations. The
+batteries were McMullin's Ohio battery, Simmonds's Kentucky battery, and
+a battery of mountain howitzers at Gauley Mount, manned by a detachment
+of the 47th Ohio Infantry. Simmonds's company was originally of the 1st
+Kentucky Infantry assigned by me to man the guns I first took into the
+Kanawha valley, and subsequently transferred to the artillery service by
+the Secretary of War. The guns were two 20-pounder Parrott rifles, five
+10-pounder Parrotts, two bronze 10-pounder rifles altered from 6-pounder
+smooth-bores, three bronze and one iron 6-pounder smooth-bores, and ten
+mountain howitzers to be packed on mules. Some of these guns were left
+in position at posts, and three small field batteries were organized for
+the marching columns. Besides the regiment of freshly recruited West
+Virginia cavalry, there were Schambeck's Independent troop of Illinois
+cavalry, and Smith's (originally Pfau's) Independent troop of Ohio
+cavalry, both German troops.]</span> Detachments were at the mouth of the
+Big-Sandy River, at Guyandotte, at the mouth of the Kanawha on the Ohio
+River, at several points in the Kanawha valley below Gauley Bridge, at
+Summersville on the upper Gauley, at Gauley Bridge, at Gauley Mount or
+Tompkins farm on New River, and at Fayette C. H. The last-named post had
+the only brigade organization which had been retained in winter
+quarters, and was commanded by Colonel Scammon of the Twenty-third Ohio.
+The post at Summersville had been brought into my command for the
+winter, and was garrisoned by the Thirty-sixth Ohio under Colonel George
+Crook. At Gauley Bridge was the Twenty-eighth Ohio (a German regiment),
+under Colonel August Moor.</p>
+<p>When the decision of General Fremont to have my command advance on
+both sides of the New River was received, I immediately submitted my
+plan of organization to that end. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. p. 127.]</span> I proposed to leave
+the West Virginia Infantry regiments with half the Second West Virginia
+Cavalry to guard the Kanawha valley and our depots of supply, with
+Colonel J. A. J. Lightburn of the Fourth West Virginia in command. The
+Ohio regiments were to be moved forward so that the Eleventh,
+Forty-fourth, and Forty-seventh could be quickly concentrated on the
+Lewisburg turnpike in front of Gauley Bridge, where Colonel Crook could
+join them with the Thirty-sixth by a diagonal road and take command of
+this column. I assigned to him a mixed battery of field-pieces and
+mountain howitzers. Colonel Scammon's brigade was to advance from
+Fayette C. H. to Flat-top Mountain as soon as the weather would permit,
+and thus secure the barrier covering our further movement southward. The
+brigade consisted of the Twelfth, Twenty-third, arid Thirtieth Ohio,
+with McMullin's battery, and one half the Second Virginia Cavalry. When
+Scammon advanced, the remaining Ohio regiments (Twenty-eighth,
+Thirty-fourth, and Thirty-seventh), with Simmonds's battery should
+concentrate at Fayette C. H. and form a new brigade under Colonel Moor.
+This organization was approved by Fremont, and the preliminary steps
+were quietly taken. By the 20th of April Scammon's brigade was at
+Raleigh, only awaiting the settling of the roads to advance to Flat-top.
+A week later he held the passes of the mountain, with a detachment on
+the New River at the mouth of the Blue-stone, where he communicated with
+the right of Crook's brigade. The front was thus covered from
+Summersville to Flat-top Mountain, and the regiments in rear were moving
+into their assigned positions.</p>
+<p>My brigade commanders were all men of marked character. Colonel Moor
+was a German of portly presence and grave demeanor, a gentleman of
+dignity of character as well as of bearing, and a brave, resolute man.
+He had been long a citizen of the United States, and had, as a young
+man, seen some military service, as was reported, in the Seminole War in
+Florida. He was a rigid disciplinarian, and his own regiment was a model
+of accuracy in drill and neatness in the performance of all camp duties.
+He was greatly respected by his brother officers, and his square head,
+with dark, smooth-shaven face, and rather stern expression, inspired his
+troops with something very like awe, insuring prompt obedience to his
+commands. At home, in Cincinnati, he was a man of influence among the
+German residents, and his daughter was the wife of General Godfrey
+Weitzel of the regular army. My association with him was every way
+agreeable and satisfactory.</p>
+<p>Colonel Crook was an officer of the regular army who had taken early
+advantage of the relaxation of the rule preventing such from accepting a
+volunteer appointment. A man of medium size, with light hair and sandy
+beard, his manner was rather diffident and shy, and his whole style
+quiet and reticent. His voice was light rather than heavy, and he was so
+laconic of speech that this, with his other characteristics, caused it
+to be commonly said of him that he had been so long fighting Indians on
+the frontier that he had acquired some of their traits and habits. His
+system of discipline was based on these peculiarities. He aimed at a
+stoical command of himself as the means of commanding others, and
+avoided noisy bluster of every sort, going, perhaps, to an excess in
+brevity of speech and in enforcing his orders by the consequences of any
+disobedience. His subordinates recognized his purpose to be just, and
+soon learned to have the greatest confidence in him as a military
+officer. Unless common fame did him injustice, he was one of those
+officers who had, at the beginning, no deep sympathy with the National
+cause, and had no personal objection to the success of the Rebellion.
+But he was a Northern man, and an ambitious professional soldier who did
+not mean to let political opinions stand in the way of military success. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: A romantic story is told of
+his experience a little later. He was in command on the Upper Potomac
+with headquarters at Cumberland, where he fell in love with the daughter
+of the proprietor of the hotel at which he had his headquarters, and
+whom he subsequently made his wife. The family was of secession
+proclivities, and the son of the house was in the Confederate army. This
+young man led a party of the enemy who were able, by his knowledge of
+the surroundings of his home, to capture General Crook in the night, and
+to carry him away a prisoner without any serious collision with the
+troops encamped about. Crook was soon exchanged, and in the latter part
+of the war served with distinction as division commander under Sheridan.]</span>
+In his case, as in many others, I believe this attitude was modified by
+his service under the flag, and that in 1864 he voted for Mr. Lincoln's
+re-election; he, with General Sheridan, casting at the improvised army
+ballot-box, what was understood to be their first vote ever cast in a
+civil election.</p>
+<p>Colonel Lightburn was one of the loyal West Virginians whose
+standing and intelligence made him naturally prominent among his people.
+He was a worthy man and an honorable officer, whose knowledge of the
+country and of the people made him a fit selection to preserve the peace
+and protect our communications in the valley during our forward
+movement. As his duties thus separated him from the principal columns, I
+saw less of him than of the other brigade commanders. The two West
+Virginia regiments which remained in the district were freshly
+organized, and were distributed in camps where they could practise
+company drill and instruction whilst they kept the country in order. Of
+Colonel Scammon, my senior brigade commander, I have already spoken in a
+former chapter. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ante</i>,
+pp. 110, 111.]</span> </p>
+<p>Fr&eacute;mont limited our advance to the line of Flat-top Mountain
+until he should himself be ready to open the campaign in the north. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. pp. 89, 108.]</span> Blenker's division had been given to him
+from the Potomac army when McClellan began his movement to the
+peninsula, but on the 12th of April it had only reached Salem, a station
+on the Manassas Gap Railway between the Bull-Run Mountains and the Blue
+Ridge. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p.
+71.]</span> The War Department now sent General Rosecrans to conduct the
+division with speed to Fr&eacute;mont, but extraordinary delays still
+occurred, and the command did not reach Fr&eacute;mont at Petersburg
+till the 11th of May, when he immediately moved forward with it to the
+support of Schenck and Milroy at Franklin. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 168, 177,
+pt. i. pp. 8, 9.]</span> This delay was one of a series of misfortunes;
+for could Fr&eacute;mont have been at McDowell with this strong
+reinforcement added to Schenck's and Milroy's brigades, there can be no
+reasonable doubt that Jackson's attack, if delivered at all, would have
+proven a disaster for the Confederates. This, however, would not have
+ensured success for the general campaign, for Banks might still have
+been driven back in the Shenandoah valley, and Fr&eacute;mont's position
+would have been compromised. Nothing but a union of the two columns
+would have met the situation.</p>
+<p>At the beginning of May, the additional transportation necessary for
+my advance beyond Flat-top had not arrived, but we did not wait for it. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: .<i>Id</i>., pt. iii. pp.
+108, 112, 114, 127.]</span> The regiments were ordered to leave tents
+behind, and to bivouac without shelter except such as they could make
+with "brush," for the expected shelter tents also were lacking. The
+whole distance from the head of navigation to the railroad at Newberne
+was one hundred and forty miles. Flat-top Mountain and Lewisburg were,
+respectively, about halfway on the two routes assigned to us. Some two
+thousand of the enemy's militia were holding the mountain passes in
+front of us, and a concentration of the regular Confederate troops was
+going on behind them. These last consisted of two brigades under General
+Henry Heth, as well as J. S. Williams's and Marshall's brigades, under
+General Humphrey Marshall, with the Eighth Virginia Cavalry. General
+Marshall appears to have been senior when the commands were united.
+Looking south from Flat-top Mountain we see the basin of the Blue-stone
+River, which flows northeastward into New River. This basin, with that
+of the Greenbrier on the other side of New River, forms the broadest
+stretch of cultivated land found between the mountain ranges, though the
+whole country is rough and broken even here. The crest of Flat-top
+Mountain curves southward around the headwaters of the Blue-stone, and
+joins the more regular ranges in Tazewell County. The straight ridge of
+East-River Mountain forms a barrier on the southern side of the basin,
+more than thirty miles away from the summit of Flat-top where Scammon's
+camp was placed on the road from Raleigh C. H. to Princeton, the
+county-seat of Mercer. The Narrows of New River were where that stream
+breaks through the mountain barrier I have described, and the road from
+Princeton to Giles C. H. passes through the defile. Only one other
+outlet from the basin goes southward, and that is where the road from
+Princeton to Wytheville passes through Rocky Gap, a gorge of the wildest
+character, some thirty miles south-westward from the Narrows. These
+passes were held by Confederate forces, whilst their cavalry, under
+Colonel W. H. Jenifer, occupied Princeton and presented a skirmishing
+resistance to our advance-guard.</p>
+<p>On the 1st of May a small party of the Twenty-third Ohio met the
+enemy's horse at Camp Creek, a branch of the Blue-stone, six miles from
+the crest of Flat-top, and had a lively engagement, repulsing greatly
+superior numbers. On hearing of this, Lieutenant-Colonel R. B. Hayes
+marched with part of the Twenty-third Ohio and part of the West Virginia
+cavalry, and followed up the enemy with such vigor that Jenifer was
+driven through Princeton too rapidly to permit him to remove the stores
+collected there. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. i. pp. 449, 450.]</span> To avoid their
+falling into our hands, Jenifer set fire to the town. Hayes succeeded in
+saving six or eight houses, but the rest were destroyed. Jenifer
+retreated on the Wytheville road, expecting us to follow by that route;
+but Hayes, learning that the Narrows were not strongly held, and being
+now reinforced by the rest of his regiment (the Twenty-third), marched
+on the 6th to the Narrows which he held, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt. iii. p.
+140.]</span> whilst he sent Major Comly with a detachment into
+Pearisburg, the county-seat of Giles. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: James M. Comly, later Brevet
+Brigadier-General, and since the war at one time United States minister
+to the Sandwich Islands.]</span> The affair at Camp Creek had cost
+Jenifer some twenty in killed and wounded, and an equal number were
+captured in the advance on Giles C. H. Our casualties were 1 killed and
+20 wounded. Our line, however, was getting too extended, and the utmost
+exertions were needed to supply the troops in their present positions.
+Princeton, being at the forking of the roads to Pearisburg and
+Wytheville, was too important a point to be left unguarded, and I at
+once sent forward Colonel Scammon with the Thirtieth Ohio to hold it. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p 148.]</span>
+On the 9th of May the Twelfth Ohio was put in march from Raleigh to join
+him, and Moor's brigade was approaching the last-named place where my
+headquarters were, that being the terminus, for the time, of the
+telegraph line which kept me in communication with Fr&eacute;mont. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. p 157.]</span> The same day the department commander informed me
+of the attack by Jackson on Milroy on the 7th, and ordered me to suspend
+movements in advance until my forces should be concentrated. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 158.]</span>
+The weather was rainy, and the roads suffered badly from cutting up by
+the wagons, but I had hoped to push forward a strong advanced guard to
+the great railway bridge near Newberne, and destroy it before the enemy
+had time to concentrate there. This made it necessary to take some risk,
+for it was not possible to move the whole command till some supplies
+could be accumulated at Raleigh and at Flat-top Mountain.</p>
+<p>As fast as the supplies would permit, Moor went forward, taking no
+tents beyond Raleigh, and all of the troops on this line now faced the
+continuing rains without shelter. Guerilla parties were set actively at
+work by the Confederates in the region of the Guyandotte and at other
+points in our rear. Colonel Lightburn was directed to keep his forces
+actively moving to suppress these outbreaks, and the forward movement
+was pressed. On the 10th of May Heth's two brigades of the enemy
+attacked our advance-guard at Pearisburg, and these, after destroying
+the enemy's stores, which they had captured there, retired skirmishing,
+till they joined Scammon, who had advanced from Princeton to their
+support. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 176.]</span> Scammon's brigade was now together, a mile below the
+Narrows of New River, with the East River in front of him, making a
+strong, defensible position. The telegraph reached Flat-top Mountain on
+the 13th, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 184.]</span> even this being delayed because wagons to carry the wire
+could not be spared from the task of supplying the troops with food. I
+moved my headquarters to Princeton on this day, and pressed forward
+Moor's brigade in the hope of being able to push again beyond the
+barrier at the Narrows of New River, where Heth's brigades had now taken
+position. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. p. 188.]</span> Neither Scammon nor Moor was
+able to take with him ammunition enough for more than a slight
+engagement, nor was any accumulation of food possible. We were living
+"from hand to mouth," no additional transportation had reached us, and
+every wagon and pack-mule was doing its best. As fast as Moor's
+regiments reached Princeton they were hurried forward to French's Mill,
+five miles in rear of Scammon, on the road running up East River, and
+intersecting the Wytheville road so as to form a triangle with the two
+going from Princeton. During the 14th and 15th Moor's regiments arrived,
+and were pushed on to their position, except one half regiment
+(detachments of the Thirty-fourth and Thirty-seventh Ohio), under Major
+F. E. Franklin, and one troop of cavalry, which were kept at Princeton
+as a guard against any effort on the enemy's part to interrupt our
+communications. Moor was ordered to send a detachment up the East River
+to the crossing of the Wytheville road, so as to give early warning of
+any attempt of the enemy to come in upon our flank from that direction. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt. ii. p. 505.]</span>
+My purpose was to attack Heth with Scammon's and Moor's brigades, drive
+him away from the Narrows of New River, and prevent him, if possible,
+from uniting with Marshall's command, which was understood to be
+somewhere between Jeffersonville (Tazewell C. H.) and Wytheville. If we
+succeeded in beating Heth, we could then turn upon Marshall. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt. iii. pp.
+197-199.]</span> </p>
+<p>On the afternoon of the 15th Moor threw a detachment of two
+companies over East River Mountain as a reconnoissance to learn whether
+the roads in that direction were practicable for a movement to turn the
+left of Heth. It attacked and handsomely routed a post of the enemy on
+Wolf Creek. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xii. pt. ii. p. 505.]</span> The few wagons and pack-mules
+were hurrying forward some rations and ammunition; but the 17th would be
+the earliest possible moment at which I could lead a general advance.
+The telegraph wire would reach Princeton by the evening of that day, and
+I waited there for the purpose of exchanging messages with
+Fr&eacute;mont before pushing toward Newberne, the expected rendezvous
+with the other troops of the department. But all our efforts could not
+give us the needed time to anticipate the enemy. They had railway
+communication behind a mountain wall which had few and difficult passes.
+Marshall and Williams were already marching from Tazewell C. H. to
+strike our line of communications at Princeton, and were far on the way. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt. iii. p.
+199.]</span> </p>
+<p>About noon of the 16th Colonel Moor reported that his detachment on
+the Wytheville road was attacked by a force of the enemy estimated at
+1500. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt.
+ii. pp. 505, 509.]</span> This seems to have been the command of Colonel
+Wharton, marching to join Marshall, who was coming from the west by a
+road down the head-waters of East River. Of this, however, we were
+ignorant. I ordered Moor to take the remainder of his command (leaving
+half a regiment only at French's) to drive off the force at the
+cross-roads, and if he were overpowered to retreat directly upon
+Princeton by the western side of the triangle of roads, of which each
+side was twelve or fifteen miles long. Colonel Scammon reported no
+change in Heth's positions or force in front of him. Patrols were sent
+out on all the roads west and south of Princeton, our little force of
+horsemen being limited to Smith's troop of Ohio cavalry which was acting
+as headquarters escort. About two o'clock the patrol on the Wyoming
+road, five miles out of Princeton, was fired upon by the enemy's
+cavalry, and came rapidly in with the report. The four companies of
+infantry under Majors Franklin and Ankele were moved out on that road,
+and soon developed the infantry of Marshall's command. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. ii. p. 506.]</span> He and Williams had marched across from the
+Tazewell to the Wyoming road, and were coming in upon our flank and
+rear. I reconnoitred them personally with care, and satisfied myself of
+their overwhelming superiority to the little detachment I had in hand.
+Franklin and Ankele were ordered to deploy their whole force as
+skirmishers and to hold the enemy back as long as possible. Some of our
+troopers were shown on the flanks, and so imposing a show was made that
+Marshall advanced cautiously. Our men behaved beautifully, holding every
+tree and rock, delaying the enemy for more than three hours from
+reaching the crests of the hills looking down upon the town. I had sent
+orderlies to stop and turn back our wagon trains on the way from
+Flat-top, and had directed headquarters baggage and the few stores in
+Princeton to be loaded and sent on the road toward Moor and Scammon. Our
+only tents were three or four wall tents for headquarters (the
+adjutant-general's, quartermaster's, and commissary's offices), and
+these I ordered to be left standing to impose upon the enemy the idea
+that we did not mean to retire. As evening approached, the hostile force
+occupied the summits of surrounding hills, and directing the infantry
+slowly to fall back and follow me, I galloped with my staff to bring
+back Scammon and restore our broken communications. At French's, twelve
+miles from Princeton, I found that Moor had not had time to execute the
+orders of the afternoon, and that ten companies from the Twenty-eighth
+and Thirty-seventh Ohio were all that he had been able to send to
+Wytheville road crossing. These, we learned later in the night, had
+succeeded in re-occupying the cross-roads. They were ordered to hold
+fast till morning, and if the enemy still appeared to be mainly at
+Princeton, to march in that direction and attack them from the rear.
+Scammon was ordered to send half a regiment to occupy Moor's position at
+French's during the night, and to march his whole command at daybreak
+toward Princeton. There was but one and a half regiments now with Moor,
+and these were roused and ordered to accompany me at once on our return
+to Princeton. It was a dark and muddy march, and as we approached the
+town we deployed skirmishers in front, though they were obliged to move
+slowly in the darkness. Day was just breaking as we came out of the
+forest upon the clearing, line of battle was formed, and the troops went
+forward cheering. The enemy made no stubborn resistance, but retired
+gradually to a strong position on rough wooded hills about a mile from
+the village, where they covered both the Wytheville and the Wyoming
+road. They had artillery on both flanks, and could only be reached over
+open and exposed ground. We recovered our headquarters tents, standing
+as we had left them. We had captured a few prisoners and learned that
+Marshall and Williams were both before us. Whilst pushing them back,
+Lieutenant-Colonel Von Blessingh with the ten companies of Moor's
+brigade approached on the Wytheville road and attacked; but the enemy
+was aware of their approach and repulsed them, having placed a
+detachment in a very strong position to meet them. Von Blessingh
+withdrew his men, and later joined the command by a considerable detour.
+With less than two regiments in hand, and with the certainty of the
+enemy's great superiority, there was nothing for it but to take the best
+position we could and await Scammon's arrival. We made as strong a show
+of force as possible, and by skirmishing advances tempted the enemy to
+come down to attack; but he also was expecting reinforcements, and a
+little artillery firing was the only response we provoked. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. ii. pp. 506, 507.]</span> As some evidence of the physical exhaustion
+from the continuous exertions of the preceding day and night, I may
+mention the fact that during the artillery firing I threw myself for a
+little rest on the ground, close beside the guns; and though these were
+firing at frequent intervals, I fell asleep and had a short but
+refreshing nap almost within arm's length of the wheels of a
+gun-carriage.</p>
+<p>Toward evening Scammon arrived with his brigade, reporting that
+Heth's force had followed his retiring movement as far as French's, and
+confirming the information that four brigades of the enemy were before
+us. Shortly after dark the officer of the day, on the right, reported
+the noise of artillery marching around that flank. Our last day's
+rations had been issued, and our animals were without forage. Small
+parties of the enemy had gone far to our rear and cut the telegraph, so
+that we had had no news from the Kanawha valley for two days. The
+interruption was likely to create disturbance there and derange all our
+plans for supply. It was plain that we should have to be content with
+having foiled the enemy's plan to inflict a severe blow upon us, and
+that we might congratulate ourselves that with two brigades against four
+we had regained our line without serious loss. I therefore ordered that
+the troops be allowed to rest till three o'clock in the morning of the
+18th, and that the column then retire behind the Blue-stone River. The
+movement was made without interruption, and a camp on Flat-top Mountain
+was selected, from which the roads on every side were well guarded, and
+which was almost impregnable in itself. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt. iii. p.
+209.]</span> Our casualties of all kinds in the affairs about Princeton
+had been only 113, as the enemy had not delivered any serious attack,
+and the contest on our side had been one of manoeuvre in which our only
+chance of important results was in attacking either Heth or Marshall
+when they were so far separated that they could not unite against us on
+the field of battle. After the 15th this chance did not exist, and
+wisdom dictated that we should retire to a safe point from which we
+could watch for contingencies which might give us a better opportunity.
+Our experience proved what I have before stated, that the facility for
+railway concentration of the enemy in our front made this line a useless
+one for aggressive movements, as they could always concentrate a
+superior force after they received the news of our being in motion. It
+also showed the error of dividing my forces on two lines, for had
+Crook's brigade been with me, or my two brigades with him, we should
+have felt strong enough to cope with the force which was actually in our
+front, and would at least have made it necessary for the enemy to detach
+still more troops from other movements to meet us. Our campaign, though
+a little one, very well illustrates the character of the subordinate
+movements so often attempted during the war, and shows that the same
+principles of strategy are found operating as in great movements. The
+scale is a reduced one, but cause and effect are linked by the same
+necessity as on a broader theatre of warfare.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</p>
+<p>POPE IN COMMAND--TRANSFER TO WASHINGTON</p>
+<p>A key position--Crook's engagement at Lewisburg--Watching and
+scouting--Mountain work--Pope in command--Consolidation of
+Departments--Suggestions of our transfer to the East--Pope's Order No.
+II and Address to the Army--Orders to march across the
+mountains--Discussion of them--Changed to route by water and
+rail--Ninety-mile march--Logistics--Arriving in Washington--Two
+regiments reach Pope--Two sent to Manassas--Jackson captures
+Manassas--Railway broken--McClellan at Alexandria--Engagement at Bull
+Run Bridge--Ordered to Upton's Hill--Covering Washington--Listening to
+the Bull Run battle--Ill news travels fast.</p>
+<p>Our retreat to Flat-top Mountain had been made without loss of
+material, except one baggage-wagon, which broke down irreparably, and
+was burned by my order. At the crossing of Blue-stone River we were
+beyond the junction of roads by which our flank could be turned, and we
+halted there as the end of the first march. As the men forded the
+stream, the sun broke through the clouds, which had been pretty steadily
+raining upon us, the brass band with the leading brigade struck up the
+popular tune, "Aren't you glad to get out of the wilderness?" and the
+soldiers, quick to see the humorous application of any such incident,
+greeted it with cheers and laughter. All felt that we were again masters
+of the situation. Next day we moved leisurely to the mountain summit, a
+broad undulating table-land with some cultivated farms, where our camp
+was perfectly hidden from sight, whilst we commanded a most extensive
+view of the country in front. Outposts at the crossing of the Blue-stone
+and at Pack's Ferry on New River, with active scouting-parties and
+patrols scouring the country far and wide, kept me fully informed of
+everything occurring near us. We had time to organize the new
+wagon-trains which were beginning to reach us, and, while waiting till
+Fr&eacute;mont could plan new co-operative movements, to prepare for our
+part in such work.</p>
+<p>The camp on Flat-top Mountain deserved the name of a "key point" to
+the country in front as well, perhaps, as that much abused phrase ever
+is deserved. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Clausewitz
+says of the phrases "covering position," "key of the country," etc.,
+that they are for the most part mere words without sense when they
+indicate only the material advantage which is given by the elevation of
+the land. "On War," part ii. chap. xvii.]</span> The name of the mountain
+indicates its character. The northern slope is gentle, so that the
+approach from Raleigh C. H. is not difficult, whilst the southern
+declivity falls off rapidly to the Blue-stone valley. The broad ridge at
+the summit is broken into rounded hills which covered the camp from
+view, whilst they still permitted manoeuvre to meet any hostile
+approach. The mountain abutted on the gorge of the New River on the
+northeast, and stretched also southwestward into the impracticable
+wilderness about the headwaters of the Guyandotte and the Tug Fork of
+Sandy. The position was practically unassailable in front by any force
+less than double our own, and whilst we occupied it the enemy never
+ventured in force beyond the passes of East River Mountain. We built a
+flying-bridge ferry at Pack's, on New River, near the mouth of the
+Blue-stone, where a passable road up the valley of the Greenbrier
+connected us with Colonel Crook's position at Lewisburg. The post at
+Pack's Ferry was held by a detachment from Scammon's brigade in command
+of Major Comly of the Twenty-third Ohio. On the 6th of August a
+detachment of the enemy consisting of three regiments and a section of
+artillery under Colonel Wharton made an effort to break up the ferry by
+an attack from the east side, but they accomplished nothing. Major Comly
+was quickly supported by reinforcements from Scammon's brigade, and
+drove off his assailants. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. ii. p. 127; pt. iii. pp. 541, 542.]</span> </p>
+<p>I have not yet spoken of the movements of Colonel Crook's brigade on
+the Lewisburg route, because circumstances so delayed his advance that
+it had no immediate relation to our movements upon Pearisburg and
+Princeton. As the march of my own column was beginning, General
+Fr&eacute;mont, upon information of guerilla raids north of
+Summersville, directed that Crook be sent into Webster County to
+co-operate with troops sent southward from Weston to destroy the lawless
+parties. This involved a march of more than seventy miles each way, and
+unforeseen delays of various kinds. Two of the guerillas captured were
+tried and convicted of murder, and Colonel Crook was obliged to remain
+in that region to protect the administration of justice till the
+execution of the murderers and the dispersion of the guerilla bands. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 127, 159.]</span>
+The organization and movement of his brigade upon Lewisburg was by this
+means put back so far that his column could not get within supporting
+distance of mine. He reached Lewisburg on the day of our affair at
+Princeton. He had been energetic in all his movements, but the diversion
+of parts of his command to so distant an enterprise as that into Webster
+County had been fatal to co-operation. The Confederate General Heth had
+been able to neglect the Lewisburg route and to carry his brigade to the
+assistance of Marshall in his opposition to my advance. As it turned
+out, I should have done better to have waited at Flat-top Mountain till
+I knew that Crook was at Lewisburg, and then to have made a fresh
+combination of movements. Our experience only added another to the
+numerous proofs the whole campaign furnished, of the futility of such
+combined operations from distant bases,</p>
+<p>Major-General Loring took command of all the Confederate forces in
+southwestern Virginia on the 19th or 20th of May, and Heth was already
+in march to oppose Crook's forward movement. On the 23d Heth, with some
+3000 men, including three batteries of artillery, attacked Crook at
+Lewisburg, soon after daybreak in the morning. Crook met him in front of
+the town, and after a sharp engagement routed him, capturing four
+cannon, some 200 stand of arms and 100 prisoners. His own loss was 13
+killed and 53 wounded, with 7 missing. He did not think it wise to
+follow up the retreating enemy, but held a strong position near
+Lewisburg, where his communications were well covered, and where he was
+upon the same range of highlands on which we were at Flat-top, though
+fifty miles of broken country intervened. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. ii. pp. 804-813.]</span> Meanwhile Fr&eacute;mont had been ordered to
+Banks's relief, and had been obliged to telegraph me that we must be
+left to ourselves till the results of the Shenandoah campaign were
+tested. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pt. iii. p. 264.]</span> Rumors were rife that after Jackson retired from
+Fr&eacute;mont's front at Franklin, Johnson's division was ordered to
+march into our part of West Virginia. We were thus thrown, necessarily,
+into an expectant attitude, awaiting the outcome of Fr&eacute;mont's
+eastward movement and the resumption of his plans. Our men were kept
+busy in marching and scouting by detachments, putting down guerilla
+bands and punishing disorders. They thus acquired a power of sustained
+exertion on foot which proved afterward of great value.</p>
+<p>There was, in a way, a resemblance in our situation and in our work
+to that of feudal chiefs in the middle ages. We held a lofty and almost
+impregnable position, overlooking the country in every direction. The
+distant ridges of the Alleghanies rose before us, the higher peaks
+standing out in the blue distance, so that we seemed to watch the
+mountain passes fifty miles away without stirring from our post. The
+loyal people about us formed relations to us not unlike those of the
+feudal retainers of old. They worked their farms, but every man had his
+rifle hung upon his chimney-piece, and by day or by night was ready to
+shoulder it and thread his way by paths known only to the natives, to
+bring us news of open movement or of secret plots among the
+Secessionists. They were organized, also, in their own fashion, and
+every neighborhood could muster its company or its squad of home-guards
+to join in quelling seditious outbreaks or in strengthening a little
+column sent against any of the enemy's outposts. No considerable hostile
+movement was possible within a range of thirty miles without our having
+timely notice of it. The smoke from the camp-fires of a single troop of
+horse could be seen rising from the ravines, and detachments of our
+regiments guided by the native scouts would be on the way to reconnoitre
+within an hour. Officers as well as men went on foot, for they followed
+ridges where there was not even a bridle-path, and depended for safety,
+in no small degree, on their ability to take to the thickets of the
+forest-clad hillside if they found themselves in the presence of a body
+of the Confederate cavalry. Thirty miles a day was an easy march for
+them after they had become hardened to their work, and taking several
+days together they could outmarch any cavalry, especially when they
+could take "short cuts" over hills and away from travelled roads. They
+knew at what farms they could find "rations," and where were the hostile
+neighborhoods from which equally enterprising scouts would glide away to
+carry news of their movements to the enemy. At headquarters there was a
+constant going and coming. Groups of home-guards were nearly always
+about, as picturesque in their homely costume as Leather-stocking
+himself, and many of our officers and men were hardly less expert as
+woodsmen. Constant activity was the order of the day, and the whole
+command grew hardy and self-reliant with great rapidity.</p>
+<p>General Pope was, on the 26th of June, assigned to command the Army
+of Virginia, including the forces under McDowell and Banks as well as
+those in the Mountain Department. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. p. 435.]</span> Fremont was
+relieved from command at his own request, and the Mountain Department
+ceased to exist. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 437.]</span> Pope very wisely determined to unite in one army under
+his own command as many as possible of the troops reporting to him, and
+meanwhile directed us to remain on the defensive. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 471.]</span>
+I ventured on the 3d of July to suggest by telegraph that my division
+would make a useful reinforcement to his active army in the field, and
+reiterated it on the 5th, with some explanation of my views. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 451, 457.]</span>
+I indicated Fayetteville and Hawk's Nest as points in front of Gauley
+Bridge where moderate garrisons could cover the valley defensively, as I
+had done in the preceding year. Getting no answer, I returned to the
+subject on the 13th. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 471.]</span> Pope, however, did not issue his address upon assuming
+active command till the 14th, when his much ridiculed manifesto to the
+army appeared. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: He had
+announced his assignment and his headquarters at Washington on June 27 (<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 436), but he now issued the address as he was about to take the
+field (<i>Id</i>., p. 473).]</span> Since the war General Pope has
+himself told me that this, as well as the other orders issued at that
+time and which were much criticised, were drafted under the dictation,
+in substance, of Mr. Stanton, the Secretary of War. He admitted that
+some things in them were not quite in good taste; but the feeling was
+that it was desirable to infuse vigor into the army by stirring words,
+which would by implication condemn McClellan's policy of over-caution in
+military matters, and over-tenderness toward rebel sympathizers and
+their property. The Secretary, as he said, urged such public
+declarations so strongly that he did not feel at liberty to resist. They
+were unfairly criticised, and were made the occasion of a bitter and
+lasting enmity toward Pope on the part of most of the officers and men
+of the Potomac Army. It seems that Mr. Lincoln hesitated to approve the
+one relating to the arrest of disloyal persons within the lines of the
+army, and it was not till Pope repeated his sense of the need of it that
+the President yielded, on condition that it should be applied in
+exceptional cases only. It was probably intended more to terrify
+citizens from playing the part of spies than to be literally enforced,
+which would, indeed, have been hardly possible. No real severity was
+used under it, but the Confederate government made it the occasion of a
+sort of outlawry against Pope and his army. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: It is only fair to recollect
+that in the following year Halleck found it necessary to repeat in
+substance Pope's much abused orders, and Meade, who then commanded the
+Potomac Army, issued a proclamation in accordance with them. (Official
+Records, vol. xxvii. pt. i. p. 102; pt. iii. p. 786.) For Pope's
+submission of Order No. 11 to Mr. Lincoln and the limitation placed on
+it, see <i>Id</i>., vol. xii. pt. iii. pp. 500, 540. For general
+military law on the subject, see Birkhimer's "Military Government and
+Martial Law," chap. viii. For the practice of the Confederates, see the
+treatment of the Hon. George Summers, chap. xix. <i>post</i>.]</span>
+Only two days later he issued an order against pillaging or molestation
+of persons and dwellings, as stringent as any one could wish. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. p. 573.]</span> </p>
+<p>On the 5th of August Pope suggested to Halleck that I should be
+ordered to leave about 2500 men intrenched near Gauley Bridge, and march
+with the remainder of my command (say nine regiments) by way of
+Lewisburg, Covington, Staunton, and Harrisonburg to join him. Halleck
+replied that it was too much exposed, and directed him to select one
+more in the rear. Pope very rightly answered that there was no other
+route which would not make a great circuit to the rear. Halleck saw that
+Jackson's army near Charlottesville with a probable purpose of turning
+Pope's right flank might make a junction impossible for me, and stated
+the objection, but concluded with authority to Pope to order as he
+deemed best, "but with caution." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. pp. 534, 540, 543.]</span> </p>
+<p>On the 8th of August Pope telegraphed me, accordingly, to march by
+way of Lewisburg, Covington, Warm Springs, and Augusta Springs to
+Harrisonburg, and there join him by shortest route. He indicated
+Winchester or Romney as my secondary aim if I should find the junction
+with him barred. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 460, 462, 551.]</span> This route avoided Staunton, but by so short
+a distance that it was scarcely safer, and the roads to be travelled
+were much harder and longer. At this time several detachments of
+considerable size were out, chasing guerilla parties and small bodies of
+Confederate troops, and assisting in the organization or enlistment of
+Union men. The movement ordered could not begin for several days, and I
+took advantage of the interval to lay before General Pope, by telegraph,
+the proof that the march would take fifteen days of uninterrupted travel
+through a mountainous region, most of it a wilderness destitute of
+supplies, and with the enemy upon the flank. Besides this there was the
+very serious question whether the Army of Virginia would be at
+Charlottesville when I should approach that place. On the other hand, my
+calculation was that we could reach Washington in ten days or less, by
+way of the Kanawha and Ohio rivers to Parkersburg, and thence by the
+Baltimore and Ohio Railroad to the capital. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. xiii. pt.
+iii. pp. 555, 559.]</span> My dispatches were submitted to General
+Halleck, and on the 11th of August General Pope telegraphed a modified
+assent to my suggestions. He directed that 5000 men should remain in
+West Virginia under my command, and the remainder proceed to Washington
+by river and rail. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xiii. pt. iii. p. 560.]</span> An incursion of the
+enemy's cavalry into Logan County on my right and rear was at the moment
+in progress, and we used great activity in disposing of it, so that the
+change in our dispositions might not be too quickly known to our
+adversaries nor have the appearance of retreat. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I at one time supposed that
+the orders to march across the country originated with General Halleck,
+but the Official Records of the War fix the history of the matter as is
+above stated.]</span> </p>
+<p>It is a natural wish of every soldier to serve with the largest army
+in the most important campaign. The order to remain with a diminished
+command in West Virginia was a great disappointment to me, against which
+I made haste to protest. On the 13th I was rejoiced by permission to
+accompany my command to the East. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 567, 570.]</span> Preliminary orders had already been given for
+making Fayetteville and Hawk's Nest the principal advanced posts in the
+contracted operations of the district, with Gauley Bridge for their
+common depot of supply and point of concentration in case of an advance
+of the enemy in force. I organized two small brigades and two batteries
+of artillery for the movement to Washington. Colonels Scammon and Moor,
+who were my senior colonels, were already in command of brigades, and
+Colonel Lightburn was in command of the lower valley. The arrangement
+already existing practically controlled. Scammon's brigade was
+unchanged, and in Moor's the Thirty-sixth Ohio under Crook and the
+Eleventh were substituted for the Thirty-seventh and Thirty-fourth. The
+organization therefore was as follows; namely, First Brigade, Colonel
+Scammon commanding, consisted of the Twelfth, Twenty-third, and
+Thirtieth Ohio and McMullin's Ohio Battery; Second Brigade, Colonel Moor
+commanding, consisted of the Eleventh, Twenty-eighth, and Thirty-sixth
+Ohio and Simmonds's Kentucky Battery. One troop of horse for orderlies
+and headquarters escort, and another for similar service, with the
+brigades, also accompanied us. The regiments left in the Kanawha
+district were the Thirty-fourth, Thirty-seventh, Forty-fourth, and
+Forty-seventh Ohio, the Fourth and Ninth West Virginia Infantry, the
+Second West Virginia Cavalry, a battery, and some incomplete local
+organizations. Colonel J. A. J. Lightburn of the Fourth West Virginia
+was in command as senior officer within the district. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. pp. 567, 570; vol. li. pt. i. pp. 738, 742, 754.]</span> </p>
+<p>Portions of the troops were put in motion on the 14th of August, and
+a systematic itinerary was prepared for them in advance. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. li. pt. i.
+p. 738.]</span> They marched fifty minutes, and then rested the remaining
+ten minutes of each hour. The day's work was divided into two stages of
+fifteen miles each, with a long rest at noon, and with a half day's
+interval between the brigades. The weather was warm, but by starting at
+three o'clock in the morning the heat of the day was reserved for rest,
+and they made their prescribed distance without distress and without
+straggling. They went by Raleigh C. H. and Fayetteville to Gauley
+Bridge, thence down the right bank of the Kanawha to Camp Piatt,
+thirteen miles above Charleston. The whole distance was ninety miles,
+and was covered easily in the three days and a half allotted to it. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. xii. pt.
+iii. p. 629.]</span> The fleet of light-draft steamboats which supplied
+the district with military stores was at my command, and I gave them
+rendezvous at Camp Piatt, where they were in readiness to meet the
+troops when the detachments began to arrive on the 17th. In the evening
+of the 14th I left the camp at Flat-top with my staff and rode to
+Raleigh C. H. On the 15th we completed the rest of the sixty miles to
+Gauley Bridge. From that point I was able to telegraph General Meigs,
+the Quartermaster-General at Washington, that I should reach
+Parkersburg, the Ohio River terminus of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad,
+on the evening of the 20th, and should need railway transportation for
+5000 men, two batteries of six guns each, 1100 horses, 270 wagons, with
+camp equipage and regimental trains complete, according to the army
+regulations then in force. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. pp. 577, 619, 629; vol. li. p.
+754.]</span> </p>
+<p>At Gauley Bridge I met Colonel Lightburn, to whom I turned over the
+command of the district, and spent the time, whilst the troops were on
+the march, in completing the arrangements both for our transportation
+and for the best disposition of the troops which were to remain. The
+movement of the division was the first in which there had been a
+carefully prepared effort to move a considerable body of troops with
+wagons and animals over a long distance within a definitely fixed time,
+and it was made the basis of the calculations for the movement of
+General Hooker and his two corps from Washington to Tennessee in the
+next year. It thus obtained some importance in the logistics of the war.
+The president of the railway put the matter unreservedly into the hands
+of W. P. Smith, the master of transportation; Mr. P. H. Watson,
+Assistant Secretary of War, represented the army in the management of
+the transfer, and by thus concentrating responsibility and power, the
+business was simplified, and what was then regarded as a noteworthy
+success was secured. The command could have moved more rapidly, perhaps,
+without its wagons and animals, but a constant supply of these was
+needed for the eastern army, and it was wise to take them, for they were
+organized into trains with drivers used to their teams and feeling a
+personal interest in them. It turned out that our having them was a most
+fortunate thing, for not only were the troops of the Army of the Potomac
+greatly crippled for lack of transportation on their return from the
+peninsula, but we were able to give rations to the Ninth Army Corps
+after the battle of Antietam, when the transportation of the other
+divisions proved entirely insufficient to keep up the supply of food.</p>
+<p>From the head of navigation on the Kanawha to Parkersburg on the
+Ohio was about one hundred and fifty miles; but the rivers were so low
+that the steamboats proceeded slowly, delayed by various obstacles and
+impediments, At Letart's Falls, on the Ohio, the water was a broken
+rapid, up which the boats had to be warped one at a time, by means of a
+heavy warp-line made fast to the bank and carried to the steam-capstan
+on the steamer. At the foot of Blennerhassett's Island there was only
+two feet of water in the channel, and the boats dragged themselves over
+the bottom by "sparring," a process somewhat like an invalid's pushing
+his wheel-chair along by a pair of crutches. But everybody worked with a
+will, and on the 21st the advanced regiments were transferred to the
+railway cars at Parkersburg, according to programme, and pulled out for
+Washington. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. pp. 619, 629.]</span> These were the
+Thirty-sixth Ohio, Colonel Crook, and the Thirtieth Ohio, Colonel Ewing.
+They passed through Washington to Alexandria, and thence, without
+stopping, to Warrenton, Virginia, where they reported at General Pope's
+headquarters. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 636, 637, 668, 676.]</span> The Eleventh Ohio (Lieutenant-Colonel
+Coleman) and Twelfth (Colonel White), with Colonel Scammon commanding
+brigade, left Parkersburg on the 22d, reaching Washington on the 24th.
+One of them passed on to Alexandria, but the other (Eleventh Ohio) was
+stopped in Washington by reason of a break in Long Bridge across the
+Potomac, and marched to Alexandria the next day. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. pp. 650, 677.]</span> The last of the regiments (Twenty-eighth
+Ohio, Colonel Moor, and Twenty-third, Lieutenant-Colonel Hayes), with
+the artillery and cavalry followed, and on the 26th all the men had
+reached Washington, though the wagons and animals were a day or two
+later in arriving. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 698.]</span> </p>
+<p>In Washington I reported to the Secretary of War, and was received
+with a cordiality that went far to remove from my mind the impression I
+had got from others, that Mr. Stanton was abrupt and unpleasant to
+approach. Both on this occasion and later, he was as affable as could be
+expected of a man driven with incessant and importunate duties of state.
+In the intervals of my constant visits to the railway offices (for
+getting my troops and my wagons together was the absorbing duty) I found
+time for a hurried visit to Secretary Chase, and found also my friend
+Governor Dennison in the city, mediating between the President and
+General McClellan with the good-will and diplomatic wisdom which
+peculiarly marked his character. I had expected to go forward with three
+regiments to join General Pope on the evening of the 26th; but Colonel
+Haupt, the military superintendent of railways at Alexandria, was unable
+to furnish the transportation by reason of the detention of trains at
+the front. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 625, 677.]</span> Lee's flank movement against Pope's army had begun,
+and as the latter retreated all the railway cars which could be procured
+were needed to move his stores back toward Washington. On the afternoon
+of the 26th, however, arrangements had been made for moving the
+regiments at Alexandria early next morning. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ibid</i>, and pp. 678,
+679.]</span> The wagons and animals were near at hand, and I ordered
+Colonel Moor with the Twenty-eighth Ohio to march with them to Manassas
+as soon as they should be unloaded from the railway trains. But during
+the night occurred a startling change in the character of the campaign
+which upset all our plans and gave a wholly unexpected turn to my own
+part in it.</p>
+<p>About nine o'clock in the evening Colonel Haupt received at
+Alexandria the information that the enemy's cavalry had attacked our
+great depot of supplies at Manassas Junction. The telegrapher had barely
+time to send a message, break the connection of the wires, and hurry
+away to escape capture. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. p. 680.]</span> It was naturally
+supposed to be only a cavalry raid, but the interruption of
+communication with Pope in that crisis was in itself a serious mishap.
+The first thing to be done was to push forward any troops at hand to
+protect the railway bridge over Bull Run, and by authority of the War
+Department Colonel Haupt was authorized to send forward, under Colonel
+Scammon, the Eleventh and Twelfth Ohio without waiting to communicate
+with me. They were started very early in the morning of the 27th, going
+to support a New Jersey brigade under General George W. Taylor which had
+been ordered to protect the Bull Run bridge. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: C. W., vol. i. pp. 379, 381.]</span>
+Ignorant of all this, I was busy on Wednesday morning (27th), trying to
+learn the whereabouts of the trains with my wagon teams, which had not
+yet reached Washington, and reported the situation as to my command to
+the Assistant Secretary of War, Mr. Watson. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. p. 698.]</span> I then learned of Scammon's sudden movement to
+the front, and of the serious character of the enemy's movement upon
+Manassas. I marched at once with the two regiments still in Washington,
+expecting to follow the rest of the command by rail as soon as we should
+reach Alexandria. Arriving there, I hastened to the telegraph office at
+the railway station, where I found not only Colonel Haupt, but General
+McClellan, who had come from Fortress Monroe the night before. Of the
+Army of the Potomac, Heintzelman's and Porter's corps were already with
+Pope, Franklin's was at Alexandria, and Sumner's was beginning to
+arrive. As soon as it was known at the War Department that McClellan was
+present, General Halleck's correspondence was of course with him, and we
+passed under his orders. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. pp. 688, 689, 691.]</span> It had
+already been learned that 'Stonewall' Jackson was with infantry as well
+as cavalry at Manassas, and that the Bull Run bridge had been burned,
+our troops being driven back three or four miles from it. McClellan
+thought it necessary to organize the two corps at Alexandria and such
+other troops as were there, including mine, first to cover that place
+and Washington in the possible contingency that Lee's whole army had
+interposed between General Pope and the capital, and, second, to open
+communication with Pope as soon as the situation of the latter could be
+learned. Couch's division was still at Yorktown, and orders had been
+issued by Halleck to ship 5000 new troops there to relieve Couch and
+allow his veteran division to join the Potomac Army. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>., p. 689.]</span> </p>
+<p>McClellan directed me to take the two regiments with me into camp
+with Franklin's corps at Annandale, three miles in front of Alexandria,
+and to obey Franklin's orders if any emergency should occur. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 692.]</span>
+I found, at the post-quartermaster's office, an officer who had served
+in West Virginia a year before, and by his hearty and efficient
+good-will secured some supplies for the regiments with me during the
+days that were yet to pass before we got our own trains and could feel
+that we had an assured means of living and moving in an independent way.
+We bivouacked by the roadside without shelter of any sort, enveloped in
+dense clouds of dust from the marching columns of the Army of the
+Potomac, their artillery and wagons, as they passed and went into camp
+just in front of us. About noon, on Thursday (28th), Colonel Scammon
+joined me with the two regiments he had taken toward Manassas, and we
+learned the particulars of the sharp engagement he had at the railway
+bridge.</p>
+<p>The train carrying the troops approached the bridge over Bull Run
+about eight o'clock in the morning on Wednesday, and Colonel Scammon
+immediately pushed forward the Twelfth Ohio (Colonel White) to the
+bridge itself and the bank of the stream. He met the New Jersey brigade
+of four regiments coming back in confusion and panic. The commander,
+General Taylor, had taken position on the west side of the creek,
+covering the bridge; but he had no artillery, and though his advance was
+made with great spirit (as Jackson recognized in his report <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. ii. p. 644.]</span> ), his lines had been subjected to a heavy
+artillery fire from the batteries of A. P. Hill's and Jackson's own
+divisions, and broke, retreating in disorder to the eastern side of the
+stream. General Taylor himself fell severely wounded whilst trying to
+rally them. It was at this moment that Scammon reached the field with
+the Twelfth Ohio. He had heard the artillery fire, but little or no
+musketry, and was astonished at seeing the retreat. He sent his
+adjutant-general, Lieutenant Robert P. Kennedy, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Member of Congress (1890),
+and recently Lieutenant-Governor of Ohio.]</span> to communicate with
+General Taylor and to try to rally the fugitives. Meanwhile he ordered
+Colonel White to line the bank of the creek with his men and try to
+protect the bridge structure. Kennedy found General Taylor in a litter
+being carried to the rear, and the general, though in anguish from his
+wound, was in great mental distress at the rout of his men. He begged
+every one to rally the flying troops if possible, and sent his own
+adjutant-general, Captain Dunham, to turn over the general command to
+Scammon. All efforts to rally the panic-stricken brigade were fruitless,
+and Scammon resisted the advance of Hill's division through nearly a
+whole day with the two regiments alone. A Lieutenant Wright of the
+Fourth New Jersey, with ten men, reported to Colonel Scammon and begged
+assignment in the line. Their names are honorably enrolled in Scammon's
+report, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xii. pt. ii. p. 407.]</span> and these, with Captain
+Dunham, did heroic service, but were all of the brigade that took any
+further part in the fight. Dunham succeeded in rallying a portion of the
+brigade later in the day, but too late to enter the engagement.</p>
+<p>Taking advantage of the bridges near the stream, Scammon kept his
+men covered from the artillery fire as well as possible, driving back
+with his volleys every effort to pass by the bridge or to ford the
+stream in his front. Hill moved brigades considerably to right and left,
+and attempted to surround White and the Twelfth Ohio. But Coleman, with
+the Eleventh, had come up in support, and Scammon ordered him to charge
+on the enemy's right, which was passing White's left flank. Coleman did
+so in splendid style, driving his foe before him, and crossing the
+bridge to the west side. The odds, however, were far too great where a
+brigade could attack each regiment of ours and others pass beyond them,
+so that Scammon, having fully developed the enemy's force, had to limit
+himself to delaying their advance, retiring his little command in
+echelon from one ridge to another, as his wings were threatened. This he
+did with perfect coolness and order, maintaining the unequal struggle
+without assistance till about half-past three in the afternoon. The
+enemy's efforts now relaxed, and Scammon withdrew at leisure to a
+position some three miles from the bridge. Hill still showed a
+disposition to surround the detachment by manoeuvres, and Scammon
+retired toward Annandale in the night. He himself underestimated the
+enemy's force in infantry, which Jackson's report puts at "several
+brigades." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xii. pt. ii. p. 644.]</span> His loss in the two Ohio
+regiments was 106 in killed, wounded, and missing. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 262.]</span>
+Those of the New Jersey brigade are not reported. The combat was a most
+instructive military lesson, teaching what audacity and skill may do
+with a very small force in delaying and mystifying a much larger one,
+which was imposed upon by its firm front and its able handling.</p>
+<p>Some of Scammon's wounded being too badly hurt to be removed, he
+detailed a surgeon to remain with them and care for them till they
+should be exchanged or otherwise brought within our lines. This surgeon
+was taken to Jackson's headquarters, where he was questioned as to the
+troops which had held the Confederates at bay. General J. E. B. Stuart
+was with Jackson, and on the surgeon's stating that the fighting during
+most of the day had been by the two Ohio regiments alone, Stuart's racy
+expressions of admiration were doubly complimentary as coming from such
+an adversary, and, when repeated, were more prized by the officers and
+men than any praise from their own people. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The history of this
+engagement was currently published with curious inaccuracies. Even Mr.
+Ropes in his "Campaign under Pope" does not seem to have seen the
+Official Records on our side, and supposed that Taylor's brigade was all
+that was engaged. See Official Records, vol. xii. pt. ii. pp. 405-411;
+also pt. iii. pp. 698, 699; also C. W., vol. i. pp. 379-382.]</span> </p>
+<p>Toward evening on Thursday, a thunderstorm and gale of wind came up,
+adding greatly to the wretched discomfort of the troops for the moment,
+but making the air clearer and laying the dust for a day or two. I found
+partial shelter with my staff, on the veranda of a small house which was
+occupied by ladies of the families of some general officers of the
+Potomac Army, who had seized the passing opportunity to see their
+husbands in the interval of the campaign. We thought ourselves fortunate
+in getting even the shelter of the veranda roof for the night. On Friday
+morning (29th), Captain Fitch, my quartermaster, was able to report his
+train and baggage safe at Alexandria, and we were ready for any service.
+Orders came from General McClellan during the forenoon to move the four
+regiments now with me into Forts Ramsey and Buffalo, on Upton's and
+Munson's hills, covering Washington on the direct road to Centreville by
+Aqueduct Bridge, Ball's Cross-Roads, and Fairfax C. H. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. pp. 712, 726. For this he had Halleck's authority, in view of
+the danger of cavalry raids into the city. <i>Id</i>., p. 722.]</span>
+General McClellan had established his headquarters on Seminary Ridge
+beyond the northern outskirts of Alexandria, and after putting my
+command in motion I rode there to get fuller instructions from him as to
+the duty assigned me. His tents were pitched in a high airy situation
+looking toward the Potomac on the east; indeed he had found them a
+little too airy in the thunder-squall of the previous evening which had
+demolished part of the canvas village. It must have been about noon when
+I dismounted at his tent. The distant pounding of artillery had been in
+our ears as we rode. It was Pope's battle with Jackson along the
+turnpike between Bull Run and Gainesville and on the heights above
+Groveton, thirty miles away.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/1-11-1.png" title="Map"
+ alt="Map" style="width: 726px; height: 750px;"><br>
+</p>
+<p>General Franklin had ridden over from Annandale and was with
+McClellan receiving his parting directions under the imperative orders
+which Halleck had sent to push that corps out to Pope. McClellan's words
+I was not likely to forget. "Go," he said, "and whatever may happen,
+don't allow it to be said that the Army of the Potomac failed to do its
+utmost for the country." McClellan then explained to me the importance
+of the position to which I was ordered. The heights were the outer line
+of defence of Washington on the west, which had been held at one time, a
+year before, by the Confederates, who had an earthwork there, notorious
+for a while under the camp name of "Fort Skedaddle." From them the
+unfinished dome of the Capitol was to be seen, and the rebel flag had
+flaunted there, easily distinguishable by the telescopes which were
+daily pointed at it from the city. McClellan had little expectation that
+Pope would escape defeat, and impressed upon me the necessity of being
+prepared to cover a perhaps disorderly retreat within the lines. Some
+heavy artillery troops (Fourth New York Heavy Artillery) were in
+garrison at one of the forts, and these with the forces at Falls Church
+were ordered to report to me. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. p. 726.]</span> Assuring me that he
+would soon visit me in my new quarters, McClellan dismissed me, and I
+galloped forward to overtake my troops.</p>
+<p>I found the position of the forts a most commanding one, overlooking
+the country in every direction. Westward the ground sloped away from us
+toward Fairfax Court House and Centreville. Northward, in a pretty
+valley, lay the village of Falls Church, and beyond it a wooded ridge
+over which a turnpike road ran to Vienna and on to Leesburg. Behind us
+was the rolling country skirting the Potomac, and from Ball's
+Cross-Roads, a mile or two in rear, a northward road led to the chain
+bridge above Georgetown, whilst the principal way went directly to the
+city by the Aqueduct Bridge. Three knolls grouped so as to command these
+different directions had been crowned with forts of strong profile. The
+largest of these, Fort Ramsey, on Upton's Hill was armed with
+twenty-pounder Parrott rifles, and the heavy-artillery troops occupied
+this work. I had a pair of guns of the same kind and calibre in my mixed
+battery, and these with my other field artillery were put in the other
+forts. Lines of infantry trench connected the works and extended right
+and left, and my four regiments occupied these. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. li.
+pt. i. pp. 777, 779; vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 176.]</span> A regiment of
+cavalry (Eighth Illinois, joined later by the Eighth Pennsylvania) was
+ordered to report to me, and this, with Schambeck's squadron which had
+come with me, made a cavalry camp in front of Falls Church and picketed
+and patrolled the front. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+See my order assigning garrisons to the forts. Official Records, vol.
+li. pt. i. p. 771.]</span> </p>
+<p>We pitched our headquarters tents on Upton's Hill, just in rear of
+Fort Ramsey, and had a sense of luxury in "setting our house in order"
+after the uncomfortable experience of our long journey from West
+Virginia. The hurry of startling events in the past few days made our
+late campaign in the mountains seem as far away in time as it was in
+space. We were now in the very centre of excitement, and had become a
+very small part of a great army. The isolation and the separate
+responsibility of the past few months seemed like another existence
+indefinitely far away. I lost no time in making a rapid ride about my
+position, studying its approaches in the gathering twilight and trying
+to fix in mind the leading features of the topography with their
+relation to the possible retreat of our army and advance of the enemy.
+And all the while the rapid though muffled thumping of the distant
+cannon was in our ears, coming from the field in front of Groveton,
+where Lee, having now united his whole army against Pope, was sending
+part of Longstreet's divisions against McDowell's corps along the
+Warrenton turnpike.</p>
+<p>On Saturday the 30th ambulances began coming through our lines with
+wounded men, and some on foot with an arm in a sling or bandages upon
+the head were wearily finding their way into the city. All such were
+systematically questioned, their information was collated and corrected,
+and reports were made to General Halleck and General McClellan. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. ii. p. 405; pt. iii. pp. 748, 789; vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 170; vol.
+li. pt. i. p. 777.]</span> The general impression of all undoubtedly was
+that the engagement of Friday had been victorious for our army, and that
+the enemy was probably retreating at dark. During the day the cannonade
+continued with occasional lulls. It seemed more distant and fainter,
+requiring attentive listening to hear it. This was no doubt due to some
+change in the condition of the atmosphere; but we naturally interpreted
+it according to our wishes, and believed that the success of Friday was
+followed by the pursuit of the enemy. About four o'clock in the
+afternoon the distant firing became much more rapid; at times the
+separate shots could not be counted. I telegraphed to McClellan the fact
+which indicated a crisis in the battle. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. p. 748.]</span> It was the fierce artillery duel which preceded
+the decisive advance of Longstreet against Pope's left wing. This was
+the decisive turning-point in the engagement, and Pope was forced to
+retreat upon Centreville.</p>
+<p>Early in the evening all doubt was removed about the result of the
+battle. Ill news travels fast, and the retreat toward us shortened the
+distance to be travelled. But as Sumner's and Franklin's corps had gone
+forward and would report to Pope at Centreville, we were assured that
+Pope was "out of his scrape" (to use the words of McClellan's too famous
+dispatch to the President <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+vol. xi. pt. i. p. 98.]</span> ), and that the worst that could now
+happen would be the continuance of the retreat within our lines. The
+combat at Chantilly on the evening of September 1st was the last of
+Pope's long series of bloody engagements, and though the enemy was
+repulsed, the loss of Generals Kearny and Stevens made it seem to us
+like another disaster.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</p>
+<p>RETREAT WITHIN THE LINES--REORGANIZATION--HALLECK AND HIS
+SUBORDINATES</p>
+<p>McClellan's visits to my position--Riding the lines--Discussing the
+past campaign--The withdrawal from the James--Prophecy--McClellan and
+the soldiers--He is in command of the defences--Intricacy of official
+relations--Reorganization begun--Pope's army marches through our
+works--Meeting of McClellan and Pope--Pope's characteristics--Undue
+depreciation of him--The situation when Halleck was made
+General-in-Chief--Pope's part in it--Reasons for dislike on the part of
+the Potomac Army--McClellan's secret service--Deceptive information of
+the enemy's force--Information from prisoners and citizens--Effects of
+McClellan's illusion as to Lee's strength--Halleck's previous
+career--Did he intend to take command in the field?--His abdication of
+the field command--The necessity for a union of forces in
+Virginia--McClellan's inaction was Lee's opportunity--Slow transfer of
+the Army of the Potomac--Halleck burdened with subordinate's
+work--Burnside twice declines the command--It is given to
+McClellan--Pope relieved--Other changes in
+organization--Consolidation--New campaign begun.</p>
+<p>On Sunday, the 31st, McClellan rode over to Upton's Hill and spent
+most of the day with me. He brought me a copy of the McDowell map of the
+country about Washington, the compilation of which had been that
+officer's first work at the beginning of hostilities. It covered the
+region to and beyond the Bull Run battlefield, and although not wholly
+accurate, it was approximately so, and was the only authority relied
+upon for topographical details of the region. McClellan's primary
+purpose was to instruct me as to the responsibilities that might fall
+upon me if the army should be driven in. A day or two later I received
+formal orders to prepare to destroy buildings in front within my lines
+of artillery fire, and to be ready to cover the retreat of our army
+should any part be driven back near my position. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. pp. 802, 805.]</span> All this, however, had been discussed with
+McClellan himself. We rode together over all the principal points in the
+neighborhood, and he pointed out their relation to each other and to
+positions on the map which we did not visit. The discussion of the
+topography led to reminiscences of the preceding year,--of the manner in
+which the enemy had originally occupied these hills, and of their
+withdrawal from them,--of the subsequent construction of the forts and
+connecting lines, who occupied them all, and the system of mutual
+support, of telegraphic communication, and of plans for defence in case
+of attack.</p>
+<p>McClellan had received me at Alexandria on the 27th with all his old
+cordiality, and had put me at once upon our accustomed footing of
+personal friendship. On my part, there was naturally a little
+watchfulness not to overstep the proper line of subordination or to be
+inquisitive about things he did not choose to confide to me; but, this
+being assumed, I found myself in a circle where he seemed to unbosom
+himself with freedom. I saw no interruption in this while I remained in
+the Potomac Army. He was, at this time, a little depressed in manner,
+feeling keenly his loss of power and command, but maintaining a quiet
+dignity that became him better than any show of carelessness would have
+done. He used no bitter or harsh language in criticising others. Pope
+and McDowell he plainly disliked, and rated them low as to capacity for
+command; but he spoke of them without discourtesy or vilification. I
+think it necessary to say this because of the curious sidelight thrown
+on his character by the private letters to his wife which have since
+been published in his "Own Story," and of which I shall have more to
+say. Their inconsistency with his expressions and manner in
+conversation, or at least their great exaggeration of what he conveyed
+in familiar talk, has struck me very forcibly and unpleasantly.</p>
+<p>He discussed his campaign of the peninsula with apparent unreserve.
+He condemned the decision to recall him from Harrison's Landing, arguing
+that the one thing to do in that emergency was to reinforce his army
+there and make it strong enough to go on with its work and capture
+Richmond. He said that if the government had lost confidence in his
+ability to conduct the campaign to a successful end, still it was unwise
+to think of anything else except to strengthen that army and give it to
+some one they could trust. He added explicitly, "If Pope was the man
+they had faith in then Pope should have been sent to Harrison's Landing
+to take command, and however bitter it would have been, I should have
+had no just reason to complain." He predicted that they would yet be put
+to the cost of much life and treasure to get back to the position left
+by him.</p>
+<p>On Monday, September 1st, he visited me again, and we renewed our
+riding and our conversation. The road from his headquarters encampment
+near Alexandria to Upton's Hill was a pleasant one for his
+"constitutional" ride, and my position was nearest the army in front
+where news from it would most likely be first found. The Army of the
+Potomac had all passed to the front from Alexandria, and according to
+the letter of the orders issued, he was wholly without command; though
+Halleck personally directed him to exercise supervision over all
+detachments about the works and lines. He came almost alone on these
+visits, an aide and an orderly or two being his only escort. Colonel
+Colburn of his staff was usually his companion. He wore a blue flannel
+hunting-shirt quite different from the common army blouse. It was made
+with a broad yoke at the neck, and belt at the waist, the body in
+plaits. He was without sash or side arms, or any insignia of rank except
+inconspicuous shoulder-straps. On this day he was going into Washington,
+and I rode down with him to the bridge. Bodies of troops of the new
+levies were encamped at different points near the river. In these there
+seemed to be always some veterans or officers who knew the general, and
+the men quickly gathered in groups and cheered him. He had a taking way
+of returning such salutations. He went beyond the formal military
+salute, and gave his cap a little twirl, which with his bow and smile
+seemed to carry a little of personal good fellowship even to the
+humblest private soldier. If the cheer was repeated, he would turn in
+his saddle and repeat the salute. It was very plain that these little
+attentions to the troops took well, and had no doubt some influence in
+establishing a sort of comradeship between him and them. They were part
+of an attractive and winning deportment which adapted itself to all
+sorts and ranks of men.</p>
+<p>On Tuesday he came a little later in the day, and I noticed at once
+a change in his appearance. He wore his yellow sash with sword and belt
+buckled over it, and his face was animated as he greeted me with "Well,
+General, I am in command again!" I congratulated him with hearty
+earnestness, for I was personally rejoiced at it. I was really attached
+to him, believed him to be, on the whole, the most accomplished officer
+I knew, and was warmly disposed to give him loyal friendship and
+service. He told me of his cordial interview with President Lincoln, and
+that the latter had said he believed him to be the only man who could
+bring organized shape out of the chaos in which everything seemed then
+to be. The form of his new assignment to duty was that he was to "have
+command of the fortifications of Washington, and of all the troops for
+the defence of the capital." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. p. 807.]</span> The order was made
+by the personal direction of the President, and McClellan knew that
+Secretary Stanton did not approve of it. General Halleck seemed glad to
+be rid of a great responsibility, and accepted the President's action
+with entire cordiality. Still, he was no doubt accurate in writing to
+Pope later that the action was that of the President alone without any
+advice from him. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. p. 820.]</span> McClellan was
+evidently and entirely happy in his personal relation to things. He had
+not been relieved from the command of the Army of the Potomac, though
+the troops had passed temporarily to Pope's army. As commandant of all
+within the defences, his own army reported to him directly when they
+came within our lines. Pope's army of northern Virginia would, of
+course, report through its commander, and Burnside's in a similar way.
+The first thing to be done was to get the army in good condition, to
+strengthen its corps by the new regiments which were swarming toward the
+capital, and to prepare it for a new campaign. McClellan seemed quite
+willing to postpone the question who would command when it took the
+field. Of the present he was sure. It was in his own hands, and the work
+of reorganization was that in which his prestige was almost sure to
+increase. This attitude was plainly shown in all he said and in all he
+hinted at without fully saying it.</p>
+<p>Halleck had already directed Pope to bring the army within the
+fortifications, though the latter had vainly tried to induce him to ride
+out toward Centreville, to see the troops and have a consultation there
+before determining what to do. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 796.]</span> We were therefore expecting the head of column to
+approach my lines, and I arranged that we should be notified when they
+came near. McClellan had already determined to put the corps and
+divisions of the Army of the Potomac in the works, at positions
+substantially the same as they had occupied a year before,--Porter near
+Chain Bridge, Sumner next, Franklin near Alexandria, etc. I was directed
+to continue in the position I already occupied, to be supported by part
+of McDowell's corps.</p>
+<p>About four o'clock McClellan rode forward, and I accompanied him. We
+halted at the brow of the hill looking down the Fairfax road. The head
+of the column was in sight, and rising dust showed its position far
+beyond. Pope and McDowell, with the staff, rode at the head. Their
+uniform and that of all the party was covered with dust, their beards
+were powdered with it; they looked worn and serious, but alert and
+self-possessed. When we met, after brief salutations, McClellan
+announced that he had been ordered to assume command within the
+fortifications, and named to General Pope the positions the several
+corps would occupy. This done, both parties bowed, and the cavalcade
+moved on. King's division of McDowell's corps was the leading one,
+General Hatch, the senior brigadier, being in command by reason of
+King's illness. Hatch was present, near Pope, when McClellan assumed
+command, and instantly turning rode a few paces to the head of his
+column and shouted, "Boys, McClellan is in command again; three cheers!"
+The cheers were given with wild delight, and were taken up and passed
+toward the rear of the column. Warm friend of McClellan as I was, I felt
+my flesh cringe at the unnecessary affront to the unfortunate commander
+of that army. But no word was spoken. Pope lifted his hat in a parting
+salute to McClellan and rode quietly on with his escort. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: General Hatch had been in
+command of the cavalry of Banks's corps up to the battle of Cedar
+Mountain, when he was relieved by Pope's order by reason of
+dissatisfaction with his handling of that arm of the service. His
+assignment to a brigade of infantry in King's division was such a
+reduction of his prominence as an officer that it would not be strange
+if it chafed him.]</span> </p>
+<p>McClellan remained for a time, warmly greeted by the passing troops.
+He then left me, and rode off toward Vienna, northward. According to my
+recollection, Colonel Colburn was the only member of his staff with him;
+they had a small cavalry escort. My understanding also was that they
+proposed to return by Chain Bridge, avoiding the crowding of the road on
+which they had come out, and on which McDowell's corps was now moving.
+In his "Own Story" McClellan speaks of going in that direction to see
+the situation of Sumner's troops, supposed to be attacked, and intimates
+a neglect on Pope's part of a duty in that direction. I am confident he
+is mistaken as to this, and that I have given the whole interview
+between him and Pope. The telegraphic connection with my headquarters
+was such that he could learn the situation in front of any part of the
+line much more promptly there than by riding in person. Lee did not
+pursue, in fact, beyond Fairfax C. H. and Centreville, and nothing more
+than small bodies of cavalry were in our vicinity. I had kept
+scouting-parties of our own cavalry active in our front, and had also
+collected news from other sources. On the 1st of September I had been
+able to send to army headquarters authentic information of the
+expectation of the Confederate army to move into Maryland, and every day
+thereafter added to the evidence of that purpose, until they actually
+crossed the Potomac on the 5th. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. ii. pp. 404, 405; vol. xix. pt. ii. p.
+170; vol. li. pt. i. p. 777.]</span> </p>
+<p>Hatch's division was put into the lines on my left with orders to
+report to me in case of attack. Patrick's brigade of that division was
+next day placed near Falls Church in support of my cavalry, reporting
+directly to me. My two regiments which had been with Pope rejoined the
+division, and made it complete again. The night of the 2d was one in
+which I was on the alert all night, as it was probable the enemy would
+disturb us then if ever; but it passed quietly. A skirmish in our front
+on the Vienna road on the 4th was the only enlivening event till we
+began the campaign of South Mountain and Antietam on the 6th.</p>
+<p>Pope's proposed reorganization of his army, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. p. 810.]</span> which would have put me with most of Sigel's
+corps under Hooker, was prevented by a larger change which relieved him
+of command and consolidated his army with that of the Potomac on
+September 5th. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 813.]</span> I had a very slight acquaintance with Pope at the
+beginning of the war, but no opportunity of increasing it till he
+assumed command in Virginia and I reported to him as a subordinate. The
+events just sketched had once more interfered with my expected
+association with him, and I did not meet him again till long afterward.
+Then I came to know him well. His wife and the wife of my intimate
+friend General Force were sisters, and in Force's house we often met. He
+was then broken in health and softened by personal afflictions. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Mrs. Pope and Mrs. Force
+were daughters of the Hon. V. B. Horton, of Pomeroy, Ohio, a public man
+of solid influence and character, and prominent in the development of
+the coal and salt industries of the Ohio valley. I leave the text as I
+wrote it some years before General Pope's death. Since he died, the
+friendship of our families has culminated in a marriage between our
+children.]</span> His reputation in 1861 was that of an able and
+energetic man, vehement and positive in character, apt to be choleric
+and even violent toward those who displeased him. I remember well that I
+shrunk a little from coming under his immediate orders through fear of
+some chafing, though I learned in the army that choleric commanders, if
+they have ability, are often warmly appreciative of those who serve them
+with soldierly spirit and faithfulness. No one who had any right to
+judge questioned Pope's ability or his zeal in the National cause. His
+military career in the West had been a brilliant one. The necessity for
+uniting the columns in northern Virginia into one army was palpable; but
+it was a delicate question to decide who should command them. It seems
+to have been assumed by Mr. Lincoln that the commander must be a new
+man,--neither Fr&eacute;mont, McDowell, nor Banks. The reasons were
+probably much the same as those which later brought Grant and Sheridan
+from the West.</p>
+<p>Pope's introduction to the Eastern army, which I have already
+mentioned, was an unfortunate one; but neither he nor any one else could
+have imagined the heat of partisan spirit or the lengths it would run.
+No personal vilification was too absurd to be credited, and no
+characterization was too ridiculous to be received as true to the life.
+It was assumed that he had pledged himself to take Richmond with an army
+of 40,000 men when McClellan had failed to do so with 100,000. His
+defeat by Lee was taken to prove him contemptible as a commander, by the
+very men who lauded McClellan for having escaped destruction from the
+same army. There was neither intelligence nor consistency in the
+vituperation with which he was covered; but there was abundant proof
+that the wounded <i>amour propre</i> of the officers and men of the
+Potomac Army made them practically a unit in intense dislike and
+distrust of him. It may be that this condition of things destroyed his
+possibility of usefulness at the East; but it would be asking too much
+of human nature (certainly too much of Pope's impetuous nature) to ask
+him to take meekly the office of scapegoat for the disastrous result of
+the whole campaign. His demand on Halleck that he should publish the
+approval he had personally given to the several steps of the movements
+and combats from Cedar Mountain to Chantilly was just, but it was
+imprudent. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. pp. 812, 821.]</span> Halleck was irritated,
+and made more ready to sacrifice his subordinate. Mr. Lincoln was
+saddened and embarrassed; but being persuaded that Pope's usefulness was
+spoiled, he swallowed his own pride and sense of justice, and turned
+again to McClellan as the resource in the emergency of the moment.</p>
+<p>Pope seems to me entirely right in claiming that Jackson's raid to
+Manassas was a thing which should have resulted in the destruction of
+that column. He seems to have kept his head, and to have prepared his
+combinations skilfully for making Jackson pay the penalty of his
+audacity. There were a few hours of apparent hesitation on August 28th,
+but champions of McClellan should be the last to urge that against him.
+His plans were deranged on that day by the accident of McDowell's
+absence from his own command. This happened through an excess of zeal on
+McDowell's part to find his commander and give him the benefit of his
+knowledge of the topography of the country; yet it proved a serious
+misfortune, and shows how perilous it is for any officer to be away from
+his troops, no matter for what reason. Many still think Porter's
+inaction on the 29th prevented the advantage over Jackson from becoming
+a victory. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I have
+treated this subject at large in "The Second Battle of Bull Run as
+connected with the Fitz-John Porter Case."]</span> But after all, when
+the army was united within our lines, the injuries it had inflicted on
+the enemy so nearly balanced those it had received that if Grant or
+Sherman had been in Halleck's place, Lee would never have crossed the
+Potomac into Maryland. McClellan, Pope, and Burnside would have
+commanded the centre and wings of the united and reinforced army, and
+under a competent head it would have marched back to the Rappahannock
+with scarcely a halt.</p>
+<p>That Halleck was in command was, in no small measure, Pope's own
+work. He reminded Halleck of this in his letter of September 30th,
+written when he was chafing under the first effects of his removal. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. pp. 816, etc.]</span> "If you desire," said he, "to know the
+personal obligation to which I refer, I commend you to the President,
+the Secretary of War, or any other member of the administration. Any of
+these can satisfy your inquiries." This means that he had, before the
+President and the cabinet, advocated putting Halleck in supreme command
+over himself and McClellan to give unity to a campaign that would else
+be hopelessly broken down. McClellan was then at Harrison's Landing,
+believing Lee's army to be 200,000 strong, and refusing to listen to any
+suggestion except that enormous reinforcements should be sent to him
+there. He had taught the Army of the Potomac to believe implicitly that
+the Confederate army was more than twice as numerous as it was in fact.
+With this conviction it was natural that they should admire the
+generalship which had saved them from annihilation. They accepted with
+equal faith the lessons which came to them from headquarters teaching
+that the "radicals" at Washington were trying for political ends to
+destroy their general and them. In regard to the facts there were
+varying degrees of intelligence among officers and men; but there was a
+common opinion that they and he were willingly sacrificed, and that
+Pope, the radical, was to succeed him. This made them hate Pope, for the
+time, with holy hatred. If the army could at that time have compared
+authentic tables of strength of Lee's army and their own, the whole
+theory would have collapsed at once, and McClellan's reputation and
+popularity with it. They did not have the authentic tables, and fought
+for a year under the awful cloud created by a blundering spy-system.</p>
+<p>The fiction as to Lee's forces is the most remarkable in the history
+of modern wars. Whether McClellan was the victim or the accomplice of
+the inventions of his "secret service," we cannot tell. It is almost
+incredible that he should be deceived, except willingly. I confess to a
+contempt for all organizations of spies and detectives, which is the
+result of my military experience. The only spies who long escape are
+those who work for both sides. They sell to each what it wants, and suit
+their wares to the demand. Pinkerton's man in the rebel commissariat at
+Yorktown who reported 119,000 rations issued daily, laughed well in his
+sleeve as he pocketed the secret service money. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: For Pinkerton's reports, see
+Official Records, vol. xi. pt. i. pp. 264-272.]</span> </p>
+<p>A great deal of valuable information may be got from a hostile
+population, for few men or women know how to hold their tongues, though
+they try never so honestly. A friendly population overdoes its
+information, as a rule. I had an excellent example of this in the
+Kanawha valley. After I had first advanced to Gauley Bridge, the
+Secessionists behind me were busy sending to the enemy all they could
+learn of my force. We intercepted, among others, a letter from an
+intelligent woman who had tried hard to keep her attention upon the
+organization of my command as it passed her house. In counting my
+cannon, she had evidently taken the teams as the easiest units to count,
+and had set down every caisson as a gun, with the battery-forge thrown
+in for an extra one. In a similar way, every accidental break in the
+marching column was counted as the head of a new regiment. She thus, in
+perfect good faith, doubled my force, and taught me that such
+information to the enemy did them more harm than good.</p>
+<p>As to the enemy's organization and numbers, the only information I
+ever found trustworthy is that got by contact with him. No day should
+pass without having some prisoners got by "feeling the lines." These, to
+secure treatment as regular prisoners of war, must always tell the
+company and regiment to which they belong. Rightly questioned, they
+rarely stop there, and it is not difficult to get the brigade, division,
+etc. The reaction from the dangers with which the imagination had
+invested capture, to the commonly good-humored hospitality of the
+captors, makes men garrulous of whom one would not expect it. General
+Pope's chief quartermaster, of the rank of colonel, was captured by
+Stuart's cavalry in this very campaign; and since the war I have read
+with amazement General Lee's letters to President Davis, to the
+Secretary of War at Richmond, and to General Loring in West Virginia,
+dated August 23d, in which he says: <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. ii. pp. 940-941.]</span> "General Stuart
+reports that General Pope's chief quartermaster, who was captured last
+night, positively asserts that Cox's troops are being withdrawn by the
+way of Wheeling." Of course Lee suggests the importance of "pushing
+things" in the Kanawha valley. Stuart thus knew my movement on the day I
+left Parkersburg.</p>
+<p>Even when the captured person tells nothing he is bound to conceal,
+enough is necessarily known to enable a diligent provost-marshal to
+construct a reasonably complete roster of the enemy in a short time. In
+the Atlanta campaign I always carried a memorandum book in which I noted
+and corrected all the information of this sort which came to me, and by
+comparing this with others and with the lists at General Sherman's
+headquarters, there was no difficulty in keeping well up in the enemy's
+organization. It may therefore be said that every commanding officer
+ought to know the divisions and brigades of his enemy. The strength of a
+brigade is fairly estimated from the average of our own, for in people
+of similar race and education, the models of organization are
+essentially the same, and subject to the same causes of diminution
+during a campaign. Such considerations as these leave no escape from the
+conclusion that McClellan's estimates of Lee's army were absolutely
+destructive of all chances of success, and made it impossible for the
+President or for General Halleck to deal with the military problem
+before them. That he had continued this erroneous counting for more than
+a year, and through an active campaign in the field, destroyed every
+hope of correcting it. The reports of the peninsular campaign reveal, at
+times, the difficulty there was in keeping up the illusion. The known
+divisions in the Confederate army would not account for the numbers
+attributed to them, and so these divisions occasionally figure in our
+reports as "grand divisions." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+In his dispatch to Halleck on the morning after South Mountain
+(September 15), D. H. Hill's division is called a corps. Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 294.]</span> That the false estimate was
+unnecessary is proven by the fact that General Meigs, in Washington, on
+July 28th, made up an estimate from the regiments, brigades, etc.,
+mentioned in the newspapers that got through the lines, which was
+reasonably accurate. But McClellan held Meigs for an enemy. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: General Meigs found ninety
+regiments of infantry, one regiment of cavalry, and five batteries of
+artillery designated by name in the "Confederate" newspaper reports of
+the seven days' battles. Comparing this with other information from
+similar sources, he concluded that Lee had about one hundred and fifty
+regiments. These, at 700 men each, would make 105,000, or at 400 (which
+he found a full average) the gross of the infantry would be 60,000.
+General Webb, with official documents before him, puts it at 70,000 to
+80,000. Does one need better evidence how much worse than useless was
+McClellan's secret service? See Official Records, vol. xi. pt. iii. p.
+340.]</span> When I joined McClellan at Washington, I had no personal
+knowledge of either army except as I had learned it from the newspapers.
+My predilections in favor of McClellan made me assume that his facts
+were well based, as they ought to have been. I therefore accepted the
+general judgment of himself and his intimate friends as to his late
+campaign and Pope's, and believed that his restoration to command was an
+act of justice to him and of advantage to the country. I did not stay
+long enough with that army to apply any test of my own to the question
+of relative numbers, and have had to correct my opinions of the men and
+the campaigns by knowledge gained long afterward. I however used
+whatever influence I had to combat the ideas in McClellan's mind that
+the administration meant to do him any wrong, or had any end but the
+restoration of National unity in view.</p>
+<p>Whether Halleck was appointed on Pope's urgent recommendation or no,
+his campaign in the West was the ground of his promotion. The advance
+from the Ohio to Fort Donelson, to Nashville, to Shiloh, and to Corinth
+had been under his command, and he deservedly had credit for movements
+which had brought Kentucky and Tennessee within the Union lines. He had
+gone in person to the front after the battle of Shiloh, and though much
+just criticism had been made of his slow digging the way to Corinth by a
+species of siege operations, he had at any rate got there. Mr. Lincoln
+was willing to compromise upon a slow advance upon Richmond, provided it
+were sure and steady. Halleck's age and standing in the army were such
+that McClellan himself could find no fault with his appointment, if any
+one were to be put over him.</p>
+<p>Everything points to the expectation, at the time of his
+appointment, that Halleck would assume the personal command in the
+field. He visited McClellan at Harrison's Landing on July 25th, however,
+and promised him that if the armies should be promptly reunited, he
+(McClellan) should command the whole, with Burnside and Pope as his
+subordinates. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: McC. Own
+Story, p. 474; Official Records, vol. xi. pt. iii. p. 360.]</span> That
+he did not inform Pope of this abdication of his generalship in the
+field is plain from Pope's correspondence during the campaign. It is
+made indisputably clear by Pope's letter to him of the 25th of August. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. xii. pt.
+ii. pp. 65, 66.]</span> He probably did not tell the President or Mr.
+Stanton of it. He seems to have waited for the union of the parts of the
+army, and when that came his prestige was forever gone, and he had
+become, what he remained to the close of the war, a bureau officer in
+Washington. He had ordered the transfer of the Potomac Army from the
+James to Acquia Creek, intending to unite it with Burnside's at
+Falmouth, opposite Fredericksburg, and thus begin a fresh advance from
+the line of the Rappahannock. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. ii. p. 5; vol. xi. pt. i. pp. 80-84; <i>Id</i>.,
+pt. iii. p. 337.]</span> He believed, and apparently with reason, that
+ten days was sufficient to complete this transfer with the means at
+McClellan's disposal, but at the end of ten days the movement had not
+yet begun. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The order
+was given August 3; the movement began August 14. <i>Id</i>., pt. i.
+pp. 80, 89.]</span> He was right in thinking that the whole army should
+be united. McClellan thought the same. The question was where and how.
+McClellan said, "Send Pope's men to me." Halleck replied that it would
+not do to thus uncover Washington. McClellan had said that vigorous
+advance upon the enemy by his army and a victory would best protect the
+capital. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+vol. xii. pt. ii. pp. 9, 10.]</span> Again he was right, but he seemed
+incapable of a vigorous advance. Had he made it when he knew (on July
+30) that Jackson had gone northward with thirty thousand men to resist
+Pope's advance, his army would not have been withdrawn. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. xi. pt.
+iii. p. 342.]</span> He was then nearly twice as strong as Lee, but he
+did not venture even upon a forced reconnoissance. The situation of the
+previous year was repeated. He was allowing himself to be besieged by a
+fraction of his own force. Grant would have put himself into the
+relation to McClellan which he sustained to Meade in 1864, and would
+have infused his own energy into the army. Halleck did not do this. It
+would seem that he had become conscious of his own lack of nerve in the
+actual presence of an enemy, and looked back upon his work at St. Louis
+in administering his department, whilst Grant and Buell took the field,
+with more satisfaction than upon his own advance from Shiloh to Corinth.
+He seemed already determined to manage the armies from his office in
+Washington and assume no responsibility for their actual leadership.</p>
+<p>When the Army of the Potomac was arriving at Alexandria, another
+crisis occurred in which a single responsible head in the field was a
+necessity. McClellan had been giving a continuous demonstration, since
+August 4th, how easy it is to thwart and hinder any movement whilst
+professing to be accomplishing everything that is possible. No maxim in
+war is better founded in experience than that a man who believes that a
+plan is sure to fail should never be set to conduct it. McClellan had
+written that Pope would be beaten before the Army of the Potomac could
+be transferred to him, and Pope was beaten. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Halleck to McClellan, August
+10 and 12, and McClellan's reply: Official Records, vol. xi. pt. i. pp.
+86-88. See also O. S., p. 466.]</span> The only chance for any other
+result was for Halleck himself to conduct the transfer. If Halleck meant
+that Franklin should have pushed out to Manassas on the 27th of August,
+he should have taken the field and gone with the corps. He did not know
+and could not know how good or bad McClellan's excuses were, and nothing
+but his own presence, with supreme power, could certainly remove the
+causes for delay. He wrote to Pope that he could not leave Washington,
+when he ought not to have been in Washington. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. iii. p. 797.]</span> He worked and worried himself ill trying to make
+McClellan do what he should have done himself, and then, overwhelmed
+with details he should never have burdened himself with, besought his
+subordinate to relieve him of the strain by practically taking command. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 691; vol.
+xi. pt. i. p. 103.]</span> </p>
+<p>As soon as McClellan began the movement down the James, Lee took
+Longstreet's corps to Jackson, leaving only D. H. Hill's at Richmond. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt. ii. pp.
+177, 552.]</span> From that moment McClellan could have marched anywhere.
+He could have marched to Fredericksburg and joined Pope, and Halleck
+could have met them with Burnside's troops. But the vast imaginary army
+of the Confederacy paralyzed everything, and the ponderous task of
+moving the Army of the Potomac and its enormous material by water to
+Washington went on. The lifeless and deliberate way in which it went on
+made it the 1st of September when Sumner and Franklin reached
+Centreville, and the second battle of Bull Run had ended in defeat on
+the evening before.</p>
+<p>But the army was at last reunited, within the fortifications of
+Washington, it is true, and not on the James or on the line of the
+Rappahannock. There was another opportunity given to Halleck to put
+himself at its head, with McClellan, Pope, and Burnside for his three
+lieutenants. Again he was unequal to his responsibility. Mr. Lincoln saw
+his feebleness, and does not seem to have urged him. Halleck was
+definitely judged in the President's mind, though the latter seems to
+have clung to the idea that he might be useful by allowing him to assume
+the role he chose, and confine himself to mere suggestions and to purely
+routine work. Pope's unpopularity with the army was adopted by popular
+clamor, which always finds a defeated general in the wrong. The
+President, in real perplexity, compromised by assigning McClellan to
+command for the purpose of organizing, a work in which he was admitted
+by all to be able. The command in the field was a second time offered to
+Burnside, who declined it, warmly advocating McClellan's claims and
+proving his most efficient friend. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+C. W., vol. i. p. 650.]</span> Within three days from the time I had
+ridden with McClellan to meet the retreating army, the enemy had crossed
+the Potomac, and decision could not be postponed. The President met
+McClellan, and told him in person that he was assigned to command in the
+field. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p.
+453; Official Records, vol. xi. pt. i. p. 103.]</span> </p>
+<p>On the 5th of September Halleck had sent to McClellan a confidential
+note, telling of the President's action relieving Pope, and anticipating
+the issue of formal orders: <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 182.]</span> "The President has
+directed that General Pope be relieved and report to the War Department;
+that Hooker be assigned to command of Porter's corps, and that
+Franklin's corps be temporarily attached to Heintzelman's. The orders
+will be issued this afternoon. Generals Porter and Franklin are to be
+relieved from duty till the charges against them are examined. I give
+you this memorandum in advance of orders, so that you may act
+accordingly in putting forces in the field." Later in the same day
+Halleck sent to McClellan the opinion that the enemy was without doubt
+crossing the Potomac, and said, "If you agree with me, let our troops
+move immediately." The formal order to Pope was: "The armies of the
+Potomac and Virginia being consolidated, you will report for orders to
+the Secretary of War." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 183.]</span> Pope had caused charges to be preferred against Porter
+and Franklin, and had accused McClellan of wilfully delaying
+reinforcements and so causing his defeat. His indignation that the
+interpretation of affairs given by McClellan and his friends should be
+made into public opinion by the apparent acquiescence of Halleck and the
+administration overcame his prudence. Had he controlled his feelings and
+schooled himself into patience, he would hardly have been relieved from
+active service, and his turn would probably have come again. As it
+stood, the President saw that McClellan and Pope could not work
+together, and the natural outcome was that he retired Pope, so that
+McClellan should not have it to say that he was thwarted by a hostile
+subordinate. McClellan himself was so manifestly responsible for
+Franklin's movements from the 27th to the 30th of August, that it was a
+matter of course that when the chief was assigned to command the
+condonation should cover the subordinate, and at McClellan's request
+Franklin was allowed to take the field at once. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. pp. 190, 197.]</span> A few days later he urged the same action
+in Porter's case, and it was done. Porter joined the army at South
+Mountain on the 14th of September. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 190, 254, 289.]</span> The same principle demanded that McDowell,
+who was obnoxious to McClellan, should be relieved, and this was also
+done. As an ostensible reason for the public, McDowell's request for a
+Court of Inquiry upon his own conduct was assumed to imply a desire to
+be relieved from the command of his corps. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 188, 189,
+197.]</span> But the court was not assembled till the next winter.
+McDowell had been maligned almost as unscrupulously as Pope. A total
+abstainer from intoxicating drinks, he was persistently described as a
+drunkard, drunken upon the field of battle. One of the most loyal and
+self-forgetting of subordinates, he was treated as if a persistent
+intriguer for command. A brave and competent soldier, he was believed to
+be worthless and untrustworthy. As between Halleck, McClellan, and Pope,
+the only one who had fought like a soldier and manoeuvred like a general
+was sent to the northwestern frontier to watch the petty Indian tribes,
+carrying the burden of others' sins into the wilderness. Mr. Lincoln's
+sacrifice of his sense of justice to what seemed the only expedient in
+the terrible crisis, was sublime. McClellan commanded the army, and
+Porter and Franklin each commanded a corps. If the country was to be
+saved, confidence and power could not be bestowed by halves.</p>
+<p>In his "Own Story" McClellan speaks of the campaign in Maryland as
+made "with a halter round his neck," <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: O. S., p. 551.]</span>
+meaning that he had no real command except of the defences of
+Washington, and that he marched after Lee without authority, so that, if
+unsuccessful, he might have been condemned for usurpation of command. It
+would be incredible that he adopted such a mere illusion, if he had not
+himself said it. It proves that some at least of the strange additions
+to history which he thus published had their birth in his own
+imagination brooding over the past, and are completely contradicted by
+the official records. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+This illusion, at least, is shown to be of later origin by his telegram
+to his wife of September 7. "I leave here this afternoon," he says, "to
+take command of the troops in the field. The feeling of the government
+towards me, I am sure, is kind and trusting. I hope, with God's
+blessing, to justify the great confidence they now repose in me, and
+will bury the past in oblivion." O. S., p. 567.]</span> The consolidation
+of the armies under him was, in fact, a promotion, since it enlarged his
+authority and committed to him the task that properly belonged to
+Halleck as general-in-chief. For a few days, beginning September 1st,
+McClellan's orders and correspondence were dated "Headquarters,
+Washington," because no formal designation had been given to the
+assembled forces at the capital. When he took the field at Rockville on
+the 8th of September, he assumed, as he had the right to do in the
+absence of other direction from the War Department, that Burnside's and
+Pope's smaller armies were lost in the larger Army of the Potomac by the
+consolidation, and resumed the custom of dating his orders and
+dispatches from "Headquarters, Army of the Potomac," from the command of
+which he had never been removed, even when its divisions were
+temporarily separated from him. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+On August 31st Halleck had written to him, "You will retain the command
+of everything in this vicinity not temporarily belonging to Pope's army
+in the field;" and in the general order issued August 30, McClellan's
+command of the Army of the Potomac is affirmed. Official Records, vol.
+xi. pt. i. p. 103; <i>Id</i>., vol. li. pt. i. p. 775.]</span> The
+defences of Washington were now entrusted to Major-General Banks,
+strictly in subordination, however, to himself. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. pp. 202, 214.]</span> The official record of authority and
+command is consistent and perfect, and his notion in his later years,
+that there was anything informal about it, is proven to be imaginary. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ante</i>, p. 257.]</span>
+Halleck's direction, which I have quoted, to "let our troops move
+immediately," would be absurd as addressed to the commandant of the Army
+of the Potomac into which the Army of Virginia was consolidated, unless
+that commandant was to take the field, or a formal order relieved him of
+command as Pope was relieved. Certainly no other commander was
+designated, and I saw enough of him in those days to say with confidence
+that he betrayed no doubt that the order to "move immediately" included
+himself. McClellan's popularity with the Army of the Potomac had seemed
+to Mr. Lincoln the only power sufficient to ensure its prompt and
+earnest action against the Confederate invasion. His leadership of it,
+to be successful, had to be accompanied with plenary powers, even if the
+stultification of the government itself were the consequence. When the
+patriotism of the President yielded to this, the suggestion of McClellan
+twenty years afterward, that it had all been a pitfall prepared for
+him, would be revolting if, in view of the records, the absurdity of it
+did not prove that its origin was in a morbid imagination. It is far
+more difficult to deal leniently with the exhibition of character in
+his private letters, which were injudiciously added to his "Own Story"
+by his literary executor. In them his vanity and his ill-will toward
+rivals and superiors are shockingly naked; and since no historian can
+doubt that at every moment from September, 1861, to September, 1862,
+his army greatly outnumbered his enemy, whilst in equipment and supply
+there was no comparison, his persistent outcry that he was sacrificed
+by his government destroys even that character for dignity and that
+reputation for military intelligence which we fondly attributed to him.</p>
+<p>The general arrangement of the campaign seems to have been settled
+between Halleck and McClellan on the 5th of September. General Sumner
+with the Second and Twelfth corps moved up the Potomac by way of
+Tenallytown, Burnside with the First and Ninth corps moved to Leesboro
+with a view to covering Baltimore, the front was explored by the cavalry
+under Pleasonton, and the Sixth Corps, under Franklin, constituted a
+reserve. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Confusion in
+the numbers of the First and Twelfth corps is found in the records and
+dispatches, owing to the fact that in the Army of Virginia the corps
+numbers were not those given them by the War Department. Sigel's,
+properly the Eleventh Corps, had been called First of that army.
+Banks's, properly Twelfth, had been called Second, and McDowell's,
+properly First, had been called Third. In the Maryland campaign Hooker
+was assigned to McDowell's, and it sometimes figures as First, sometimes
+as Third; Mansfield was assigned to Banks's. The proper designations
+after the consolidation were First and Twelfth. Reno had been assigned
+to the First, but McClellan got authority to change it, and gave it to
+Hooker, sending Reno back to the Ninth. Official Records, vol. xix. pt.
+ii. pp. 197, 198, 279, 349.]</span> The preliminary movements occupied
+the 5th and 6th, but on the 7th the positions were as I have stated
+them. The principal bodies were designated, respectively, as right and
+left wings instead of armies. The two corps from the Army of Virginia
+were separated, one being assigned to the right wing under Burnside, and
+the other to the left under Sumner.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII</p>
+<p>SOUTH MOUNTAIN</p>
+<p>March through Washington--Reporting to Burnside--The Ninth
+Corps--Burnside's personal qualities--To Leesboro--Straggling--Lee's
+army at Frederick--Our deliberate advance--Reno at New Market--The march
+past--Reno and Hayes--Camp gossip--Occupation of Frederick--Affair with
+Hampton's cavalry--Crossing Catoctin Mountain--The valley and South
+Mountain--Lee's order found--Division of his army--Jackson at Harper's
+Ferry--Supporting Pleasonton's reconnoissance--Meeting Colonel Moor--An
+involuntary warning--Kanawha Division's advance--Opening of the
+battle--Carrying the mountain crest--The morning fight--Lull at
+noon--Arrival of supports--Battle renewed--Final success--Death of
+Reno--Hooker's battle on the right--His report--Burnside's
+comments--Franklin's engagement at Crampton's Gap.</p>
+<p>Late in the night of the 5th I received orders from McClellan's
+headquarters to march from my position on Upton's Hill through
+Washington toward Leesboro, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Leesboro, a village of Maryland eight or ten miles north of Washington,
+must be distinguished from Leesburg in Virginia.]</span> as soon as my
+pickets could be relieved by troops of McDowell's corps. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. p. 183; vol. li. pt. i. p. 789.]</span> My route was designated
+as by the road which was a continuation northward of Seventh Street, and
+I was directed to report to General Ambrose E. Burnside, commanding
+right wing, whose headquarters were in the suburbs of the city on that
+road. This was in accordance with my wish, expressed to McClellan that I
+might have active field work. For two or three days we were not attached
+to a corps, but as the organization of the army became settled we were
+temporarily assigned to the Ninth, which had been Burnside's, and had
+been with him in North Carolina. During this campaign it was commanded
+by Major-General Jesse L. Reno, who had long had a division in it, and
+had led the corps in the recent battle. We marched from Upton's Hill at
+daybreak of the 6th, taking the road to Georgetown by Ball's
+Cross-Roads. In Georgetown we turned eastward through Washington to
+Seventh Street, and thence northward to the Leesboro road. As we passed
+General Burnside's quarters, I sent a staff officer to report our
+progress. It was about ten o'clock, and Burnside had gone to the White
+House to meet the President and cabinet by invitation. His chief of
+staff, General J. G. Parke, sent a polite note, saying we had not been
+expected so soon, and directed us to halt and bivouac for the present in
+some fields by the roadside, near where the Howard University now is. In
+the afternoon I met Burnside for the first time, and was warmly
+attracted by him, as everybody was. He was pre-eminently a manly man, as
+I expressed it in writing home. His large, fine eyes, his winning smile
+and cordial manners, bespoke a frank, sincere, and honorable character,
+and these indications were never belied by more intimate acquaintance.
+The friendship then begun lasted as long as he lived. I learned to
+understand the limitations of his powers and the points in which he fell
+short of being a great commander; but as I knew him better I estimated
+more and more highly his sincerity and truthfulness, his unselfish
+generosity, and his devoted patriotism. In everything which makes up an
+honorable and lovable personal character he had no superior. I shall
+have occasion to speak frequently of his peculiarities and his special
+traits, but shall never have need to say a word in derogation of the
+solid virtues I have attributed to him. His chief-of-staff, General
+Parke, was an officer of the Engineers, and one of the best instructed
+of that corps. He had served with distinction under Burnside in North
+Carolina, in command of a brigade and division. I always thought that he
+preferred staff duty, especially with Burnside, whose confidence in him
+was complete, and who would leave to him almost untrammelled control of
+the administrative work of the command.</p>
+<p>On September 7th I was ordered to take the advance of the Ninth
+Corps in the march to Leesboro, following Hooker's corps. It was my
+first march with troops of this army, and I was shocked at the
+straggling I witnessed. The "roadside brigade," as we called it, was
+often as numerous, by careful estimate, as our own column moving in the
+middle of the road. I could say of the men of the Kanawha division, as
+Richard Taylor said of his Louisiana brigade with Stonewall Jackson,
+that they had not yet <i>learned</i> to straggle. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: See Taylor's "Destruction
+and Reconstruction," p. 50, for a curious interview with Jackson.]</span>
+I tried to prevent their learning it. We had a roll-call immediately
+upon halting after the march, and another half an hour later, with
+prompt reports of the result. I also assigned a field officer and
+medical officer to duty at the rear of the column, with ambulances for
+those who became ill and with punishments for the rest. The result was
+that, in spite of the example of others, the division had no stragglers,
+the first roll-call rarely showing more than twenty or thirty not
+answering to their names, and the second often proving every man to be
+present. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: See letters of
+General R. B. Hayes and General George Crook, Appendix B.]</span> In both
+the Army of the Potomac and the Army of Northern Virginia the evil had
+become a most serious one. After the battle of Antietam, for the express
+purpose of remedying it, McClellan appointed General Patrick
+Provost-Marshal with a strong provost-guard, giving him very extended
+powers, and permitting nobody, of whatever rank, to interfere with him.
+Patrick was a man of vigor, of conscience, and of system, and though he
+was greatly desirous of keeping a field command, proved so useful,
+indeed so necessary a part of the organization, that he was retained in
+it against his wishes, to the end of the war, each commander of the Army
+of the Potomac in turn finding that he was indispensable. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I have discussed this
+subject also in a review of Henderson's Stonewall Jackson, "The Nation,"
+Nov. 24, 1898, p. 396.]</span> </p>
+<p>The Confederate army suffered from straggling quite as much,
+perhaps, as ours, but in a somewhat different way. At the close of the
+Antietam campaign General Lee made bitter complaints in regard to it,
+and asked the Confederate government for legislation which would
+authorize him to apply the severest punishments. As the Confederate
+stragglers were generally in the midst of friends, where they could
+sleep under shelter and get food of better quality than the army ration,
+this grew to be the regular mode of life with many even of those who
+would join their comrades in an engagement. They were not reported in
+the return of "effectives" made by their officers, but that they often
+made part of the killed, wounded, and captured I have little doubt. In
+this way a rational explanation may be found of the larger discrepancies
+between the Confederate reports of casualties and ours of their dead
+buried and prisoners taken.</p>
+<p>The weather during this brief campaign was as lovely as possible,
+and the contrast between the rich farming country in which we now were,
+and the forest-covered mountains of West Virginia to which we had been
+accustomed, was very striking. An evening march, under a brilliant moon,
+over a park-like landscape with alternations of groves and meadows which
+could not have been more beautifully composed by a master artist,
+remains in my memory as a page out of a lovely romance. On the day that
+we marched to Leesboro, Lee's army was concentrated near Frederick,
+behind the Monocacy River, having begun the crossing of the Potomac on
+the 4th. There was a singular dearth of trustworthy information on the
+subject at our army headquarters. We moved forward by very short marches
+of six or eight miles, feeling our way so cautiously that Lee's reports
+speak of it as an unexpectedly slow approach. The Comte de Paris excuses
+it on the ground of the disorganized condition of McClellan's army after
+the recent battle. It must be remembered, however, that Sumner's corps
+and Franklin's had not been at the second Bull Run, and were veterans of
+the Potomac Army. The Twelfth Corps had been Banks's, and it too had not
+been engaged at the second Bull Run, its work having been to cover the
+trains of Pope's army on the retrograde movement from Warrenton
+Junction. Although new regiments had been added to these corps, it is
+hardly proper to say that the army as a whole was not one which could be
+rapidly manoeuvred. I see no good reason why it might not have advanced
+at once to the left bank of the Monocacy, covering thus both Washington
+and Baltimore, and hastening by some days Lee's movement across the Blue
+Ridge. We should at least have known where the enemy was by being in
+contact with him, instead of being the sport of all sorts of vague
+rumors and wild reports. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+McClellan was not wholly responsible for this tardiness, for Halleck
+was very timid about uncovering Washington, and his dispatches tended to
+increase McClellan's natural indecision. Official Records, vol. xix. pt.
+ii. p. 280.]</span> </p>
+<p>The Kanawha division took the advance of the right wing when we left
+Leesboro on the 8th, and marched to Brookville. On the 9th it reached
+Goshen, where it lay on the 10th, and on the 11th reached Ridgeville on
+the railroad. The rest of the Ninth Corps was an easy march behind us.
+Hooker had been ordered further to the right on the strength of rumors
+that Lee was making a circuit towards Baltimore, and his corps reached
+Cooksville and the railroad some ten miles east of my position. The
+extreme left of the army was at Poolesville, near the Potomac, making a
+spread of thirty miles across the whole front. The cavalry did not
+succeed in getting far in advance of the infantry, and very little
+valuable information was obtained. At Ridgeville, however, we got
+reliable evidence that Lee had evacuated Frederick the day before, and
+that only cavalry was east of the Catoctin Mountains. Hooker got similar
+information at about the same time. It was now determined to move more
+rapidly, and early in the morning of the 12th I was ordered to march to
+New Market and thence to Frederick. At New Market I was overtaken by
+General Reno, with several officers of rank from the other divisions of
+the corps, and they dismounted at a little tavern by the roadside to see
+the Kanawha division go by. Up to this time they had seen nothing of us
+whatever. The men had been so long in the West Virginia mountains at
+hard service, involving long and rapid marches, that they had much the
+same strength of legs and ease in marching which was afterward so much
+talked of when seen in Sherman's army at the review in Washington at the
+close of the war. I stood a little behind Reno and the rest, and had the
+pleasure of hearing their involuntary exclamations of admiration at the
+marching of the men. The easy swinging step, the graceful poise of the
+musket on the shoulder, as if it were a toy and not a burden, and the
+compactness of the column were all noticed and praised with a heartiness
+which was very grateful to my ears. I no longer felt any doubt that the
+division stood well in the opinion of my associates.</p>
+<p>I enjoyed this the more because, the evening before, a little
+incident had occurred which had threatened to result in some
+ill-feeling. It had been thought that we were likely to be attacked at
+Ridgeville, and on reaching the village I disposed the division so as to
+cover the place and to be ready for an engagement. I ordered the
+brigades to bivouac in line of battle, covering the front with outposts
+and with cavalry vedettes from the Sixth New York Cavalry (Colonel
+Devin), which had been attached to the division during the advance. The
+men were without tents, and to make beds had helped themselves to some
+straw from stacks in the vicinity. Toward evening General Reno rode up,
+and happening first to meet Lieutenant-Colonel Rutherford B. Hayes,
+commanding the Twenty third Ohio, he rather sharply inquired why the
+troops were not bivouacking "closed in mass," and also blamed the taking
+of the straw. Colonel Hayes referred him to me as the proper person to
+account for the disposition of the troops, and quietly said he thought
+the quartermaster's department could settle for the straw if the owner
+was loyal. A few minutes later the general came to my own position, but
+was now quite over his irritation. I, of course, knew nothing of his
+interview with Hayes, and when he said that it was the policy in
+Maryland to make the troops bivouac in compact mass, so as to do as
+little damage to property as possible, I cordially assented, but urged
+that such a rule would not apply to the advance-guard when supposed to
+be in presence of the enemy; we needed to have the men already in line
+if an alarm should be given in the night. To this he agreed, and a
+pleasant conversation followed. Nothing was said to me about the straw
+taken for bedding, and when I heard of the little passage-at-arms with
+Colonel Hayes, I saw that it was a momentary disturbance which had no
+real significance. Camp gossip, however, is as bad as village gossip,
+and in a fine volume of the "History of the Twenty-first Massachusetts
+Regiment," I find it stated that the Kanawha division coming fresh from
+the West was disposed to plunder and pillage, giving an exaggerated
+version of the foregoing story as evidence of it. This makes it a duty
+to tell what was the small foundation for the charge, and to say that I
+believe no regiments in the army were less obnoxious to any just
+accusation of such a sort. The gossip would never have survived the war
+at all but for the fact that Colonel Hayes became President of the
+United States, and the supposed incident of his army life thus acquired
+a new interest. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: This
+incident gives me the opportunity to say that after reading a good many
+regimental histories, I am struck with the fact that with the really
+invaluable material they contain when giving the actual experiences of
+the regiments themselves, they also embody a great deal of mere gossip.
+As a rule, their value is confined to what strictly belongs to the
+regiment; and the criticisms, whether of other organizations or of
+commanders, are likely to be the expression of the local and temporary
+prejudices and misconceptions which are notoriously current in time of
+war. They need to be read with due allowance for this. The volume
+referred to is a favorable example of its class, but its references to
+the Kanawha division (which was in the Ninth Corps only a month)
+illustrate the tendency I have mentioned. It should be borne in mind
+that the Kanawha men had the position of advance-guard, and I believe
+did not camp in the neighborhood of the other divisions in a single
+instance from the time we left Leesboro till the battle of South
+Mountain. What is said of them, therefore, is not from observation. The
+incident between Reno and Hayes occurred in the camp of the latter, and
+could not possibly be known to the author of the regimental history but
+by hearsay. Yet he affirms as a fact that the Kanawha division
+"plundered the country unmercifully," for which Reno "took
+Lieutenant-Colonel Hayes severely though justly to task." He also
+asserts that the division set a "very bad example" in straggling. As to
+this, the truth is as I have circumstantially stated it above. He has
+still further indulged in a "slant" at the "Ohioans" in a story of dead
+Confederates being put in a well at South Mountain,--a story as
+apocryphal as the others. Wise's house and well were within the camp of
+the division to which the Twenty-first Massachusetts belonged, and the
+burial party there would have been from that division. Lastly, the
+writer says that General Cox, the temporary corps commander, "robs us
+[the Twenty-first Massachusetts]</span><span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);"> of our dearly bought fame" by naming
+the Fifty-first New York and Fifty-first Pennsylvania as the regiments
+which stormed the bridge at Antietam. He acquits Burnside and McClellan
+of the alleged injustice, saying they "follow the corps report in this
+respect." Yet mention is not made of the fact that my report literally
+copies that of the division commander, who himself selected the
+regiments for the charge! The "Ohioan" had soon gone west again with his
+division, and was probably fair game. There is something akin to
+provincialism in regimental </span><span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">esprit
+de corps</span><span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">, and such
+instances as the above, which are all found within a few pages of the
+book referred to, show that, like Leech's famous Staffordshire rough in
+the Punch cartoon, to be a "stranger" is a sufficient reason to "'eave
+'arf a brick at un." See letters of President Hayes and General Crook on
+the subject, Appendix B.]</span> </p>
+<p>From New Market we sent the regiment of cavalry off to the right to
+cover our flank, and to investigate reports that heavy bodies of the
+enemy's cavalry were north of us. The infantry pushed rapidly toward
+Frederick. The opposition was very slight till we reached the Monocacy
+River, which is perhaps half a mile from the town. Here General Wade
+Hampton, with his brigade as rear-guard of Lee's army, attempted to
+resist the crossing. The highway crosses the river by a substantial
+stone bridge, and the ground upon our bank was considerably higher than
+that on the other side. We engaged the artillery of the enemy with a
+battery of our own, which had the advantage of position, whilst the
+infantry forced the crossing both by the bridge and by a ford a quarter
+of a mile to the right. As soon as Moor's brigade was over, it was
+deployed on the right and left of the turnpike, which was bordered on
+either side by a high and strong post-and-rail fence. Scammon's was soon
+over, and similarly deployed as a second line, with the Eleventh Ohio in
+column in the road. Moor had with him a troop of horse and a single
+cannon, and went forward with the first line, allowing it to keep
+abreast of him on right and left. I also rode on the turnpike between
+the two lines, and only a few rods behind Moor, having with me my staff
+and a few orderlies. Reno was upon the other bank of the river,
+overlooking the movement, which made a fine military display as the
+lines advanced at quick-step toward the city. Hampton's horsemen had
+passed out of our sight, for the straight causeway turned sharply to the
+left just as it entered the town, and we could not see beyond the turn.
+We were perhaps a quarter of a mile from the city, when a young staff
+officer from corps headquarters rode up beside me and exclaimed in a
+boisterous way, "Why don't they go in faster? There's nothing there!" I
+said to the young man, "Did General Reno send you with any order to me?"
+"No," he replied. "Then," said I, "when I want your advice I will ask
+it." He moved off abashed, and I did not notice what had become of him,
+but, in fact, he rode up to Colonel Moor, and repeated a similar speech.
+Moor was stung by the impertinence which he assumed to be a criticism
+upon him from corps headquarters, and, to my amazement, I saw him
+suddenly dash ahead at a gallop with his escort and the gun. He soon
+came to the turn of the road where it loses itself among the houses;
+there was a quick, sharp rattling of carbines, and Hampton's cavalry was
+atop of the little party. There was one discharge of the cannon, and
+some of the brigade staff and escort came back in disorder. I ordered up
+at "double quick" the Eleventh Ohio, which, as I have said, was in
+column in the road, and these, with bayonets fixed, dashed into the
+town. The enemy had not waited for them, but retreated out of the place
+by the Hagerstown road. Moor had been ridden down, unhorsed, and
+captured. The artillery-men had unlimbered the gun, pointed it, and the
+gunner stood with the lanyard in his hand, when he was struck by a
+charging horse; the gun was fired by the concussion, but at the same
+moment it was capsized into the ditch by the impact of the cavalry
+column. The enemy had no time to right the gun or carry it off, nor to
+stop for prisoners. They forced Moor on another horse, and turned tail
+as the charging lines of infantry came up on right and left as well as
+the column in the road, for there had not been a moment's pause in the
+advance. It had all happened, and the gun with a few dead and wounded of
+both sides were in our hands, in less time than it has taken to describe
+it. Those who may have a fancy for learning how Munchausen would tell
+this story, may find it in the narrative of Major Heros von Borke of J.
+E. B. Stuart's staff. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Von Borke's account is so good an example of the way in which romance
+may be built up out of a little fact that I give it in full. The burning
+of the stone bridge half a mile in rear of the little affair was a
+peculiarly brilliant idea; but he has evidently confused our advance
+with that on the Urbana road. He says: "Toward evening the enemy arrived
+in the immediate neighborhood of Monocacy bridge, and observing only a
+small force at this point, advanced very carelessly. A six-pounder gun
+had been placed in position by them at a very short distance from the
+bridge, which fired from time to time a shot at our horsemen, while the
+foremost regiment marched along at their ease, as if they believed this
+small body of cavalry would soon wheel in flight. This favorable moment
+for an attack was seized in splendid style by Major Butler, who
+commanded the two squadrons of the Second South Carolina Cavalry,
+stationed at this point as our rear-guard. Like lightning he darted
+across the bridge, taking the piece of artillery, which had scarcely an
+opportunity of firing a shot, and falling upon the regiment of infantry,
+which was dispersed in a few seconds, many of them being shot down, and
+many others, among whom was the colonel in command, captured. The colors
+of the regiment also fell into Major Butler's hands. The piece of
+artillery, in the hurry of the moment, could not be brought over to our
+side of the river, as the enemy instantly sent forward a large body of
+cavalry at a gallop, and our dashing men had only time to spike it and
+trot with their prisoners across the bridge, which, having been already
+fully prepared for burning, was in a blaze when the infuriated Yankees
+arrived at the water's edge. The conflagration of the bridge of course
+checked their onward movement, and we quietly continued the retreat."
+Von Borke, vol. i. p. 203. Stuart's report is very nearly accurate:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 816.]</span> Moor's capture,
+however, had consequences, as we shall see. The command of his brigade
+passed to Colonel George Crook of the Thirty-sixth Ohio.</p>
+<p>Frederick was a loyal city, and as Hampton's cavalry went out at one
+end of the street and our infantry came in at the other, and whilst the
+carbine smoke and the smell of powder still lingered, the closed
+window-shutters of the houses flew open, the sashes went up, the windows
+were filled with ladies waving their handkerchiefs and national flags,
+whilst the men came to the column with fruits and refreshments for the
+marching soldiers as they went by in the hot sunshine of the September
+afternoon. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Although at
+the head of the column, the "truth of history" compels me to say that I
+saw nothing of Barbara Frietchie, and heard nothing of her till I read
+Whittier's poem in later years. When, however, I visited Frederick with
+General Grant in 1869, we were both presented with walking-sticks made
+from timbers of Barbara's house which had been torn down, and, of
+course, I cannot dispute the story of which I have the stick as
+evidence; for Grant thought the stick shut me up from any denial and
+established the legend.]</span> Pleasonton's cavalry came in soon after
+by the Urbana road, and during the evening a large part of the army drew
+near the place. Next morning (13th) the cavalry went forward to
+reconnoitre the passes of Catoctin Mountain, Rodman's division of our
+corps being ordered to support them and to proceed toward Middletown in
+the Catoctin valley. Through some misunderstanding Rodman took the road
+to Jefferson, leading to the left, where Franklin's corps was moving,
+and did not get upon the Hagerstown road. About noon I was ordered to
+march upon the latter road to Middletown. McClellan himself met me as my
+column moved out of town, and told me of the misunderstanding in
+Rodman's orders, adding that if I found him on the march I should take
+his division also along with me. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+As is usual in such cases, the direction was later put in writing by
+his chief of staff. Official Records, vol. li. pt. i. p. 827.]</span> I
+did not meet him, but the other two divisions of the corps crossed
+Catoctin Mountain that night, whilst Rodman returned to Frederick. The
+Kanawha division made an easy march, and as the cavalry was now ahead of
+us, met no opposition in crossing Catoctin Mountain or in the valley
+beyond. On the way we passed a house belonging to a branch of the
+Washington family, and a few officers of the division accompanied me, at
+the invitation of the occupant, to look at some relics of the Father of
+his Country which were preserved there. We stood for some minutes with
+uncovered heads before a case containing a uniform he had worn, and
+other articles of personal use hallowed by their association with him,
+and went on our way with our zeal strengthened by closer contact with
+souvenirs of the great patriot. Willcox's division followed us, and
+encamped a mile and a half east of Middletown. Sturgis's halted not far
+from the western foot of the mountain, with corps headquarters near by.
+My own camp for the night was pitched in front (west) of the village of
+Middletown along Catoctin Creek. Pleasonton's cavalry was a little in
+advance of us, at the forks of the road where the old Sharpsburg road
+turns off to the left from the turnpike. The rest of the army was camped
+about Frederick, except Franklin's corps (Sixth), which was near
+Jefferson, ten miles further south but also east of Catoctin Mountain.</p>
+<p>The Catoctin or Middletown valley is beautifully included between
+Catoctin Mountain and South Mountain, two ranges of the Blue Ridge,
+running northeast and southwest. It is six or eight miles wide, watered
+by Catoctin Creek, which winds southward among rich farms and enters the
+Potomac near Point of Rocks. The National road leaving Frederick passes
+through Middletown and crosses South Mountain, as it goes northwestward,
+at a depression called Turner's Gap. The old Sharpsburg road crosses the
+summit at another gap, known as Fox's, about a mile south of Turner's.
+Still another, the old Hagerstown road, finds a passage over the ridge
+at about an equal distance north. The National road, being of easier
+grades and better engineering, was now the principal route, the others
+having degenerated to rough country roads. The mountain crests are from
+ten to thirteen hundred feet above the Catoctin valley, and the "gaps"
+are from two to three hundred feet lower than the summits near them. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: These elevations are from
+the official map of the U.S. Engineers.]</span> These summits are like
+scattered and irregular hills upon the high rounded surface of the
+mountain top. They are wooded, but along the southeasterly slopes, quite
+near the top of the mountain, are small farms, with meadows and
+cultivated fields.</p>
+<p>The military situation had been cleared up by the knowledge of Lee's
+movements which McClellan got from a copy of Lee's order of the day for
+the both. This had been found at Frederick on the 13th, and it tallied
+so well with what was otherwise known that no doubt was left as to its
+authenticity. It showed that Jackson's corps with Walker's division were
+besieging Harper's Ferry on the Virginia side of the Potomac, whilst
+McLaws's division supported by Anderson's was co-operating on Maryland
+Heights. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. pp. 281, 603.]</span> Longstreet, with the
+remainder of his corps, was at Boonsboro or near Hagerstown. D. H.
+Hill's division was the rear-guard, and the cavalry under Stuart covered
+the whole, a detached squadron being with Longstreet, Jackson, and
+McLaws each. The order did not name the three separate divisions in
+Jackson's command proper (exclusive of Walker), nor those remaining with
+Longstreet except D. H. Hill's; but it is hardly conceivable that these
+were not known to McClellan after his own and Pope's contact with them
+during the campaigns of the spring and summer. At any rate, the order
+showed that Lee's army was in two parts, separated by the Potomac and
+thirty or forty miles of road. As soon as Jackson should reduce Harper's
+Ferry they would reunite. Friday the 12th was the day fixed for the
+concentration of Jackson's force for his attack, and it was Saturday
+when the order fell into McClellan's hands. Three days had already been
+lost in the slow advance since Lee had crossed Catoctin Mountain, and
+Jackson's artillery was now heard pounding at the camp and earthworks of
+Harper's Ferry. McLaws had already driven our forces from Maryland
+Heights, and had opened upon the ferry with his guns in commanding
+position on the north of the Potomac. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 607.]</span>
+McClellan telegraphed to the President that he would catch the rebels
+"in their own trap if my men are equal to the emergency." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. p. 281.]</span> There was certainly no time to lose. The
+information was in his hands before noon, for he refers to it in a
+dispatch to Mr. Lincoln at twelve. If his men had been ordered to be at
+the top of South Mountain before dark, they could have been there; but
+less than one full corps passed Catoctin Mountain that day or night, and
+when the leisurely movement of the 14th began, he himself, instead of
+being with the advance, was in Frederick till after 2 P.M., at which
+hour he sent a dispatch to Washington, and then rode to the front ten or
+twelve miles away. The failure to be "equal to the emergency" was not in
+his men. Twenty-four hours, as it turned out, was the whole difference
+between saving and losing Harper's Ferry with its ten or twelve thousand
+men and its unestimated munitions and stores. It may be that the
+commanders of the garrison were in fault, and that a more stubborn
+resistance should have been made. It may be that Halleck ought to have
+ordered the place to be evacuated earlier, as McClellan suggested.
+Nevertheless, at noon of the 13th McClellan had it in his power to save
+the place and interpose his army between the two wings, of the
+Confederates with decisive effect on the campaign. He saw that it was an
+"emergency," but did not call upon his men for any extraordinary
+exertion. Harper's. Ferry surrendered, and Lee united the wings of his
+army beyond the Antietam before the final and general engagement was
+forced upon him.</p>
+<p>At my camp in front of Middletown, I received no orders looking to a
+general advance on the 14th; but only to support, by a detachment,
+Pleasonton's cavalry in a reconnoissance toward Turner's Gap. Pleasonton
+himself came to my tent in the evening, and asked that one brigade might
+report to him in the morning for the purpose. Six o'clock was the hour
+at which he wished them to march. He said further that he and Colonel
+Crook were old army acquaintances and that he would like Crook to have
+the detail. I wished to please him, and not thinking that it would make
+any difference to my brigade commanders, intimated that I would do so.
+But Colonel Scammon, learning what was intended, protested that under
+our custom his brigade was entitled to the advance next day, as the
+brigades had taken it in turn. I explained that it was only as a
+courtesy to Pleasonton and at his request that the change was proposed.
+This did not better the matter in Scammon's opinion. He had been himself
+a regular officer, and the point of professional honor touched him. I
+recognized the justice of his demand, and said he should have the duty
+if he insisted upon it. Pleasonton was still in the camp visiting with
+Colonel Crook, and I explained to him the reasons why I could not yield
+to his wish, but must assign Scammon's brigade to the duty in conformity
+with the usual course. There was in fact no reason except the personal
+one for choosing one brigade more than the other, for they were equally
+good. Crook took the decision in good part, though it was natural that
+he should wish for an opportunity of distinguished service, as he had
+not been the regular commandant of the brigade. Pleasonton was a little
+chafed, and even intimated that he claimed some right to name the
+officer and command to be detailed. This, of course, I could not admit,
+and issued the formal orders at once. The little controversy had put
+Scammon and his whole brigade upon their mettle, and was a case in which
+a generous emulation did no harm. What happened in the morning only
+increased their spirit and prepared them the better to perform what I
+have always regarded as a very brilliant exploit.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/1-13-1.png"
+ title="South Mountain" alt="South Mountain"
+ style="width: 778px; height: 1061px;"></p>
+<p>The morning of Sunday the 14th of September was a bright one. I had
+my breakfast very early and was in the saddle before it was time for
+Scammon to move. He was prompt, and I rode on with him to see in what
+way his support was likely to be used. Two of the Ninth Corps batteries
+(Gibson's and Benjamin's) had accompanied the cavalry, and one of these
+was a heavy one of twenty-pounder Parrotts. They were placed upon a
+knoll a little in front of the cavalry camp, about half a mile beyond
+the forks of the old Sharpsburg road with the turnpike. They were
+exchanging shots with a battery of the enemy well up in the gap. Just as
+Scammon and I crossed Catoctin Creek I was surprised to see Colonel Moor
+standing at the roadside. With astonishment I rode to him and asked how
+he came there. He said that he had been taken beyond the mountain after
+his capture, but had been paroled the evening before, and was now
+finding his way back to us on foot. "But where are <i>you</i> going?"
+said he. I answered that Scammon was going to support Pleasonton in a
+reconnoissance into the gap. Moor made an involuntary start, saying, "My
+God! be careful!" then checking himself, added, "But I am paroled!" and
+turned away. I galloped to Scammon and told him that I should follow him
+in close support with Crook's brigade, and as I went back along the
+column I spoke to each regimental commander, warning them to be prepared
+for anything, big or little,--it might be a skirmish, it might be a
+battle. Hurrying to camp, I ordered Crook to turn out his brigade and
+march at once. I then wrote a dispatch to General Reno, saying I
+suspected we should find the enemy in force on the mountain top, and
+should go forward with both brigades instead of sending one. Starting a
+courier with this, I rode forward again and found Pleasonton. Scammon
+had given him an inkling of our suspicions, and in the personal
+interview they had reached a mutual good understanding. I found that he
+was convinced that it would be unwise to make an attack in front, and
+had determined that his horsemen should merely demonstrate upon the main
+road and support the batteries, whilst Scammon should march by the old
+Sharpsburg road and try to reach the flank of the force on the summit. I
+told him that in view of my fear that the force of the enemy might be
+too great for Scammon, I had determined to bring forward Crook's brigade
+in support. If it became necessary to fight with the whole division, I
+should do so, and in that case I should assume the responsibility myself
+as his senior officer. To this he cordially assented.</p>
+<p>One section of McMullin's six-gun battery was all that went forward
+with Scammon (and even these not till the infantry reached the summit),
+four guns being left behind, as the road was rough and steep. There were
+in Simmonds's battery two twenty-pounder Parrott guns, and I ordered
+these also to remain on the turnpike and to go into action with
+Benjamin's battery of the same calibre. It was about half-past seven
+when Crook's head of column filed off from the turnpike upon the old
+Sharpsburg road, and Scammon had perhaps half an hour's start. We had
+fully two miles to go before we should reach the place where our attack
+was actually made, and as it was a pretty sharp ascent the men marched
+slowly with frequent rests. On our way up we were overtaken by my
+courier who had returned from General Reno with approval of my action
+and the assurance that the rest of the Ninth Corps would come forward to
+my support.</p>
+<p>When Scammon had got within half a mile of Fox's Gap (the summit of
+the old Sharpsburg road), <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+The Sharpsburg road is also called the Braddock road, as it was the way
+by which Braddock and Washington had marched to Fort Duquesne
+(Pittsburg) in the old French war. For the same reason the gap is called
+Braddock's Gap. I have adopted that which seems to be in most common
+local use.]</span> the enemy opened upon him with case-shot from the edge
+of the timber above the open fields, and he had judiciously turned off
+upon a country road leading still further to the left, and nearly
+parallel to the ridge above. His movement had been made under cover of
+the forest, and he had reached the extreme southern limit of the open
+fields south of the gap on this face of the mountain. Here I overtook
+him, his brigade being formed in line under cover of the timber, facing
+open pasture fields having a stone wall along the upper side, with the
+forest again beyond this. On his left was the Twenty-third Ohio under
+Lieutenant-Colonel R. B. Hayes, who had been directed to keep in the
+woods beyond the open, and to strike if possible the flank of the enemy.
+His centre was the Twelfth Ohio under Colonel Carr B. White, whose duty
+was to attack the stone wall in front, charging over the broad open
+fields. On the right was the Thirtieth Ohio, Colonel Hugh Ewing, who was
+ordered to advance against a battery on the crest which kept up a rapid
+and annoying fire. It was now about nine o'clock, and Crook's column had
+come into close support. Bayonets were fixed, and at the word the line
+rushed forward with loud hurrahs. Hayes, being in the woods, was not
+seen till he had passed over the crest and turned upon the enemy's flank
+and rear. Here was a sharp combat, but our men established themselves
+upon the summit and drove the enemy before them. White and Ewing charged
+over the open under a destructive fire of musketry and shrapnel. As
+Ewing approached the enemy's battery (Bondurant's), it gave him a
+parting salvo, and limbered rapidly toward the right along a road in
+the edge of the woods which follows the summit to the turnpike near the
+Mountain House at Turner's Gap. White's men never flinched, and the
+North Carolinians of Garland's brigade (for it was they who held the
+ridge at this point) poured in their fire till the advancing line of
+bayonets was in their faces when they broke away from the wall. Our men
+fell fast, but they kept up their pace, and the enemy's centre was
+broken by a heroic charge. Garland strove hard to rally his men, but his
+brigade was hopelessly broken in two. He rallied his right wing on the
+second ridge a little in rear of that part of his line, but Hayes's
+regiment was here pushing forward from our left. Colonel Ruffin of the
+Thirteenth North Carolina held on to the ridge road beyond our right,
+near Fox's Gap. The fighting was now wholly in the woods, and though the
+enemy's centre was routed there was stubborn resistance on both flanks.
+His cavalry dismounted (said to be under Colonel Rosser <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Stuart's Report, Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 817.]</span> ) was found to extend beyond
+Hayes's line, and supported the Stuart artillery, which poured canister
+into our advancing troops. I now ordered Crook to send the Eleventh Ohio
+(under Lieutenant-Colonel Coleman) beyond Hayes's left to extend our
+line in that direction, and to direct the Thirty-sixth Ohio
+(Lieutenant-Colonel Clark) to fill a gap between the Twelfth and
+Thirtieth caused by diverging lines of advance. The only remaining
+regiment (the Twenty-eighth, Lieutenant-Colonel Becker) was held in
+reserve on the right. The Thirty-sixth aided by the Twelfth repulsed a
+stout effort of the enemy to re-establish their centre. The whole line
+again sprung forward. A high knoll on our left was carried. The
+dismounted cavalry was forced to retreat with their battery across the
+ravine in which the Sharpsburg road descends on the west of the
+mountain, and took a new position on a separate hill in rear of the
+heights at the Mountain House. There was considerable open ground at
+this new position, from which their battery had full play at a range of
+about twelve hundred yards upon the ridge held by us. But the Eleventh
+and Twenty-third stuck stoutly to the hill which Hayes had first
+carried, and their line was nearly parallel to the Sharpsburg road,
+facing north. Garland had rushed to the right of his brigade to rally
+them when they had broken before the onset of the Twenty-third Ohio upon
+the flank, and in the desperate contest there he had been killed and the
+disaster to his command made irreparable. On our side Colonel Hayes had
+also been disabled by a severe wound as he gallantly led the Ohio
+regiment.</p>
+<p>I now directed the centre and right to push forward toward Fox's
+Gap. Lieutenant Croome with a section of McMullin's battery had come up,
+and he put his guns in action in the most gallant manner in the open
+ground near Wise's house. The Thirtieth and Thirty-sixth changed front
+to the right and attacked the remnant of Garland's brigade, now
+commanded by Colonel McRae, and drove it and two regiments from G. B.
+Anderson's brigade back upon the wooded hill beyond Wise's farm at Fox's
+Gap. The whole of Anderson's brigade retreated further along the crest
+toward the Mountain House. Meanwhile the Twelfth Ohio, also changing
+front, had thridded its way in the same direction through laurel
+thickets on the reverse slope of the mountain, and attacking suddenly
+the force at Wise's as the other two regiments charged it in front,
+completed the rout and brought off two hundred prisoners. Bondurant's
+battery was again driven hurriedly off to the north. But the hollow at
+the gap about Wise's was no place to stay. It was open ground and was
+swept by the batteries of the cavalry on the open hill to the northwest,
+and by those of Hill's division about the Mountain House and upon the
+highlands north of the National road; for those hills run forward like a
+bastion and give a perfect flanking fire along our part of the mountain.
+The gallant Croome with a number of his gunners had been killed, and his
+guns were brought back into the shelter of the woods, on the hither side
+of Wise's fields. The infantry of the right wing was brought to the same
+position, and our lines were reformed along the curving crests from that
+point which looks down into the gap and the Sharpsburg road, toward the
+left. The extreme right with Croome's two guns was held by the
+Thirtieth, with the Twenty-eighth in second line. Next came the Twelfth,
+with the Thirty-sixth in second line, the front curving toward the west
+with the form of the mountain summit. The left of the Twelfth dipped a
+little into a hollow, beyond which the Twenty-third and Eleventh
+occupied the next hill facing toward the Sharpsburg road. Our front was
+hollow, for the two wings were nearly at right angles to each other;
+but the flanks were strongly placed, the right, which was most exposed,
+having open ground in front which it could sweep with its fire and
+having the reserve regiments closely supporting it. Part of Simmonds's
+battery which had also come up had done good service in the last
+combats, and was now disposed so as to check the fire of the enemy.</p>
+<p>It was time to rest. Three hours of up-hill marching and climbing
+had been followed by as long a period of bloody battle, and it was
+almost noon. The troops began to feel the exhaustion of such labor and
+struggle. We had several hundred prisoners in our hands, and the field
+was thickly strewn with dead, in gray and in blue, while our field
+hospital a little down the mountain side was encumbered with hundreds of
+wounded. We learned from our prisoners that the summit was held by D. H.
+Hill's division of five brigades with Stuart's cavalry, and that
+Longstreet's corps was in close support. I was momentarily expecting to
+hear from the supporting divisions of the Ninth Corps, and thought it
+the part of wisdom to hold fast to our strong position astride of the
+mountain top commanding the Sharpsburg road till our force should be
+increased. The two Kanawha brigades had certainly won a glorious
+victory, and had made so assured a success of the day's work that it
+would be folly to imperil it. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+For Official Records, see Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. pp.
+458-474.]</span> </p>
+<p>General Hill has since argued that only part of his division could
+oppose us; <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Century War
+Book, vol. ii. pp. 559, etc.]</span> but his brigades were all on the
+mountain summit within easy support of each other, and they had the day
+before them. It was five hours from the time of our first charge to the
+arrival of our first supports, and it was not till three o'clock in the
+afternoon that Hooker's corps reached the eastern base of the mountain
+and began its deployment north of the National road. Our effort was to
+attack the weak end of his line, and we succeeded in putting a stronger
+force there than that which opposed us. It is for our opponent to
+explain how we were permitted to do it. The two brigades of the Kanawha
+division numbered less than 3000 men. Hill's division was 5000 strong, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 1025.]</span> even by the Confederate method of counting their
+effectives, which should be increased nearly one-fifth to compare
+properly with our reports. In addition to these Stuart had the principal
+part of the Confederate cavalry on this line, and they were not idle
+spectators. Parts of Lee's and Hampton's brigades were certainly there,
+and probably the whole of Lee's. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 819.]</span> With less than half the numerical strength which was
+opposed to it, therefore, the Kanawha division had carried the summit,
+advancing to the charge for the most part over open ground in the storm
+of musketry and artillery fire, and held the crests they had gained
+through the livelong day, in spite of all efforts to retake them.</p>
+<p>In our mountain camps of West Virginia I had felt discontented that
+our native Ohio regiments did not take as kindly to the labors of drill
+and camp police as some of German birth, and I had warned them that they
+would feel the need of accuracy and mechanical precision when the day of
+battle came. They had done reasonably well, but suffered in comparison
+with some of the others on dress parade and in the form and neatness of
+the camp. When, however, on the slopes of South Mountain I saw the lines
+go forward steadier and more even under fire than they ever had done at
+drill, their intelligence making them perfectly comprehend the advantage
+of unity in their effort and in the shock when they met the foe--when
+their bodies seemed to dilate, their step to have better cadence and a
+tread as of giants as they went cheering up the hill,--I took back all
+my criticisms and felt a pride and glory in them as soldiers and
+comrades that words cannot express.</p>
+<p>It was about noon that the lull in the battle occurred, and it
+lasted a couple of hours, while reinforcements were approaching the
+mountain top from both sides. The enemy's artillery kept up a pretty
+steady fire, answered occasionally by our few cannon; but the infantry
+rested on their arms, the front covered by a watchful line of
+skirmishers, every man at his tree. The Confederate guns had so
+perfectly the range of the sloping fields about and behind us, that
+their canister shot made long furrows in the sod with a noise like the
+cutting of a melon rind, and the shells which skimmed the crest and
+burst in the tree-tops at the lower side of the fields made a sound like
+the crashing and falling of some brittle substance, instead of the tough
+fibre of oak and pine. We had time to notice these things as we paced
+the lines waiting for the renewal of the battle.</p>
+<p>Willcox's division reported to me about two o'clock, and would have
+been up earlier, but for a mistake in the delivery of a message to him.
+He had sent from Middletown to ask me where I desired him to come, and
+finding that the messenger had no clear idea of the roads by which he
+had travelled, I directed him to say that General Pleasonton would point
+out the road I had followed, if inquired of. Willcox understood the
+messenger that I wished him to inquire of Pleasonton where he had better
+put his division in, and on doing so, the latter suggested that he move
+against the crests on the north of the National road. He was preparing
+to do this when Burnside and Reno came up and corrected the movement,
+recalling him from the north and sending him by the old Sharpsburg road
+to my position. As his head of column came up, Longstreet's corps was
+already forming with its right outflanking my left. I sent two regiments <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: In my official report I said
+one regiment, but General Willcox reported that he sent two, and he is
+doubtless right. For his official report, see Official Records, vol.
+xix. pt. ii. p. 428.]</span> to extend my left, and requested Willcox to
+form the rest of the division on my right facing the summit. He was
+doing this when he received an order from General Reno to take position
+overlooking the National road facing northward. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ibid</i>.]</span> I can
+hardly think the order could have been intended to effect this, as the
+turnpike is deep between the hills there, and the enemy quite distant on
+the other side of the gorge. But Willcox, obeying the order as he
+received it, formed along the Sharpsburg road, his left next to my
+right, but his line drawn back nearly at right angles to it. He placed
+Cook's battery in the angle, and this opened a rapid fire on one of the
+enemy's which was on the bastion-like hill north of the gorge already
+mentioned. Longstreet's men were now pretty well up, and pushed a
+battery forward to the edge of the timber beyond Wise's farm, and opened
+upon Willcox's line, enfilading it badly. There was a momentary break
+there, but Willcox was able to check the confusion, and to reform his
+lines facing westward as I had originally directed; Welch's brigade was
+on my right, closely supporting Cook's battery and Christ's beyond it.
+The general line of Willcox's division was at the eastern edge of the
+wood looking into the open ground at Fox's Gap, on the north side of the
+Sharpsburg road. A warm skirmishing fight was continued along the whole
+of our line, our purpose being to hold fast my extreme left which was
+well advanced upon and over the mountain crest, and to swing the right
+up to the continuation of the same line of hills near the Mountain House.</p>
+<p>At nearly four o'clock the head of Sturgis's column approached. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Sturgis's Report, <i>Id</i>.,
+pt. i. p. 443.]</span> McClellan had arrived on the field, and he with
+Burnside and Reno was at Pleasonton's position at the knoll in the
+valley, and from that point, a central one in the midst of the curving
+hills, they issued their orders. They could see the firing of the
+enemy's battery from the woods beyond the open ground in front of
+Willcox, and sent orders to him to take or silence those guns at all
+hazards. He was preparing to advance, when the Confederates anticipated
+him (for their formation had now been completed) and came charging out
+of the woods across the open fields. It was part of their general
+advance and their most determined effort to drive us from the summit we
+had gained in the morning. The brigades of Hood, Whiting, Drayton, and
+D. R. Jones in addition to Hill's division (eight brigades in all)
+joined in the attack on our side of the National road, batteries being
+put in every available position. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Longstreet's Report, Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 839.]</span>
+The fight raged fiercely along the whole front, but the bloodiest
+struggle was around Wise's house, where Drayton's brigade assaulted my
+right and Willcox's left, coming across the open ground. Here the
+Sharpsburg road curves around the hill held by us so that for a little
+way it was parallel to our position. As the enemy came down the hill
+forming the other side of the gap, across the road and up again to our
+line, they were met by so withering a fire that they were checked
+quickly, and even drifted more to the right where their descent was
+continuous. Here Willcox's line volleyed into them a destructive fire,
+followed by a charge that swept them in confusion back along the road,
+where the men of the Kanawha division took up the attack and completed
+their rout. Willcox succeeded in getting a foothold on the further side
+of the open ground and driving off the artillery which was there. Along
+our centre and left where the forest was thick, the enemy was equally
+repulsed, but the cover of the timber enabled them to keep a footing
+near by, whilst they continually tried to extend so as to outflank us,
+moving their troops along a road which goes diagonally down that side of
+the mountain from Turner's Gap to Rohrersville. The batteries on the
+north of the National road had been annoying to Willcox's men as they
+advanced, but Sturgis sent forward Durell's battery from his division as
+soon as he came up, and this gave special attention to these hostile
+guns, diverting their fire from the infantry. Hooker's men, of the First
+Corps, were also by this time pushing up the mountain on that side of
+the turnpike, and we were not again troubled by artillery on our right
+flank.</p>
+<p>It was nearly five o'clock when the enemy had disappeared in the
+woods beyond Fox's Gap and Willcox could reform his shattered lines. As
+the easiest mode of getting Sturgis's fresh men into position, Willcox
+made room on his left for Ferrero's brigade supported by Nagle's,
+doubling also his lines at the extreme right. Rodman's division, the
+last of the corps, now began to reach the summit, and as the report came
+from the extreme left that the enemy was stretching beyond our flank, I
+sent Fairchild's brigade to assist our men there, whilst Rodman took
+Harland's to the support of Willcox. A staff officer now brought word
+that McClellan directed the whole line to advance. At the left this
+could only mean to clear our front decisively of the enemy there, for
+the slopes went steadily down to the Rohrersville road. At the centre
+and right, whilst we held Fox's Gap, the high and rocky summit at the
+Mountain House was still in the enemy's possession. The order came to me
+as senior officer upon the line, and the signal was given. On the left
+Longstreet's men were pushed down the mountain side beyond the
+Rohrersville and Sharpsburg roads, and the contest there was ended. The
+two hills between the latter road and the turnpike were still held by
+the enemy, and the further one could not be reached till the Mountain
+House should be in our hands. Sturgis and Willcox, supported by Rodman,
+again pushed forward, but whilst they made progress they were baffled by
+a stubborn and concentrated resistance.</p>
+<p>Reno had followed Rodman's division up the mountain, and came to me
+a little before sunset, anxious to know why the right could not get
+forward quite to the summit. I explained that the ground there was very
+rough and rocky, a fortress in itself and evidently very strongly held.
+He passed on to Sturgis, and it seemed to me he was hardly gone before
+he was brought back upon a stretcher, dead. He had gone to the skirmish
+line to examine for himself the situation, and had been shot down by the
+enemy posted among the rocks and trees. There was more or less firing on
+that part of the field till late in the evening, but when morning dawned
+the Confederates had abandoned the last foothold above Turner's Gap and
+retreated by way of Boonsboro to Sharpsburg. The casualties in the Ninth
+Corps had been 889, of which 356 were in the Kanawha division. Some 600
+of the enemy were captured by my division and sent to the rear under
+guard.</p>
+<p>On the north of the National road the First Corps under Hooker had
+been opposed by one of Hill's brigades and four of Longstreet's, and had
+gradually worked its way along the old Hagerstown road, crowning the
+heights in that direction after dark in the evening. Gibbon's brigade
+had also advanced in the National road, crowding up quite close to
+Turner's Gap and engaging the enemy in a lively combat. It is not my
+purpose to give a detailed history of events which did not come under my
+own eye. It is due to General Burnside, however, to note Hooker's
+conduct toward his immediate superior and his characteristic efforts to
+grasp all the glory of the battle at the expense of truth and of
+honorable dealing with his commander and his comrades. Hooker's official
+report for the battle of South Mountain was dated at Washington,
+November 17th, when Burnside was in command of the Army of the Potomac,
+and when the intrigues of the former to obtain the command for himself
+were notorious and near their final success. In it he studiously avoided
+any recognition of orders or directions received from Burnside, and
+ignores his staff, whilst he assumes that his orders came directly from
+McClellan and compliments the staff officers of the latter, as if they
+had been the only means of communication. This was not only insolent but
+a military offence, had Burnside chosen to prosecute it. He also asserts
+that the troops on our part of the line had been defeated and were at
+the turnpike at the base of the mountain in retreat when he went
+forward. At the close of his report, after declaring that "the forcing
+of the passage of South Mountain will be classed among the most
+brilliant and satisfactory achievements of this army," he adds, "its
+principal glory will be awarded to the First Corps." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. pp. 214-215.]</span> </p>
+<p>Nothing is more justly odious in military conduct than embodying
+slanders against other commands in an official report. It puts into the
+official records misrepresentations which cannot be met because they are
+unknown, and it is a mere accident if those who know the truth are able
+to neutralize their effect. In most cases it will be too late to
+counteract the mischief when those most interested learn of the
+slanders. All this is well illustrated in the present case. Hooker's
+report got on file months after the battle, and it was not till the
+January following that Burnside gave it his attention. I believe that
+none of the division commanders of the Ninth Corps learned of it till
+long afterward. I certainly did not till 1887, a quarter of a century
+after the battle, when the volume of the official records containing it
+was published. Burnside had asked to be relieved of the command of the
+Army of the Potomac after the battle of Fredericksburg unless Hooker
+among others was punished for insubordination. As in the preceding
+August, the popular sentiment of that army as an organization was again,
+in Mr. Lincoln's estimation, too potent a factor to be opposed, and the
+result was the superseding of Burnside by Hooker himself, though the
+President declared in the letter accompanying the appointment that the
+latter's conduct had been blameworthy. It was under these circumstances
+that Burnside learned of the false statements in Hooker's report of
+South Mountain, and put upon file his stinging response to it. His
+explicit statement of the facts will settle that question among all who
+know the reputation of the men, and though unprincipled ambition was for
+a time successful, that time was so short and things were "set even" so
+soon that the ultimate result is one that lovers of justice may find
+comfort in. <br>
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The text of Burnside's
+supplemental report is as follows:--</span></p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">"When I sent in my report of the part
+taken by my command in the battle of South Mountain, General Hooker, who
+commanded one of the corps of my command (the right wing), had not sent
+in his report, but it has since been sent to me. I at first determined
+to pass over its inaccuracies as harmless, or rather as harming only
+their author; but upon reflection I have felt it my duty to notice two
+gross misstatements made with reference to the commands of Generals Reno
+and Cox, the former officer having been killed on that day, and the
+latter now removed with his command to the West. </p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">"General Hooker says that as he came
+up to the front, Cox's corps was retiring from the contest. This is
+untrue. General Cox did not command a corps, but a division; and that
+division was in action, fighting most gallantly, long before General
+Hooker came up, and remained in the action all day, never leaving the
+field for one moment. He also says that he discovered that the attack by
+General Reno's corps was without sequence. This is also untrue, and when
+said of an officer who so nobly fought and died on that same field, it
+partakes of something worse than untruthfulness. Every officer present
+who knew anything of the battle knows that Reno performed a most
+important part in the battle, his corps driving the enemy from the
+heights on one side of the main pike, whilst that of General Hooker
+drove them from the heights on the other side. </p>
+<p><span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">"General Hooker should remember
+that I had to order him four separate times to move his command into
+action, and that I had to myself order his leading division (Meade's) to
+start before he would go." Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 422.] </span><br>
+The men of the First Corps and its officers did their duty nobly on
+that as on many another field, and the only spot on the honor of the day
+is made by the personal unscrupulousness and vainglory of its commander.</p>
+<p>Franklin's corps had attacked and carried the ridge about five miles
+further south, at Crampton's Gap, where the pass had been so stubbornly
+defended by Mahone's and Cobb's brigades with artillery and a detachment
+of Hampton's cavalry as to cause considerable loss to our troops. The
+principal fighting was at a stone wall near the eastern base of the
+mountain, and when the enemy was routed from this position, he made no
+successful rally and the summit was gained without much more fighting.
+The attack at the stone wall not far from Burkettsville was made at
+about three o'clock in the afternoon. The Sixth Corps rested upon the
+summit at night.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</p>
+<p>ANTIETAM: PRELIMINARY MOVEMENTS</p>
+<p>Lee's plan of invasion--Changed by McClellan's advance--The position
+at Sharpsburg--Our routes of march--At the Antietam--McClellan
+reconnoitring--Lee striving to concentrate--Our delays--Tuesday's
+quiet--Hooker's evening march--The Ninth Corps command--Changing our
+positions--McClellan's plan of battle--Hooker's evening
+skirmish--Mansfield goes to support Hooker--Confederate
+positions--Jackson arrives--McLaws and Walker reach the field--Their
+places.</p>
+<p>Before morning on the 15th of September it became evident that Lee
+had used the night in withdrawing his army. An advance of the pickets at
+daybreak confirmed this, and Pleasonton's cavalry was pushed forward to
+Boonsboro, where they had a brisk skirmish with the enemy's rear-guard.
+At Boonsboro a turnpike to Sharpsburg leaves the National road, and the
+retreat of the Confederate cavalry, as well as other indications,
+pointed out the Sharpsburg road as the line of Lee's retreat. He had
+abandoned his plan of moving further northward, and had chosen a line
+bringing him into surer communication with Jackson. His movements before
+the battle of South Mountain revealed a purpose of invasion identical
+with that which he tried to carry out in 1863 in the Gettysburg
+campaign. Longstreet, with two divisions and a brigade (D. R. Jones,
+Hood, and Evans), had advanced to Hagerstown, and it seems that a large
+part of the Confederate trains reached there also. D. H. Hill's division
+held Boonsboro and the passes of South Mountain at Turner's and Fox's
+Gaps. McLaws invested our fortifications on Maryland Heights, supported
+by R. H. Anderson's division. Jackson, with four divisions (A. P. Hill,
+Ewell, and Starke of his own corps, with Walker temporarily reporting to
+him), was besieging Harper's Ferry.</p>
+<p>On Saturday, the 13th, Lee determined to draw back Longstreet from
+his advanced position, in view of the fact that Jackson had not yet
+reduced Harper's Ferry and that McClellan was marching to its relief.
+Longstreet's divisions therefore approached Boonsboro so as to support
+D. H. Hill, and thus it happened that they took part in the battle of
+South Mountain. Hill again occupied the summit where we found him on the
+14th. From all this it is very plain that if McClellan had hastened his
+advance on the 13th, the passes of South Mountain at Turner's and Fox's
+gaps would not have been occupied in force by the enemy, and the
+condition of things would have been what he believed it was on the
+morning of the 14th, when a single brigade had been thought enough to
+support Pleasonton's reconnoissance. Twenty-four hours had changed all
+that.</p>
+<p>The turnpike from Boonsboro to Sharpsburg continues southward a
+couple of miles, crossing the Potomac to Shepherdstown, which lies on
+the Virginia side of the river. A bridge which formerly carried the road
+over the stream had been burned; but not far below the ruined piers was
+a ford, which was a pretty good one in the present stage of water.
+Shepherdstown was the natural place of junction for Lee and Jackson; but
+for Lee to have marched there at once would have exposed Jackson to
+attack from the northern side of the Potomac. The precious stores and
+supplies captured at Harper's Ferry must be got to a place of safety,
+and this was likely to delay Jackson a day or two. Lee therefore ordered
+McLaws to obstruct Franklin's movement as much as he could, whilst he
+himself concentrated the rest of Longstreet's corps at Sharpsburg,
+behind the Antietam. If McClellan's force should prove overwhelming, the
+past experience of the Confederate general encouraged him to believe
+that our advance would not be so enterprising that he could not make a
+safe retreat into Virginia. He resolved therefore to halt at Sharpsburg,
+which offered an excellent field for a defensive battle, leaving himself
+free to resume his aggressive campaign or to retreat into Virginia
+according to the result.</p>
+<p>McClellan had ordered Richardson's division of the Second Corps to
+support the cavalry in the advance, and Hooker's corps followed
+Richardson. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Hooker's
+Report, Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 216.]</span> It would seem
+most natural that the whole of Sumner's wing should take the advance on
+the 15th, though the breaking up of organizations was so much a habit
+with McClellan that perhaps it should not be surprising that one of
+Sumner's divisions was thus separated from the rest, and that Burnside's
+right wing was also divided. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+We must not forget the fact, however, that the order dividing the army
+into wings was suspended on that morning, and that this gives to the
+incident the air of an intentional reduction of the wing commanders to
+the control of a single corps. Official Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. p.
+297.]</span> The Ninth Corps was ordered to follow the old Sharpsburg
+road through Fox's Gap, our line of march being thus parallel to the
+others till we should reach the road from Boonsboro to Sharpsburg.</p>
+<p>But we were not put in motion early in the day. We were ordered
+first to bury the dead, and to send the wounded and prisoners to
+Middletown It was nearly noon when we got orders to march, and when the
+head of column filed into the road, the way was blocked by Porter's
+corps, which was moving to the front by the same road. As soon as the
+way was clear, we followed, leaving a small detachment to complete the
+other tasks which had been assigned us. In the wooded slope of the
+mountain west of the gap, a good many of the Confederate dead still lay
+where they had fallen in the fierce combats for the possession of the
+crest near Wise's house. Our road led through a little hamlet called
+Springvale, and thence to another, Porterstown, near the left bank of
+the Antietam, where it runs into the Boonsboro and Sharpsburg turnpike.
+Sumner's two corps had taken temporary position on either side of the
+turnpike, behind the line of hills which there borders the stream.
+Porter's corps was massed in rear of Sumner, and Hooker's had been moved
+off to the right, around Keedysville. I was with the Kanawha division,
+assuming that my temporary command of the corps ended with the battle on
+the mountain. As we came up in rear of the troops already assembled, we
+received orders to turn off the road to the left, and halted our
+battalions closed in mass. It was now about three o'clock in the
+afternoon. McClellan, as it seemed, had just reached the field, and was
+surrounded by a group of his principal officers, most of whom I had
+never seen before. I rode up with General Burnside, dismounted, and was
+very cordially greeted by General McClellan. He and Burnside were
+evidently on terms of most intimate friendship and familiarity. He
+introduced me to the officers I had not known before, referring
+pleasantly to my service with him in Ohio and West Virginia, putting me
+upon an easy footing with them in a very agreeable and genial way.</p>
+<p>We walked up the slope of the ridge before us, and looking westward
+from its crest, the whole field of the coming battle was before us.
+Immediately in front the Antietam wound through the hollow, the hills
+rising gently on both sides. In the background, on our left, was the
+village of Sharpsburg, with fields enclosed by stone fences in front of
+it. At its right was a bit of wood (since known as the West Wood), with
+the little Dunker Church standing out white and sharp against it.
+Farther to the right and left, the scene was closed in by wooded ridges
+with open farm lands between, the whole making as pleasing and
+prosperous a landscape as can easily be imagined.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/1-14-1.jpg" title="Map"
+ alt="Map" style="width: 385px; height: 600px;"><br>
+</p>
+<p>We made a large group as we stood upon the hill, and it was not long
+before we attracted the enemy's attention. A puff of white smoke from a
+knoll on the right of the Sharpsburg road was followed by the screaming
+of a shell over our heads. McClellan directed that all but one or two
+should retire behind the ridge, while he continued the reconnoissance,
+walking slowly to the right. I think Fitz-John Porter was the only
+general officer who was retained as a companion in this walk. I noted
+with satisfaction the cool and business-like air with which McClellan
+made his examination under fire. The Confederate artillery was answered
+by a battery of ours, and a lively cannonade ensued on both sides,
+though without any noticeable effect. The enemy's position was revealed,
+and he was evidently in force on both sides of the turnpike in front of
+Sharpsburg, covered by the undulations of the rolling ground which hid
+his infantry from our sight.</p>
+<p>The examination of the enemy's position and the discussion of it
+continued till near the close of the day. Orders were then given for the
+Ninth Corps to move to the left, keeping off the road, which was
+occupied by other troops. We moved through fields and farm lands, an
+hour's march in the dusk of evening, going into bivouac about a mile
+south of the Sharpsburg bridge, and in rear of the hills bordering the
+Antietam.</p>
+<p>The village of Sharpsburg is in the midst of a plateau which is
+almost enclosed by the Potomac River and the Antietam. The Potomac
+bounds it on the south and west, and the Antietam on the east. The
+plateau in general outline may be considered a parallelogram, four miles
+in length from north to south, and two and a half miles in width inside
+the bends of the river. The northern side of this terrain appears the
+narrowest, for here the river curves sharply away to the west, nearly
+doubling the width of the field above and below the bend. From the
+village the ground descends in all directions, though a continuous ridge
+runs northward, on which is the Hagerstown turnpike. The Boonsboro
+turnpike enters the village from the northeast, crossing the Antietam on
+a stone bridge, and continuing through Sharpsburg to the southwest,
+reaches Shepherdstown by the ford of the Potomac already mentioned. The
+Hagerstown turnpike enters the town from the north, passing the Dunker
+Church a mile out, and goes nearly due south, crossing the Antietam at
+its mouth, and continuing down the Potomac toward Harper's Ferry.</p>
+<p>The Antietam is a deep creek, with few fords at an ordinary stage of
+water, and the principal roads cross it upon stone bridges. Of these
+there were three within the field of battle; the upper one in front of
+Keedysville, the middle one upon the Boonsboro turnpike, and the lower
+one on the Sharpsburg and Rohrersville road, since known as Burnside's
+bridge. McClellan's staff was better supplied with officers of engineers
+than the staff of most of our separate armies, and Captain Duane, his
+chief engineer, systematized the work of gathering topographical
+information. This was communicated to the general officers in connection
+with the orders which were given them. In this way we were instructed
+that the only fords of the Antietam passable at that time were one
+between the two upper bridges named, and another about half a mile below
+Burnside's bridge, in a deep bend of the stream. We found, however,
+during the engagement of the 17th, another practicable crossing for
+infantry a short distance above the bridge. This was not a ford in
+common use, but in the low stage of water at the time it was made
+available for a small force.</p>
+<p>It was about noon of the 15th of September that Lee placed the
+forces which he had in hand across the turnpike in front of Sharpsburg.
+D. H. Hill's division was on the north of the road, and on the south of
+it Longstreet's own old division (now under General D. R. Jones), Hood's
+division, and Evans's independent brigade. Stuart's cavalry and the
+reserve artillery were also present. The rest of the army was with
+Jackson at Harper's Ferry, or co-operating with him in the neighborhood
+of Maryland Heights. Out of forty-four brigades, Lee could put but
+fourteen or fifteen in line that day to oppose McClellan. He was very
+strong in artillery, however, and his cannon looked grimly over the
+hill-crests behind which his infantry were lying. Cutts's and Jones's
+battalions of the reserve artillery were ordered to report to Hill for
+the protection of the left of the Confederate line, and gave him in all
+the sixty or seventy guns which he speaks of in his report, and which
+have puzzled several writers who have described the battle. Whenever our
+troops showed themselves as they marched into position, they were
+saluted from shotted cannon, and the numerous batteries that were
+developed on the long line of hills before us no doubt did much to
+impress McClellan with the belief that he had the great bulk of Lee's
+army before him.</p>
+<p>The value of time was one of the things McClellan never understood.
+He should have been among the first in the saddle at every step in the
+campaign after he was in possession of Lee's order of the 9th, and
+should have infused energy into every unit in his army. Instead of
+making his reconnoissance at three in the afternoon of Monday, it might
+have been made at ten in the morning, and the battle could have been
+fought before night, if, indeed, Lee had not promptly retreated when
+support from Jackson would thus have become impossible. Or if McClellan
+had pushed boldly for the bridge at the mouth of the Antietam, nothing
+but a precipitate retreat by Lee could have prevented the interposition
+of the whole National army between the separated wings of the
+Confederates. The opportunity was still supremely favorable for
+McClellan, but prompt decision was not easy for him. Nothing but
+reconnoitring was done on Monday afternoon or on Tuesday, whilst Lee was
+straining every nerve to concentrate his forces and to correct what
+would have proven a fatal blunder in scattering them, had his opponent
+acted with vigor. The strongest defence the eulogists of the Confederate
+general have made for him is that he perfectly understood McClellan's
+caution and calculated with confidence upon it; that he would have been
+at liberty to perfect his combinations still more at leisure, but for
+the accident by which the copy of his plan had fallen into our hands at
+Frederick City.</p>
+<p>During the 16th we confidently expected a battle, and I kept with my
+division. In the afternoon I saw General Burnside, and learned from him
+that McClellan had determined to let Hooker make a movement on our
+extreme right to turn Lee's position. Burnside's manner in speaking of
+this implied that he thought it was done at Hooker's solicitation, and
+through his desire, openly evinced, to be independent in command. I
+urged Burnside to assume the immediate command of the corps and allow me
+to lead my own division. He objected that as he had been announced as
+commander of the right wing of the army, composed of the two corps, he
+was unwilling to waive his precedence or to assume that Hooker was
+detached for anything more than a temporary purpose. I pointed out that
+Reno's staff had been granted leave of absence to take the body of their
+chief to Washington, and that my division staff was too small for corps
+duty; but he met this by saying that he would use his staff for this
+purpose, and help me in every way he could till the crisis of the
+campaign should be over. Sympathizing with his very natural feeling, I
+ceased objecting, and accepted with as good grace as I could the
+unsatisfactory position of nominal commander of the corps to which I was
+a comparative stranger, and which, under the circumstances, naturally
+looked to him as its accustomed and real commander. Burnside's
+intentions in respect to myself were thoroughly friendly, as he
+afterward proved, and I had no ground for complaint on this score; but
+the position of second in command is always an awkward and anomalous
+one, and such I felt it.</p>
+<p>The 16th passed without serious fighting, though we had desultory
+cannonading and picket firing. It was hard to restrain our men from
+showing themselves on the crest of the long ridge in front of us, and
+whenever they did so they drew the fire from some of the enemy's
+batteries, to which ours would respond. McClellan reconnoitred the line
+of the Antietam near us, and the country immediately on our left, down
+the valley. As the result of this we were ordered to change our
+positions at nightfall, staff officers being sent to guide each division
+to its new camp. The selected positions were marked by McClellan's
+engineers, who then took members of Burnside's staff to identify the
+locations, and these in turn conducted our divisions. There was far more
+routine of this sort in that army than I ever saw elsewhere. Corps and
+division commanders should have the responsibility of protecting their
+own flanks and in choosing ordinary camps. To depend upon the general
+staff for this is to take away the vigor and spontaneity of the
+subordinate and make him perform his duty in a mechanical way. He should
+be told what is known of the enemy and his movements so as to be put
+upon his guard, and should then have freedom of judgment as to details.
+The changes made were as follows: Rodman's division went half a mile
+further to the left, where a country road led to the Antietam ford, half
+a mile below the Burnside bridge. Sturgis's division was placed on the
+sides of the road leading to the stone bridge just mentioned. Willcox's
+was put in reserve in rear of Sturgis. My own was divided, Scammon's
+brigade going with Rodman, and Crook's going with Sturgis. Crook was
+ordered to take the advance in crossing the bridge in case we should be
+ordered to attack. This selection was made by Burnside himself as a
+compliment to the division for the vigor of its assault at South
+Mountain. While we were moving we heard Hooker's guns far off on the
+right and front, and the cannonade continued an hour or more after it
+became dark.</p>
+<p>What, then, was the plan of battle of which the first step was this
+movement of Hooker's? McClellan's dispositions on the 15th were made
+whilst Franklin's corps was still absent, and, under the orders he
+received, was likely to be so for a day at least. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 29.]</span> Sumner's two corps had been treated as the centre
+of the army in hand, Burnside's had been divided by putting Hooker on
+the extreme right and the Ninth Corps on the extreme left, and Porter's
+corps was in reserve. This looked as if a general attack in front with
+this organization of the army were intended. But the more McClellan
+examined the enemy's position the less inclined he was to attack the
+centre. He could cross the bridge there and on the right, and deploy;
+but the gentle slopes rising toward Sharpsburg were swept by formidable
+batteries and offered no cover to advancing troops. The enemy's infantry
+was behind stone fences and in sunken roads, whilst ours must advance
+over the open. Lee's right rested upon the wooded bluffs above the
+Burnside bridge, where it could only be approached by a small head of
+column charging along the narrow roadway under a concentrated fire of
+cannon and small arms. No point of attack on the whole field was so
+unpromising as this. Then, as Jackson was still at Harper's Ferry, there
+was the contingency of an attack in rear if anything less than the mass
+of our army were pushed beyond Lee's right.</p>
+<p>On our right, in front of Hooker, it was easy to turn the
+Confederate line. The road from Keedysville through Smoketown to the
+Hagerstown turnpike crossed the Antietam in a hollow, out of the line of
+fire, and a march around Lee's left flank could be made almost wholly
+under cover. The topography of the field therefore suggested a flank
+attack from our right, if the National commander rejected the better
+strategy of interposing his army between Lee and Jackson as too daring a
+movement. This flank attack McClellan determined to make, and some time
+after noon of the 16th issued his orders accordingly. In his preliminary
+report of the battle, made before he was relieved from command,
+McClellan says:--</p>
+<p>"The design was to make the main attack upon the enemy's left,--at
+least to create a diversion in favor of the main attack, with the hope
+of something more, by assailing the enemy's right,--and as soon as one
+or both of the flank movements were fully successful, to attack their
+centre with any reserve I might then have in hand." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: O R., vol. xix. pt. i. p.
+30.]</span> </p>
+<p>His report covering his whole career in the war, dated August 4,
+1863 (and published February, 1864, after warm controversies had arisen,
+and he had become a political character), modifies the above statement
+in some important particulars. It says:--</p>
+<p>"My plan for the impending general engagement was to attack the
+enemy's left with the corps of Hooker and Mansfield supported by
+Sumner's and if necessary by Franklin's, and as soon as matters looked
+favorably there, to move the corps of Burnside against the enemy's
+extreme right upon the ridge running to the south and rear of
+Sharpsburg, and having carried their position to press along the crest
+toward our right, and whenever either of these flank movements should be
+successful, to advance our centre with all the forces then disposable." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix,
+pt. i, p. 55.]</span> </p>
+<p>The opinion I got from Burnside at the time, as to the part the
+Ninth Corps was to take, was fairly consistent with the design first
+quoted, namely, that when the attack by Sumner, Hooker, and Franklin
+should be progressing favorably, we were "to create a diversion in favor
+of the main attack, with the hope of something more." It is also
+probable that Hooker's movement was at first intended to be made by his
+corps alone, the attack to be taken up by Sumner's two corps as soon as
+Hooker began, and to be shared in by Franklin if he reached the field in
+time, thus making a simultaneous oblique attack from our right by the
+whole army except Porter's corps, which was in reserve, and the Ninth
+Corps, which was to create the "diversion" on our left and prevent the
+enemy from stripping his right to reinforce his left. It is hardly
+disputable that this would have been a better plan than the one actually
+carried out. Certainly the assumption that the Ninth Corps could cross
+the Antietam alone at the only place on the field where the Confederates
+had their line immediately upon the stream which must be crossed under
+fire by two narrow heads of column, and could then turn to the right
+along the high ground occupied by the hostile army before that army had
+been broken or seriously shaken elsewhere, is one which would hardly be
+made till time had dimmed the remembrance of the actual position of
+Lee's divisions upon the field. It is also noticeable that the plan as
+given in the final report leaves no "centre" with which to "advance"
+when either of the flank movements should be successful, Porter's corps
+in reserve being the only one not included in the movement as described.</p>
+<p>Further evidence that the plan did not originally include the wide
+separation of two corps to the right to make the extended turning
+movement is found in Hooker's incomplete report, and in the wide
+interval in time between the marching of his corps and that of
+Mansfield. Hooker was ordered to cross the Antietam at about two o'clock
+in the afternoon of the 16th by the bridge in front of Keedysville and
+the ford below it. He says that after his troops were over and in march,
+he rode back to McClellan, who told him that he might call for
+reinforcements, and that when they came they should be under his
+command. Somewhat later McClellan rode forward with his staff to observe
+the progress making, and Hooker again urged the necessity of
+reinforcements. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 217.]</span> Yet Sumner did not
+receive orders to send Mansfield's corps to his support till evening,
+and it marched only half an hour before midnight, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 275.]</span>
+reaching its bivouac, about a mile and a half in rear of that of Hooker,
+at 2 A.M. of the 17th. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 475.]</span> </p>
+<p>After crossing the Antietam, Hooker had shaped his course to the
+westward, aiming to reach the ridge on which the Hagerstown turnpike
+runs, and which is the dominant feature in the landscape. This ridge is
+about two miles distant from the Antietam, and for the first mile of the
+way no resistance was met. However, his progress had been observed by
+the enemy, and Hood's two brigades were taken from the centre and passed
+to the left of D. H. Hill. Here they occupied an open wood (since known
+as the East Wood) northeast of the Dunker Church. Hooker was now trying
+to approach the Confederate positions, Meade's division of the
+Pennsylvania Reserves being in the advance. A sharp skirmishing combat
+ensued, and artillery was brought into action on both sides. I have
+mentioned our hearing the noise of this engagement from the other
+extremity of the field in the fading light of evening. On our side
+Seymour's brigade had been chiefly engaged, and had felt the enemy so
+vigorously that Hood supposed he had repulsed a serious effort to take
+the wood. Hooker was, however, aiming to pass quite beyond the flank,
+and kept his other divisions north of the hollow beyond the wood, and
+upon the ridge which reaches the turnpike near the largest re-entrant
+bend of the Potomac, which is only half a mile distant. Here he
+bivouacked upon the slopes of the ridge, Doubleday's division resting
+with its right upon the turnpike, Ricketts's division upon the left of
+Doubleday, and Meade covering the front of both with the skirmishers of
+Seymour's brigade. Between Meade's skirmishers and the ridge were the
+farmhouse and barn of J. Poffenberger, on the east side of the road,
+where Hooker made his own quarters for the night. Half a mile further in
+front was the farm of D. R. Miller, the dwelling on the east, and the
+barn surrounded by stacks on the west of the road. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Hooker's unfinished report
+says he slept in the barn of D. R. Miller, but he places it on the east
+of the road, and the spot is fully identified as Poffenberger's by
+General Gibbon, who commanded the right brigade, and by
+Lieutenant-Colonel Rufus R. Dawes, Sixth Wisconsin (afterward Brevet
+Brigadier-General), both of whom subsequently visited the field and
+determined the positions.]</span> Mansfield's corps (the Twelfth),
+marching as it did late in the night, kept further to the right than
+Hooker's, but moved on a nearly parallel course, and bivouacked on the
+farm of another J. Poffenberger, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. pp. 275, 475.]</span> near the road
+which, branching from the Hagerstown turnpike at the Dunker Church,
+intersects the one running from Keedysville through Smoketown to the
+same turnpike about a mile north of Hooker's position. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: See map, p. 299.]</span> </p>
+<p>On the Confederate side, Hood's division had been so roughly handled
+that it was replaced by two brigades of Ewell's division (commanded by
+Lawton), which with Jackson's own (commanded by J. R. Jones) had been
+led to the field from Harper's Ferry by Jackson, reaching Sharpsburg in
+the afternoon of the 16th. These divisions were formed on the left of D.
+H. Hill, and in continuation of his line along the turnpike, but with a
+brigade advanced to the East Wood, which was held as a salient. Hood's
+division, on being relieved, was placed in reserve near the Dunker
+Church, and spent part of the night in cooking rations, of which its
+supply had been short for a day or two. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 923.]</span> The combatants on both sides slept upon their
+arms, well knowing that the dawn would bring bloody work.</p>
+<p>During the evening McClellan issued orders looking toward the
+joining of a general engagement at daybreak. McLaws's Confederate
+division, which had been opposing Franklin, crossed the Potomac at
+Maryland Heights, and marched by way of Shepherdstown, reaching
+Sharpsburg on the morning of the 17th. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 855, 856.]</span>
+Walker's division, which had come from Harper's Ferry on the 16th,
+extended Lee's right down the Antietam, covering the ford at which
+Rodman, on our side, was expected to cross. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 914.]</span>
+A. P. Hill's division was the only force of the enemy completing the
+work at Harper's Ferry, and Franklin was ordered to leave Couch's
+division to observe Hill's movements from our side of the Potomac, and
+to bring the remainder of his corps on the field early in the morning. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 376.]</span>
+In the respite given him since Sunday, Lee had therefore concentrated
+all his army but one division, and was better ready for the battle than
+McClellan, for Franklin's corps could come upon the field only after a
+considerable march, and he did not, in fact, reach it till ten o'clock
+or later. Sumner was ordered to have the Second Corps ready to march an
+hour before day, but he had no authority to move till explicit orders to
+that effect should reach him. I have said that Hooker claims in his
+report that the promise was made him that Mansfield's corps, when it
+came to reinforce him, should be under his orders. If this were so, it
+would unite all the troops now present which had fought in Pope's Army
+of Virginia. I find no trace, however, in the reports of the battle,
+that Hooker exercised any such command. He seems to have confined his
+work to the independent action of his own corps until Mansfield's death,
+and was himself disabled almost immediately afterward. As there were
+commanders of wings of the army duly designated, and two corps were now
+separated by a long interval from the rest in an independent turning
+movement, it can hardly be debated that that was the place of all others
+where one of them should have been, unless McClellan were there in
+person. Had Burnside's two corps been kept together as the right wing,
+the right attack could have been made a unit. If Sumner had then been
+directed to keep in communication with Burnside, and to advance when the
+latter did, nobody will doubt that Sumner would have been prompt in
+sustaining his comrades. But both Sumner and Burnside were made to feel
+that they were reduced from their proper rank, and however conscientious
+they might be in carrying out such orders as reached them, it was not in
+human nature that they should volunteer suggestions or anticipate
+commands. McClellan had thus thrown away the advantages, if there were
+any, in holding only two or three men directly responsible for the
+co-ordination of his movements, and had assumed the full personal
+responsibility of watching each phase of the battle and suiting the
+proper orders to each conjuncture as it should arise.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</p>
+<p>ANTIETAM: THE FIGHT ON THE RIGHT</p>
+<p>Hooker astir early--The field near the Dunker Church--Artillery
+combat--Positions of Hooker's divisions--Rocky ledges in the
+woods--Advance of Doubleday through Miller's orchard and garden--Enemy's
+fire from West Wood--They rush for Gibbon's battery--Repulse--Advance of
+Patrick's brigade--Fierce fighting along the turnpike--Ricketts's
+division in the East Wood--Fresh effort of Meade's division in the
+centre--A lull in the battle--Mansfield's corps reaches the
+field--Conflicting opinions as to the hour--Mansfield killed--Command
+devolves on Williams--Advance through East Wood--Hooker wounded--Meade
+in command of the corps--It withdraws--Greene's division reaches the
+Dunker Church--Crawford's in the East Wood--Terrible effects on the
+Confederates--Sumner's corps coming up--Its formation--It moves on the
+Dunker Church from the east--Divergence of the divisions--Sedgwick's
+passes to right of Greene--Attacked in flank and broken--Rallying at the
+Poffenberger hill--Twelfth Corps hanging on near the church--Advance of
+French's division--Richardson follows later--Bloody Lane reached--The
+Piper house--Franklin's corps arrives--Charge of Irwin's brigade.</p>
+<p>Before the break of day on Wednesday the 17th, it was discovered
+that Doubleday's division of Hooker's corps lay exposed to artillery
+fire from batteries of the enemy supposed to be in position on their
+front and right. In rousing the men and changing their place, the
+stillness of the night was so far broken that the Confederates believed
+they were advancing to attack, and a lively cannonade and picket firing
+anticipated the dawn. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+R. R. Dawes, Service with the Sixth Wisconsin, p. 87.]</span> The chance
+for getting their breakfast was thus destroyed, and Hooker prepared his
+whole command for action as soon as it should be light enough to move.
+Looking south from the Poffenberger farm along the turnpike, he then saw
+a gently rolling landscape of which the commanding point was the Dunker
+Church, whose white brick walls appeared on the right of the road,
+backed by the foliage of the West Wood, which came toward him filling a
+hollow that ran parallel to the turnpike, with a single row of fields
+between. On the east side of the turnpike was the Miller house, with its
+barn and stack-yard across the road to the right, and beyond these the
+ground dipped into a little depression. Still further on was seen a
+large cornfield between the East Wood and the turnpike, rising again to
+the higher level, and Hooker noticed the glint from a long line of
+bayonets beyond the corn, struck by the first rays of the rising sun.
+There was, however, another little hollow at the further side of the
+cornfield, which could not be seen from Hooker's position; and on the
+farthest ridge, near the church and extending across the turnpike toward
+the East Wood, were the Confederate lines, partly sheltered by piles of
+rails taken from the fences. They looked to Hooker as if they were
+deployed along the edge of the corn, but an open sloping field lay
+between the corn and them, after passing the second hollow. It was plain
+that the high ground about the little white church was the key of the
+enemy's position, and if that could be carried, Hooker's task would be
+well done.</p>
+<p>The enemy's artillery had opened early from a high hill nearly east
+of the Miller house in a position to strike our forces in flank and rear
+as they should go forward, and Hooker placed batteries on the equally
+commanding height above Poffenberger's and detached Hofmann's brigade
+from Doubleday's division to support it and to prevent the enemy from
+turning our extreme right. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 224.]</span> This force maintained
+its position during the day, and was the nucleus about which both
+Hooker's and Sedgwick's men rallied after their fight. The enemy's
+artillery referred to were several batteries under Stuart's command
+supported by his cavalry and by Early's brigade of infantry which
+Jackson detached for that purpose. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records vol. xix. pt. i. p. 819.]</span> </p>
+<p>Doubleday's division (except Hofmann), was in two lines, Gibbon's
+and Phelps's in front, supported by Patrick's. Of Meade's division
+Seymour's brigade, which had sustained the combat of the evening before,
+had continued to cover the front with skirmishers during the night, and
+remained on the northeast side of the East Wood. The other brigades
+(Anderson and Magilton) were placed in reserve behind Doubleday. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 269.]</span>
+The Tenth Regiment Pennsylvania Reserves was sent from Anderson's to a
+strong position west of the turnpike near the extremity of the strip of
+wood northwest of the Miller house. It was among ledges of rock looking
+into the ravine beyond which were Stuart and Early. The ravine was the
+continuation northward to the Potomac of a little watercourse which
+headed near the Dunker Church and along one side of which the West Wood
+lay, the outcrop of rock making broken ledges along its whole length.
+Indeed, all the pieces of wood in the neighborhood seemed to be full of
+such rocks, and for that reason had been allowed to remain in forest.
+The regiment was ordered to cover its front with skirmishers and to hold
+its position at all hazards. Ricketts's division had bivouacked in a
+wood east of Doubleday's. Its three brigades (Duryea's, Hartsuff's, and
+Christian's) were deployed on the left of Doubleday, and were to march
+toward the Dunker Church through the East Wood, passing the line of
+Seymour's brigade, which was then to become its support.</p>
+<p>The Confederates opened a rapid artillery fire from the open ground
+in front of the Dunker Church as well as from Stuart's position, and
+Hooker answered the challenge by an immediate order for his line to
+advance. Doubleday directed Gibbon, who was on the right, to guide upon
+the turnpike. Patrick remained for a time in the wood north of the
+Miller house, till he should be needed at the front. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 224.]</span> Doubleday and his brigade commanders seem to have
+supposed that Meade's men occupied part at least of the West Wood, and
+that they would cover Gibbon's flank as he advanced. This belief was
+based on the stationing of the Tenth Pennsylvania Reserves; but that
+regiment was fifteen or twenty rods north of the northern end of the
+West Wood, and Gibbon's right flank, as he advanced, was soon exposed to
+attack from Ewell's division (Lawton in command), which held the wood,
+hidden from view and perfectly protected by the slope of the ground and
+the forest, as they looked over the rim into the undulating open fields
+in front. Part of Battery B, Fourth United States Artillery (Gibbon's
+own battery), was run forward to Miller's barn and stack-yard on the
+right of the road, and fired over the heads of the advancing regiments. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 229, 248.]</span>
+Other batteries were similarly placed, more to the left, and our cannon
+roared from all the hill crests encircling the field. The line moved
+swiftly forward through Miller's orchard and kitchen garden, breaking
+through a stout picket fence on the near side, down into the moist
+ground of the hollow, and up through the corn which was higher than
+their heads and shut out everything from view. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Dawes, Sixth Wisconsin, p.
+88.]</span> At the southern side of the field they came to a low fence,
+beyond which was the open field already mentioned, and the enemy's line
+at the further side of it. But the cornfield only covered part of the
+line, and Gibbon's right had outmarched the left, which had been exposed
+to a terrible fire. The direction taken had been a little oblique, so
+that the right wing of the Sixth Wisconsin (the flanking regiment) had
+crossed the turnpike and was suddenly assailed by a sharp fire from the
+West Wood on its flank. They swung back into the road, lying down along
+the high, stout post-and-rail fence, keeping up their fire by shooting
+between the rails. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Dawes, Sixth Wisconsin, p. 89.]</span> </p>
+<p>Leaving this little band to protect their right, the main line,
+which had come up on the left, leaped the fence at the south edge of the
+cornfield, and charged up hill across the open at the enemy in front.
+But the concentrated fire of artillery and musketry was more than they
+could bear. Men fell by scores and hundreds, and the thinned lines gave
+way and ran for the shelter of the corn. They were rallied in the hollow
+on the north side of the field. The enemy had rapidly extended his left
+under cover of the West Wood, and now made a dash at the right flank and
+at Gibbon's exposed guns. His men on the right faced by that flank and
+followed him bravely, though with little order, in a dash at the
+Confederates who were swarming out of the wood. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 91.]</span>
+The gunners double-charged the cannon with canister, and under a
+terrible fire of artillery and rifles Lawton's division broke and sought
+shelter. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 248.]</span> </p>
+<p>Patrick's brigade had now come up in support of Gibbon, and was sent
+across the turnpike into the West Wood to cover that flank, two
+regiments of Gibbon's going with him. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 243.]</span>
+His men pushed forward, the enemy retiring, until they were in advance
+of the principal line in the cornfield upon which the Confederates of
+Jackson's division were now marching to attack. Patrick faced his
+brigade to the left, parallel to the edge of the wood and to the
+turnpike, and poured his fire into the flank of the enemy, following it
+by a charge through the field and up to the fence along the road. Again
+the Confederates were driven back, but their left came forward in the
+wood again, attacking Patrick's right, forcing him to resume his
+original direction of front and to retire to the cover of a rocky ledge
+in the open at right angles to the turnpike not far from the northern
+end of the timber. Phelps's brigade had gone forward with Gibbon's,
+pushing nearly to the Confederate lines, and being driven back with
+great loss when they charged over open ground against the enemy.</p>
+<p>Ricketts's division advanced from the wood in which it had spent the
+night, passed through Seymour's skirmishers and entered the East Wood,
+swinging his left forward as he went. This grove was open, but the rocks
+made perfect cover for Jackson's men, and every stone and tree blazed
+with deadly fire. Hartsuff endeavored to reconnoitre the ground, but was
+wounded and disabled immediately. Ricketts pushed on, suffering
+fearfully from an enemy which in open order could fall back from rock to
+rock and from tree to tree with little comparative loss. He succeeded at
+last in reaching the west edge of this wood, forming along the road and
+fences that were just within its margin. Here he kept up a rapid fire
+till his ammunition was exhausted. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 258.]</span> </p>
+<p>When Doubleday's men had been finally repulsed, our line on the
+right curved from the ledge where Patrick took refuge, forward in front
+of Miller's orchard and garden, part of Gibbon's men lying down along
+the turnpike fence facing to the west. Meade's two brigades in reserve
+were sent forward, but when they reached Gibbon and Phelps, Ricketts was
+calling for assistance in the East Wood and Magilton's brigade was sent
+to him, leaving a gap on the left of Anderson. Another gallant effort
+was now made, Seymour's depleted brigade striving to cover the opening,
+but the enemy dashed at it as Anderson came up the slope, and the left
+being taken in flank, the whole broke again to the rear. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 269, 270.]</span>
+Ricketts's right was also imperilled, and he withdrew his exhausted
+lines to reorganize and to fill their empty cartridge-boxes. There was a
+lull in the battle, and the combatants on both sides were making
+desperate efforts to reform their broken regiments.</p>
+<p>Mansfield had called the Twelfth Corps to arms at the first sound of
+Hooker's battle and marched to his aid. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 475.]</span> It consisted of two divisions, Williams's and
+Greene's, the first of two and the other of three brigades. There were a
+number of new and undrilled regiments in the command, and in hastening
+to the front in columns of battalions in mass, proper intervals for
+deployment had not been preserved, and time was necessarily lost before
+the troops could be put in line. Indeed, some of them were not regularly
+deployed at all. They had left their bivouac at sunrise which, as it was
+about the equinox, was not far from six o'clock. They had marched across
+the country without reference to roads, always a very slow mode of
+advancing, and doubly so with undrilled men. The untrained regiments
+must, in the nature of things, have been very much like a mob when their
+so-called columns-in-mass approached the field of battle. It is
+impossible to reconcile the statements of the reports as to the time
+they became engaged. General Williams says they were engaged before
+seven o'clock. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 476.]</span> General Meade says they relieved his men not earlier
+than ten or eleven. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 270.]</span> It seems to be guesswork in both cases, and we are
+forced to judge from circumstantial evidence. Ricketts thinks he had
+been fighting four hours when he retired for lack of ammunition, and the
+Twelfth Corps men had not yet reached him. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 259.]</span>
+Patrick, on the extreme right, says that his men had made their coffee
+in the lull after his retreat to the sheltering ledge of rocks, and had
+completed their breakfast before the first of Mansfield's men joined him
+there. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p.
+244.]</span> The circumstantial details given by several officers make
+the interval between the attack by the Twelfth Corps and the arrival of
+Sumner a very short one. It may be regarded as probable, therefore, that
+Hooker's battle covered the larger part of the time between six o'clock
+and the arrival of Sumner at about ten.</p>
+<p>On reaching the field, Mansfield had a brief consultation with
+Hooker, resulting in his ordering Williams to form his division nearly
+as Doubleday's had been, and to advance with his right upon the
+turnpike. He himself led forward the left of Crawford's brigade, which
+was the first to arrive, and pushed toward the East Wood. The regiments
+were still in columns of companies, and though Williams had ordered them
+deployed, the corps commander himself, as Crawford says, countermanded
+this order and led them under fire in column. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 484.]</span> He evidently believed Ricketts's men to be still
+holding the East Wood, and tried to keep his own from opening fire upon
+the troops that were seen there. At this moment he was mortally wounded,
+before the deployment was made.</p>
+<p>General Alpheus S. Williams, on whom the command devolved, was a
+cool and experienced officer. He hastened the deployment of Crawford's
+and Gordon's brigades of his own division, sending one of the new and
+large regiments to assist the Pennsylvania regiment in holding the
+important position covering the right beyond the turnpike. As Greene's
+division came up, he ordered him to form beyond Gordon's left, and when
+deployed to move on the Dunker Church through the East Wood, guiding his
+left by the cloud of smoke from the Mumma house, which had been set on
+fire by D. H. Hill's men. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 475, 1033.]</span> At Doubleday's request, he detached Goodrich's
+brigade from Greene, and sent it to Patrick on the right with orders to
+advance into the West Wood from its northern extremity. Patrick says the
+regiments came separately and at considerable intervals, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 244.]</span> and it is not unlikely that the older regiments
+were sent in to relieve Hooker's men as fast as they were ready, and the
+more disorganized ones were obliged to delay till they could be got into
+some sort of shape. Williams made his first disposition of his troops
+according to Hooker's suggestion, but the latter received a serious
+wound in the foot, as it would seem, before the attack by the Twelfth
+Corps had begun. Hooker turned over the command to Meade, and a formal
+order confirming this was issued from McClellan's head-quarters later in
+the day. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pt. ii. p. 315.]</span> </p>
+<p>So many of the regiments were carried under fire while still in
+column that not only was the formation of the line an irregular one, but
+the deployment when made was more diagonal to the turnpike than Hooker's
+had been, and the whole line faced more to the westward. But they
+advanced with a courage equal to the heroism already shown on that
+field. The Confederates who now held the open space at the Dunker Church
+were Hood's two brigades, and the rest of Jackson's corps extended into
+the West Wood. Stuart had found his artillery position on the hill too
+far from Jackson's line, and the fighting was so near the church that he
+could not fire upon our men without hurting his own. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt. i. p. 820.]</span>
+He therefore moved further to the south and west, and Early carried his
+brigade (except the Thirteenth Virginia) back toward Ewell's division,
+which now came under his command by the disabling of General Lawton in
+the fight. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 968, 969.]</span> </p>
+<p>Williams's first line was a good deal shortened, and the divisions,
+guiding as well as they could upon Greene, crowded so far to the south
+that even Crawford's brigade, which was on the right of all, went partly
+through the East Wood advancing on a line nearly at right angles to the
+turnpike. The enemy had followed Ricketts's retiring battalions and were
+again in occupation of the East Wood. His work was to be done over
+again, though the stubborn courage of Hood's depleted brigades could not
+make up for the numbers which the National officers now led against him.
+But the rocks, the ledges, and the trees still gave him such cover that
+it was at a fearful cost that the Twelfth Corps men pushed him steadily
+back and then by a final rush drove him from the roads which skirted the
+grove on west and south. What was left of Jackson's corps except Early's
+brigade had come out of the West Wood to meet Crawford's division, and
+the stout high fences along the turnpike were the scene of frightful
+slaughter. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. i. pp. 485, 487.]</span> The Confederates tried to
+climb them, but the level fire of our troops swept over the field so
+that the top of the fence seemed in the most deadly line of the leaden
+storm, and the men in gray fell in windrows along its panels. Our own
+men were checked by the same obstacle, and lay along the ground shooting
+between the rails and over the fallen bodies of the Confederate soldiers
+which made a sort of rampart.</p>
+<p>In obedience to his original orders, Greene took ground a little
+more to his left, occupying a line along a fence from the burning Mumma
+house to the road leading from the East Wood directly to the Dunker
+Church. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p.
+505.]</span> The two brigades with thinned ranks barely filled this
+space, and Crawford's division connected with them as well as it could.
+Batteries came forward on Greene's left and right, and helped to sweep
+the grove around the church. Hill attempted to hold him back, and a bold
+dash was made at Greene, probably by Hill's left brigades which were
+ordered forward to support Hood. Greene's men lay on the ground just
+under the ridge above the burning house till the enemy were within a few
+rods of them, then rose and delivered a volley which an eyewitness
+(Major Crane, Seventh Ohio) says cut them down "like grass before the
+mower." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 506.]</span> Those who escaped sought refuge
+in the wood behind the church, where the crowning ridge is some distance
+back from the road. Greene now dashed forward and gained the grove
+immediately about the church, where he held on for an hour or two.
+Crawford's division, after several ebbs and flows in the tide of battle,
+was holding the western skirt of the East wood with one or two of its
+regiments still close to the turnpike fence on his right.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Goodrich had been trying to advance from the north end of
+the West Wood to attack the flank of the enemy there; but Early with his
+own brigade held the ledges along the ravine so stubbornly that he was
+making little progress.</p>
+<p>Greene was calling for support about the Dunker Church, for he was
+close under the ridge on which Hill and Jackson were forming such line
+as they could, and he was considerably in advance of our other troops.
+Williams withdrew one regiment from Goodrich's brigade and sent it to
+Greene, and directed Crawford to send also to him the Thirteenth New
+Jersey, a new and strong regiment which had been left in reserve, as we
+have seen, in a bit of wood northeast of the field of battle. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 476, 505.]</span>
+Gordon's brigade was withdrawn by Crawford to enable it to reorganize in
+rear of the East Wood, and Crawford's own brigade held the further
+margin of it. It will thus be seen that the Twelfth Corps was now
+divided into three portions,--Greene's division at the church,
+Crawford's in the East Wood, and Goodrich's brigade near the north end
+of the West Wood.</p>
+<p>Meade had withdrawn the First Corps to the ridge at Poffenberger's,
+where it had bivouacked the night before, except that Patrick's brigade
+remained in support of Goodrich. The corps had suffered severely, having
+lost 2470 in killed and wounded, but it was still further depleted by
+straggling, so that Meade reported less than 7000 men with the colors
+that evening. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 349.]</span> Its organization had been
+preserved, however, and the story that it was utterly dispersed was a
+mistake. The Twelfth Corps also had its large list of casualties,
+increased a little later by its efforts to support Sumner, and
+aggregating, before the day was over, 1746.</p>
+<p>But the fighting of Hooker's and Mansfield's men, though lacking
+unity of force and of purpose, had also cost the enemy dear. J. R.
+Jones, who commanded Jackson's division, had been wounded; Starke, who
+succeeded Jones, was killed; Lawton, who commanded Ewell's division, was
+wounded. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pt. i. p. 956.]</span> Lawton's and Trimble's brigades had been fearfully
+crippled in the first fight against Hooker on the plateau between the
+Dunker Church and the East Wood, and Hood was sent back to relieve them. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 923.]</span>
+He, in turn, had been reinforced by the brigades of Ripley, Colquitt,
+and McRae (Garland's) from D. H. Hill's division. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 1022.]</span>
+When Greene reached the Dunker Church, therefore, the Confederates on
+that wing were more nearly disorganized than our own troops. Nearly half
+their numbers were killed and wounded, and Jackson's famous "Stonewall"
+division was so completely broken up that only a handful of men under
+Colonels Grigsby and Stafford remained, and attached themselves to
+Early's command. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 969.]</span> Of the division now under Early, his own brigade was all
+that retained much strength, and this, posted among the rocks in the
+West Wood and vigorously supported by Stuart and the artillery on that
+flank, was all that covered the left of Lee's army. Could Hooker and
+Mansfield have attacked together, or, still better, could Sumner's
+Second Corps have marched before day and united with the first onset,
+Lee's left must inevitably have been crushed long before the Confederate
+divisions of McLaws, Walker, and A. P. Hill could have reached the
+field. It is this failure to carry out any intelligible plan which the
+historian must regard as the unpardonable military fault on the National
+side. To account for the hours between daybreak and eight o'clock on
+that morning, is the most serious responsibility of the National
+commander. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: A
+distinguished officer (understood to be Gen. R. R. Dawes) who visited
+the field in 1866 has published the statement that at the Pry house,
+where McClellan had his headquarters, he was informed that on the
+morning of the 17th the general rose at about seven o'clock and
+breakfasted leisurely after that hour. (Marietta, Ohio, Sentinel.)]</span> </p>
+<p>Sumner's Second Corps was now approaching the scene of action, or
+rather two divisions of it, Sedgwick's and French's, for Richardson's
+was still delayed till his place could be filled by Porter's troops.
+Although ordered to be ready to move at daybreak, Sumner emphasizes in
+his report the fact that whilst his command was prepared to move at the
+time ordered, he "did not receive from headquarters the order to march
+till 7.20 A. M." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 275.]</span> By the time he could
+reach the field, Hooker had fought his battle and had been repulsed. The
+same strange tardiness in sending orders is noticeable in regard to
+every part of the army, and Richardson was not relieved so that he could
+follow French till an hour or two later. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ibid</i>.]</span> </p>
+<p>Sumner advanced, after crossing the Antietam, in a triple column,
+Sedgwick's division in front, the three brigades marching by the right
+flank and parallel to each other. French followed in the same formation.
+They crossed the Antietam by Hooker's route, but did not march so far to
+the northwest as Hooker had done. On the way Sumner met Hooker, who was
+being carried from the field, and the few words he could exchange with
+the wounded general were enough to make him feel the need of haste, but
+not enough to give him any clear idea of the situation. When the centre
+of the corps was opposite the Dunker Church, and nearly east of it, the
+change of direction was given; the troops faced to their proper front,
+and advanced in line of battle in three lines, fully deployed and sixty
+or seventy yards apart, Sumner himself being in rear of Sedgwick's first
+line and near its left. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 305.]</span> As they approached the
+position held by Greene's division at the church, French kept on so as
+to form on Greene's left, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 323.]</span> but Sedgwick, under Sumner's immediate leading, diverged
+somewhat to the right, passing through the East Wood, crossing the
+turnpike on the right of Greene and of the Dunker Church, and plunged
+into the West Wood. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 305.]</span> The fences there had been destroyed by the Confederates
+before the battle began, for the purpose of making room for their own
+manoeuvres as well as to make barricades in front of the cornfield.
+Sedgwick's right did not extend far enough north to be obstructed by the
+fences where the Twelfth Corps men had lain along them in repulsing
+Jackson. When he entered the wood, there were absolutely no Confederate
+troops in front of him. The remnants of Jackson's men, except Early's
+brigade, were clustered at the top of the ridge immediately in front of
+Greene, and Early was further to the right, opposing Goodrich and
+Patrick; Early, however, made haste under cover of the woods to pass
+around Sedgwick's right and to get in front of him to oppose his
+progress. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 970.]</span> This led to a lively skirmishing fight in which Early was
+making as great a demonstration as possible, but with no chance of solid
+success. Sedgwick pushed him back, and his left was coming obliquely
+into the open at the bottom of the hollow beyond the wood, when, at the
+very moment, McLaws's and Walker's Confederate divisions came upon the
+field. The former had only just arrived by rapid marching from
+Shepherdstown beyond the Potomac; the latter had been hastily called
+away by Lee from his position on the lower Antietam opposite the left
+wing of Burnside's Ninth Corps. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. pp. 857, 914.]</span> </p>
+<p>Walker charged headlong upon the left flank of Sedgwick's lines, and
+McLaws, passing by Walker's left, also threw his division diagonally
+upon the already broken and retreating brigades. Taken at such a
+disadvantage, these had never a chance; and in spite of the heroic
+bravery of Sumner and Sedgwick with most of their officers (Sedgwick
+being severely wounded), the division was driven off to the north with
+terrible losses, carrying along in their rout Goodrich's brigade of the
+Twelfth Corps which had been holding Early at bay. Goodrich was killed,
+and his brigade suffered hardly less than the others. Patrick's brigade
+of Hooker's corps was in good order at the rocky ledges north of the
+West Wood which are at right angles to the turnpike, and he held on
+stubbornly till the disorganized troops drifted past his left, and then
+made an orderly retreat in line toward the Poffenberger hill. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 245.]</span>
+Meade was already there with the remnants of Hooker's men. Here some
+thirty cannon of both corps were quickly concentrated, and, supported by
+everything which retained organization, easily checked the pursuers and
+repulsed all efforts of Jackson and Stuart to resume the offensive or to
+pass between them and the Potomac. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 306.]</span> </p>
+<p>Sumner did not accompany the routed troops to this position, but as
+soon as it was plain that the division could not be rallied, he galloped
+off to put himself in communication with French and with headquarters of
+the army and to try to retrieve the situation. From the flag station
+east of the East Wood he signalled to McClellan, "Reinforcements are
+badly wanted; our troops are giving way." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 134.]</span>
+Williams was in that part of the field, and Sumner sent a staff officer
+to him ordering that he should push forward to Sedgwick's support
+anything he could. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 477.]</span> Williams in person
+ordered Gordon's brigade to advance, for this, as we have seen, had been
+reorganized behind the East Wood. He sent the same order to Crawford for
+the rest of that division. Crawford had withdrawn his men in the East
+Wood to let Sedgwick pass diagonally along his front, and now advanced
+again to the west margin of the grove. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 485.]</span>
+Gordon was ahead of him in time and further to the right, and again
+charged up to the turnpike fences. But the routed troops were already
+swarming from the wood across his front, and their pursuers were
+charging after them. Again the turnpike was made the scene of a bloody
+conflict, and the bodies of many more of the slain of both armies were
+added to those which already lined those fences. Gordon's men were
+overpowered and fell back in the direction they had come. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 495.]</span>
+The enemy's attack spread out toward Greene and toward Crawford, who was
+now at the edge of the East Wood again; but both of these held firm, and
+a couple of batteries on the rise of ground in front poured canister
+into the enemy till he took refuge again in the wood beyond the church.
+It was between nine and ten o'clock, probably about ten, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The reports on the
+Confederate side fix ten o'clock as the time McLaws and Walker reached
+the field, and corroborate the conclusion I draw from all other
+available evidence.]</span> when Sumner entered the West Wood, and in
+fifteen minutes or a little more the one-sided combat was over.</p>
+<p>Sumner's principal attack was made, as I have already indicated, at
+right angles to that of Hooker. He had thus crossed the line of Hooker's
+movement in both the advance and the retreat of the latter. This led to
+some misconceptions on Sumner's part. Crawford's division had retired to
+the right and rear to make way for Sedgwick as he came up. It thus
+happened that Greene's division was the only part of the Twelfth Corps
+troops Sumner saw, and he led Sedgwick's men to the right of these.
+Ignorant as he necessarily was of what had occurred before, he assumed
+that he formed on the extreme right of the Twelfth Corps, and that he
+fronted in the same direction as Hooker had done. This misconception of
+the situation led him into another error. He had seen only stragglers
+and wounded men on the line of his own advance, and hence concluded that
+Hooker's Corps was completely dispersed and its division and brigade
+organizations broken up. He not only gave this report to McClellan at
+the time, but reiterated it later in his statement before the Committee
+on the Conduct of the War. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+C. W., vol. i. p. 368.]</span> The truth was that he had marched
+westward more than a mile south of the Poffenberger hill where Meade was
+with the sadly diminished but still organized First Corps, and half that
+distance south of the Miller farm buildings, near which Goodrich's
+brigade had entered the north end of the West Wood, and in front of
+which part of Williams's men had held the ground along the turnpike till
+they were relieved by Sedgwick's advance. Sedgwick had gone in,
+therefore, between Greene and Crawford, and the four divisions of the
+two corps alternated in their order from left to right, thus: French,
+Greene, Sedgwick, Crawford, the last being Williams's, of which Crawford
+was in command.</p>
+<p>It was not Sumner's fault that he was so ill-informed of the actual
+situation on our right; but it is plain that in the absence of McClellan
+from that part of the field he should have left the personal leadership
+of the men to the division commanders, and should himself have found out
+by rapid examination the positions of all the troops operating there. It
+was his part to combine and give intelligent direction to the whole,
+instead of charging forward at haphazard with Sedgwick's division. Both
+Meade and Williams had men enough in hand to have joined in a concerted
+movement with him; and had he found either of those officers before
+plunging into the West Wood, he would not have taken a direction which
+left his flank wholly exposed, with the terrible but natural results
+which followed. The original cause of the mischief, however, was
+McClellan's failure to send Sumner to his position before daybreak, so
+that the three corps could have acted together from the beginning of
+Hooker's attack.</p>
+<p>But we must return to Sumner's divisions, which were advancing
+nearer the centre. The battle on the extreme right was ended by ten
+o'clock in the morning, and there was no more serious fighting north of
+the Dunker Church. The batteries on the Poffenberger hill and those
+about the East Wood swept the open ground and the cornfield over which
+Hooker and Mansfield had fought, and for some time Greene was able to
+make good his position at the church. The Confederates were content to
+hold the line of the West Wood and the high ground back of the church,
+and French's attack upon D. H. Hill was now attracting their attention.
+French advanced toward Greene's left, over the open farm lands, and
+after a fierce combat about the Rullett and Clipp farm buildings, drove
+Hill's division from them. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 323.]</span> At what time the
+Confederates made a rush at Greene and drove him back to the edge of the
+East Wood is uncertain; but it must have been soon after the disaster to
+Sedgwick. It seems to have been an incident of the aggressive movement
+against Sedgwick, though not coincident with it. It must certainly have
+been before French's advance reached the Rullett and Clipp houses, for
+the enemy's men holding them would have been far in rear of Greene at
+the church, and he must by that time have been back near the burnt house
+of Mumma and the angle of the East Wood. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 505. Greene says that he held the ground at the church for two
+hours, and that his men were in action from 6.30 A. M. to 1.30 P. M. The
+length of time and hours of the day are so irreconcilable as given in
+different reports that we are forced to trust more to the general
+current of events than to the time stated.]</span> </p>
+<p>Richardson's division followed French after an hour or two, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Hancock says the division
+crossed the Antietam about 9.30. Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p.
+277.]</span> and then, foot by foot, field by field, from fence to
+fence, and from hill to hill, the enemy was pressed back, till the
+sunken road, since known as "Bloody Lane," was in our hands, piled full
+of the Confederate dead who had defended it with their lives. Richardson
+had been mortally wounded, and Hancock had been sent from Franklin's
+corps to command the division. Colonel Barlow had been conspicuous in
+the thickest of the fight, and after a series of brilliant actions had
+been carried off desperately wounded. On the Confederate side equal
+courage and a magnificent tenacity had been exhibited. Men who had
+fought heroically in one position no sooner found themselves free from
+the struggle of an assault than they were hurried away to repeat their
+exertions, without even a breathing-spell, on another part of the field.
+They exhausted their ammunition, and still grimly held crests, as
+Longstreet tells us, with their bayonets, but without a single cartridge
+in their boxes. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 840.]</span> The story of the fight at this part of the field is
+simpler than that of the early morning, for there was no such variety in
+the character of the ground or in the tactics of the opposing forces. It
+was a sustained advance with continuous struggle, sometimes ebbing a
+moment, then gaining, but with the organization pretty well preserved
+and the lines kept fairly continuous on both sides. Our men fought their
+way up to the Piper house, near the turnpike, and that position marks
+the advance made by our centre. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 279.]</span> The crest of the
+ridge on which the Hagerstown turnpike runs had been secured from
+Piper's north to Miller's, and it was held until the Confederate retreat
+on the 19th.</p>
+<p>The head of Franklin's Corps (the Sixth) had arrived about ten
+o'clock, and had taken the position near the Sharpsburg bridge, which
+Sumner had occupied in the night. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 376.]</span> Before noon Smith's and Slocum's divisions were both
+ordered to Sumner's assistance. As they passed by the farm buildings in
+front of the East Wood, the enemy made a dash at Greene and French.
+Smith ordered forward Irwin's brigade to their support, and Irwin
+charged gallantly, driving the assailants back to the cover of the woods
+about the church. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 402, 409.]</span> Franklin's men then formed under the crest already
+mentioned, from "Bloody Lane" by the Clipp, Rullett, and Mumma houses to
+the East Wood and the ridge in front. The aggressive energy of both
+sides seemed exhausted. French and Richardson's battle may be considered
+as ended at one or two o'clock. There was no fighting later but that on
+the extreme left, where Burnside's Ninth Corps was engaged, and we must
+turn our attention to that part of the field.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</p>
+<p>ANTIETAM: THE FIGHT ON THE LEFT</p>
+<p>Ninth Corps positions near Antietam Creek--Rodman's division at
+lower ford--Sturgis's at the bridge--Burnside's headquarters on the
+field--View from his place of the battle on the right--French's
+fight--An exploding caisson--Our orders to attack--The hour--Crisis of
+the battle--Discussion of the sequence of events--The Burnside
+bridge--Exposed approach--Enfiladed by enemy's artillery--Disposition of
+enemy's troops--His position very strong--Importance of Rodman's
+movement by the ford--The fight at the bridge--Repulse--Fresh
+efforts--Tactics of the assault--Success--Formation on further
+bank--Bringing up ammunition--Willcox relieves Sturgis--The latter now
+in support--Advance against Sharpsburg--Fierce combat--Edge of the town
+reached--Rodman's advance on the left--A. P. Hill's Confederate division
+arrives from Harper's Ferry--Attacks Rodman's flank--A raw regiment
+breaks--The line retires--Sturgis comes into the gap--Defensive position
+taken and held--Enemy's assaults repulsed--Troops sleeping on their
+arms--McClellan's reserve--Other troops not used--McClellan's idea of
+Lee's force and plans--Lee's retreat--The terrible casualty lists.</p>
+<p>We have seen that the divisions of the Ninth Corps were conducted by
+staff officers of Burnside's staff to positions that had been indicated
+by McClellan and marked by members of his staff. The morning of
+Wednesday the 17th broke fresh and fair. The men were astir at dawn,
+getting breakfast and preparing for a day of battle. The artillery fire
+which opened Hooker's battle on the right spread along the whole line,
+and the positions which had been assigned us in the dusk of evening were
+found to be exposed, in some places, to the direct fire of the
+Confederate guns. Rodman's division suffered more than the others,
+Fairchild's brigade alone reporting thirty-six casualties before they
+could find cover. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 451.]</span> My own tents had been
+pitched at the edge of a little grove of forest trees, and the
+headquarters mess was at breakfast at sunrise when the cannonade began.
+The rapid explosion of shrapnel about us hastened our morning meal; the
+tents were struck and loaded upon the wagons, horses were saddled, and
+everything made ready for the contingencies of the day. It was not till
+seven o'clock that orders came to advance toward the creek as far as
+could be done without exposing the men to unnecessary loss. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 424.]</span> Rodman was directed to acquaint himself with the
+situation of the ford in front of him, and Sturgis to seek the best
+means of approach to the stone bridge. All were then to remain in
+readiness to obey further orders.</p>
+<p>When these arrangements had been made, I rode to the position
+Burnside had selected for himself, which was upon a high knoll northeast
+of the Burnside bridge, near a haystack which was a prominent landmark.
+Near by was Benjamin's battery of twenty-pounder Parrotts, and a little
+further still to the right, on the same ridge, General Sturgis had sent
+in Durell's battery. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ibid</i>.]</span>
+These were exchanging shots with the enemy's guns opposite, and had the
+advantage in range and weight of metal. At this point I remained until
+the order for our attack came, later in the day. We anxiously watched
+what we could see at the right, and noted the effect of the fire of the
+heavy guns of Benjamin's battery. We could see nothing distinctly that
+occurred beyond the Dunker Church, for the East and West Woods with
+farm-houses and orchards between made an impenetrable screen. A column
+of smoke stood over the burning Mumma house, marking plainly its
+situation.</p>
+<p>As the morning wore on, we saw lines of troops advancing from our
+right upon the other side of the Antietam, and engaging the enemy
+between us and the East Wood. The Confederate lines facing them now also
+rose into view. From our position we looked, as it were, down between
+the opposing lines as if they had been the sides of a street, and as the
+fire opened we saw wounded men carried to the rear and stragglers making
+off. Our lines halted, and we were tortured with anxiety as we
+speculated whether our men would charge or retreat. The enemy occupied
+lines of fences and stone walls, and their batteries made gaps in the
+National ranks. Our long-range guns were immediately turned in that
+direction, and we cheered every well-aimed shot. One of our shells blew
+up a caisson close to the Confederate line. This contest was going on,
+and it was yet uncertain which would succeed, when one of McClellan's
+staff rode up with an order to Burnside. The latter turned to me, saying
+we were ordered to make our attack. I left the hill-top at once to give
+personal supervision to the movement ordered, and did not return to it.
+My knowledge by actual vision of what occurred on the right ceased.</p>
+<p>The question at what hour Burnside received this order, has been
+warmly disputed. The manner in which we had waited, the free discussion
+of what was occurring under our eyes and of our relation to it, the
+public receipt of the order by Burnside in the usual and business-like
+form, all forbid the supposition that this was any reiteration of a
+former order. <br>
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I leave this as
+originally written, although the order itself has since come to light;
+for the discussion of the circumstantial evidence may be useful in
+determining the value of McClellan's report of 1863 where it differs in
+other respects from his original report of 1862 and from other
+contemporaneous documents.</span></p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">"HEAD-QUARTERS, ARMY OF THE POTOMAC,<br>
+September 17, 1862,--9.10 A. M.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">MAJOR-GENERAL BURNSIDE: <br>
+GENERAL,--General Franklin's command is within one mile and a half of
+here. General McClellan desires you to open your attack. As soon as you
+shall have uncovered the upper stone bridge you will be supported, and,
+if necessary, on your own line of attack. So far all is going well.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Respectfully, GEO. D. RUGGLES,
+Colonel, etc."</p>
+<p><span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">This order appears in the
+supplementary volume of the Official Records, vol. li. pt. i. p. 844.
+From Pry's house, where McClellan's headquarters were that day, to
+Burnside's, was over two miles as the crow flies. This establishes the
+accuracy of the original reports of both, which stated the hour of
+receipt at ten o'clock. It corroborates also the time of Franklin's
+arrival on the field, and the connection of this with Burnside's
+advance.]</span><br>
+If then we can determine whose troops we saw engaged, we shall know
+something of the time of day; for there has been a general agreement
+reached as to the hours of movement of Sumner's divisions during the
+forenoon on the right and right centre. The official map settles this.
+No lines of our troops were engaged in the direction of Bloody Lane and
+the Rullett farm-house, and between the latter and our station on the
+hill, till French's division made its attack. We saw them distinctly on
+the hither side of the farm buildings, upon the open ground,
+considerably nearer to us than the Dunker Church or the East Wood. In
+number we took them to be a corps. The place, the circumstances, all fix
+it beyond controversy that they were French's men or French's and
+Richardson's. No others fought on that part of the field until Franklin
+went to their assistance at noon or later. The incident of their advance
+and the explosion of the caisson was illustrated by the pencil of Mr.
+Forbes on the spot, and was placed by him at the time Franklin's head of
+column was approaching from the direction of Rohrersville, which was
+about ten o'clock. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Forbes's sketch is reproduced in "Battles and Leaders of the Civil War,"
+vol. ii. p. 647, and is of historical importance in connection with the
+facts stated above.]</span> </p>
+<p>It seems now very clear that about ten o'clock in the morning was
+the great crisis in this battle. The sudden and complete rout of
+Sedgwick's division was not easily accounted for, and, with McClellan's
+theory of the enormous superiority of Lee's numbers, it looked as if the
+Confederate general had massed overwhelming forces on our right.
+Sumner's notion that Hooker's corps was utterly dispersed was naturally
+accepted, and McClellan limited his hopes to holding on at the East Wood
+and the Poffenberger hill, where Hooker's batteries were massed and
+supported by the troops that had been rallied there. Franklin's corps,
+as it came on the field, was detained to support the threatened right
+centre, and McClellan determined to help it further by a demonstration
+upon the extreme left by the Ninth Corps. At this time, therefore, he
+gave his order to Burnside to cross the Antietam and attack the enemy,
+thus creating a diversion in favor of our hard-pressed right. His
+preliminary report of the battle (dated October 16, 1862) explicitly
+states that the order to Burnside to attack was "communicated to him at
+ten o'clock A.M." This exactly agrees with the time stated by Burnside
+in his official report, and would ordinarily be quite conclusive. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: See note, p. 334, <i>ante</i>.
+C. W., pt. i. p. 41; Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. pp. 31, 416.]</span> </p>
+<p>In the book published in 1864 as his official report of his whole
+military career, McClellan says he ordered Burnside to make this attack
+at eight o'clock. The circumstances under which his final published
+statements were made take away from them the character of a calm and
+judicial correction of his first report. He was then a general set aside
+from active service and a political aspirant to the Presidency. His book
+was a controversial one, issued as an argument to the public, and the
+earlier report must be regarded in a military point of view as the more
+authoritative unless good grounds are given for the changes. When he
+wrote his preliminary report he certainly knew the hour and the
+condition of affairs on the field when he gave the order to Burnside. To
+do so at eight o'clock would not accord with his plan of battle. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 30, 55.]</span>
+His purpose had been to move the Ninth Corps against the enemy "when
+matters looked favorably" on our right, after an attack by Hooker,
+Mansfield, and Sumner, supported, if necessary, by Franklin. But
+Sumner's attack was not made till after nine, and Franklin's head of
+column did not reach the field till ten. McClellan's book, indeed,
+erroneously postpones Franklin's arrival till past noon, which, if true,
+would tend to explain why the day wore away without any further activity
+on the right; but the preliminary report better agrees with Franklin's
+when it says that officer reached the field about an hour after
+Sedgwick's disaster. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. pp. 30, 61, 376.]</span> </p>
+<p>Still further, matters had at no time "looked favorably" on the
+right up to ten o'clock. The condition, therefore, which was assumed as
+precedent to Burnside's movement, never existed; and this was better
+known to McClellan than to any one else, for he received the first
+discouraging reports after Mansfield fell, and the subsequent alarming
+ones when Sedgwick was routed. Burnside's report was dated on the 30th
+of September, within two weeks of the battle, and at a time when public
+discussion of the incomplete results of the battle was animated. It was
+made after he had in his hands my own report as his immediate
+subordinate, in which I had given about nine o'clock as my remembrance
+of the time. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 424.]</span> As I directed the details of the action at the bridge in
+obedience to this order, it would have been easy for him to have
+accepted the hour named by me, for I should have been answerable for any
+delay in execution after that time. But he then had in his possession
+the order which came to him upon the hill-top overlooking the field, and
+no officer in the whole army has a better established reputation for
+candor and freedom from any wish to avoid full personal responsibility
+for his acts. It was not till his report was published in the Official
+Records (1887) <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 416.]</span> that I saw it or learned its contents, although I
+enjoyed his personal friendship down to his death. He was content to
+have stated the fact as he knew it, and did not feel the need of
+debating it. The circumstances have satisfied me that his accuracy in
+giving the hour was greater than my own. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Upon reflection, I think it
+probable that the order from McClellan was read to me, and that I thus
+got the hour of its date connected in my mind with the beginning of our
+attack.]</span> </p>
+<p>It will not be wondered at, therefore, if to my mind the story of
+the eight o'clock order is an instance of the way in which an erroneous
+recollection is based upon the desire to make the facts accord with a
+theory. The actual time must have been as much later than nine o'clock
+as the period during which, with absorbed attention, we had been
+watching the battle on the right,--a period, it is safe to say, much
+longer than it seemed to us. The judgment of the hour which I gave in my
+report was merely my impression from passing events, for I hastened at
+once to my own duties without thinking to look at my watch; whilst the
+cumulative evidence seems to prove, conclusively, that the time stated
+by Burnside, and by McClellan himself in his original report, is
+correct. The order, then, to Burnside to attack was not sent at eight
+o'clock, but reached him at ten; it was not sent to follow up an
+advantage gained by Hooker and Sumner, but to create, if possible, a
+strong diversion in favor of the imperilled right wing when the general
+outlook was far from reassuring.</p>
+<p>McClellan truly said, in his original report, that the task of
+carrying the bridge in front of Burnside was a difficult one. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 31.]</span> The hill on which I have placed the station of
+General Burnside was the bolder and more prominent crest of the line of
+hills which skirted the Antietam on the east, and was broken by
+depressions here and there, through which the country roads ran down to
+the stream. Such a hollow was just at the south of Burnside's position
+at the haystack on the Rohrback farm. In rear of him and a little lower
+down were the farm buildings, and from these a road ran down the winding
+hollow to the Antietam, but reached the stream several hundred yards
+below the bridge. Following the road, therefore, it was necessary to
+turn up stream upon the narrow space between the hills and the water,
+without any cover from the fire of the enemy on the opposite side. The
+bluffs on that side were wooded to the water's edge, and were so steep
+that the road from the bridge could not go up at right angles to the
+bank, but forked both ways and sought the upper land by a more gradual
+ascent to right and left. The fork to the right ran around a shoulder of
+the hill into a ravine which there reaches the Antietam, and thence
+ascends by an easy grade toward Sharpsburg. The left branch of the road
+rises by a similar but less marked depression.</p>
+<p>These roads were faced by stone fences, and the depth of the valley
+and its course made it impossible to reach the enemy's position at the
+bridge by artillery fire from the hill-tops on our side. Not so from the
+enemy's position, for the curve of the valley was such that it was
+perfectly enfiladed near the bridge by the Confederate batteries at the
+position now occupied by the National Cemetery. The bridge itself was a
+stone structure of three arches with stone parapets on the sides. These
+curved outward at the end of the bridge to allow for the turn of the
+roadway. On the enemy's side, the stone fences came down close to the
+bridge.</p>
+<p>The Confederate defence of the passage was intrusted to D. R.
+Jones's division of six brigades, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 804.]</span> which was the one
+Longstreet himself had disciplined and led till he was assigned to a
+larger command. Toombs's brigade was placed in advance, occupying the
+defences of the bridge itself and the wooded slopes above, while the
+other brigades supported him, covered by the ridges which looked down
+upon the valley. The division batteries were supplemented by others from
+the enemy's reserve, and the valley, the bridge, and the ford below were
+under the direct and powerful fire of shot and shell from the
+Confederate cannon. Toombs's force, thus strongly supported, was as
+large as could be disposed of at the head of the bridge, and abundantly
+large for resistance to any that could be brought against it. Our
+advance upon the bridge could only be made by a narrow column, showing a
+front of eight men at most; but the front which Toombs deployed behind
+his defences was three or four hundred yards both above and below the
+bridge. He himself says in his report: <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 890.]</span> "From the nature of the ground on the other side,
+the enemy were compelled to approach mainly by the road which led up the
+river near three hundred paces parallel with my line of battle and
+distant therefrom from fifty to a hundred and fifty feet, thus exposing
+his flank to a destructive fire the most of that distance." Under such
+circumstances the Confederate position was nearly impregnable against a
+direct attack over the bridge; for the column approaching it was not
+only exposed at almost pistol-range to the perfectly covered infantry of
+the enemy and to two batteries which were assigned to the special duty
+of supporting Toombs, having the exact range of the little valley with
+their shrapnel; but, if it should succeed in reaching the bridge, its
+charge across it must be made under a fire ploughing through its length,
+the head of the column melting away as it advanced, so that, as every
+soldier knows, it could show no front strong enough to make an
+impression upon the enemy's breastworks, even if it should reach the
+other side. As a desperate sort of diversion in favor of the right wing,
+it might be justifiable; but I believe that no officer or man who knew
+the actual situation at that bridge thinks that a serious attack upon it
+was any part of McClellan's original plan. Yet, in his detailed report
+of 1863, instead of speaking of it as the difficult task the original
+report had called it, he treats it as little different from a parade or
+march across which might have been done in half an hour.</p>
+<p>Burnside's view of the matter was that the front attack at the
+bridge was so difficult that the passage by the ford below must be an
+important factor in the task; for if Rodman's division should succeed in
+getting across there, at the bend of the Antietam, he would come up in
+rear of Toombs, and either the whole of D. R. Jones's division would
+have to advance to meet Rodman, or Toombs must abandon the bridge. In
+this I certainly concurred, and Rodman was ordered to push rapidly for
+the ford. It is important to remember, however, that Walker's
+Confederate division had been posted during the earlier morning to hold
+that part of the Antietam line, supporting Toombs as well, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 914.]</span> and it was probably from him that Rodman suffered
+the first casualties that occurred in his ranks. But, as we have seen,
+Walker had been called away by Lee only an hour before, and had made the
+hasty march by the rear of Sharpsburg to fall upon Sedgwick. If
+therefore Rodman had been sent to cross at eight o'clock, it is safe to
+say that his column, fording the stream in the face of Walker's deployed
+division, would never have reached the further bank,--a contingency that
+McClellan did not consider when arguing, long afterward, the favorable
+results that might have followed an earlier attack. As Rodman died upon
+the field, no full report for his division was made, and we only know
+that he met with some resistance from both infantry and artillery; that
+the winding of the stream made his march longer than he anticipated, and
+that, in fact, he only approached the rear of Toombs's position from
+that direction about the time when our last and successful charge upon
+the bridge was made, between noon and one o'clock.</p>
+<p>The attacks at the Burnside bridge were made under my own eye.
+Sturgis's division occupied the centre of our line, with Crook's brigade
+of the Kanawha division on his right front, and Willcox's division in
+reserve, as I have already stated. Crook's position was somewhat above
+the bridge, but it was thought that by advancing part of Sturgis's men
+to the brow of the hill, they could cover the advance of Crook, and that
+the latter could make a straight dash down the hill to our end of the
+bridge. The orders were accordingly given, and Crook advanced, covered
+by the Eleventh Connecticut (of Rodman's) under Colonel Kingsbury,
+deployed as skirmishers. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. pp. 419, 424.]</span> In passing over
+the spurs of the hills, Crook came out on the bank of the stream above
+the bridge and found himself under a heavy fire at short range. He faced
+the enemy and returned the fire, getting such cover for his men as he
+could and trying to drive off or silence his opponents. The engagement
+was one in which the Antietam prevented the combatants from coming to
+close quarters, but it was none the less vigorously continued with
+musketry fire. Crook reported that his hands were full and that he could
+not approach closer to the bridge. Later in the contest, his men, lining
+the stream, made experiments in trying to get over, and found a fordable
+place a little way above, by which he got over five companies of the
+Twenty-eighth Ohio at about the same time as the final and successful
+charge. But on the failure of Crook's first effort, Sturgis ordered
+forward an attacking column from Nagle's brigade, supported and covered
+by Ferrero's brigade, which took position in a field of corn on one of
+the lower slopes of the hill opposite the head of the bridge. The whole
+front was carefully covered with skirmishers, and our batteries on the
+heights overhead were ordered to keep down the fire of the enemy's
+artillery. Nagle's effort was gallantly made, but it failed, and his men
+were forced to seek cover behind the spur of the hill from which they
+had advanced. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 444.]</span> We were constantly hoping to
+hear something from Rodman's advance by the ford, and would gladly have
+waited for some more certain knowledge of his progress, but at this time
+McClellan's sense of the necessity of relieving the right was such that
+he was sending reiterated orders to push the assault. Not only were
+these forwarded to me, but to give added weight to my instructions,
+Burnside sent direct to Sturgis urgent messages to carry the bridge at
+all hazards.</p>
+<p>I directed Sturgis to take two regiments from Ferrero's brigade,
+which had not been engaged, and make a column by moving them together by
+the flank, the one left in front and the other right in front, side by
+side, so that when they passed the bridge they could turn to left and
+right, forming line as they advanced on the run. He chose the
+Fifty-first New York, Colonel Robert B. Potter, and the Fifty-first
+Pennsylvania, Colonel John F. Hartranft (both names afterward greatly
+distinguished), and both officers and men were made to feel the
+necessity of success. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ibid</i>.]</span>
+At the same time Crook succeeded in bringing a light howitzer of
+Simmonds's mixed battery down from the hill-tops, and placed it where it
+had a point-blank fire on the further end of the bridge. The howitzer
+was one we had captured in West Virginia, and had been added to the
+battery, which was partly made up of heavy rifled Parrott guns. When
+everything was ready, a heavy skirmishing fire was opened all along the
+bank, the howitzer threw in double charges of canister, and in scarcely
+more time than it takes to tell it, the bridge was passed and Toombs's
+brigade fled through the woods and over the top of the hill. The
+charging regiments were advanced in line to the crest above the bridge
+as soon as they were deployed, and the rest of Sturgis's division, with
+Crook's brigade, were immediately brought over to strengthen the line.
+These were soon joined by Rodman's division, with Scammon's brigade,
+which had crossed at the ford, and whose presence on that side of the
+stream had no doubt made the final struggle of Toombs's men less
+obstinate than it would otherwise have been, the fear of being taken in
+rear having always a strong moral effect upon even the best of troops.</p>
+<p>It was now about one o'clock, and nearly three hours had been spent
+in a bitter and bloody contest across the narrow stream. The successive
+efforts to carry the bridge had been as closely following each other as
+possible. Each had been a fierce combat, in which the men with wonderful
+courage had not easily accepted defeat, and even, when not able to cross
+the bridge, had made use of the walls at the end, the fences, and every
+tree and stone as cover, while they strove to reach with their fire
+their well-protected and nearly concealed opponents. The lulls in the
+fighting had been short, and only to prepare new efforts. The severity
+of the work was attested by our losses, which, before the crossing was
+won, exceeded 500 men, and included some of our best officers, such as
+Colonel Kingsbury of the Eleventh Connecticut, Lieutenant-Colonel Bell
+of the Fifty-first Pennsylvania, and Lieutenant-Colonel Coleman of the
+Eleventh Ohio, two of them commanding regiments. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 427.]</span> The proportion of casualties to the number engaged
+was much greater than common; for the nature of the combat required that
+comparatively few troops should be exposed at once, the others remaining
+under cover.</p>
+<p>Our next task was to prepare to hold the heights we had gained
+against the return assault of the enemy which we expected, and to reply
+to the destructive fire from the enemy's abundant artillery. Light
+batteries were brought over and distributed in the line. The men were
+made to lie down behind the crest to save them from the concentrated
+cannonade which the enemy opened upon us as soon as Toombs's regiments
+succeeded in reaching their main line. But McClellan's anticipation of
+an overwhelming attack upon his right was so strong that he determined
+still to press our advance, and sent orders accordingly. The ammunition
+of Sturgis's and Crook's men had been nearly exhausted, and it was
+imperative that they should be freshly supplied before entering into
+another engagement. Sturgis also reported his men so exhausted by their
+efforts as to be unfit for an immediate advance. On this I sent to
+Burnside the request that Willcox's division be sent over, with an
+ammunition train, and that Sturgis's division be replaced by the fresh
+troops, remaining, however, on the west side of the stream as support to
+the others. This was done as rapidly as was practicable, where
+everything had to pass down the steep hill-road and through so narrow a
+defile as the bridge. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+As a mode of ready reckoning, it is usual to assume that a division
+requires an hour to march past a given point by the flank. With the
+crossing of an ammunition train, the interval of time is more than
+accounted for.]</span> Still, it was three o'clock before these changes
+and preparations could be made. Burnside had personally striven to
+hasten them, and had come over to the west bank to consult and to hurry
+matters, and took his share of personal peril, for he came at a time
+when the ammunition wagons were delivering cartridges, and the road at
+the end of the bridge where they were was in the range of the enemy's
+constant and accurate fire. It is proper to mention this because it has
+been said that he did not cross the stream. The criticisms made by
+McClellan as to the time occupied in these changes and movements will
+not seem forcible if one will compare them with any similar movements on
+the field; such as Mansfield's to support Hooker, or Sumner's or
+Franklin's to reach the scene of action. About this, however, there is
+fair room for difference of opinion: what I personally know is that it
+would have been folly to advance again before Willcox had relieved
+Sturgis, and that as soon as the fresh troops reported and could be put
+in line, the order to advance was given. McClellan is in accord with all
+other witnesses in declaring that when the movement began, the conduct
+of the troops was gallant beyond criticism.</p>
+<p>Willcox's division formed the right, Christ's brigade being north,
+and Welsh's brigade south of the road leading from the bridge to
+Sharpsburg. Crook's brigade of the Kanawha division supported Willcox.
+Rodman's division formed on the left, Harland's brigade having the
+position on the flank, and Fairchild's uniting with Willcox at the
+centre. Scammon's brigade was the reserve for Rodman at the extreme
+left. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records,
+vol. xix. pt. i. pp. 425, 430.]</span> Sturgis's division remained and
+held the crest of the hill above the bridge. About half of the batteries
+of the divisions accompanied the movement, the rest being in position on
+the hill-tops east of the Antietam. The advance necessarily followed the
+high ground toward Sharpsburg, and as the enemy made strongest
+resistance toward our right, the movement curved in that direction, the
+six brigades of Jones's Confederate division being deployed diagonally
+across our front, holding the stone fences and crests of the
+cross-ridges and aided by abundant artillery, in which arm the enemy was
+particularly strong.</p>
+<p>The battle was a fierce one from the moment Willcox's men showed
+themselves on the open ground. Christ's brigade, taking advantage of all
+the cover the trees and inequalities of surface gave them, pushed on
+along the depression in which the road ran, a section of artillery
+keeping pace with them in the road. The direction of movement brought
+all the brigades of the first line in echelon, but Welsh soon fought his
+way up beside Christ, and they together drove the enemy successively
+from the fields and farm-yards till they reached the edge of the
+village. Upon the elevation on the right of the road was an orchard in
+which the shattered and diminished force of Jones made a final stand,
+but Willcox concentrated his artillery fire upon it, and his infantry
+was able to push forward and occupy it. They now partly occupied the
+town of Sharpsburg, and held the high ground commanding it on the
+southeast, where the National Cemetery now is. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 431.]</span> The struggle had been long and bloody. It was
+half-past four in the afternoon, and ammunition had again run low, for
+the wagons had not been able to accompany the movement. Willcox paused
+for his men to take breath again and to fetch up some cartridges; but
+meanwhile affairs were taking a serious turn on the left.</p>
+<p>As Rodman's division went forward, he found the enemy before him
+seemingly detached from Willcox's opponents, and occupying ridges on his
+left front, so that he was not able to keep his own connection with
+Willcox in the swinging movement to the right. Still, he made good
+progress in the face of stubborn resistance, though finding the enemy
+constantly developing more to his left, and the interval between him and
+Willcox widening. The view of the field to the south was now obstructed
+by fields of tall Indian corn, and under this cover Confederate troops
+approached the flank in line of battle. Scammon's officers in the
+reserve saw them as soon as Rodman's brigades echeloned, as these were
+toward the front and right. This hostile force proved to be A. P. Hill's
+division of six brigades, the last of Jackson's force to leave Harper's
+Ferry, and which had reached Sharpsburg since noon. Those first seen by
+Scammon's men were dressed in the National blue uniforms which they had
+captured at Harper's Ferry, and it was assumed that they were part of
+our own forces till they began to fire. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 468.]</span> Scammon quickly changed front to the left, drove
+back the enemy before him, and occupied a line of stone fences, which he
+held until he was afterward withdrawn from it. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id.</i>, p. 466.]</span>
+Harland's brigade was partly moving in the corn-fields. One of his
+regiments was new, having been organized only three weeks, and the
+brigade had somewhat lost its order and connection when the sudden
+attack came. Rodman directed Colonel Harland to lead the right of the
+brigade, while he himself attempted to bring the left into position. In
+performing this duty he fell, mortally wounded. Harland's horse was shot
+under him, and the brigade broke in confusion after a brief effort of
+its right wing to hold on. Fairchild also now received the fire on his
+left, and was forced to fall back and change front. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id.</i>, pp. 451, 453.]</span> </p>
+<p>Being at the centre when this break occurred on the left, I saw that
+it would be impossible to continue the movement to the right, and sent
+instant orders to Willcox and Crook to retire the left of their line,
+and to Sturgis to come forward into the gap made in Rodman's. The troops
+on the right swung back in perfect order; Scammon's brigade hung on at
+its stone wall at the extreme left with unflinching tenacity till
+Sturgis had formed on the curving hill in rear of them, and Rodman's had
+found refuge behind. Willcox's left then united with Sturgis, and
+Scammon was withdrawn to a new position on the left flank of the whole
+line. That these manoeuvres on the field were really performed in good
+order is demonstrated by the fact that although the break in Rodman's
+line was a bad one, the enemy was not able to capture many prisoners,
+the whole number of missing, out of the 2349 casualties which the Ninth
+Corps suffered in the battle, being 115, which includes wounded men
+unable to leave the field. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. pp. 200, 427.]</span> </p>
+<p>The enemy were not lacking in bold efforts to take advantage of the
+check we had received, but were repulsed with severe punishment, and as
+the day declined were content to entrench themselves along the line of
+the road leading from Sharpsburg to the Potomac at the mouth of the
+Antietam, half a mile in our front. The men of the Ninth Corps lay that
+night upon their arms, the line being one which rested with both flanks
+near the Antietam and curved outward upon the rolling hill-tops which
+covered the bridge and commanded the plateau between us and the enemy.
+With my staff, I lay upon the ground behind the troops, holding our
+horses by the bridles as we rested, for our orderlies were so exhausted
+that we could not deny them the same chance for a little broken slumber.</p>
+<p>The Ninth Corps occupied its position on the heights west of the
+Antietam without further molestation, except an irritating picket
+firing, till the Confederate army retreated on the 19th of September.
+But the position was one in which no shelter from the weather could be
+had, nor could any cooking be done; and the troops were short of
+rations. My division wagon-train, which I had brought from the West,
+here stood us in good stead, for the corps as a whole was very short of
+transportation. The energy of Captain Fitch, my quartermaster, forced
+the train back and forth between us and the nearest depot of supplies,
+and for several days the whole corps had the benefit of the provisions
+thus brought forward. Late in the afternoon of Thursday the 18th,
+Morell's division of Porter's corps was ordered to report to Burnside to
+relieve the picket line and some of the regiments in the most exposed
+position. One brigade was sent over the Antietam for this purpose, and a
+few of the Ninth Corps regiments were enabled to withdraw far enough to
+cook some rations, of which they had been in need for twenty-four hours. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: General Porter in his report
+says Morell took the place of the whole Ninth Corps. In this he is
+entirely mistaken, as the reports from Morell's division, as well as
+those of the Ninth Corps, show.]</span> Harland's brigade of Rodman's
+division had been taken to the east side of the stream to be
+reorganized, on the evening of Wednesday the 17th. The sounds heard
+within the enemy's lines by our pickets gave an inkling of their
+retrograde movement in the night of Thursday, and at break of day on
+Friday morning the retreat of Lee's whole army was discovered by
+advancing the picket line. Reconnoissances sent to the front discovered
+that the whole Confederate army had crossed the Potomac.</p>
+<p>The conduct of the battle on the left has given rise to several
+criticisms, among which the most prominent has been that Porter's corps,
+which lay in reserve, was not put in at the same time with the Ninth
+Corps. It has been said that some of them were engaged or in support of
+the cavalry and artillery at the centre. This does not appear to have
+been so to any important extent, for no active fighting was going on
+elsewhere after Franklin's corps relieved Sumner's about noon.
+McClellan's reports do not urge this. He answered the criticism by
+saying that he did not think it prudent to divest the centre of all
+reserve troops. No doubt a single strong division, marching beyond the
+left flank of the Ninth Corps, would have so occupied A. P. Hill's
+division that our movement into Sharpsburg could not have been checked,
+and, assisted by the advance of Sumner and Franklin on the right, would
+apparently have made certain the complete rout of Lee. As troops are put
+in reserve, not to diminish the army, but to be used in a pinch, I am
+convinced that McClellan's refusal to use them on the left was the
+result of his rooted belief, through all the day after Sedgwick's
+defeat, that Lee was overwhelmingly superior in force, and was preparing
+to return a crushing blow upon our right flank. He was keeping something
+in hand to fill a gap or cover a retreat, if that wing should be driven
+back. Except in this way, also, I am at a loss to account for the
+inaction of the right during the whole of our engagement on the left.
+Looking at our part of the battle as only a strong diversion to prevent
+or delay Lee's following up his success against Hooker and the rest, it
+is intelligible. I certainly so understood it at the time, as my report
+witnesses, and McClellan's original report sustains this view. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. pp. 31, 426.]</span> If he had been impatient to have our attack
+delivered earlier, he had reason for double impatience that Franklin's
+fresh troops should assail Lee's left simultaneously with our assault of
+his other wing, unless he regarded action there as hopeless, and looked
+upon our movement as a sort of forlorn hope to keep Lee from following
+up his advantages.</p>
+<p>But even these are not all the troublesome questions requiring an
+answer. It will be remembered that Franklin's corps, after forcing
+Crampton's Gap, had remained in Pleasant Valley between Rohrersville and
+Boonsboro until Tuesday night (16th September). McClellan then ordered
+Couch's division to be sent to occupy Maryland Heights and observe the
+enemy in Harper's Ferry, whilst Franklin with Smith's and Slocum's
+divisions should march to the battle-field at daybreak of Wednesday. Why
+could not Couch be called up and come on our left as well as A. P.
+Hill's division, which was the last of the Confederate troops to leave
+the ferry, there being nothing to observe after it was gone? Couch's
+division, coming with equal pace with Hill's on the other side of the
+river would have answered our needs as well as one from Porter's corps.
+Hill came, but Couch did not. Yet even then, a regiment of horse,
+watching that flank and scouring the country as we swung forward, would
+have developed Hill's presence and enabled the commanding general either
+to stop our movement or to take the available means to support it. The
+cavalry was put to no such use. It occupied the centre of the whole
+line, only its artillery being engaged during the day. It would have
+been invaluable to Hooker in the morning, as it would have been to us in
+the afternoon.</p>
+<p>McClellan had marched from Frederick City with the information that
+Lee's army was divided, Jackson being detached with a large force to
+take Harper's Ferry. He had put Lee's strength at 120,000 men. Assuming
+that there was still danger that Jackson might come upon our left with
+his large force, and that Lee had proven strong enough without Jackson
+to repulse three corps on our right and right centre, McClellan might
+have regarded his own army as divided also for the purpose of meeting
+both opponents, and his cavalry would have been upon the flank of the
+part with which he was attacking Lee; Porter would have been in position
+to help either part in an extremity or to cover a retreat; and Burnside
+would have been the only subordinate available to check Lee's apparent
+success. Will any other hypothesis intelligibly account for McClellan's
+dispositions and orders? The error in the above assumption would be that
+McClellan estimated Lee's troops at nearly double their actual numbers,
+and that what was taken for proof of Lee's superiority in force on the
+field was a series of partial reverses which resulted directly from the
+piecemeal and disjointed way in which McClellan's morning attacks had
+been made.</p>
+<p>The same explanation is the most satisfactory one that I can give
+for the inaction of Thursday, the 18th of September. Could McClellan
+have known the desperate condition of most of Lee's brigades, he would
+also have known that his own were in much better case, badly as they had
+suffered. I do not doubt that most of his subordinates discouraged the
+resumption of the attack, for the belief in Lee's great preponderance in
+numbers had been chronic in the army during the whole year. That belief
+was based upon the inconceivably mistaken reports of the secret-service
+organization, accepted at headquarters, given to the War Department at
+Washington as a reason for incessant demands of reinforcements, and
+permeating downward through the whole organization till the error was
+accepted as truth by officers and men, and became a factor in their
+morale which can hardly be overestimated. The result was that Lee
+retreated unmolested on the night of the 18th of September, and that
+what might have been a real and decisive success was a drawn battle in
+which our chief claim to victory was the possession of the field.</p>
+<p>The numbers engaged and the losses on each side have been the
+subject of unending dispute. If we take the returns of Lee at the
+beginning of his campaign against Pope, and deduct his acknowledged
+losses, he crossed the Potomac with over 72,000 men. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: See my review of Henderson's
+Stonewall Jackson, "The Nation," Nov. 24, 1898, p.396.]</span> If we take
+his returns of September 22, and add the acknowledged losses of the
+month, he had over 57,000. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+See my review of Allan's Army of Northern Virginia, "The Nation," Feb.
+2, 1893, p.86. Also reply to General Fitzhugh Lee, <i>Id</i>., Dec. 20,
+1894, p.462; Confederate Statistics, <i>Id</i>., Jan. 24, 1895, p.71;
+Review of Ropes's Story of the Civil War, <i>Id</i>., March 9, 1899,
+p.185.]</span> McClellan's 87,000 present for duty is accepted by all,
+though various causes considerably reduced the number he brought into
+action. The best collation of reports of casualties at Antietam gives
+12,410 as those on the National side, and 11,172 on the Confederate. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Century War Book, vol. ii.
+p.603.]</span> Longstreet, comparing the fighting in the fiercest
+battles of the war, says "on no single day in any one of them was there
+such carnage as in this fierce struggle." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: From Manassas to Appomattox,
+p.239.]</span><br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII</p>
+<p>MCCLELLAN AND POLITICS--HIS REMOVAL AND ITS CAUSE</p>
+<p>Meeting Colonel Key--His changes of opinion--His relations to
+McClellan--Governor Dennison's influence--McClellan's attitude toward
+Lincoln--Burnside's position--The Harrison Landing letter--Compared with
+Lincoln's views--Probable intent of the letter--Incident at McClellan's
+headquarters--John W. Garrett--Emancipation Proclamation--An
+after-dinner discussion of it--Contrary influences--Frank
+advice--Burnside and John Cochrane--General Order 163--Lincoln's visit
+to camp--Riding the field--A review--Lincoln's desire for continuing the
+campaign--McClellan's hesitation--His tactics of discussion--His
+exaggeration of difficulties--Effect on his army--Disillusion a slow
+process--Lee's army not better than Johnston's--Work done by our Western
+army--Difference in morale--An army rarely bolder than its
+leader--Correspondence between Halleck and McClellan--Lincoln's
+remarkable letter on the campaign--The army moves on November 2--Lee
+regains the line covering Richmond--McClellan relieved--Burnside in
+command.</p>
+<p>When I rode up with Burnside on the afternoon of the 15th September,
+in the group around McClellan I met Judge Key, whom I had not seen since
+we parted in the Ohio Senate in April of the preceding year. He was now
+aide-de-camp on the headquarters staff with the rank of colonel, and
+doing duty also as judge-advocate. When McClellan directed us to leave
+the ridge because the display of numbers attracted the enemy's fire,
+Colonel Key took my arm and we walked a little way down the slope till
+we found a fallen tree, on which we sat down, whilst he plunged eagerly
+into the history of his own opinions since we had discussed the causes
+of the war in the legislature of our State. He told me with earnestness
+that he had greatly modified his views on the subject of slavery, and he
+was now satisfied that the war must end in its abolition. The system was
+so plainly the soul of the rebellion and the tie which bound the seceded
+States together, that its existence must necessarily depend upon the
+success of the revolutionary movement, and it would be a fair object of
+attack, if doing so would help our cause. I was struck by the zeal with
+which he dashed into the discussion, forgetful of his actual
+surroundings in his wish to make me quickly understand the change that
+had come over his views since we parted at Columbus. He was so absorbed
+that even when a shell burst near us, he only half gave it attention,
+saying in a parenthetical way that he would change his position, as he
+would "rather not be hit in the back by one of those confounded things."
+We had been so sitting that in facing me his back was toward the front
+and the line of fire.</p>
+<p>Colonel Key has been regarded by many as McClellan's evil genius,
+whose influence had been dominant in the general's political conduct and
+who was therefore the cause of his downfall. His influence on McClellan
+was unquestionably great,--and what he said to me is an important help
+in understanding the general's conduct and opinions. It accords with
+other statements of his which have been made public by Judge William M.
+Dickson of Cincinnati, who at one time was Colonel Key's partner in the
+practice of the law. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I
+have failed in my efforts to find a communication on the subject in a
+newspaper, written by Judge Dickson, which he showed to me, reiterating
+his statements in it.]</span> </p>
+<p>General McClellan urged me to come to his headquarters without
+ceremony, and after the battle of Antietam I had several opportunities
+of unrestrained discussion of affairs in which he seemed entirely frank
+in giving me his opinions. It was plainly evident that he was subjected
+to a good deal of pressure by opponents of the administration to make
+him commit himself to them. On the other hand, Governor Dennison of
+Ohio, who was his sincere friend, took every opportunity to counteract
+such influences and to promote a good understanding between him and Mr.
+Lincoln. McClellan perfectly knew my own position as an outspoken
+Republican who from the first had regarded the system of slavery as the
+stake ventured by the Secessionists on their success in the war, and who
+held to John Quincy Adams's doctrine that the war powers were adequate
+to destroy the institution which we could not constitutionally abolish
+otherwise. With me, the only question was when the ripe time had come
+for action, and I had looked forward to Mr. Lincoln's proclamation with
+some impatience at the delay.</p>
+<p>The total impression left upon me by the general's conversation was
+that he agreed with Colonel Key in believing that the war ought to end
+in abolition of slavery; but he feared the effects of haste, and thought
+the steps toward the end should be conservatively careful and not
+brusquely radical. I thought, and still think, that he regarded the
+President as nearly right in his general views and political purposes,
+but overcrowded by more radical men around him into steps which as yet
+were imprudent and extreme. Such an attitude on his part made Governor
+Dennison and myself feel that there was no need of any political quarrel
+between him and the administration, and that if he would only rebuff all
+political intriguers and put more aggressive energy into his military
+operations, his career might be a success for the country as well as for
+himself. The portions of his correspondence with Burnside which have
+become public show that the latter also had, as a true friend,
+constantly urged him to keep out of political controversy. Burnside
+himself, like Grant and Sherman, began with a dislike of the antislavery
+movement; but, also like them, his patriotism being the dominant
+quality, the natural effect of fighting the Secessionists was to beget
+in him a hearty acceptance of the policy of emancipation to which Mr.
+Lincoln had been led by the same educational process.</p>
+<p>At the time I am speaking of, I knew nothing of McClellan's famous
+letter to the President from Harrison's Landing, of July 7, but since it
+has come to light, I have interpreted it much less harshly than many
+have done. Reading it in the light of his talk during those Antietam
+days, I think it fair to regard it as an effort to show Mr. Lincoln that
+they were not far apart in opinion, and to influence the President to
+take the more conservative course to which he thought him inclined when
+taking counsel only of his own judgment. McClellan knew that his "change
+of base" to the James River in June was not accepted as the successful
+strategy he declared it to be, and that strong influences were at work
+to remove him. Under the guise of giving advice to the President, he was
+in fact assuring him that he did not look to the acknowledgment of the
+Confederacy as a conceivable outcome of the war; that the "contraband"
+doctrine applied to slaves was consistent with compensated emancipation;
+that he favored the application of the principle to the border States so
+as to make them free States; that concentration of military force as
+opposed to dispersion of effort was the true policy; that he opposed the
+rules of warfare which he assumed were announced in General Pope's much
+criticised orders; and lastly, that he would cordially serve under such
+general-in-chief as Mr. Lincoln should select.</p>
+<p>Compare all this with Mr. Lincoln's known views. It was notorious
+that he was thought to be too conservative by many of his own party. He
+had urged a system of compensated emancipation for the border States. He
+had said that he held the slavery question to be only a part, and an
+absolutely subordinate part, of the greater question of saving the
+Union. He had disapproved of a portion of Pope's order regarding the
+treatment of non-combatants. However ill-advised McClellan's letter was,
+it may be read between the lines as an attempt to strengthen himself
+with the President as against Stanton and others, and to make his
+military seat firmer in the saddle by showing that he was not in
+political antagonism to Mr. Lincoln, but held, in substance, the
+conservative views that were supposed to be his. Its purpose seems to me
+to have been of this personal sort. He did not publish it at the time,
+and it was not till he was removed from his command that it became a
+kind of political manifesto. This view is supported by what occurred
+after the publication of the Emancipation Proclamation, which I shall
+tell presently; but, to preserve the proper sequence, I must first give
+another incident.</p>
+<p>A few days after the battle of Antietam a prominent clergyman of
+Hagerstown spent the Sunday in camp, and McClellan invited a number of
+officers to attend religious services in the parlors of the house where
+headquarters were. The rooms were well filled, several civilians being
+also present. I was standing by myself as we were waiting for the
+clergyman to appear, when a stout man in civilian's dress entered into
+conversation with me. He stood at my side as we faced the upper part of
+the suite of rooms, and taking it to be a casual talk merely to pass the
+time, I paid rather languid attention to it and to him as he began with
+some complimentary remarks about the army and its recent work. He spoke
+quite enthusiastically of McClellan, and my loyalty to my commander as
+well as my personal attachment to him made me assent cordially to what
+he said. He then spoke of the politicians in Washington as wickedly
+trying to sacrifice the general, and added, whispering the words
+emphatically in my ear, "But you military men have that matter in your
+own hands, you have but to tell the administration what they must do,
+and they will not dare to disregard it!" This roused me, and I turned
+upon him with a sharp "What do you mean, sir!" As I faced him, I saw at
+once by his look that he had mistaken me for another; he mumbled
+something about having taken me for an acquaintance of his, and moved
+away among the company.</p>
+<p>I was a good deal agitated, for though there was more or less of
+current talk about disloyal influences at work, I had been sceptical as
+to the fact, and to be brought face to face with that sort of thing was
+a surprise. I was a stranger to most of those who were there, and walked
+a little aside, watching the man who had left me. I soon saw him talking
+with General Fitz-John Porter, on the opposite side of the room,
+evidently calling attention to me as if asking who I was. I made
+inquiries as to who the civilian was, and later came to know him by
+sight very well. He was John W. Garrett, President of the Baltimore and
+Ohio Railroad Company.</p>
+<p>Mr. Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation was published on the 24th of
+September, and within a very few days I was invited to meet General
+Burnside and General John Cochrane of New York at a camp dinner in
+McClellan's tent. General Cochrane was a "War Democrat" in politics, and
+had been active as a politician in his State. He was also the son-in-law
+of Gerrit Smith, the well-known abolitionist, and had advocated arming
+the slaves as early as November, 1861. McClellan told us frankly that he
+had brought us there for the purpose of asking our opinions and advice
+with regard to the course he should pursue respecting the Proclamation.
+He said that he was urged to put himself in open opposition to it by
+politicians not only, but by army officers who were near to him. He
+named no names, but intimated that they were of rank and influence which
+gave weight to their advice. He knew that we were all friends of the
+administration, and his object seemed to be to learn whether we thought
+he should say anything or should maintain silence on the subject; for he
+assumed that we would oppose any hostile demonstration on his part.</p>
+<p>This naturally led to inquiries as to his actual attitude to the
+slavery question, and he expressed himself in substance as I have before
+indicated; repeating with even stronger emphasis his belief that the war
+would work out the manumission of the slaves gradually and ultimately,
+and that as to those who came within our lines as we advanced the
+liberation would be complete and immediate. He thought, however, that
+the Proclamation was premature, and that it indicated a change in the
+President's attitude which he attributed to radical influences at
+Washington.</p>
+<p>There had been no previous understanding between us who were his
+guests. For my part, I then met General Cochrane for the first time, and
+had conversed with McClellan himself more freely on political subjects
+than I had with Burnside. We found ourselves, however, in entire accord
+in advising him that any declaration on his part against the
+Proclamation would be a fatal error. We could easily understand that he
+should differ from us in his way of viewing the question of public
+policy, but we pointed out very clearly that any public utterance by him
+in his official character criticising the civil policy of the
+administration would be properly regarded as a usurpation. He intimated
+that this was his own opinion, but, by way of showing how the matter was
+thrust at him by others, said that people had assured him that the army
+was so devoted to him that they would as one man enforce any decision he
+should make as to any part of the war policy.</p>
+<p>I had so recently gone through the little experience on this subject
+which I have narrated above, that I here spoke out with some emphasis. I
+said that those who made such assurances were his worst enemies, and in
+my judgment knew much less of the army than they pretended; that our
+volunteer soldiers were citizens as well as soldiers, and were citizens
+more than soldiers; and that greatly as I knew them to be attached to
+him, I believed not a corporal's guard would stand by his side if he
+were to depart from the strict subordination of the military to the
+civil authority. Burnside and Cochrane both emphatically assented to
+this, and McClellan added that he heartily believed both that it was
+true and that it ought to be so. But this still left the question open
+whether the very fact that there was an agitation in camp on the
+subject, and intrigues of the sort I have mentioned, did not make it
+wise for him to say something which would show, at least, that he gave
+no countenance to any would-be revolutionists. We debated this at some
+length, with the general conclusion that it might be well for him to
+remind the army in general orders that whatever might be their rights as
+citizens, they must as soldiers beware of any organized effort to meddle
+with the functions of the civil government.</p>
+<p>I left the Army of the Potomac before McClellan's general order on
+this subject, dated October 7, was published, but when I read it in the
+light of the conference in his tent, I regarded it as an honest effort
+on his part to break through the toils which intriguers had spread for
+him, and regretted that what seemed to me one of his most laudable
+actions should have been one of the most misrepresented and
+misunderstood. </p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The order is found in
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 395, and is as follows:--</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">General Orders. No. 163.<br>
+HEAD-QUARTERS ARMY OF THE POTOMAC, CAMP NEAR SHARPSBURG, MD., October
+7, 1862.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">The attention of the officers and
+soldiers of the army of the Potomac is called to General Orders No, 139,
+War Department, September 24, 1862, publishing to the army the
+President's proclamation of September 22.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">A proclamation of such grave moment
+to the nation, officially communicated to the army, affords to the
+general commanding an opportunity of defining specifically to the
+officers and soldiers under his command the relation borne by all
+persons in the military service of the United States toward the civil
+authorities of the Government. The Constitution confides to the civil
+authorities--legislative, judicial, and executive--the power and duty of
+making, expounding, and executing the Federal laws. Armed forces are
+raised and supported simply to sustain the civil authorities, and are to
+be held in strict subordination thereto in all respects. This
+fundamental rule of our political system is essential to the security of
+our republican institutions, and should be thoroughly understood and
+observed by every soldier. The principle upon which and the object for
+which armies shall be employed in suppressing rebellion, must be
+determined and declared by the civil authorities, and the Chief
+Executive, who is charged with the administration of the national
+affairs, is the proper and only source through which the needs and
+orders of the Government can be made known to the armies of the nation.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Discussions by officers and soldiers
+concerning public measures determined upon and declared by the
+Government, when carried at all beyond temperate and respectful
+expressions of opinion, tend greatly to impair and destroy the
+discipline and efficiency of troops, by substituting the spirit of
+political faction for that firm, steady, and earnest support of the
+authorities of the Government, which is the highest duty of the American
+soldier. The remedy for political errors, if any are committed, is to be
+found only in the action of the people at the polls.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">In thus calling the attention of this
+army to the true relation between the soldier and the government, the
+general commanding merely adverts to an evil against which it has been
+thought advisable during our whole history to guard the armies of the
+Republic, and in so doing he will not be considered by any right-minded
+person as casting any reflection upon that loyalty and good conduct
+which has been so fully illustrated upon so many battle-fields.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">In carrying out all measures of
+public policy, this army will of course be guided by the same rules of
+mercy and Christianity that have ever controlled its conduct toward the
+defenceless.</p>
+<p><span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">By Command of Major-General
+McClellan,</span><br style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);"> JAS. A. HARDIE,</span><br
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);"> Lieutenant-Colonel, Aide-de-camp,
+and Act'g Ass't Adj't Gen'l."]</span> </p>
+<p>I have always understood that the order was drafted by Colonel Key,
+who afterward expressed in very strong terms his confidence in the high
+motives and progressive tendencies of McClellan at the time he issued it.</p>
+<p>General Cochrane, some time after the close of the war, in a
+pamphlet outlining his own military history, made reference to the visit
+to McClellan which I have narrated, and states that he was so greatly
+impressed by the anti-slavery sentiments avowed by the general, that he
+made use of them in a subsequent effort to bring him and Secretary Chase
+into more cordial relations. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+The War for the Union, Memoir by General John Cochrane, pp. 29-31.]</span>
+It is possible that, in a friendly comparison of views in which we were
+trying to find how nearly we could come together, the general may have
+put his opinions with a liberality which outran his ordinary statements
+of belief; but I am very sure that he gave every evidence of sincerity,
+and that none of us entertained a doubt of his being entirely
+transparent with us. He has since, in his "Own Story," referred to his
+taking counsel of Mr. Aspinwall of New York at about the same time, and
+there is evidence that General W. F. Smith also threw his influence
+against any opposition by McClellan to the Emancipation Proclamation. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Nicolay and Hay's Lincoln,
+vol. vi. p. 180.]</span> McClellan's letters show that his first impulse
+was to antagonism; but there is no fair reason to doubt that his action
+at last was prompted by the reasons which he avowed in our conversation,
+and by the honorable motives he professed. He immediately sent a copy of
+his order to Mr. Lincoln personally, and this indicates that he believed
+the President would be pleased with it.</p>
+<p>The reference which he made to suggestions that the army would
+follow him in a <i>coup d'e'tat</i> is supported by what he formally
+declared in his memoirs. He there tells us that in 1861 he was often
+approached in regard to a "dictatorship," and that when he was finally
+removed many in the army were in favor of his marching upon Washington
+to take possession of the government. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Own Story, pp. 85, 652.]</span>
+It would seem that treasonable notions were rife about him to an extent
+that was never suspected, unless he was made the dupe of pretenders who
+saw some profit in what might be regarded as a gross form of adulation.
+He must be condemned for the weakness which made such approaches to him
+possible; but we are obliged to take the fact as he gives it, and to
+accept as one of the strange elements of the situation a constant stream
+of treasonable suggestions from professed friends in the army and out of
+it. An anecdote which came to me in a way to make it more than
+ordinarily trustworthy was that in the summer of 1861 McClellan was
+riding with an older officer of the regular army, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: General McCall.]</span> and
+said to him, "I understand there is a good deal of talk of making a
+dictatorship." "Ah!" said the other, "Mr. Lincoln, I suppose." "Oh, no,"
+replied McClellan, "it's me they're talking of." Bits of evidence from
+many sources prove that there had been from the first too much such talk
+about Washington, and whilst McClellan cannot be held responsible for
+it, there is no proof that he rebuked it as he should have done. It was
+part of the fermenting political and military intrigue which is found at
+the seat of government in such a time, if anywhere, and I take
+satisfaction in testifying that away from that neighborhood I never even
+heard the thing mentioned or referred to, that I can recollect.
+Washington would be spoken of in a general way as a place of intrigues,
+but I never knew this to have a wider meaning given to it than the
+ordinary one of political schemes within lawful limits and personal
+ambitions of no criminal character.</p>
+<p>Mr. Lincoln visited our camp on the 1st of October, and remained two
+or three days. I was with the party of officers invited by McClellan to
+accompany the President in a ride over the route which Sumner had
+followed in the battle. We crossed the Antietam in front of Keedysville,
+followed the hollows and byways to the East Wood, and passed through
+this and the cornfields which had been the scene of Hooker's and
+Mansfield's fierce fighting. We visited the Dunker Church and then
+returned to camp by Bloody Lane and the central stone bridge. The
+President was observant and keenly interested in the field of battle,
+but made no display of sentiment. On another day he reviewed the troops
+which were most accessible from headquarters. As my own corps was among
+the first on the list, I did not join the escort of the President at the
+general's quarters, but was with the troops attending to the details of
+the parade. We were ordered to be under arms at eight o'clock, but it
+was more than two hours after that when the reviewing cort&egrave;ge
+came on the ground. The officers were very hilarious over some grotesque
+story with which Mr. Lincoln had seasoned the conversation, and which
+seemed to have caused some forgetfulness of the appointment with the
+troops. We were reviewed by divisions, and I met the party with my
+staff, riding down the lines with them, and answering the inquiries of
+the President and the general as to the history and the experience of
+the different organizations as we passed them. The usual march in review
+was omitted for lack of time, the President contenting himself with
+riding along the lines formed in parade. I had missed seeing the
+President in Washington when I paid my respects at the White House, and
+this was my first meeting with him after his inauguration. His
+unpretending cordiality was what first impressed one, but you soon saw
+with what sharp intelligence and keen humor he dealt with every subject
+which came up. He referred very pleasantly to his knowledge of me
+through Secretary Chase, showing the kindly instinct to find some
+compliment or evidence of recognition for all who approached him.</p>
+<p>This geniality in Mr. Lincoln made him avoid personal criticism of
+the campaign, and gave an air of earnest satisfaction to what he said of
+the work done by McClellan. There was enough to praise, and he praised
+it heartily. He was also thankful that the threatened invasion of the
+North had been defeated, and showed his sense of great relief. He had
+adopted the rule for himself to limit his direct influence upon his
+generals to the presentation of his ideas of what was desirable, often
+taking pains even in his written communications to say that he made no
+order, and left the definite direction to General Halleck. McClellan
+gave the most favorable interpretation to all that the President said,
+but could not ignore the anxiety Mr. Lincoln showed that an energetic
+campaign should be continued. He wrote home: "I incline to think that
+the real purpose of his visit is to push me into a premature advance
+into Virginia." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: O. S.,
+p. 654.]</span> </p>
+<p>The President had coupled his earliest telegraphic congratulations
+with the question, "Can't you beat them some more before they get off?"
+and McClellan's private correspondence shows that he, on his part,
+chafed at every suggestion of haste. As early as the 22d of September,
+the general had written that he looked upon the campaign as
+substantially ended, and intended to give some time to the
+reorganization of the army before beginning a new one. The vicinity of
+Harper's Ferry or Frederick seemed to him the proper place for the camp
+meanwhile, and he wished for a rise in the Potomac River which should
+make it impracticable for Lee to ford it again. He delayed in the
+neighborhood of Sharpsburg, waiting for this. To those of us with whom
+he talked freely, he spoke of the necessity of incorporating into the
+Army of the Potomac at least a hundred thousand of the new levies to
+make it really fit for an aggressive campaign, and argued that it would
+save time in the end to use some of it now in the work of reorganizing.</p>
+<p>Mr. Lincoln was plainly troubled with the apprehension that the
+delays of 1861 were to be repeated, and that the fine October weather of
+that region would be again wasted and nothing done till the next spring.
+There were men enough about him at Washington to remind him of this in
+irritating ways, and to make him realize that as he had personally
+restored McClellan to the command he would be personally responsible for
+keeping him moving. McClellan rightly understood Mr. Lincoln's visit as
+meaning this. He did not refuse to move; on the other hand, he professed
+to be anxious to do so at the earliest moment when it should be really
+practicable. His obstinacy was of a feminine sort. He avoided open
+antagonism which would have been a challenge of strength, but found
+constantly fresh obstacles in the way of doing what he was determined
+from the first not to do. The need of clothing for the men and of horses
+for the cavalry was a fruitful subject for debate, and the debate, if
+sufficiently prolonged, would itself accomplish the delay that was
+desired.</p>
+<p>The official correspondence shows that the President went back to
+Washington determined to cut the knot in a peremptory way, if he was
+forced to do so. McClellan could not have been blind to this. His
+private letters show that he thought it not improbable that he would be
+relieved from command. His desire for military success was a ruling one
+with him on both public and private grounds. We are forced, therefore,
+to conclude that he actually lacked faith in success, and regarded the
+crossing of the Potomac as too perilous until he should reorganize the
+army with the additional hundred thousand recruits. In this we see the
+ever-recurring effect of his exaggeration of the enemy's force. We now
+know that this over-estimate was inexcusable, but we cannot deny that he
+made it, nor, altogether, that he believed in it. It constituted a
+disqualification for such a command, and led to what must be regarded as
+the inevitable result,--his removal. The political questions connected
+with the matter cut no important figure in it. If he had had faith in
+his ability to conquer Lee's army, we should never have heard of them.</p>
+<p>Whilst I mean what I say in speaking of McClellan's exaggeration of
+his enemy as constituting incompetence for such a command, it has
+reference to the necessity in which we were that our army should be
+aggressively handled. Few men could excel him in strictly defensive
+operations. He did not lack personal courage, nor did his intellectual
+powers become obscured in the excitement of actual war. He showed the
+ordinary evidences of presence of mind and coolness of judgment under
+fire. His tendency to see his enemy doubled in force was, however, a
+constitutional one, and no amount of experience seemed to cure it. Had
+it not been so he would have devised checks upon the reports of his
+secret-service agents, and corrected their estimates by those more
+reliable methods which I have already spoken of. McClellan was, even in
+those days, often compared to Marshal Daun, whose fair ability but
+studiously defensive policy was so in contrast with the daring strategy
+of the great Frederick. The comparison was a fair one. The trouble was
+that we had need of a Frederick.</p>
+<p>It may seem strange that his subordinates so generally accepted his
+view and supported him in his conduct; but it was a natural result of
+forces always at work in an army. The old maxim that "Councils of war
+never fight" is only another way of saying that an army is never bolder
+than its leader. It is the same as the old Greek proverb, "Better an
+army of deer with a lion for leader, than an army of lions with a deer
+for leader." The body of men thus organized relies upon its chief for
+the knowledge of the enemy and for the plan by which the enemy is to be
+taken at a disadvantage. It will courageously carry out his plans so
+long as he has faith in them himself and has good fortune in their
+execution. Let doubt arise as to either of these things and his troops
+raise the cry "We are sacrificed," "We are slaughtered uselessly."
+McClellan's arts of military popularity were such that his army accepted
+his estimate of the enemy, and believed (in the main) that he had shown
+great ability in saving them from destruction in a contest at such odds.
+They were inclined, therefore, to hold the government at Washington
+responsible for sacrificing them by demanding the impossible. Under such
+circumstances nothing but a cautious defensive policy could be popular
+with officers or men. If McClellan's data were true, he and they were
+right. It would have been folly to cross the Potomac and, with their
+backs to the river, fight a greatly superior enemy. Because the data
+were not true there was no solution for the problem but to give the army
+another commander, and painfully to undo the military education it had
+for a year been receiving. The process of disillusion was a slow one.
+The disasters to Burnside and Hooker strengthened the error. Meade's
+standstill after Gettysburg was very like McClellan's after Antietam,
+and Mr. Lincoln had to deal with it in a very similar way. When Grant
+took command the army expected him to have a similar fate, and his
+reputation was treated as of little worth because he had not yet "met
+Bobby Lee." His terrible method of "attrition" was a fearfully costly
+one, and the flower of that army was transferred from the active roster
+to the casualty lists before the prestige of its enemy was broken. But
+it was broken, and Appomattox came at last.</p>
+<p>It will not do to say that the Confederate army in Virginia was in
+any sense superior to their army in the West. When the superior force of
+the National army was systematically applied, General Lee was reduced to
+as cautious a defensive in Virginia as was General Johnston in Georgia.
+Longstreet and Hood had no better success when transferred to the West
+than the men who had never belonged to the Army of Virginia. In fact, it
+was with Joseph E. Johnston as his opponent that McClellan's career was
+chiefly run. Yet the Confederate army in the West was broken at Donelson
+and at Vicksburg. It was driven from Stone's River to Chattanooga, and
+from Missionary Ridge to Atlanta. Its remnant was destroyed at Franklin
+and Nashville, and Sherman's March to the Sea nearly completed the
+traverse of the whole Confederacy. His victorious army was close in rear
+of Petersburg when Richmond was finally won. Now that we have got rid of
+the fiction that the Confederate government gave to Lee an enormously
+larger army than it gave to Bragg or to Joseph Johnston, we have to
+account for the fact that with much less odds in their favor our Western
+army accomplished so much more. As a military objective Richmond was in
+easier reach from the Potomac than Nashville from the Ohio. From
+Nashville to Chattanooga was fully as difficult a task. The vulnerable
+lines of communication multiplied in length as we went southward, and
+made the campaign of Atlanta more difficult still. Vicksburg was a
+harder nut to crack than Richmond. We must put away our <i>esprit de
+corps</i>, and squarely face the problem as one of military art with
+the Official Records and returns before us. Our Western army was of
+essentially the same material as the Eastern. Regiments from nearly all
+the States were mingled in both. Wisconsin men fought beside those from
+Maine in the Army of the Potomac, as men who had fought at Antietam and
+at Gettysburg followed Sherman through the Carolinas. The difference was
+not in the rank and file, it was not in the subordinates. It was the
+difference in leadership and in the education of the armies under their
+leaders during their first campaigns. That mysterious thing, the morale
+of an army, grows out of its belief as to what it can do. If it is
+systematically taught that it is hopelessly inferior to its adversary,
+it will be held in check by a fraction of its own force. The general who
+indoctrinates his army with the belief that it is required by its
+government to do the impossible, may preserve his popularity with the
+troops and be received with cheers as he rides down the line, but he has
+put any great military success far beyond his reach. In this study of
+military morale, its causes and its effects, the history of the Army of
+the Potomac is one of the most important and one of the gravest lessons
+the world has ever seen.</p>
+<p>I have to confess that at Antietam I shared, more or less fully, the
+opinions of those among whom I was. I accepted McClellan as the best
+authority in regard to the enemy's numbers, and, assuming that he was
+approximately right in that, the reasonable prudence of waiting for
+reinforcements could not be denied. I saw that he had lost valuable time
+in the movements of the campaign, but the general result seemed
+successful enough to hide this for the time at least. My own experience,
+therefore, supports the conclusion I have already stated, that an army's
+enterprise is measured by its commander's, and, by a necessary law, the
+army reflects his judgment as to what it can or cannot accomplish.</p>
+<p>Mr. Lincoln had told McClellan during his visit to the army that his
+great fault was "overcautiousness." He had intimated plainly enough that
+he must insist upon the continuance of the campaign. He had discussed
+the plans of advance, and urged McClellan to operate upon Lee's
+communications by marching south on the east side of the Blue Ridge. He
+had disclaimed any purpose of forcing a movement before the army was
+ready, but saw no reason why it should take longer to get ready after
+Antietam than after Pope's last battle. Soon after his return to
+Washington, Halleck sent a peremptory order to McClellan to cross the
+Potomac. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 10.]</span> It was dated October 6th, and
+said: "The President directs that you cross the Potomac and give battle
+to the enemy or drive him South. Your army must move now while the roads
+are good. If you cross the river between the enemy and Washington, and
+cover the latter by your line of operations, you can be reinforced with
+30,000 men. If you move up the valley of the Shenandoah, not more than
+12,000 or 15,000 can be sent to you. The President advises the interior
+line between Washington and the enemy, but does not order it." It also
+required him to report immediately which line he adopted. Halleck, as
+General-in-chief, ought to have given his own decision as to the line of
+operations, but his characteristic indecision was shown in failing to do
+so. He did not even express an opinion as to the relative merits of the
+two lines, and limited himself to his concurrence in the order to move
+in one way or the other.</p>
+<p>McClellan replied on the 7th, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 11.]</span> saying that he had
+determined to adopt the Shenandoah line, though he wished to "state
+distinctly" that he should only use that line till the enemy should
+retire beyond Winchester, as he did not expect to be able to supply his
+army more than twenty or twenty-five miles beyond a railway or canal
+depot. If the enemy retreated, he would adopt some new and decisive line
+of operations. He objected to the interior line because it did not cover
+Maryland and Pennsylvania from a return of Lee's army, and because (as
+he said) the army could not be supplied by it. He indicated three days
+as the time within which he could move. At the end of that time he
+complained of still lacking clothing. On the 12th he found it
+"absolutely necessary" that the cavalry should have more horses. The
+discussion over these things ran on till the 21st.</p>
+<p>Mr. Lincoln made a strong effort to save McClellan from the effects
+of his mental deficiencies. He exhausted advice and exhortation. He even
+ventured upon mild raillery on the idleness of the army. On the 13th he
+had written a remarkable letter to McClellan, in which he reminded him
+of what had occurred between them at the Antietam and argued in favor of
+the interior line of movement. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 13.]</span> He showed that Lee at
+Winchester supplied his army twice as far from his railway depot as
+McClellan thought possible for the Army of the Potomac. He urged the
+recognized advantage of operating by a line which attacked the enemy's
+communications. He pointed out that if Lee should try to cross the
+Potomac, our army could be in his rear and should destroy him. He showed
+that McClellan at Harper's Ferry was nearer to Richmond than Lee: "His
+route is the arc of a circle of which yours is the chord." He analyzed
+the map and showed that the interior line was the easier for supplying
+the army: "The chord line, as you see, carries you by Aldie, Haymarket
+and Fredericksburg, and you see how turnpikes, railroads, and finally
+the Potomac by Acquia Creek, meet you at all points from Washington." He
+even gave the figures in miles from gap to gap in the mountains, which
+would enable McClellan to strike the enemy in flank or rear; and this
+was of course to be done if Lee made a stand. "It is all easy," his
+letter concluded, "if our troops march as well as the enemy; and it is
+unmanly to say they cannot do it." Yet he expressly disclaimed making
+his letter an order. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Since writing this, I have had occasion to treat this subject more
+fully, as bearing upon Mr. Lincoln's military judgment and intelligence,
+in a review of Henderson's Stonewall Jackson, "The Nation," Nov. 24,
+Dec. 1, 1898.]</span> </p>
+<p>As a mere matter of military comprehension and judgment of the
+strategic situation, the letter puts Mr. Lincoln head and shoulders
+above both his military subordinates. Halleck saw its force, but would
+not order it to be carried out. McClellan shrank from the decisive vigor
+of the plan, though he finally accepted it as the means of getting the
+larger reinforcements. On the 21st of October the discussion of cavalry
+horses was pretty well exhausted, and McClellan telegraphed Halleck <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 81.]</span> that in other respects he was nearly ready to move,
+and inquires whether the President desired him to march on the enemy at
+once or to wait the arrival of the new horses. Halleck answered that the
+order of the 6th October remained unchanged. "If you have not been and
+are not now in condition to obey it, you will be able to show such want
+of ability. The President does not expect impossibilities, but he is
+very anxious that all this good weather should not be wasted in
+inactivity. Telegraph when you will move and on what lines you propose
+to march." This dispatch was plainly a notice to McClellan that he would
+be held responsible for the failure to obey the order of the 6th unless
+he could exonerate himself by showing that he could not obey it. In his
+final report, however, he says that he treated it as authority to decide
+for himself whether or not it was possible to move with safety to the
+army; <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ibid</i>.]</span>
+"and this responsibility," he says, "I exercised with the more
+confidence in view of the strong assurance of his trust in me, as
+commander of that army, with which the President had seen fit to honor
+me during his last visit." Argument is superfluous, in view of the
+correspondence, to show that orders and exhortations were alike wasted.</p>
+<p>The movement began in the last days of October, the Sixth Corps,
+which was in the rear, crossing the Potomac on the 2d of November.
+McClellan had accepted Mr. Lincoln's plan, but lack of vigor in its
+execution broke down the President's patience, and on the 5th of
+November, upon Lee's recrossing the Blue Ridge without a battle, he
+ordered the general to turn over the command to Burnside, as he had
+declared he would do if Lee's was allowed to regain the interior line.
+The order was presented and obeyed on the 7th, and McClellan left the
+army. The fallen general brooded morbidly over it all for twenty years,
+and then wrote his "Own Story," a most curious piece of self-exposure,
+in which he unconsciously showed that the illusions which had misguided
+him in his campaigns were still realities to him, and that he had made
+no use of the authentic facts which Confederate as well as National
+records had brought within his reach. He had forgotten much, but he had
+learned nothing.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII</p>
+<p>PERSONAL RELATIONS OF McCLELLAN, BURNSIDE, AND PORTER</p>
+<p>Intimacy of McClellan and Burnside--Private letters in the official
+files--Burnside's mediation--His self-forgetful devotion--The movement
+to join Pope--Burnside forwards Porter's dispatches--His double refusal
+of the command--McClellan suspends the organization of wings--His
+relations to Porter--Lincoln's letter on the subject--Fault-finding with
+Burnside--Whose work?--Burnside's appearance and bearing in the field.</p>
+<p>McClellan and Burnside had been classmates at West Point, and had
+been associated in railway employment after they had left the army, in
+the years immediately before the war. The intimacy which began at the
+Academy had not only continued, but they had kept up the demonstrative
+boyish friendship which made their intercourse like that of brothers.
+They were "Mac" and "Burn" to each other when I knew them, and although
+Fitz-John Porter, Hancock, Parker, Reno, and Pleasonton had all been
+members of the same class, the two seemed to be bosom friends in a way
+totally different from their intimacy with the others. Probably there
+was no one outside of his own family to whom McClellan spoke his secret
+thoughts in his letters, as he did to Burnside. The characteristic lack
+of system in business which was very noticeable in Burnside, made him
+negligent, apparently, in discriminating between official letters and
+private ones, and so it happens that there are a number in the official
+records which were never meant to reach the public. They show, however,
+as nothing else could, the relations which the two men sustained to each
+other, and reveal strong traits in the characters of both.</p>
+<p>After Burnside had secured his first success in the Roanoke
+expedition, he had written to McClellan, then in the midst of his
+campaign of the peninsula, and this was McClellan's reply on the 21st of
+May, 1862:-- <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol ix. p. 392.]</span> </p>
+<p>"MY DEAR BURN,--Your dispatch and kind letter received. I have
+instructed Seth [Williams] to reply to the official letter, and now
+acknowledge the kind private note. It always does me good, in the midst
+of my cares and perplexities, to see your wretched old scrawling. I have
+terrible troubles to contend with, but have met them with a good heart,
+like your good old self, and have thus far struggled through
+successfully.... I feel very proud of Yorktown: it and Manassas will be
+my brightest chaplets in history, for I know that I accomplished
+everything in both places by pure military skill. I am very proud, and
+very grateful to God that he allowed me to purchase such great success
+at so trifling a loss of life.... The crisis cannot long be deferred. I
+pray for God's blessing on our arms, and rely far more on his goodness
+than I do on my own poor intellect. I sometimes think, now, that I can
+almost realize that Mahomet was sincere. When I see the hand of God
+guarding one so weak as myself, I can almost think myself a chosen
+instrument to carry out his schemes. Would that a better man had been
+selected.... Good-bye and God bless you, Burn. With the sincere hope
+that we may soon shake hands, I am, as ever,</p>
+<p>Your sincere friend, MCCLELLAN."</p>
+<p>When McClellan reached the James River after the seven days'
+battles, the first suggestion as to reinforcing him was that Burnside
+should bring to his aid the bulk of his little army in North Carolina.
+This was determined upon, and the Ninth Corps was carried by sea to
+Fortress Monroe. As soon as the movement was started, Burnside hastened
+in advance to Washington, and on returning to the fortress wrote
+McClellan as follows:-- <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+O. S., p. 472.]</span> </p>
+<p>"OLD POINT, July 15, 1862.</p>
+<p>MY DEAR MAC,--I have just arrived from Washington, and have not time
+to get ready to go up this morning, but will to-morrow. I've much to say
+to you and am very anxious to see you.... The President has ordered me
+to remain here for the present, and when I asked him how long, he said
+five or six days. I don't know what it means; but I do know, my dear
+Mac, that you have lots of enemies. But you must keep cool; don't allow
+them to provoke you into a quarrel. You must come out all right; I'll
+tell you all to-morrow.</p>
+<p>Your old friend, BURN."</p>
+<p>He went up the river to Harrison's Landing and stayed a couple of
+days, consulting with McClellan as to the situation. He returned to Old
+Point Comfort on the 18th, and immediately telegraphed to the War
+Department for leave to go to Washington and present the results of his
+conference with McClellan. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xi. pt. iii. p. 326.]</span> This was granted,
+and he again presented himself before the President and Secretary
+Stanton as the friend of McClellan. He urged the increase of McClellan's
+army to an extent which would make the general resume the aggressive
+with confidence. Halleck visited McClellan at once after assuming
+command as general-in-chief, but satisfied himself that the government
+could not furnish the thirty thousand additional troops which McClellan
+then demanded. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id.</i>,
+p. 337.]</span> This led to the decision to bring the Army of the
+Potomac back by water, and to unite it with Pope's army on the
+Rappahannock.</p>
+<p>On this visit to Washington the President and Secretary of War had
+offered to Burnside himself the command of the Army of the Potomac. He
+had refused it, earnestly asserting his faith that McClellan was much
+fitter for the command than he, and trying hard to restore confidence
+and a mutual good understanding between his friend and the government.
+He was discouraged at the result, and after he returned to his command
+wrote a letter, every line of which shows his sadness and his
+disinterested friendship, for he does not mention, much less take credit
+to himself for, the refusal to supersede his friend. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: O. S., 472.]</span> </p>
+<p>"FORT MONROE, Aug. 2, 1862.</p>
+<p>MY DEAR MAC,--I'm laid up with a lame leg, and besides am much
+worried at the decision they have chosen to make in regard to your army.
+From the moment I reached Washington I feared it would be so, and I am
+of the opinion that your engineers <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+This hints at General Barnard's unfavorable criticisms of McClellan's
+management, which led to a request by the latter to have another officer
+assigned as chief engineer. See Halleck to McClellan, Aug. 7, 1862.
+Official Records, vol. xi. pt. iii. p. 359.]</span> had much to do with
+bringing about the determination. When the conclusion was arrived at, I
+was the only one who advocated your forward movement. I speak now as if
+a positive decision had been arrived at, which I do not know, and you of
+course do; my present orders indicate it. But you know what they are and
+all about it, so I will accept it as something that is ordered for the
+best. Let us continue to give our undivided support to the cause and all
+will be well. It looks dark sometimes, but a just God will order
+everything for the best. We can't expect to have it all as we wish. I'm
+off for my destination, and will write you a long letter from there. The
+troops are nearly all embarked. Good-bye. God bless you!</p>
+<p>Your old friend, A. E. BURNSIDE."</p>
+<p>Burnside was sent with the Ninth Corps to Falmouth on the
+Rappahannock. Porter's corps joined him there, and both the corps were
+sent forward to Warrenton to join Pope. When Pope's communication with
+Washington was cut, it was only through Burnside that the government
+could hear of him for several days, and in response to the calls for
+news he telegraphed copies of Porter's dispatches to him. Like
+McClellan's private letters, these dispatches told more of the writer's
+mind and heart than would willingly have been made public. Burnside's
+careless outspoken frankness as to his own opinions was such that he
+probably did not reflect what reticences others might wish to have made.
+Perhaps he also thought that Porter's sarcasms on Pope, coming from one
+who had gained much reputation in the peninsula, would be powerful in
+helping to reinstate McClellan. At any rate, the dispatches were the
+only news from the battle-field he could send the President in answer to
+his anxious inquiries, and he sent them. They were the cause of Mr.
+Lincoln's request to McClellan, on September 1st, that he would write
+Porter and other friends begging them to give Pope loyal support. They
+were also the most damaging evidence against Porter in his subsequent
+court-martial.</p>
+<p>Before the Maryland campaign began, Mr. Lincoln again urged upon
+Burnside the command of the army, and he again declined, warmly
+advocating McClellan's retention as before. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: C. W., vol. i. p. 650.]</span>
+His advocacy was successful, as I have already stated. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ante</i>, p. 257.]</span>
+The arrangement that Burnside and Sumner were to command wings of the
+army of at least two corps each, was made before we left Washington, and
+Burnside's subordinates, Hooker and Reno, were, by direction of the
+President, assigned to corps commands through orders from army
+headquarters. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. pp. 188, 197.]</span> McClellan did not
+publish to the Army of the Potomac this assignment of Burnside and
+Sumner till the 14th of September, though it had been acted upon from
+the beginning of the campaign. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 290.]</span> On the evening of the same day Porter's corps joined the
+army at South Mountain, and before the advance was resumed on the
+following morning, the order was again suspended and Burnside reduced to
+the command of a single corps. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 297.]</span> I have already suggested Hooker's relation to this, and
+only note at this point the coincidence, if it was nothing more, that
+the first evidence of any change in McClellan's friendship toward
+Burnside occurs within a few hours from Porter's arrival, and in
+connection with a complaint made by the latter.</p>
+<p>McClellan and Burnside had slept in the same house the night after
+the battle of South Mountain. Porter seems to have joined them there.
+During the evening McClellan dictated his orders for the movements of
+the 15th which were communicated to the army in the morning. That Porter
+should be unfriendly to Burnside was not strange, for it had by this
+time become known that the dispatches of August 27th to 30th were relied
+upon by General Pope's friends to show Porter's hostile and
+insubordinate spirit in that campaign. The court-martial was still
+impending over Porter, and he had been allowed to take the field only at
+McClellan's special request. Although Burnside had not dreamed of doing
+Porter an ill service, his transmittal of the dispatches to the
+President had made them available as evidence, and Porter, not
+unnaturally, held him responsible for part of his peril. The sort of
+favoritism which McClellan showed to Porter was notorious in the army.
+Had the position of chief of staff been given him, it would have
+sanctioned his personal influence without offending the self-respect of
+other general officers; but that position was held by General Marcy, the
+father-in-law of McClellan, and Porter's manifest power at headquarters
+consequently wore the air of discourtesy toward others. The incident I
+have narrated of the examination of Lee's position at Sharpsburg from
+the ridge near Pry's house was an example of this. It was Porter who in
+the presence of the commandants of the wings of the army was invited by
+McClellan to continue the examination when the others were sent below
+the crest of the hill. Governor Sprague testified before the Committee
+on the Conduct of the War to the notoriety of this from the beginning of
+the peninsular campaign and to the bad feeling it caused. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: C. W., vol. i. p. 566.]</span>
+General Rosecrans testified that in the winter of 1861-62, on his visit
+to Washington, he found that Porter was regarded as the confidential
+adviser of McClellan. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+vol. vi. (Rosecrans) p. 14.]</span> It was matter of common fame, too
+well known to be questioned by anybody who served in that army. Mr.
+Lincoln had discussed it to some extent in his correspondence with
+McClellan in the month of May, and had warned the general of the
+mischiefs likely to ensue, even whilst authorizing provisional corps to
+be organized for Porter and Franklin. He had used such exceptional
+plainness as to say to the general <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xi. pt. iii. p. 154.]</span> that "it is looked
+upon as merely an effort to pamper one or two pets and to persecute and
+degrade their supposed rivals. The commanders of these corps are of
+course the three highest officers with you, but I am constantly told
+that you have no consultation or communication with them; that you
+consult and communicate with nobody but General Fitz-John Porter and
+perhaps General Franklin. I do not say these complaints are true or
+just, but at all events it is proper you should know of their existence."</p>
+<p>McClellan's dealing with the division of the army into wings was
+part of the same persistent method of thwarting the purpose of the
+administration while ostensibly keeping the letter. It was perfectly
+easy to advance from South Mountain upon Sharpsburg, keeping Sumner's
+and Burnside's commands intact. The intermingling of them was
+unnecessary at the beginning, and was mischievous during the battle of
+Antietam. No military reason can be given for it, and the history of the
+whole year makes it plain that the reasons were personal.</p>
+<p>The offer of the command of the army to Burnside, though refused,
+was a sufficiently plain designation of McClellan's successor in case he
+should be relieved or be disabled. It needed a more magnanimous nature
+than McClellan's proved to be, to bear the obligation of Burnside's
+powerful friendship in securing for him again the field command of the
+army. When he was in personal contact with Burnside, the transparent
+sincerity of the latter's friendship always brought McClellan to his
+better self, and to the eye of an observer they were as cordially
+intimate as they had ever been. Yet unfriendly things which had been
+done officially could not easily be undone, and the friendship was
+maintained by the subordinate condoning the sins against it. Hooker was
+allowed to separate himself from Burnside's command on the morning of
+the 15th, against the protest of his commander; the order announcing the
+assignment of the wing command was suspended and was never renewed,
+though McClellan afterward gave Burnside temporary command of several
+corps when detached from the rest of the army.</p>
+<p>Burnside spent several hours with his chief on Monday morning
+(15th), and was disturbed and grieved at the course things had taken. It
+is possible that his pre-occupation of mind made him neglect the prompt
+issue of orders for moving the Ninth Corps, though I know nothing
+definite as to this. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: My
+own recollection is that part of the corps had marched without rations
+on the preceding day, and had sent back during the night for them.
+Burnside took the responsibility of allowing the corps to wait until
+these supplies came and the men could be fed before marching again. It
+will be remembered that McClellan made no effort to bring on an
+engagement that day, nor during the whole of the next day.]</span>
+Porter's corps was to follow us through Fox's Gap, and when his head of
+column came up the mountain at noon, we certainly were not in motion. My
+own division was the rear one of the column that day, by way of change,
+as I had had the advance all the way from Washington. General Porter
+reported at McClellan's headquarters that the movement of his troops was
+obstructed by Burnside's, and got at his own special request an order to
+push by them. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 296.]</span> The written order Porter
+preserved, and put upon it an endorsement adding to what it contains the
+accusation that "Burnside's corps was not moving three hours after the
+hour designated for him." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Ibid.</i>]</span>
+No doubt there was many a delay in that campaign in divers corps. The
+significant thing in this one was the pains taken to "make a record" of
+it against Burnside, and the inclusion in this of unofficial matter by
+means of the endorsement.</p>
+<p>On the 16th another vexatious incident of a similar character
+occurred. After McClellan's reconnoitring on our left, he orally
+directed that the divisions of the Ninth Corps should be moved to
+positions designated by members of his staff. When Burnside had taken
+his position on a hill-top from which the positions could be seen and
+the movement accurately directed, another staff officer from McClellan
+came and requested that the movement be delayed for further
+consideration by the commanding general. It was this that occasioned a
+halt and our subsequent march in the dusk of evening, as has been
+narrated in its place. That evening the following note was written at
+McClellan's headquarters, but it was not delivered to Burnside till the
+next day, the day of the battle: <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id.</i>,
+p. 308.]</span> ---</p>
+<p>"HEADQUARTERS, ARMY OF THE POTOMAC,<br>
+September 16, 1862.</p>
+<p>MAJOR-GENERAL BURNSIDE, Commanding Ninth Corps, etc.</p>
+<p>GENERAL,--The General commanding has learned that although your
+corps was ordered to be in a designated position at 12 M. to-day, at or
+near sunset only one division and four batteries had reached the ground
+intended for your troops. The general has also been advised that there
+was a delay of some four hours in the movement of your command
+yesterday. I am instructed to call upon you for explanations of these
+failures on your part to comply with the orders given you, and to add,
+in view of the important military operations now at hand, the commanding
+general cannot lightly regard such marked departure from the tenor of
+his instructions.</p>
+<p>I am, general, very respectfully, your obedient servant,</p>
+<p>----------,</p>
+<p>Lieutenant-Colonel, Aide-de-camp, and Act'g Ass't Adj't. Gen'l."</p>
+<p>To this missive Burnside dictated the following answer on the field
+during the battle:-- <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records., vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 314.]</span> </p>
+<p>"HEADQUARTERS, September 17, 1862.</p>
+<p>BRIG. GEN. S. WILLIAMS, Assistant Adjutant-General.</p>
+<p>GENERAL,--Your dispatch of yesterday this moment received. General
+Burnside directs me to say that immediately upon the receipt of the
+order of the general commanding, which was after twelve o'clock, he
+ordered his corps to be in readiness to march, and instead of having
+Captain Duane <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Captain
+Duane was senior engineer officer in the field, on the staff of
+McClellan, and had conducted the reconnoitring of the Antietam.]</span>
+post the divisions in detail, and at the suggestion of Captain Duane, he
+sent three aides to ascertain the position of each of the three
+divisions, that they might post them. These aides returned shortly
+before three o'clock, and they immediately proceeded to post the three
+columns. The general then went on an eminence above these positions to
+get a good view of them, and whilst there, during the progress of the
+movement of his corps, an aide from General McClellan came to him and
+said that General McClellan was not sure that the proper position had
+been indicated, and advised him not to hasten the movement until the
+aide had communicated with the general commanding. He (General Burnside)
+at once went to General McClellan's headquarters to inform him that he
+had seen large bodies of the enemy moving off to the right. Not finding
+the general commanding, General Burnside returned to his command, and
+the movement was resumed and continued as rapidly as possible. General
+Burnside directs me to say that he is sorry to have received so severe a
+rebuke from the general commanding, and particularly sorry that the
+general commanding feels that his instructions have not been obeyed; but
+nothing can occur to prevent the general from continuing his hearty
+co-operation to the best of his ability in any movement the general
+commanding may direct.</p>
+<p>I have the honor to be, general, very respectfully, your obedient
+servant,<br>
+LEWIS RICHMOND,<br>
+Assistant Adjutant-General."</p>
+<p>The answer was of course conclusive, but it leaves the difficult
+problem, how came the reprimand to be written which General McClellan
+could not have dictated, as the interruption of Burnside's movement was
+caused by a message from himself? The blank for the name of a staff
+officer who was to sign it, and the indication of his rank and position
+point to Lieutenant-Colonel James A. Hardie as the one for whom it was
+prepared, but Colonel Hardie must have demurred to signing it, since
+Colonel Richmond's answer implies that General Seth Williams's name was
+finally attached. All of us who knew General Williams and his methods of
+doing business will be slow to believe that he volunteered a paper of
+that kind. He afterward served on Burnside's own staff and had his
+confidence. The responsibility must fall upon General Marcy, the chief
+of staff, and most of the officers of that army will be likely to
+conclude that he also would act only by the direction of McClellan or of
+some one whom he regarded as having decisive authority to speak for him
+in his absence.</p>
+<p>I have already referred to an error contained in General Porter's
+report of the battle of Antietam, where he says that "Morell's division
+in reporting to General Burnside relieved his corps, which was at once
+recalled from its position in front of Antietam bridge." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. p. 339.]</span> I mention it again only to say that since this was
+not only contrary to the fact, but is unsupported by the records, to
+accept it and to embody it in his official report certainly indicates no
+friendly disposition toward Burnside. To that extent it supports any
+other circumstances which point to Porter as the hostile influence which
+becomes so manifest at McClellan's headquarters after the 14th of
+September. I know by many expressions uttered by Burnside during those
+days and afterward, that though he was deeply grieved at some things
+which had occurred, he did not waver in his loyal friendship to
+McClellan. He uttered no unkind word in regard to him personally, either
+then or ever in my hearing. He sometimes spoke of what he believed to be
+mischievous influences about McClellan and which he thought were too
+powerful with him, but was earnest and consistent in wishing for him the
+permanent command of that army till success should give a glorious end
+to the war. It was after the irritating incidents I have narrated that
+the visit to McClellan to dine with him occurred, and I saw them
+frequently together till I left the army on the 5th of October. Their
+manner toward each other was more than cordial, it was affectionately
+intimate. Burnside never mentioned to me, although I was next him in
+command, the reprimand which is copied above. His real unwillingness to
+supersede McClellan, even when the final order came in November, is
+abundantly attested. McClellan only by degrees gave outward evidence of
+the souring of his own feelings toward Burnside, but his private letters
+show that the process began with the battle of South Mountain. By the
+time that he wrote his final report in the latter part of 1863 it had
+advanced far enough to warp his memory of the campaign and to make him
+try to transfer to Burnside the responsibility for some of his mishaps.
+When his "Own Story" was written, the process was complete, and no
+kindly remembrance dictated a word which could give any indication of
+the friendship that had died.</p>
+<p>Those who are not familiar with the customs of military service
+might see little significance in the fact that the fault-finding with
+Burnside was put in the form of official communications which thus
+became part of the permanent documentary history of the war. To military
+men, however, it would be almost conclusive proof of a settled hostility
+to him, formally calling his military character in question in a way to
+make it tell against him for ulterior purposes. Nothing is more common
+in an active campaign than for a commanding officer to send messages
+hurrying the movement of a part of his army. These are usually oral, and
+even when delays are complained of, the commander, in the interests of
+cordial cooperation and cheerful alacrity, awaits a full opportunity for
+personal explanation from his immediate subordinates before
+administering a reprimand. It goes without saying that where intimate
+friendship exists, still more delicate consideration is used. To send
+such a letter as that of September 16th, and in the course of such
+deliberate movements as were McClellan's during those days, would be
+scarcely conceivable unless there had been a formal breach of personal
+relations, and it was equivalent to notice that they were henceforth to
+deal at arm's-length only.</p>
+<p>McClellan's "Own Story" shows that in regard to the alleged delay on
+the morning of the 15th, he had a personal explanation from Burnside. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: O. S., p. 586.]</span> Yet in
+the night of the 16th the same querulous inquiry was repeated as if it
+had not been answered, with the addition of the new complaint of a delay
+on the 16th which was caused by McClellan's personal request, and the
+whole accompanied by so formal a reprimand that the ordinary reply to it
+would have been a demand for a court of inquiry. The occurrence was
+unexampled in that campaign and stands entirely alone, although
+McClellan's memoirs show that he alleged delays in other cases, notably
+in Hooker's march that same afternoon to attack the enemy, of which no
+recorded notice was taken. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+O. S., p.590.]</span> Considering the personal relations of the men
+before that time, and as I myself witnessed them from day to day
+afterward, it is simply incredible that McClellan dictated the letters
+which went from his headquarters.</p>
+<p>Before ending the discussion of matters personal to these officers I
+will say a few words regarding Burnside's appearance and bearing in the
+field. He was always a striking figure, and had a dashing way with him
+which incited enthusiasm among his soldiers. Without seeming to care for
+his costume, or even whilst affecting a little carelessness, there was
+apt to be something picturesque about him. He had a hearty and jovial
+manner, a good-humored cordiality toward everybody, that beamed in his
+face as he rode through the camps or along the lines. When not on
+parade, he often discarded his uniform coat, wearing a light undress
+jacket, with no indication of his rank except the yellow silk sash about
+his waist which showed that he was a general officer. On one occasion
+when I accompanied him in a change of position, we passed the Ninth
+Corps column in march, and it was interesting to see how he was greeted
+by the troops which had been with him in his North Carolina campaign. He
+wore that day a "Norfolk jacket," a brown knit roundabout, fitting close
+to his person; his hat was the stiff broad-rimmed, high-crowned
+regulation hat, worn rather rakishly, with gold cord, acorn-tipped; his
+pistol-belt was a loose one, allowing the holster to hang on his hip
+instead of being buckled tight about the waist; his boots were the high
+cavalry boots reaching to the knee; his large buckskin gauntlets covered
+his forearm; he rode a large bony horse, bob-tailed, with a wall-eye
+which gave him a vicious look, and suited well the brigandish air of his
+rider's whole appearance. Burnside's flashing eyes, his beard trimmed to
+the "Burnside cut" with the mustache running into the side whiskers
+whilst the square, clean-shaven chin and jaws gave a tone of decision
+and force to his features, made up a picture that at once arrested the
+eye. As we went along the roadside at a fast trot, his high-stepping
+horse seemed to be keeping his white eye on the lookout for a chance to
+lash out at somebody. The men evidently enjoyed the scene, cheering him
+loudly. I was particularly amused with one group of soldiers at rest by
+their stacked muskets. They sat upon their haunches, and clapped their
+hands as he passed, exclaiming and laughing, "Just see the old fellow!
+just look at him!" Burnside laughed at their fun as jollily as they did
+themselves, and took no offence at the free-and-easy way in which they
+showed their liking for him. There was no affectation in all this, but
+an honest enjoyment in following his own whim in style and in
+accoutrement. His sincere earnestness in the cause for which he was
+fighting was apparent to all who met him, and no one in his presence
+could question the single-hearted honesty and unselfishness of the man.
+His bearing under fire was good, and his personal courage beyond
+question. He shrank from responsibility with sincere modesty, because he
+questioned his own capacity to deal with affairs of great magnitude. He
+was not only not ambitious to command a great army, but he honestly
+sought to put it aside when it was thrust upon him, and accepted it at
+last from a sense of obligation to the administration which had
+nominated him to it in spite of his repeated disclaimers. It carafe to
+him finally, without consulting him, as a military order he could not
+disobey without causing a most awkward dead-lock in the campaign.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX</p>
+<p>RETURN TO WEST VIRGINIA</p>
+<p>Ordered to the Kanawha valley again--An unwelcome surprise--Reasons
+for the order--Reporting to Halleck at Washington--Affairs in the
+Kanawha in September--Lightburn's positions--Enemy under Loring
+advances--Affair at Fayette C. H.--Lightburn retreats--Gauley Bridge
+abandoned--Charleston evacuated--Disorderly flight to the Ohio--Enemy's
+cavalry raid under Jenkins--General retreat in Tennessee and
+Kentucky--West Virginia not in any Department--Now annexed to that of
+Ohio--Morgan's retreat from Cumberland Gap--Ordered to join the Kanawha
+forces--Milroy's brigade also--My interviews with Halleck and
+Stanton--Promotion--My task--My division sent with me--District of West
+Virginia--Colonel Crook promoted--Journey westward--Governor
+Peirpoint--Governor Tod--General Wright--Destitution of Morgan's
+column--Refitting at Portland, Ohio--Night drive to Gallipolis--An
+amusing accident--Inspection at Point Pleasant--Milroy ordered to
+Parkersburg--Milroy's qualities--Interruptions to movement of troops--No
+wagons--Supplies delayed--Confederate retreat--Loring relieved--Echols
+in command--Our march up the valley--Echols retreats--We occupy
+Charleston and Gauley Bridge--Further advance stopped--Our forces
+reduced--Distribution of remaining troops--Alarms and minor
+movements--Case of Mr. Summers--His treatment by the Confederates.</p>
+<p>In war it is the unexpected that happens. On the 4th of October my
+permanent connection with the Army of the Potomac seemed assured. I was
+in command of the Ninth Corps, encamped in Pleasant Valley, awaiting the
+renewal of active operations. My promotion to the rank of Major-General
+had been recommended by McClellan and Burnside, with the assurance that
+the permanent command of the corps would be added. On that evening an
+order came from Washington directing me to return to the Kanawha valley,
+from which our troops had been driven. I was to report in person at
+Washington immediately, and would there get detailed directions. The
+order was as much a surprise to my immediate superiors as it was to me,
+and apparently as little welcome. We all recognized the necessity of
+sending some one to the Kanawha who knew the country, and the
+reasonableness, therefore, of assigning the duty to me. McClellan and
+Burnside both promised that when matters should be restored to a good
+footing in West Virginia they would co-operate in an effort to bring me
+back, and as this was coupled with a strong request to the War
+Department that my promotion should be made immediate, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: McClellan to Halleck,
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 383.]</span> acquiesced with
+reasonably good grace.</p>
+<p>Going to Washington on the eth, I received my orders and
+instructions from Halleck, the General-in-Chief. They were based upon
+the events which had occurred in the Kanawha valley since I left it in
+August. The information got by General Stuart from Pope's captured
+quartermaster had led to a careful examination of the letter-books
+captured at the same time, and Lee thus learned that I had left 5000
+men, under Colonel Lightburn, to garrison the posts about Gauley Bridge.
+The Confederate forces were therefore greater than ours in that region,
+and General Loring, who was in command, was ordered to make at once a
+vigorous aggressive campaign against Lightburn, to "clear the valley of
+the Kanawha and operate northwardly to a junction" with the army of Lee
+in the Shenandoah valley. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. i. p. 1069; <i>Id.</i>, vol. xii. pp.
+940-943, 946. This correspondence fully justifies Pope's suspicion that
+Lee then planned to operate by the Valley of Virginia.]</span> Loring
+marched, on the 6th of September, with a column which he reported about
+5000 strong, expecting to add to it by organizing recruits and militia
+as Floyd had done in the previous year. His line of operations was by
+way of Princeton, Flat-top Mountain and Raleigh C. II. to Fayette C. H.
+His forces do not seem to have been noticeably increased by recruiting
+till ours had retreated out of the valley.</p>
+<p>Lightburn's advanced positions were two,--a brigade under Colonel
+Siber of the Thirty-seventh Ohio being at Raleigh C. H. and another
+under Colonel Gilbert of the Forty-fourth Ohio, near the Hawk's Nest,
+and at Alderson's on the Lewisburg road. A small post was kept up at
+Summersville and one at Gauley Bridge, where Lightburn had his
+headquarters, and some detachments guarded trains and steamboats in the
+lower valley. Gauley Bridge was, as in the preceding year, the central
+point, and though it was necessary to guard both the Lewisburg and the
+Raleigh roads on the opposite sides of the New River gorge, a
+concentration on the line the enemy should take was the plain rule of
+action when the opposing armies were about equal. Or, by concentrating
+at Gauley Bridge, my experience had proved that we could hold at bay
+three or four times our numbers. In either case, fighting in detail was
+to be avoided, and rapid concentration under one leader to be effected.</p>
+<p>On the approach of the enemy Siber was withdrawn from Raleigh C. H.
+to Fayette, and Gilbert to Tompkins farm, three miles from Gauley
+Bridge, but the brigades were not united. On the 10th of September
+Loring attacked Siber at Fayette, in the intrenchments made by Scammon
+in the winter. Siber repulsed the efforts of Loring to drive him out of
+his position, and held it during the day. Three companies of the Fourth
+Virginia under Captain Vance, and a squad of horse were sent by
+Lightburn from Gauley Bridge to Siber's assistance, but the latter,
+being without definite orders and thinking he could not hold the
+position another day, retreated in the night, setting fire to a large
+accumulation of stores and abandoning part of his wagons. He halted on
+the ridge of Cotton Hill, covering the road to Gauley Bridge, and was
+there joined by five companies of the Forty-seventh Ohio, also sent to
+his assistance by Lightburn. Loring followed and made a partial attack,
+which was met by the rear-guard under Captain Vance and repulsed, whilst
+Siber's principal column marched on to Montgomery's ferry on the Kanawha.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Lightburn had called in Gilbert's force to Gauley Bridge
+during the night of the both, and placed them opposite the ferry
+connecting with Siber, which was just below Kanawha Falls and in the
+lower part of the Gauley Bridge camp. On Siber's appearance at the
+ferry, Lightburn seems to have despaired of having time to get him over,
+and directed him to march down the left bank of the river, burning the
+sheds full of stores which were on that side of the stream. When Captain
+Vance with the rear-guard reached the ferry, the buildings were blazing
+on both sides of the narrow pass under the bluff, and his men ran the
+gantlet of fire, protecting their heads with extra blankets which they
+found scattered near the stores. Vance easily held the enemy at bay at
+Armstrong's Creek, and Siber marched his column, next morning, to
+Brownstown, some twenty-five miles below Kanawha Falls, where steamboats
+met him and ferried him over to Camp Piatt. There he rejoined Lightburn.</p>
+<p>Gilbert's artillery was put in position on the right bank at
+Montgomery's Ferry, and checked the head of Loring's column when it
+approached the Kanawha in pursuit of Siber. Lightburn had ordered the
+detachment in post at Summersville to join him at Gauley, and Colonel
+Elliot of the Forty-seventh Ohio, who commanded it, marched down the
+Gauley with his ten companies (parts of three regiments) and a small
+wagon train. He approached Gauley Bridge on the 11th, but Lightburn had
+not waited for him, and the enemy were in possession. Elliot burned his
+wagons and took to the hills with his men, cutting across the angle
+between the Gauley and the Kanawha and joining Gilbert's column near
+Cannelton. A smaller detachment, only a little way up the Gauley, was
+also left to its fate in the precipitate retreat, and it also took to
+the hills and woods and succeeded in evading the enemy. It was about ten
+o'clock in the morning when Loring's head of column approached the
+Kanawha and drew the fire of Gilbert's guns. After about an hour's
+cannonade across the river, Lightburn gave the order to retreat down the
+right bank, after burning the stores and blowing up the magazine at
+Gauley Bridge. Loring found men to swim across the river and extinguish
+the fires kindled on the ferry-boats, which were soon put in use to
+ferry Echols's brigade across. This followed Lightburn down the right
+bank, whilst Loring himself, with Williams's and Wharton's brigades,
+marched after Siber down the left. The over-hanging cliffs and hills
+echoed with the cannonade, and the skirmishers exchanged rifle-shots
+across the rapid stream; but few casualties occurred, and after Elliot
+joined the column, it marched with little interruption to Camp Piatt,
+thirteen miles from Charleston, where Siber met them, and the steamboats
+he had used passed down the river to the Ohio.</p>
+<p>Siber's brigade continued its retreat rapidly to Charleston, passed
+through the town and crossed the Elk River. Gilbert's brigade also
+retired, but in better order, and it kept up a skirmish with the
+advance-guard of Echols's column which was following them. When Gilbert
+reached the outskirts of Charleston, he checked the advance of the enemy
+long enough to enable the quartermasters at the post to move their
+trains across the Elk; but the haste of the evacuation was so great that
+the stores in depot there were not removed, and were burned to prevent
+their falling into the enemy's hands. Gilbert retired across the Elk,
+and the suspension bridge was destroyed. Loring's artillery made a dash
+for a hill on the left bank of the Kanawha, which commanded the new
+position taken up by Lightburn's troops, and the Confederate battery
+soon opened an enfilade fire across the river, taking the line of
+breastworks along the Elk in flank and in reverse. The trains and the
+stragglers started in direst confusion on the road to Ravenswood on the
+Ohio, which offered a line of retreat not subject to the enemy's fire.
+Siber's brigade followed, Gilbert's continued to bring up the rear. The
+road down the Kanawha was abandoned because it was in range of artillery
+from the opposite side of the river throughout its whole course down the
+valley. The road to Ripley and Ravenswood was therefore taken, and the
+flying troops were met at those towns on the Ohio by steamboats which
+conveyed part of them to Point Pleasant at the mouth of the Kanawha,
+where the whole command was concentrated in the course of a few days. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. i. pp. 1058-1060.]</span> Siber's loss was 16 killed, 87 wounded, and
+over 100 missing. Gilbert reported 9 men killed and 8 wounded, with
+about 75 missing; but as the enemy do not enumerate any captured
+prisoners in their reports except a lieutenant and 10 men, it is evident
+that the missing were mostly men who outran the others. Loring's losses
+as reported by his surgeon were 18 killed and 89 wounded. The enemy
+claim to have captured large numbers of wagons, horses, mules, and
+stores of all kinds which Loring estimated at a million dollars' worth,
+besides all that were burned.</p>
+<p>It was a panicky retreat after the hot little fight by Siber's
+brigade at Fayette C. H., and it is not worth while to apply to it any
+military criticism, further than to say that either of the brigades
+intrenched at Gauley Bridge could have laughed at Loring. The river
+would have been impassable, for all the ferry-boats were in the keeping
+of our men on the right bank, and Loring would not dare pass down the
+valley leaving a fortified post on the line of communications by which
+he must return. The topography of the wild mountain region was such that
+an army could only pass from the lower Kanawha to the headwaters of the
+James River by the road Loring had used in his advance, or by that
+leading through the post of Gauley Bridge to Lewisburg and beyond. The
+Confederate War Department seem to have thought that their forces might
+have passed from Charleston to the Ohio, thence to Parkersburg, and
+turning east from this town, have made their way to Beverly and to the
+Valley of Virginia by the route Garnett had used in the previous year.
+They would have found, however, as Loring told them, that it would have
+been easy for the National forces to overwhelm them with numbers while
+they were making so long and so difficult a march in a vast region most
+of which was a wilderness.</p>
+<p>Lightburn's position had been made more embarrassing by the fact
+that a cavalry raid under Brigadier-General Jenkins was passing around
+his left flank while Loring came upon him in front. Jenkins with a light
+column of horse moved from Lewisburg by way of the Wilderness Road to
+northwestern Virginia, captured posts and destroyed stores at Weston,
+Buckhannon, and Roane C. H., and made a circuit to the lower Kanawha,
+rejoining Loring after Lightburn's retreat. Little real mischief was
+done by this raid, but it added to the confusion, and helped to disturb
+the self-possession of the commanding officer. In this way it was one of
+the causes of the precipitate retreat.</p>
+<p>Several circumstances combined to make Lightburn's disaster
+embarrassing to the government. West Virginia had not been connected
+with any military department after Pope's command had been broken up.
+McClellan's authority did not extend beyond his own army and its theatre
+of operations. Halleck could hardly take personal charge of the affairs
+of remote districts. Thus the Kanawha valley had dropped out of the
+usual system and was an omitted case. The embarrassment was increased by
+the fact that Buell was retreating out of Tennessee before Bragg, Morgan
+had evacuated Cumberland Gap and was making a painful and hazardous
+retreat to the Ohio, and the Confederate forces under Kirby Smith were
+moving directly upon Cincinnati. Lightburn's mishap, therefore, was only
+the northern extremity of a line of defeats extending through the whole
+length of the Ohio valley from Parkersburg to Louisville. The governors
+of West Virginia and Ohio were naturally alarmed at the events in the
+Kanawha valley, and were earnest in their calls upon the War Department
+for troops to drive Loring back beyond the mountains and for an officer
+to command them who knew something of the country.</p>
+<p>Halleck seems to have been puzzled at the condition of things, not
+having realized that Pope's retirement had left West Virginia "in the
+air." It took a week, apparently, to get satisfactory details of the
+actual situation, and on the 19th of September the first important step
+was taken by annexing the region to the Department of the Ohio, then
+commanded by Major-General Horatio G. Wright, whose headquarters were at
+Cincinnati. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xvi. pt. ii. p. 328.]</span> Wright was directed to provide
+for the recovery of lost ground in West Virginia as rapidly as possible,
+but the campaign in Kentucky was the more important and urgent, so that
+no troops could be spared for secondary operations until the
+Confederates had ceased to threaten Cincinnati and Louisville.</p>
+<p>On the 1st of October Halleck again called General Wright's
+attention to the need of doing something for West Virginia. Governor
+Peirpoint, of that State, represented the Confederates under Loring as
+about 10,000 in number, and this reflected the opinion which Lightburn
+had formed during his retreat. It became the basis of calculation in the
+campaign which followed, though it greatly exaggerated Loring's force.
+Three days later Brigadier-General George W. Morgan was known to have
+reached the Ohio River with the division he had brought from Cumberland
+Gap, and General Halleck outlined a plan of action. He ordered Morgan's
+division to be sent to Gallipolis to take part in the advance into the
+Kanawha valley, where some new Ohio regiments were also to join them. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. p. 381.]</span> He at the same time called me to Washington to
+receive instructions under which I was to take command of the whole
+force operating on the Kanawha line. Brigadier-General Milroy had
+already (September 25th) been ordered to proceed thither with his
+brigade, which was in Washington and was part of Banks's forces
+garrisoning the capital. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id.</i>,
+pp. 355, 359.]</span> He was moved through Pennsylvania to Wheeling by
+rail, and thence down the Ohio River to Point Pleasant at the mouth of
+the Kanawha.</p>
+<p>My order to leave the Army of the Potomac reached me on Saturday
+evening. Much business had to be closed up before I could properly turn
+over the command of the Ninth Corps, but I was able to complete it and
+make the journey to Washington so as to report to General Halleck on
+Monday morning. He received me very kindly, and explained the necessity
+they were under to send some one to the Kanawha valley who knew the
+country. He was complimentary as to my former service there, and said my
+return to that region would meet the earnest wishes of the governors of
+West Virginia and Ohio, as well as the judgment of the War Department
+and of himself. To compensate for separating me from the command of the
+Ninth Corps, it had been decided to make my promotion at once and to put
+the whole of West Virginia under my command as a territorial district.
+He inquired into some details of the topography of the Kanawha valley
+and of my experience there, and concluded by saying that reinforcements
+would be sent to make the column I should lead in person stronger than
+the 10,000 attributed to Loring. My task would then be to drive back the
+enemy beyond the mountains. When that was accomplished, part of the
+troops would probably be withdrawn. The actual position of Milroy's
+brigade was not definitely known, and Governor Peirpoint of West
+Virginia had asked to have it sent to Clarksburg. This gave me the
+opportunity to urge that my own Kanawha division be detached from the
+Ninth Corps and sent back to Clarksburg, where with Milroy they would
+make a force strong enough to take care of that part of the State and to
+make a co-operative movement toward Gauley Bridge. This also was
+granted, and immediate promotion was given to Colonel Crook so that he
+might command the division, and a promise was made to do the like for
+Colonel Scammon, who would then be available for the command of the
+division still under Lightburn, whose retreat was strongly condemned as
+precipitate. No soldier could object to an arrangement so satisfactory
+as this, and though I still preferred to remain with the Army of the
+Potomac, I could only accept the new duty with sincere thanks for the
+consideration shown me. The General-in-Chief accompanied me to the room
+of the Secretary of War, and Mr. Stanton added to my sense of obligation
+by warm expressions of personal good-will. His manner was so different
+from the brusque one commonly attributed to him that I have nothing but
+pleasant remembrances of my relations to him, both then and later. My
+own appointment as major-general was handed me by him, the usual
+promotions of my personal staff were also made, and directions were
+given for the immediate appointment of Crook to be brigadier.</p>
+<p>I called to pay my respects to the President, but he was in Cabinet
+meeting and could not be seen. I had a short but warmly friendly visit
+with Mr. Chase later in the day, and was ready to leave town for my new
+post of duty by the evening train. The Secretary of War directed me to
+visit Wheeling and Columbus on my way, and then to report to General
+Wright at Cincinnati before going to the Kanawha valley. This was in
+fact the quickest way to reach the mouth of the Kanawha River, for the
+fall rains had not yet come to make the Ohio navigable, and from
+Columbus to Cincinnati, and thence by the Marietta Railway eastward,
+was, as the railway routes then ran, the best method of joining my
+command. The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was interrupted between
+Harper's Ferry and Hancock (about fifty miles) by the Confederate
+occupation of that part of Virginia. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. pp. 393, 394.]</span> General Crook was ordered to march the
+division from its camp in Pleasant Valley to Hancock, where trains on
+the western division of the railway would meet him and transport the
+troops to Clarksburg. For myself and staff, we took the uninterrupted
+railway line from Washington to Pittsburg, and thence to Wheeling, where
+we arrived on the evening of October 8th. The 9th was given to
+consultation with Governor Peirpoint and to communication with such
+military officers as were within reach. We reached Columbus on the both,
+when I had a similar consultation with Governor Tod and his military
+staff in regard to new regiments available for my use. Leaving Columbus
+in the afternoon, we arrived at Cincinnati late the same night, and on
+Saturday, the 11th, I reported to General Wright.</p>
+<p>He was an officer of the engineer corps of the regular army, a man
+of fine acquirements and of a serious and earnest character, whose
+military service throughout the war was marked by solidity and modesty.
+If there seemed at first a little <i>hauteur</i> in his manner, one soon
+saw that it was a natural reserve free from arrogance. The sort of
+confusion in which everything was, is indicated by the fact that he knew
+nothing of my whereabouts when informed from Washington that I would be
+ordered to the Kanawha, and on the same day (6th October) addressed a
+dispatch to me at Point Pleasant whilst I was receiving instructions
+from General Halleck in Washington. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xvi. pt. ii. p. 579.]</span> Our personal
+consultation established a thoroughly good understanding at once, and as
+long as I remained under his orders, I found him thoroughly considerate
+of my wishes and appreciative of my suggestions and of the conduct of my
+own part of the work to be done.</p>
+<p>Morgan's division, after reaching the Ohio River, had been moved to
+Portland on the Marietta Railroad, the nearest point to Gallipolis,
+which was twenty-five miles away and nearly opposite the mouth of the
+Great Kanawha. His retreat had been through a sparsely settled country,
+much of which was a wilderness, rugged and broken in the extreme. His
+wagons had broken down, his teams were used up, his soldiers were worn
+out, ragged, and barefoot. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id.</i>,
+pt. i. p. 990.]</span> Many arms and accoutrements had been lost, and
+the command was imperatively in need of complete refitting and a little
+rest. The men had been largely recruited in East Tennessee and Kentucky,
+and were unwilling to serve in any other theatre of war. The
+Tennesseans, indeed, were reported to be mutinous at the news that they
+were to be sent to the Kanawha valley. General Wright issued orders for
+the refitting of the command, and promised such delay and rest as might
+be found practicable. He detached three regiments to serve in Kentucky,
+and directed their place to be made good by three new Ohio regiments
+then organizing. The division was permitted to remain at Portland till
+imperatively needed for my movement.</p>
+<p>There were no trains running on the railroad on Sunday, and Monday
+morning, the 13th October, was the earliest possible start on the
+remainder of my journey. I left Cincinnati at that time, and with my
+personal staff reached Portland in the afternoon. Morgan's division was
+found to be in quite as bad condition as had been reported, but he was
+in daily expectation of the new equipments and clothing, as well as
+wagons for his baggage-train and fresh horses for his artillery. It was
+stated also that a paymaster had been ordered to join the division, with
+funds to pay part at least of the large arrears of pay due to the men.
+This looked hopeful, but still implied some further delay. Uneasy to
+learn the actual condition of affairs with Lightburn's command, I
+determined to reach Gallipolis the same night. Our horses had been left
+behind, and being thus dismounted, we took passage in a four-horse hack,
+a square wagon on springs, enclosed with rubber-cloth curtains. Night
+fell soon after we began our journey, and as we were pushing on in the
+dark, the driver blundered and upset us off the end of a little
+sluiceway bridge into a mud-hole. He managed to jump from his seat and
+hold his team, but there was no help for us who were buttoned in. The
+mud was soft and deep, and as the wagon settled on its side, we were
+tumbled in a promiscuous heap into the ooze and slime, which completely
+covered us. We were not long in climbing out, and seeing lights in a
+farm-house, made our way to it. As we came into the light of the lamps
+and of a brisk fire burning on the open hearth, we were certainly as
+sorry a military spectacle as could be imagined. We were most kindly
+received, the men taking lanterns and going to our driver's help, whilst
+we stood before the fire, and scraped the thick mud from our uniforms
+with chips from the farmer's woodyard, making rather boisterous sport of
+our mishap. Before the wagon had been righted and partly cleaned, we had
+scraped and sponged each other off and were ready to go on. We noticed,
+however, that the room had filled with men, women, and children from the
+neighborhood, who stood bashfully back in the shadows, and who modestly
+explained that they had heard there was a "live general" there, and as
+they had never seen one, they had "come over." They must have formed
+some amusing ideas of military personages, and we found at least as much
+sport in being the menagerie as they did in visiting it. Our mishap made
+us wait for the moon, which rose in an hour or so, and we then took
+leave of our entertainers and our audience and drove on, with no desire,
+however, to repeat the performance. We made some ten miles more of the
+road, but found it so rough, and our progress so slow, that we were glad
+to find quarters for the rest of the night, finishing the journey in
+the morning.</p>
+<p>On reaching my field of duty, my first task was to inspect the
+forces at Point Pleasant, and learn what was necessary to make a forward
+movement as soon as Morgan's troops should reach me. General Wright had
+originally expected that inclusive of Milroy's and Morgan's troops, I
+should find at the mouth of the Kanawha, on arriving there, some 20,000
+men. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records,
+vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 402.]</span> In fact, however, Lightburn's
+diminished command had only been reinforced by three new Ohio regiments
+(the Eighty-ninth, Ninety-first, and Ninety-second) and a new one from
+West Virginia (the Thirteenth), and with these his strength was less
+than 7300, officers and men, showing that his original command was sadly
+reduced by straggling and desertion during his retreat. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 522.]</span>
+The new regiments were made up of good material, but as they were raw
+recruits, their usefulness must for some time be greatly limited.</p>
+<p>Two regiments of infantry and a squadron of cavalry with a howitzer
+battery were at Guyandotte, under Colonel Jonathan Cranor of the
+Fortieth Ohio, and the Fifth West Virginia was at Ceredo near the mouth
+of the Big Sandy River. They had been stationed at these points to
+protect the navigation of the Ohio and to repel the efforts of the
+Confederate Cavalry General Jenkins to "raid" that region in which was
+his old home. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. pp. 459, 522.]</span> They formed, a little
+later, the Third Brigade of the Kanawha division under Crook.</p>
+<p>I found General Milroy in command as the ranking officer present,
+and he had sent Cranor's command down the river. When Governor Peirpoint
+learned that Milroy's brigade had passed Wheeling on his way to the
+Kanawha, he applied urgently to General Wright to send him, instead,
+from Parkersburg by rail to Clarksburg to form the nucleus of a column
+to move southward from that point upon the rear of Loring's forces.
+Wright assented, for both he and Halleck accepted the plan of converging
+columns from Clarksburg and Point Pleasant, and regarded that from the
+former place as the more important. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.
+p. 402.]</span> If directions were sent to Milroy to this effect, they
+seem to have miscarried. Besides his original brigade, some new Indiana
+regiments were ordered to report to him. He had, with characteristic
+lack of reflection and without authority, furloughed the Fifth West
+Virginia regiment in mass and sent the men home. I gave him a new one in
+place of this, ordered him to reassemble the other as soon as possible,
+and to march at once to Parkersburg, proceeding thence to Clarksburg by
+rail. The new troops added to his command enabled him to organize them
+into a division of two brigades, and still other regiments were added to
+him later. Milroy was a picturesque character, with some excellent
+qualities. A tall man, with trenchant features, bright eyes, a great
+shock of gray hair standing out from his head, he was a marked personal
+figure. He was brave, but his bravery was of the excitable kind that
+made him unbalanced and nearly wild on the battle-field. His
+impulsiveness made him erratic in all performances of duty, and
+negligent of the system without which the business of an army cannot go
+on. This was shown in his furlough of a regiment whilst <i>en route</i>
+to reinforce Lightburn, who was supposed to be in desperate straits. It
+is also seen in the absence of Official Records of the organization of
+his command at this time, so that we cannot tell what regiments
+constituted it when his division was assembled at Clarksburg. He is
+described, in the second Battle of Bull Run, as crazily careering over
+the field, shouting advice to other officers instead of gathering and
+leading his own command, which he said was routed and scattered. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xii.
+pt. ii. pp. 342, 362-364.]</span> Under the immediate control of a firm
+and steady hand he could do good service, but was wholly unfit for
+independent responsibility. His demonstrative manner, his boiling
+patriotism, and his political zeal gave him prominence and made him a
+favorite with the influential war-governor of Indiana, Oliver P. Morton,
+who pushed his military advancement.</p>
+<p>The Kanawha division left the Army of the Potomac on the 8th of
+October and reached Hancock on the 10th. There it crossed the track of a
+raid of the Confederate cavalry into Pennsylvania, under Stuart. By
+McClellan's order one brigade was sent to McConnelsville to intercept
+the enemy, and the other was halted. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. xix. pt.
+ii. pp. 62-78.]</span> By the 13th Crook had been allowed to concentrate
+the division at Hancock again, but was kept waiting for orders, so that
+he was not able to report to me his arrival at Clarksburg till the 20th.
+Colonel Scammon was on a short leave of absence during this march, and
+was promoted. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: His new
+rank dated from 15th October, that of Crook from 7th September. Army
+Register, 1863.]</span> He reported to me in person in his new rank of
+brigadier a little later. The brigades of the Kanawha division were
+commanded by the senior colonels present.</p>
+<p>The increase of troops in the district made immediate need of
+transportation and munitions and supplies of all kinds. The Kanawha
+division had not been allowed to bring away with it its admirably
+equipped supply train, but its energetic quartermaster, Captain Fitch,
+came with the troops, and I immediately made him chief quartermaster of
+the district. Milroy's division had no wagons, neither had Morgan's. The
+fall rains had not yet raised the rivers, and only boats of lightest
+draught could move on the Ohio, whilst navigation on the Kanawha was
+wholly suspended. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 433.]</span> Four hundred wagons
+and two thousand mules were estimated as necessary to supply two moving
+columns of ten thousand men each, in addition to such trains as were
+still available in the district. Only one hundred wagons could be
+promised from the depot at Cincinnati, none of which reached me before
+the enemy was driven out of the Kanawha valley. I was authorized to
+contract for one hundred more to be built at Wheeling, where, however,
+the shops could only construct thirty-five per week, and these began to
+reach the troops only after the 1st of November. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 535-537.]</span>
+We hoped for rains which would give us navigation in the Kanawha in
+spite of the suffering which wet weather at that season must produce,
+and I ordered wagons and teams to be hired from the country people as
+far as this could be done. Similar delays and trouble occurred in
+procuring advance stores and equipments. Part of Morgan's men were
+delayed at the last moment by their new knapsacks coming to them without
+the straps which fasten them to the shoulders. General Wright blamed the
+depot officers for this, and took from me and my subordinates all
+responsibility for the delays; <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+., pp. 438, 475.]</span> but the incidents make an instructive lesson in
+the difficulty of suddenly organizing a new and strong military column
+in a region distant from large depots of supply. It also shows the
+endless cost and mischief that may result from an ill-advised retreat
+and destruction of property at such posts as Gauley Bridge and
+Charleston. To put the local quartermasters at Gallipolis and other
+towns on the Ohio side of the river under my command, General Wright
+enlarged the boundaries of my district so as to include the line of Ohio
+counties bordering on the river. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. pp. 381, 421.]</span> </p>
+<p>On visiting Lightburn's command at Point Pleasant, I ordered a
+brigade to be sent forward next day (15th) to Ten-mile Creek, repairing
+the road and bridges, whilst a scouting party of experienced men started
+out at once to penetrate the country by circuitous ways and to collect
+information. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 433.]</span> In two or three days bits of news began to arrive, with
+rumors that Loring was retreating. The truth was that he in fact
+withdrew his infantry, leaving Jenkins with the cavalry and irregular
+forces to hold the valley for a time, and then to make a circuit
+northward by way of Bulltown, Sutton, etc., gaining the Beverly turnpike
+near the mountains and rejoining the infantry, which would march to join
+Lee by roads intersecting that highway at Monterey. Such at least was
+the purpose Loring communicated to the Confederate War Department; but
+he was not allowed to attempt it. His instructions had been to march his
+whole command by the route Jenkins was taking and at least to hold the
+valley stubbornly as far as Charleston. On receipt of the news that he
+was retreating, orders were sent him to turn over the command to
+Brigadier-General John Echols, the next in rank, and to report in person
+at Richmond. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: ., pp.
+661, 667.]</span> Echols was ordered immediately to resume the positions
+which had been abandoned, and did so as rapidly as possible. Loring had
+in fact begun his retreat on the 11th, three days before I reached
+Gallipolis, but the first information of it was got after the scouting
+had been begun which is mentioned above. By the 18th I was able to give
+General Wright confirmation of the news and a correct outline of
+Loring's plan, though we had not then learned that Echols was marching
+back to Charleston. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. p. 449.]</span> We heard of his
+return two or three days later. As evidence of the rapidity with which
+information reached the enemy, it is noteworthy that Lee knew my command
+had left the Army of the Potomac for West Virginia on the 11th October,
+three days after Crook marched from camp in Pleasant Valley. He reported
+to Richmond that four brigades had gone to that region, which was
+accurate as to the number, though only half right as to identification
+of the brigades. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 662, 663.]</span> On the 13th he sent further information that I had
+been promoted and assigned to command the district.</p>
+<p>By the 20th there had been a slight rise in the Kanawha River, so
+that it was possible to use small steamboats to carry supplies for the
+troops, and Lightburn was ordered to advance his whole division to Red
+House, twenty-five miles, and to remove obstructions to navigation which
+had been planted there. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 456, 459.]</span> One brigade of Morgan's division was in condition
+to move, and it was ordered from Portland to Gallipolis. The rest were
+to follow at the earliest possible moment. The discontent of the East
+Tennessee regiments had not been lessened by the knowledge they had that
+powerful political influences were at work to second their desire to be
+moved back into the neighborhood of their home. On the 10th of October a
+protest against their being sent into West Virginia was made by Horace
+Maynard, the loyal representative of East Tennessee in Congress, a man
+of marked character and ability and deservedly very influential with the
+government. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+vol. xvi. pt. ii. pp. 604, 635, 651.]</span> Maynard addressed Halleck a
+second time on the subject on the 22d, and on the 29th Andrew Johnson,
+then military governor of Tennessee, wrote to President Lincoln for the
+same purpose. It hardly need be said that the preparation of those
+regiments would proceed slowly, pending such negotiations. Their distant
+homes and families were at the mercy of the enemy, and it seemed to them
+intolerable that their faces should be turned in any other direction. I
+suggested an exchange for new Ohio regiments, but as these were not yet
+filled up, it could not be done. General Wright assured them that they
+should be sent to Kentucky as soon as we were again in possession of
+West Virginia. Most of these regiments came under my command again later
+in the war, and I became warmly attached to them. Their drill and
+discipline were always lax, but their courage and devotion to the
+national cause could not be excelled.</p>
+<p>It was not till the 23d that any of Morgan's men really entered into
+the forward movement in the valley. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. pp. 474, 475.]</span> On that day
+the brigade of Colonel John F. DeCourcey (Sixteenth Ohio), composed of
+Ohio and Kentucky troops, reached Ten-mile Creek and was ordered to
+march to Red House the day after. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Colonel DeCourcey was an Irishman of good family, who took service in
+our army, and was a good officer. He afterwards inherited an Irish
+baronage.]</span> Lightburn was busy clearing the river of obstructions
+and preparing to move to Pocataligo River as the next step in advance.
+Of the other brigades belonging to Morgan, that of Brigadier-General
+Samuel P. Carter, composed partly of Tennesseans, was at Gallipolis,
+intending to enter the valley on the 24th. The remaining brigade, under
+Brigadier-General James G. Spears, was entirely Tennessean, and was
+still at Portland where the paymaster had just arrived and was giving
+the regiments part payment.</p>
+<p>My purpose was to concentrate the force at Pocataligo, assume the
+command in person, and attack the enemy in the positions in front of
+Charleston, in which Wise had resisted me in the previous year. I should
+have been glad to make the expected movement of a column from Clarksburg
+under Crook and Milroy co-operate directly with my own, but
+circumstances made it impracticable. The operations of the Confederate
+cavalry under Jenkins were keeping the country north of the Kanawha in a
+turmoil, and reports had become rife that he would work his way out
+toward Beverly. The country was also full of rumors of a new invasion
+from East Virginia. Milroy's forces were not yet fully assembled at
+Clarksburg on the 20th, but he was ordered to operate toward Beverly,
+whilst Crook, with the old Kanawha division, should move on Summersville
+and Gauley Bridge. Both had to depend on hiring wagons for
+transportation of supplies. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. pp. 459, 481, 482.]</span> Separated
+as they were, they would necessarily be cautious in their movements,
+making the suppression of guerillas, the driving out of raiders, and the
+general quieting of the country their principal task. Their r&ocirc;le
+was thus, of course, made subordinate to the movement of my own column,
+which must force its own way without waiting for results from other
+operations.</p>
+<p>Half of Carter's brigade was, at the last moment, delayed at
+Gallipolis, the clothing and equipments sent to them there being found
+incomplete. Just half of Morgan's division with two batteries of
+artillery were in motion on the 24th. On that day Lightburn was moved to
+Pocataligo, about forty miles from the river mouth, where I joined him
+in person on the 27th. A cold storm of mingled rain and snow had made
+the march and bivouac very uncomfortable for a couple of days. General
+Morgan accompanied me, and during the 28th the active column of three
+and a half brigades was concentrated, two or three other regiments being
+in echelon along the river below. Tyler Mountain behind Tyler Creek was,
+as formerly, the place at which the enemy was posted to make a stand
+against our further progress, though he had no considerable force on the
+south side of the river at the mouth of Scary Creek. Reconnoissances
+showed nothing but cavalry in our immediate front, and it afterwards
+appeared that Echols began a rapid retreat from Charleston on that day. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. p. 685.]</span> He had called to him Jenkins with the greater
+part of the cavalry, and entrusted to the latter the duty of holding us
+back as much as possible. Suspecting this from evidence collected at
+Pocataligo, I determined to put Siber's brigade and a battery, all in
+light marching order, on the south side of the river, accompanied by a
+light-draught steamboat, which the rise in the river after the storm
+enabled us to use as far as Charleston. This brigade could turn the
+strong position at Tyler Mountain, and passing beyond this promontory on
+the opposite side of the river, could command with artillery fire the
+river road on the other bank behind the enemy in our front. The
+steamboat would enable them to make a rapid retreat if the belief that
+no great force was on that side of the river should prove to be a
+mistake. Siber was also furnished with a battery of four mountain
+howitzers, which could be carried to the edge of the water or anywhere
+that men could march. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 504, 509, 530.]</span> </p>
+<p>On the right bank of the river (north side) the principal column of
+two brigades (Toland's and DeCourcey's) advanced on the turnpike near
+the stream, having one six-gun battery and a section of twenty-pounder
+Parrots with them. What was present of Carter's brigade was sent by the
+mountain road further from the stream, to cover our left and to turn the
+flank of the Tyler Mountain position, if a stubborn stand should be made
+there. A light six-gun battery accompanied it. All moved forward
+simultaneously on the morning of the 29th. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ibid</i>.]</span> The
+dispositions thus made rendered it vain for the enemy's cavalry to offer
+any stubborn resistance, and Jenkins abandoned Tyler Mountain on our
+approach, thus giving us certain knowledge that he was not closely
+supported by the infantry. Our advance-guard reached the Elk River
+opposite Charleston in the afternoon, and I made personal reconnoissance
+of the means of crossing. The suspension bridge had been ruined in
+Lightburn's retreat, and the enemy had depended upon a bridge of boats
+for communication with their troops in the lower valley. These boats had
+been taken to the further bank of the river and partly destroyed, but as
+the enemy had continued his retreat, we soon had a party over collecting
+those that could be used, and other flatboats used in the coal trade,
+and a practicable bridge was reconstructed before night of the 30th. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. p. 530.]</span> Meanwhile I entered the town with the
+advance-guard as soon as we had a boat to use for a ferry, and spent the
+night of the 29th there. We had friends enough in the place to put us
+quickly in possession of all the news, and I was soon satisfied that
+Echols had no thought of trying to remain on the western side of the
+mountains. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 515, 520.]</span> </p>
+<p>The column crossed the Elk late in the afternoon of the 30th, and I
+pushed Toland's and Carter's brigades to Malden and Camp Piatt that
+evening, Siber's brigade advancing to Brownstown on the other side of
+the Kanawha River. Lightburn's division was ordered forward next day to
+Gauley Bridge, Carter's brigade at Malden was ordered to send strong
+parties southward into Boone County, to reconnoitre and to put down
+guerilla bands. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 530.]</span> DeCourcey's brigade was halted at Charleston, and
+Spears' Tennessee brigade was directed to remain at Gallipolis till
+further orders. Communication was opened with Crook, who was ordered to
+press forward via Summersville to Gauley Bridge as quickly as possible. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. p. 520.]</span> The retreating enemy had burned the bridges,
+obstructed the roads with fallen timber, and cut and destroyed the
+flatboats along the river; so that the first and most pressing task was
+to reopen roads, make ferries and bridges, and thus renew the means of
+getting supplies to the troops. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 536.]</span> The river was still low, unusually so for the season,
+and the water was falling. Every energy was therefore necessary to get
+forward supplies to Gauley Bridge and the other up-river posts, for if
+the river should freeze whilst low, the winter transportation would be
+confined to the almost impassable roads. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 537.]</span>
+I reported to General Wright the re-occupation of the valley, our lack
+of wagon-trains for further advance, and all the facts which would
+assist in deciding whether anything further should be attempted. I did
+not conceal the opinion which all my experience had confirmed, that no
+military advantage could be secured by trying to extend operation by
+this route across the mountains into the James River valley.</p>
+<p>On the 2d of November Brigadier-General Scammon reported for duty,
+and I ordered him to Gauley Bridge to assume command of the division
+which was then under Colonel Lightburn, who resumed the command of his
+brigade. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ibid</i>.]</span>
+Scammon was directed to inspect carefully all our old positions as far
+as Raleigh C. H., to report whether the recent retreat of troops from
+Fayetteville had been due to any improper location of the fortifications
+there, to examine the road up Loup Creek, and any others which might be
+used by the enemy to turn our position at Gauley Bridge, to state the
+present conditions of buildings at all the upper posts, and whether any
+storehouses had escaped destruction. In short, we needed the material on
+which to base intelligent plans for a more secure holding of the region
+about the falls of the Kanawha, or for a further advance to the eastward
+if it should be ordered.</p>
+<p>The information which came to me as soon as I was in actual contact
+with the enemy, not only satisfied me that Loring's forces had been
+greatly exaggerated, but led me to estimate them at a lower figure than
+the true one. In reporting to General Wright on 1st November, I gave the
+opinion that they amounted to about 3500 infantry, but with a
+disproportionate amount of artillery, some twenty pieces. The cavalry
+under Jenkins numbered probably 1000 or 1500 horse. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xix.
+pt. ii. p. 531.]</span> About the first of October Loring, in a dispatch
+to Richmond, stated his force at "only a little more than 4000," <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 635.]</span>
+which probably means that the 5000 with which he entered the valley were
+somewhat reduced by the sick and by desertions. He seems to refer to his
+infantry, for Jenkins's command had been an independent one. It would be
+reasonable, therefore, to put his total strength at some 6000 or a
+little higher. On our side, the column with which I actually advanced
+was just about 9000 men, with 2000 more of Morgan's command within
+reach, had there been need to call them up from the Ohio River.</p>
+<p>On the 8th of November Halleck telegraphed to General Wright that no
+posts need be established beyond Gauley Bridge, and that about half of
+my command should be sent to Tennessee and the Mississippi valley. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 556, 557.]</span>
+On the same day General Wright formally approved my views as submitted
+to him, and ordered Morgan's division to be sent to Cincinnati at once. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 537.]</span>
+It was thus definitively settled that my task for the winter would be to
+restore the condition of affairs in West Virginia which had existed
+before Loring's invasion, and organize my district with a view to prompt
+and easy supply of my posts, the suppression of lawlessness and
+bushwhacking, the support of the State authorities, and the instruction
+and discipline of officers and men. My first attention was given to the
+question of transportation, for the winter was upon us and wagons were
+very scarce. The plan of using the river to the utmost was an economy as
+well as a necessity, and I returned to my former arrangement of using
+batteaux for the shallow and swift waters of the upper river, connecting
+with the movable head of steamboat navigation. A tour of inspection to
+Gauley Bridge and the posts in that vicinity satisfied me that they were
+in good condition for mutual support, and for carrying on a system of
+scouting which could be made a useful discipline and instruction to the
+troops, as well as the means of keeping thoroughly informed of the
+movements of the enemy.</p>
+<p>The line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad was kept under the
+control of General Kelley, and his authority extended to active
+co-operation with the Army of the Potomac in keeping open communication
+with Washington. In case of need, the commander of that army was
+authorized to give orders to General Kelley direct, without waiting to
+transmit them through my headquarters. General Milroy was established on
+the Beverly front, communicating on his left with General Kelley and on
+his right with General Crook, at Gauley Bridge. General Scammon had his
+station at Fayette C. H., covering the front on the south side of New
+River, whilst Crook watched the north side and extended his posts in
+Milroy's direction as far as Summersville. Colonel Cranor remained on
+the Ohio near Guyandotte, scouting the valley of the Guyandotte River
+and communicating with Charleston and other posts on the Kanawha.</p>
+<p>On the 12th of November reports were received from General Kelley
+that authentic information showed that Jackson was advancing from the
+Shenandoah valley upon West Virginia. Similar information reached army
+headquarters at Washington, and in anticipation of possible necessity
+for it, I directed Milroy to hold himself in readiness to march at once
+to join Kelley, if the latter should call upon him. I telegraphed
+General Wright that I did not think the report would prove well founded,
+but it put everybody upon the alert for a little while. Kelley had
+beaten up a camp of Confederates under Imboden about eighteen miles
+above Moorefield on the south branch of the Potomac, causing
+considerable loss to the enemy in killed and wounded and capturing fifty
+prisoners. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xix. pt. ii. pp. 572, 573, 578, 585, 586.]</span> Some
+movement to support Imboden probably gave rise to the story of Jackson's
+advance, but Lee kept both corps of his army in hand and moved the whole
+down the Rappahannock soon afterward, to meet Burnside's advance upon
+Fredericksburg.</p>
+<p>The invasion of the Kanawha valley by Loring had stirred up much
+bitter feeling again between Union men and Confederates, and was
+followed by the usual quarrels and recriminations among neighbors. The
+Secessionists were stimulated to drop the prudent reserve they had
+practised before, and some of them, in the hope that the Confederate
+occupation would be permanent, persecuted loyal men who were in their
+power. The retreat of the enemy brought its day of reckoning, and was
+accompanied by a fresh emigration to eastern Virginia of a considerable
+number of the more pronounced Secessionists. I have said <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ante</i>, p. 154.]</span>
+that Mr. George Summers, formerly the leading man of the valley, had
+studiously avoided political activity after the war began; but this did
+not save him from the hostility of his disloyal neighbors. Very shortly
+after my re-occupation of Charleston he called upon me one evening and
+asked for a private interview. He had gone through a painful experience,
+he said, and as it would pretty surely come to my ears, he preferred I
+should hear it from himself, before enemies or tale-bearers should
+present it with such coloring as they might choose. During the
+Confederate occupation he had maintained his secluded life and kept
+aloof from contact with the military authorities. Their officers,
+however, summoned him before them, charged him with treason to Virginia
+and to the Confederate States, and demanded of him that he take the oath
+of allegiance to the Southern government. He demurred to this, and urged
+that as he had scrupulously avoided public activity, it would be harsh
+and unjust to force him to a test which he could not conscientiously
+take. They were in no mood to listen to argument, and charged that his
+acquiescence in the rule of the new state government of West Virginia
+was, in his case, more injurious to the Confederate cause than many
+another man's active unionism. Finding Mr. Summers disposed to be firm,
+they held him in arrest; and as he still refused to yield, he was told
+that he should be tied by a rope to the tail of a wagon and forced to
+march in that condition, as a prisoner, over the mountains to Richmond.</p>
+<p>He was an elderly man, used to a refined and easy life, somewhat
+portly in person, and, as he said, he fully believed such treatment
+would kill him. The fierceness of their manner convinced him that they
+meant to execute the threat, and looking upon it as a sentence of death,
+he yielded and took the oath. He said that being in duress of such a
+sort, and himself a lawyer, he considered that he had a moral right to
+escape from his captors in this way, though he would not have yielded to
+anything short of what seemed to him an imminent danger of his life. The
+obligation, he declared, was utterly odious to him and was not binding
+on his conscience; but he had lost no time in putting himself into my
+hands, and would submit to whatever I should decide in the matter. It
+would be humiliating and subject him to misconstruction by others if he
+took conflicting oaths, but he was willing to abjure the obligation he
+had taken, if I demanded it, and would voluntarily renew his allegiance
+to the United States with full purpose to keep it.</p>
+<p>He was deeply agitated, and I thoroughly pitied him. My acquaintance
+with him in my former campaign gave me entire confidence in his
+sincerity, and made me wish to spare him any fresh embarrassment or
+pain. After a moment's reflection, I replied that I did not doubt
+anything he had told me of the facts or of his own sentiments in regard
+to them. His experience only confirmed my distrust of all test oaths.
+Either his conscience already bound him to the National government, or
+it did not. In either case I could not make his loyalty more sure by a
+fresh oath, and believing that the one he had taken under duress was
+void in fact as well as in his own conscience, I would leave the matter
+there and ask nothing more of him. He was greatly relieved by my
+decision, but bore himself with dignity. I never saw any reason to be
+sorry for the course I took, and believe that he was always afterward
+consistent and steady in his loyalty to the United States.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX</p>
+<p>WINTER QUARTERS, 1862-63--PROMOTIONS AND POLITICS</p>
+<p>Central position of Marietta, Ohio--Connection with all parts of
+West Virginia--Drill and instruction of troops--Guerilla
+warfare--Partisan Rangers--Confederate laws--Disposal of
+plunder--Mosby's Rangers as a type--Opinions of Lee, Stuart, and
+Rosser--Effect on other troops--Rangers finally abolished--Rival
+home-guards and militia--Horrors of neighborhood war--Staff and staff
+duties--Reduction of forces--General Cluseret--Later connection with the
+Paris Commune--His relations with Milroy--He resigns--Political
+situation--Congressmen distrust Lincoln--Cutler's diary--Resolutions
+regarding appointments of general officers--The number authorized by
+law--Stanton's report--Effect of Act of July, 1862--An excess of nine
+major-generals--The legal questions involved--Congressional patronage
+and local distribution--Ready for a "deal"--Bill to increase the number
+of generals--A "slate" made up to exhaust the number--Senate and House
+disagree--Conference--Agreement in last hours of the session--The new
+list--A few vacancies by resignation, etc.--List of those dropped--My
+own case--Faults of the method--Lincoln's humorous comments--Curious
+case of General Turchin--Congestion in the highest
+grades--Effects--Confederate grades of general and
+lieutenant-general--Superiority of our system--Cotemporaneous reports
+and criticisms--New regiments instead of recruiting old ones--Sherman's
+trenchant opinion.</p>
+<p>Early in December I established my winter headquarters at Marietta
+on the Ohio River, a central position from which communication could be
+had most easily with all parts of the district and with department
+headquarters. It was situated at the end of the railway line from
+Cincinnati to the Ohio River near Parkersburg, where the Baltimore and
+Ohio Railroad met the Cincinnati line. The Baltimore road, coming from
+the east, forked at Grafton in West Virginia and reached Wheeling, as
+has been described in an earlier chapter. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ante</i>, pp. 40, 42.]</span>
+The river was usually navigable during the winter and made an easy
+communication with Wheeling as with the lower towns. I was thus
+conveniently situated for most speedily reaching every part of my
+command, in person or otherwise. It took but a little while to get
+affairs so organized that the routine of work ran on quietly and
+pleasantly. No serious effort was made by the enemy to re-enter the
+district during the winter, and except some local outbreaks of
+"bush-whacking" and petty guerilla warfare, there was nothing to
+interrupt the progress of the troops in drill and instruction.</p>
+<p>A good deal of obscurity still hangs about the subject of guerilla
+warfare, and the relation of the Confederate government to it. There
+was, no doubt, a good deal of loose talk that found its way into print
+and helped form a popular opinion, which treated almost every scouting
+party as if it were a lawless organization of "bush-whackers." But there
+was an authoritative and systematic effort of the Richmond government to
+keep up partisan bodies within our lines which should be soldiers when
+they had a chance to do us a mischief, and citizens when they were in
+danger of capture and punishment. When Fremont assumed command of the
+Mountain Department, he very early called the attention of the Secretary
+of War to the fact that Governor Letcher was sending commissions into
+West Virginia, authorizing the recipients to enlist companies to be used
+against us in irregular warfare. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xii. pt. iii. p. 75.]</span> </p>
+<p>The bands which were organized by the Confederate Government under
+authority of law, but which were free from the control of army
+commanders and unrestrained by the checks upon lawlessness which are
+found in subordination to the operations of organized armies, were
+called "Partisan Rangers," and protection as legitimate soldiers was
+promised them. They were not required to camp with the army, or to
+remain together as troops or regiments. They wore uniforms or not, as
+the whim might take them. They remained, as much as they dared, in their
+home region, and assembled, usually at night, at a preconcerted signal
+from their leaders, to make a "raid." They were not paid as the more
+regular troops were, but were allowed to keep the horses which they
+captured or "lifted." They were nominally required to turn over the
+beef-cattle and army stores to the Confederate commissariat, but after a
+captured wagon-train had been looted by them, not much of value would be
+found in it. Their raids were made by such numbers as might chance to be
+got together. Stuart, the brilliant Confederate cavalry commander,
+whilst crediting Mosby with being the best of the partisans, said of
+him, "he usually operates with only one-fourth of his nominal strength.
+Such organizations, as a rule, are detrimental to the best interests of
+the army at large." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxxiii. p. 1082.]</span> General Lee, in
+forwarding one of Mosby's reports, commended his boldness and good
+management, but added: "I have heard that he has now with him a large
+number of men, yet his expeditions are undertaken with very few, and his
+attention seems more directed to the capture of sutlers' wagons, etc.,
+than to the injury of the enemy's communications and outposts.... I do
+not know the cause for undertaking his expeditions with so few men;
+whether it is from policy or the difficulty of collecting them. I have
+heard of his men, among them officers, being in rear of this army,
+selling captured goods, sutlers' stores, etc. This had better be
+attended to by others. It has also been reported to me that many
+deserters from this army have joined him. Among them have been seen
+members of the Eighth Virginia Regiment." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol xxix. pt.
+ii. p.652.]</span> In the "Richmond Examiner" of August 18, 1863 (the
+same date as General Lee's letter), was the statement that "At a sale of
+Yankee plunder taken by Mosby and his men, held at Charlottesville last
+week, thirty-odd thousand dollars were realized, to be divided among the
+gallant band." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxix. pt. ii. p. 653.]</span> </p>
+<p>The injury to the discipline of their own army gradually brought
+leading officers of the Confederates to the conviction that the
+"Partisan Rangers" cost more than they were worth. In January, 1864,
+General Rosser, one of the most distinguished cavalry officers of the
+South, made a formal communication to General Lee on the subject.
+"During the time I have been in the valley," he said, "I have had ample
+opportunity of judging of the efficiency and usefulness of the many
+irregular bodies of troops which occupy this country, known as
+partisans, etc., and am prompted by no other feeling than a desire to
+serve my country, to inform you that they are a nuisance and an evil to
+the service. Without discipline, order, or organization, they roam
+broadcast over the country, a band of thieves, stealing, pillaging,
+plundering, and doing every manner of mischief and crime. They are a
+terror to the citizens and an injury to the cause. They never fight;
+can't be made to fight. Their leaders are generally brave, but few of
+the men are good soldiers, and have engaged in this business for the
+sake of gain." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+vol. xxxiii. p. 1081.]</span> After classifying the mischiefs to the
+regular service, he continues: "It is almost impossible to manage the
+different companies of my brigade that are from Loudoun, Fauquier,
+Fairfax, etc., the region occupied by Mosby. They see these men living
+at their ease and enjoying the comforts of home, allowed to possess all
+that they capture, and their duties mere pastime pleasures compared with
+their own arduous ones, and it is a natural consequence, in the nature
+of man, that he should become dissatisfied under these circumstances.
+Patriotism fails, in a long and tedious war like this, to sustain the
+ponderous burdens which bear heavily and cruelly upon the heart and soul
+of man." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxxiii. p. 1081.]</span> General Rosser recommended the
+absorption of the partisan bodies into the ordinary brigades, using
+their supposed talents for scouting by sending them on expeditions as
+regular patrols and reconnoitring parties, reporting to their proper
+command as soon as the duty was done.</p>
+<p>It was upon Rosser's communication that Stuart made the endorsement
+already quoted, and Lee sent it forward to the War Department, further
+endorsed thus: "As far as my knowledge and experience extend, there is
+much truth in the statement of General Rosser. I recommend that the law
+authorizing these partisan corps be abolished. The evils resulting from
+their organization more than counterbalance the good they accomplish."
+The Secretary of War, Mr. Siddon, drafted a bill to abolish them, and it
+passed the Confederate House. Delay occurring in the Senate, the matter
+was compromised by transferring all the Rangers except Mosby's and
+McNeill's to the line. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 1082, 1253.]</span> As it was to Mosby's that the reported facts
+applied, and all agreed that his was the best of the lot, we may imagine
+what must have been the character of the rest.</p>
+<p>In the first two winters of the war, these organizations were in the
+height of their pernicious activity, and the loyal West Virginians were
+their favorite victims. We knew almost nothing of their organization,
+except that they claimed some Confederate law for their being. We seldom
+found them in uniform, and had no means of distinguishing them from any
+other armed horse-stealers and "bush-whackers." We were, however, made
+unpleasantly certain of the fact that in every neighborhood where
+secession sentiments were rife, our messengers were waylaid and killed,
+small parties were ambushed, and all the exasperating forms of guerilla
+warfare were abundant. Besides all this, the Confederate authorities
+assumed to call out the militia of counties into which they were
+intending to make an expedition, so that they might have the temporary
+co-operation of local troops. They claimed the right to do this because
+they had not recognized the separation of West Virginia, and insisted
+that the whole was subject to the laws of Virginia. The result was that
+the Union men formed companies of "Home Guards" for self-protection, and
+the conflict of arms was carried into every settlement in the mountain
+nooks and along the valleys. In this kind of fighting there was no
+quarter given, or if prisoners were taken, they were too often reported
+as having met with fatal accidents before they could be handed over to
+the regular authorities. As all this could have no effect upon the
+progress of the war, the more cool and intelligent heads of both sides
+opposed it, and gradually diminished it. Severe measures against it were
+in fact merciful, for the horrors of war are always least when the
+fighting is left to the armies of responsible belligerents, unprovoked
+by the petty but exasperating hostilities of irregulars. The trouble
+from this source was less during the winter of 1862-63 than it had been
+the year before, but it still gave occupation to small movable columns
+of our troops from time to time.</p>
+<p>The organization of my staff was somewhat increased with the
+enlargement of responsibilities. Lieutenant-Colonel McElroy, who had
+been my adjutant-general in the campaign of 1861, returned to me as
+inspector-general and took the whole supervision of the equipment,
+drill, and instruction of the troops of the district. Major Bascom, who
+had received his promotion at the same time with mine, continued to be
+adjutant-general. The increased work in looking after supplies made more
+force in the commissariat a necessity, and Captain Barriger of the
+regular army was sent to me, my former commissary, Captain Treat,
+continuing on the staff. Barriger was a modest, clear-headed officer of
+admirable business qualifications, whom I had the good fortune to be
+again associated with late in the war. Three principal depots of supply
+were established at the bases of the principal lines of communication in
+the district,--Wheeling, Parkersburg, and Gallipolis. At each of these,
+depot commissaries and quartermasters were located, and the posts and
+commands at the front drew their supplies from them. Captain Fitch, my
+quartermaster, supervised his department in a similar way to that of the
+commissariat. My aides were Captain Christie and Lieutenant Conine, as
+before, and I added to them my brother, Theodore Cox, who served with me
+as volunteer aide without rank in the battles of South Mountain and
+Antietam, and was then appointed lieutenant in the Eleventh Ohio
+Infantry. He was my constant companion from this time till peace was
+established. The medical department remained under the care of Major
+Holmes, Brigade-Surgeon, who combined scientific with administrative
+qualities in a rare measure.</p>
+<p>There was no military movement during the winter of sufficient
+importance to be told at length. Constant scouting and reconnoissances
+were kept up, slight skirmishes were not infrequent, but these did not
+prevent our sense of rest and of preparation for the work of the next
+spring. General Crook, with a brigade, was transferred temporarily to
+the command of Rosecrans in Tennessee, and Kelley, Milroy, and Scammon
+divided the care of the three hundred miles of mountain ranges which
+made our front. My own leisure gave me the opportunity for some
+systematic and useful reading in military history and art. An amusing
+interlude occurred in a hot controversy which arose between General
+Milroy and one of his subordinates which would not be worth mentioning
+except for the fact that the subordinate had afterward a world-wide
+notoriety as military chief of the Paris Commune in 1870.</p>
+<p>Gustave Cluseret was a Frenchman, who was appointed in the spring of
+1862 an aide-de-camp with the rank of colonel upon the staff of General
+Fr&eacute;mont, who (with questionable legality) assigned him to command
+a brigade, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xii. pt. i. pp. 9, 35.]</span> and recommended his
+appointment as brigadier for good conduct in the May and June campaign
+against Jackson. The appointment was made on October 14th, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Army Register, 1863, p. 95.]</span>
+and during the fall and winter he had a brigade in Milroy's division.
+Milroy was, for a time, loud in his praises of Cluseret as the <i>beau
+ideal</i> of an officer, and their friendship was fraternal. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxi.
+p. 779.]</span> In the winter, however, their mutual admiration was
+nipped by a killing frost, and a controversy sprung up between them
+which soon led to mutual recrimination also in the superlative degree.
+They addressed their complaints to General Halleck, and as the papers
+passed through my headquarters, I was a witness of their berating of
+each other. They made a terrible din, on paper, for a while, but I
+cannot recall anything very serious in their accusations. Halleck
+pigeon-holed their correspondence, but Milroy had powerful political
+friends, and Cluseret, learning that his appointment would not be
+confirmed by the Senate, anticipated their action, and terminated his
+military career in the United States by resigning two days before the
+close of the session of Congress. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Army Register, 1863, p. 101. His name does not appear in the lists in
+the body of the Register, because he was not in the Army April 1, 1863,
+the date of publication.]</span> </p>
+<p>This brings me to the subject of Congressional action in the matter
+of the promotions and appointments in the army during this winter
+session which closed the Thirty-seventh Congress. By it I was myself to
+suffer the one severe disappointment of my military career. The time was
+one of great political excitement, for the fall elections had resulted
+in a great overturning in the Congressional delegations. The Democrats
+had elected so many representatives for the Thirty-eighth Congress that
+it was doubtful whether the administration would be able to command a
+majority in the House. The retirement of McClellan from the command had
+also provoked much opposition, and in the lack of full knowledge of the
+reasons for displacing him, political ones were imagined and charged.
+Public policy forbade the President to make known all his grounds of
+dissatisfaction with the general, and many of his own party openly
+questioned his wisdom and his capacity to govern. Men whose patriotism
+cannot be questioned shared in this distrust, and in their private
+writings took the most gloomy view of the situation and of the future of
+the country. This was intensified when Burnside was so bloodily repulsed
+at Fredericksburg at the close of the first week of the session. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Mr. W. P. Cutler,
+Representative from Ohio, a modest but very intelligent and patriotic
+man, wrote in his diary under December 16th: "This is a day of darkness
+and peril to the country... Lincoln himself seems to have no nerve or
+decision in dealing with great issues. We are at sea, and no pilot or
+captain. God alone can take care of us, and all his ways <i>seem</i> to
+be against us and to favor the rebels and their allies the Democrats.
+Truly it is a day of darkness and gloom." "Life and Times" of Ephraim
+Cutler, with biographical sketches of Jervis Cutler and W. P. Cutler,
+p.296.]</span> </p>
+<p>As is usual in revolutionary times, more radical measures were
+supposed by many to be the cure for disasters, and in caucuses held by
+congressmen the supposed conservatism of Mr. Lincoln and part of his
+cabinet was openly denounced, and the earnestness of the army leaders
+was questioned. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Mr.
+Cutler reports a caucus of the House held January 27th, in which
+"Mr.---- stated that the great difficulty was in holding the President
+to anything. He prided himself on having a divided cabinet, so that he
+could play one against the other... The earnest men are brought to a
+deadlock by the President. The President is tripped up by his generals,
+who for the most part seem to have no heart in their work." <i>Id</i>.,
+p.301. Mr. Cutler himself expresses similar sentiments and reiterates:
+"It really seems as if the ship of state was going to pieces in the
+storm." "How striking the want of a leader. The nation is without a
+head." "The true friends of the government are groping around without a
+leader," etc. <i>Id</i>., pp. 297, 301,302]</span> Much of this was a
+misunderstanding of the President and of events which time has
+corrected, but at the moment and in the situation of the country it was
+natural. It strongly affected the conduct of the federal legislators,
+and must be taken into the account when we try to understand their
+attitude toward the army and the administration of military affairs.</p>
+<p>In the Senate, at a very early day after the opening of the session,
+Mr. Wilson, chairman of the Committee on Military Affairs, offered a
+resolution (which passed without opposition) calling upon the Secretary
+of War for "the number and names of the major-generals and
+brigadier-generals in the service of the United States, and where and
+how they are employed." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Senate Journal, 3d Session, 37th Congress, Dec. 8, 1862.]</span> This
+was, no doubt, the offspring of an opinion in vogue in Congress, that
+the President had gone beyond the authority of law in the number of
+these officers he had appointed. If this were true, the course taken was
+not a friendly one toward the administration. The whole list of
+appointments and promotions would be submitted to the Senate for
+confirmation, and if the statutory number had been exceeded, that body
+could stop confirming when it reached the legal limit. There were, of
+course, frequent consultations between the Congressional committees or
+the individual members and the Secretary of War; but whatever efforts
+there may have been to reach a quiet understanding failed. On the 21st
+of January, the Secretary not having responded to Mr. Wilson's
+resolution, Mr. Rice of Minnesota offered another (which also passed by
+unanimous consent), directing the Secretary of War "to inform the Senate
+whether any more major and brigadier generals have been appointed and
+paid than authorized by law; and if so, how many; give names, dates of
+appointment and amounts paid." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+Jan. 21, 1863.]</span> </p>
+<p>Two days later the Secretary sent in his reports in response to both
+resolutions. To the first he replied that the interests of the public
+service would not permit him to state "where and how" the general
+officers were employed, but he gave the list of names. He gave also a
+separate list of six major-generals who were not assigned to any duty. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: These were McClellan,
+Fr&eacute;mont, Cassius M. Clay, Buell (ordered before a military
+commission), McDowell, and F. J. Porter (both before military courts in
+connection with the second battle of Bull Run).]</span> To the second
+resolution he replied that "It is believed by this Department that the
+law authorizing the increase of the volunteer and militia forces
+necessarily implied an increase of officers beyond the number specified
+in the Act of July 17, 1862, to any extent required by the service, and
+that the number of appointments is not beyond such limit." If the limit
+of the statute named were strictly applied, he said there would be found
+to be nine major-generals and forty-six brigadier-generals in excess.
+There had been no payments of increased salary to correspond with the
+increased rank, except in one instance. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Executive Documents of
+Senate, 3d Session, 37th Congress, Nos. 21 and 22. The nine
+major-generals were Schuyler Hamilton, Granger, Cox, Rousseau,
+McPherson, Augur, Meade, Hartsuff, and N. B. Buford. If the number were
+thirteen, it would include Foster, Parke, Schenck, and Hurlbut.]</span>
+The list submitted showed fifty-two major-generals in service, and one
+(Buford) was omitted, so that if forty should prove to be the limit,
+there would be thirteen in excess. This, however, was only apparently
+true, for the Secretary's list included the four major-generals in the
+regular army, whose case was not covered by the limitation of the
+statute. This seems to have been overlooked in the steps subsequently
+taken by members of Congress, and as the action was unwelcome to the
+President, he did not enlighten the legislators respecting their
+miscalculation. The business proceeded upon the supposition that the
+appointments in the highest rank were really thirteen in excess of the
+number fixed by the statute.</p>
+<p>The state of the law was this. The Act of July 22, 1861, authorized
+the President to call for volunteers, not exceeding half a million, and
+provided for one brigadier-general for four regiments and one
+major-general for three brigades. The Act of 25th July of the same year
+authorized a second call of the same number, and provided for "such
+number of major-generals and brigadier-generals as may in his (the
+President's) judgment be required for their organization." In the next
+year, however, a "rider" was put upon the clause in the appropriation
+bill to pay the officers and men of the volunteer service, which
+provided "that the President shall not be authorized to appoint more
+than forty major-generals, nor more than two hundred
+brigadier-generals," and repealed former acts which allowed more. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The several acts referred to
+may be found in vol. xii. U. S. Statutes at Large, pp. 268, 274, 506.
+The appropriation bill was passed July 5, 1862. The date July 17, 1862,
+in the Secretary's report seems to be a misprint.]</span> This limit just
+covered those who had been appointed up to the date of the approval of
+the appropriation bill. Two questions, however, were still open for
+dispute. First, whether a "rider" upon the appropriation should change a
+general law on the subject of army organization, and second, whether the
+new limit might not allow appointments to be <i>thereafter</i> made to
+the extent of the numbers stated. The report of Mr. Stanton evidently
+suggests such questions.</p>
+<p>The matter was now in good shape for what politicians call "a deal,"
+and negotiations between members of Congress and the executive were
+active. The result appears to have been an understanding that a bill
+should be passed increasing the number of general officers, so as not
+only to cover the appointments already made, but leaving a considerable
+margin of new promotions to be filled by arrangement between the high
+contracting parties. On the 12th of February, 1863, the Senate passed a
+bill providing for the appointment of twenty major-generals of
+volunteers and fifty brigadiers. This was not acceptable to the House.
+The battle of Stone's River had lately been fought in Tennessee, and
+representatives from the West were urgent in arguing that affairs near
+Washington unduly filled the view of the administration. There was some
+truth in this. At any rate the House amended the bill so as to increase
+the numbers to forty major-generals and one hundred brigadiers, to be
+made by promotions, for meritorious service, from lower grades. As soon
+as it was known that the Military Committee of the House would report
+such an amendment, it was assumed that the Senate would concur, and a
+"slate" was made up accordingly. On the hypothesis that the list of
+major-generals was thirteen in excess of the forty fixed by statute, a
+new list of twenty-seven was made out, which would complete the forty to
+be added by the new bill. A similar list was prepared for the brigadiers
+and precisely similar negotiations went on, but for brevity's sake I
+shall confine myself to the list for the highest rank, in which I was
+personally concerned.</p>
+<p>The House passed the amended bill on the 27th of February, and it
+went back to the Senate for concurrence in the amendments. But now an
+unexpected difficulty arose. The Senate refused to concur in the changes
+made by the House. It matters little whether the senators were offended
+at the determination of the lower House to have so large a share in the
+nominations, or desired to punish the President for having gone beyond
+the letter of the law in his promotions of 1862; the fact was that they
+voted down the amendments. A committee of conference between the two
+houses was appointed, and a compromise report was made fixing the
+additional number of major-generals at thirty and of brigadiers at
+seventy-five. Both Houses finally concurred in the report, the bill went
+to the President on the 1st of March, and he signed it on the next day.</p>
+<p>There was but a single working-day of the session left, for the
+session must end at noon of the 4th of March. The list must be reduced.
+The manner in which this was done clinches the proof, if there had been
+any doubt before, that the list of twenty-seven was the result of
+negotiations with congressmen. No meddling with that list was permitted,
+though the use of patronage as "spoils" had some very glaring
+illustrations in it. The President had to make the reduction from his
+own promotions made earlier, and which were therefore higher on the list
+and in rank, instead of dropping those last added, as had seemed to be
+demanded by the earlier action of Congress. The only exception to this
+was in the case of General Schofield, whose even-handed administration
+of the District of Missouri and army of the frontier had excited the
+enmity of extreme politicians in that State and in Kansas, led by
+Senator "Jim" Lane, the prince of "jay-hawkers." Schofield was dropped
+from the twenty-seven.</p>
+<p>A few changes had occurred in the original roster of officers,
+making additional vacancies. Governor Morgan of New York, who had a
+complimentary appointment as major-general, but had never served,
+resigned. Schuyler Hamilton also resigned, and Fitz-John Porter was
+cashiered.</p>
+<p>The number to be sacrificed was thus reduced to six, and the lot
+fell on Generals N. B. Buford, G. W. Morell, W. F. Smith, H. G. Wright,
+J. M. Schofield, and myself. The last four won their promotion a second
+time and were re-appointed and confirmed at varying intervals; but of
+that later. Of course, in such a scramble it was only a question as to
+who had or had not powerful friends on the spot who would voluntarily
+champion his cause. No one at a distance could have any warning. The
+passage of the bill and action under it came together. For myself, I had
+gone quietly on in the performance of duty, never dreaming of danger,
+and it was long years after the war before I learned how the thing had
+in fact been done. My place had been near the top of the list, the
+commands which I had exercised and the responsibilities intrusted to me
+had been greater than those of the large majority of the appointees, and
+I had conclusive evidence of the approval of my superiors. The news was
+at first, therefore, both astonishing and disheartening. As a result of
+political "influences," it is sufficiently intelligible. I had at that
+time a barely speaking acquaintance with Senator Wade of Ohio. It was
+the same with Senator Sherman, but with the added disadvantage that in
+the senatorial contest of 1860 between him and Governor Dennison I had
+warmly espoused the cause of the latter. Mr. Hutchins, the
+representative from my district, had not been renominated, and Garfield,
+who was elected in his place, had not yet taken his seat, but was still
+in the military service in the field. Mr. Chase had been a constant
+friend, but this was just the time when his differences with Mr. Lincoln
+had become acute, and since the 20th of December the President had in
+his hands the resignations of both Seward and Chase, which enabled him
+to refuse both, and to baffle the party in the Senate which was trying
+to force him to reorganize his cabinet by excluding Seward and those who
+were thought the more conservative. As he expressed it, "he had a
+pumpkin in each end of his bag, and could now ride." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Hay and Nicolay's "Lincoln,"
+vol. vi. p. 271.]</span> If, on the theory of apportioning the promotions
+to States, it were held that Ohio must lose one of the six nominated, it
+was easy to see where the balance of influence would be. General Halleck
+was well known to be persistent in favoring appointments from the
+regular army, and would urge that the reduction should be made from
+those originally appointed from civil life. These were Schenck and
+myself. But General Schenck was a veteran member of the House of
+Representatives and had now been elected to the next house, in which it
+was known he would be a prominent character. It goes without saying,
+therefore, that on such a basis the black ball would come to me. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The promotions of Ohio
+officers then pending, besides my own, were of Schenck, McCook,
+Rosecrans, Stanley, McPherson, and Sheridan.]</span> To complete the
+story of the promotions made at this time, it may be added that a short
+executive session of the Senate was held after the regular adjournment
+of Congress on the 4th of March, and that the President sent in the
+names of Carl Schurz and Julius Stahel to be made major-generals. For
+one of these a vacancy was made by the arrangement that Cassius M. Clay
+was reappointed minister to St. Petersburg and resigned the military
+rank which he had never used. The other seems to have been made by a
+resignation to take effect the next month. General Sumner died on the
+21st of March, making another vacancy, but it is difficult to fix with
+accuracy the exact date of the changes which occurred. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The reason for this
+difficulty is in part found in the frequent assignment of rank to
+officers from an earlier date than their appointment, and as the
+official lists are arranged according to rank, they are sometimes
+misleading as to date of appointment. Thus Rosecrans dates in the
+register from March 21, 1862, but he was not appointed till some six
+months later. So also Schofield when reappointed in May, 1863, was made
+to rank as in his first appointment, from Nov. 29, 1862.]</span> In the
+case of the last two promotions Mr. Lincoln openly declared that he made
+them in recognition of the German element in the army and in politics. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: For an illustration of Mr.
+Lincoln's way of putting things in such cases, see "Military Miscellany"
+by Colonel James B. Fry, p. 281.]</span> </p>
+<p>It would be unjust to assume that members of Congress and the
+President were not guided by patriotic motives. The reform of the public
+service in matters of appointment had not then attracted much attention.
+Patronage was used for political purposes with complete frankness and
+openness. In civil offices this custom was boldly defended and
+advocated. There was some consciousness shown that promotions in the
+army ought to be controlled by a somewhat different rule, but it seemed
+to be thought that enough was done in the way of safeguard when the
+choice was confined to officers already in service, and appointments for
+the highest grades were not given to entirely new men from civil life.
+Each aspirant could find friends to sound his praises, and it was easy
+to assert that it was only giving preference to one's friends among
+officers of equal merit. Many excellent appointments were in fact made,
+and the proportion of these would have been greater if the judgment of
+military superiors had been more controlling in determining the whole
+list. Mr. Lincoln's humorous way of explaining his actions may give an
+impression of a lower standard than he actually acknowledged; but it
+cannot be denied that he allowed himself to be pressed into making
+military promotions, at times, upon purely political or personal
+reasons. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Colonel Fry,
+who was assistant adjutant-general at Washington and in personal
+intercourse with the President, gives the following as a memorandum made
+by Mr. Lincoln himself in reference to an application to have a
+regular-army officer made a brigadier-general of volunteers. "On this
+day Mrs. ----- called upon me: she is the wife of Major ----- of the
+regular army. She is a saucy little woman, and I think she will torment
+me till I have to do it." Colonel Fry adds, "It was not long till that
+little woman's husband was appointed a brigadier-general." Miscellany,
+pp. 280, 281.]</span> </p>
+<p>It did not seem to occur to the authorities that the judgment of
+superior officers in the field should be called for and carefully
+considered when it was a question of promoting one of their
+subordinates. An instance which occurred in General Buell's army carried
+this beyond the verge of the grotesque. Colonel Turchin, of an Illinois
+regiment, was a Russian, an educated officer who had served in the
+Russian staff corps. An excellent soldier in many respects, his ideas of
+discipline were, unfortunately, lax, and in the summer of 1862 he was
+courtmartialled for allowing his men to pillage a town in Tennessee. The
+court was an intelligent one, of which General Garfield was president.
+The story current in the army at the time, and which I believe to be
+true, is that after the court had heard part of the testimony it became
+apparent that they must convict, and Mrs. Turchin, who usually
+accompanied her husband in the field, started to the rear to procure
+political "influences" to save him. With various recommendations she
+went to Washington, and was so successful that although the sentence of
+the court dismissing him from the service was promulgated on the 6th of
+August, he had been appointed a brigadier-general of volunteers on the
+5th, and he was not one of those who were dropped from the list on March
+3, 1863. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xvi. pt. ii. p. 277.]</span> The trial was one of
+considerable notoriety, yet it is probable that it was overlooked by the
+President and Secretary of War at the time the appointment was made; but
+it cannot need to be said that whatever grounds for leniency might have
+existed, it turns the whole business into a farce when they were made
+the basis of a promotion in the revised list six months later. To add to
+the perfection of the story, Mrs. Turchin had acted on her own
+responsibility, and the colonel did not know of the result till he had
+gone home, and in an assembly of personal friends who called upon him
+ostensibly to cheer him in his doleful despondency, his wife brought the
+little drama to its <i>d&eacute;nouement</i> by presenting him with the
+appointment in their presence.</p>
+<p>One of the worst features of the method of appointment by "slate"
+made up between congressmen and the executive was that it filled up
+every place allowed by law, and left nothing to be used as a recognition
+for future services in the field, except as vacancies occurred, and
+these were few and far between. The political influences which
+determined the appointment were usually powerful enough to prevent
+dismissal. Whoever will trace the employment of officers of the highest
+grades in the last half of the war, will find large numbers of these on
+unimportant and nominal duty, whilst their work in the active armies was
+done by men of lower grade, to whom the appropriate rank had to be
+refused. The system was about as bad as could be, but victory was won in
+spite of it. It was fortunate, on the whole, that we did not have the
+grades of lieutenant-general and general during the war, as the
+Confederates had. They made the one the regular rank of a corps
+commander and the other of the commander of an army in the field. With
+us the assignment of a major-general by the President to command a corps
+gave him a temporary precedence over other major-generals not so
+assigned, and in like manner for the commander of an army. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Our system was essentially
+that of the first French Republic and the Consulate, under which any
+general of division was assignable to an army command in chief.]</span>
+If these were relieved, they lost the precedence, and thus there was a
+sort of temporary rank created, giving a flexibility to the grade of
+major-general, without which we should have been greatly embarrassed.
+Grant's rank of lieutenant-general was an exceptional grade, made for
+him alone, when, after the battle of Missionary Ridge, he was assigned
+to the command of all the armies.</p>
+<p>These opinions of mine are not judgments formed after the fact. The
+weak points in our army organization were felt at the time, and I took
+every means in my power to bring them to the attention of the proper
+authorities, State and National. At the close of 1862 a commission was
+appointed by the Secretary of War to revise the articles of war and army
+regulations. Of this commission Major-General Hitchcock was chairman.
+They issued a circular calling for suggestions as to alterations
+supposed to be desirable, and a copy was sent to me among others. I took
+occasion to report the results of my own experience, and to trace the
+evils which existed to their sources in our military system. I called
+attention to the striking parallel between our practices and those that
+had been in use in the first French Republic, and to the identical
+mischiefs which had resulted. Laxity of discipline, straggling,
+desertion, demagoguery in place of military spirit, giving commissions
+as the reward of mere recruiting, making new regiments instead of
+filling up the old ones, absence of proper staff corps,--every one of
+these things had been suffered in France till they could no longer be
+endured, and we had faithfully copied their errors without profiting by
+the lesson.</p>
+<p>In the freedom of private correspondence with Mr. Chase I enlarged
+upon the same topics, and urged him to get the serious attention of the
+President and the cabinet to them. I gave him examples of the mischiefs
+that were done by the insane efforts to raise new regiments by
+volunteering when we ought to apply a conscription as the only fair way
+of levying a tax on the physical strength of the nation. I said: "I have
+known a lieutenant to be forced by his captain (a splendid soldier) to
+resign on account of his general inefficiency. I have seen that same
+lieutenant take the field a few months later as lieutenant-colonel of a
+new regiment, whilst the captain still stood at the head of his fraction
+of a company in the line. This is not a singular instance, but an
+example of cases occurring literally by the thousand in our vast army
+during the year past.... Governor Tod (of Ohio) said to me some time
+ago, with the deepest sorrow, that he was well aware that in raising the
+new regiments by volunteering, the distribution of offices to the
+successful recruiters was filling the army with incompetent men whom we
+should have to sift out again by such process as we could!.... Have we
+time for the sifting process? Even if we had, how inefficient the
+process itself when these officers have their commissions in their
+pockets, and cannot be brought before a court or a military commission
+till much of the mischief they can do is accomplished, bad habits
+amongst the soldiers formed, and the work of training them made
+infinitely more difficult than with absolutely raw recruits. It was in
+view of such probable results that I expressed the hope that no more new
+regiments would be raised by volunteering, when, in July last, the levy
+of an additional force was mooted. It seemed to me that the President
+could well say to the world, 'Our people have shown abundant proof of
+their enthusiasm in support of the government by volunteering already to
+the number of more than half a million, a thing unprecedented in the
+world's history: we now, as a matter of military expediency, call for a
+draft to fill up the broken battalions.'" <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: From private letter of Jan.
+1, 1863.]</span> </p>
+<p>I urged with equal frankness the need of giving unity to the army by
+abolishing the distinction between regulars and volunteers, and by a
+complete reorganization of the staff. I said it seemed absurd that with
+nearly a million of men in the field, the Register of the Army of the
+United States should show an organization of some twenty regiments only,
+of which scarce a dozen had been in active service. "If a volunteer
+organization is fit to decide the <i>great</i> wars of the nation, is it
+not ridiculous to keep an expensive organization of regulars for the
+petty contests with Indians or for an ornamental appendage to the State
+in peace?" The thing to be aimed at seemed to me to be to have a system
+flexible enough to provide for the increase of the army to any size
+required, without losing any of the advantage of character or efficiency
+which, in any respect, pertained to it as a regular army. Circumstances
+to which I have already alluded, probably prevented Mr. Chase from
+taking any active part again in the discussion of army affairs in the
+cabinet. Probably many of the same ideas were urged upon the President
+from other quarters, for there was much agitation of the subject in the
+army and out of it. But nothing came of it, for even the draft, when it
+became the law, was used more as a shameful whip to stimulate
+volunteering than as an honorable and right way to fill the ranks of the
+noble veteran regiments. General Sherman found, in 1864, the same wrong
+system thwarting his efforts to make his army what it should be, and
+broke out upon it in glorious exasperation. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Letter to Halleck, Sept. 4,
+1864. "To-morrow is the day for the draft, and I feel more interested in
+it than in any event that ever transpired. I do think it has been wrong
+to keep our old troops so constantly under fire. Some of these old
+regiments that we had at Shiloh and Corinth have been with me ever
+since, and some of them have lost seventy per cent in battle. It looks
+hard to put these brigades, now numbering less than 800 men, into
+battle. They feel discouraged, whereas, if we could have a steady influx
+of recruits, the living would soon forget the dead. The wounded and sick
+are lost to us, for once at a hospital, they become worthless. It has
+been a very bad economy to kill off our best men and pay full wages and
+bounties to the drift and substitutes." Official Records, vol. xxxviii.
+pt. v. p. 793.]</span><br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI</p>
+<p>FAREWELL TO WEST VIRGINIA--BURNSIDE IN THE DEPARTMENT OF THE OHIO</p>
+<p>Desire for field service--Changes in the Army of the
+Potomac--Judgment of McClellan at that time--Our defective
+knowledge--Changes in West Virginia--Errors in new
+organization--Embarrassments resulting--Visit to General Schenck--New
+orders from Washington--Sent to Ohio to administer the draft--Burnside
+at head of the department--District of Ohio--Headquarters at
+Cincinnati--Cordial relations of Governor Tod with the military
+authorities--System of enrolment and draft--Administration by Colonel
+Fry--Decay of the veteran regiments--Bounty-jumping--Effects on
+political parties--Soldiers voting--Burnside's military plans--East
+Tennessee--Rosecrans aiming at Chattanooga--Burnside's business
+habits--His frankness--Stories about him--His personal
+characteristics--Cincinnati as a border city--Rebel sympathizers--Order
+No. 38--Challenged by Vallandigham--The order not a new
+departure--Lincoln's proclamation--General Wright's circular.</p>
+<p>My purpose to get into active field service had not slept, and soon
+after the establishment of a winter organization in the district, I had
+applied to be ordered to other duty. My fixed conviction that no useful
+military movements could be made across the mountain region implied that
+the garrisons of West Virginia should be reduced to a minimum and
+confined to the duty of defending the frontier of the new State. The
+rest of the troops might properly be added to the active columns in the
+field. McClellan had been relieved of command whilst I was conducting
+active operations in the Kanawha valley, and Burnside suffered his
+repulse at Fredericksburg within a few days after I was directed to make
+my headquarters at Marietta and perfect the organization of the
+district. I was therefore at a loss to choose where I would serve, even
+if I had been given <i>carte blanche</i> to determine my own work.
+Enough was known of the reasons for the President's dissatisfaction with
+McClellan to make me admit that the change of command was an apparent
+necessity, yet much was unknown, and the full strength of the
+President's case was not revealed till the war was over. My personal
+friendship for McClellan remained warm, and I felt sure that Hooker as a
+commander would be a long step downward. In private I did not hesitate
+to express the wish that McClellan should still be intrusted with the
+command of the Potomac army, that it should be strongly reinforced, and
+that by constant pressure upon its commander his indecision of character
+might be overcome. Those who were near to McClellan believed that he was
+learning greater self-confidence, for the Antietam campaign seemed a
+decided improvement on that of the Chickahominy. The event, in great
+measure, justified this opinion, for it was not till Grant took command
+a year later that any leadership superior to McClellan's was developed.
+Yet it must be confessed that we did not know half the discouragements
+that were weighing upon the President and his Secretary of War, and
+which made the inertia of the Eastern army demand a desperate remedy.</p>
+<p>My personal affairs drifted in this way: the contest over the lists
+of promotions, of which I knew next to nothing, prevented any action on
+the request for a change of duty, and the close of the session of
+Congress brought the official notice that the promotion had expired by
+legal limitation. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: March
+24th; received the 30th.]</span> The first effect was naturally
+depressing, and it took a little time and some philosophy to overcome
+it; but the war was not ended yet, and reflection made the path of duty
+appear to be in the line of continued active service.</p>
+<p>To form a new department for General Schenck, West Virginia was
+detached from the Department of the Ohio and annexed to Maryland. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxv.
+pt. ii. p. 145.]</span> This was a mistake from a military point of view,
+for not only must the posts near the mountains be supplied and
+reinforced from the Ohio as their base, toward which would also be the
+line of retreat if retreat were necessary, but the frequent advances of
+the Confederate forces, through the Shenandoah valley to the Potomac,
+always separated the West from any connection with Baltimore, and made
+it impossible for an officer stationed there (as General Schenck was) to
+direct affairs in the western district at the very time of greatest
+necessity.</p>
+<p>Another important fact was overlooked. The river counties of Ohio
+formed part of the district, and the depots on the river were supplied
+from Cincinnati. Not only was Gallipolis thus put in another department
+from the posts directly dependent on that depot as a base of supplies
+and the principal station for hospitals, but the new boundary line left
+me, personally, and my headquarters in the Department of the Ohio. I at
+once called the attention of the War Department to these results,
+sending my communication in the first instance through General Wright.
+He was in the same boat with myself, for his rank had also been reduced
+on the 4th of March, but he thought the intention must have been to
+transfer me with the district to the Eastern Department. On this I wrote
+to Washington direct, asking for definite orders. I also wrote to
+General Schenck, telling him of General Wright's supposition that I was
+transferred with the district, and inquiring if he had any definite
+decision of the question. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 159, 160.]</span> </p>
+<p>About the 3d of April I was directed to report in person to General
+Schenck at Baltimore, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 175.]</span> and reached that city on the 4th. My relations with
+General Schenck had been, personally, cordial, and our friendship
+continued till his death, many years after the war. Whatever plans he
+may have had were set aside by orders from Washington, which met me at
+his headquarters, ordering me to report at Columbus, Ohio, to assist the
+governor in organizing the troops to be called out under the new
+enrolment and conscription law. This was accompanied by the assurance
+that this duty would be but temporary, and that my desire to be assigned
+to active field duty would then be favorably considered. It is not
+improbable that my report on army organization, which has been
+mentioned, had something to do with this assignment; but I did not ask
+permission to visit Washington, though within a couple of hours' ride of
+the capital, and hastened back to my assigned post. Besides my wish to
+cut my connection with West Virginia on general military theories of its
+insignificance as a theatre of war, my stay there would have been
+intolerable, since General Milroy, in whose judgment I had less
+confidence than in that of any of my other subordinates, was, by the
+curious outcome of the winter's promotions, the one of all others who
+had been put over my head. I could not then foresee the cost the country
+would pay for this in the next summer's campaign in the Shenandoah, but
+every instinct urged me to sever a connection which could bode no good.
+The reasonableness of my objection to serving as a subordinate where I
+had been in command was recognized, and the arrangement actually made
+was as acceptable as anything except a division in an active army.</p>
+<p>It greatly added to my contentment to learn that General Burnside
+had been ordered to the Department of the Ohio, and would be my
+immediate superior. I hastened back to Marietta, closed up the business
+pending there, and went to Columbus on the 9th of April. The arrangement
+between Governor Tod and General Burnside proved to be the formation of
+the Military District of Ohio, including the whole State. I was placed
+in command of this district, reporting directly to the general, who
+himself conferred with the governor. My own relations to my superiors
+were thus made strictly military, which was a much pleasanter thing for
+me than direct connection with the civil authorities would be; for this
+involved a danger of cross-purposes and conflicting orders.
+Brigadier-General John S. Mason, an excellent officer, was ordered to
+report to me as my immediate subordinate in command of the camps and the
+post at Columbus, and before the end of the month Burnside directed me
+to fix my own headquarters at Cincinnati, where I could be in constant
+communication with himself. All this was done with the most cordial
+understanding between Burnside and the governor. Indeed, nothing could
+be more perfect than the genial and reasonable tone of Governor Tod's
+intercourse with the military officers stationed in Ohio.</p>
+<p>My duties under the Enrolment Act turned out to be very slight. The
+Act (passed March 3, 1863) made, in general, each congressional district
+an enrolment district under charge of a provost-marshal with the rank of
+captain. A deputy provost-marshal supervised the enrolment and draft for
+the State, and the whole was under the control of the
+provost-marshal-general at Washington, Colonel James B. Fry. The law
+provided for classification of all citizens capable of military duty
+between the ages of twenty and forty-five, so as to call out first the
+unmarried men and those not having families dependent on them. The
+exemptions on account of physical defects were submitted to a board of
+three, of which the local provost-marshal was chairman, and one was a
+medical man. Substitutes might be accepted in the place of drafted men,
+or a payment of three hundred dollars would be taken in place of
+personal service, that sum being thought sufficient to secure a
+voluntary recruit by the government. The principal effect of this
+provision was to establish a current market price for substitutes.</p>
+<p>The general provisions of the law for the drafting were wise and
+well matured, and the rules for the subordinate details were well
+digested and admirably administered by Colonel Fry and his bureau. It
+was a delicate and difficult task, but it was carried out with such
+patience, honesty, and thoroughness that nothing better could be done
+than copy it, if a future necessity for like work should arise. There
+was no good ground for complaint, and in those cases where, as in New
+York, hostile political leaders raised the cry of unfairness and
+provoked collision between the mob and the National authorities, the
+victims were proved to be the dupes of ignorance and malice. The
+administration of the law was thoroughly vindicated, and if there were
+to be a draft at all, it could not be more fairly and justly enforced.</p>
+<p>There was room for difference of opinion as to some of the
+provisions of the law regarding exemption and substitution, but the most
+serious question was raised by the section which applied to old
+regiments and which had nothing to do with the enrolment and draft. This
+section directed that when regiments had become reduced in numbers by
+any cause, the officers of the regiment should be proportionately
+diminished. As new regiments were still received and credited upon the
+State's liability under the draft, it of course resulted that the old
+regiments continued to decay. A public sentiment had been created which
+looked upon the draft as a disgrace, and the most extraordinary efforts
+were made to escape it. Extra bounties for volunteering were paid by
+counties and towns, and the combination of influences was so powerful
+that it was successful in most localities, and very few men were
+actually put in the ranks by the draft.</p>
+<p>The offer of extra bounties to induce volunteering brought into
+existence "bounty-jumping," a new crime analogous to that of "repeating"
+at elections. A man would enlist and receive the bounty, frequently
+several hundred dollars, but varying somewhat in different places and
+periods. He would take an early opportunity to desert, as he had
+intended to do from the first. Changing his name, he would go to some
+new locality and enlist again, repeating the fraud as often as he could
+escape detection. The urgency to get recruits and forward them at once
+to the field, and the wide country which was open to recruiting, made
+the risk of punishment very small. Occasionally one was caught, and he
+would of course be liable to punishment as a deserter. The final report
+of the provost-marshal-general mentions the case of a criminal in the
+Albany penitentiary, New York, who confessed that he had "jumped the
+bounty" thirty-two times. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Provost-Marshal-General's Report, p. 153.]</span> </p>
+<p>Another evil incidental to the excessive stimulus of volunteering
+was a political one, which threatened serious results. It deranged the
+natural political balance of the country by sending the most patriotic
+young men to the field, and thus giving an undue power to the
+disaffected and to the opponents of the administration. This led to the
+State laws for allowing the soldiers to vote wherever they might be,
+their votes being certified and sent home. In its very nature this was a
+makeshift and a very dubious expedient to cure the mischief. It would
+not have been necessary if we had had at an early day a system of
+recruiting that would have drawn more evenly from different classes into
+the common service of the country.</p>
+<p>The military officers of the department and district had nothing to
+do with the enrolment and drafting, unless resistance to the
+provost-marshals should make military support for these officers
+necessary. We had hoped to have large camps of recruits to be organized
+and instructed, but the numbers actually drafted in Ohio, in 1863, were
+insignificant, for reasons already stated. Three or four very small post
+garrisons were the only forces at my command, and these were reduced to
+the minimum necessary to guard the prison camps and the depots of
+recruiting and supply.</p>
+<p>General Burnside had not come West with a purpose to content himself
+with the retiracy of a department out of the theatre of actual war. His
+department included eastern Kentucky, and afforded a base for operations
+in the direction of East Tennessee. Mr. Lincoln had never lost his
+eagerness and zeal to give assistance to the loyal mountaineers, and had
+arranged with Burnside a plan of co-operation with Rosecrans by which
+the former should move from Lexington, Ky., upon Knoxville, whilst the
+latter marched from Murfreesboro, Tenn., upon Chattanooga. This was
+better than the impracticable plan of 1861, which aimed at the
+occupation of East Tennessee before Chattanooga had been taken, and the
+task was at last accomplished by the method now used. It was by no means
+the best or most economical method, which would have been to have but
+one strong army till Chattanooga were firmly in our hands, and then
+direct a subordinate column upon the upper Holston valley. It was
+utterly impossible to keep up a line of supply for an army in East
+Tennessee by the wagon roads over the mountains. The railroad through
+Chattanooga was indispensable for this purpose. But Mr. Lincoln had not
+fully appreciated this, and was discontented that both Buell and
+Rosecrans had in turn paid little attention, as it seemed, to his desire
+to make the liberation of East Tennessee the primary and immediate aim
+of their campaigns. He had therefore determined to show his own faith in
+Burnside, and his approval of the man, by giving him a small but active
+army in the field, and to carry out his cherished purpose by having it
+march directly over the Cumberland Mountains, whilst Rosecrans was
+allowed to carry out the plan on which the commanders of the Cumberland
+army seemed, in the President's opinion, too stubbornly bent.</p>
+<p>Burnside's old corps, the Ninth, was taken from the Army of the
+Potomac and sent to Kentucky, and a new corps, to be called the
+Twenty-third, was soon authorized, to contain the Tennessee regiments
+which had been in General Morgan's command, and two divisions made up of
+new regiments organized in Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois under the last
+call for volunteers. To these were added several Kentucky regiments of
+different ages in service. General Parke, so long Burnside's chief of
+staff, was to command the Ninth Corps, and Major-General George L.
+Hartsuff was assigned to the Twenty-third. In a former chapter I have
+spoken of Hartsuff's abilities as a staff officer in West Virginia. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Chap, vi., <i>ante</i>.]</span>
+His qualities as a general officer had not been tried. He was wounded at
+the beginning of the engagement at Antietam, where he commanded a
+brigade in Hooker's corps. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Chap, xv., <i>ante</i>.]</span> That was his first service under his
+appointment as brigadier, and he had necessarily been out of the field
+since that time. My own expectation was that he would make an excellent
+reputation as a corps commander, but it was not his fortune to see much
+continuous field service. His health was seriously affected by his
+wounds, and after a short trial of active campaigning he was obliged to
+seek more quiet employment.</p>
+<p>The establishment of my headquarters at Cincinnati threw me once
+more into close personal relations with Burnside, and enabled me to
+learn his character more intimately. His adjutant-general's office was
+on East Fourth Street, and most of the routine work was done there. The
+general had his own quarters on Ninth Street, where he had also an
+office for himself and his aides-de-camp. My own office and the official
+headquarters of the district were on Broadway below Fourth, in the house
+now occupied by the Natural History Society. There was thus near half a
+mile between us, though I was but a little way from the adjutant-general
+of the department, through whose office my regular business with the
+general went. Burnside, however, loved to discuss department affairs
+informally, and with the perfect freedom of unrestrained social
+intercourse. When he gave his confidence he gave it without reserve, and
+encouraged the fullest and freest criticism of his own plans and
+purposes. His decisions would then be put in official form by the proper
+officers of the staff, and would be transmitted, though I was nearly
+always personally aware of what was to be ordered before the formal
+papers reached me. He had very little pride of opinion, and was
+perfectly candid in weighing whatever was contrary to his predilections;
+yet he was not systematic in his business methods, and was quite apt to
+decide first and discuss afterward. He never found fault with a
+subordinate for assuming responsibility or acting without orders,
+provided he was assured of his earnest good purpose in doing so. In such
+cases he would assume the responsibility for what was done as cheerfully
+as if he had given the order. In like manner he was careless of forms
+himself, in doing whatever seemed necessary or proper, and might pass by
+intermediate officers to reach immediately the persons who were to act
+or the things to be done. There was no intentional slight to any one in
+this: it was only a characteristic carelessness of routine. Martinets
+would be exasperated by it, and would be pretty sure to quarrel with
+him. No doubt it was a bad business method, and had its mischiefs and
+inconveniences. A story used to go the rounds a little later that
+soldiers belonging to the little army in East Tennessee were sometimes
+arrested at their homes and sent back as deserters, when they would
+produce a furlough written by Burnside on a leaf of his pocket
+memorandum-book, which, as they said, had been given by him after
+hearing a pitiful story which moved his sympathies. Such inventions were
+a kind of popular recognition of his well-known neglect of forms, as
+well as of his kind heart. There was an older story about him, to the
+effect that, when a lieutenant in the army, he had been made
+post-quartermaster at some little frontier garrison, and that his
+accounts and returns got into such confusion that after several pretty
+sharp reminders the quartermaster-general notified him, as a final
+terror, that he would send a special officer and subject him and his
+papers to a severe scrutiny. As the story ran, Burnside, in transparent
+honesty, wrote a cordial letter of thanks in reply, saying it was just
+what he desired, as he had been trying hard to make his accounts up, but
+had to confess he could do nothing with them, but was sure such an
+expert would straighten them. In my own service under him I often found
+occasion to supply the formal links in the official chain, so that
+business would move on according to "regulations;" but any trouble that
+was made in this way was much more than compensated by the generous
+trust with which he allowed his name and authority to be used when
+prompt action would serve the greater ends in view.</p>
+<p>My habit was to go to his private quarters on Ninth Street, when the
+regular business of the day was over, and there get the military news
+and confer with him on pending or prospective business affecting my own
+district. His attractive personality made him the centre of a good deal
+of society, and business would drop into the background till late in the
+evening, when his guests voluntarily departed. Then, perhaps after
+midnight, he would take up the arrears of work and dictate letters,
+orders, and dispatches, turning night into day. It not unfrequently
+happened that after making my usual official call in the afternoon, I
+had gone to my quarters and to bed at my usual hour, when I would be
+roused by an orderly from the general begging that I would come up and
+consult with him on some matter of neglected business. He was always
+bright and clear in those late hours, and when he buckled to work,
+rapidly disposed of it.</p>
+<p>He did not indulge much in retrospect, and rarely referred to his
+misfortunes in the Army of the Potomac. On one or two occasions he
+discussed his Fredericksburg campaign with me. The delay in sending
+pontoons from Washington to Falmouth, which gave Lee time to concentrate
+at Fredericksburg, he reasonably argued, was the fault of the military
+authorities at Washington; but I could easily see that if his
+supervision of business had been more rigidly systematic, he would have
+made sure that he was not to be disappointed in his means of crossing
+the Rappahannock promptly. As to the battle itself he steadily insisted
+that the advance of Meade's division proved that if all the left wing
+had acted with equal vigor and promptness, Marye's heights would have
+been turned and carried. It is due to him to repeat that in such
+discussions his judgment of men and their motives was always kind and
+charitable. I never heard him say anything bitter, even of those whom I
+knew he distrusted.</p>
+<p>At the time I am speaking of, Cincinnati was in a curious political
+and social condition. The advance through Kentucky of Bragg and Kirby
+Smith in the preceding year had made it a centre for "rebel
+sympathizers." The fact that a Confederate army had approached the hills
+that bordered the river had revived the hopes and the confidence of many
+who, while wishing success to the Southern cause, had done so in a vague
+and distant way. Now it seemed nearer to them, and the stimulus to
+personal activity was greater. There was always, in the city, a
+considerable and influential body of business men who were of Southern
+families; and besides this, the trade connections with the South, and
+the personal alliances by marriage, made a ground of sympathy which had
+noticeable effects. There were two camps in the community, pretty
+distinctly defined, as there were in Kentucky. The loyal were ardently
+and intensely so. The disloyal were bitter and not always restrained by
+common prudence. A good many Southern women, refugees from the theatre
+of active war, were very open in their defiance of the government, and
+in their efforts to aid the Southern armies by being the bearers of
+intelligence. The "contraband mail" was notoriously a large and active
+one.</p>
+<p>Burnside had been impressed with this condition of things from the
+day he assumed command. His predecessor had struggled with it without
+satisfactory results. It was, doubtless, impossible to do more than
+diminish and restrain the evil, which was the most annoying of the
+smaller troubles attending the anomalous half-military and half-civil
+government of the department. Within three weeks from his arrival in
+Cincinnati, Burnside was so convinced of the widespread and multiform
+activity of the disloyal element that he tried to subdue it by the
+publication of his famous General Order No. 38. The reading of the order
+gives a fair idea of the hostile influences he found at work, for of
+every class named by him there were numerous examples. <br>
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: The text of the order
+is as follows:</span></p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">"General Orders. <br>
+No. 38.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT OF THE OHIO,<br>
+CINCINNATI, OHIO, April 13, 1863.</p>
+<p><span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">The commanding general
+publishes, for the information of all concerned, that hereafter all
+persons found within our lines who commit acts for the benefit of the
+enemies of our country, will be tried as spies or traitors, and, if
+convicted, will suffer death. This order includes the following classes
+of persons: Carriers of secret mails; writers of letters sent by secret
+mails; secret recruiting officers within the lines; persons who have
+entered into an agreement to pass our lines for the purpose of joining
+the enemy; persons found concealed within our lines, belonging to the
+service of the enemy; and, in fact, all persons found improperly within
+our lines who could give private information to the enemy; and all
+persons within our lines who harbor, protect, conceal, feed, clothe, or
+in any way aid the enemies of our country. The habit of declaring
+sympathy for the enemy will not be allowed in this department. Persons
+committing such offences will be at once arrested with a view to being
+tried as above stated, or sent beyond our lines into the lines of their
+friends. It must be distinctly understood that treason, expressed or
+implied, will not be tolerated in this department. All officers and
+soldiers are strictly charged with the execution of this order, </span><br
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);"> By command of Major-General
+Burnside, </span><br style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);"> LEWIS RICHMOND, </span><br
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);"> Assistant Adjutant General."]</span> </p>
+<p>It was no doubt true that the Confederate authorities had constant
+correspondence with people in the Northern States, and that systematic
+means were used to pass information and contraband merchandise through
+the lines. Quinine among drugs, and percussion caps among ordnance
+stores were the things they most coveted, and dealers in these carried
+on their trade under pretence of being spies for each side in turn. But
+besides these who were merely mercenary, there were men and women who
+were honestly fanatical in their devotion to the Confederate cause. The
+women were especially troublesome, for they often seemed to court
+martyrdom. They practised on our forbearance to the last degree; for
+they knew our extreme unwillingness to deal harshly with any of their
+sex. Personally, I rated the value of spies and informers very low, and
+my experience had made me much more prone to contempt than to fear of
+them. But examples had to be made occasionally; a few men were punished,
+a few women who belonged in the South were sent through the lines, and
+we reduced to its lowest practical terms an evil and nuisance which we
+could not wholly cure. The best remedy for these plots and disturbances
+at the rear always was to keep the enemy busy by a vigorous aggressive
+at the front. We kept, however, a species of provost court pretty
+actively at work, and one or two officers were assigned to
+judge-advocate's duty, who ran these courts under a careful supervision
+to make sure that they should not fall into indiscretions.</p>
+<p>So long as the hand of military power was laid only on private
+persons who were engaged in overt acts of giving aid and comfort to the
+rebellion in the ways specified in Order No. 38, there was little
+criticism. But the time came when General Burnside seemed to be
+challenged by a public character of no little prominence to enforce his
+order against him. The Vallandigham case became the sensation of the
+day, and acquired a singular historical importance. The noise which was
+made about it seemed to create a current opinion that Burnside's action
+was a new departure, and that his Order No. 38 was issued wholly on his
+own responsibility. This was not so. In the preceding year, and about
+the time of his Emancipation Proclamation, the President had also
+proclaimed against treasonable practices in very emphatic terms. He had
+declared that "all rebels and insurgents, their aiders and abettors,
+within the United States, and all persons discouraging volunteer
+enlistments, resisting militia drafts, or guilty of any disloyal
+practice, affording aid and comfort to rebels against the authority of
+the United States, shall be subject to martial law and liable to trial
+and punishment by courts-martial or military commission." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Messages and Papers of the
+Presidents, vol. vi. p. 98. See also Order No. 42 of General Burbridge,
+commanding District of Kentucky. Official Records, vol. xxxix. pt. ii.
+p. 27.]</span> </p>
+<p>Burnside's order was in strict accordance with this authority, and
+he had no ultimate responsibility for the policy thus proclaimed. He was
+simply reiterating and carrying out in his department the declared
+purpose of the administration. Even in the matter of newspaper
+publications, his predecessor, General Wright, had felt obliged, upon
+Bragg and Kirby Smith's invasion of Kentucky, to put a stop to
+treasonable editorials and to the publication of military information
+likely to benefit the enemy. He issued a circular on September 13, 1862,
+notifying the publishers of the Cincinnati papers that the repetition of
+such offence would be immediately followed by the suppression of the
+paper and the arrest and confinement of the proprietors and writers. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xvi.
+pt. ii. p. 514. See a characteristic letter by Sherman on this subject, <i>Id</i>.,
+vol. xxxi. pt. i. p. 765: "Now I am again in authority over you, and
+you must heed my advice. Freedom of speech and freedom of the press,
+precious relics of former history, must not be construed too largely.
+You must print nothing that prejudices government or excites envy,
+hatred, and malice in a community. Persons in office or out of office
+must not be flattered or abused. Don't publish an account of any
+skirmish, battle, or movement of an army, unless the name of the writer
+is given in full and printed. I wish you success; but my first duty is
+to maintain 'order and harmony.'" (To editors of "Memphis Bulletin.")]</span>
+It is necessary to keep these facts in mind if we would judge fairly of
+Burnside's responsibility when it was his fortune to apply the rule to a
+case attracting great public attention.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII</p>
+<p>THE VALLANDIGHAM CASE--THE HOLMES COUNTY WAR</p>
+<p>Clement L. Vallandigham--His opposition to the war--His theory of
+reconstruction--His Mount Vernon speech--His arrest--Sent before the
+military commission--General Potter its president--Counsel for the
+prisoner--The line of defence--The judgment--Habeas Corpus
+proceedings--Circuit Court of the United States--Judge Leavitt denies
+the release--Commutation by the President--Sent beyond the
+lines--Conduct of Confederate authorities--Vallandigham in
+Canada--Candidate for Governor--Political results--Martial
+law--Principles underlying it--Practical application--The intent to aid
+the public enemy--The intent to defeat the draft--Armed resistance to
+arrest of deserters, Noble County--To the enrolment in Holmes County--A
+real insurrection--Connection of these with Vallandigham's speeches--The
+Supreme Court refuses to interfere--Action in the Milligan case after
+the war--Judge Davis's personal views--Knights of the Golden Circle--The
+Holmes County outbreak--Its suppression--Letter to Judge Welker.</p>
+<p>Clement L. Vallandigham had been representative in Congress of the
+Montgomery County district of Ohio, and lived at Dayton. He was a man of
+intense and saturnine character, belligerent and denunciatory in his
+political speeches, and extreme in his views. He was the leader in Ohio
+of the ultra element of opposition to the administration of Mr. Lincoln,
+and a bitter opponent of the war. He would have prevented the secession
+of the Southern States by yielding all they demanded, for he agreed with
+them in thinking that their demands for the recognition of the
+constitutional inviolability of the slave system were just. After the
+war began he still advocated peace at any price, and vehemently opposed
+every effort to subdue the rebellion. To his mind the war was absolutely
+unconstitutional on the part of the national government, and he
+denounced it as tyranny and usurpation. His theory seemed to be that if
+the South were "let alone," a reconstruction of the Union could be
+satisfactorily effected by squelching the anti-slavery agitation, and
+that the Western States, at any rate, would find their true interest in
+uniting with the South, even if the other Northern States should refuse
+to do so. Beyond all question he answered to the old description of a
+"Northern man with Southern principles," and his violence of temper made
+it all a matter of personal hatred with him in his opposition to the
+leaders of the party in power at the North. His denunciations were the
+most extreme, and his expressions of contempt and ill-will were wholly
+unbridled. He claimed, of course, that he kept within the limits of a
+"constitutional opposition," because he did not, in terms, advise his
+hearers to combine in armed opposition to the government.</p>
+<p>About the first of May he addressed a public meeting at Mount Vernon
+in central Ohio, where, in addition to his diatribes against the Lincoln
+administration, he denounced Order No. 38, and Burnside as its author.
+His words were noted down in short-hand by a captain of volunteers who
+was there on leave of absence from the army, and the report was
+corroborated by other reputable witnesses. He charged the administration
+with designing to erect a despotism, with refusing to restore the Union
+when it might be done, with carrying on the war for the liberation of
+the blacks and the enslavement of the whites. He declared that the
+provost-marshals for the congressional districts were intended to
+restrict the liberties of the people; that courts-martial had already
+usurped power to try citizens contrary to law; that he himself would
+never submit to the orders of a military dictator, and such were
+Burnside and his subordinates; that if those in authority were allowed
+to accomplish their purposes, the people would be deprived of their
+liberties and a monarchy established. Such and like expressions, varied
+by "trampling under his feet" Order No. 38, etc., made the staple of his
+incendiary speech.</p>
+<p>When the report was made to Burnside and he had satisfied himself of
+its substantial truth, he promptly accepted the challenge to test the
+legality of his order, and directed the arrest of Mr. Vallandigham. It
+was characteristic of him that he did not consult with his subordinates
+or with lawyers. He did not even act through my district organization,
+but sent his own aide-de-camp with a guard to make the arrest at Dayton.
+My recollection is that I did not know of the purpose till it was
+accomplished. His reason for direct action, no doubt, was that if there
+were many links in the chain of routine, there were multiplied chances
+of failure. He did not want to be baffled in the arrest, or to give the
+opportunity for raising a mob, which there would be if his purposes were
+to become known in advance,</p>
+<p>The arrest was made in the early morning of the 5th of May, before
+dawn, and the prisoner was brought to Cincinnati. He was at first taken
+under guard to the Burnet House, where he breakfasted, and was then put
+in the military prison connected with the houses used as barracks for
+the troops in the city. A military commission had been ordered on the
+21st of April from Department Headquarters for the trial of the classes
+of offenders named in Order No. 38, and of this commission
+Brigadier-General R. B. Potter of the Ninth Corps was President. General
+Potter was a distinguished officer throughout the war. He was a brother
+of Clarkson N. Potter, the prominent lawyer and Democratic member of
+Congress later, and both were sons of the Episcopal Bishop Potter of
+Pennsylvania. The character of the whole court was very high for
+intelligence and standing. Before this court Mr. Vallandigham was
+arraigned on the charge of publicly expressing sympathy with those in
+arms against the government, and uttering disloyal sentiments and
+opinions with intent to weaken the power of the government in its
+efforts to suppress the rebellion.</p>
+<p>Vallandigham consulted with the Hon. George E. Pugh and others as
+his counsel, and then adopted the course of protesting against the
+jurisdiction of the court and against the authority for his arrest. His
+grounds were that he was not amenable to any military jurisdiction, and
+that his public speech did not constitute an offence known to the
+Constitution and laws. To avoid the appearance of waiving the question
+of jurisdiction, his counsel did not appear, though offered the
+opportunity to do so, and Mr. Vallandigham cross-examined the witnesses
+himself, and called those who testified for him. The question of fact
+raised by him was that he had not advised forcible resistance to the
+government, but had urged action at the elections by defeating the party
+in power at the polls. That he did not in terms advocate insurrection
+was admitted by the judge advocate of the court, but the commission were
+persuaded that the effect of his speech was intended and well calculated
+to be incendiary, and to arouse any kind of outbreak in sympathy with
+the armed enemies of the country. The trial ended on the 7th of May, but
+the judgment was not promulgated till the 16th, proceedings in <i>habeas
+corpus</i> having intervened. The finding of the court was that the
+prisoner was guilty, as charged, and the sentence was close confinement
+in Fort Warren, Boston harbor, during the continuance of the war.</p>
+<p>On the 9th of May Mr. Pugh made application to the United States
+Circuit Court, Judge Leavitt sitting, for a writ of <i>habeas corpus</i>
+directed to General Burnside, in order that the lawfulness of Mr.
+Vallandigham's arrest and trial might be tested. The court directed
+notice of the application to be given to the general, and set the 11th
+for the hearing. The case was elaborately argued by Mr. Pugh for the
+prisoner, and by Mr. Aaron F. Perry and the District Attorney Flamen
+Ball for General Burnside. The hearing occupied several days, and the
+judgment of the court was given on the morning of the 16th. Judge
+Leavitt refused the writ on the ground that, civil war being flagrant in
+the land, and Ohio being under the military command of General Burnside
+by appointment of the President, the acts and offences described in
+General Order No. 38 were cognizable by the military authorities under
+the powers of war.</p>
+<p>General Burnside had awaited the action of the court, and now
+promulgated the sentence under the judgment of the military commission.
+Three days later (May 19th) the President commuted the sentence by
+directing that Mr. Vallandigham be sent "under secure guard, to the
+headquarters of General Rosecrans, to be put by him beyond our military
+lines, and that in case of his return within our line, he be arrested
+and kept in close custody for the term specified in his sentence." This
+was done accordingly. The Confederate officials adopted a careful policy
+of treating him courteously without acknowledging that he was one of
+themselves, and facilities were given him for running the blockade and
+reaching Canada. There he established himself on the border and put
+himself in communication with his followers in Ohio, by whom he was soon
+nominated for the Governorship of the State.</p>
+<p>The case, of course, excited great public interest, and was, no
+doubt, the occasion of considerable embarrassment to the administration.
+Mr. Lincoln dealt with it with all that shrewd practical judgment for
+which he was so remarkable, and in the final result it worked to the
+political advantage of the National cause. Sending Vallandigham beyond
+the lines took away from him the personal sympathy which might have been
+aroused had he been confined in one of the casemates of Fort Warren, and
+put upon him an indelible badge of connection with the enemies of the
+country. The cautious action of the Confederates in regard to him did
+not tend to remove this: for it was very apparent that they really
+regarded him as a friend, and helped him on his way to Canada in the
+expectation that he would prove a thorn in Mr. Lincoln's side. The
+President's proposal to the leading politicians who applied to him to
+rescind the sentence, that as a condition of this they should make
+certain declarations of the duty to support the government in a vigorous
+prosecution of the war, was a most telling bit of policy on his part,
+and took the sting entirely out of the accusations of tyranny and
+oppression.</p>
+<p>It must be admitted, however, that the case was one in which the
+administration ought to have left Burnside wholly untrammelled in
+carrying out the proclamation of September 25, 1862, or should have
+formulated a rule for its military officers, so that they would have
+acted only in accordance with the wishes of the government, and in cases
+where the full responsibility would be assumed at Washington. When
+Burnside arrested Mr. Vallandigham, the Secretary of War telegraphed
+from Washington his approval, saying, "In your determination to support
+the authority of the government and suppress treason in your department,
+you may count on the firm support of the President." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. p. 316.]</span> Yet when a little later Burnside
+suppressed the "Chicago Times" for similar utterances, the President, on
+the request of Senator Trumbull, backed by prominent citizens of
+Chicago, directed Burnside to revoke his action. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 385, 386.]</span>
+This the latter did by General Order No. 91, issued on the 4th of June.
+He read to me on June 7th a letter from Mr. Stanton, which practically
+revoked the whole of his Order No. 38 by directing him not to arrest
+civilians or suppress newspapers without conferring first with the War
+Department. This would have been very well if it had been done at the
+beginning; but to have it come after political pressure from the
+outside, and in so marked contradiction to the approval first expressed,
+shows that there was no well-considered policy. It put Burnside himself
+in an intolerable position, and, of course, made him decline further
+responsibility for such affairs in his department. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: I do not find in the
+Official Records the letter of Mr. Stanton above referred to; but I
+speak of it from a written memorandum I made at the time.]</span> </p>
+<p>The whole question as to the right and the policy of military
+arrests and orders in such a time bristles with difficulties. Had I been
+consulted before Burnside took action, I should have advised him to
+collect carefully the facts and report them to Washington, asking for
+specific instructions. The subject called for directions which would be
+applicable in all the military departments which included States out of
+the theatre of active warlike operations; and such general directions
+should be given by the government. But Burnside was apt to act
+impulsively, and his impulse was to follow the bent of his ardent
+patriotism. He was stirred to burning wrath by what seemed to him an
+intent to give aid and comfort to the rebellion, and meant to punish
+such conduct without stopping to ask what complications might come of it.</p>
+<p>I had found it desirable to form a judgment of my own with reference
+to the extent or limitation of military authority in the actual
+circumstances, and I quote the form in which I then cast it, so that I
+may not seem to be giving opinions formed after my own military duties
+were ended. I concluded, "First: That martial law operates either by
+reason of its proclamation by competent authority, or <i>ex necessitate
+rei</i> in the immediate theatre of military operations. Second; That
+when the struggle is in the nature of a revolution, and so long as the
+attempted revolution is in active progress, no definite limits can be
+given to the 'theatre of operations,' but the administration must be
+regarded as possessing a limited discretionary power in the use of
+martial law." As to the practical application of this power, "the
+presumptions are always in favor of the established civil law of the
+land, whenever and wherever it has a reasonable chance of unobstructed
+operation. In a State or portion of the country not the theatre of
+actual fighting, and where the civil courts are actually organized and
+working, there must be some strong reason for sending criminals or State
+prisoners before a military tribunal; such as that the government had
+reason to believe that a conspiracy was so powerful as to make an actual
+present danger of its overthrowing the loyal governments in some of the
+States before the civil courts could act in the ordinary process of
+business. In such a case, the arrest and admission to bail of the
+conspirators might be only the signal for their adherents to seize the
+reins of civil power, overthrow the courts, and consummate a revolution.
+The quick and summary action of military power would then be the only
+thing which could avert the danger. The justification of the use of a
+military tribunal depends on the existence of 'probable cause' for
+believing the public danger to be great."</p>
+<p>I see no reason to change the form of stating the principle I then
+adopted. The limitations given it seem sufficient to secure proper
+caution in applying it, and will show that I thought then, as I do now,
+that the administration ought to have laid down rules by which the
+commandants of military departments could be guided, and which would
+have saved us from the weakness of acting with seeming vigor on one day,
+only to retreat from our position the next.</p>
+<p>In Vallandigham's case the common argument was used by his friends
+that he was not exceeding a lawful liberty of speech in political
+opposition to the administration. When, however, a civil war is in
+progress, it is simply a question of fact whether words used are
+intended to give aid and comfort to the enemy and are evidence of
+conspiracy with the public enemy. If so, it is too clear for argument
+that the overt acts of the enemy are brought home to all who combine and
+confederate with them, and all are involved in the same responsibility.
+This question of fact and intent was officially settled by the findings
+of the military court. But there was another connection of the speech
+with overt acts, which the public mind took firm hold of. Among the most
+incendiary of Vallandigham's appeals had been those which urged the
+people to resist the provost-marshals in the several districts. It is
+nonsense to say that resisting the draft or the arrest of deserters only
+meant voting for an opposition party at the elections. There had been
+armed and organized resistance to arrest of deserters in Noble County
+just before his speech, and soon after it there was a still more
+formidable armed organization with warlike action against the enrolling
+officers in Holmes County, in the same region in which the speech was
+made. This last took the form of an armed camp, and the insurgents did
+not disperse till a military force was sent against them and attacked
+them in fortified lines, where they used both cannon and musketry. It
+did not seem plausible to the common sense of the people that we could
+properly charge with volleying musketry upon the barricades of the less
+intelligent dupes, whilst the leader who had incited and counselled the
+resistance was to be held to be acting within the limits of proper
+liberty of speech. Law and common sense are entirely in harmony in
+regarding the conspiracy as a unit, the speech at Mount Vernon and the
+armed collision on the Holmes County hill being parts of one series of
+acts in which the instigator was responsible for the natural
+consequences of the forces he set in motion.</p>
+<p>To complete the judicial history of the Vallandigham case, it may be
+said that he applied to the Supreme Court of the United States a few
+months afterward for a writ to revise and examine the proceedings of the
+military commission and to determine their legality. The court dismissed
+his application on the ground that the writ applied for was not a legal
+means of bringing the proceedings of the military court under review.
+The charges and specifications and the sentence were all set forth in
+the application, so that the court was made officially aware of the full
+character of the case. This was naturally accepted at the time as
+practically sustaining the action of the President and General Burnside.
+When, however, the war was over, there was taken up to the Supreme Court
+the case of Milligan from Indiana, who had been condemned to death for
+treasonable conduct in aid of the rebellion, done as a member of the
+Knights of the Golden Circle, an organization charged with overt acts in
+attempting to liberate by force the Confederate prisoners of war in the
+military prisons, and otherwise to assist the rebellion. The current
+public sentiment in regard to executive power had unquestionably changed
+with the return to peace, and Lincoln having been assassinated and
+Johnson being in the presidential chair, the tide was running strongly
+in favor of congressional rather than executive initiative in public
+affairs. It cannot be denied that the court responded more or less fully
+to the popular drift, then as in other important historical junctures.
+In the opinion as delivered by Judge Davis, it went all lengths in
+holding that the military commission could not act upon charges against
+a person not in the military service, and who was a citizen of the State
+where tried, when in such State the civil courts were not actually
+suspended by the operations of war. Chief Justice Chase and three of
+the justices thought this was going too far, and whilst concurring in
+discharging Milligan, held that Congress could authorize military
+commissions to try civilians in time of actual war, and that such
+military tribunals might have concurrent jurisdiction with the civil
+courts. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Ex parte
+Vallandigham, Wallace's Reports, i. 243. Ex parte Milligan, <i>Id</i>.,
+iv. 2, etc.]</span> </p>
+<p>We must not forget that whilst the judicial action determines the
+rights of the parties in a suit, the executive has always asserted his
+position as an independent co-ordinate branch of the government,
+authorized by the Constitution to determine for himself, as executive,
+his duties, and to interpret his powers, subject only to the
+Constitution as he understands it. Jefferson, Jackson, and Lincoln in
+turn found themselves in exigencies where they held it to be their duty
+to decide for themselves on their high political responsibility in
+matters of constitutional power and duty. Lincoln suspended the
+privilege of <i>habeas corpus</i> by his own proclamation, and adhered
+to his view, although Judge Taney in the Circuit Court for Maryland
+denied his power to do so. When Congress passed a regulating act on the
+subject which seemed to him sufficient, he signed the statute because he
+was quite willing to limit his action by the provisions embodied in it,
+and not because he thought the act necessary to confer the power.</p>
+<p>An incident in the history of the treasonable organizations believed
+to exist in Indiana emphasizes the change of mental attitude of Judge
+Davis between 1863 and 1866. During the progress of the Vallandigham
+case, General Burnside conceived a distrust of the wisdom of the course
+pursued by Brigadier-General Carrington, who commanded at Indianapolis,
+and sent Brigadier-General Hascall there to command that district.
+Carrington had been the right hand of Governor Morton in ferreting out
+the secrets of the Golden Circle, and applying Order No, 38 to them, but
+Burnside's lack of confidence in the cool-headed caution and judgment of
+his subordinate led him to make the change. Hascall was a brave and
+reliable Indiana officer, who had seen much active field service, and
+with whom I was associated in the Twenty-third Corps during the Atlanta
+campaign. He was ardently loyal, but an unexcitable, matter-of-fact sort
+of person. He did not suit Governor Morton, who applied to the Secretary
+of War to have him removed from command, declaring that immediate action
+was important. Judge Davis, who was in Indianapolis, was induced to
+co-operate with the governor in the matter, and telegraphed to Mr.
+Stanton that Hascall's removal was demanded by the honor and interests
+of the government. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. ii. p.369. See also <i>Id</i>.,
+p.194.]</span> Hascall was sent to the field, and after a short interval
+Carrington was restored to duty at Indianapolis. In the continued
+investigation and prosecution of the Golden Circle, and finally in the
+trial of Milligan, General Carrington was, under Governor Morton, the
+most active instrument; and it was, of course, to keep him at work on
+that line that the changes in command were secured. Yet it was the fruit
+of this very work of Carrington that was so strongly and sweepingly
+declared to be illegal by the Supreme Court, Judge Davis himself
+delivering the opinion and going beyond the chief-justice and others in
+denying all power and authority to military courts in such cases. Had
+Mr. Lincoln lived, he would no doubt have avoided any question before
+the Supreme Court in regard to his authority, by pardoning Milligan as
+he granted amnesty to so many who had been active in the rebellion. But
+Mr. Johnson was so much hampered by his quarrel with Congress over
+reconstruction that he was disposed to avoid interference with criminal
+cases where his action could subject him to the charge of sympathy with
+the accused. He carefully abstained from meddling with Jefferson Davis
+as he did with Milligan, and left the responsibility with the courts.</p>
+<p>The final development of the investigation of the Society of the
+Golden Circle took place after I had again obtained a field command, and
+I was glad to have no occasion to form a personal judgment about it. The
+value of evidence collected by means of detectives depends so greatly on
+the character of the men employed and the instructions under which they
+act, that one may well suspend judgment unless he has more than
+ordinarily full knowledge on these points. The findings of the military
+commission must stand as a <i>prima facie</i> historical determination
+of the facts it reported, and the burden of proof is fairly upon those
+who assert that the conclusions were not sustained by trustworthy
+evidence.</p>
+<p>I have mentioned the open resistance to the draft and to the arrest
+of deserters in Noble and in Holmes counties. The first of these was
+scarcely more than a petty riotous demonstration, which melted away
+before the officers as soon as they were able to show that they were
+backed by real power. The second looked for a time more formidable, and
+assumed a formal military organization. Governor Tod issued a
+proclamation warning the offenders of the grave consequences of their
+acts, and exhorting them for their own sake and the sake of their
+families to disperse and obey the laws. I directed General Mason at
+Columbus to be sure, if military force had to be used, that enough was
+concentrated to make stubborn resistance hopeless. The insurgents
+maintained a bold face till the troops were close upon them; but when
+they saw a strong line of infantry charging up toward the stone fences
+on the hillside where they had made their camp, and heard the whistling
+of bullets from the skirmishers, their courage gave way and they fled,
+every man for himself. Only two or three were seriously wounded, and
+comparatively few arrests were made. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. i. pp.395-397.]</span> Submission to law was all that was
+demanded, and when this was fully established, the prisoners were soon
+released without further punishment. The fear of further prosecutions
+operated to preserve the peace, and the men who had been allowed to go
+at large were a guaranty, in effect, for the good behavior of the
+community.</p>
+<p>Before dropping the subject, I may properly add that the arrest of
+Mr. Vallandigham very naturally raised the question how far we were
+willing to go in bringing disloyal men before the military courts.
+Prominent citizens, and especially men in official position, often found
+themselves urged to ask for the arrest of the more outspoken followers
+of Vallandigham in every country neighborhood. In answer to inquiries
+which had come through the Hon. Martin Welker, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Afterward for many years
+Judge of the U. S. District Court for northern Ohio.]</span> member of
+Congress for the Wayne County district, I wrote him a letter which shows
+the efforts we made to be prudent and to avoid unnecessary collisions.
+Judge Welker had served as Judge Advocate on my staff in the three
+months' service in the spring of 1861, and my intimacy with him made me
+speak as to our policy without reserve.</p>
+<p>"We are hopeful," I wrote, "now that the United States Circuit Court
+has refused to release Mr. Vallandigham on <i>habeas corpus</i>, that
+his followers will take warning and that their course will be so
+modified that there may be no occasion to make many more arrests.</p>
+<p>"I am persuaded that our policy should be to repress disloyalty and
+sedition at home rather by punishment of prominent examples than by a
+general arrest of all who may make themselves obnoxious to General Order
+No. 38, as the latter course will involve a more frequent application of
+military authority than we choose to resort to, unless circumstances
+should make it imperatively necessary... I am full of hope that the
+seditious designs of bad men will fail by reason of the returning sense
+of those who have been their dupes, and that the able and patriotic
+opinion of Judge Leavitt in the <i>habeas corpus</i> case will cause
+great numbers to take positive ground in favor of the government, who
+have hitherto been more or less under the influence of our northern
+traitors. If such shall be the result we can afford to overlook bygones,
+and I am inclined to await the development of public sentiment before
+following up Vallandigham's arrest by many others."</p>
+<p>This letter was written before the Secretary of War made any
+limitation of Burnside's authority in enforcing his famous order, and
+shows that in the District of Ohio, at least, there was no desire to set
+up a military despotism, or to go further in applying military methods
+to conduct in aid of the rebellion than we might be forced to go.</p>
+<p>Burnside's action in suppressing disloyal newspapers was not
+peculiar to himself. General Wright, his predecessor, had done the same,
+and other military commandants, both before and after and in other parts
+of the country, had felt obliged to take the same course. These facts
+only make more clear the desirability of a well-considered system of
+action determined by the government at Washington, and applicable to all
+such cases.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII</p>
+<p>BURNSIDE AND ROSECRANS--THE SUMMER'S DELAYS</p>
+<p>Condition of Kentucky and Tennessee--Halleck's instructions to
+Burnside--Blockhouses at bridges--Relief of East Tennessee--Conditions
+of the problem--Vast wagon-train required--Scheme of a railroad--Surveys
+begun--Burnside's efforts to arrange co-operation with Rosecrans--Bragg
+sending troops to Johnston--Halleck urges Rosecrans to
+activity--Continued inactivity--Burnside ordered to send troops to
+Grant--Rosecrans's correspondence with Halleck--Lincoln's
+dispatch--Rosecrans collects his subordinates' opinions--Councils of
+war--The situation considered--Sheridan and Thomas--Computation of
+effectives--Garfield's summing up--Review of the situation when
+Rosecrans succeeded Buell--After Stone's River--Relative
+forces--Disastrous detached expeditions--Appeal to ambition--The
+major-generalship in regular army--Views of the President
+justified--Burnside's forces--Confederate forces in East
+Tennessee--Reasons for the double organization of the Union armies.</p>
+<p>Burnside was not a man to be satisfied with quasi-military duty and
+the administration of a department outside of the field of active
+warfare. He had been reappointed to the formal command of the Ninth
+Corps before he came West, and the corps was sent after him as soon as
+transportation could be provided for it. He reached Cincinnati in person
+just as a raid into Kentucky by some 2000 Confederate cavalry under
+Brigadier-General John Pegram was in progress. Pegram marched from East
+Tennessee about the middle of March, reaching Danville, Ky., on the 23d.
+He spread reports that he was the advance-guard of a large force of all
+arms intending a serious invasion of the State. These exaggerations had
+their effect, and the disturbance in the Department of the Ohio was out
+of proportion to the strength of the hostile column. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Letter of Governor Robinson,
+Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. ii. p. 97; <i>Id</i>., pp. 121, 126.]</span>
+The troops belonging to the post at Danville retreated to the hither
+side of the Kentucky River at Hickman's Bridge, where they took up a
+defensive position. They saved the railway bridge from destruction, and
+Brigadier-General Quincy A. Gillmore, who commanded the District of
+Central Kentucky with headquarters at Lexington, was able to concentrate
+there a sufficient force to resume the offensive against Pegram.</p>
+<p>Burnside ordered reinforcements to Gillmore from the other parts of
+Kentucky, and Pegram, whose report indicates that a foray for beef,
+cattle, and horses was the principal object of his expedition, commenced
+his retreat. Gillmore followed him up vigorously, recapturing a
+considerable part of the cattle he had collected, and overtaking his
+principal column at Somerset, routed him and drove him beyond the
+Cumberland River.</p>
+<p>The month of March had begun with pleasant spring weather, and on
+the 15th General Wright had written to Halleck that an invasion of
+Kentucky was probable, especially as Rosecrans showed no signs of
+resuming the aggressive against Bragg's army in middle Tennessee. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 143.]</span>
+In Halleck's letter of instructions to Burnside as the latter was
+leaving Washington to relieve Wright, the general plan of an advance on
+East Tennessee in connection with that of Rosecrans toward Chattanooga
+was outlined, but the General-in-Chief acknowledged that the supply of
+an army in East Tennessee by means of the wagon roads was probably
+impracticable. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 163.]</span> He pointed out the necessity of reducing the number and
+size of garrisons in the rear, and making everything bend to the great
+object of organizing the army for active initiative against the enemy.
+He recommended building block-houses to protect the principal bridges on
+the railroads, where very small garrisons could give comparative
+security to our lines of communication. This plan was ultimately carried
+out on a large scale, and was the necessary condition of Sherman's
+Atlanta campaign of 1864. Taken as a whole, Halleck's instructions to
+Burnside presented no definite objective, and were a perfunctory sort of
+introduction to his new command, which raises a doubt whether the
+organization of a little army in the Department of the Ohio met his
+approval.</p>
+<p>The fact was that Burnside was acting on an understanding with
+President Lincoln himself, whose ardent wish to send a column for the
+relief of the loyal people of East Tennessee never slumbered, and who
+was already beginning to despair of its accomplishment by Rosecrans's
+army. The uneasiness at Washington over Rosecrans's inaction was
+becoming acute, and Mr. Lincoln was evidently turning to Burnside's
+department in hope of an energetic movement there. In this hope Burnside
+was sent West, and the Ninth Corps was detached from the Army of the
+Potomac and sent after him. The project of following up his advance by
+the construction of a railroad from Danville, then the terminus of the
+railway line reaching southward from Cincinnati, was discussed, and the
+President recommended it to Congress, but no appropriation of money was
+made. The scheme was hardly within the limits of practicable plans, for
+the building of a railway through such difficult country as the
+Cumberland mountain region implied laborious engineering surveys which
+could only be made when the country was reduced to secure possession,
+and the expenditure of time as well as of money would be likely to
+exceed the measure of reasonable plans for a military campaign. The true
+thing to do was to push Rosecrans's army to Chattanooga and beyond. With
+the valley of the Tennessee in our possession, and Chattanooga held as a
+new base of supply for a column in East Tennessee as well as another in
+Georgia, the occupation of Knoxville and the Clinch and Holston valleys
+to the Virginia line was easy. Without it, all East Tennessee campaigns
+were visionary. It was easy enough to get there; the trouble was to
+stay. Buell's original lesson in logistics, in which he gave the War
+Department a computation of the wagons and mules necessary to supply ten
+thousand men at Knoxville, was a solid piece of military arithmetic from
+which there was no escape. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Ante</i>,
+p. 199. Official Records, vol. vii. p. 931.]</span> </p>
+<p>When Burnside reached Cincinnati and applied himself practically to
+the task of organizing his little army for a march over the mountains,
+his first requisitions for wagons and mules were a little startling to
+the Quartermaster-General and a little surprising to himself. He began
+at once an engineering reconnoissance of the country south of Lexington
+and Danville, as far as it was within our control, and employed an able
+civil engineer, Mr. Gunn, to locate the preliminary line for a railway. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. xxiii. pt.
+ii. p. 610.]</span> These surveys were the starting-points from which the
+actual construction of the road between Cincinnati and Chattanooga was
+made after the close of the war.</p>
+<p>Burnside also urged that the troops in Kentucky, exclusive of the
+Ninth Corps, be organized into a new corps with General Hartsuff as its
+commander. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 259.]</span> Halleck demurred to this, but the President directed it
+to be done, and the order was issued by the War Department on 27th
+April. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp.
+269, 283, 400.]</span> Burnside also applied himself earnestly to
+procuring from Rosecrans a plan of active co-operation for an advance.
+As soon as Hartsuff assumed command of the new Twenty-third Corps,
+Burnside sent him, on May 3d, to visit Rosecrans in person, giving him
+authority to arrange an aggressive campaign. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 312.]</span>
+Hartsuff's old relations to Rosecrans made him a very fit person for the
+negotiation. Rosecrans hesitated to decide, and called a council of his
+principal officers. He suggested that the Ninth Corps be sent down the
+Louisville and Nashville Railroad to Glasgow, near the Tennessee line,
+but did not indicate any immediate purpose of advancing. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. pp. 313, 315.]</span> Burnside meant to take the field
+with both corps of his command, which he had organized under the name of
+the Army of the Ohio; but to reassure Rosecrans, he wrote that if in
+co-operation the two armies should come together, he would waive his
+elder rank and serve under Rosecrans whilst he should remain in middle
+Tennessee. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 331.]</span> It was now the 15th of May, and he sent a confidential
+staff officer again to Rosecrans to try to settle a common plan of
+operations. On the 18th Halleck had heard of Bragg's army being weakened
+to give General Joseph E. Johnston a force with which to relieve
+Pemberton at Vicksburg, and he became urgent for both Rosecrans and
+Burnside to advance. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 337.]</span> He thought it probable that raids would be attempted by
+the enemy to distract attention from his real object, and pointed out
+concentration and advance as the best way to protect the rear as well as
+to reach the enfeebled adversary. Burnside hastened in good faith his
+preparations for movement. He was collecting a pack mule train to supply
+the lack of wagons, and put his detachments in motion to concentrate. He
+begged for the third division of his corps (Getty's), which had been
+detained in the Army of the Potomac and could not yet be spared, but did
+not wait for it. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 338.]</span> By the 1st of June he was ready to leave in person for
+the front, and on the 3d was at Lexington, definitely committed to the
+movement into East Tennessee. There he was met by an order from Halleck
+to send 8000 men at once to reinforce General Grant at Vicksburg. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 384.]</span>
+The promise was made that they should be returned as soon as the
+immediate exigency was over, but the order was imperative. Burnside
+never hesitated in obedience. The two divisions of the Ninth Corps made
+about the number required, and they were immediately turned back and
+ordered to the Ohio River to be shipped on steamboats. Sorely
+disappointed, Burnside asked that he might go with his men, but was told
+that his departmental duties were too important to spare him from them. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. pp. 384, 386.]</span> Major-General Parke was therefore
+sent in command of the corps. Burnside returned to Cincinnati, grieving
+at the interruption of his plans, yet hoping it would not be for long.
+His duties at the rear were not agreeable, especially as this was just
+the time when he was directed to recall his order suppressing disloyal
+newspapers, and to refrain from arrests of civilians without explicit
+authority from Washington.</p>
+<p>We may safely assume that the President and his War Secretary were
+as little pleased at having to order the Ninth Corps away as Burnside
+was to have them go. In fact the order was not made till they entirely
+despaired of making Rosecrans advance with the vigor necessary to
+checkmate the Confederates. On the receipt of Halleck's dispatch of the
+18th May, Rosecrans entered into a telegraphic discussion of the
+probable accuracy of Halleck's information, saying that whatever troops
+were sent by the enemy to Mississippi were no doubt sent from Charleston
+and Savannah and not from Bragg. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 337.]</span> He insisted that it was not good policy to advance at
+present. On the 21st he said, "If I had 6000 cavalry in addition to the
+mounting of the 2000 now waiting horses, I would attack Bragg within
+three days." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 351.]</span> He also interposed the unfavorable judgment of his corps
+commanders in regard to an advance. Military history shows that this is
+pretty uniformly an excuse for a delay already fully resolved on by a
+commanding general. Halleck had no more cavalry to send, and could only
+say so. Burnside notified Rosecrans on the 22d that his columns had
+begun the movements of concentration and that they would be complete in
+three or four days. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. ii. p. 355.]</span> On the 28th Mr.
+Lincoln himself telegraphed Rosecrans, "I would not push you to any
+rashness, but I am very anxious that you do your utmost, short of
+rashness, to keep Bragg from getting off to help Johnston against
+Grant." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p.
+369.]</span> Rosecrans curtly answered, "Dispatch received. I will
+attend to it." In his dispatches to Mr. Stanton of similar date there is
+no intimation of any purpose whatever to move. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Ibid</i>.]</span> In
+telegraphing to Burnside, Rosecrans said that he was only waiting for
+the development of the former's concentration, and that he wished to
+advance by the 4th of June. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 372, 376.]</span> Burnside had already informed him that he would be
+ready by June 2d, and repeated it. On the date last named Rosecrans
+telegraphed Burnside that his movement had already begun, and that he
+wanted the Army of the Ohio to come up as near and as quickly as
+possible. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 381.]</span> Still he gave no intimation to the authorities at
+Washington of an advance, for none had in fact been made by his army,
+nor even of any near purpose to make one. On June 3d, Halleck
+telegraphed him: "Accounts received here indicate that Johnston is being
+heavily reinforced from Bragg's army. If you cannot hurt the enemy now,
+he will soon hurt you." He followed this by his dispatch to Burnside
+ordering reinforcements to be sent to Grant, and the remainder of the
+troops in the Department of the Ohio to be concentrated defensively in
+Kentucky. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 383, 384.]</span> The only move that Rosecrans made was to send on
+the 8th to his general officers commanding corps and divisions, a
+confidential circular asking their opinion in writing in answer to the
+following questions, in substance,--</p>
+<p>1. Has the enemy been so materially weakened that this army could
+advance on him at this time with strong reasonable chances of fighting a
+great and successful battle?</p>
+<p>2. Is an advance of our army likely to prevent additional
+reinforcements being sent against General Grant by Bragg?</p>
+<p>3. Is an immediate or early advance of our army advisable? <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. p. 395.]</span> </p>
+<p>With substantial unanimity they answered that it was not advisable
+to move, though they seem generally to have been aware that Breckinridge
+with about 10,000 men of all arms had gone from Bragg to Johnston. When
+Rosecrans reported the result of this council to Halleck, the latter
+reminded him of the maxim that "councils of war never fight," and that
+the responsibility for his campaign rests upon a commanding general and
+cannot be shared by a council of war.</p>
+<p>The careful study of the correspondence elicited by Rosecrans's
+circular would make a most valuable commentary upon the theme, "<i>Why</i>
+Councils of War never fight." The three questions were addressed to
+sixteen general officers commanding corps and divisions. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Their answers are found in
+Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. ii. as follows: Davis, p. 395,
+Johnson, do., McCook, 396, Turchin, 397, Brannan, 402, Crittenden, 403,
+Granger, 403, Wood, 405, Negley, 407, Palmer, do., Reynolds, 409,
+Rousseau, 410, Sheridan, 411, Stanley, 412, Thomas, 414, Van Cleve, 415,
+Mitchell, 417, and Garfield's summing up, 420.]</span> In reading the
+responses the impression grows strong that there was what may be called
+a popular feeling among these officers that their duty was to back up
+their commanding general in a judgment of his on the subjects submitted,
+which could hardly be other than well known. On the question as to the
+probable reduction of Bragg's army by detachments sent to Johnston,
+whilst they nearly all have some knowledge of the diminution of the
+Confederate army to about the extent mentioned above, most of them
+answer that they do not think it a <i>material</i> weakening, that being
+the tenor of the inquiry put to them. Some of them, however, say very
+naturally that as the secret service is managed from headquarters and
+all the information received is forwarded there, General Rosecrans
+should be much better able to answer this question than his
+subordinates. As to the second part of that question, nearly all seem to
+assume that the battle would be in the nature of a direct attack on the
+fortifications at Shelbyville and are not sanguine of a successful
+result. The few who speak of turning manoeuvres feel that the further
+retreat of Bragg would only lengthen their own line of communications
+and do no good. Strangely, too, they argue, many of them, that an
+advance would not prevent further depletion of Bragg to strengthen
+Johnston. They consequently and almost unanimously advise against an
+immediate or early advance.</p>
+<p>It is instructive to compare these opinions with the actual facts.
+The inaction of the summer had led directly to the detachment of two
+divisions of infantry and artillery and one of cavalry to reinforce
+Johnston, just as the inactivity of Meade later in the season encouraged
+the Richmond government to send Longstreet to Bragg from Virginia. If
+Rosecrans had moved early in the season, not only must Bragg have kept
+his army intact, but the battle of Chickamauga, if fought at all, must
+have been decided without Longstreet, and therefore most probably with
+brilliant success for our arms. It was delay in advancing, both in
+Tennessee and in Virginia, that thus directly led to disaster. If a
+brilliant victory at Chickamauga had been coincident with the fall of
+Vicksburg and Lee's defeat at Gettysburg, it does not seem rash to
+believe that the collapse of the Confederacy would have been hastened by
+a year.</p>
+<p>Two of the generals who answered these questions attained afterward
+to such distinction that their replies are an interesting means of
+learning their mental character and gauging their development. Sheridan
+answered briefly that he believed Bragg had no more than 25,000 or
+30,000 infantry and artillery, with a "large" cavalry force. In this he
+was very close to the mark. Bragg's report for the latter part of May,
+before sending reinforcements to Johnston, showed his forces present for
+duty to be 37,000 infantry, a little less than 3000 artillery, and
+15,000 cavalry, in round numbers. Deduct 10,000 from these, and Sheridan
+is found to be sufficiently accurate.<br>
+<span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. ii. p. 846.</span></p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">The reference to Bragg's returns of
+strength to the Adjutant-General's office makes this an appropriate
+place to note the method of making these returns and its bearing on the
+much debated question of the "Effective Total" commonly given by
+Confederate writers as the force of their armies compared with ours. The
+blanks for these reports were sent out from the
+Adjutant-and-Inspector-General's office at Richmond, with the order that
+the numerical returns be made "on the forms furnished and according to
+the directions expressed on them" (General Orders No. 64, Sept. 8,
+1862). The column "Effective Total" in these returns included only
+enlisted men carrying arms and actually in the line of battle. It
+excluded all officers, the non-commissioned staff, extra-duty men, the
+sick in hospital, and those in arrest. To secure uniformity in the
+method of reporting in his army and to correct some irregularity,
+General Bragg issued a circular, as follows (Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. p. 619):--</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Circular.] </p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">"HEADQUARTERS, ARMY OF TENNESSEE,<br>
+TULLAHOMA, January 29, 1863. </p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Hereafter, under the column of
+'Effective Total' in the reports from this army, extra-duty men and men
+in arrest will not be included. The 'Effective Total' must include only
+the fighting field force--those who are carried into the field of battle
+with fire-arms in their hands.</p>
+<p style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">By command of General Bragg.<br>
+GEORGE WM. BRENT, <br>
+Assistant Adjutant-General."</p>
+<p><span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">Before the publication of the
+Official Records, I had occasion to call attention to the subject: see
+"The Nation," May 21, 1874, p. 334; also "Atlanta" (Scribners' Series),
+pp. 27, 28; and again in "The Nation," February 2, 1893, p. 86. A fair
+comparison between the Confederate and the National armies, therefore,
+demands a computation of numbers by the same method; and as we did not
+use forms containing the "Effective Total" as reported by the
+Confederates, the columns of officers and men "present for duty" which
+are computed alike in the returns on both sides are the most
+satisfactory and fair basis of comparison.]</span> <br>
+He did not think Bragg would fight, but would retreat, and thought that
+in such a case he would not be hindered from sending more help to
+Johnston. Again, as forage in the country was scarce, he voted against
+an early advance.</p>
+<p>Thomas did not believe Bragg had been materially weakened, for if
+any troops had been sent away, he thought they had returned or their
+places had been supplied. He concluded that Bragg was ready to fight
+with an army at least as large as that of Rosecrans; that to hold our
+army where it was would sufficiently prevent further reduction of
+Bragg's; that an advance would give the latter the advantage and was not
+advisable. His preference for defensive warfare was very evident. He
+said it was true that Bragg might be reinforced and take the initiative,
+but that he "should be most happy to meet him here with his
+reinforcements." In conclusion he indicated the necessity of 6000 more
+cavalry to be added to the army. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+See also <i>ante</i>, p. 478.]</span> </p>
+<p>When the answers were all received, Garfield summed them up in a
+paper, which must be admitted to be a remarkable production for a young
+volunteer officer deliberately controverting the opinions of such an
+array of seniors. He gave, as the best information at headquarters, the
+force of Bragg, before sending help to Johnston, as 38,000 infantry,
+2600 artillery, and 17,500 cavalry. This made the infantry about 1000
+too many, the artillery nearly exactly right, and the cavalry 2500 too
+many,--on the whole a very close estimate. From these he deducted
+10,000, which was right. He stated Rosecrans's force at 82,700 "bayonets
+and sabres" with about 3000 more on the way, but deducted 15,000 for
+necessary posts and garrisons. The balancing showed 65,000 to throw
+against Bragg's 41,500. He further showed that delay would give time for
+the enemy's detachments to return, whilst we could hope for no further
+increase during the rest of the season. He then analyzed the military
+and civil reasons for activity, declared that he believed we could be
+victorious, and that the administration and the country had the right to
+expect the army to try.</p>
+<p>The result was a curious but encouraging result of bold and cogent
+reasoning. Although Rosecrans reported to General Halleck on the 11th of
+June the opinion of his corps and division commanders against an early
+advance, the logic and the facts pressed upon him by his chief of staff
+evidently took strong hold of his active intellect, so that when Halleck
+on the 16th asked for a categorical answer whether he would make an
+immediate movement forward, he replied, "If it means to-night or
+to-morrow, no. If it means as soon as all things are ready, say five
+days, yes." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. pp. 8-10.]</span> No doubt the rather plain
+intimation that a categorical "no" would be followed by action at
+Washington helped the decision; but it would have helped it to a decided
+negative if Garfield's paper, reinforced by the personal advice and oral
+discussions which we now know were of daily occurrence between them, had
+not had a convincing weight with him, both as to the feasibility of the
+campaign of turning manoeuvres which he devised and adopted, and as to
+its probable success. The result is reckoned one of his chief claims to
+military renown.</p>
+<p>But to judge properly the relations of the government to both the
+commanding generals in Kentucky and Tennessee, it is necessary to go
+back to the days immediately after the battle of Stone's River, and to
+inquire what were the tasks assigned these commanders and the means
+furnished to perform them. The disappointment of the administration at
+Washington with Rosecrans's conduct of his campaign dated, indeed, much
+earlier than the time indicated. He had succeeded Buell at the end of
+October when Bragg was in full retreat to the Tennessee River. The
+continuance of a vigorous pursuit and the prompt reoccupation of the
+country held by us in the early summer was regarded as of the utmost
+importance for political, quite as much as for military reasons. It was
+not a time to halt and reorganize an army. The question of foreign
+intervention was apparently trembling in the balance, and to let
+European powers rest under the belief that we had lost most of what had
+been gained in the advance from Donelson to Shiloh and Corinth, was to
+invite complications of the most formidable character. The Washington
+authorities had therefore a perfect right to decide that to press Bragg
+vigorously and without intermission was the imperative duty of the
+commander of the Army of the Cumberland. He would be rightly held to
+have disappointed the expectations of his government if he failed to do
+so. Rosecrans had been chosen to succeed Buell because of the belief
+that his character was one of restless vehemence better adapted to this
+work than the slower but more solid qualities of Thomas, who was already
+second in command in that army. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Since the text was written the Life of O. P. Morton has appeared, and
+in it his part in the change from Buell to Rosecrans is given. He urged
+the change upon Lincoln on the ground that aggressive vigor was
+imperatively demanded. "Another three months like the last six, and we
+are lost," said he. "Reject the wicked incapables whom you have
+patiently tried and found utterly wanting." On October 24th he
+telegraphed, "The removal of General Buell and the appointment of
+Rosecrans came not a moment too soon." Life, vol. i. pp. 197, 198.]</span>
+Halleck was obliged very soon to remind Rosecrans of this, and to claim
+the right of urging him onward because he himself had given the advice
+which had been decisive when the question of the choice was under
+consideration.</p>
+<p>Yet as soon as the army was again concentrated about Nashville,
+Rosecrans's correspondence took the form of urgent demands for the means
+of reorganization. He insisted that his cavalry force must be greatly
+increased, that he must have repeating arms for his horsemen, that he
+must organize a selected corps of mounted infantry and obtain horses for
+them--in short, that he must take months to put his army in a condition
+equal to his desires before resuming the work of the campaign. His
+energy seemed to be wholly directed to driving the administration to
+supply his wants, whilst Bragg was allowed not only to stop his rather
+disorganized flight, but to retrace his steps toward middle Tennessee.</p>
+<p>On the 4th of December Halleck telegraphed that the President was so
+disappointed and dissatisfied that another week of inaction would result
+in another change of commanders. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xx. pt. ii. p. 118.]</span> Rosecrans replied
+detailing his necessities, but taking a high tone and declaring himself
+insensible to threats of removal. The next day Halleck patiently but
+decidedly gave the reasons which made the demand for activity a
+reasonable one, adding the reminder that no one had doubted that Buell
+would eventually have succeeded, and that Rosecrans's appointment had
+been made because they believed he would move more rapidly. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 124.]</span>
+Meanwhile every effort was made to furnish him with the arms,
+equipments, and horses he desired.</p>
+<p>The battle of Stone's River had many points of resemblance to that
+of Antietam, and like that engagement was indecisive in itself, the
+subsequent retreat of the Confederates making it a victory for the
+national arms. The condition of the Army of the Cumberland after the
+battle was a sufficient reason for some delay, and a short time for
+recuperation and reinforcement was cordially accepted by everybody as a
+necessity of the situation. Congratulations and thanks were abundantly
+showered on the army, and promotions were given in more than common
+number. It was not concealed, however, that the government was most
+anxious to follow up the success and to make the delays as short as
+possible. An aggressive campaign was demanded, and the demand was a
+reasonable one because the means furnished were sufficient for the
+purpose.</p>
+<p>At the close of the month of January, Rosecrans's forces present for
+duty in his department numbered 65,000, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., vol. xxiii. pt.
+ii. p. 29.]</span> the Confederates under Bragg were 40,400. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 622.]</span>
+The end of February showed the National forces to be 80,000, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. p. 93.]</span> the enemy 43,600. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 654.]</span>
+After this Bragg's army gradually increased till midsummer, when it
+reached a maximum of about 57,000, and Rosecrans's grew to 84,000. The
+Confederates had a larger proportion of cavalry than we, but this was at
+the expense of being much weaker in infantry, the decisive arm in
+serious engagements. In fact this disproportion was another reason for
+active work, since experience showed that the enemy kept his cavalry at
+home when he was vigorously pushed, and sent them on raids to interrupt
+our communications when we gave him a respite. Our superiority in
+numbers was enough, therefore, to make it entirely reasonable and in
+accord with every sound rule of conducting war, that the government
+should insist upon an active and aggressive campaign from the earliest
+day in the spring when the weather promised to be favorable. Such
+weather came at the beginning of March, and the Confederates took
+advantage of it, as we have seen, by sending Pegram into Kentucky. Their
+cavalry under Wheeler attacked also Fort Donelson, but were repulsed. A
+reconnoissance by a brigade under Colonel Coburn from Franklin toward
+Spring Hill resulted in the capture of the brigade by the Confederates
+under Van Dorn. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 115.]</span> In the same month Forrest made a daring raid close to
+Nashville and captured Colonel Bloodgood and some 800 men at Brentwood. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 171, 732.]</span>
+Rosecrans organized a raid by a brigade of infantry mounted on mules,
+commanded by Colonel Streight, with the object of cutting the railroad
+south of Chattanooga. It was delayed in starting till near the end of
+April, and was overtaken and captured near Rome in Georgia. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 232, 321.]</span>
+These exasperating incidents were occurring whilst the Army of the
+Cumberland lay still about Murfreesboro, and its commander harassed the
+departments at Washington with the story of his wants, and intimated
+that nothing but carelessness as to the public good stood between him
+and their full supply. He was assured that he was getting his full share
+of everything which could be procured,--rifles, revolvers, carbines,
+horses, and equipments,--but the day of readiness seemed as far off as
+ever.</p>
+<p>On the 1st of March the President, feeling that the time had come
+when his armies should be in motion, and plainly discouraged at the poor
+success he had had in getting Rosecrans ready for an advance, authorized
+General Halleck to say to him that there was a vacant major-generalcy in
+the regular army which would be given to the general in the field who
+should first win an important and decisive victory. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. p. 95.]</span> The appeal to ambition was treated as if it
+had been an insult. It was called an "auctioneering of honor," and a
+base way to come by a promotion. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 111.]</span> Halleck retorted conclusively that Rosecrans himself had
+warmly advocated giving promotion in the lower grades only for
+distinguished services in the field, and said: "When last summer, at
+your request, I urged the government to promote you for success in the
+field, and, again at your request, urged that your commission be dated
+back to your services in West Virginia, I thought I was doing right in
+advocating your claim to honors for services rendered." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 138.]</span>
+In view of this unique correspondence it is certainly curious to find
+Rosecrans a few days later enumerating his personal grievances to Mr.
+Lincoln, and putting among them this, that after the battle of Stone's
+River he had asked "as a personal favor" that his commission as
+major-general of volunteers should be dated back to December, 1861, and
+that it was not granted. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 146.]</span> It was considerably antedated, so as to make him outrank
+General Thomas, much to the disgust of the latter when he learned it;
+but the date was not made as early as Rosecrans desired, which would
+have made him outrank Grant, Buell, and Burnside as well as Thomas.</p>
+<p>Persuasion and exhortation having failed, Grant must either be left
+to take the chances that part of Bragg's army would be concentrated
+under Johnston in Mississippi, or he must be strengthened by sending to
+him that part of our forces in Kentucky and Tennessee which could most
+easily be spared. There can be no doubt that it was well judged to send
+the Ninth Corps to him, as it would be less mischievous to suspend
+Burnside's movement into East Tennessee than to diminish the Army of the
+Cumberland under existing circumstances. It is, however, indisputably
+clear that the latter army should have been in active campaign at the
+opening of the season, whether we consider the advantage of the country
+or the reputation of its commander.</p>
+<p>If we inquire what means the administration gave Burnside to perform
+his part of the joint task assigned him, we shall find that it was not
+niggardly in doing so. His forces were at their maximum at the end of
+May, when they reached but little short of 38,000 present for duty in
+his whole department. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. ii. p. 380.]</span> This included,
+however, all the great States of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan
+as well as the eastern half of Kentucky, and there were several camps of
+prisoners and posts north of the Ohio which demanded considerable
+garrisons. Eight thousand men were used for this purpose, and nobody
+thought this an excess. Thirty thousand were thus left him for such
+posts in Kentucky as would be necessary to cover his communications and
+for his active column. He expected to make his active army about 25,000,
+and the advance movements had begun when, as has been stated, he was
+ordered to suspend, and to send the Ninth Corps to Grant.</p>
+<p>The enemy in East Tennessee were under the command of General Dabney
+Maury at first, but when he was sent to Mobile, General S. B. Buckner
+was made the commandant. His returns of forces for May 31st show that he
+had 16,267 present for duty, with which to oppose the advance of
+Burnside. The information of the latter was that his opponent had
+20,000, and he reckoned on having to deal with that number. The passes
+of the Cumberland Mountains were so few and so difficult that it was by
+no means probable that his campaign would be an easy one; yet the
+difficulties in the first occupation were not so serious as those which
+might arise if Bragg were able to maintain an interior position between
+the two National armies. In that case, unless he were kept thoroughly
+employed by Rosecrans, he might concentrate to crush Burnside before his
+decisive conflict with the Army of the Cumberland. This was the inherent
+vice of a plan which contemplated two independent armies attempting to
+co-operate; and if Rosecrans had been willing to open his campaign on
+the 1st of March, it is almost certain that the troops in Kentucky would
+have been ordered to him. The President did not determine to send
+Burnside to the West and to give him a little army of his own till he
+despaired of the liberation of East Tennessee in that season by any
+activity of Rosecrans. This cannot be overlooked in any candid criticism
+of the summer's work.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV</p>
+<p>THE MORGAN RAID</p>
+<p>Departure of the staff for the field--An amusingly quick
+return--Changes in my own duties--Expeditions to occupy the
+enemy--Sanders' raid into East Tennessee--His route--His success and
+return--The Confederate Morgan's raid--His instructions--His reputation
+as a soldier--Compared with Forrest--Morgan's start delayed--His
+appearance at Green River, Ky.--Foiled by Colonel Moore--Captures
+Lebanon--Reaches the Ohio at Brandenburg--General Hobson in
+pursuit--Morgan crosses into Indiana--Was this his original
+purpose?--His route out of Indiana into Ohio--He approaches
+Cincinnati--Hot chase by Hobson--Gunboats co-operating on the
+river--Efforts to block his way--He avoids garrisoned posts and
+cities--Our troops moved in transports by water--Condition of Morgan's
+jaded column--Approaching the Ohio at Buffington's--Gunboats near the
+ford--Hobson attacks--Part captured, the rest fly northward--Another
+capture--A long chase--Surrender of Morgan with the remnant--Summary of
+results--A burlesque capitulation.</p>
+<p>The departure of General Burnside and his staff for active service
+in the field was quite an event in Cincinnati society. The young men
+were a set of fine fellows, well educated and great social favorites.
+There was a public concert the evening before they left for Lexington,
+and they were to go by a special train after the entertainment should be
+over. They came to the concert hall, therefore, not only booted and
+spurred, but there was perhaps a bit of youthful but very natural
+ostentation of being ready for the field. Their hair was cropped as
+close as barber's shears could cut it, they wore the regulation uniform
+of the cavalry, with trim round-about jackets, and were the "cynosure of
+all eyes." Their parting words were said to their lady friends in the
+intervals of the music, and the pretty dramatic effect of it all
+suggested to an onlooker the famous parting scene in "Belgium's capital"
+which "Childe Harold" has made so familiar.</p>
+<p>It was quite an anti-climax, however, when the gay young officers
+came back, before a week was over, crestfallen, the detaching of the
+Ninth Corps having suspended operations in Kentucky. They were a little
+quizzed about their very brief campaign, but so good-humoredly that they
+bore it pretty well, and were able to seem amused at it, as well as the
+fair quizzers.</p>
+<p>In preparation for a lengthened absence, Burnside had turned over to
+me some extra duties. He ordered the District of Michigan to be added to
+my command, and gave general directions that the current business of the
+department headquarters should pass through my hands. As General Parke,
+his chief of staff, had gone to Vicksburg in command of the Ninth Corps,
+Burnside made informal use of me to supply in some measure his place.
+Our relations therefore became closer than ever. He hoped his troops
+would soon come back to him, as was promised, and in resuming business
+at the Cincinnati headquarters, he tried to keep it all in such shape
+that he could drop it at a moment's notice.</p>
+<p>To keep the enemy occupied he organized two expeditions, one under
+Brigadier-General Julius White into West Virginia, and the other under
+Colonel W. P. Sanders into East Tennessee. The latter was one of the
+boldest and longest raids made during the war, and besides keeping the
+enemy on the alert, destroying considerable military stores and a number
+of important railway bridges, it was a preliminary reconnoissance of
+East Tennessee and the approaches to it through the mountains, which was
+of great value a little later. The force consisted of 1500 mounted men,
+being detachments from different regiments of cavalry and mounted
+infantry, among which were some of the loyal men of East Tennessee under
+Colonel R. K. Byrd. Sanders was a young officer of the regular army who
+was now colonel of the Fifth Kentucky Cavalry. He rapidly made a
+first-class reputation as a bold leader of mounted troops, but was
+unfortunately killed in the defence of Knoxville in November of this
+same year. His expedition started from Mount Vernon, Kentucky, on the
+14th of June, marched rapidly southward sixty miles to Williamsburg,
+where the Cumberland River was fordable. Thence he moved southwest about
+the same distance by the Marsh Creek route to the vicinity of Huntsville
+in Tennessee. Continuing this route southward some fifty miles more, he
+struck the Big Emory River, and following this through Emory Gap, he
+reached the vicinity of Kingston on the Clinch River in East Tennessee,
+having marched in all rather more than two hundred miles. Avoiding
+Kingston, which was occupied by a superior force of Confederates, he
+marched rapidly on Knoxville, destroying all the more important railway
+bridges. Demonstrating boldly in front of Knoxville, and finding that it
+was strongly held and its streets barricaded for defence, he passed
+around the town and advanced upon Strawberry Plains, where a great
+bridge and trestle crosses the Holston River, 2100 feet in length, a
+place to become very familiar to us in later campaigning. Crossing the
+Holston at Flat Creek, where other bridges were burned, he moved up the
+left (east) bank of the river to attack the guard at the big bridge, the
+Confederate forces being on that side. He drove them off, capturing 150
+of the party and five cannon. He not only destroyed the bridge, but
+captured and burnt large quantities of military stores and camp
+equipage. On he went along the railway to Mossy Creek, where another
+bridge 300 feet long was burned. He now turned homeward toward the
+north-west, having greatly injured a hundred miles of the East Tennessee
+Railroad. Turning like a fox under the guidance of his East Tennessee
+scouts, he crossed the Clinch Mountains and the valley of the Clinch,
+and made his way back by way of Smith's Gap through the Cumberland
+Mountains to his starting-place in Kentucky. He had captured over 450
+prisoners, whom he paroled, had taken ten cannon and 1000 stands of
+small arms which he destroyed, besides the large amounts of military
+stores which have been mentioned. He marched about five hundred miles in
+the whole circuit, and though frequently skirmishing briskly with
+considerable bodies of the enemy, his losses were only 2 killed, 4
+wounded, and 13 missing. Of course a good many horses were used up, but
+as a preliminary to the campaign which was to follow and in which
+Sanders was to have a prominent place, it was a raid which was much more
+profitable than most of them. He was gone ten days. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Sanders' Report, Official
+Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. pp. 385, 386.]</span> </p>
+<p>The expedition under Brigadier-General Julius White was sent to beat
+up the Confederate posts in the Big Sandy valley and to aid incidentally
+the raid under Sanders into East Tennessee. Burnside sent another
+southward in the direction of Monticello, Kentucky. The object of these
+was to keep the enemy amused near home and prevent the raids his cavalry
+had been making on the railway line by which Rosecrans kept up his
+communication with Louisville. They seem rather to have excited the
+emulation of the Confederate cavalryman Brigadier-General John H.
+Morgan, who, a few days before Rosecrans's advance on Tullahoma,
+obtained permission to make a raid, starting from the neighborhood of
+McMinnville, Tenn., crossing the Cumberland near Burkesville, and thence
+moving on Louisville, which he thought he might capture with its depots
+of military stores, as it was supposed to be almost stripped of troops.
+His division consisted of about 3000 horsemen, and he took the whole of
+it with him, though Wheeler, his chief, seems to have limited him to
+2000. His instructions were to make a rapid movement on the line of the
+Louisville and Nashville Railroad in Kentucky and to get back to his
+place in Bragg's army as quickly as possible. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. i. p.817.]</span> </p>
+<p>Morgan's reputation as a soldier was a peculiar one. He had made a
+number of raids which showed a good deal of boldness in the general plan
+and a good deal of activity in the execution, but it cannot be said that
+he showed any liking for hard fighting. Like boys skating near thin ice,
+he seemed to be trying to see how close he could come to danger without
+getting in. A really bold front showed by a small body of brave men was
+usually enough to turn him aside. It is instructive to compare his
+career with Forrest's. They began with similar grade, but with all the
+social and personal prestige in Morgan's favor. Forrest had been a local
+slave-trader, a calling which implied social ostracism in the South, and
+which put a great obstacle in the way of advancement. Both were fond of
+adventurous raids, but Forrest was a really daring soldier and fought
+his way to recognition in the face of stubborn prejudice. Morgan
+achieved notoriety by the showy temerity of his distant movements, but
+nobody was afraid of him in the field at close quarters.</p>
+<p>The official order to Morgan to start on his expedition was dated on
+the 18th of June, but he did not get off till the close of the month. It
+would seem that he remained in observation on the flank of Rosecrans's
+army as the left wing moved upon Manchester, and began his northward
+march after Bragg had retreated to Decherd on the way to Chattanooga. At
+any rate, he was first heard of on the north side of the Cumberland on
+the 2d of July, near Burkesville and marching on Columbia. Burnside
+immediately ordered all his cavalry and mounted infantry to concentrate
+to meet him, but his route had been chosen with full knowledge of the
+positions of our detachments and he was able to get the start of them.
+Brigadier-General H. M. Judah, who commanded the division of the
+Twenty-third Corps which covered that part of our front, seems to have
+wholly misconceived the situation, and refused to listen to the better
+information which his subordinates gave him. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Sketches of War History,
+vol. iv. (Papers of the Ohio Commandery of the Loyal Legion). A paper by
+Capt. H. C. Weaver, Sixteenth Kentucky Infantry, who was on the staff of
+Brigadier-General E. H. Hobson during the pursuit of Morgan.]</span>
+After a slight skirmish at Columbia, Morgan made for the Green River
+bridge at Tebb's Bend, an important crossing of the Louisville Railroad.
+The bend was occupied by Colonel O. H. Moore of the Twenty-fifth
+Michigan Infantry, who, under previous instructions from
+Brigadier-General E. H. Hobson, intrenched a line across the neck of the
+bend, some distance in front of the stockade at the bridge. Morgan
+advanced upon the 4th of July, and after a shot or two from his
+artillery, sent in a flag demanding the surrender of Moore's little
+force, which amounted to only 200 men. Moore did not propose to
+celebrate the national anniversary in that way, and answered
+accordingly. The enemy kept up a lively skirmishing fight for some
+hours, when he withdrew. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. p. 645.]</span> Moore had beaten
+him off with a loss of 6 killed and 23 wounded of the brave Michigan
+men. He reported Morgan's loss at 50 killed and 200 wounded. The
+Confederate authorities admit that they had 36 killed, but put their
+wounded at only 46, an incredibly small proportion to the killed.</p>
+<p>The raiders continued their route to Lebanon, where was the
+Twentieth Kentucky Infantry under Lieutenant-Colonel Charles S. Hanson,
+numbering less than 400 men, without artillery. A brigade ordered to
+reinforce the post delayed its advance, and Hanson was left to his own
+resources. After several hours of a lively skirmishing fight without
+much loss, he surrendered to save the village from destruction by fire,
+which Morgan threatened. The loss in the post was 4 killed and 15
+wounded. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. p. 649.]</span> Hanson reported 29 rebel dead
+left on the field and 30 wounded, also abandoned. No doubt others of the
+wounded were taken care of and concealed by their sympathizers in the
+vicinity. Some military stores had been burned with the railway
+station-house before Hanson surrendered. He and his men were paroled in
+the irregular way adopted by Morgan on the raid.</p>
+<p>Bardstown was the next point reached by the enemy, but Morgan's
+appetite for Louisville seems now to have diminished, and he turned to
+the westward, reaching the Ohio River on the 8th, at Brandenburg, some
+thirty miles below the city. The detachments of mounted troops which
+were in pursuit had been united under the command of General Hobson, the
+senior officer present, and consisted of two brigades, commanded by
+Brigadier-General J. M. Shackelford and Colonel F. Wolford. They
+approached Brandenburg on the evening of the 8th and captured the
+steamboat "McCombs" with a remnant of Morgan's men and stores the next
+morning when they entered the town. They saw on the opposite bank the
+smoking wreck of the steamboat "Alice Dean" which Morgan had set on fire
+after landing his men on the Indiana shore. The steamboat "McCombs" was
+sent to Louisville for other transports. A delay of twenty-four hours
+thus occurred, and when Hobson's command was assembled in Indiana,
+Morgan had the start by nearly two days. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Hobson's Report, Official
+Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. p. 659.]</span> </p>
+<p>It is claimed by Morgan's intimate friend and chronicler that he
+intended to cross the Ohio from the day he left camp in Tennessee,
+although it would be contrary to his orders; <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 818. History
+of Morgan's Cavalry, by B. W. Duke, p. 410.]</span> and that he had made
+investigations in advance in regard to fords on the upper Ohio and
+particularly at Buffington Island, where he ultimately tried to cross
+into West Virginia. If true, this would forfeit every claim on his part
+to the character of a valuable and intelligent subordinate; for
+operations on a large scale would be absolutely impossible if the
+commander of a division of cavalry may go off as he pleases, in
+disobedience to the orders which assign him a specific task. Except for
+this statement, it would be natural to conclude that when he approached
+Louisville he began to doubt whether the city were so defenceless as he
+had assumed, and knowing that twenty-four hours' delay would bring
+Hobson's forces upon his back, he then looked about for some line of
+action that would save his prestige and be more brilliant than a race
+back again to Tennessee. It is quite probable that the feasibility of
+crossing the Ohio and making a rapid ride through the country on its
+northern bank had been discussed by him, and conscious as he was that he
+had thus far accomplished nothing, he might be glad of an excuse for
+trying it. This interpretation of his acts would be more honorable to
+him as an officer than the deliberate and premeditated disobedience
+attributed to him. But whether the decision was made earlier or later,
+the capture of the steamboats at Brandenburg was at once made use of to
+ferry over his command, though it was not accomplished without some
+exciting incidents. A party of the Confederates under Captain Hines had
+crossed into Indiana a few days before without orders from Morgan, being
+as independent of him, apparently, as he was of General Bragg. Hines's
+party had roused the militia of the State, and he had made a rapid
+retreat to the Ohio, reaching it just as Morgan entered Brandenburg. It
+may be that the lucky daredeviltry of Hines's little raid fired his
+commander's heart to try a greater one; at any rate, Morgan forgave his
+trespass against his authority as he prayed to be forgiven by Bragg, and
+turned his attention to driving off the Indiana militia who had followed
+Hines to the bank of the river and now opened fire with a single cannon.
+Morgan's artillery silenced the gun and caused the force to retreat out
+of range, when he put over two of his regiments, dismounted, to cover
+the ferrying of the rest. At this point one of the "tin-clad" gunboats
+of the river fleet made its appearance and took part in the combat. The
+section of Parrot guns in Morgan's battery proved an overmatch for it,
+however, and it retired to seek reinforcements. The interval was used to
+hasten the transport of the Confederate men and horses, and before
+further opposition could be made, the division was in the saddle and
+marching northward into Indiana.</p>
+<p>At the first news of Morgan's advance into Kentucky, Burnside had
+directed General Hartsuff, who commanded in that State, to concentrate
+his forces so as to capture Morgan if he should attempt to return
+through the central part of it. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. pp.13, 679, etc.]</span> Judah's
+and Boyle's divisions were put in motion toward Louisville, and the
+remainder of the mounted troops not already with Hobson were also
+hurried forward. These last constituted a provisional brigade under
+Colonel Sanders. It may help to understand the organization of the
+National troops to note the fact that all which operated against Morgan
+were parts of the Twenty-third Corps, which was composed of four
+divisions under Generals Sturgis, Boyle, Judah, and White. The brigades
+were of both infantry and mounted troops, united for the special
+purposes of the contemplated campaign into East Tennessee. For the
+pursuit of Morgan the mounted troops were sent off first, and as these
+united they formed a provisional division under Hobson, the senior
+brigadier present. Quite a number of the regiments were mounted
+infantry, who after a few months were dismounted and resumed their
+regular place in the infantry line. For the time being, however, Hobson
+had a mounted force that was made up of fractions of brigades from all
+the divisions of the corps; and Shackelford, Wolford, Kautz, and Sanders
+were the commanders of the provisional brigades during the pursuit. Its
+strength did not quite reach 3000 men. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. i. p. 658.]</span> </p>
+<p>Morgan's first course was due north, and he marched with some
+deliberation. On the 10th he reached Salem, about forty miles from the
+river, on the railway between Louisville and Chicago. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pp. 717, 719.]</span>
+A small body of militia had assembled here, and made a creditable stand,
+but were outflanked and forced to retreat after inflicting on him a
+score of casualties. The evidences Morgan here saw of the ability of the
+Northern States to overwhelm him by the militia, satisfied him that
+further progress inland was not desirable, and turning at right angles
+to the road he had followed, he made for Madison on the Ohio. There was
+evidently some understanding with a detachment he had left in Kentucky,
+for on the 11th General Manson, of Judah's division, who was on his way
+with a brigade from Louisville to Madison by steamboats under naval
+convoy, fell in with a party of Morgan's men seeking to cross the river
+at Twelve-mile Island, a little below Madison. Twenty men and forty-five
+horses were captured. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pt. ii. pp. 729, 745.]</span> If any of this party had succeeded in
+crossing before (as was reported) they would of course inform their
+chief of the reinforcements going to Madison, and of the gunboats in the
+river. Morgan made no attack on Madison, but took another turn northward
+in his zigzag course, and marched on Vernon, a railway-crossing some
+twenty miles from Madison, where the line to Indianapolis intersects
+that from Cincinnati to Vincennes. Here a militia force had been
+assembled under Brigadier-General Love, and the town was well situated
+for defence. Morgan, declining to attack, now turned eastward again, his
+course being such that he might be aiming for the river at Lawrenceburg
+or at Cincinnati.</p>
+<p>The deviousness of his route had been such as to indicate a want of
+distinct purpose, and had enabled Hobson greatly to reduce the distance
+between them. Hanson's brigade on the steamboats was now about 2500
+strong, and moved on the 12th from Madison to Lawrenceburg, keeping pace
+as nearly as possible with Morgan's eastward progress. Sanders's brigade
+reached the river twenty miles above Louisville, and General Boyle sent
+transports to put him also in motion on the river. At the request of
+Burnside, Governor Tod, of Ohio, called out the militia of the southern
+counties, as Governor Morton had done in Indiana. Burnside himself, at
+Cincinnati, kept in constant telegraphic communication with all points,
+assembling the militia where they were most likely to be useful and
+trying to put his regular forces in front of the enemy. It would have
+been easy to let the slippery Confederate horsemen back into Kentucky.
+The force in the river, both naval and military, unquestionably
+prevented this at Madison, and probably at Lawrenceburg. On the 13th
+Morgan was at Harrison on the Ohio State line, and it now became my turn
+as district commander to take part in the effort to catch him. I had no
+direct control of the troops of the Twenty-third Corps, and the only
+garrisons in Ohio were at the prison camps at Columbus and Sandusky.
+These of course could not be removed, and our other detachments were
+hardly worth naming. Burnside declared martial law in the counties
+threatened with invasion, so that the citizens and militia might for
+military purposes come directly under our control. The relations between
+the general and myself were so intimate that no strict demarcation of
+authority was necessary. He authorized me to give commands in his name
+when haste demanded it, and we relieved each other in night watching at
+the telegraph.</p>
+<p>A small post had been maintained at Dayton, since the Vallandigham
+disturbance, and Major Keith, its commandant, was ordered to take his
+men by rail to Hamilton. He went at once and reported himself holding
+that town with 600 men, including the local militia, but only 400 were
+armed. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. pp.742, 743.]</span> Lieutenant-Colonel Neff
+commanded at Camp Dennison, thirteen miles from Cincinnati, and had 700
+armed men there, with 1200 more of unarmed recruits. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p.749.]</span>
+At both these posts systematic scouting was organized so as to keep
+track of the enemy, and their active show of force was such that Morgan
+did not venture to attack either, but threaded his way around them. At
+Cincinnati there was no garrison. A couple of hundred men formed the
+post at Newport on the Kentucky side of the river, but the main reliance
+was on the local militia. These were organized as soon as the governor's
+call was issued on the evening of the 12th. Batteries were put in
+position covering the approaches to the city from the north and west,
+and the beautiful suburban hills of Clifton and Avondale afforded
+excellent defensive positions.</p>
+<p>The militia that were called out were of course infantry, and being
+both without drill and unaccustomed to marching, could only be used in
+position, to defend a town or block the way. In such work they showed
+courage and soldierly spirit, so that Morgan avoided collision with all
+considerable bodies of them. But they could not be moved. All we could
+do was to try to assemble them at such points in advance as the raiders
+were likely to reach, and we especially limited their task to the
+defensive one, and to blockading roads and streams. Particular stress
+was put on the orders to take up the planking of bridges and to fell
+timber into the roads. Little was done in this way at first, but after
+two or three days of constant reiteration, the local forces did their
+work better, and delays to the flying enemy were occasioned which
+contributed essentially to the final capture.</p>
+<p>No definite news of Morgan's crossing the Ohio line was received
+till about sunset of the 13th when he was marching eastward from
+Harrison. Satisfied that Lawrenceburg and lower points on the Ohio were
+now safe, Burnside ordered the transports and gunboats at once to
+Cincinnati. Manson and Sanders arrived during the night, and the latter
+with his brigade of mounted men was, at dawn of the 14th, placed on the
+north of the city in the village of Avondale. Manson with the transports
+was held in readiness to move further up the river.</p>
+<p>Feeling the net drawing about him, Morgan gave his men but two or
+three hours' rest near Harrison, and then took the road toward
+Cincinnati. He reached Glendale, thirteen miles northwest of the city,
+late in the night, and then turned to the east, apparently for Camp
+Dennison, equally distant in a northeast direction. His men were jaded
+to the last degree of endurance, and some were dropping from the saddle
+for lack of sleep. Still he kept on. Colonel Neff, in accordance with
+his orders, had blockaded the principal roads to the west, and stood at
+bay in front of his camp. Morgan threw a few shells at Neff's force, and
+a slight skirmish began, but again he broke away, forced to make a
+detour of ten miles to the north. We had been able to warn Neff of their
+approach by a message sent after midnight, and he had met them boldly,
+protecting the camp and the railroad bridge north of it. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. i. pp. 748, 750.]</span> The raiders reached Williamsburg in
+Clermont County, twenty-eight miles from Cincinnati, in the afternoon of
+the 14th, and there the tired men and beasts took the first satisfactory
+rest they had had for three days. Morgan had very naturally assumed that
+there would be a considerable regular force at Cincinnati, and
+congratulated himself that by a forced night march he had passed round
+the city and avoided being cut off. He had, in truth, escaped by the
+skin of his teeth. Could Burnside have felt sure that Lawrenceburg was
+safe a few hours earlier, Manson and Sanders might have been in
+Cincinnati early enough on the 13th to have barred the way from
+Harrison. He had in fact ordered Manson up at two o'clock in the
+afternoon, but the latter was making a reconnoissance north of the town,
+and was detained till late in the night. As soon as it was learned on
+the 14th that Morgan had passed east of the Little Miami River, Sanders
+was ordered to join Hobson and aid in the pursuit. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: In the reports of Hobson and
+Sanders there seems to be a mistake of a day in the dates, from the 12th
+to the 16th. This may be corrected by the copies of current dispatches
+given in Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. pp. 730-750.]</span>
+Hobson's horses were almost worn out, for following close upon Morgan's
+track, as he was doing, he found only broken down animals left behind by
+the rebels, whilst these gathered up the fresh animals as they advanced.
+Still he kept doggedly on, seldom more than ten or fifteen miles behind,
+but unable to close that gap till his opponent should be delayed or
+brought to bay.</p>
+<p>After entering Clermont County, the questions as to roads, etc,
+indicated that Morgan was making for Maysville, hoping to cross the
+river there. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 749.]</span> Manson's brigade and the gunboats were accordingly sent
+up the river to that vicinity. The militia of the Scioto valley were
+ordered to destroy the bridges, in the hope that that river would delay
+him, but they were tardy or indifferent, and it was a day or two later
+before the means of obstruction were efficiently used. Judah's forces
+reached Cincinnati on the 14th, a brigade was there supplied with
+horses, and they were sent by steamers to Portsmouth. Judah was ordered
+to spare no effort to march northward far enough to head off the enemy's
+column. On the 16th General Scammon, commanding in West Virginia, was
+asked to concentrate some of his troops at Gallipolis or Pomeroy on the
+upper Ohio, and promptly did so. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 756.]</span> The militia were concentrated at several points along
+the railway to Marietta. Hobson was in the rear, pushing along at the
+rate of forty miles a day.</p>
+<p>Morgan had soon learned that the river was so patrolled that no
+chance to make a ferry could be trusted, and he made his final effort to
+reach the ford at Buffington Island, between Marietta and Pomeroy. He
+reached Pomeroy on the 18th, but Scammon was occupying it, and the
+troops of the Kanawha division soon satisfied Morgan that he was not
+dealing with militia. He avoided the roads held by our troops, and as
+they were infantry, could move around them, though a running skirmish
+was kept up for some miles. Hobson was close in rear, and Judah's men
+were approaching Buffington. Morgan reached the river near the ford
+about eight o'clock in the evening. The night was pitchy dark, and his
+information was that a small earthwork built to command the ford was
+occupied by a permanent garrison. He concluded to wait for daylight. The
+work had in fact been abandoned on the preceding day, but at daybreak in
+the morning he was attacked. Hobson's men pushed in from west and north,
+and Judah from the south. The gunboats came close up to the island,
+within range of the ford, and commanded it. Hobson attacked vigorously
+and captured the artillery. The wing of the Confederate forces, about
+700 in number, surrendered to General Shackelford, and about 200 to the
+other brigades under Hobson. The rest of the enemy, favored by a fog
+which filled the valley, evaded their pursuers and fled northward.
+Hobson ordered all his brigades to obey the commands of Shackelford, who
+was in the lead, and himself sought Judah, whose approach had been
+unknown to him till firing was heard on the other side of the enemy.
+Judah had also advanced at daybreak, but in making a reconnoissance he
+himself with a small escort had stumbled upon the enemy in the fog. Both
+parties were completely surprised, and before Judah could bring up
+supports, three of his staff were captured, Major Daniel McCook,
+paymaster, who had volunteered as an aide, was mortally wounded, ten
+privates were wounded, and twenty or thirty with a piece of artillery
+captured. Morgan hastily turned in the opposite direction, when he ran
+into Hobson's columns; Judah's prisoners and the gun were recaptured,
+and the enemy driven in confusion, with the losses above stated. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. i. pp. 775-777.]</span> </p>
+<p>As Hobson was regularly a brigade commander in Judah's division, the
+latter now asserted command of the whole force, against Hobson's
+protest, who was provisionally in a separate command by Burnside's
+order. Fortunately, Shackelford had already led Hobson's men in rapid
+pursuit of the enemy, and as soon as Burnside was informed of the
+dispute, he ordered Judah not to interfere with the troops which had
+operated separately. By the time this order came Shackelford was too far
+away for Hobson to rejoin him, and continued in independent command till
+Morgan's final surrender. He overtook the flying Confederates on the
+20th, about sixty miles further north, and they were forced to halt and
+defend themselves. Shackelford succeeded in getting a regiment in the
+enemy's rear, and after a lively skirmish between 1200 and 1300
+surrendered. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pp. 778, 781.]</span> Morgan himself again evaded with about 600
+followers. Shackelford took 500 volunteers on his best horses and
+pressed the pursuit. The chase lasted four days of almost continuous
+riding, when the enemy was again overtaken in Jefferson County, some
+fifteen miles northwest of Steubenville. General Burnside had collected
+at Cincinnati the dismounted men of Hobson's command, had given them
+fresh horses, and had sent them by rail to join Shackelford. They were
+under command of Major W. B. Way of the Ninth Michigan Cavalry and Major
+G. W. Rue of the Ninth Kentucky Cavalry. They brought five or six
+hundred fresh men to Shackelford's aid, and their assistance was
+decisive. Morgan's course to the river at Smith's Ferry on the border of
+Columbiana County was intercepted, and near Salineville he was forced to
+surrender with a little less than 400 men who still followed him. About
+250 had surrendered in smaller bodies within a day or two before, and
+stragglers had been picked up at many points along the line of pursuit.
+Burnside reported officially that about 3000 prisoners were brought to
+Cincinnati. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. p. 14.]</span> General Duke states that some
+300 of Morgan's command succeeded in crossing the Ohio about twenty
+miles above Buffington, and escaped through West Virginia. He also gives
+us some idea of the straggling caused by the terrible fatigues of the
+march by telling us that the column was reduced by nearly 500 effectives
+when it passed around Cincinnati. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Hist. of Morgan's Cavalry, pp. 442, 443.]</span> It is probable that
+these figures are somewhat loosely stated, as the number of prisoners is
+very nearly the whole which the Confederate authorities give as Morgan's
+total strength. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: A note
+attached to Wheeler's return of the cavalry of his corps for July 31st
+says that Morgan's division was absent "on detached service,"
+effectives 2743. Add to this the officers, etc., and the total "present
+for duty" would be a little over 3000. Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt.
+ii. p. 941. For Bragg's circular explaining the term "effectives" as
+applying only to private soldiers actually in the line of battle, see <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 619, and <i>ante</i>, p. 482.]</span> Either a considerable
+reinforcement must have succeeded in getting to him across the river, or
+a very small body must have escaped through West Virginia. Burnside
+directed the officers to be sent to the military prison camp for
+officers on Johnson's Island in Sandusky Bay, and the private soldiers
+to go to Camp Chase at Columbus and Camp Morton at Indianapolis. Soon
+afterward, however, orders came from Washington that the officers should
+be confined in the Ohio penitentiary, in retaliation for unusual
+severities practised on our officers who were prisoners in the South.
+Morgan's romantic escape from the prison occurred just after I was
+relieved from the command of the district in the fall, for the purpose
+of joining the active army in East Tennessee.</p>
+<p>A glance at the raid as a whole, shows that whilst it naturally
+attracted much attention and caused great excitement at the North, it
+was of very little military importance. It greatly scattered for a time
+and fatigued the men and horses of the Twenty-third Corps who took part
+in the chase. It cost Indiana and Ohio something in the plunder of
+country stores and farm-houses, and in the pay and expenses of large
+bodies of militia that were temporarily called into service. But this
+was all. North of the Ohio no military posts were captured, no public
+depots of supply were destroyed, not even an important railway bridge
+was burned. There was no fighting worthy of the name; the list of
+casualties on the National side showing only 19 killed, 47 wounded, and
+8 missing in the whole campaign, from the 2d of July to the final
+surrender. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxlii. pt. i. p.637.]</span> For this the whole Confederate
+division of cavalry was sacrificed. Its leader was never again trusted
+by his government, and his prestige was gone forever. His men made
+simply a race for life from the day they turned away from the militia at
+Vernon, Indiana. Morgan carefully avoided every fortified post and even
+the smaller towns. The places he visited after he crossed the Ohio line
+do not include the larger towns and villages that seemed to lie directly
+in his path. He avoided the railroads also, and these were used every
+day to convey the militia and other troops parallel to his route, to
+hedge him in and finally to stop him. His absence was mischievous to
+Bragg, who was retreating upon Chattanooga and to whom the division
+would have been a most welcome reinforcement. He did not delay Burnside,
+for the latter was awaiting the return of the Ninth Corps from
+Vicksburg, and this did not begin to arrive till long after the raid was
+over. None of the National army's communications were interrupted, and
+not a soldier under Rosecrans lost a ration by reason of the pretentious
+expedition. It ended in a scene that was ridiculous in the extreme.
+Morgan had pressed into his service as guides, on the last day of his
+flight, two men who were not even officers of the local militia, but who
+were acting as volunteer homeguards to protect their neighborhood. When
+he finally despaired of escape, he begged his captive guides to change
+their <i>r&ocirc;le</i> into commanders of an imaginary army and to
+accept his surrender upon merciful and favorable terms to the
+vanquished! He afterward claimed the right to immediate liberation on
+parole, under the conditions of this burlesque capitulation. Shackelford
+and his rough riders would accept no surrender but an unconditional one
+as prisoners of war, and were sustained in this by their superiors. The
+distance by the river between the crossing at Brandenburg and the ferry
+above Steubenville near which Morgan finally surrendered, was some six
+hundred miles. This added to the march from Tennessee through Kentucky
+would make the whole ride nearly a thousand miles long. Its importance,
+however, except as a subject for an entertaining story, was in an
+inverse ratio to its length. Its chief interest to the student of
+military history is in its bearing on the question of the rational use
+of cavalry in an army, and the wasteful folly of expeditions which have
+no definite and tangible military object. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: For Official Records and
+correspondence concerning the raid, see Burnside's report (Official
+Records, vol. xxiii. pt. i. pp.13, 14) and the miscellaneous documents (<i>Id</i>.,
+pp.632-818).]</span><br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV</p>
+<p>THE LIBERATION OF EAST TENNESSEE</p>
+<p>News of Grant's victory at Vicksburg--A thrilling scene at the
+opera--Burnside's Ninth Corps to return--Stanton urges Rosecrans to
+advance--The Tullahoma manoeuvres--Testy correspondence--Its real
+meaning--Urgency with Burnside--Ignorance concerning his situation--His
+disappointment as to Ninth Corps--Rapid concentration of other
+troops--Burnside's march into East Tennessee--Occupation of
+Knoxville--Invests Cumberland Gap--The garrison surrenders--Good news
+from Rosecrans--Distances between armies--Divergent lines--No railway
+communication--Burnside concentrates toward the Virginia line--Joy of
+the people--Their intense loyalty--Their faith in the future.</p>
+<p>During the Morgan Raid and whilst we in Ohio were absorbed in the
+excitement of it, events were moving elsewhere. Lee had advanced from
+Virginia through Maryland into Pennsylvania and had been defeated at
+Gettysburg by the National army under Meade. Grant had brought the siege
+of Vicksburg to a glorious conclusion and had received the surrender of
+Pemberton with his army of 30,000 Confederates. These victories, coming
+together as they did and on the 4th of July, made the national
+anniversary seem more than ever a day of rejoicing and of hope to the
+whole people. We did not get the news of Grant's victory quite so soon
+as that of Meade's, but it came to us at Cincinnati in a way to excite
+peculiar enthusiasm.</p>
+<p>An excellent operatic company was giving a series of performances in
+the city, and all Cincinnati was at Pike's Opera House listening to <i>I
+Puritani</i> on the evening of the 7th of July. General Burnside and his
+wife had one of the proscenium boxes, and my wife and I were their
+guests. The second act had just closed with the famous trumpet song, in
+which Susini, the great basso of the day, had created a <i>furore</i>.
+A messenger entered the box where the general was surrounded by a
+brilliant company, and gave him a dispatch which announced the surrender
+of Vicksburg and Pemberton's army. Burnside, overjoyed, announced the
+great news to us who were near him, and then stepped to the front of the
+box to make the whole audience sharers in the pleasure. As soon as he
+was seen with the paper in his hand, the house was hushed, and his voice
+rang through it as he proclaimed the great victory and declared it a
+long stride toward the restoration of the Union. The people went almost
+wild with excitement, the men shouted hurrahs, the ladies waved their
+handkerchiefs and clapped their hands, all rising to their feet. The
+cheering was long as well as loud, and before it subsided the excitement
+reached behind the stage. The curtain rose again, and Susini came
+forward with a national flag in each hand, waving them enthusiastically
+whilst his magnificent voice resounded in a repetition of the song he
+had just sung, and which seemed as appropriate as if it were inspired
+for the occasion,--</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"Suoni la tromba, e intrepido<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Io pugner&ograve; da forte,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Bello &egrave; affrontar la morte,<br>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Gridando libert&agrave;!"</p>
+<p>The rejoicing and the cheers were repeated to the echo, and when at
+last they subsided, the rest of the opera was only half listened to,
+suppressed excitement filling every heart and the thought of the great
+results to flow from the victories absorbing every mind.</p>
+<p>Burnside reckoned with entire certainty on the immediate return of
+the Ninth Corps, and planned to resume his expedition into East
+Tennessee as soon as his old troops should reach him again. The Morgan
+raid was just beginning, and no one anticipated its final scope. In the
+dispatch from the Secretary of War which announced Grant's great
+victory, Burnside was also told that the corps would immediately return
+to him. In answering it on the 8th July, he said, "I thought I was very
+happy at the success of General Grant and General Meade, but I am still
+happier to hear of the speedy return of the Ninth Corps." He informed
+Rosecrans of it on the same day, adding, "I hope soon to be at work
+again." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxiii. pt. ii. pp.522, 524.]</span> </p>
+<p>The Washington authorities very naturally and very properly wished
+that the tide of success should be kept moving, and Secretary Stanton
+had exhorted Rosecrans to further activity by saying, on the 7th, "You
+and your noble army now have the chance to give the finishing blow to
+the rebellion. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p.518.]</span> Will you neglect the chance?" Rosecrans replied: "You do
+not appear to observe the fact that this noble army has driven the
+rebels from middle Tennessee, of which my dispatches advised you. I beg
+in behalf of this army that the War Department may not overlook so great
+an event because it is not written in letters of blood." He, however,
+did not intimate any purpose of advancing. No doubt the manoeuvering of
+Bragg out of his fortified positions at Shelbyville and Tullahoma had
+been well done; but its chief value was that it forced Bragg to meet the
+Army of the Cumberland in the open field if the advantage should be
+promptly followed up. If he were allowed to fortify another position,
+nothing would be gained but the ground the army stood on. Had Rosecrans
+given any intimation of an early date at which he could rebuild the Elk
+River bridge and resume active operations, it would probably have
+relieved the strain so noticeable in the correspondence between him and
+the War Department. He did nothing of the kind, and the necessity of
+removing him from the command was a matter of every-day discussion at
+Washington, as is evident from the confidential letters Halleck sent to
+him. The correspondence between the General-in-Chief and his subordinate
+is a curious one. A number of the most urgent dispatches representing
+the dissatisfaction of the President and the Secretary were accompanied
+by private and confidential letters in which Halleck explains the
+situation and strongly asserts his friendship for Rosecrans and the
+error of the latter in assuming that personal hostility to himself was
+at bottom of the reprimands sent him on account of his delays. It was
+with good intentions that Halleck wrote thus, but the wisdom of it is
+very questionable. It gave Rosecrans ground to assume that the official
+dispatches were only the formal expression of the ideas of the President
+and Secretary whilst the General-in-Chief did not join in the
+condemnation of his dilatory mode of conducting the campaign. To say to
+Rosecrans, as Halleck did on July 24th, "Whether well founded or without
+any foundation, the dissatisfaction really exists, and I deem it my duty
+as a friend to represent it to you truly and fairly," <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. pp. 552, 555, 601.]</span> is to neglect his duty as
+commander of the whole army to express his own judgment and to give
+orders which would have the weight of his military position and presumed
+knowledge in military matters. When, therefore, a few days later he gave
+peremptory orders to begin an active advance, these orders were
+interpreted in the light of the preceding correspondence, and lost their
+force and vigor. They were met by querulous and insubordinate inquiries
+whether they were intended to take away all discretion as to details
+from the commander of an army in the field. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Aug. 4, <i>Id</i>., p. 592.]</span>
+It has been argued that Rosecrans's weakness of character consisted in a
+disposition to quarrel with those in power over him, and that a spirit
+of contradiction thwarted the good military conduct which his natural
+energy might have produced. I cannot help reading his controversial
+correspondence in the light of my personal observation of the man, and
+my conviction is that his quarrelsome mode of dealing with the War
+Department was the result of a real weakness of will and purpose which
+did not take naturally to an aggressive campaign that involved great
+responsibilities and risks. Being really indecisive in fixing his plan
+of campaign and acting upon it, his infirmity of will was covered by a
+belligerence in his correspondence. A really enterprising commander in
+the field would have begun an active campaign in the spring before any
+dissatisfaction was exhibited at Washington; and if he had a decided
+purpose to advance at any reasonably early period, there was nothing in
+the urgency shown by his superiors to make him abandon his purpose. He
+might have made testy comments, but he would have acted.</p>
+<p>Halleck's correspondence with Burnside in July is hard to
+understand, unless we assume that it was so perfunctory that he did not
+remember at one time what he said or did earlier. In a dispatch to the
+General-in-Chief dated the 11th, Rosecrans had said, "It is important to
+know if it will be practicable for Burnside to come in on our left flank
+and hold the line of the Cumberland; if not, a line in advance of it and
+east of us." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxiii. pt. ii. p. 529.]</span> It was already understood
+between Rosecrans and Burnside that the latter would do this and more as
+soon as he should have the Ninth Corps with him; and the dispatch must
+be regarded as a variation on the form of excuses for inaction, by
+suggesting that he was delayed by the lack of an understanding as to
+co-operation by the Army of the Ohio. On receipt of Rosecrans's
+dispatch, Halleck answered it on the 13th, saying, "General Burnside has
+been frequently urged to move forward and cover your left by entering
+East Tennessee. I do not know what he is doing. He seems tied fast to
+Cincinnati." On the same day he telegraphed Burnside, "I must again urge
+upon you the importance of moving forward into East Tennessee, to cover
+Rosecrans's left." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 531.]</span> It is possible that Burnside's telegraphic
+correspondence with the Secretary of War was not known to Halleck, but
+it is hard to believe that the latter was ignorant of the proportions
+the Morgan raid had taken after the enemy had crossed the Ohio River.
+The 13th of July was the day that Morgan marched from Indiana into Ohio
+and came within thirteen miles of Cincinnati. Burnside was organizing
+all the militia of southern Ohio, and was concentrating two divisions of
+the Twenty-third Corps to catch the raiders. One of these was on a fleet
+of steamboats which reached Cincinnati that day, and the other, under
+Hobson, was in close pursuit of the enemy. Where should Burnside have
+been, if not at Cincinnati? If the raid had been left to the "militia
+and home guards," as Halleck afterward said all petty raids should be,
+this, which was not a petty raid, would pretty certainly have had
+results which would have produced more discomfort at Washington than the
+idea that Burnside was "tied fast to Cincinnati." Burnside was exactly
+where he ought to be, and doing admirable work which resulted in the
+capture of the division of 3000 rebel cavalry with its officers from the
+general in command downward. That the General-in-Chief was entirely
+ignorant of what was going on, when every intelligent citizen of the
+country was excited over it and every newspaper was full of it, reflects
+far more severely upon him than upon Burnside.</p>
+<p>But this was by no means the whole. He forgot that when he stopped
+Burnside's movement on 3d June to send the Ninth Corps to Grant, it was
+with the distinct understanding that it prevented its resumption till
+the corps should return. He had himself said that this should be as
+early as possible, and meanwhile directed Burnside to concentrate his
+remaining forces as much as he could. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. p.384.]</span> Burnside had been told on the 8th of July,
+without inquiry from him, that the corps was coming back to him, and had
+immediately begun his preparation to resume an active campaign as soon
+as it should reach him. Not hearing of its being on the way, on the 18th
+he asked Halleck if orders for its return had been given. To this
+dispatch no answer was given, and it was probably pigeonholed and
+forgotten. Burnside continued his campaign against Morgan, and on the
+24th, when the last combinations near Steubenville were closing the
+career of the raider, Halleck again telegraphs that there must be no
+further delay in the movement into East Tennessee, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. p.553.]</span> and orders an immediate report of the
+position and number of Burnside's troops organized for that purpose! He
+was still ignorant, apparently, that there had been any occasion to
+withdraw the troops in Kentucky from the positions near the Cumberland
+River.</p>
+<p>Burnside answered temperately, reciting the facts and reminding him
+of the actual state of orders and correspondence, adding only, "I should
+be glad to be more definitely instructed, if you think the work can be
+better done." Morgan's surrender was on the 26th, and Burnside
+immediately applied himself with earnest zeal to get his forces back
+into Kentucky. Judah's division at Buffington was three hundred miles
+from Cincinnati and five hundred from the place it had left to begin the
+chase. Shackelford's mounted force was two hundred miles further up the
+Ohio. This last was, as has been recited, made up of detachments from
+all the divisions of the Twenty-third Corps, and its four weeks of
+constant hard riding had used up men and horses. These all had to be got
+back to the southern part of central Kentucky and refitted, returned to
+their proper divisions, and prepared for a new campaign. The
+General-in-Chief does not seem to have had the slightest knowledge of
+these circumstances or conditions.</p>
+<p>On the 28th another Confederate raid developed itself in southern
+Kentucky, under General Scott. It seemed to be intended as a diversion
+to aid Morgan to escape from Ohio, but failed to accomplish anything.
+Scott advanced rapidly from the south with his brigade, crossing the
+Cumberland at Williamsburg and moving through London upon Richmond. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. p. 568.]</span> Colonel Sanders endeavored to stop the
+enemy at Richmond with about 500 men hastily collected, but was driven
+back. He was ordered to Lexington and put in command of all the mounted
+men which could be got together there, 2400 in all, and advanced against
+Scott, who now retreated by Lancaster, Stanford, and Somerset. At
+Lancaster the enemy was routed in a charge and 200 of them captured.
+Following them up with vigor, their train was destroyed and about 500
+more prisoners were taken. At the Cumberland River Sanders halted,
+having been without rations for four days. The remnant of Scott's force
+had succeeded in crossing the river after abandoning the train. Scott
+claimed to have taken and paroled about 200 prisoners in the first part
+of his raid, but such irregular paroles of captured men who could not be
+carried off were unauthorized and void. The actual casualties in
+Sanders's command were trifling. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pt. i. pp. 828-843; pt. ii. pp. 568, 589.]</span> </p>
+<p>The effect of this last raid was still further to wear out
+Burnside's mounted troops, but he pressed forward to the front all his
+infantry and organized a column for advance. In less than a week, on
+August 4, he was able to announce to the War Department that he had
+11,000 men concentrated at Lebanon, Stanford, and Glasgow, with outposts
+on the Cumberland River, and that he could possibly increase this to
+12,000 by reducing some posts in guard of the railway. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 591.]</span>
+Upon this, Halleck gave to Rosecrans peremptory orders for the immediate
+advance of the Army of the Cumberland, directing him also to report
+daily the movement of each corps till he should cross the Tennessee. On
+the next day Burnside was ordered in like manner to advance with a
+column of 12,000 men upon Knoxville, on reaching which place he was to
+endeavor to connect with the forces under Rosecrans. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol.
+xxiii. pt. ii. pp.592-593.]</span> The dispatch closed with what was
+called a repetition of a former order from the Secretary of War for
+Burnside to leave Cincinnati and take command of his moving column in
+person. Burnside had never dreamed of doing anything else, as everybody
+near him knew, though he had in fact been quite ill during the latter
+part of July. The mention of a former order was another sheer blunder on
+General Halleck's part, and Burnside indignantly protested against the
+imputation contained in it. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pp.593, 594.]</span> The truth seems to be that Halleck was in such a
+condition of irritation over his correspondence with Rosecrans, that
+nothing pertaining to the Department of the Ohio was accurately placed
+in his mind or accurately stated when he had occasion to refer to it. In
+cutting the knot by peremptory orders to both armies to move, he was
+right, and was justified in insisting that the little column of 12,000
+under Burnside should start although it could only be got together in
+greatest haste and with the lack of equipment occasioned by the "wear
+and tear" of the operations against Morgan. If, in insisting on this, he
+had recognized the facts and given Burnside and his troops credit for
+the capture of the rebel raiders and the concentration, in a week, of
+forces scattered over a distance of nearly a thousand miles, no one
+would have had a right to criticise him. The exigency fairly justified
+it. But to treat Burnside as if he had been only enjoying himself in
+Cincinnati, and his troops all quietly in camp along the Cumberland
+River through the whole summer,--to ignore the absence of the Ninth
+Corps and his own suspension of a movement already begun when he took it
+away,--to assume in almost every particular a basis of fact absolutely
+contrary to the reality and to telegraph censures for what had been
+done, under his own orders or strictly in harmony with them,--all this
+was doing a right thing in as absurdly wrong a way as was possible. A
+gleam of humor and the light of common sense is thrown over one
+incident, when Mr. Lincoln, seeing that Burnside had full right from the
+dispatches to suppose the Ninth Corps was to come at once to him from
+Vicksburg and that no one had given him any explanation, himself
+telegraphed that the information had been based on a statement from
+General Grant, who had not informed them why the troops had not been
+sent. "General Grant," the President quaintly added, "is a copious
+worker and fighter, but a very meagre writer or telegrapher. No doubt he
+changed his purpose for some sufficient reason, but has forgotten to
+notify us of it." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxiii. pt. ii. p. 561.]</span> The reference to
+copious work as contrasted with the <i>copia verborum</i> gains added
+point from a dispatch of Halleck to Rosecrans, quite early in the
+season, in which the latter is told that the cost of his telegraph
+dispatches is "as much or perhaps more than that of all the other
+generals in the field." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 255.]</span> The form of the reference to Grant enables us also to
+read between the lines the progress he was making in reputation and in
+the President's confidence. He kept "pegging away," and was putting
+brains as well as energy into his work. The records show also that
+Burnside took the hint, whether intended or not, and in this campaign
+did not err on the side of copiousness in dispatches to Washington.</p>
+<p>To avoid the delay which would be caused by the distribution of his
+mounted force to the divisions they had originally been attached to,
+Burnside organized these into a division under Brigadier-General S. P.
+Carter, and an independent brigade under Colonel F. Wolford. He also
+reorganized the infantry divisions of the Twenty-third Corps. The first
+division, under Brigadier-General J. T. Boyle, was to remain in Kentucky
+and protect the lines of communication. The second was put under command
+of Brigadier-General M. D. Manson, and the third under Brigadier-General
+M. S. Hascall. Each marching division was organized into two brigades
+with a battery of artillery attached to each brigade. Three batteries of
+artillery were in reserve. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxx. pt. ii. pp. 553-555.]</span> </p>
+<p>On the 11th of August General Burnside went to Hickman's Bridge, and
+the forward movement was begun. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pt. iii. p. 16. Hickman's Bridge, as has already been mentioned, was at
+the terminus of the Central Kentucky Railroad. There, on the bank of the
+Kentucky River, Burnside made a fortified depot from which his wagon
+trains should start as a base for the supply system of his army in East
+Tennessee. It was called Camp Nelson in honor of the dead Kentucky
+general.]</span> At this date the Confederate forces in East Tennessee
+under General Buckner numbered 14,733 "present for duty," with an
+"aggregate present" of 2000 or 3000 more. Conscious that the column of
+12,000 which Halleck had directed him to start with was less than the
+hostile forces in the Holston valley, Burnside reduced to the utmost the
+garrisons and posts left behind him. Fortunately the advanced division
+of the Ninth Corps returning from Vicksburg reached Cincinnati on the
+12th, and although the troops were wholly unfit for active service by
+reason of malarial diseases contracted on the "Yazoo," they could
+relieve some of the Kentucky garrisons, and Burnside was thus enabled to
+increase his moving column to about 15,000 men. The earlier stages of
+the advance were slow, as the columns were brought into position to take
+up their separate lines of march and organize their supply trains for
+the road. On the 20th Hanson's division was at Columbia, Hascall's was
+at Stanford, Carter's cavalry division was at Crab Orchard, and
+independent brigades of cavalry under Colonels Wolford and Graham were
+at Somerset and Glasgow. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pt. ii. p. 548.]</span> On that day orders were issued for the
+continuous march. General Julius White relieved Manson in command of the
+second division, and the two infantry divisions were to move on
+Montgomery, Tenn., Hascall's by way of Somerset, Chitwoods, and
+Huntsville, and White's by way of Creelsboro, Albany, and Jamestown.
+Carter's cavalry, which covered the extreme left flank, marched through
+Mt. Vernon and London to Williamsburg, where it forded the Cumberland,
+thence over the Jellico Mountains to Chitwoods where it became the
+advance of Hascall's column to Montgomery. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. ii. p. 548.]</span> At this point the columns were united and all
+moved together through Emory Gap upon Kingston. Burnside accompanied the
+cavalry in person, and sent two detachments, one to go by way of Big
+Creek Gap to make a demonstration on Knoxville, and the other through
+Winter's Gap for the same purpose of misleading the enemy as to his line
+of principal movement.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center;"><img src="images/1-25-1.jpg"
+ title="Map of East Tennessee." alt="Map of East Tennessee."
+ style="width: 800px; height: 480px;"><br>
+</p>
+<p>Nothing could be more systematic and vigorous than the march of
+Burnside's columns. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+p. 569.]</span> They made from fifteen to twenty or twenty-five miles a
+day with the regularity of clock-work, though the route in many parts of
+it was most difficult. There were mountains to climb and narrow gorges
+to thread. Streams were to be forded, roads were to be repaired and in
+places to be made anew. On the 1st of September Burnside occupied
+Kingston, having passed through Emory Gap into East Tennessee and
+communicated with Crittenden's corps of Rosecrans's army. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Itinerary, Official Records,
+vol. xxx. pt. ii. pp. 576-578.]</span> Here he learned that upon the
+development of the joint plan of campaign of the National commanders,
+Bragg had withdrawn Buckner's forces south of the Tennessee at Loudon,
+there making them the right flank of his army about Chattanooga. There
+was, however, one exception in Buckner's order to withdraw.
+Brigadier-General John W. Frazer was left at Cumberland Gap with 2500
+men, and though Buckner had on August 30th ordered him to destroy his
+material and retreat into Virginia, joining the command of Major-General
+Samuel Jones, this order was withdrawn on Frazer's representation of his
+ability to hold the place and that he had rations for forty days. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. ii. p. 608.]</span> There being therefore no troops in East Tennessee
+to oppose its occupation, Burnside's advance-guard entered Knoxville on
+the 3d of September. Part of the Twenty-third Corps had been sent toward
+London on the 2d, and upon their approach the enemy burned the great
+railroad bridge at that place. A light-draught steamboat was building at
+Kingston, and this was captured and preserved. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt. iii. p.
+333.]</span> It played a useful part subsequently in the transportation
+of supplies when the wagon-trains were broken down and the troops were
+reduced nearly to starvation. No sooner was Burnside in Knoxville than
+he put portions of his army in motion for Cumberland Gap, sixty miles
+northward. He had already put Colonel John F. DeCourcey (Sixteenth Ohio
+Infantry) in command of new troops arriving in Kentucky, and ordered him
+to advance against the fortifications of the gap on the north side.
+General Shackelford was sent with his cavalry from Knoxville, but when
+Burnside learned that DeCourcey and he were not strong enough to take
+the place, he left Knoxville in person with Colonel Samuel Gilbert's
+brigade of infantry and made the sixty-mile march in fifty-two hours.
+Frazer had refused to surrender on the summons of the subordinates; but
+when Burnside arrived and made the demand in person, he despaired of
+holding out and on the 9th of September surrendered the garrison. A
+considerable number got away by scattering after the flag was hauled
+down, but 2,205 men laid down their arms, and twelve pieces of cannon
+were also among the spoils. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+pt. ii. pp. 548, 599, 604, 611.]</span> DeCourcey's troops were left to
+garrison the fortifications, and the rest were sent to occupy the upper
+valley of the Holston toward the Virginia line.</p>
+<p>On the 10th, and while still at Cumberland Gap, Burnside received a
+dispatch from General Crittenden with the news that he was in possession
+of Chattanooga, that Bragg had retreated toward Rome, Ga., and that
+Rosecrans hoped with his centre and right to intercept the enemy at
+Rome, which was sixty miles south of Chattanooga. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. iii. p. 523.]</span> Everything was therefore most promising on the
+south, and Burnside had only to provide for driving back the
+Confederates under Jones, at the Virginia line, a hundred and thirty
+miles northeast of Knoxville. It becomes important here to estimate
+these distances rightly. Knoxville is a hundred and eleven miles distant
+from Chattanooga by the railroad, and more by the country roads. From
+Bristol on the northeast to Chattanooga on the southwest is two hundred
+and forty-two miles, which measures the length of that part of the
+Holston and Tennessee valley known as East Tennessee. If Rosecrans were
+at Rome, as General Crittenden's dispatch indicated, he was more than a
+hundred and seventy miles distant from Knoxville, and nearly three
+hundred miles from the region about Greeneville and the Watauga River,
+whose crossing would be the natural frontier of the upper valley, if
+Burnside should not be able to extend his occupation quite to the
+Virginia line. It will be seen therefore that the progress of the
+campaign had necessarily made Rosecrans's and Burnside's lines of
+operation widely divergent, and they were far beyond supporting distance
+of each other, since there was no railway communication between them,
+and could not be for a long time. Burnside captured some locomotives and
+cars at Knoxville; but bridges had been destroyed to such an extent that
+these were of little use to him, for the road could be operated but a
+short distance in either direction and the amount of rolling stock was,
+at most, very little. Complete success for Rosecrans, with the reopening
+and repair of the whole line from Nashville through Chattanooga,
+including the rebuilding of the great bridge at London, were the
+essential conditions of further co-operation between the two armies, and
+of the permanent existence of Burnside's in East Tennessee.</p>
+<p>Efforts had been made to extend the lines of telegraph as Burnside
+advanced, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxx. pt. ii. p. 574; pt. iii. p. 717.]</span> but it took
+some time to do this, and even when the wires were up there occurred a
+difficulty in making the electric circuit, so that through all the
+critical part of the Chickamauga campaign, Burnside had to communicate
+by means of so long a line of couriers that three days was the actual
+time of transmittal of dispatches between himself and Washington. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., pt. iii. p.
+718.]</span> The news from Rosecrans on the 10th was so reassuring that
+Burnside's plain duty was to apply himself to clearing the upper valley
+of the enemy, and then to further the great object of his expedition by
+giving the loyal inhabitants the means of self-government, and
+encouraging them to organize and arm themselves with the weapons which
+his wagon trains were already bringing from Kentucky. He had also to
+provide for his supplies, and must use the good weather of the early
+autumn to the utmost, for the long roads over the mountains would be
+practically impassable in winter. The route from Kentucky by way of
+Cumberland Gap was the shortest, and, on the whole, the easiest, and a
+great system of transportation by trains under escort was put in
+operation. The camp at Cumberland Gap could give this protection through
+the mountain district, and made a convenient stopping-place in the weary
+way when teams broke down or had to be replaced. Other roads were also
+used whilst they seemed to be safe, and the energies and resources of
+the quartermaster's department were strained to the utmost to bring
+forward arms, ammunition for cannon and muskets, food and medical
+supplies, and all the munitions of war. The roads were covered with
+herds of beeves and swine, and feeding stations for these were
+established and the forage had to be drawn to them, for nothing could be
+got, along the greater part of the route. Burnside hoped that the
+railway by Chattanooga would be put in repair and be open before winter
+should shut in, but he very prudently acted on the principle of making
+the most of his present means. It was well he did so, for otherwise his
+little army would have been starved before the winter was half over.</p>
+<p>From Cumberland Gap the courier line was sixty miles shorter than
+from Knoxville, and the first dispatches of Burnside announcing his
+capture of Frazer's troops reached Washington more quickly than later
+ones. At noon of the 11th Mr. Lincoln answered it with hearty
+congratulations and thanks. This was quickly followed by a
+congratulatory message from Halleck accompanied by formal orders. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. iii. p. 555.]</span> These last only recapitulated the points in
+Burnside's further operations and administration which were the simplest
+deductions from the situation. Burnside was to hold the country eastward
+to the gaps of the North Carolina mountains (the Great Smokies) and the
+valley of the Holston up to the Virginia line. Halleck used the phrase
+"the line of the Holston," which would be absurd, and was probably only
+a slip of the pen. The exact strength of General Jones, the Confederate
+commander in southwestern Virginia, was not known, but, to preserve his
+preponderance, Burnside could not prudently send less than a division of
+infantry and a couple of brigades of cavalry to the vicinity of
+Rogersville or Greeneville and the railroad crossing of the Watauga.
+This would be just about half his available force. The other division
+was at first divided, one of the two brigades being centrally placed at
+Knoxville, and the other at Sevierville, thirty miles up the French
+Broad River, where it covered the principal pass over the Smokies to
+Asheville, N. C. The rest of his cavalry was at London and Kingston,
+where it covered the north side of the Tennessee River and communicated
+with Rosecrans's outposts above Chattanooga.</p>
+<p>Halleck further informed Burnside that the Secretary of War directed
+him to raise all the volunteers he could in East Tennessee and to select
+officers for them. If he had not already enough arms and equipments he
+could order them by telegraph. As to Rosecrans, the General-in-Chief
+stated that he would occupy Dalton or some other point south of
+Chattanooga, closing the enemy's line from Atlanta, and when this was
+done, the question would be settled whether the whole would move
+eastward into Virginia or southward into Georgia and Alabama. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. iii. p. 555.]</span> Burnside's present work being thus cut out for
+him, he set himself about it with the cordial earnestness which marked
+his character. He had suggested the propriety of his retiring as soon as
+the surrender of Frazer had made his occupation of East Tennessee an
+assured success, but he had not formally asked to be relieved. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 523.]</span>
+His reasons for doing so dated back to the Fredericksburg campaign, in
+part; for he had believed that his alternative then presented to the
+government, that he should be allowed to dismiss insubordinate generals
+or should himself resign, ought to have been accepted. His case had some
+resemblance to Pope's when the administration approved his conduct and
+his courage but retired him and restored McClellan to command, in
+deference to the supposed sentiment of the Army of the Potomac.
+Halleck's persistent ignoring of the officially recorded causes of the
+delay in this campaign, and his assumption that the Morgan raid was not
+an incident of any importance in Burnside's responsibilities, had not
+tended to diminish the latter's sense of discomfort in dealing with army
+head-quarters. A debilitating illness gave some added force to his other
+reasons, which, however, we who knew him well understood to be the
+decisive ones with him. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxx. pt. iii. p. 523; vol. xxxi. pt. i. p. 757.]</span>
+Mr. Lincoln's sincere friendship and confidence he never doubted, but
+his nature could not fully appreciate the President's policy of bending
+to existing circumstances when current opinion was contrary to his own,
+so that he might save his strength for more critical action at another
+time. Burnside had now the <i>&eacute;clat</i> of success in a campaign
+which was very near the heart of the President and full of interest for
+the Northern people. This, he felt, was a time when he could retire with
+honor. Mr. Lincoln postponed action in the kindest and most
+complimentary words, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+vol. xxx. pt. iii. p. 554. "Yours received. A thousand thanks for the
+late successes you have given us. We cannot allow you to resign until
+things shall be a little more settled in East Tennessee. If then, purely
+on your own account you wish to resign, we will not further refuse you."]</span>
+and when he finally assigned another to command the department, did not
+allow Burnside to resign, but laid out other work for him where his
+patriotism and his courage could be of use to the country.</p>
+<p>The advent of the army into East Tennessee was, to its loyal people,
+a resurrection from the grave. Their joy had an exultation which seemed
+almost beyond the power of expression. Old men fell down fainting and
+unconscious under the stress of their emotions as they saw the flag at
+the head of the column and tried to cheer it! Women wept with happiness
+as their husbands stepped out of the ranks of the loyal Tennessee
+regiments when these came marching by the home. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Temple's East Tennessee and
+the Civil War, pp. 476, 478. Humes's The Loyal Mountaineers, pp. 211,
+218.]</span> These men had gathered in little recruiting camps on the
+mountain-sides and had found their way to Kentucky, travelling by night
+and guided by the pole-star, as the dark-skinned fugitives from bondage
+had used to make their way to freedom. Their families had been marked as
+traitors to the Confederacy, and had suffered sharpest privations and
+cruel wrong on account of the absence of the husband and father, the
+brother, or the son. Now it was all over, and a jubilee began in those
+picturesque valleys in the mountains, which none can understand who had
+not seen the former despair and the present revulsion of happiness. The
+mountain coves and nooks far up toward the Virginia line had been among
+the most intense in loyalty to the nation. Andrew Johnson's home was at
+Greeneville, and he was now the loyal provisional governor of Tennessee,
+soon to be nominated Vice-President of the United States. General
+Carter, who had asked to be transferred from the navy to organize the
+refugee loyalists into regiments, was a native of the same region. It
+was at the Watauga that the neighboring opponents of secession had given
+the first example of daring self-sacrifice in burning the railway
+bridge. For this they were hanged, and their memory was revered by the
+loyal men about them, as was Nathan Hale's by our revolutionary fathers.
+East Tennessee was full of such loyalty, but here were good reasons why
+Burnside should push his advance at least to the Watauga, and if
+possible to the Virginia line. His sympathies were all alive for this
+people. The region, he telegraphed the President, is as loyal as any
+State of the North. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxx. pt. iii. p. 523.]</span> It threw off all
+disguise, it blossomed with National flags, it took no counsel of
+prudence, it refused to think of a return of Confederate soldiers and
+Confederate rule as a possibility. It exulted in every form of defiance
+to the Richmond government and what had been called treason to the
+Confederate States. The people had a religious faith that God would not
+abandon them or suffer them to be again abandoned. If such an incredible
+wrong were to happen, they must either leave their country in mass, or
+they must be ready to die. They could see no other alternative.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;"><br>
+<p style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI</p>
+<p>BURNSIDE IN EAST TENNESSEE</p>
+<p>Organizing and arming the loyalists--Burnside concentrates near
+Greeneville--His general plan--Rumors of Confederate
+reinforcements--Lack of accurate information--The Ninth Corps in
+Kentucky--Its depletion by malarial disease--Death of General Welsh from
+this cause--Preparing for further work--Situation on 16th
+September-Dispatch from Halleck--Its apparent purpose--Necessity to
+dispose of the enemy near Virginia border--Burnside personally at the
+front--His great activity--Ignorance of Rosecrans's peril--Impossibility
+of joining him by the 20th--Ruinous effects of abandoning East
+Tennessee--Efforts to aid Rosecrans without such abandonment--Enemy
+duped into burning Watauga bridge themselves--Ninth Corps
+arriving--Willcox's division garrisons Cumberland Gap--Reinforcements
+sent Rosecrans from all quarters--Chattanooga made safe from attack--The
+supply question--Meigs's description of the roads--Burnside halted near
+Loudon--Halleck's misconception of the geography--The people imploring
+the President not to remove the troops--How Longstreet got away from
+Virginia--Burnside's alternate plans--Minor operations in upper Holston
+valley--Wolford's affair on the lower Holston.</p>
+<p>For a week after the capture of Cumberland Gap Burnside devoted
+himself to the pleasing task of organizing the native loyalists into a
+National Guard for home defence, issuing arms to them upon condition
+that they should, as a local militia, respond to his call and reinforce
+for temporary work his regular forces whenever the need should arise.
+The detailed reports from the upper valley reported the enemy under
+Jones at first to be 4000, and later to be 6000 strong. These estimates
+came through cool-headed and prudent officers, and were based upon
+information brought in by loyal men who had proven singularly accurate
+in their knowledge throughout the campaign. Point was added to these
+reports by the experience of one of his regiments. A detachment of 300
+men of the One Hundredth Ohio had been sent to support a cavalry
+reconnoissance near Limestone Station on the railroad, whilst Burnside
+was investing Cumberland Gap, and these had been surrounded and forced
+to surrender by the enemy. This showed the presence of a considerable
+body of Confederates in the upper valley, and that they were bold and
+aggressive. It was the part of prudence to act upon this information,
+and Burnside ordered all his infantry except one brigade to march toward
+Greeneville. Two brigades of cavalry were already there, and his purpose
+was to concentrate about 6000 infantry, try to obtain a decisive
+engagement with the Confederates, and to punish them so severely that
+the upper valley would be safe, for a time at least, from invasion by
+them, so that he might be free to withdraw most of his troops to
+co-operate with Rosecrans in a Georgia campaign, if that alternative in
+Halleck's plans should be adopted. He felt the importance of this the
+more, as the news received from Virginia mentioned the movement of
+railway rolling-stock to the East to bring, as rumor had it, Ewell's
+corps from Lee to reinforce Jones. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxx. pt. iii. pp. 661, 717.]</span> The sending
+of the railway trains was a fact, but the object, as it turned out, was
+to transport Longstreet's corps to reinforce Bragg. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 731.]</span>
+Of this, however, Burnside had no intimation, and must act upon the
+information which came to him.</p>
+<p>The Ninth Corps began to arrive at Cincinnati from Vicksburg on the
+12th of August, half of it coming then, and the second division arriving
+on the 20th. It was reduced to 6000 by casualties and by sickness, and
+was in a pitiable condition. Being made up of troops which had served in
+the East, the men were not acclimated to the Mississippi valley, and in
+the bayous and marshes about Vicksburg had suffered greatly. Malarial
+fevers ate out their vitality, and even those who reported for duty
+dragged themselves about, the mere shadows of what they had been.
+General Parke reported their arrival and was then obliged to go upon
+sick-leave himself. General Welsh, who had distinguished himself at
+Antietam, reported that his division must recuperate for a few weeks
+before it could take the field. He made a heroic effort to remain on
+duty, but died suddenly on the 14th, and his loss was deeply felt by the
+corps. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxx. pt. iii. p. 45.]</span> Potter's division was as badly
+off as Welsh's, and both were for a short time scattered at healthful
+camps in the Kentucky hills. Each camp was, at first, a hospital; but
+the change of climate and diet rapidly restored the tone of the hardy
+soldiery.</p>
+<p>General Willcox, who commanded the Indiana district, belonged to the
+corps, and asked to be returned to duty with it. He was allowed to do so
+on the 11th of September, and the War Department sent with him a new
+division of Indiana troops which had been recruited and organized during
+the summer. Burnside had ordered recruits and new regiments to
+rendezvous in Kentucky, and prepared to bring them as well as the Ninth
+Corps forward as soon as the latter should be fit to march. Every camp
+and station at the rear was full of busy preparation during the last of
+August and the beginning of September, and at the front the general
+himself was now concentrating his little forces to strike a blow near
+the Virginia line which would make him free to move afterward in any
+direction the General-in-Chief should determine.</p>
+<p>On the 16th of September Hascall's division was echeloned along the
+road from Morristown back toward Knoxville; White's division passed
+Knoxville, moving up the valley to join Hascall. Hartsuff, who commanded
+the Twenty-third Corps, had been disabled for field work by trouble from
+his old wounds and was at Knoxville. Burnside was also there, intending
+to go rapidly forward and overtake his infantry as soon as they should
+approach Greeneville. In the night the courier brought him a dispatch
+from Halleck, <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxx. pt. iii. p. 617.]</span> dated the 13th, directing a
+rapid movement of all his forces in Kentucky toward East Tennessee,
+where the whole Army of the Ohio was to be concentrated as soon as
+possible. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>.,
+pt. ii. p. 550.]</span> He also directed Burnside to move his infantry
+toward Chattanooga, giving as a reason that Bragg might manoeuvre to
+turn Rosecrans's right, and in that case Rosecrans would want to hand
+Chattanooga over to Burnside so that he himself could move the whole
+Army of the Cumberland to meet Bragg.</p>
+<p>There was nothing in this dispatch which intimated that Rosecrans
+was in any danger, nor was Burnside informed that Bragg had been
+reinforced by Longstreet's corps. On the other hand, his information
+looked to Ewell's joining Jones against himself. The object Halleck had
+in view seemed to be to get the Ninth Corps and other troops now in
+Kentucky into East Tennessee as rapidly as possible, and then to move
+the whole Army of the Ohio down toward Rosecrans. It certainly could not
+be that he wished Cumberland Gap abandoned, and the trains and
+detachments coming through it from Kentucky left to the tender mercies
+of Jones and his Confederates, who could capture them at their leisure
+and without a blow. It was equally incredible that the government could
+wish to stop the organization of the loyalists just as weapons were
+being distributed to them, and to abandon them to the enemy when their
+recent open demonstrations in favor of the Union would make their
+condition infinitely worse than if our troops had never come to them.
+The rational interpretation, and the one Burnside gave it, was that the
+alternative which had been stated in the earlier dispatch of the 11th
+had been settled in favor of a general movement southward instead of
+eastward, and that this made it all the more imperative that he should
+disembarrass himself of General Jones and establish a line on the upper
+Holston which a small force could hold, whilst he with the rest of the
+two corps should move southward as soon as the Ninth Corps could make
+the march from Kentucky. This was exactly what General Schofield did in
+the next spring when he was ordered to join Sherman with the Army of the
+Ohio; and I do not hesitate to say that it was the only thing which an
+intelligent military man on the ground and knowing the topography would
+think of doing. To make a panicky abandonment of the country and of the
+trains and detachments <i>en route</i> to it, would have been hardly
+less disgraceful than a surrender of the whole. To Burnside's honor and
+credit it should be recorded that he did not dream of doing it. He
+strained every nerve to hasten the movement of his troops so as to get
+through with his little campaign against Jones by the time the Ninth
+Corps could come from Kentucky, and if he could accomplish it within
+that limit, he would have the right to challenge the judgment of every
+competent critic, whether he had not done that which became a good
+soldier and a good general.</p>
+<p>On the 17th of September the concentration of Burnside's infantry
+toward Greeneville had so far progressed that he was preparing to go
+personally to the front and lead them against the enemy. It is
+noticeable in the whole campaign that he took this personal leadership
+and activity on himself. In Hartsuff's condition of health it would have
+been within the ordinary methods of action that the next in rank should
+assume command of the Twenty-third Corps, and that the department
+commander should remain at his headquarters at Knoxville. But Hartsuff
+was able to attend to office business, and so Burnside practically
+exchanged places with him, leaving his subordinate with discretion to
+direct affairs in the department at large, whilst he himself did the
+field work with his troops. He had done it at Cumberland Gap when he
+received the surrender of Frazer; he was doing it now, and he was to do
+it again, still later, when he met Longstreet's advance at the crossing
+of the Holston River.</p>
+<p>In preparation for an absence of some days, he wrote, on the date
+last mentioned, a long dispatch to General Halleck, in the nature of a
+report of the state of affairs at that date. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. iii. p. 717.]</span> He explained the failure of the telegraph and
+the efforts that were making to get it in working order. He gave the
+situation of the troops and stated his purpose to attack the enemy. He
+noticed the report of Ewell's coming against him and promised stout
+resistance, finding satisfaction in the thought that it would give Meade
+the opportunity to strike a decisive blow against Lee's reduced army. He
+reported the condition of his trains and cattle droves on the road from
+Kentucky, and the contact of his cavalry in the south part of the valley
+with Rosecrans's outposts. The bridge over the Hiwassee at Calhoun, he
+said, could be finished in ten days, and the steamboat at Kingston would
+soon be completed and ready for use. All this promised better means of
+supply at an early day, though at present "twenty-odd cars" were all the
+means of moving men or supplies on the portion of the railroad within
+his control.</p>
+<p>Later in the same day he received Halleck's dispatch of the 14th,
+which said it was believed the enemy would concentrate to give Rosecrans
+battle, and directed him to reinforce the latter with all possible
+speed. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Burnside's
+dispatches of the 17th in answer to Halleck's seem to show that both
+those of 13th and 14th were received by him after he had written the
+long one in the morning. The internal evidence supports this idea, and
+his second dispatch on the 17th acknowledges the receipt of Halleck's
+two together. Official Records, vol. xxx. pt. iii. p. 718. In his
+official report, however, Burnside says the dispatch of 13th was
+received "on the night of the 16th" (Official Records, vol. xxx. pt. ii.
+p. 550), and I have followed this statement, although his report was not
+written till November, 1865, when lapse of time might easily give rise
+to an error in so trifling a detail. The matter is of no real
+consequence in the view I have taken of the situation.]</span> Still, no
+information was given of the movement of Longstreet to join Bragg, and
+indeed it was only on the 15th that Halleck gave the news to Rosecrans
+as reliable. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, xxx. pt. ii. p. 643.]</span> Burnside must therefore regard the
+enemy concentrating in Georgia as only the same which Rosecrans had been
+peremptorily ordered to attack and which he had been supposed to be
+strong enough to cope with. No time was stated at which the battle in
+Georgia would probably occur. To hasten the work in hand, to put affairs
+at the Virginia line in condition to be left as soon as might be, and
+then to speed his forces toward Chattanooga to join in the Georgia
+campaign, was plainly Burnside's duty. If it would be too rash for
+Rosecrans to give battle without reinforcements, that officer was
+competent to manoeuvre his army in retreat and take a defensible
+position till his reinforcements could come. That course would be
+certainly much wiser than to abandon East Tennessee to the enemy, with
+all the consequences of such an act, quite as bad as the loss of a
+battle. As matters turned out, even such instantaneous and ruinous
+abandonment would not have helped Rosecrans. It was now the afternoon of
+the 17th of September. The battle of Chickamauga was to begin in the
+early morning of the 19th and to end disastrously on the 20th. One full
+day for the marching of troops was all that intervened, or two at most,
+if they were only to reach the field upon the second day of the battle.
+And where were Burnside's men? One division at Greeneville and above,
+more than two hundred miles from Chattanooga, and the other near New
+Market and Morristown, a hundred and fifty miles. Burnside's "twenty-odd
+cars" were confined to a section of the railroad less than eighty miles
+long, and could hardly carry the necessary baggage and ammunition even
+for that fraction of the way. The troops must march, and could not by
+any physical possibility make a quarter of the distance before
+Rosecrans's fate at Chickamauga should be decided. The authorities at
+Washington must bear the responsibility for complete ignorance of these
+conditions, or, what would be equally bad, a forgetfulness of them in a
+moment of panic.</p>
+<p>But Burnside did not know and could not guess that a battle was to
+be fought so soon. All he could do was to prepare to carry out the
+wishes of the War Department as speedily as could be, without the total
+ruin of East Tennessee and all he had accomplished. Such ruin might come
+by the fate of war if he were driven out by superior force, but he would
+have been rightly condemned if it had come by his precipitate
+abandonment of the country. He did more to carry out Halleck's wish than
+was quite prudent. He stopped the troops which had not yet reached
+Greeneville and ordered a countermarch. He hastened up the country to
+make the attack upon the Confederates with the force he already had in
+their presence, and then to bring the infantry back at once, hoping the
+cavalry could hold in check a defeated enemy.</p>
+<p>The necessity of delivering a blow at General Jones was afterwards
+criticised by Halleck, but it was in accordance with the sound rules of
+conducting war. To have called back his troops without a fight would
+have been to give the enemy double courage by his retreat, and his
+brigades would have been chased by the exulting foe. They would either
+have been forced to halt and fight their pursuers under every
+disadvantage of loss of prestige and of the initiative, or have made a
+precipitate flight which would have gone far to ruin the whole command
+as well as the Tennessee people they had just liberated. It is true that
+this involved an advance from Greeneville upon Jonesboro, but the
+cavalry were already in contact with the enemy near there, and this was
+the only successful mode of accomplishing his purpose. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Messrs. Nicolay and Hay, in
+their "Life of Lincoln," give the draft of a letter to Burnside which
+Mr. Lincoln wrote but did not send, in which he expressed his surprise
+that Burnside should be moving toward Virginia when they at Washington
+were so anxious to have him in Georgia. Mr. Lincoln's judgments of
+military affairs were excellent when he was fully possessed of the
+facts; and I have elaborated somewhat my statement of the circumstances
+in East Tennessee, and of the distances, etc., to show how little they
+were known or understood in Washington. Nicolay and Hay's Lincoln, vol.
+viii. p. 166.]</span> </p>
+<p>Making use of the portion of the railroad which could be operated,
+Burnside reached Greeneville on the 18th and rode rapidly to Jonesboro.
+On the 19th a brigade of cavalry under Colonel Foster attacked the enemy
+at Bristol, defeated them, tore up the railroad, and destroyed the
+bridges two miles above the town. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:
+Official Records, vol. xxx. pt. ii. p. 592.]</span> Foster then returned
+to Blountsville, and marched on the next day to Hall's Ford on the
+Watauga, where, after a skirmishing fight lasting several hours, he
+again dislodged the enemy, capturing about fifty prisoners and a piece
+of artillery with slight loss to himself. These were flanking movements
+designed to distract the attention of the enemy whilst Burnside
+concentrated most of his force in front of their principal position at
+Carter's Station, where the most important of the railway bridges in
+that region crosses the Watauga. To impress his opponent with the belief
+that he meant to make an extended campaign, Burnside, on the 22d,
+notified Jones to remove the non-combatants from the villages of the
+upper valley. Foster's brigade of cavalry was again sent to demonstrate
+on the rear, whilst Burnside threatened in front with the infantry. The
+enemy now evacuated the position and retreated, first burning the
+bridge. This was what Burnside desired, and the means of resuming
+railway communication to support an advance toward Knoxville being taken
+from the Confederates for a considerable time, he was now able to put
+all his infantry except two regiments in march for Knoxville. A brigade
+of cavalry with this small infantry support at Bull's Gap was entrusted
+with the protection of this region, and by the help of the home guards
+of loyal men, was able to hold it during the operations of the next
+fortnight. Burnside's purpose had been, if he had not been interrupted,
+to have pressed the Confederates closely with a sufficient force in
+front to compel a retreat, whilst he intercepted them with the remainder
+of his army, moving by a shorter line from Blountsville. He made,
+however, the best of the situation, and having driven the enemy over the
+State line and disengaged his own troops, he was free to concentrate the
+greater part of them for operations at the other end of the valley.</p>
+<p>The Ninth Corps was now beginning to arrive, and was ordered to
+rendezvous first at Knoxville. Willcox had assembled his division of new
+troops, mostly Indianans, and marched with them to Cumberland Gap, where
+he relieved the garrison of that post, and was himself entrusted by
+Burnside with the command of that portion of the department, covering
+the upper valleys of the Clinch and Holston as well as the lines of
+communication with Cincinnati and the Ohio River.</p>
+<p>In the days immediately preceding the battle of Chickamauga, Halleck
+had urged reinforcements forward toward Rosecrans from all parts of the
+West. Pope in Minnesota, Schofield in Missouri, Hurlbut at Memphis, and
+Sherman at Vicksburg had all been called upon for help, and all had put
+bodies of troops in motion, though the distances were great and the
+effect was a little too much like the proverbial one of locking the
+stable door after the horse had been stolen. As there was no telegraphic
+communication with Burnside, the General-in-Chief gave orders through
+the adjutant-general's office in Cincinnati directly to the Ninth Corps
+and to the detachments of the Twenty-third Corps remaining or assembling
+in Kentucky, to march at once into East Tennessee. An advisory
+supervision of the department offices in Cincinnati had been left with
+me, and Captain Anderson, the assistant adjutant-general, issued orders
+in General Burnside's name after consultation with me. General Parke cut
+short his sick-leave, and, though far from strong, assumed command of
+the Ninth Corps and began the march for Cumberland Gap. The guards for
+the railways and necessary posts were reduced to the lowest limits of
+safety, and every available regiment was hurried to the front.</p>
+<p>By the end of September Burnside's forces were pretty well
+concentrated between Knoxville and Loudon, the crossing of the Holston
+River. It had now been learned that Bragg's army had suffered even more
+than Rosecrans's in the battle of Chickamauga, and notwithstanding the
+rout of the right wing of the Cumberland Army, the stubborn fighting of
+the centre and left wing under Thomas had made the enemy willing to
+admit that they had not won a decisive victory. Our army was within its
+lines at Chattanooga, and these had been so strengthened that General
+Meigs, who had been sent out in haste as a special envoy of the War
+Department, reported to Mr. Stanton on the 27th of September that the
+position was very strong, being practically secure against an assault,
+and that the army was hearty, cheerful, and confident. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. iii. p. 890.]</span> Meigs was himself a distinguished officer of the
+Engineer Corps as well as quartermaster-general, and the weight of his
+opinion at once restored confidence in Washington. He saw at a glance
+that the only perilous contingency was the danger of starvation, for the
+wagon roads over the mountains on the north side of the Tennessee were
+most difficult at best, and soon likely to become impassable. The army
+was safe from the enemy till it chose to resume the offensive, provided
+it could be fed. He concluded his dispatch by saying, "Of the rugged
+nature of this region I had no conception when I left Washington. I
+never travelled on such roads before." <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. iii. p. 890.]</span> It was only too evident that Halleck shared this
+ignorance, and had added to it a neglect to estimate the distances over
+these mountains and through these valleys, and the relations of the
+points, he directed Burnside to hold, with the immediate theatre of
+Rosecrans's operations.</p>
+<p>On the same date as Meigs's report, Burnside was also sending a full
+statement of his situation and an explanation of his conduct. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 904.]</span>
+The telegraphic communication was opened just as he finished his
+dispatch, and for the first time he had the means of rapid intercourse
+with army headquarters. He patiently explained the misconceptions and
+cross purposes of the preceding fortnight, and showed how impossible and
+how ruinous would have been any other action than that which he took.
+Halleck had said that it would now be necessary to move the Army of the
+Ohio along the north side of the Tennessee till it should be opposite
+Chattanooga and reinforce Rosecrans in that way. Burnside pointed out
+that this would open the heart of East Tennessee to Bragg's cavalry or
+detachments from his army. He offered to take the bolder course of
+moving down the south side of the rivers, covering Knoxville and the
+valley as he advanced.</p>
+<p>Mr. Lincoln replied by authorizing Burnside to hold his present
+positions, sending Rosecrans, in his own way, what help he could spare. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id</i>., p. 905.]</span>
+Halleck's answer was an amazing proof that he had never comprehended the
+campaign. He reiterated that Burnside's orders, before leaving Kentucky
+and continuously since, had been "to connect your right with General
+Rosecrans's left, so that if the enemy concentrated on one, the other
+would be able to assist." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id</i>.,
+p. 906.]</span> If this meant anything, it meant that Burnside was to
+keep within a day's march of Rosecrans; for two days was more than
+enough to fight out a battle like Chickamauga. Yet he and everybody else
+knew that Burnside's supply route from Kentucky was through Cumberland
+Gap, and he had warmly applauded when Burnside turned that position, and
+by investing it in front and rear, had forced Frazer to surrender. He
+had explicitly directed Burnside to occupy and hold the upper Holston
+valley nearly or quite to the Virginia line, and one gets weary of
+repeating that between these places and Chattanooga was a breadth of two
+hundred miles of the kind of country Meigs had described and more than
+ten days of hard marching. His present orders are equally blind.
+Burnside is directed to reinforce Rosecrans with "all your available
+force," yet "East Tennessee must be held at all hazards, if possible."
+To "hold at all hazards" might be understood, but what is the effect of
+the phrase "if possible"? It must amount in substance to authority to do
+exactly what Burnside was doing,--to hold East Tennessee with as small
+means as he thought practicable, and to reinforce Rosecrans with what he
+could spare.</p>
+<p>It was, on the whole, fortunate for the country that Burnside was
+not in telegraphic communication with Washington sooner. Had he been
+actually compelled to abandon East Tennessee on the 13th or 14th of
+September, incalculable mischief would have followed. The Ninth Corps
+was <i>en route</i> for Cumberland Gap, and it with all the trains and
+droves on the road must either have turned back or pushed on blindly
+with no probability of effecting a junction with the Twenty-third Corps.
+Even as it was, the terror in East Tennessee, when it became known that
+they were likely to be abandoned, was something fearful. Public and
+private men united in passionate protests, and the common people stood
+aghast. Two of the most prominent citizens only expressed the universal
+feeling when, in a dispatch to Mr. Lincoln, they used such language as
+this,--</p>
+<p>"In the name of Christianity and humanity, in the name of God and
+liberty, for the sake of their wives and children and everything they
+hold sacred and dear on earth, the loyal people of Tennessee appeal to
+you and implore you not to abandon them again to the merciless dominion
+of the rebels, by the withdrawal of the Union forces from East
+Tennessee." <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official
+Records, vol. xxx. pt. iv. p. 401. ]</span> </p>
+<p>With the evidence of the ability of the Army of the Cumberland to
+hold its position at Chattanooga, there came a breathing spell and a
+quick end of the panic. It was seen that there was time to get all
+desirable reinforcements to Rosecrans from the West, and Hooker was sent
+with two corps from the East, open lines of well-managed railways making
+this a quicker assistance than could be given by even a few days'
+marches over country roads. The culmination of the peril had been caused
+by the inactivity of the Army of the Potomac, which had permitted the
+transfer of Longstreet across four States; and now Hooker was sent from
+that army by a still longer route through the West to the vicinity of
+Bridgeport, thirty miles by rail below Chattanooga on the Tennessee
+River, but nearer fifty by the circuitous mountain roads actually used.
+It became evident also that Burnside's army could only subsist by making
+the most of its own lines of supply through Kentucky. To add its trains
+to those which were toiling over the mountains between Chattanooga and
+Bridgeport, would risk the starvation of the whole. Until a better line
+could be opened, Burnside was allowed to concentrate most of his forces
+in the vicinity of Loudon, where he guarded the whole valley. His
+cavalry connected with Rosecrans on the north side of the Tennessee, and
+also held the line of the Hiwassee on the left.</p>
+<p>On the last day of September Burnside reported the concentration of
+his forces and submitted three alternate plans of assisting Rosecrans: <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. iii. p. 954.]</span> First, to abandon East Tennessee and move all
+his forces by the north bank of the Tennessee River to Chattanooga. This
+was what Halleck had seemed to propose. Second, to cross the Holston and
+march directly against Bragg's right flank whilst Rosecrans should
+attack in front. This was essentially what Grant afterward did, putting
+Sherman in a position similar to that which Burnside would have taken.
+Third, to march with 7000 infantry and 5000 cavalry entirely around
+Bragg by the east, and strike his line of communications at Dalton or
+thereabouts. This had a strong resemblance to the strategy of Sherman
+next spring, when he forced Johnston out of Dalton by sending McPherson
+to his rear at Resaca. Burnside added to it the plan of a march to the
+sea, proposing that if Bragg pursued him, he should march down the
+railroad to Atlanta, destroying it as thoroughly as possible, and then
+make his way to the coast, living on the country.</p>
+<p>The last of these plans was that which Burnside preferred and
+offered to put into immediate execution. Neither of them was likely to
+succeed at that moment, for Rosecrans was so far demoralized by the
+effects of his late battle that he was in no condition to carry out any
+aggressive campaign with decisive energy. He declared in favor of the
+first <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: <i>Id.</i>, pt.
+iv. p. 72.]</span> (for they were communicated to him as well as to
+Halleck), and this only meant that he wanted his army at Chattanooga
+reinforced by any and every means, though he could not supply them, and
+the fortifications were already so strong that General Meigs reported
+that 10,000 men could very soon hold them against all Bragg's army. The
+plans, however, give us interesting light on Burnside's character and
+abilities, and show that he was both fertile in resources and disposed
+to adopt the boldest action. Halleck in reply said that distant
+expeditions into Georgia were not now contemplated, nor was it now
+necessary to join Rosecrans at Chattanooga. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxx.
+pt. iv. p. 25.]</span> It was sufficient for Burnside to be in position
+to go to Rosecrans's assistance if he should require it. He was,
+however, to "hold some point near the upper end of the valley," which
+kept alive the constant occasion for misunderstanding, since it implied
+the protection and occupation of all East Tennessee, and the general
+there in command was the only one who could judge what was necessary to
+secure the object. The necessity for activity soon showed itself. About
+the 6th of October General Jones was reported to be showing a
+disposition to be aggressive, and Burnside determined to strike a blow
+at him again and with more force than that which had been interrupted a
+fortnight before. Willcox was ordered from Cumberland Gap to Morristown
+with his four new Indiana regiments; the Ninth Corps (having now only
+about 5000 men present for duty) was moved up the valley also, whilst
+the Twenty-third Corps, with two brigades of cavalry, was left in its
+positions near Loudon. The rest of the cavalry, under Shackelford,
+accompanied the movement up the valley of which Burnside took command in
+person. Leaving the cavalry post at Bull's Gap and advancing with his
+little army, he found the enemy strongly posted about midway between the
+Gap and Greeneville. Engaging them and trying to hold them by a
+skirmishing fight, he sent Foster's cavalry brigade to close the passage
+behind them. Foster found the roads too rough to enable him to reach the
+desired position in time, and the enemy retreating in the night escaped.
+The pursuit was pushed beyond the Watauga River, and a more thorough
+destruction was made of the railroad to and beyond the Virginia line.
+Considerable loss had been inflicted on the enemy and 150 prisoners had
+been captured, but no decisive engagement had been brought about, Jones
+being wary and conscious of inferiority of force. Willcox was left at
+Greeneville with part of the cavalry, while Burnside brought back the
+Ninth Corps to Knoxville. The activity was good for the troops and was
+successful in curbing the enemy's enterprise, besides encouraging the
+loyal inhabitants. There was now a lull in affairs till November, broken
+only by a mishap to Colonel Wolford's brigade of cavalry on the south of
+the Holston, where he was watching the enemy's advanced posts in the
+direction of Athens and Cleveland. Burnside had sent a flag of truce
+through the lines on the 19th of October, and the enemy taking advantage
+of it, delivered an unexpected blow upon Wolford, capturing 300 or 400
+of his men and a battery of mountain howitzers, together with a wagon
+train which was several miles from camp. <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: Official Records, vol. xxxi.
+pt. i. p. 273.]</span> Wolford heard that his train was attacked and sent
+two regiments to protect it. These were surrounded by a superior force,
+and Wolford then brought up the rest of his command, only 700 strong,
+and made a bold effort to rescue his comrades. This he did, with the
+loss of the prisoners mentioned and the howitzers, which were taken
+after they had fired their last cartridge. The wagons were burned, but
+the men bravely cut their way out. Approaching Loudon, they were met by
+General Julius White with infantry reinforcements. The tables were now
+turned on the Confederates, who fled over the Hiwassee again, losing in
+their turn about 100 prisoners. <span style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote:<i>Id.</i>,
+pp. 5, 6.]</span><br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
+<p><br>
+<span style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="APPENDIX_A"></a>APPENDIX A</span></p>
+<p><i>List of Letters and Dispatches relating to the campaign in the
+Great Kanawha valley, 1861, which are not found in the publication of
+the Official Records of the Union and Confederate armies (see footnote,
+chapter iv. p. 60).</i></p>
+<p>Letters and Dispatches of General McClellan to General J. D. Cox, of
+dates July 6th, 12th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 20th, August 1st.</p>
+<p>Letters and Dispatches of General J. D. Cox to General McClellan, of
+dates July 4th, 6th, 10th, 17th.</p>
+<p>Letters and Dispatches of General Rosecrans to General Cox of dates
+July 26th, 29th, 31st, four of August 5th, one of August 6th, 8th, two
+of 13th, three of 16th, one of 17th, 18th, two of 20th, one each of
+26th, 27th, 29th, 30th.</p>
+<p>Letters and Dispatches of General Cox to General Rosecrans, of dates
+August 6th, 7th, 10th, 19th, 28th, two each of 30th and 31st, one of
+September 2d (enclosing Colonel Tyler's report of engagement at Cross
+Lanes), 3d, 9th, 22d, October 5th (order of withdrawal from Sewell
+Mountain), two of October 7th, one each of 8th, 9th, three of 10th, one
+of 16th.</p>
+<p>There are also missing numerous ones from and to Colonel Tyler,
+Colonel W. Sooy Smith, Colonel J. V. Guthrie, and other officers.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="width: 100%; height: 2px;">
+<p><br>
+<span style="font-weight: bold;"><a name="APPENDIX_B"></a>APPENDIX B</span></p>
+<p><i>Letters of Generals R. B. Hayes and George Crook as to the
+discipline and conduct of the Kanawha Division in the campaign of
+September, 1862. The death of President Hayes has removed any objections
+to the publication of his letter.</i></p>
+<p>FREMONT, OHIO, 8th September, 1882.</p>
+<p>MY DEAR GENERAL,--Your note of the 4th instant came during a brief
+absence from home. I appreciate your kindness and your friendly
+suggestions. After sleeping on it, I am not inclined to depart from my
+custom in dealing with attacks upon me.... Besides, to give a correct
+relation of the Reno altercation would be to disparage an officer who
+died in battle a few days after the affair, and who cannot now give his
+side of the controversy.</p>
+<p>One of the brigades of the division was commanded by General Crook
+and another by General Scammon, both regular army officers conspicuous
+for attention to strictness of discipline. General Scammon was at the
+time still colonel of the Twenty-third. The regiment on that march
+repeatedly reported, as I was glad to do, not a single absentee on the
+first roll-call immediately after the halt.</p>
+<p>The altercation, in its general facts, was as you recall it. But the
+occasion of it was this. The regiment halted to bivouac in a
+stubble-field. The men got bundles of straw, or possibly of wheat
+unthreshed, from a stack in the field to lie upon. General Reno saw it.
+I was temporarily absent. The general, as you say, "in a rough way"
+accosted the men, and as I returned, I heard his language and retorted
+in behalf of my men, not in my own case at all, for he had said nothing
+to me. Hence the row between us. I was told, while I was lying wounded, <span
+ style="color: rgb(255, 0, 0);">[Footnote: During the battle of South
+Mountain.--J. D. C.]</span> that General Reno was greatly pleased by our
+vigorous attack, and that he paid us a high compliment, expressing
+gratification that our difficulty had gone no further than it did.</p>
+<p>Now excuse my suggestion. Let officers tell the story whose names
+are not called in question in the note referred to--say General Scammon,
+General Crook, and yourself. I am grateful for your attention to this
+misrepresentation, and hope you will not differ widely from me as to the
+correctness of the course I take. Sincerely,<br>
+(Signed) R. B. HAYES.<br>
+</p>
+<hr style="height: 2px; width: 50%;">
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<p>HEADQUARTERS DEPARTMENT OF ARIZONA, WHIPPLE BARRACKS,<br>
+PRESCOTT, A. T., November 27, 1882.</p>
+<p>MY DEAR GENERAL,--Referring to your letter of the 3d instant asking
+replies to certain queries with reference to the conduct of the Kanawha
+Division during the Antietam campaign, I can only reply generally. The
+twenty years which have elapsed make my memory indistinct, and I can now
+recall only prominent features or particular incidents in which I was
+especially interested. I remember distinctly, however, that the Kanawha
+Division compared favorably in discipline and general good conduct with
+the best troops of the army. In my own brigade there was no straggling,
+or, if any, so little that it did not come to my notice. I am quite sure
+there was no pillaging in my brigade. My men probably took fence rails
+for their bivouac fires, and straw and hay for their beds, but to the
+best of my belief there was nothing done that could be called pillaging. </p>
+<p>I heard, at the time, something with reference to a controversy
+between Generals Reno and Hayes, but if ever I knew what it was about, I
+have forgotten it. In this matter it seems as if the statement of
+General Hayes should be conclusive. </p>
+<p>I am very glad that you have interested yourself in refuting the
+numberless charges which the writers of personal histories have found it
+convenient to lay against the Kanawha Division, and which in almost
+every instance are base slanders. The <i>personnel</i> of the division
+should in itself be a sufficient refutation. The regiments were mainly
+of '61 men from country districts who enlisted from motives of
+patriotism, and as a rule were never disgraced by conduct which many of
+the regiments enlisted in the large cities of the East were notorious
+for throughout the army.</p>
+<p>The Kanawha Division did not belong to the Army of the Potomac, and
+it was therefore an easy matter to shift responsibility from its own
+organization by throwing it on the shoulders of the troops serving with
+it. The subsequent reputation of this division is in itself a sufficient
+answer, and I challenge history to show an organization which was more
+distinguished for all soldierly qualities than the one you had the honor
+to command during the campaign, until the death of Reno gave you the
+Ninth Corps.</p>
+<p>You are at liberty to use this letter in any way you deem best, and
+I am only sorry that I can do no more to assist you.</p>
+<p>Very Sincerely, Your friend,<br>
+GEORGE CROOK, Brig. Gen'l.</p>
+<p>To General J. D. Cox. <br>
+</p>
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<p><br>
+</p>
+<BR>
+<BR>
+<BR>
+<BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Military Reminiscences of the Civil
+War V1, by Jacob Dolson Cox
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+</pre>
+
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