diff options
| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 05:19:35 -0700 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 05:19:35 -0700 |
| commit | dafd13896c6af068a34dffe25c319eefc4ccbd2c (patch) | |
| tree | cbf9cff7cf0a95256a193caf4b7c5498a47b7d37 | |
| -rw-r--r-- | .gitattributes | 3 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 2652.txt | 9921 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 2652.zip | bin | 0 -> 213696 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | LICENSE.txt | 11 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | README.md | 2 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | old/2shdn10.txt | 9809 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | old/2shdn10.zip | bin | 0 -> 211668 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | old/2shdn11.txt | 9871 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | old/2shdn11.zip | bin | 0 -> 217072 bytes |
9 files changed, 29617 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/2652.txt b/2652.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..19f4bf2 --- /dev/null +++ b/2652.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9921 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Memoirs of General P. H. Sheridan, +Vol. 2, by General Philip Henry Sheridan + +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: The Memoirs of General P. H. Sheridan, Vol. 2 + +Author: General Philip Henry Sheridan + +Release Date: June 7, 2004 [EBook #2652] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEMOIRS OF GENERAL SHERIDAN *** + + + + +Produced by David Widger + + + + +PERSONAL MEMOIRES OF P. H. SHERIDAN, VOLUME 2. + +By Philip Henry Sheridan + + + +CHAPTER I. + +ORGANIZING SCOUTS--MISS REBECCA WRIGHT--IMPORTANT INFORMATION--DECIDE +TO MOVE ON NEWTOWN--MEETING GENERAL GRANT--ORGANIZATION OF THE UNION +ARMY--OPENING OF THE BATTLE OF THE OPEQUON--DEATH OF GENERAL RUSSELL +--A TURNING MOVEMENT--A SUCCESSFUL CAVALRY CHARGE--VICTORY--THREE +LOYAL GIRLS--APPOINTED A BRIGADIER-GENERAL IN THE REGULAR ARMY +--REMARKS ON THE BATTLE. + +While occupying the ground between Clifton and Berryville, referred +to in the last chapter of the preceding volume, I felt the need of an +efficient body of scouts to collect information regarding the enemy, +for the defective intelligence-establishment with which I started out +from Harper's Ferry early in August had not proved satisfactory. I +therefore began to organize my scouts on a system which I hoped would +give better results than bad the method hitherto pursued in the +department, which was to employ on this service doubtful citizens and +Confederate deserters. If these should turn out untrustworthy, the +mischief they might do us gave me grave apprehension, and I finally +concluded that those of our own soldiers who should volunteer for the +delicate and hazardous duty would be the most valuable material, and +decided that they should have a battalion organization and be +commanded by an officer, Major H. K. Young, of the First Rhode Island +Infantry. These men were disguised in Confederate uniforms whenever +necessary, were paid from the Secret-Service Fund in proportion to +the value of the intelligence they furnished, which often stood us in +good stead in checking the forays of Gilmore, Mosby, and other +irregulars. Beneficial results came from the plan in many other ways +too, and particularly so when in a few days two of my scouts put me +in the way of getting news conveyed from Winchester. They had +learned that just outside of my lines, near Millwood, there was +living an old colored man, who had a permit from the Confederate +commander to go into Winchester and return three times a week, for +the purpose of selling vegetables to the inhabitants. The scouts had +sounded this man, and, finding him both loyal and shrewd, suggested +that he might be made useful to us within the enemy's lines; and the +proposal struck me as feasible, provided there could be found in +Winchester some reliable person who would be willing to co-operate +and correspond with me. I asked General Crook, who was acquainted +with many of the Union people of Winchester, if he knew of such a +person, and he recommended a Miss Rebecca Wright, a young lady whom +he had met there before the battle of Kernstown, who, he said, was a +member of the Society of Friends and the teacher of a small private +school. He knew she was faithful and loyal to the Government, and +thought she might be willing to render us assistance, but he could +not be certain of this, for on account of her well known loyalty she +was under constant surveillance. I hesitated at first, but finally +deciding to try it, despatched the two scouts to the old negro's +cabin, and they brought him to my headquarters late that night. I +was soon convinced of the negro's fidelity, and asking him if he was +acquainted with Miss Rebecca Wright, of Winchester, he replied that +he knew her well. There upon I told him what I wished to do, and +after a little persuasion he agreed to carry a letter to her on his +next marketing trip. My message was prepared by writing it on tissue +paper, which was then compressed into a small pellet, and protected +by wrapping it in tin-foil so that it could be safely carried in the +man's mouth. The probability, of his being searched when he came to +the Confederate picketline was not remote, and in such event he was +to swallow the pellet. The letter appealed to Miss Wright's loyalty +and patriotism, and requested her to furnish me with information +regarding the strength and condition of Early's army. The night +before the negro started one of the scouts placed the odd-looking +communication in his hands, with renewed injunctions as to secrecy +and promptitude. Early the next morning it was delivered to Miss +Wright, with an intimation that a letter of importance was enclosed +in the tin-foil, the negro telling her at the same time that she +might expect him to call for a message in reply before his return +home. At first Miss Wright began to open the pellet nervously, but +when told to be careful, and to preserve the foil as a wrapping for +her answer, she proceeded slowly and carefully, and when the note +appeared intact the messenger retired, remarking again that in the +evening he would come for an answer. + +On reading my communication Miss Wright was much startled by the +perils it involved, and hesitatingly consulted her mother, but her +devoted loyalty soon silenced every other consideration, and the +brave girl resolved to comply with my request, notwithstanding it +might jeopardize her life. The evening before a convalescent +Confederate officer had visited her mother's house, and in +conversation about the war had disclosed the fact that Kershaw's +division of infantry and Cutshaw's battalion of artillery had started +to rejoin General Lee. At the time Miss Wright heard this she +attached little if any importance to it, but now she perceived the +value of the intelligence, and, as her first venture, determined to +send it to me at once, which she did with a promise that in the +future she would with great pleasure continue to transmit information +by the negro messenger. + + + +"SEPTEMBER 15, 1864. + +"I learn from Major-General Crook that you are a loyal lady, and +still love the old flag. Can you inform me of the position of +Early's forces, the number of divisions in his army, and the strength +of any or all of them, and his probable or reported intentions? Have +any more troops arrived from Richmond, or are any more coming, or +reported to be coming? + +"You can trust the bearer." + +"I am, very respectfully, your most obedient servant, + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General Commanding." + + + +"SEPTEMBER 16, 1864. + +"I have no communication whatever with the rebels, but will tell you +what I know. The division of General Kershaw, and Cutshaw's +artillery, twelve guns and men, General Anderson commanding, have +been sent away, and no more are expected, as they cannot be spared +from Richmond. I do not know how the troops are situated, but the +force is much smaller than represented. I will take pleasure +hereafter in learning all I can of their strength and position, and +the bearer may call again. + +"Very respectfully yours," +............ + + + +Miss Wright's answer proved of more value to me than she anticipated, +for it not only quieted the conflicting reports concerning Anderson's +corps, but was most important in showing positively that Kershaw was +gone, and this circumstance led, three days later, to the battle of +the Opequon, or Winchester as it has been unofficially called. Word +to the effect that some of Early's troops were under orders to return +to Petersburg, and would start back at the first favorable +opportunity, had been communicated to me already from many sources, +but we had not been able to ascertain the date for their departure. +Now that they had actually started, I decided to wait before offering +battle until Kershaw had gone so far as to preclude his return, +feeling confident that my prudence would be justified by the improved +chances of victory; and then, besides, Mr. Stanton kept reminding me +that positive success was necessary to counteract the political +dissatisfaction existing in some of the Northern States. This course +was advised and approved by General Grant, but even with his powerful +backing it was difficult to resist the persistent pressure of those +whose judgment, warped by their interests in the Baltimore and Ohio +railroad, was often confused and misled by stories of scouts (sent +out from Washington), averring that Kershaw and Fitzhugh Lee had +returned to Petersburg, Breckenridge to southwestern Virginia, and at +one time even maintaining that Early's whole army was east of the +Blue Ridge, and its commander himself at Gordonsville. + +During the inactivity prevailing in my army for the ten days +preceding Miss Wright's communication the infantry was quiet, with +the exception of Getty's division, which made a reconnoissance to the +Opequon, and developed a heavy force of the enemy at Edwards's +Corners. The cavalry, however, was employed a good deal in this +interval skirmishing heavily at times to maintain a space about six +miles in width between the hostile lines, for I wished to control +this ground so that when I was released from the instructions of +August 12, I could move my men into position for attack without the +knowledge of Early. The most noteworthy of these mounted encounters +was that of McIntosh's brigade, which captured the Eighth South +Carolina at Abraham's Creek September 13. + +It was the evening of the 16th of September that I received from Miss +Wright the positive information that Kershaw was in march toward +Front Royal on his way by Chester Gap to Richmond. Concluding that +this was my opportunity, I at once resolved to throw my whole force +into Newtown the next day, but a despatch from General Grant +directing me to meet him at Charlestown, whither he was coming to +consult with me, caused me to defer action until after I should see +him. In our resulting interview at Charlestown, I went over the +situation very thoroughly, and pointed out with so much confidence +the chances of a complete victory should I throw my army across the +Valley pike near Newtown that he fell in with the plan at once, +authorized me to resume the offensive, and to attack Early as soon as +I deemed it most propitious to do so; and although before leaving +City Point he had outlined certain operations for my army, yet he +neither discussed nor disclosed his plans, my knowledge of the +situation striking him as being so much more accurate than his own. + + +[Extract from "Grant's Memoirs," page 328.] + +"....Before starting I had drawn up a plan of campaign for Sheridan, +which I had brought with me; but seeing that he was so clear and so +positive in his views, and so confident of success, I said nothing +about this, and did not take it out of my pocket...." + + +The interview over, I returned to my army to arrange for its movement +toward Newtown, but while busy with these preparations, a report came +to me from General Averell which showed that Early was moving with +two divisions of infantry toward Martinsburg. This considerably +altered the state of affairs, and I now decided to change my plan and +attack at once the two divisions remaining about Winchester and +Stephenson's depot, and later, the two sent to Martinsburg; the +disjointed state of the enemy giving me an opportunity to take him in +detail, unless the Martinsburg column should be returned by forced +marches. + +While General Early was in the telegraph office at Martinsburg on the +morning of the 18th, he learned of Grant's visit to me; and +anticipating activity by reason of this circumstance, he promptly +proceeded to withdraw so as to get the two divisions within +supporting distance of Ramseur's, which lay across the Berryville +pike about two miles east of Winchester, between Abraham's Creek and +Red Bud Run, so by the night of the 18th Wharton's division, under +Breckenridge, was at Stephenson's depot, Rodes near there, and +Gordon's at Bunker Hill. At daylight of the 19th these positions of +the Confederate infantry still obtained, with the cavalry of Lomax, +Jackson, and Johnson on the right of Ramseur, while to the left and +rear of the enemy's general line was Fitzhugh Lee, covering from +Stephenson's depot west across the Valley pike to Applepie Ridge. + +My army moved at 3 o'clock that morning. The plan was for Torbert to +advance with Merritt's division of cavalry from Summit Point, carry +the crossings of the Opequon at Stevens's and Lock's fords, and form +a junction near Stephenson's depot, with Averell, who was to move +south from Darksville by the Valley pike. Meanwhile, Wilson was to +strike up the Berryville pike, carry the Berryville crossing of the +Opequon, charge through the gorge or canyon on the road west of the +stream, and occupy the open ground at the head of this defile. +Wilson's attack was to be supported by the Sixth and Nineteenth +corps, which were ordered to the Berryville crossing, and as the +cavalry gained the open ground beyond the gorge, the two infantry +corps, under command of General Wright, were expected to press on +after and occupy Wilson's ground, who was then to shift to the south +bank of Abraham's Creek and cover my left; Crook's two divisions, +having to march from Summit Point, were to follow the Sixth and +Nineteenth corps to the Opcquon, and should they arrive before the +action began, they were to be held in reserve till the proper moment +came, and then, as a turning-column, be thrown over toward the Valley +pike, south of Winchester. + +McIntosh's brigade of Wilson's division drove the enemy's pickets +away from the Berryville crossing at dawn, and Wilson following +rapidly through the gorge with the rest of the division, debouched +from its western extremity with such suddenness as to capture a +small earthwork in front of General Ramseur's main line; and +not-withstanding the Confederate infantry, on recovering from its +astonishment, tried hard to dislodge them, Wilson's troopers +obstinately held the work till the Sixth Corps came up. I followed +Wilson to select the ground on which to form the infantry. The Sixth +Corps began to arrive about 8 o'clock, and taking up the line Wilson +had been holding, just beyond the head of the narrow ravine, the +cavalry was transferred to the south side of Abraham's Creek. + +The Confederate line lay along some elevated ground about two miles +east of Winchester, and extended from Abraham's Creek north across +the Berryville pike, the left being hidden in the heavy timber on Red +Bud Run. Between this line and mine, especially on my right, clumps +of woods and patches of underbrush occurred here and there, but the +undulating ground consisted mainly of open fields, many of which were +covered with standing corn that had already ripened. + +Much time was lost in getting all of the Sixth and Nineteenth corps +through the narrow defile, Grover's division being greatly delayed +there by a train of ammunition wagons, and it was not until late in +the forenoon that the troops intended for the attack could be got +into line ready to advance. General Early was not slow to avail +himself of the advantages thus offered him, and my chances of +striking him in detail were growing less every moment, for Gordon and +Rodes were hurrying their divisions from Stephenson's depot +--across-country on a line that would place Gordon in the woods south +of Red Bud Run, and bring Rodes into the interval between Gordon and +Ramseur. + +When the two corps had all got through the canyon they were formed +with Getty's division of the Sixth to the left of the Berryville +pike, Rickett's division to the right of the pike, and Russell's +division in reserve in rear of the other two. Grover's division of +the Nineteenth Corps came next on the right of Rickett's, with Dwight +to its rear in reserve, while Crook was to begin massing near the +Opequon crossing about the time Wright and Emory were ready to +attack. + +Just before noon the line of Getty, Ricketts, and Grover moved +forward, and as we advanced, the Confederates, covered by some heavy +woods on their right, slight underbrush and corn-fields along their +Centre, and a large body of timber on their left along the Red Bud, +opened fire from their whole front. We gained considerable ground at +first, especially on our left but the desperate resistance which the +right met with demonstrated that the time we had unavoidably lost in +the morning had been of incalculable value to Early, for it was +evident that he had been enabled already to so far concentrate his +troops as to have the different divisions of his army in a connected +line of battle, in good shape to resist. + +Getty and Ricketts made some progress toward Winchester in connection +with Wilson's cavalry, which was beyond the Senseny road on Getty's +left, and as they were pressing back Ramseur's infantry and Lomax's +cavalry Grover attacked from the right with decided effect. Grover +in a few minutes broke up Evans's brigade of Gordon's division, but +his pursuit of Evans destroyed the continuity of my general line, and +increased an interval that had already been made by the deflection of +Ricketts to the left, in obedience to instructions that had been +given him to guide his division on the Berryville pike. As the line +pressed forward, Ricketts observed this widening interval and +endeavored to fill it with the small brigade of Colonel Keifer, but +at this juncture both Gordon and Rodes struck the weak spot where the +right of the Sixth Corps and the left of the Nineteenth should have +been in conjunction, and succeeded in checking my advance by driving +back a part of Ricketts's division, and the most of Grover's. As +these troops were retiring I ordered Russell's reserve division to be +put into action, and just as the flank of the enemy's troops in +pursuit of Grover was presented, Upton's brigade, led in person by +both Russell and Upton, struck it in a charge so vigorous as to drive +the Confederates back in turn to their original ground. + +The success of Russell enabled me to re-establish the right of my +line some little distance in advance of the position from which it +started in the morning, and behind Russell's division (now commanded +by Upton) the broken regiments of Ricketts's division were rallied. +Dwight's division was then brought up on the right, and Grover's men +formed behind it. + +The charge of Russell was most opportune, but it cost many men in +killed and wounded. Among the former was the courageous Russell +himself; killed by a piece of shell that passed through his heart, +although he had previously been struck by a bullet in the left +breast, which wound, from its nature, must have proved mortal, yet of +which he had not spoken. Russell's death oppressed us all with +sadness, and me particularly. In the early days of my army life he +was my captain and friend, and I was deeply indebted to him, not only +for sound advice and good example, but for the inestimable service he +had just performed, and sealed with his life, so it may be inferred +how keenly I felt his loss. + +As my lines were being rearranged, it was suggested to me to put +Crook into the battle, but so strongly had I set my heart on using +him to take possession of the Valley pike and cut off the enemy, that +I resisted this advice, hoping that the necessity for putting him in +would be obviated by the attack near Stephenson's depot that +Torbert's cavalry was to make, and from which I was momentarily +expecting to hear. No news of Torbert's progress came, however, so, +yielding at last, I directed Crook to take post on the right of the +Nineteenth Corps and, when the action was renewed, to push his +command forward as a turning-column in conjunction with Emory. After +some delay in the annoying defile, Crook got his men up, and posting +Colonel Thoburn's division on the prolongation of the Nineteenth +Corps, he formed Colonel Duval's division to the right of Thoburn. +Here I joined Crook, informing him that I had just got word that +Torbert was driving the enemy in confusion along the Martinsburg pike +toward Winchester; at the same time I directed him to attack the +moment all of Duval's men were in line. Wright was instructed to +advance in concert with Crook, by swinging Emory and the right of the +Sixth Corps to the left together in a half-wheel. Then leaving +Crook, I rode along the Sixth and Nineteenth corps, the open ground +over which they were passing affording a rare opportunity to witness +the precision with which the attack was taken up from right to left. +Crook's success began the moment he started to turn the enemy's left; +and assured by the fact that Torbert had stampeded the Confederate +cavalry and thrown Breckenridge's infantry into such disorder that it +could do little to prevent the envelopment of Gordon's left, Crook +pressed forward without even a halt. + +Both Emory and Wright took up the fight as ordered, and as they did +so I sent word to Wilson, in the hope that he could partly perform +the work originally laid out for Crook, to push along the Senseny +road and, if possible, gain the valley pike south of Winchester. I +then returned toward my right flank, and as I reached the Nineteenth +Corps the enemy was contesting the ground in its front with great +obstinacy; but Emory's dogged persistence was at length rewarded with +success, just as Crook's command emerged from the morass of Red Bud +Run, and swept around Gordon, toward the right of Breckenridge, who, +with two of Wharton's brigades, was holding a line at right angles +with the Valley pike for the protection of the Confederate rear. +Early had ordered these two brigades back from Stephenson's depot in +the morning, purposing to protect with them his right flank and line +of retreat, but while they were en route to this end, he was obliged +to recall them to his left to meet Crook's attack. + +To confront Torbert, Patton's brigade of infantry and some of +Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry had been left back by Breckenridge, but, with +Averell on the west side of the Valley pike and Merritt on the east, +Torbert began to drive this opposing force toward Winchester the +moment he struck it near Stephenson's depot, keeping it on the go +till it reached the position held by Breckenridge, where it +endeavored to make a stand. + +The ground which Breckenridge was holding was open, and offered an +opportunity such as seldom had been presented during the war for a +mounted attack, and Torbert was not slow to take advantage of it. +The instant Merritt's division could be formed for the charge, it +went at Breckenridge's infantry and Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry with such +momentum as to break the Confederate left, just as Averell was +passing around it. Merritt's brigades, led by Custer, Lowell, and +Devin, met from the start with pronounced success, and with sabre or +pistol in hand literally rode down a battery of five guns and took +about 1,200 prisoners. Almost simultaneously with this cavalry +charge, Crook struck Breckenridge's right and Gordon's left, forcing +these divisions to give way, and as they retired, Wright, in a +vigorous attack, quickly broke Rodes up and pressed Ramseur so hard +that the whole Confederate army fell back, contracting its lines +within some breastworks which had been thrown up at a former period +of the war, immediately in front of Winchester. + +Here Early tried hard to stem the tide, but soon Torbert's cavalry +began passing around his left flank, and as Crook, Emory, and Wright +attacked in front, panic took possession of the enemy, his troops, +now fugitives and stragglers, seeking escape into and through +Winchester. + +When this second break occurred, the Sixth and Nineteenth corps were +moved over toward the Millwood pike to help Wilson on the left, but +the day was so far spent that they could render him no assistance, +and Ramseur's division, which had maintained some organization, was +in such tolerable shape as to check him. Meanwhile Torbert passed +around to the west of Winchester to join Wilson, but was unable to do +so till after dark. Crook's command pursued the enemy through the +town to Mill Greek, I going along. + +Just after entering the town, Crook and I met, in the main street, +three young girls, who gave us the most hearty reception. One of +these young women was a Miss Griffith, the other two Miss Jennie and +Miss Susie Meredith. During the day they had been watching the +battle from the roof of the Meredith residence, with tears and +lamentations, they said, in the morning when misfortune appeared to +have overtaken the Union troops, but with unbounded exultation when, +later, the tide set in against the Confederates. Our presence was, +to them, an assurance of victory, and their delight being +irrepressible, they indulged in the most unguarded manifestations and +expressions. When cautioned by Crook, who knew them well, and +reminded that the valley had hitherto been a race-course--one day in +the possession of friends, and the next of enemies--and warned of the +dangers they were incurring by such demonstrations, they assured him +that they had no further fears of that kind now, adding that Early's +army was so demoralized by the defeat it had just sustained that it +would never be in condition to enter Winchester again. As soon as we +had succeeded in calming the excited girls a little I expressed a +desire to find some place where I could write a telegram to General +Grant informing him of the result of the battle, and General Crook +conducted me to the home of Miss Wright, where I met for the first +time the woman who had contributed so much to our success, and on a +desk in her school-room wrote the despatch announcing that we had +sent Early's army whirling up the valley. + +My losses in the battle of the Opequon were heavy, amounting to about +4,500 killed, wounded, and missing. Among the killed was General +Russell, commanding a division, and the wounded included Generals +Upton, McIntosh and Chapman, and Colonels Duval and Sharpe. The +Confederate loss in killed, wounded, and prisoners about equaled +mine, General Rodes being of the killed, while Generals Fitzhugh Lee +and York were severely wounded. + +We captured five pieces of artillery and nine battle-flags. The +restoration of the lower valley--from the Potomac to Strasburg--to +the control of the Union forces caused great rejoicing in the North, +and relieved the Administration from further solicitude for the +safety of the Maryland and Pennsylvania borders. The President's +appreciation of the victory was expressed in a despatch so like Mr. +Lincoln that I give a facsimile of it to the reader: + +[In the handwriting of President Lincoln] +"EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT +"WASHINGTON, Sep. 20, 1864 + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERMAN +"WINCHESTER, VA. + +"Have just heard of your great victory. God bless you all, officers +and men. Strongly inclined to come up and see you. + +"A. LINCOLN." + + +This he supplemented by promoting me to the grade of +brigadier-general in the regular army, and assigning me to the +permanent command of the Middle Military Department, and following that +came warm congratulations from Mr. Stanton and from Generals Grant, +Sherman, and Meade. + +The battle was not fought out on the plan in accordance with which +marching orders were issued to my troops, for I then hoped to take +Early in detail, and with Crook's force cut off his retreat. I +adhered to this purpose during the early part of the contest, but was +obliged to abandon the idea because of unavoidable delays by which I +was prevented from getting the Sixth and Nineteenth corps through the +narrow defile and into position early enough to destroy Ramseur while +still isolated. So much delay had not been anticipated, and this +loss of time was taken advantage of by the enemy to recall the troops +diverted to Bunker Hill and Martinsburg on the 17th, thus enabling +him to bring them all to the support of Ramseur before I could strike +with effect. My idea was to attack Ramseur and Wharton, +successively, at a very early hour and before they could get succor, +but I was not in condition to do it till nearly noon, by which time +Gordon and Rodes had been enabled to get upon the ground at a point +from which, as I advanced, they enfiladed my right flank, and gave it +such a repulse that to re-form this part of my line I was obliged to +recall the left from some of the ground it had gained. It was during +this reorganization of my lines that I changed my plan as to Crook, +and moved him from my left to my right. This I did with great +reluctance, for I hoped to destroy Early's army entirely if Crook +continued on his original line of march toward the Valley pike, south +of Winchester; and although the ultimate results did, in a measure +vindicate the change, yet I have always thought that by adhering to +the original plan we might have captured the bulk of Early's army. + + + + +CHAPTER 11. + +PURSUING EARLY--A SECRET MARCH--FISHER'S HILL--A GREAT SUCCESS +--REMOVAL OF AVERELL--THE RETREAT--CAPTURING AN OLD COMRADE +--THE MURDER OF LIEUTENANT MEIGS. + +The night of the 19th of September I gave orders for following Early +up the valley next morning--the pursuit to begin at daybreak--and in +obedience to these directions Torbert moved Averell out on the Back +road leading to Cedar Creek, and Merritt up the Valley pike toward +Strasburg, while Wilson was directed on Front Royal by way of +Stevensburg. Merritt's division was followed by the infantry, +Emory's and Wright's columns marching abreast in the open country to +the right and left of the pike, and Crook's immediately behind them. +The enemy having kept up his retreat at night, presented no +opposition whatever until the cavalry discovered him posted at +Fisher's Hill, on the first defensive line where he could hope to +make any serious resistance. No effort was made to dislodge him, and +later in the day, after Wright and Emory came up, Torbert shifted +Merritt over toward the Back road till he rejoined Averell. As +Merritt moved to the right, the Sixth and Nineteenth corps crossed +Cedar Creek and took up the ground the cavalry was vacating, Wright +posting his own corps to the west of the Valley pike overlooking +Strasburg, and Emory's on his left so as to extend almost to the road +leading from Strasburg to Front Royal. Crook, as he came up the same +evening, went into position in some heavy timber on the north bank of +Cedar Creek. + +A reconnoissance made pending these movements convinced me that the +enemy's position at Fisher's Hill was so strong that a direct assault +would entail unnecessary destruction of life, and, besides, be of +doubtful result. At the point where Early's troops were in position, +between the Massanutten range and Little North Mountain, the valley +is only about three and a half miles wide. All along the precipitous +bluff which overhangs Tumbling Run on the south side, a heavy line of +earthworks had been constructed when Early retreated to this point in +August, and these were now being strengthened so as to make them +almost impregnable; in fact, so secure did Early consider himself +that, for convenience, his ammunition chests were taken from the +caissons and placed behind the breastworks. Wharton, now in command +of Breckenridge's division--its late commander having gone to +southwest Virginia--held the right of this line, with Gordon next +him; Pegram, commanding Ramseur's old division, joined Gordon. +Ramseur with Rodes's division, was on Pegram's left, while Lomax's +cavalry, now serving as foot-troops, extended the line to the Back +road. Fitzhugh Lee being wounded, his cavalry, under General +Wickham, was sent to Milford to prevent Fisher's Hill from being +turned through the Luray Valley. + +In consequence of the enemy's being so well protected from a direct +assault, I resolved on the night of the 20th to use again a +turning-column against his left, as had been done on the 19th at the +Opequon. To this end I resolved to move Crook, unperceived if possible, +over to the eastern face of Little North Mountain, whence he could +strike the left and rear of the Confederate line, and as he broke it +up, I could support him by a left half-wheel of my whole line of +battle. The execution of this plan would require perfect secrecy, +however, for the enemy from his signal-station on Three Top could +plainly see every movement of our troops in daylight. Hence, to escape +such observation, I marched Crook during the night of the 20th into +some heavy timber north of Cedar Creek, where he lay concealed all day +the 21st. This same day Wright and Emory were moved up closer to the +Confederate works, and the Sixth Corps, after a severe fight, in which +Ricketts's and Getty were engaged, took up some high ground on the +right of the Manassas Gap railroad in plain view of the Confederate +works, and confronting a commanding point where much of Early's +artillery was massed. Soon after General Wright had established this +line I rode with him along it to the westward, and finding that the +enemy was still holding an elevated position further to our right, on +the north side of Tumbling Run, I directed this also to be occupied. +Wright soon carried the point, which gave us an unobstructed view of +the enemy's works and offered good ground for our artillery. It also +enabled me to move the whole of the Sixth Corps to the front till its +line was within about seven hundred yards of the enemy's works; the +Nineteenth Corps, on the morning of the 22d, covering the ground +vacated by the Sixth by moving to the front and extending to the right, +but still keeping its reserves on the railroad. + +In the darkness of the night of the gist, Crook was brought across +Cedar Creek and hidden in a clump of timber behind Hupp's Hill till +daylight of the 22d, when, under cover of the intervening woods and +ravines, he was marched beyond the right of the Sixth Corps and again +concealed not far from the Back road. After Crook had got into this +last position, Ricketts's division was pushed out until it confronted +the left of the enemy's infantry, the rest of the Sixth Corps +extending from Ricketts's left to the Manassas Gap railroad, while +the Nineteenth Corps filled in the space between the left of the +Sixth and the North Fork of the Shenandoah. + +When Ricketts moved out on this new line, in conjunction with +Averell's cavalry on his right, the enemy surmising, from information +secured from his signal-station, no doubt, that my attack was to be +made from Ricketts's front, prepared for it there, but no such +intention ever existed. Ricketts was pushed forward only that he +might readily join Crook's turning-column as it swung into the +enemy's rear. To ensure success, all that I needed now was enough +daylight to complete my arrangements, the secrecy of movement imposed +by the situation consuming many valuable hours. + +While Ricketts was occupying the enemy's attention, Crook, again +moving unobserved into the dense timber on the eastern face of Little +North Mountain, conducted his command south in two parallel columns +until he gained the rear of the enemy's works, when, marching his +divisions by the left flank, he led them in an easterly direction +down the mountain-side. As he emerged from the timber near the base +of the mountain, the Confederates discovered him, of course, and +opened with their batteries, but it was too late--they having few +troops at hand to confront the turning-column. Loudly cheering, +Crook's men quickly crossed the broken stretch in rear of the enemy's +left, producing confusion and consternation at every step. + +About a mile from the mountain's base Crook's left was joined by +Ricketts, who in proper time had begun to swing his division into the +action, and the two commands moved along in rear of the works so +rapidly that, with but slight resistance, the Confederates abandoned +the guns massed near the centre. The swinging movement of Ricketts +was taken up successively from right to left throughout my line, and +in a few minutes the enemy was thoroughly routed, the action, though +brief, being none the less decisive. Lomax's dismounted cavalry gave +way first, but was shortly followed by all the Confederate infantry +in an indescribable panic, precipitated doubtless by fears of being +caught and captured in the pocket formed by Tumbling Run and the +North Fork of the Shenandoah River. The stampede was complete, the +enemy leaving the field without semblance of organization, abandoning +nearly all his artillery and such other property as was in the works, +and the rout extending through the fields and over the roads toward +Woodstock, Wright and Emory in hot pursuit. + +Midway between Fisher's Hill and Woodstock there is some high ground, +where at night-fall a small squad endeavored to stay us with two +pieces of artillery, but this attempt at resistance proved fruitless, +and, notwithstanding the darkness, the guns were soon captured. The +chase was then taken up by Devin's brigade as soon as it could be +passed to the front, and continued till after daylight the next +morning, but the delays incident to a night pursuit made it +impossible for Devin to do more than pick up stragglers. + +Our success was very great, yet I had anticipated results still more +pregnant. Indeed, I had high hopes of capturing almost the whole of +Early's army before it reached New Market, and with this object in +view, during the manoeuvres of the 21st I had sent Torbert up the +Luray Valley with Wilson's division and two of Merritt's brigades, in +the expectation that he would drive Wickham out of the Luray Pass by +Early's right, and by crossing the Massanutten Mountain near New +Market, gain his rear. Torbert started in good season, and after +some slight skirmishing at Gooney Run, got as far as Milford, but +failed to dislodge Wickham. In fact, he made little or no attempt to +force Wickham from his position, and with only a feeble effort +withdrew. I heard nothing at all from Torbert during the 22d, and +supposing that everything was progressing favorably, I was astonished +and chagrined on the morning of the 23d, at Woodstock, to receive the +intelligence that he had fallen back to Front Royal and Buckton ford. +My disappointment was extreme, but there was now no help for the +situation save to renew and emphasize Torbert's orders, and this was +done at once, notwithstanding that I thought, the delay, had so much +diminished the chances of his getting in the rear of Early as to make +such a result a very remote possibility, unless, indeed, far greater +zeal was displayed than had been in the first attempt to penetrate +the Luray Valley. + +The battle of Fisher's Hill was, in a measure, a part of the battle +of the Opequon; that is to say, it was an incident of the pursuit +resulting from that action. In many ways, however, it was much more +satisfactory, and particularly so because the plan arranged on the +evening of the 20th was carried out to the very letter by Generals +Wright, Crook, and Emory, not only in all their preliminary +manoeuvres, but also during the fight itself. The only drawback was +with the cavalry, and to this day I have been unable to account +satisfactorily for Torbert's failure. No doubt, Wickham's position +near Milford was a strong one, but Torbert ought to have made a +fight. Had he been defeated in this, his withdrawal then to await +the result at Fisher's Hill would have been justified, but it does +not appear that he made any serious effort of all to dislodge the +Confederate cavalry: his impotent attempt not only chagrined me very +much, but occasioned much unfavorable comment throughout the army. + +We reached Woodstock early on the morning of the 23d, and halted +there some little time to let the troops recover their organization, +which had been broken in the night march they had just made. When +the commands had closed up we pushed on toward Edinburg, in the hope +of making more captures at Narrow Passage Creek; but the +Confederates, too fleet for us, got away; so General Wright halted +the infantry not far from Edinburg, till rations could be brought the +men. Meanwhile I, having remained at Woodstock, sent Dedin's brigade +to press the enemy under every favorable opportunity, and if possible +prevent him from halting long enough to reorganize. Notwithstanding +Devin's efforts the Confederates managed to assemble a considerable +force to resist him, and being too weak for the rearguard, he awaited +the arrival of Averell, who, I had informed him, would be hurried to +the front with all possible despatch, for I thought that Averell must +be close at hand. It turned out, however, that he was not near by at +all, and, moreover, that without good reason he had refrained from +taking any part whatever in pursuing the enemy in the flight from +Fisher's Hill; and in fact had gone into camp and left to the +infantry the work of pursuit. + +It was nearly noon when Averell came up, and a great deal of precious +time had been lost. We had some hot words, but hoping that he would +retrieve the mistake of the night before, I directed him to proceed +to the front at once, and in conjunction with Devin close with the +enemy. He reached Devin's command about 3 o'clock in the afternoon, +just as this officer was pushing the Confederates so energetically +that they were abandoning Mount Jackson, yet Averell utterly failed +to accomplish anything. Indeed, his indifferent attack was not at +all worthy the excellent soldiers he commanded, and when I learned +that it was his intention to withdraw from the enemy's front, and +this, too, on the indefinite report of a signal-officer that a +"brigade or division" of Confederates was turning his right flank, +and that he had not seriously attempted to verify the information, I +sent him this order: + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY DIVISION, +"Woodstock, Va., Sept. 23, 1864 + +"BREVET MAJOR-GENERAL AVERELL + +"Your report and report of signal-officer received. I do not want +you to let the enemy bluff you or your command, and I want you to +distinctly understand this note. I do not advise rashness, but I do +desire resolution and actual fighting, with necessary casualties, +before you retire. There must now be no backing or filling by you +without a superior force of the enemy actually engaging you. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General Commanding." + + +Some little time after this note went to Averell, word was brought me +that he had already carried out the programme indicated when +forwarding the report of the expected turning of his right, and that +he had actually withdrawn and gone into camp near Hawkinsburg. I +then decided to relieve him from the command of his division, which I +did, ordering him to Wheeling, Colonel William H. Powell being +assigned to succeed him. + +The removal of Averell was but the culmination of a series of events +extending back to the time I assumed command of the Middle Military +Division. At the outset, General Grant, fearing discord on account +of Averell's ranking Torbert, authorized me to relieve the former +officer, but I hoped that if any trouble of this sort arose, it could +be allayed, or at least repressed, during the campaign against Early, +since the different commands would often have to act separately. +After that, the dispersion of my army by the return of the Sixth +Corps and Torbert's cavalry to the Army of the Potomac would take +place, I thought, and this would restore matters to their normal +condition; but Averell's dissatisfaction began to show itself +immediately after his arrival at Martinsburg, on the 14th of August, +and, except when he was conducting some independent expedition, had +been manifested on all occasions since. I therefore thought that the +interest of the service would be subserved by removing one whose +growing indifference might render the best-laid plans inoperative. + + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY DIVISION. +"HARRISONBURG, VA., SEPT. 25, 1864 11:30 P. M. +"LIEUT-GENERAL GRANT, Comd'g, City Point, Va. + +"I have relieved Averell from his command. Instead of following the +enemy when he was broken at Fisher's Hill (so there was not a cavalry +organization left), he went into camp and let me pursue the enemy for +a distance of fifteen miles, with infantry, during the night. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + +The failure of Averell to press the enemy the evening of the 23d gave +Early time to collect his scattered forces and take up a position on +the east side of the North Fork of the Shenandoah, his left resting +on the west side of that stream at Rude's Hill, a commanding point +about two miles south of Mt. Jackson. Along this line he had +constructed some slight works during the night, and at daylight on +the 24th, I moved the Sixth and Nineteenth corps through Mt. Jackson +to attack him, sending Powell's division to pass around his left +flank, toward Timberville, and Devin's brigade across the North Fork, +to move along the base of Peaked Ridge and attack his right. The +country was entirely open, and none of these manoeuvres could be +executed without being observed, so as soon as my advance began, the +enemy rapidly retreated in line of battle up the valley through New +Market, closely followed by Wright and Emory, their artillery on the +pike and their columns on its right and left. Both sides moved with +celerity, the Confederates stimulated by the desire to escape, and +our men animated by the prospect of wholly destroying Early's army. +The stern-chase continued for about thirteen miles, our infantry +often coming within range, yet whenever we began to deploy, the +Confederates increased the distance between us by resorting to a +double quick, evading battle with admirable tact. While all this was +going on, the open country permitted us a rare and brilliant sight, +the bright sun gleaming from the arms and trappings of the thousands +of pursuers and pursued. + +Near New Market, as a last effort to hold the enemy, I pushed Devin's +cavalry--comprising about five hundred men--with two guns right up on +Early's lines, in the hope that the tempting opportunity given him to +capture the guns would stay his retreat long enough to let my +infantry deploy within range, but he refused the bait, and after +momentarily checking Devin he continued on with little loss and in +pretty good order. + +All hope of Torbert's appearing in rear of the Confederates vanished +as they passed beyond New Market. Some six miles south of this place +Early left the Valley Pike and took the road to Keezletown, a move +due in a measure to Powell's march by way of Timberville toward +Lacy's Springs, but mainly caused by the fact that the Keezletown +road ran immediately along the base of Peaked Mountain--a rugged +ridge affording protection to Early's right flank--and led in a +direction facilitating his junction with Kershaw, who had been +ordered back to him from Culpeper the day after the battle of the +Opequon. The chase was kept up on the Keezeltown road till darkness +overtook us, when my weary troops were permitted to go into camp; and +as soon as the enemy discovered by our fires that the pursuit had +stopped, he also bivouacked some five miles farther south toward Port +Republic. + +The next morning Early was joined by Lomax's cavalry from +Harrisonburg, Wickham's and Payne's brigades of cavalry also uniting +with him from the Luray Valley. His whole army then fell back to the +mouth of Brown's Gap to await Kershaw's division and Cutshaw's +artillery, now on their return. + +By the morning of the 25th the main body of the enemy had disappeared +entirely from my front, and the capture of some small, squads of +Confederates in the neighboring hills furnished us the only incidents +of the day. Among the prisoners was a tall and fine looking officer, +much worn with hunger and fatigue. The moment I saw him I recognized +him as a former comrade, George W. Carr, with whom I had served in +Washington Territory. He was in those days a lieutenant in the Ninth +Infantry, and was one of the officers who superintended the execution +of the nine Indians at the Cascades of the Columbia in 1856. Carr +was very much emaciated, and greatly discouraged by the turn events +had recently taken. For old acquaintance sake I gave him plenty to +eat, and kept him in comfort at my headquarters until the next batch +of prisoners was sent to the rear, when he went with them. He had +resigned from the regular army at the commencement of hostilities, +and, full of high anticipation, cast his lot with the Confederacy, +but when he fell into our hands, his bright dreams having been +dispelled by the harsh realities of war, he appeared to think that +for him there was no future. + +Picking up prisoners here and there, my troops resumed their march +directly south on the Valley pike, and when the Sixth and Nineteenth +corps reached Harrisonburg, they went into camp, Powell in the +meanwhile pushing on to Mt. Crawford, and Crook taking up a position +in our rear at the junction of the Keezletown road and the Valley +pike. Late in the afternoon Torbert's cavalry came in from New +Market arriving at that place many hours later than it had been +expected. + +The succeeding day I sent Merritt to Port Republic to occupy the +enemy's attention, while Torbert, with Wilson's division and the +regular brigade, was ordered to Staunton, whence he was to proceed to +Waynesboro' and blow up the railroad bridge. Having done this, +Torbert, as he returned, was to drive off whatever cattle he could +find, destroy all forage and breadstuffs, and burn the mills. He +took possession of Waynesboro' in due time, but had succeeded in only +partially demolishing the railroad bridge when, attacked by Pegram's +division of infantry and Wickham's cavalry, he was compelled to fall +back to Staunton. From the latter place he retired to Bridgewater, +and Spring Hill, on the way, however, fully executing his +instructions regarding the destruction of supplies. + +While Torbert was on this expedition, Merritt had occupied Port +Republic, but he happened to get there the very day that Kershaw's +division was marching from Swift Run Gap to join Early. By accident +Kershaw ran into Merritt shortly after the latter had gained the +village. Kershaw's four infantry brigades attacked at once, and +Merrit, forced out of Port Republic, fell back toward Cross Keys; and +in anticipation that the Confederates could be coaxed to that point, +I ordered the infantry there, but Torbert's attack at Wavnesboro' had +alarmed Early, and in consequence he drew all his forces in toward +Rock-fish Gap. This enabled me to re-establish Merritt at Port +Republic, send the Sixth and Nineteenth corps to the neighborhood of +Mt. Crawford to await the return of Torbert, and to post Crook at +Harrisonburg; these dispositions practically obtained till the 6th of +October, I holding a line across the valley from Port Republic along +North River by Mt. Crawford to the Back road near the mouth of Briery +Branch Gap. + +It was during this period, about dusk on the evening of October 3, +that between Harrisonburg and Dayton my engineer officer, Lieutenant +John R. Meigs, was murdered within my lines. He had gone out with +two topographical assistants to plot the country, and late in the +evening, while riding along the public road on his return to camp, he +overtook three men dressed in our uniform. From their dress, and +also because the party was immediately behind our lines and within a +mile and a half of my headquarters, Meigs and his assistants +naturally thought that they were joining friends, and wholly +unsuspicious of anything to the contrary, rode on with the three men +some little distance; but their perfidy was abruptly discovered by +their suddenly turning upon Meigs with a call for his surrender. It +has been claimed that, refusing to submit, he fired on the +treacherous party, but the statement is not true, for one of the +topographers escaped--the other was captured--and reported a few +minutes later at my headquarters that Meigs was killed without +resistance of any kind whatever, and without even the chance to give +himself up. This man was so cool, and related all the circumstances +of the occurrence with such exactness, as to prove the truthfulness +of his statement. The fact that the murder had been committed inside +our lines was evidence that the perpetrators of the crime, having +their homes in the vicinity, had been clandestinely visiting them, +and been secretly harbored by some of the neighboring residents. +Determining to teach a lesson to these abettors of the foul deed--a +lesson they would never forget--I ordered all the houses within an +area of five miles to be burned. General Custer, who had succeeded +to the command of the Third Cavalry division (General Wilson having +been detailed as chief of cavalry to Sherman's army), was charged +with this duty, and the next morning proceeded to put the order into +execution. The prescribed area included the little village of +Dayton, but when a few houses in the immediate neighborhood of the +scene of the murder had been burned, Custer was directed to cease his +desolating work, but to fetch away all the able-bodied males as +prisoners. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +REASONS FOR NOT PURSUING EARLY THROUGH THE BLUE RIDGE--GENERAL +TORBERT DETAILED TO GIVE GENERAL ROSSER A "DRUBBING"--GENERAL ROSSER +ROUTED--TELEGRAPHED TO MEET STANTON--LONGSTREET'S MESSAGE--RETURN TO +WINCHESTER--THE RIDE TO CEDAR CREEK--THE RETREATING ARMY--RALLYING +THE TROOPS--REFORMING THE LINE--COMMENCING THE ATTACK--DEFEAT OF THE +CONFEDERATES--APPOINTED A MAJOR-GENERAL IN THE REGULAR ARMY--RESULTS +OF THE BATTLE. + +While we lay in camp at Harrisonburg it became necessary to decide +whether or not I would advance to Brown's Gap, and, after driving the +enemy from there, follow him through the Blue Ridge into eastern +Virginia. Indeed, this question began to cause me solicitude as soon +as I knew Early had escaped me at New Market, for I felt certain that +I should be urged to pursue the Confederates toward Charlottesville +and Gordonsville, and be expected to operate on that line against +Richmond. For many reasons I was much opposed to such a plan, but +mainly because its execution would involve the opening of the Orange +and Alexandria railroad. To protect this road against the raids of +the numerous guerrilla bands that infested the region through which +it passed, and to keep it in operation, would require a large force +of infantry, and would also greatly reduce my cavalry; besides, I +should be obliged to leave a force in the valley strong enough to +give security to the line of the upper Potomac and the Baltimore and +Ohio railroad, and this alone would probably take the whole of +Crook's command, leaving me a wholly inadequate number of fighting +men to prosecute a campaign against the city of Richmond. Then, too, +I was in doubt whether the besiegers could hold the entire army at +Petersburg; and in case they could not, a number of troops sufficient +to crush me might be detached by Lee, moved rapidly by rail, and, +after overwhelming me, be quickly returned to confront General Meade. +I was satisfied, moreover, that my transportation could not supply me +further than Harrisonburg, and if in penetrating the Blue Ridge I met +with protracted resistance, a lack of supplies might compel me to +abandon the attempt at a most inopportune time. + +I therefore advised that the Valley campaign be terminated north of +Staunton, and I be permitted to return, carrying out on the way my +original instructions for desolating the Shenandoah country so as to +make it untenable for permanent occupation by the Confederates. I +proposed to detach the bulk of my army when this work of destruction +was completed, and send it by way of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad +through Washington to the Petersburg line, believing that I could +move it more rapidly by that route than by any other. I was +confident that if a movement of this character could be made with +celerity it would culminate in the capture of Richmond and possibly +of General Lee's army, and I was in hopes that General Grant would +take the same view of the matter; but just at this time he was so +pressed by the Government and by public-opinion at the North, that he +advocated the wholly different conception of driving Early into +eastern Virginia, and adhered to this plan with some tenacity. +Considerable correspondence regarding the subject took place between +us, throughout which I stoutly maintained that we should not risk, by +what I held to be a false move, all that my army had gained. I being +on the ground, General Grant left to me the final decision of the +question, and I solved the first step by determining to withdraw down +the valley at least as far as Strasburg, which movement was begun on +the 6th of October. + +The cavalry as it retired was stretched across the country from the +Blue Ridge to the eastern slope of the Alleghanies, with orders to +drive off all stock and destroy all supplies as it moved northward. +The infantry preceded the cavalry, passing down the Valley pike, and +as we marched along the many columns of smoke from burning stacks, +and mills filled with grain, indicated that the adjacent country was +fast losing the features which hitherto had made it a great magazine +of stores for the Confederate armies. + +During the 6th and 7th of October, the enemy's horse followed us up, +though at a respectful distance. This cavalry was now under command +of General T. W. Rosser, who on October 5 had joined Early with an +additional brigade from Richmond. As we proceeded the Confederates +gained confidence, probably on account of the reputation with which +its new commander had been heralded, and on the third day's march had +the temerity to annoy my rear guard considerably. Tired of these +annoyances, I concluded to open the enemy's eyes in earnest, so that +night I told Torbert I expected him either to give Rosser a drubbing +next morning or get whipped himself, and that the infantry would be +halted until the affair was over; I also informed him that I proposed +to ride out to Round Top Mountain to see the fight. When I decided +to have Rosser chastised, Merritt was encamped at the foot of Round +Top, an elevation just north of Tom's Brook, and Custer some six +miles farther north and west, near Tumbling Run. In the night Custer +was ordered to retrace his steps before daylight by the Back road, +which is parallel to and about three miles from the Valley pike, and +attack the enemy at Tom's Brook crossing, while Merritt's +instructions were to assail him on the Valley pike in concert with +Custer. About 7 in the morning, Custer's division encountered Rosser +himself with three brigades, and while the stirring sounds of the +resulting artillery duel were reverberating through the valley +Merritt moved briskly to the front and fell upon Generals Lomax and +Johnson on the Valley pike. Merritt, by extending his right, quickly +established connection with Custer, and the two divisions moved +forward together under Torbert's direction, with a determination to +inflict on the enemy the sharp and summary punishment his rashness +had invited. + +The engagement soon became general across the valley, both sides +fighting mainly mounted. For about two hours the contending lines +struggled with each other along Tom's Brook, the charges and counter +charges at many points being plainly visible from the summit of Round +Top, where I had my headquarters for the time. + +The open country permitting a sabre fight, both sides seemed bent on +using that arm. In the centre the Confederates maintained their +position with much stubbornness, and for a time seemed to have +recovered their former spirit, but at last they began to give way on +both flanks, and as these receded, Merritt and Custer went at the +wavering ranks in a charge along the whole front. The result was a +general smash-up of the entire Confederate line, the retreat quickly +degenerating into a rout the like of which was never before seen. +For twenty-six miles this wild stampede kept up, with our troopers +close at the enemy's heels; and the ludicrous incidents of the chase +never ceased to be amusing topics around the camp-fires of Merritt +and Custer. In the fight and pursuit Torbert took eleven pieces of +artillery, with their caissons, all the wagons and ambulances the +enemy had on the ground, and three hundred prisoners. Some of +Rosser's troopers fled to the mountains by way of Columbia Furnace, +and some up the Valley pike and into the Massamitten Range, +apparently not discovering that the chase had been discontinued till +south of Mount Jackson they rallied on Early's infantry. + +After this catastrophe, Early reported to General Lee that his +cavalry was so badly demoralized that it should be dismounted; and +the citizens of the valley, intensely disgusted with the boasting and +swaggering that had characterized the arrival of the "Laurel Brigade" +in that section, baptized the action (known to us as Tom's Brook) the +"Woodstock Races," and never tired of poking fun at General Rosser +about his precipitate and inglorious flight. (When Rosser arrived +from Richmond with his brigade he was proclaimed as the savior of the +Valley, and his men came all bedecked with laurel branches.) + +On the 10th my army, resuming its retrograde movement, crossed to the +north side of Cedar Creek. The work of repairing the Manassas Gap +branch of the Orange and Alexandria railroad had been begun some days +before, out from Washington, and, anticipating that it would be in +readiness to transport troops by the time they could reach Piedmont, +I directed the Sixth Corps to continue its march toward Front Royal, +expecting to return to the Army of the Potomac by that line. By the +12th, however, my views regarding the reconstruction of this railroad +began to prevail, and the work on it was discontinued. The Sixth +Corps, therefore, abandoned that route, and moved toward Ashby's Gap +with the purpose of marching direct to Washington, but on the 13th I +recalled it to Cedar Creek, in consequence of the arrival of the +enemy's infantry at Fisher's Hill, and the receipt, the night before, +of the following despatch, which again opened the question of an +advance on Gordonsville and Charlottesville: + + +(Cipher.) +"WASHINGTON, October 12, 1864, 12 M. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN: + +"Lieutenant-General Grant wishes a position taken far enough south to +serve as a base for further operations upon Gordonsville and +Charlottesville. It must be strongly fortified and provisioned. +Some point in the vicinity of Manassas Gap would seem best suited for +all purposes. Colonel Alexander, of the Engineers, will be sent to +consult with you as soon as you connect with General Augur. + +"H. W. HALLECK, Major-General." + + +As it was well known in Washington that the views expressed in the +above despatch were counter to my convictions, I was the next day +required by the following telegram from Secretary Stanton to repair +to that city: + + +"WASHINGTON, October 13, 1864. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN +(through General Augur) + +"If you can come here, a consultation on several points is extremely +desirable. I propose to visit General Grant, and would like to see +you first. + +"EDWIN M. STANTON, +"Secretary of War." + + +I got all ready to comply with the terms of Secretary Stanton's +despatch, but in the meantime the enemy appeared in my front in +force, with infantry and cavalry, and attacked Colonel Thoburn, who +had been pushed out toward Strasburg from Crook's command, and also +Custer's division of cavalry on the Back road. As afterward +appeared, this attack was made in the belief that all of my troops +but Crook's had gone to Petersburg. From this demonstration there +ensued near Hupp's Hill a bitter skirmish between Kershaw and +Thoburn, and the latter was finally compelled to withdraw to the +north bank of Cedar Creek. Custer gained better results, however, on +the Back road, with his usual dash driving the enemy's cavalry away +from his front, Merritt's division then joining him and remaining on +the right. + +The day's events pointing to a probability that the enemy intended to +resume the offensive, to anticipate such a contingency I ordered the +Sixth Corps to return from its march toward Ashby's Gap. It reached +me by noon of the 14th, and went into position to the right and rear +of the Nineteenth Corps, which held a line along the north bank of +Cedar Creek, west of the Valley pike. Crook was posted on the left +of the Nineteenth Corps and east of the Valley pike, with Thoburn's +division advanced to a round hill, which commanded the junction of +Cedar Creek and the Shenandoah River, while Torbert retained both +Merritt and Custer on the right of the Sixth Corps, and at the +same time covered with Powell the roads toward Front Royal. My +head-quarters were at the Belle Grove House, which was to the west of +the pike and in rear of the Nineteenth Corps. It was my intention to +attack the enemy as soon as the Sixth Corps reached me, but General +Early having learned from his demonstration that I had not detached as +largely as his previous information had led him to believe, on the +night of the 13th withdrew to Fisher's Hill; so, concluding that he +could not do us serious hurt from there, I changed my mind as to +attacking, deciding to defer such action till I could get to +Washington, and come to some definite understanding about my future +operations. + +To carry out this idea, on the evening of the 15th I ordered all of +the cavalry under General Torbert to accompany me to Front Royal, +again intending to push it thence through Chester Gap to the Virginia +Central railroad at Charlottesville, to destroy the bridge over the +Rivanna River, while I passed through Manassas Gap to Rectortown, and +thence by rail to Washington. On my arrival with the cavalry near +Front Royal on the 16th, I halted at the house of Mrs. Richards, on +the north bank of the river, and there received the following +despatch and inclosure from General Wright, who had been left in +command at Cedar Creek: + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY Division, +"October 16, 1864. + +"GENERAL: + +"I enclose you despatch which explains itself. If the enemy should +be strongly reenforced in cavalry, he might, by turning our right, +give us a great deal of trouble. I shall hold on here until the +enemy's movements are developed, and shall only fear an attack on my +right, which I shall make every preparation for guarding against and +resisting. + +"Very respectfully, your obedient servant, + +"H. G. WRIGHT, Major-General Commanding. +"MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Commanding Middle Military Division." + + +[INCLOSURE.] "To LIEUTENANT-GENERAL EARLY: + +"Be ready to move as soon as my forces join you, and we will crush +Sheridan. + +"LONGSTREET, Lieutenant-General." + + +The message from Longstreet had been taken down as it was being +flagged from the Confederate signal-station on Three Top Mountain, +and afterward translated by our signal officers, who knew the +Confederate signal code. I first thought it a ruse, and hardly worth +attention, but on reflection deemed it best to be on the safe side, +so I abandoned the cavalry raid toward Charlottesville, in order to +give General Wright the entire strength of the army, for it did not +seem wise to reduce his numbers while reinforcement for the enemy +might be near, and especially when such pregnant messages were +reaching Early from one of the ablest of the Confederate generals. +Therefore I sent the following note to General Wright: + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY DIVISION, +"Front Royal, October 16, 1864. + +"GENERAL: The cavalry is all ordered back to you; make your position +strong. If Longstreet's despatch is true, he is under the impression +that we have largely detached. I will go over to Augur, and may get +additional news. Close in Colonel Powell, who will be at this point. +If the enemy should make an advance, I know you will defeat him. +Look well to your ground and be well prepared. Get up everything +that can be spared. I will bring up all I can, and will be up on +Tuesday, if not sooner. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL H. G. WRIGHT, +"Commanding Sixth Army Corps." + + +At 5 o'clock on the evening of the 16th I telegraphed General Halleck +from Rectortown, giving him the information which had come to me from +Wright, asking if anything corroborative of it had been received from +General Grant, and also saying that I would like to see Halleck; the +telegram ending with the question: "Is it best for me to go to see +you?" Next morning I sent back to Wright all the cavalry except one +regiment, which escorted me through Manassas Gap to the terminus of +the railroad from Washington. I had with me Lieutenant-Colonel James +W. Forsyth, chief-of-staff, and three of my aides, Major George A. +Forsyth, Captain Joseph O'Keefe, and Captain Michael V. Sheridan. I +rode my black horse, Rienzi, and the others their own respective +mounts. + +Before leaving Cedar Creek I had fixed the route of my return to be +by rail from Washington to Martinsburg, and thence by horseback to +Winchester and Cedar Creek, and had ordered three hundred cavalry to +Martinsburg to escort me from that point to the front. At Rectortown +I met General Augur, who had brought a force out from Washington to +reconstruct and protect the line of railroad, and through him +received the following reply from General Halleck: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"WASHINGTON, D.C., October 16 1864 + +"To MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN, +"Rectortown, Va. + +General Grant says that Longstreet brought with him no troops from +Richmond, but I have very little confidence in the information +collected at his headquarters. If you can leave your command with +safety, come to Washington, as I wish to give you the views of the +authorities here. + +"H. W. HALLECK, Major-General, Chief-of-Staff." + + +In consequence of the Longstreet despatch, I felt a concern about my +absence which I could hardly repress, but after duly considering what +Halleck said, and believing that Longstreet could not unite with +Early before I got back, and that even if he did Wright would be able +to cope with them both, I and my staff, with our horses, took the +cars for Washington, where we arrived on the morning of the 17th at +about 8 o'clock. I proceeded at an early hour to the War Department, +and as soon as I met Secretary Stanton, asked him for a special train +to be ready at 12 o'clock to take me to Martinsburg, saying that in +view of existing conditions I must get back to my army as quickly as +possible. He at once gave the order for the train, and then the +Secretary, Halleck, and I proceeded to hold a consultation in regard +to my operating east of the Blue Ridge. The upshot was that my views +against such a plan were practically agreed to, and two engineer +officers were designated to return with me for the purpose of +reporting on a defensive line in the valley that could be held while +the bulk of my troops were being detached to Petersburg. Colonel +Alexander and Colonel Thom both of the Engineer Corps, reported to +accompany me, and at 12 o'clock we took the train. + +We arrived about dark at Martinsburg, and there found the escort of +three hundred men which I had ordered before leaving Cedar Creek. We +spent that night at Martinsburg, and early next morning mounted and +started up the Valley pike for Winchester, leaving Captain Sheridan +behind to conduct to the army the Commissioners whom the State of New +York had sent down to receive the vote of her troops in the coming +Presidential election. Colonel Alexander was a man of enormous +weight, and Colonel Thom correspondingly light, and as both were +unaccustomed to riding we had to go slowly, losing so much time, in +fact, that we did not reach Winchester till between 3 and 4 o'clock +in the afternoon, though the distance is but twenty-eight miles. As +soon as we arrived at Colonel Edwards's headquarters in the town, +where I intended stopping for the night, I sent a courier to the +front to bring me a report of the condition of affairs, and then took +Colonel Alexander out on the heights about Winchester, in order that +he might overlook the country, and make up his mind as to the utility +of fortifying there. By the time we had completed our survey it was +dark, and just as we reached Colonel Edwards's house on our return a +courier came in from Cedar Creek bringing word that everything was +all right, that the enemy was quiet at Fisher's Hill, and that a +brigade of Grover's division was to make a reconnoissance in the +morning, the 19th, so about 10 o'clock I went to bed greatly +relieved, and expecting to rejoin my headquarters at my leisure next +day. + +Toward 6 o'clock the morning of the 19th, the officer on picket duty +at Winchester came to my room, I being yet in bed, and reported +artillery firing from the direction of Cedar Creek. I asked him if +the firing was continuous or only desultory, to which he replied that +it was not a sustained fire, but rather irregular and fitful. I +remarked: "It's all right; Grover has gone out this morning to make a +reconnoissance, and he is merely feeling the enemy." I tried to go to +sleep again, but grew so restless that I could not, and soon got up +and dressed myself. A little later the picket officer came back and +reported that the firing, which could be distinctly heard from his +line on the heights outside of Winchester, was still going on. I +asked him if it sounded like a battle, and as he again said that it +did not, I still inferred that the cannonading was caused by Grover's +division banging away at the enemy simply to find out what he was up +to. However, I went down-stairs and requested that breakfast be +hurried up, and at the same time ordered the horses to be saddled and +in readiness, for I concluded to go to the front before any further +examinations were made in regard to the defensive line. + +We mounted our horses between half-past 8 and 9, and as we were +proceeding up the street which leads directly through Winchester, +from the Logan residence, where Edwards was quartered, to the Valley +pike, I noticed that there were many women at the windows and doors +of the houses, who kept shaking their skirts at us and who were +otherwise markedly insolent in their demeanor, but supposing this +conduct to be instigated by their well-known and perhaps natural +prejudices, I ascribed to it no unusual significance. On reaching +the edge of the town I halted a moment, and there heard quite +distinctly the sound of artillery firing in an unceasing roar. +Concluding from this that a battle was in progress, I now felt +confident that the women along the street had received intelligence +from the battle, field by the "grape-vine telegraph," and were in +raptures over some good news, while I as yet was utterly ignorant of +the actual situation. Moving on, I put my head down toward the +pommel of my saddle and listened intently, trying to locate and +interpret the sound, continuing in this position till we had crossed +Mill Creek, about half a mile from Winchester. The result of my +efforts in the interval was the conviction that the travel of the +sound was increasing too rapidly to be accounted for by my own rate +of motion, and that therefore my army must be falling back. + +At Mill Creek my escort fell in behind, and we were going ahead at a +regular pace, when, just as we made the crest of the rise beyond the +stream, there burst upon our view the appalling spectacle of a +panic-stricken army-hundreds of slightly wounded men, throngs of others +unhurt but utterly demoralized, and baggage-wagons by the score, all +pressing to the rear in hopeless confusion, telling only too plainly +that a disaster had occurred at the front. On accosting some of the +fugitives, they assured me that the army was broken up, in full +retreat, and that all was lost; all this with a manner true to that +peculiar indifference that takes possession of panic-stricken men. I +was greatly disturbed by the sight, but at once sent word to Colonel +Edwards commanding the brigade in Winchester, to stretch his troops +across the valley, near Mill Creek, and stop all fugitives, directing +also that the transportation be, passed through and parked on the north +side of the town. + +As I continued at a walk a few hundred yards farther, thinking all +the time of Longstreet's telegram to Early, "Be ready when I join +you, and we will crush Sheridan," I was fixing in my mind what I +should do. My first thought was too stop the army in the suburbs of +Winchester as it came back, form a new line, and fight there; but as +the situation was more maturely considered a better conception +prevailed. I was sure the troops had confidence in me, for +heretofore we had been successful; and as at other times they had +seen me present at the slightest sign of trouble or distress, I felt +that I ought to try now to restore their broken ranks, or, failing in +that, to share their fate because of what they had done hitherto. + +About this time Colonel Wood, my chief commissary, arrived from the +front and gave me fuller intelligence, reporting that everything was +gone, my headquarters captured, and the troops dispersed. When I +heard this I took two of my aides-de-camp, Major. George A. Forsyth +and Captain Joseph O'Keefe, and with twenty men from the escort +started for the front, at the same time directing Colonel James W. +Forsyth and Colonels Alexander and Thom to remain behind and do what +they could to stop the runaways. + +For a short distance I traveled on the road, but soon found it so +blocked with wagons and wounded men that my progress was impeded, and +I was forced to take to the adjoining fields to make haste. When +most of the wagons and wounded were past I returned to the road, +which was thickly lined with unhurt men, who, having got far enough +to the rear to be out of danger, had halted, without any +organization, and begun cooking coffee, but when they saw me they +abandoned their coffee, threw up their hats, shouldered their +muskets, and as I passed along turned to follow with enthusiasm and +cheers. To acknowledge this exhibition of feeling I took off my hat, +and with Forsyth and O'Keefe rode some distance in advance of my +escort, while every mounted officer who saw me galloped out on either +side of the pike to tell the men at a distance that I had come back. +In this way the news was spread to the stragglers off the road, when +they, too, turned their faces to the front and marched toward the +enemy, changing in a moment from the depths of depression, to the +extreme of enthusiasm. I already knew that even in the ordinary +condition of mind enthusiasm is a potent element with soldiers, but +what I saw that day convinced me that if it can be excited from a +state of despondency its power is almost irresistible. I said +nothing except to remark as I rode among those on the road: "If I had +been, with you this morning this disaster would not have happened. +We must face the other way; we will go back and recover our camp." + +My first halt was made just north of Newtown, where I met a chaplain +digging his heels into the sides of his jaded horse, and making for +the rear with all possible speed. I drew up for an instant, and +inquired of him how matters were going at the front. He replied, +"Everything is lost; but all will be right when you get there"; yet +notwithstanding this expression of confidence in me, the parson at +once resumed his breathless pace to the rear. At Newtown I was +obliged to make a circuit to the left, to get round the village. I +could not pass through it, the streets were so crowded, but meeting +on this detour Major McKinley, of Crook's staff, he spread the news +of my return through the motley throng there. + +When nearing the Valley pike, just south of Newtown I saw about +three-fourths of a mile west of the pike a body of troops, which +proved to be Ricketts's and Wheaton's divisions of the Sixth Corps, +and then learned that the Nineteenth Corps had halted a little to the +right and rear of these; but I did not stop, desiring to get to the +extreme front. Continuing on parallel with the pike, about midway +between Newtown and Middletown I crossed to the west of it, and a +little later came up in rear of Getty's division of the Sixth Corps. +When I arrived, this division and the cavalry were the only troops in +the presence of and resisting the enemy; they were apparently acting +as a rear-guard at a point about three miles north of the line we +held at Cedar Creek when the battle began. General Torbert was the +first officer to meet me, saying as he rode up, "My God! I am glad +you've come." Getty's division, when I found it, was about a mile +north of Middletown, posted on the reverse slope of some slightly +rising ground, holding a barricade made with fence-rails, and +skirmishing slightly with the enemy's pickets. Jumping my horse over +the line of rails, I rode to the crest of the elevation, and there +taking off my hat, the men rose up from behind their barricade with +cheers of recognition. An officer of the Vermont brigade, Colonel A. +S. Tracy, rode out to the front, and joining me, informed me that +General Louis A. Grant was in command there, the regular division +commander, General Getty, having taken charge of the Sixth Corps in +place of Ricketts, wounded early in the action, while temporarily +commanding the corps. I then turned back to the rear of Getty's +division, and as I came behind it, a line of regimental flags rose up +out of the ground, as it seemed, to welcome me. They were mostly the +colors of Crook's troops, who had been stampeded and scattered in the +surprise of the morning. The color-bearers, having withstood the +panic, had formed behind the troops of Getty. The line with the +colors was largely composed of officers, among whom I recognized +Colonel R. B. Hayes, since president of the United States, one of the +brigade commanders. At the close of this incident I crossed the +little narrow valley, or depression, in rear of Getty's line, and +dismounting on the opposite crest, established that point as my +headquarters. In a few minutes some of my staff joined me, and the +first directions I gave were to have the Nineteenth Corps and the two +divisions of Wright's corps brought to the front, so they could be +formed on Getty's division, prolonged to the right; for I had already +decided to attack the enemy from that line as soon as I could get +matters in shape to take the offensive. Crook met me at this time, +and strongly favored my idea of attacking, but said, however, that +most of his troops were gone. General Wright came up a little later, +when I saw that he was wounded, a ball having grazed the point of his +chin so as to draw the blood plentifully. + +Wright gave me a hurried account of the day's events, and when told +that we would fight the enemy on the line which Getty and the cavalry +were holding, and that he must go himself and send all his staff to +bring up the troops, he zealously fell in with the scheme; and it was +then that the Nineteenth Corps and two divisions of the Sixth were +ordered to the front from where they had been halted to the right and +rear of Getty. + +After this conversation I rode to the east of the Valley pike and to +the left of Getty's division, to a point from which I could obtain a +good view of the front, in the mean time sending Major Forsyth to +communicate with Colonel Lowell (who occupied a position close in +toward the suburbs of Middletown and directly in front of Getty's +left) to learn whether he could hold on there. Lowell replied that +he could. I then ordered Custer's division back to the right flank, +and returning to the place where my headquarters had been established +I met near them Ricketts's division under General Keifer and General +Frank Wheaton's division, both marching to the front. When the men +of these divisions saw me they began cheering and took up the double +quick to the front, while I turned back toward Getty's line to point +out where these returning troops should be placed. Having done this, +I ordered General Wright to resume command of the Sixth Corps, and +Getty, who was temporarily in charge of it, to take command of his +own division. A little later the Nineteenth Corps came up and was +posted between the right of the Sixth Corps and Middle Marsh Brook. + +All this had consumed a great deal of time, and I concluded to visit +again the point to the east of the Valley pike, from where I had +first observed the enemy, to see what he was doing. Arrived there, I +could plainly see him getting ready for attack, and Major Forsyth now +suggested that it would be well to ride along the line of battle +before the enemy assailed us, for although the troops had learned of +my return, but few of them had seen me. Following his suggestion I +started in behind the men, but when a few paces had been taken I +crossed to the front and, hat in hand, passed along the entire length +of the infantry line; and it is from this circumstance that many of +the officers and men who then received me with such heartiness have +since supposed that that was my first appearance on the field. But +at least two hours had elapsed since I reached the ground, for it was +after mid-day, when this incident of riding down the front took +place, and I arrived not later, certainly, than half-past 10 o'clock. + +After re-arranging the line and preparing to attack I returned again +to observe the Confederates, who shortly began to advance on us. The +attacking columns did not cover my entire front, and it appeared that +their onset would be mainly directed against the Nineteenth Corps, +so, fearing that they might be too strong for Emory on account of his +depleted condition (many of his men not having had time to get up +from the rear), and Getty's division being free from assault I +transferred a part of it from the extreme left to the support of the +Nineteenth Corps. The assault was quickly repulsed by Emory, +however, and as the enemy fell back Getty's troops were returned to +their original place. This repulse of the Confederates made me feel +pretty safe from further offensive operations on their part, and I +now decided to suspend the fighting till my thin ranks were further +strengthened by the men who were continually coming up from the rear, +and particularly till Crook's troops could be assembled on the +extreme left. + +In consequence of the despatch already mentioned, "Be ready when I +join you, and we will crush Sheridan," since learned to have been +fictitious, I had been supposing all day that Longstreet's troops +were present, but as no definite intelligence on this point had been +gathered, I concluded, in the lull that now occurred, to ascertain +something positive regarding Longstreet; and Merritt having been +transferred to our left in the morning, I directed him to attack an +exposed battery then at the edge of Middletown, and capture some +prisoners. Merritt soon did this work effectually, concealing his +intention till his troops got close in to the enemy, and then by a +quick dash gobbling up a number of Confederates. When the prisoners +were brought in, I learned from them that the only troops of +Longstreet's in the fight were of Kershaw's division, which had +rejoined Early at Brown's Gap in the latter part of September, and +that the rest of Longstreet's corps was not on the field. The +receipt of this information entirely cleared the way for me to take +the offensive, but on the heels of it came information that +Longstreet was marching by the Front Royal pike to strike my rear at +Winchester, driving Powell's cavalry in as he advanced. This renewed +my uneasiness, and caused me to delay the general attack till after +assurances came from Powell denying utterly the reports as to +Longstreet, and confirming the statements of the prisoners. + +Between half-past and 4 o'clock, I was ready to assail, and decided +to do so by advancing my infantry line in a swinging movement, so as +to gain the Valley pike with my right between Middletown and the +Belle Grove House; and when the order was passed along, the men +pushed steadily forward with enthusiasm and confidence. General +Early's troops extended some little distance beyond our right, and +when my flank neared the overlapping enemy, he turned on it, with the +effect of causing a momentary confusion, but General McMillan quickly +realizing the danger, broke the Confederates at the reentering angle +by a counter charge with his brigade, doing his work so well that the +enemy's flanking troops were cut off from their main body and left to +shift for themselves. Custer, who was just then moving in from the +west side of Middle Marsh Brook, followed McMillan's timely blow with +a charge of cavalry, but before starting out on it, and while his men +were forming, riding at full speed himself, to throw his arms around +my neck. By the time he had disengaged himself from this embrace, +the troops broken by McMillan had gained some little distance to +their rear, but Custer's troopers sweeping across the Middletown +meadows and down toward Cedar Creek, took many of them prisoners +before they could reach the stream--so I forgave his delay. + +My whole line as far as the eye could see was now driving everything +before it, from behind trees, stone walls, and all such sheltering +obstacles, so I rode toward the left to ascertain how matters were +getting on there. As I passed along behind the advancing troops, +first General Grover, and then Colonel Mackenzie, rode up to welcome +me. Both were severely wounded, and I told them to leave the field, +but they implored permission to remain till success was certain. +When I reached the Valley pike Crook had reorganized his men, and as +I desired that they should take part in the fight, for they were the +very same troops that had turned Early's flank at Winchester and at +Fisher's Hill, I ordered them to be pushed forward; and the alacrity +and celerity with which they moved on Middletown demonstrated that +their ill-fortune of the morning had not sprung from lack of valor. + +Meanwhile Lowell's brigade of cavalry, which, it will be remembered, +had been holding on, dismounted, just north of Middletown ever since +the time I arrived from Winchester, fell to the rear for the purpose +of getting their led horses. A momentary panic was created in the +nearest brigade of infantry by this withdrawal of Lowell, but as soon +as his men were mounted they charged the enemy clear up to the stone +walls in the edge of Middletown; at sight of this the infantry +brigade renewed its attack, and the enemy's right gave way. The +accomplished Lowell received his death-wound in this courageous +charge. + +All our troops were now moving on the retreating Confederates, and as +I rode to the front Colonel Gibbs, who succeeded Lowell, made ready +for another mounted charge, but I checked him from pressing the +enemy's right, in the hope that the swinging attack from my right +would throw most of the Confederates to the east of the Valley pike, +and hence off their line of retreat through Strasburg to Fisher's +Hill. The eagerness of the men soon frustrated this anticipation, +however, the left insisting on keeping pace with the centre and +right, and all pushing ahead till we regained our old camps at Cedar +Creek. Beyond Cedar Creek, at Strasburg, the pike makes a sharp turn +to the west toward Fisher's Hill, and here Merritt uniting with +Custer, they together fell on the flank of the retreating columns, +taking many prisoners, wagons, and guns, among the prisoners being +Major-General Ramseur, who, mortally wounded, died the next day. + +When the news of the victory was received, General Grant directed a +salute of one hundred shotted guns to be fired into Petersburg, and +the President at once thanked the army in an autograph letter. A few +weeks after, he promoted me, and I received notice of this in a +special letter from the Secretary of War, saying: + +"--that for the personal gallantry, military skill, and just confidence +in the courage and patriotism of your troops, displayed by you on the +19th day of October at Cedar Run, whereby, under the blessing of +Providence, your routed army was reorganized, a great National +disaster averted, and a brilliant victory achieved over the rebels +for the third time in pitched battle within thirty days, Philip H. +Sheridan is appointed a major-general in the United States Army." + +The direct result of the battle was the recapture of all the +artillery, transportation, and camp equipage we had lost, and in +addition twenty-four pieces of the enemy's artillery, twelve hundred +prisoners, and a number of battle-flags. But more still flowed from +this victory, succeeding as it did the disaster of the morning, for +the reoccupation of our old camps at once re-established a morale +which for some hours had been greatly endangered by ill-fortune. + +It was not till after the battle that I learned fully what had taken +place before my arrival, and then found that the enemy, having +gathered all the strength he could through the return of +convalescents and other absentees, had moved quietly from Fisher's +Hill, in the night of the 18th and early on the morning of the 19th, +to surprise my army, which, it should be remembered, was posted on +the north bank of Cedar Creek, Crook holding on the left of the +Valley pike, with Thoburn's division advanced toward the creek on +Duval's (under Colonel Rutherford B. Hayes) and Kitching's +provisional divisions to the north and rear of Thoburn. The +Nineteenth Corps was on the right of Crook, extending in a +semi-circular line from the pike nearly to Meadow Brook, while the +Sixth Corps lay to the west of the brook in readiness to be used as a +movable column. Merritt's division was to the right and rear of the +Sixth Corps, and about a mile and a half west of Merrit was Custer +covering the fords of Cedar Creek as far west as the Middle road. + +General Early's plan was for one column under General Gordon, +consisting of three divisions of infantry (Gordon's, Ramseur's, and +Pegram's), and Payne's brigade of cavalry to cross the Shenandoah +River directly east of the Confederate works at Fisher's Hill, march +around the northerly face of the Massanutten Mountain, and again +cross the Shenandoah at Bowman's and McInturff's fords. Payne's task +was to capture me at the Belle Grove House. General Early himself, +with Kershaw's and Wharton's divisions, was to move through +Strasburg, Kershaw, accompanied by Early, to cross Cedar Creek at +Roberts's ford and connect with Gordon, while Wharton was to continue +on the Valley pike to Hupp's Hill and join the left of Kershaw, when +the crossing of the Valley pike over Cedar Creek became free. + +Lomax's cavalry, then in the Luray Valley, was ordered to join the +right of Gordon on the field of battle, while Rosser was to carry the +crossing of Cedar Creek on the Back road and attack Custer. Early's +conceptions were carried through in the darkness with little accident +or delay, Kershaw opening the fight by a furious attack on Thoburn's +division, while at dawn and in a dense fog Gordon struck Crook's +extreme left, surprising his pickets, and bursting into his camp with +such suddenness as to stampede Crook's men. Gordon directing his +march on my headquarters (the Belle Grove House), successfully turned +our position as he gained the Valley pike, and General Wright was +thus forced to order the withdrawal of the Nineteenth Corps from its +post at the Cedar Creek crossing, and this enabled Wharton to get +over the stream there unmolested and join Kershaw early in the +action. + +After Crook's troops had been driven from their camps, General Wright +endeavored to form a line with the Sixth Corps to hold the Valley +pike to the left of the Nineteenth, but failing in this he ordered +the withdrawal of the latter corps, Ricketts, temporarily commanding +the Sixth Corps, checking Gordon till Emory had retired. As already +stated, Wharton was thus permitted to cross Cedar Creek on the pike, +and now that Early had a continuous line, he pressed his advantage so +vigorously that the whole Union army was soon driven from its camps +in more or less disorder; and though much disjointed resistance was +displayed, it may be said that no systematic stand was made until +Getty's division, aided by Torbert's cavalry, which Wright had +ordered to the left early in the action, took up the ground where, on +arriving from Winchester, I found them. + +When I left my command on the 16th, little did I anticipate that +anything like this would happen. Indeed, I felt satisfied that Early +was, of himself, too weak to take the offensive, and although I +doubted the Longstreet despatch, yet I was confident that, even +should it prove true, I could get back before the junction could be +made, and at the worst I felt certain that my army was equal to +confronting the forces of Longstreet and Early combined. Still, the +surprise of the morning might have befallen me as well as the general +on whom it did descend, and though it is possible that this could +have been precluded had Powell's cavalry been closed in, as suggested +in my despatch from Front Royal, yet the enemy's desperation might +have prompted some other clever and ingenious scheme for relieving +his fallen fortunes in the Shenandoah Valley. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +GENERAL EARLY REORGANIZES HIS FORCES--MOSBY THE GUERRILLA--GENERAL +MERRITT SENT TO OPERATE AGAINST MOSBY--ROSSER AGAIN ACTIVE--GENERAL +CUSTER SURPRISED--COLONEL YOUNG SENT TO CAPTURE GILMORE THE +GUERRILLA--COLONEL YOUNG'S SUCCESS--CAPTURE OF GENERAL KELLY AND +GENERAL CROOK--SPIES--WAS WILKES BOOTH A SPY?--DRIVING THE +CONFEDERATES OUT OF THE VALLEY--THE BATTLE OF WAYNESBORO'--MARCHING +TO JOIN THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC. + +Early's broken army practically made no halt in its retreat after the +battle of Cedar-Creek until it reached New Market, though at Fisher's +Hill was left a small rear-guard of cavalry, which hastily decamped, +however, when charged by Gibbs's brigade on the morning of the 20th. +Between the date of his signal defeat and the 11th of November, the +enemy's scattered forces had sufficiently reorganized to permit his +again making a reconnoissance in the valley as far north as Cedar +Creek, my army having meanwhile withdrawn to Kernstown, where it had +been finally decided that a defensive line should be held to enable +me to detach troops to General Grant, and where, by reconstructing +the Winchester and Potomac railroad from Stephenson's depot to +Harper's Ferry, my command might be more readily, supplied. Early's +reconnoissance north of Cedar Creek ended in a rapid withdrawal of +his infantry after feeling my front, and with the usual ill-fortune +to his cavalry; Merritt and Custer driving Rosser and Lomax with ease +across Cedar Creek on the Middle and Back roads, while Powell's +cavalry struck McCausland near Stony Point, and after capturing two +pieces of artillery and about three hundred officers and men chased +him into the Luray Valley. + +Early got back to New Market on the 14th of November, and, from lack +of subsistence, being unable to continue demonstrations to prevent my +reinforcement of General Grant, began himself to detach to General +Lee by returning Kershaw's division to Petersburg, as was definitely +ascertained by Torbert in a reconnoissance to Mount Jackson. At this +time General Grant wished me to send him the Sixth Corps, and it was +got ready for the purpose, but when I informed him that Torbert's +reconnoissance had developed the fact that Early still retained four +divisions of infantry and one of cavalry, it was decided, on my +suggestion, to let the Sixth Corps remain till the season should be a +little further advanced, when the inclemency of the weather would +preclude infantry campaigning. These conditions came about early in +December, and by the middle of the month the whole of the Sixth Corps +was at Petersburg; simultaneously with its transfer to that line +Early sending his Second Corps to Lee. + +During the entire campaign I had been annoyed by guerrilla bands +under such partisan chiefs as Mosby, White, Gilmore, McNeil, and +others, and this had considerably depleted my line-of-battle +strength, necessitating as it did large, escorts for my +supply-trains. The most redoubtable of these leaders was Mosby, whose +force was made up from the country around Upperville, east of the Blue +Ridge, to which section he always fled for a hiding-place when he +scented danger. I had not directed any special operations against +these partisans while the campaign was active, but as Mosby's men had +lately killed, within my lines, my chief quartermaster, Colonel Tolles, +and Medical Inspector Ohlenchlager, I concluded to devote particular +attention to these "irregulars" during the lull that now occurred; so +on the 28th of November, I directed General Merritt to march to the +Loudoun Valley and operate against Mosby, taking care to clear the +country of forage and subsistence, so as to prevent the guerrillas from +being harbored there in the future their destruction or capture being +well-nigh impossible, on account of their intimate knowledge of the +mountain region. Merritt carried out his instructions with his usual +sagacity and thoroughness, sweeping widely over each side of his +general line of march with flankers, who burned the grain and brought +in large herds of cattle, hogs and sheep, which were issued to the +troops. + +While Merritt was engaged in this service the Baltimore and Ohio +railroad once more received the attention of the enemy; Rosser, with +two brigades of cavalry, crossing the Great North Mountain, capturing +the post of New Creek, with about five hundred prisoners and seven +guns, destroying all the supplies of the garrison, and breaking up +the railroad track. This slight success of the Confederates in West +Virginia, and the intelligence that they were contemplating further +raids in that section, led me to send, Crook there with one division, +his other troops going to City Point; and, I hoped that all the +threatened places would thus be sufficiently protected, but +negligence at Beverly resulted in the capture of that station by +Rosser on the 11th of January. + +In the meanwhile, Early established himself with Wharton's division +at Staunton in winter quarters, posting his cavalry in that +neighborhood also, except a detachment at New Market, and another +small one at the signal-station on Three Top Mountain. The winter was +a most severe one, snow falling frequently to the depth of several +inches, and the mercury often sinking below zero. The rigor of the +season was very much against the success of any mounted operations, +but General Grant being very desirous to have the railroads broken up +about Gordonsville and Charlottesville, on the 19th of December I +started the cavalry out for that purpose, Torbert, with Merritt and +Powell, marching through Chester Gap, while Custer moved toward +Staunton to make a demonstration in Torbert's favor, hoping to hold +the enemy's troops in the valley. Unfortunately, Custer did not +accomplish all that was expected of him, and being surprised by +Rosser and Payne near Lacy's Springs before reveille, had to abandon +his bivouac and retreat down the valley, with the loss of a number of +prisoners, a few horses, and a good many horse equipments, for, +because of the suddenness of Rosser's attack, many of the men had no +time to saddle up. As soon as Custer's retreat was assured, +Wharton's division of infantry was sent to Charlottesville to check +Torbert, but this had already been done by Lomax, with the assistance +of infantry sent up from Richmond. Indeed, from the very beginning +of the movement the Confederates had been closely observing the +columns of Torbert and Custer, and in consequence of the knowledge +thus derived, Early had marched Lomax to Gordonsville in anticipation +of an attack there, at the same time sending Rosser down the valley +to meet Custer. Torbert in the performance of his task captured two +pieces of artillery from Johnson's and McCausland's brigades, at +Liberty Mills on the Rapidan River, but in the main the purpose of +the raid utterly failed, so by the 27th of December he returned, +many, of his men badly frost-bitten from the extreme cold which had +prevailed. + +This expedition practically closed all operations for the season, and +the cavalry was put into winter cantonment near Winchester. The +distribution of my infantry to Petersburg and West Virginia left with +me in the beginning of the new year, as already stated, but the one +small division of the Nineteenth Corps. On account of this +diminution of force, it became necessary for me to keep thoroughly +posted in regard to the enemy, and I now realized more than I had +done hitherto how efficient my scouts had become since under the +control of Colonel Young; for not only did they bring me almost every +day intelligence from within Early's lines, but they also operated +efficiently against the guerrillas infesting West Virginia. + +Harry Gilmore, of Maryland, was the most noted of these since the +death of McNeil, and as the scouts had reported him in Harrisonburg +the latter part of January, I directed two of the most trustworthy to +be sent to watch his movements and ascertain his purposes. In a few +days these spies returned with the intelligence that Gilmore was on +his way to Moorefield, the centre of a very disloyal section in West +Virginia, about ninety miles southwest of Winchester, where, under +the guise of a camp-meeting, a gathering was to take place, at which +he expected to enlist a number of men, be joined by a party of about +twenty recruits coming from Maryland, and then begin depredations +along the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. Believing that Gilmore might +be captured, I directed Young to undertake the task, and as a +preliminary step he sent to Moorefield two of his men who early in +the war had "refugeed" from that section and enlisted in one of the +Union regiments from West Virginia. In about a week these men came +back and reported that Gilmore was living at a house between three +and four miles from Moorefield, and gave full particulars as to his +coming and going, the number of men he had about there and where they +rendezvoused. + +With this knowledge at hand I directed Young to take twenty of his +best men and leave that night for Moorefield, dressed in Confederate +uniforms, telling him that I would have about three hundred cavalry +follow in his wake when he had got about fifteen miles start, and +instructing him to pass his party off as a body of recruits for +Gilmore coming from Maryland and pursued by the Yankee cavalry. I +knew this would allay suspicion and provide him help on the road; +and, indeed, as Colonel Whittaker, who alone knew the secret, +followed after the fleeing "Marylanders," he found that their advent +had caused so little remark that the trail would have been lost had +he not already known their destination. Young met with a hearty, +welcome wherever he halted on the way, and as he passed through the +town of Moorefield learned with satisfaction that Gilmore still made +his headquarters at the house where the report of the two scouts had +located him a few days before. Reaching the designated place about +12 o'clock on the night of the 5th of February, Young, under the +representation that he had come directly from Maryland and was being +pursued by the Union cavalry, gained immediate access to Gilmore's +room. He found the bold guerrilla snugly tucked in bed, with two +pistols lying on a chair near by. He was sleeping so soundly that to +arouse him Young had to give him a violent shake. As he awoke and +asked who was disturbing his slumbers, Young, pointing at him a +cocked six-shooter, ordered him to dress without delay, and in answer +to his inquiry, informed him that he was a prisoner to one of +Sheridan's staff. Meanwhile Gilmore's men had learned of his +trouble, but the early appearance of Colonel Whittaker caused them to +disperse; thus the last link between Maryland and the Confederacy was +carried a prisoner to Winchester, whence he was sent to Fort Warren. + +The capture of Gilmore caused the disbandment of the party he had +organized at the "camp-meeting," most of the men he had recruited +returning to their homes discouraged, though some few joined the +bands of Woodson and young Jesse McNeil, which, led by the latter, +dashed into Cumberland, Maryland, at 3 O'clock on the morning of the +21st of February and made a reprisal by carrying off General Crook +and General Kelly, and doing their work so silently and quickly that +they escaped without being noticed, and were some distance on their +way before the colored watchman at the hotel where Crook was +quartered could compose himself enough to give the alarm. A troop of +cavalry gave hot chase from Cumberland, striving to intercept the +party at Moorefield and other points, but all efforts were fruitless, +the prisoners soon being beyond reach. + +Although I had adopted the general rule of employing only soldiers as +scouts, there was an occasional exception to it. I cannot say that +these exceptions proved wholly that an ironclad observance of the +rule would have been best, but I am sure of it in one instance. A +man named Lomas, who claimed to be a Marylander, offered me his +services as a spy, and coming highly recommended from Mr. Stanton, +who had made use of him in that capacity, I employed him. He made +many pretensions, often appearing over anxious to impart information +seemingly intended to impress me with his importance, and yet was +more than ordinarily intelligent, but in spite of that my confidence +in him was by no means unlimited. I often found what he reported to +me as taking place within the Confederate lines corroborated by +Young's men, but generally there were discrepancies in his tales, +which led me to suspect that he was employed by the enemy as well as +by me. I felt, however, that with good watching he could do me +little harm, and if my suspicions were incorrect he might be very +useful, so I held on to him. + +Early in February Lomas was very solicitous for me to employ a man +who, he said, had been with Mosby, but on account of some quarrel in +the irregular camp had abandoned that leader. Thinking that with two +of them I might destroy the railroad bridges east of Lynchburg, I +concluded, after the Mosby man had been brought to my headquarters by +Lomas about 12 o'clock one night, to give him employment, at the same +time informing Colonel Young that I suspected their fidelity, +however, and that he must test it by shadowing their every movement. +When Lomas's companion entered my room he was completely disguised, +but on discarding the various contrivances by which his identity was +concealed he proved to be a rather slender, dark-complexioned, +handsome young man, of easy address and captivating manners. He gave +his name as Renfrew, answered all my questions satisfactorily, and +went into details about Mosby and his men which showed an intimacy +with them at some time. I explained to the two men the work I had +laid out for them, and stated the sum of money I would give to have +it done, but stipulated that in case of failure there would be no +compensation whatever beyond the few dollars necessary for their +expenses. They readily assented, and it was arranged that they +should start the following night. Meanwhile Young had selected his +men to shadow them, and in two days reported my spies as being +concealed at Strasburg, where they remained, without making the +slightest effort to continue on their mission, and were busy, no +doubt, communicating with the enemy, though I was not able to fasten +this on them. On the 16th of February they returned to Winchester, +and reported their failure, telling so many lies about their +hazardous adventure as to remove all remaining doubt as to their +double-dealing. Unquestionably they were spies from the enemy, and +hence liable to the usual penalties of such service; but it struck me +that through them, I might deceive Early as to the time of opening +the spring campaign, I having already received from General Grant an +intimation of what was expected of me. I therefore retained the men +without even a suggestion of my knowledge of their true character, +Young meanwhile keeping close watch over all their doings. + +Toward the last of February General Early had at Staunton two +brigades of infantry under Wharton. All the rest of the infantry +except Echol's brigade, which was in southwestern Virginia, had been +sent to Petersburg during the winter, and Fitz. Lee's two brigades of +cavalry also. Rosser's men were mostly at their homes, where, on +account of a lack of subsistence and forage in the valley, they had +been permitted to go, subject to call. Lomax's cavalry was at +Millboro, west of Staunton, where supplies were obtainable. It was +my aim to get well on the road before Early could collect these +scattered forces, and as many of the officers had been in the habit +of amusing themselves fox-hunting during the latter part of the +winter, I decided to use the hunt as an expedient for stealing a +march on the enemy, and had it given out officially that a grand +fox-chase would take place on the 29th of February. Knowing that +Lomas, and Renfrew would spread the announcement South, they were +permitted to see several red foxes that had been secured, as well as a +large pack of hounds which Colonel Young had collected for the sport, +and were then started on a second expedition to burn the bridges. Of +course, they were shadowed as usual, and two days later, after they had +communicated with friends from their hiding-place, in Newtown, they +were arrested. On the way north to Fort Warren they escaped from their +guards when passing through Baltimore, and I never heard of them again, +though I learned that, after the assassination of, Mr. Lincoln, +Secretary Stanton strongly suspected his friend Lomas of being +associated with the conspirators, and it then occurred to me that the +good-looking Renfrew may have been Wilkes Booth, for he certainly bore +a strong resemblance to Booth's pictures. + +On the 27th of February my cavalry entered upon the campaign which +cleared the Shenandoah Valley of every remnant of organized +Confederates. General Torbert being absent on leave at this time, I +did not recall him, but appointed General Merritt Chief of Cavalry. +for Torbert had disappointed me on two important occasions--in the +Luray Valley during the battle of Fisher's Hill, and on the recent +Gordonsville expedition--and I mistrusted his ability to conduct any +operations requiring much self-reliance. The column was composed of +Custer's and Devin's divisions of cavalry, and two sections of +artillery, comprising in all about 10,000 officers and men. On +wheels we had, to accompany this column, eight ambulances, sixteen +ammunition wagons, a pontoon train for eight canvas boats, and a +small supply-train, with fifteen days' rations of coffee, sugar, and +salt, it being intended to depend on the country for the meat and +bread ration, the men carrying in their haversacks nearly enough to +subsist them till out of the exhausted valley. + +Grant's orders were for me to destroy the Virginia Central railroad +and the James River canal, capture Lynchburg if practicable, and then +join General Sherman in North Carolina wherever he might be found, or +return to Winchester, but as to joining Sherman I was to be governed +by the state of affairs after the projected capture of Lynchburg. +The weather was cold, the valley and surrounding mountains being +still covered with snow; but this was fast disappearing, however, +under the heavy rain that was coming down as the column moved along +up the Valley pike at a steady gait that took us to Woodstock the +first day. The second day we crossed the North Fork of the +Shenandoah on our pontoon-bridge, and by night-fall reached Lacy's +Springs, having seen nothing of the enemy as yet but a few partisans +who hung on our flanks in the afternoon. + +March 1 we encountered General Rosser at Mt. Crawford, he having been +able to call together only some five or six hundred of his troops, +our unsuspected march becoming known to Early only the day before. +Rosser attempted to delay us here, trying to burn the bridges over +the Middle Fork of the Shenandoah, but two regiments from Colonel +Capehart's brigade swam the stream and drove Rosser to Kline's Mills, +taking thirty prisoners and twenty ambulances and wagons. + +Meanwhile General Early was busy at Staunton, but not knowing my +objective point, he had ordered the return of Echol's brigade from +southwestern Virginia for the protection of Lynchburg, directed +Lomax's cavalry to concentrate at Pond Gap for the purpose of +harassing me if I moved toward Lynchburg, and at the same time +marched Wharton's two brigades of infantry, Nelson's artillery, and +Rosser's cavalry to Waynesboro', whither he went also to remain till +the object of my movement was ascertained. + +I entered Staunton the morning of March 2, and finding that Early had +gone to Waynesboro' with his infantry and Rosser, the question at +once arose whether I should continue my march to Lynchburg direct, +leaving my adversary in my rear, or turn east and open the way +through Rockfish Gap to the Virginia Central railroad and James River +canal. I felt confident of the success of the latter plan, for I +knew that Early numbered there not more than two thousand men; so, +influenced by this, and somewhat also by the fact that Early had left +word in Staunton that he would fight at Waynesboro', I directed +Merritt to move toward that place with Custer, to be closely followed +by Devin, who was to detach one brigade to destroy supplies at +Swoope's depot. The by-roads were miry beyond description, rain +having fallen almost incessantly since we left Winchester, but +notwithstanding the down-pour the column pushed on, men and horses +growing almost unrecognizable from the mud covering them from head to +foot. + +General Early was true to the promise made his friends in Staunton, +for when Custer neared Waynesboro' he found, occupying a line of +breastworks on a ridge west of the town, two brigades of infantry, +with eleven pieces of artillery and Rosser's cavalry. Custer, when +developing the position of the Confederates, discovered that their +left was somewhat exposed instead of resting on South River; he +therefore made his dispositions for attack, sending around that flank +the dismounted regiments from Pennington's brigade, while he himself, +with two brigades, partly mounted and partly dismounted, assaulted +along the whole line of breastworks. Pennington's flanking movement +stampeded the enemy in short order, thus enabling Custer to carry the +front with little resistance, and as he did so the Eighth New York +and First Connecticut, in a charge in column, broke through the +opening made by Custer, and continued on through the town of +Waynesboro', never stopping till they crossed South River. There, +finding themselves immediately in the enemy's rear, they promptly +formed as foragers and held the east bank of the stream till all the +Confederates surrendered except Rosser, who succeeded in making his +way back to the valley, and Generals Early, Wharton, Long, and +Lilley, who, with fifteen or twenty men, escaped across the Blue +Ridge. I followed up the victory immediately by despatching Capehart +through Rock-fish Gap, with orders to encamp on the east side of the +Blue Ridge. By reason of this move all the enemy's stores and +transportation fell into our hands, while we captured on the field +seventeen battle flags, sixteen hundred officers and men, and eleven +pieces of artillery. This decisive victory closed hostilities in the +Shenandoah Valley. The prisoners and artillery were sent back to +Winchester next morning, under a guard of 1,500 men, commanded by +Colonel J. H. Thompson, of the First New Hampshire. + +The night of March 2 Custer camped at Brookfield, Devin remaining at +Waynesboro'. The former started for Charlottesville the next morning +early, followed by Devin with but two brigades, Gibbs having been +left behind to blow up the iron railroad bridge across South River. +Because of the incessant rains and spring thaws the roads were very +soft, and the columns cut them up terribly, the mud being thrown by +the sets of fours across the road in ridges as much as two feet high, +making it most difficult to get our wagons along, and distressingly +wearing on the animals toward the middle and rear of the columns. +Consequently I concluded to rest at Charlottesville for a couple of +days and recuperate a little, intending at the same time to destroy, +with small parties, the railroad from that point toward Lynchburg. +Custer reached Charlottesville the 3d, in the afternoon, and was met +at the outskirts by a deputation of its citizens, headed by the +mayor, who surrendered the town with medieval ceremony, formally +handing over the keys of the public buildings and of the University +of Virginia. But this little scene did not delay Custer long enough +to prevent his capturing, just beyond the village, a small body of +cavalry and three pieces of artillery. Gibbs's brigade, which was +bringing up my mud-impeded train, did not arrive until the 5th of +March. In the mean time Young's scouts had brought word that the +garrison of Lynchburg was being increased and the fortifications +strengthened, so that its capture would be improbable. I decided, +however, to move toward the place as far as Amherst Court House, +which is sixteen miles short of the town, so Devin, under Merritt's +supervision, marched along the James River, destroying the canal, +while Custer pushed ahead on the railroad and broke it up. The two +columns were to join at New Market, whence I intended to cross the +James River at some point east of Lynchburg, if practicable, so as to +make my way to Appomattox Court House, and destroy the Southside +railroad as far east as Farmville. Owing to its swollen condition +the river was unfordable but knowing that there was a covered bridge +at Duguidsville, I hoped to secure it by a dash, and cross there, but +the enemy, anticipating this, had filled the bridge with inflammable +material, and just as our troops got within striking distance it +burst into flames. The bridge at Hardwicksville also having been +burned by the enemy, there was now no means of crossing except by +pontoons. But, unfortunately, I had only eight of these, and they +could not be made to span the swollen river. + +Being thus unable to cross until the river should fall, and knowing +that it was impracticable to join General Sherman, and useless to +adhere to my alternative instructions to return to Winchester, I now +decided to destroy still more thoroughly the James River canal and +the Virginia Central railroad and then join General Grant in front of +Petersburg. I was master of the whole country north of the James as +far down as Goochland; hence the destruction of these arteries of +supply could be easily compassed, and feeling that the war was +nearing its end, I desired my cavalry to be in at the death. + +On March 9 the main column started eastward down the James River, +destroying locks, dams, and boats, having been preceded by Colonel +Fitzhugh's brigade of Devin's division in a forced march to Goochland +and Beaver Dam Creek, with orders to destroy everything below +Columbia. I made Columbia on the 10th, and from there sent a +communication to General Grant reporting what had occurred, informing +him of my condition and intention, asking him to send forage and +rations to meet me at the White House, and also a pontoon-bridge to +carry me over the Pamunkey, for in view of the fact that hitherto it +had been impracticable to hold Lee in the trenches around Petersburg, +I regarded as too hazardous a march down the south bank of the +Pamunkey, where the enemy, by sending troops out from Richmond, might +fall upon my flank and rear. It was of the utmost importance that +General Grant should receive these despatches without chance of +failure, in order that I might, depend absolutely on securing +supplies at the White House; therefore I sent the message in +duplicate, one copy overland direct to City Point by two scouts, +Campbell and Rowan, and the other by Fannin and Moore, who were to go +down the James River in a small boat to Richmond, join the troops in +the trenches in front of Petersburg, and, deserting to the Union +lines, deliver their tidings into General Grant's hands. Each set of +messengers got through, but the copy confided to Campbell and Rowan +was first at Grant's headquarters. + +I halted for one day at Columbia to let my trains catch up, for it +was still raining and the mud greatly delayed the teams, fatiguing +and wearying the mules so much that I believe we should have been +forced to abandon most of the wagons except for the invaluable help +given by some two thousand negroes who had attached themselves to the +column: they literally lifted the wagons out of the mud. From +Columbia Merritt, with Devin's division, marched to Louisa Court +House and destroyed the Virginia Central to Frederick's Hall. +Meanwhile Custer was performing similar work from Frederick's Hall to +Beaver Dam Station, and also pursued for a time General Early, who, +it was learned from despatches captured in the telegraph office at +Frederick's Hall, was in the neighborhood with a couple of hundred +men. Custer captured some of these men and two of Early's +staff-officers, but the commander of the Valley District, accompanied +by a single orderly, escaped across the South Anna and next day made +his way to Richmond, the last man of the Confederate army that had so +long contended with us in the Shenandoah Valley. + +At Frederick's Hall, Young's scouts brought me word from Richmond +that General Longstreet was assembling a force there to prevent my +junction with Grant, and that Pickett's division, which had been sent +toward Lynchburg to oppose my march, and Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry, were +moving east on the Southside railroad, with the object of +circumventing me. Reasoning that Longstreet could interpose +effectually only by getting to the White House ahead of me, I pushed +one column under Custer across the South Anna, by way of Ground +Squirrel bridge, to Ashland, where it united with Merritt, who had +meanwhile marched through Hanover Junction. Our appearance at +Ashland drew the Confederates out in that direction, as was hoped, +so, leaving Colonel Pennington's brigade there to amuse them, the +united command retraced its route to Mount Carmel church to cross the +North Anna. After dark Pennington came away, and all the troops +reached the church by midnight of the 15th. + +Resuming the march at an early hour next morning, we took the road by +way of King William Court House to the White House, where, arriving +on the 18th, we found, greatly to our relief, the supplies which I +had requested to be sent there. In the meanwhile the enemy had +marched to Hanover Court House, but being unable either to cross the +Pamunkey there or forestall me at the White House on the south side +of the river, he withdrew to Richmond without further effort to +impede my column. + +The hardships of this march far exceeded those of any previous +campaigns by the cavalry. Almost incessant rains had drenched us for +sixteen days and nights, and the swollen streams and well-nigh +bottomless roads east of Staunton presented grave difficulties on +every hand, but surmounting them all, we destroyed the enemy's means +of subsistence, in quantities beyond computation, and permanently +crippled the Virginia Central railroad, as well as the James River +canal, and as each day brought us nearer the Army of the Potomac, all +were filled with the comforting reflection that our work in the +Shenandoah Valley had been thoroughly done, and every one was buoyed +up by the cheering thought that we should soon take part in the final +struggle of the war. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +TRANSFERRED TO PETERSBURG--GENERAL RAWLINS CORDIAL WELCOME--GENERAL +GRANT's ORDERS AND PLANS--A TRIP WITH MR. LINCOLN AND GENERAL GRANT +--MEETING GENERAL SHERMAN--OPPOSED TO JOINING THE ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE +--OPENING OF THE APPOMATTOX CAMPAIGN--GENERAL GRANT AND GENERAL RAWLINS. + +The transfer of my command from the Shenandoah Valley to the field of +operations in front of Petersburg was not anticipated by General +Grant; indeed, the despatch brought from Columbia by my scouts, +asking that supplies be sent me at the White House, was the first +word that reached him concerning the move. In view of my message the +general-in-chief decided to wait my arrival before beginning spring +operations with the investing troops south of the James River, for he +felt the importance of having my cavalry at hand in a campaign which +he was convinced would wind up the war. We remained a few days at +the White House resting and refitting the cavalry, a large amount of +shoeing being necessary; but nothing like enough horses were at hand +to replace those that had died or been disabled on the mud march from +Staunton to the Pamunkey River, so a good many of the men were still +without mounts, and all such were sent by boat to the dismounted camp +near City Point. When all was ready the column set out for Hancock +Station, a point on the military railroad in front of Petersburg, and +arriving there on the 27th of March, was in orders reunited with its +comrades of the Second Division, who had been serving with the Army +of the Potomac since we parted from them the previous August. +General Crook, who had been exchanged within a few days, was now in +command of this Second Division. The reunited corps was to enter +upon the campaign as a separate army, I reporting directly to General +Grant; the intention being thus to reward me for foregoing, of my own +choice, my position as a department commander by joining the armies +at Petersburg. + +Taking the road across the Peninsula, I started from the White House +with Merritt's column on the 25th of March and encamped that night at +Harrison's Landing. Very early next morning, in conformity with a +request from General Grant, I left by boat for City Point, Merritt +meanwhile conducting the column across the James River to the point +of rendezvous, The trip to City Point did not take long, and on +arrival at army headquarters the first person I met was General John +A. Rawlins, General Grant's chief-of-staff. Rawlins was a man of +strong likes and dislikes, and positive always both in speech and +action, exhibiting marked feelings when greeting any one, and on this +occasion met me with much warmth. His demonstrations of welcome +over, we held a few minutes' conversation about the coming campaign, +he taking strong ground against a part of the plan of operations +adopted, namely, that which contemplated my joining General Sherman's +army. His language was unequivocal and vehement, and when he was +through talking, he conducted me to General Grant's quarters, but he +himself did not enter. + +General Grant was never impulsive, and always met his officers in an +unceremonious way, with a quiet "How are you" soon putting one at his +ease, since the pleasant tone in which he spoke gave assurance of +welcome, although his manner was otherwise impassive. When the +ordinary greeting was over, he usually waited for his visitor to open +the conversation, so on this occasion I began by giving him the +details of my march from Winchester, my reasons for not joining +Sherman, as contemplated in my instructions, and the motives which +had influenced me to march to the White House. The other provision +of my orders on setting out from Winchester--the alternative return +to that place--was not touched upon, for the wisdom of having ignored +that was fully apparent. Commenting on this recital of my doings, +the General referred only to the tortuous course of my march from +Waynesboro' down, our sore trials, and the valuable services of the +scouts who had brought him tidings of me, closing with the remark +that it was, rare a department commander voluntarily deprived himself +of independence, and added that I should not suffer for it. Then +turning to the business for which he had called me to City Point, he +outlined what he expected me to do; saying that I was to cut loose +from the Army of the Potomac by passing its left flank to the +southward along the line of the Danville railroad, and after crossing +the Roanoke River, join General Sherman. While speaking, he handed +me a copy of a general letter of instructions that had been drawn up +for the army on the 24th. The letter contained these words +concerning the movements of my command: + +"The cavalry under General Sheridan, joined by the division now under +General Davies, will move at the same time (29th inst.) by the Weldon +road and the Jerusalem plank-road, turning west from the latter +before crossing the Nottoway, and west with the whole column before +reaching Stony Creek. General Sheridan will then move independently +under other instructions which will be given him. All dismounted +cavalry belonging to the Army of the Potomac, and the dismounted +cavalry from the Middle Military Division not required for guarding +property belonging to their arm of the service, will report to +Brigadier-General Benham to be added to the defenses of City Point." + +When I had gone over the entire letter I showed plainly that I was +dissatisfied with it, for, coupled with what the General had outlined +orally, which I supposed was the "other instructions," I believed it +foreshadowed my junction with General Sherman. Rawlins thought so +too, as his vigorous language had left no room to doubt, so I +immediately began to offer my objections to the programme. These +were, that it would be bad policy to send me down to the Carolinas +with a part of the Army of the Potomac, to come back to crush Lee +after the destruction of General Johnston's army; such a course would +give rise to the charge that his own forces around Petersburg were +not equal to the task, and would seriously affect public opinion in +the North; that in fact my cavalry belonged to the Army of the +Potomac, which army was able unaided to destroy Lee, and I could not +but oppose any dispersion of its strength. + +All this was said in a somewhat emphatic manner, and when I had +finished he quietly told me that the portion of my instructions from +which I so strongly dissented was intended as a "blind" to cover any +check the army in its general move, to the left might meet with, and +prevent that element in the North which held that the war could be +ended only through negotiation, from charging defeat. The fact that +my cavalry was not to ultimately join Sherman was a great relief to +me, and after expressing the utmost confidence in the plans unfolded +for closing the war by directing every effort to the annihilation of +Lee's army, I left him to go to General Ingalls's quarters. On the +way I again met Rawlins, who, when I told him that General Grant had +intimated his intention to modify the written plan of operations so +far as regarded the cavalry, manifested the greatest satisfaction, +and I judged from this that the new view of the matter had not +previously been communicated to the chief-of-staff, though he must +have been acquainted of course with the programme made out on the +24th of March. + +Toward noon General Grant sent for me to accompany him up the river. +When I joined the General he informed me that the President was on +board the boat--the steamer Mary Martin. For some days Mr. Lincoln +had been at City Point, established on the steamer River Queen, +having come down from Washington to be nearer his generals, no doubt, +and also to be conveniently situated for the reception of tidings +from the front when operations began, for he could not endure the +delays in getting news to Washington. This trip up the James had +been projected by General Meade, but on account of demands at the +front he could not go, so the President, General Grant, and I +composed the party. We steamed up to where my cavalry was crossing +on the pontoon-bridge below the mouth of the Dutch Gap canal, and for +a little while watched the column as it was passing over the river, +the bright sunshine presaging good weather, but only to delude, as +was proved by the torrents of rain brought by the succeeding days of +March. On the trip the President was not very cheerful. In fact, he +was dejected, giving no indication of his usual means of diversion, +by which (his quaint stories) I had often heard he could find relief +from his cares. He spoke to me of the impending operations and asked +many questions, laying stress upon the one, "What would be the result +when the army moved out to the left, if the enemy should come down +and capture City Point?" the question being prompted, doubtless, by +the bold assault on our lines and capture of Fort Steadman two days +before by General Gordon. I answered that I did not think it at all +probable that General Lee would undertake such a desperate measure to +relieve the strait he was in; that General Hartranft's successful +check to Gordon had ended, I thought, attacks of such a character; +and in any event General Grant would give Lee all he could attend to +on the left. Mr. Lincoln said nothing about my proposed route of +march, and I doubt if he knew of my instructions, or was in +possession at most of more than a very general outline of the plan of +campaign. It was late when the Mary Martin returned to City Point, +and I spent the night there with General Ingalls. + +The morning of the 27th I went out to Hancock Station to look after +my troops and prepare for moving two days later. In the afternoon I +received a telegram from General Grant, saying: "General Sherman will +be here this evening to spend a few hours. I should like to have you +come down." Sherman's coming was a surprise--at least to me it was +--this despatch being my first intimation of his expected arrival. +Well knowing the zeal and emphasis with which General Sherman would +present his views, there again came into my mind many misgivings with +reference to the movement of the cavalry, and I made haste to start +for Grant's headquarters. I got off a little after 7 o'clock, taking +the rickety military railroad, the rails of which were laid on the +natural surface of the ground, with grading only here and there at +points of absolute necessity, and had not gone far when the +locomotive jumped the track. This delayed my arrival at City Point +till near midnight, but on repairing to the little cabin that +sheltered the general-in-chief, I found him and Sherman still up +talking over the problem whose solution was near at hand. As already +stated, thoughts as to the tenor of my instructions became uppermost +the moment I received the telegram in the afternoon, and they +continued to engross and disturb me all the way down the railroad, +for I feared that the telegram foreshadowed, under the propositions +Sherman would present, a more specific compliance with the written +instructions than General Grant had orally assured me would be +exacted. + +My entrance into the shanty suspended the conversation for a moment +only, and then General Sherman, without prelude, rehearsed his plans +for moving his army, pointing out with every detail how he would come +up through the Carolinas to join the troops besieging Petersburg and +Richmond, and intimating that my cavalry, after striking the +Southside and Danville railroads, could join him with ease. I made +no comments on the projects for moving, his own troops, but as soon +as opportunity offered, dissented emphatically from the proposition +to have me join the Army of the Tennessee, repeating in substance +what I had previously expressed to General Grant. + +My uneasiness made me somewhat too earnest, I fear, but General Grant +soon mollified me, and smoothed matters over by practically repeating +what he had told me in regard to this point at the close of our +interview the day before, so I pursued the subject no further. In a +little while the conference ended, and I again sought lodging at the +hospitable quarters of Ingalls. + +Very early the next morning, while I was still in bed, General +Sherman came to me and renewed the subject of my joining him, but +when he saw that I was unalterably opposed to it the conversation +turned into other channels, and after we had chatted awhile he +withdrew, and later in the day went up the river with the President, +General Grant, and Admiral Porter, I returning to my command at +Hancock Station, where my presence was needed to put my troops in +march next day. + +During the entire winter General Grant's lines fronting Petersburg +had extended south of the Appomattox River, practically from that +stream around to where the Vaughn road crosses Hatcher's Run, and +this was nearly the situation Wilien the cavalry concentrated at +Hancock Station, General Weitzel holding the line north of the +Appomattox, fronting Richmond and Bermuda Hundred. + +The instructions of the 24th of March contemplated that the campaign +should begin with the movement of Warren's corps (the Fifth) at +3 o'clock on the morning of the 29th, and Humphreys's (the Second) at +6; the rest of the infantry holding on in the trenches. The cavalry +was to move in conjunction with Warren and Humphreys, and make its +way out beyond our left as these corps opened the road. + +The night of the 28th I received the following additional +instructions, the general tenor of which again disturbed me, for +although I had been assured that I was not to join General Sherman, +it will be seen that the supplemental directions distinctly present +that alternative, and I therefore feared that during the trip up the +James River on the morning of the 28th General Grant had returned to +his original views: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"City Point, Va., March 28, 1865. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN: + +"The Fifth Army Corps will move by the Vaughn road at 3 A.M. +tomorrow morning. The Second moves at about 9 A.M., having but about +three miles to march to reach the point designated for it to take on +the right of the Fifth Corps, after the latter reaches Dinwiddie +Court House. + +"Move your cavalry at as early an hour as you can, and without being +confined to any particular road or roads. You may go out by the +nearest roads in rear of the Fifth Corps, pass by its left, and +passing near to or through Dinwiddie, reach the right and rear of the +enemy as soon as you can. It is not the intention to attack the +enemy in his intrenched position, but to force him out if possible. +Should he come out and attack us, or get himself where he can be +attacked, move in with your entire force in your own way, and with +the full reliance that the army will engage or follow the enemy, as +circumstances will dictate. I shall be on the field, and will +probably be able to communicate with you; should I not do so, and you +find that the enemy keeps within his main intrenched line, you may +cut loose and push for the Danville road. If you find it practicable +I would like you to cross the Southside road, between Petersburg and +Burkeville, and destroy it to some extent. I would not advise much +detention, however, until you reach the Danville road, which I would +like you to strike as near to the Appomattox as possible; make your +destruction of that road as complete as possible; you can then pass +on to the Southside road, west of Burkeville, and destroy that in +like manner. + +"After having accomplished the destruction of the two railroads, +which are now the only avenues of supply to Lee's army, you may +return to this army, selecting your road farther south, or you may go +on into North Carolina and join General Sherman. Should you select +the latter course, get the information to me as early as possible, so +that I may send orders to meet you at Goldsboro'. + +"U. S. GRANT, Lieut.-General." + + +These instructions did not alter my line of march for the morrow, and +I trusted matters would so come about as not to require compliance +with those portions relative to the railroads and to joining Sherman; +so early on the 29th I moved my cavalry out toward Ream's Station on +the Weldon road, Devin commanding the First Division, with Colonels +Gibbs, Stagg, and Fitzhugh in charge of the brigades; the Third +Division under Custer, Colonels Wells, Capehart and Pennington being +the brigade commanders. These two divisions united were commanded by +Merritt, as they had been since leaving Winchester. Crook headed the +Second Division, his brigades being under General Davies and Colonels +John I. Gregg and Smith. + +Our general direction was westward, over such routes as could be +found, provided they did not embarrass the march of the infantry. +The roads, from the winter's frosts and rains, were in a frightful +state, and when it was sought to avoid a spot which the head of the +column had proved almost bottomless, the bogs and quicksands of the +adjoining fields demonstrated that to make a detour was to go from +bad to worse. In the face of these discouragements we floundered on, +however, crossing on the way a series of small streams swollen to +their banks. Crook and Devin reached the county-seat of Dinwiddie +about 5 o'clock in the evening, having encountered only a small +picket, that at once gave way to our advance. Merritt left Custer at +Malon's crossing of Rowanty Creek to care for the trains containing +our subsistence and the reserve ammunition, these being stuck in the +mire at, intervals all the way back to the Jerusalem plank-road; and +to make any headway at all with the trains, Custer's men often had to +unload the wagons and lift them out of the boggy places. + +Crook and Devin camped near Dinwiddie Court House in such manner as +to cover the Vaughn, Flatfoot, Boydton, and Five Forks roads; for, as +these all intersected at Dinwiddie, they offered a chance for the +enemy's approach toward the rear of the Fifth Corps, as Warren +extended to the left across the Boydton road. Any of these routes +leading to the south or west might also be the one on which, in +conformity with one part of my instructions, I was expected to get +out toward the Danville and Southside railroads, and the Five Forks +road would lead directly to General Lee's right flank, in case +opportunity was found to comply with the other part. The place was, +therefore, of great strategic value, and getting it without cost +repaid us for floundering through the mud. + +Dinwiddie Court House, though a most important point in the campaign, +was far from attractive in feature, being made up of a half-dozen +unsightly houses, a ramshackle tavern propped up on two sides with +pine poles, and the weatherbeaten building that gave official name to +the cross-roads. We had no tents--there were none in the command--so +I took possession of the tavern for shelter for myself and staff, and +just as we had finished looking over its primitive interior a rain +storm set in. + +The wagon containing my mess equipment was back somewhere on the +road, hopelessly stuck in the mud, and hence we had nothing to eat +except some coffee which two young women living at the tavern kindly +made for us; a small quantity of the berry being furnished from the +haversacks of my escort. By the time we got the coffee, rain was +falling in sheets, and the evening bade fair to be a most dismal one; +but songs and choruses set up by some of my staff--the two young +women playing accompaniments on a battered piano--relieved the +situation and enlivened us a little. However, the dreary night +brought me one great comfort; for General Grant, who that day had +moved out to Gravelly Run, sent me instructions to abandon all idea +of the contemplated raid, and directed me to act in concert with the +infantry under his immediate command, to turn, if possible, the right +flank of Lee's army. The despatch made my mind easy with respect to +the objectionable feature of my original instructions, and of course +relieved me also from the anxiety growing out of the letter received +at Hancock Station the night of the 28th; so, notwithstanding the +suspicions excited by some of my staff concerning the Virginia +feather-bed that had been assigned me, I turned in at a late hour and +slept most soundly. + +The night of the 29th the left of General Grant's infantry--Warren's +corps--rested on the Boydton road, not far from its intersection with +the Quaker road. Humphreys's corps was next to Warren; then came +Ord, next Wright, and then Parke, with his right resting on the +Appomattox. The moving of Warren and Humphreys to the left during +the day was early discovered by General Lee. He met it by extending +the right of his infantry on the White Oak road, while drawing in the +cavalry of W. H. F. Lee and Rosser along the south bank of Stony +Creek to cover a crossroads called Five Forks, to anticipate me +there; for assuming that my command was moving in conjunction with +the infantry, with the ultimate purpose of striking the Southside +railroad, Lee made no effort to hold Dinwiddie, which he might have +done with his cavalry, and in this he made a fatal mistake. The +cavalry of Fitz. Lee was ordered at this same time from Sunderland +depot to Five Forks, and its chief placed in command of all the +mounted troops of General Lee's army. + +At daylight on the 30th I proceeded to make dispositions under the +new conditions imposed by my modified instructions, and directed +Merritt to push Devin out as far as the White Oak road to make a +reconnoissance to Five Forks, Crook being instructed to send Davies's +brigade to support Devin. Crook was to hold, with Gregg's brigade, +the Stony Creek crossing of the Boydton plank road, retaining Smith's +near Dinwiddie, for use in any direction required. On the 29th W. H. +F. Lee conformed the march of his cavalry with that of ours, but my +holding Stony Creek in this way forced him to make a detour west of +Chamberlin's Run, in order to get in communication with his friends +at Five Forks. + +The rain that had been falling all night gave no sign of stopping, +but kept pouring down all day long, and the swamps and quicksands +mired the horses, whether they marched in the roads or across the +adjacent fields. Undismayed, nevertheless, each column set out for +its appointed duty, but shortly after the troops began to move I +received from General Grant this despatch, which put a new phase on +matters: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"GRAVELLY RUN, March 30, 1865. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN: + +"The heavy rain of to-day will make it impossible for us to do much +until it dries up a little, or we get roads around our rear repaired. +You may, therefore, leave what cavalry you deem necessary to protect +the left, and hold such positions as you deem necessary for that +purpose, and send the remainder back to Humphrey's Station where they +can get hay and grain. Fifty wagons loaded with forage will be sent +to you in the morning. Send an officer back to direct the wagons +back to where you want them. Report to me the cavalry you will leave +back, and the position you will occupy. Could not your cavalry go +back by the way of Stony Creek depot and destroy or capture the store +of supplies there? + +"U. S. GRANT, Lieut.-General." + + +When I had read and pondered this, I determined to ride over to +General Grant's headquarters on Gravelly Run, and get a clear idea of +what it was proposed to do, for it seemed to me that a suspension of +operations would be a serious mistake. Mounting a powerful gray +pacing horse called Breckenridge (from its capture from one of +Breckenridge's staff-officers at Missionary Ridge), and that I knew +would carry me through the mud, I set out accompanied by my Assistant +Adjutant-General, Colonel Frederick C. Newhall, and an escort of +about ten or fifteen men. At first we rode north up the Boydton +plank-road, and coming upon our infantry pickets from a direction +where the enemy was expected to appear, they began to fire upon us, +but seeing from our actions that we were friends, they ceased, and +permitted us to pass the outposts. We then struggled on in a +northeasterly direction across-country, till we struck the Vaughn +road. This carried us to army headquarters, which were established +south of Gravelly Run in an old cornfield. I rode to within a few +yards of the front of General Grant's tent, my horse plunging at +every step almost to his knees in the mud, and dismounted near a +camp-fire, apparently a general one, for all the staff-officers were +standing around it on boards and rails placed here and there to keep +them from sinking into the mire. + +Going directly to General Grant's tent, I found him and Rawlins +talking over the question of suspending operations till the weather +should improve. No orders about the matter had been issued yet, +except the despatch to me, and Rawlins, being strongly opposed to the +proposition, was frankly expostulating with General Grant, who, after +greeting me, remarked, in his quiet way: "Well, Rawlins, I think you +had better take command." Seeing that there was a difference up +between Rawlins and his chief, I made the excuse of being wet and +cold, and went outside to the fire. Here General Ingalls met me and +took me to his tent, where I was much more comfortable than when +standing outside, and where a few minutes later we were joined by +General Grant. Ingalls then retired, and General Grant began talking +of our fearful plight, resulting from the rains and mud, and saying +that because of this it seemed necessary to suspend operations. I at +once begged him not to do so, telling him that my cavalry was already +on the move in spite of the difficulties, and that although a +suspension of operations would not be fatal, yet it would give rise +to the very charge of disaster to which he had referred at City +Point, and, moreover, that we would surely be ridiculed, just as +General Burnside's army was after the mud march of 1863. His better +judgment was against suspending operations, but the proposition had +been suggested by all sorts of complaints as to the impossibility of +moving the trains and the like, so it needed little argument to +convince him, and without further discussion he said, in that manner +which with him meant a firmness of purpose that could not be changed +by further complainings, "We will go on." I then told him that I +believed I could break in the enemy's right if he would let me have +the Sixth Corps; but saying that the condition of the roads would +prevent the movement of infantry, he replied that I would have to +seize Five Forks with the cavalry alone. + +On my way back to Dinwiddie I stopped at the headquarters of General +Warren, but the General being asleep, I went to the tent of one of +his staff-officers. Colonel William T. Gentry, an old personal +friend with whom I had served in Oregon. In a few minutes Warren +came in and we had a short conversation, he speaking rather +despondently of the outlook, being influenced no doubt by the +depressing weather. + +From Warren's headquarters I returned, by the Boydton road to +Dinwiddie Court House, fording Gravelly Run with ease. When I got as +far as the Dabney road I sent Colonel Newhall out on it toward Five +Forks, with orders for Merritt to develop the enemy's position and +strength, and then rode on to Dinwiddie to endeavor to get all my +other troops up. Merritt was halted at the intersection of the Five +Forks and Gravelly Church roads when Newhall delivered the orders, +and in compliance moving out Gibbs's brigade promptly, sharp +skirmishing was brought on, Gibbs driving the Confederates to Five +Forks, where he found them behind a line of breastworks running along +the White Oak road. The reconnoissance demonstrating the intention +of the enemy to hold this point, Gibbs was withdrawn. + +That evening, at 7 o'clock, I reported the position of the +Confederate cavalry, and stated that it had been reinforced by +Pickett's division of infantry. On receipt of this despatch, General +Grant offered me the Fifth Corps, but I declined to take it, and +again asked for the Sixth, saying that with it I believed I could +turn the enemy (Pickett's) left, or break through his lines. The +morning of the 31st General Grant replied the the Sixth Corps could +not be taken from its position in the line, and offered me the +Second; but in the mean time circumstances had changed, and no corps +was ordered. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +BATTLE OF DINWIDDIE COURT HOUSE--PICKETT REPULSED--REINFORCED BY THE +FIFTH CORPS--BATTLE OF FIVE FORKS--TURNING THE CONFEDERATE LEFT--AN +UNQUALIFIED SUCCESS--RELIEVING GENERAL WARREN--THE WARREN COURT OF +INQUIRY--GENERAL SHERMAN'S OPINION. + +The night of March 30 Merritt, with Devin's division and Davies's +brigade, was camped on the Five Forks road about two miles in front +of Dinwiddie, near J. Boisseau's. Crook, with Smith and Gregg's +brigades, continued to cover Stony Creek, and Custer was still back +at Rowanty Creek, trying to get the trains up. This force had been +counted while crossing the creek on the 29th, the three divisions +numbering 9,000 enlisted men, Crook having 3,300, and Custer and +Devin 5,700. + +During the 30th, the enemy had been concentrating his cavalry, and by +evening General W. H. F. Lee and General Rosser had joined Fitzhugh +Lee near Five Forks. To this force was added, about dark, five +brigades of infantry--three from Pickett's division, and two from +Johnson's--all under command of Pickett. The infantry came by the +White Oak road from the right of General Lee's intrenchments, and +their arrival became positively known to me about dark, the +confirmatory intelligence being brought in then by some of Young's +scouts who had been inside the Confederate lines. + +On the 31st, the rain having ceased, directions were given at an +early hour to both Merritt and Crook to make reconnoissances +preparatory to securing Five Forks, and about 9 o'clock Merritt +started for the crossroads, Davies's brigade supporting him. His +march was necessarily slow because of the mud, and the enemy's +pickets resisted with obstinacy also, but the coveted crossroads fell +to Merritt without much trouble, as the bulk of the enemy was just +then bent on other things. At the same hour that Merritt started, +Crook moved Smith's brigade out northwest from Dinwiddie to +Fitzgerald's crossing of Chamberlain's Creek, to cover Merritt's +left, supporting Smith by placing Gregg to his right and rear. The +occupation of this ford was timely, for Pickett, now in command of +both the cavalry and infantry, was already marching to get in +Merritt's rear by crossing Chamberlain's Creek. + +To hold on to Fitzgerald's ford Smith had to make a sharp fight, but +Mumford's cavalry attacking Devin, the enemy's infantry succeeded in +getting over Chamberlain's Creek at a point higher up than +Fitzgerald's ford, and assailing Davies, forced him back in a +northeasterly direction toward the Dinwiddie and Five Forks road in +company with Devin. The retreat of Davies permitted Pickett to pass +between Crook and Merritt, which he promptly did, effectually +separating them and cutting off both Davies and Devin from the road +to Dinwiddie, so that to get to that point they had to retreat across +the country to B. Boisseau's and then down the Boydton road. + +Gibbs's brigade had been in reserve near the intersection of the Five +Forks and Dabney roads, and directing Merritt to hold on there, I +ordered Gregg's brigade to be mounted and brought to Merritt's aid, +for if Pickett continued in pursuit north of the Five Forks road he +would expose his right and rear, and I determined to attack him, in +such case, from Gibbs's position. Gregg arrived in good season, and +as soon as his men were dismounted on Gibbs's left, Merritt assailed +fiercely, compelling Pickett to halt and face a new foe, thus +interrupting an advance that would finally have carried Pickett into +the rear of Warren's corps. + +It was now about 4 o'clock in the afternoon and we were in a critical +situation, but having ordered Merritt to bring Devin and Davies to +Dinwiddie by the Boydton road, staff-officers were sent to hurry +Custer to the same point, for with its several diverging roads the +Court House was of vital importance, and I determined to stay there +at all hazards. At the same time orders were sent to Smith's +brigade, which, by the advance of Pickett past its right flank and +the pressure of W. H. F. Lee on its front, had been compelled to give +up Fitzgerald's crossing, to fall back toward Dinwiddie but to +contest every inch of ground so as to gain time. + +When halted by the attack of Gregg and Gibbs, Pickett, desisting from +his pursuit of Devin, as already stated, turned his undivided +attention to this unexpected force, and with his preponderating +infantry pressed it back on the Five Forks road toward Dinwiddle, +though our men, fighting dismounted behind barricades at different +points, displayed such obstinacy as to make Pickett's progress slow, +and thus give me time to look out a line for defending the Court +House. I selected a place about three-fourths of a mile northwest of +the crossroads, and Custer coming up quickly with Capehart's brigade, +took position on the left of the road to Five Forks in some open +ground along the crest of a gentle ridge. Custer got Capehart into +place just in time to lend a hand to Smith, who, severely pressed, +came back on us here from his retreat along Chamberlain's "bed"--the +vernacular for a woody swamp such as that through which Smith +retired. A little later the brigades of Gregg and Gibbs, falling to +the rear slowly and steadily, took up in the woods a line which +covered the Boydton Road some distance to the right of Capehart, the +intervening gap to be filled with Pennington's brigade. By this time +our horse-artillery, which for two days had been stuck in the mud, +was all up, and every gun was posted in this line. + +It was now near sunset, and the enemy's cavalry thinking the day was +theirs, made a dash at Smith, but just as the assailants appeared in +the open fields, Capehart's men opened so suddenly on their left +flank as to cause it to recoil in astonishment, which permitted Smith +to connect his brigade with Custer unmolested. We were now in good +shape behind the familiar barricades, and having a continuous line, +excepting only the gap to be filled with Pennington, that covered +Dinwiddie and the Boydton Road. My left rested in the woods about +half a mile west of the Court House, and the barricades extended from +this flank in a semicircle through the open fields in a northeasterly +direction, to a piece-of thick timber on the right, near the Boydton +Road. + +A little before the sun went down the Confederate infantry was formed +for the attack, and, fortunately for us, Pennington's brigade came up +and filled the space to which it was assigned between Capehart and +Gibbs, just as Pickett moved out across the cleared fields in front +of Custer, in deep lines that plainly told how greatly we were +outnumbered. + +Accompanied by Generals Merritt and Custer and my staff, I now rode +along the barricades to encourage the men. Our enthusiastic +reception showed that they were determined to stay. The cavalcade +drew the enemy's fire, which emptied several of the saddles--among +others Mr. Theodore Wilson, correspondent of the New York Herald, +being wounded. In reply our horse-artillery opened on the advancing +Confederates, but the men behind the barricades lay still till +Pickett's troops were within short range. Then they opened, Custer's +repeating rifles pouring out such a shower of lead that nothing could +stand up against it. The repulse was very quick, and as the gray +lines retired to the woods from which but a few minutes before they +had so confidently advanced, all danger of their taking Dinwiddie or +marching to the left and rear of our infantry line was over, +at least for the night. The enemy being thus checked, I sent a +staff-officer--Captain Sheridan--to General Grant to report what had +taken place during the afternoon, and to say that I proposed to stay at +Dinwiddie, but if ultimately compelled to abandon the place, I would do +so by retiring on the Vaughn road toward Hatcher's Run, for I then +thought the attack might be renewed next morning. Devin and Davies +joined me about dark, and my troops being now well in hand, I sent a +second staff-officer--Colonel John Kellogg--to explain my situation +more fully, and to assure General Grant that I would hold on at +Dinwiddie till forced to let go. + +By following me to Dinwiddie the enemy's infantry had completely +isolated itself, and hence there was now offered the Union troops a +rare opportunity. Lee was outside of his works, just as we desired, +and the general-in-chief realized this the moment he received the +first report of my situation; General Meade appreciated it too from +the information he got from Captain Sheridan, en route to army +headquarters with the first tidings, and sent this telegram to +General Grant: + +"HEADQUARTERS OF THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC, +"March 31, 1865. 9:45 p.m. + +"LIEUTENANT-GENERAL GRANT: + +"Would it not be well for Warren to go down with his whole corps and +smash up the force in front of Sheridan? Humphreys can hold the line +to the Boydton plank-road, and the refusal along with it. Bartlett's +brigade is now on the road from G. Boisseau's, running north, where +it crosses Gravelly Run, he having gone down the White Oak road. +Warren could go at once that way, and take the force threatening +Sheridan in rear at Dinwiddie, and move on the enemy's rear with the +other two. + +"G. G. MEADE, Major-General." + + +An hour later General Grant replied in these words: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"DABNEY'S MILLS, March 311, 1865. 10:15 P. M. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL MEADE, +"Commanding Army of the Potomac. + +Let Warren move in the way you propose, and urge him not to stop for +anything. Let Griffin (Griffin had been ordered by Warren to the +Boydton road to protect his rear) go on as he was first directed. + +"U. S. GRANT, Lieutenant-General." + + +These two despatches were the initiatory steps in sending the Fifth +Corps, under Major-General G. K. Warren, to report to me, and when I +received word of its coming and also that Genera Mackenzie's cavalry +from the Army of the James was likewise to be added to my command, +and that discretionary authority was given me to use all my forces +against Pickett, I resolved to destroy him, if it was within the +bounds of possibility, before he could rejoin Lee. + +In a despatch, dated 10:05 p.m., telling me of the coming of Warren +and Mackenzie, General Grant also said that the Fifth Corps should +reach me by 12 o'clock that night, but at that hour not only had none +of the corps arrived, but no report from it, so believing that if it +came all the way down to Dinwiddie the next morning, our opportunity +would be gone, I concluded that it would be best to order Warren to +move in on the enemy's rear while the cavalry attacked in front, and, +therefore, at 3 o'clock in the morning of April 1 sent this despatch +to General Warren: + +"CAVALRY HEADQUARTERS, DINWIDDIE C. H., +"April 1, 1865--3. A.M. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL WARREN, +"Commanding Fifth Army Corps. + +"I am holding in front of Dinwiddie Court House, on the road leading +to Five Forks, for three-quarters of a mile with General Custer's +division. The enemy are in his immediate front, lying so as to cover +the road just this side of A. Adams's house, which leads across +Chamberlain's bed, or run. I understand you have a division at J.[G] +Boisseau's; if so, you are in rear of the enemy's line and almost on +his flank. I will hold on here. Possibly they may attack Custer at +daylight; if so, attack instantly and in full force. Attack at +daylight anyhow, and I will make an effort to get the road this side +of Adams's house, and if I do, you can capture the whole of them. +Any force moving down the road I am holding, or on the White Oak +road, will be in the enemy's rear, and in all probability get any +force that may escape you by a flank movement. Do not fear my +leaving here. If the enemy remains, I shall fight at daylight. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + +With daylight came a slight fog, but it lifted almost immediately, +and Merritt moved Custer and Devin forward. As these divisions +advanced the enemy's infantry fell back on the Five Forks road, Devin +pressing him along the road, while Custer extended on the left over +toward Chamberlain's Run, Crook being held in watch along Stony +Creek, meanwhile, to be utilized as circumstances might require when +Warren attacked. + +The order of General Meade to Warren the night of March 31--a copy +being sent me also--was positive in its directions, but as midnight +came without a sign of or word from the Fifth Corps, notwithstanding +that was the hour fixed for its arrival, I nevertheless assumed that +there were good reasons for its non-appearance, but never once +doubted that measures would be taken to comply with my despatch Of +3 A. M. and therefore hoped that, as Pickett was falling back slowly +toward Five Forks, Griffin's and Crawford's divisions would come in +on the Confederate left and rear by the Crump road near J.[G] +Boisseau's house. + +But they did not reach there till after the enemy had got by. As a +matter of fact, when Pickett was passing the all-important point +Warren's men were just breaking from the bivouac in which their chief +had placed them the night before, and the head of Griffin's division +did not get to Boisseau's till after my cavalry, which meanwhile had +been joined by Ayres's division of the Fifth Corps by way of the +Boydton and Dabney roads. By reason of the delay in moving Griffin +and Crawford, the enemy having escaped, I massed the Fifth Corps at +J.[G] Boisseau's so that the men could be rested, and directed it to +remain there; General Warren himself had not then come up. General +Mackenzie, who had reported just after daybreak, was ordered at first +to stay at Dinwiddie Court House, but later was brought along the +Five Forks road to Dr. Smith's, and Crook's division was directed to +continue watching the crossings of Stony Creek and Chamberlain's Run. + +That we had accomplished nothing but to oblige our foe to retreat was +to me bitterly disappointing, but still feeling sure that he would +not give up the Five Forks crossroads without a fight, I pressed him +back there with Merritt's cavalry, Custer advancing on the Scott +road, while Devin drove the rearguard along that leading from J.[G] +Boisseau's to Five Forks. + +By 2 o'clock in the afternoon Merritt had forced the enemy inside his +intrenchments, which began with a short return about three-quarters +of a mile east of the Forks and ran along the south side of the White +Oak road to a point about a mile west of the Forks. From the left of +the return over toward Hatcher's Run was posted Mumford's cavalry, +dismounted. In the return itself was Wallace's brigade, and next on +its right came Ransom's, then Stewart's, then Terry's, then Corse's. +On the right of Corse was W. H. F. Lee's division of cavalry. Ten +pieces of artillery also were in this line, three on the right of the +works, three near the centre at the crossroads, and four on the left, +in the return. Rosser's cavalry was guarding the Confederate trains +north of Hatcher's Run beyond the crossing of the Ford road. + +I felt certain the enemy would fight at Five Forks--he had to--so, +while we were getting up to his intrenchments, I decided on my plan +of battle. This was to attack his whole front with Merritt's two +cavalry divisions, make a feint of turning his right flank, and with +the Fifth Corps assail his left. As the Fifth Corps moved into +action, its right flank was to be covered by Mackenzie's cavalry, +thus entirely cutting off Pickett's troops from communication with +Lee's right flank, which rested near the Butler house at the junction +of the Claiborne and White Oaks roads. In execution of this plan, +Merritt worked his men close in toward the intrenchments, and while +he was thus engaged, I ordered Warren to bring up the Fifth Corps, +sending the order by my engineer officer, Captain Gillespie, who had +reconnoitred the ground in the neighborhood of Gravelly Run Church, +where the infantry was to form for attack. + +Gillespie delivered the order about 1 o'clock, and when the corps was +put in motion, General Warren joined me at the front. Before he +came, I had received, through Colonel Babcock, authority from General +Grant to relieve him, but I did not wish to do it, particularly on +the eve of battle; so, saying nothing at all about the message +brought me, I entered at once on the plan for defeating Pickett, +telling Warren how the enemy was posted, explaining with considerable +detail, and concluding by stating that I wished his troops to be +formed on the Gravelly Church road, near its junction with the White +Oak road, with two divisions to the front, aligned obliquely to the +White Oak road, and one in reserve, opposite the centre of these two. + +General Warren seemed to understand me clearly, and then left to join +his command, while I turned my attention to the cavalry, instructing +Merritt to begin by making demonstrations as though to turn the +enemy's right, and to assault the front of the works with his +dismounted cavalry as soon as Warren became engaged. Afterward I +rode around to Gravelly Run Church, and found the head of Warren's +column just appearing, while he was sitting under a tree making a +rough sketch of the ground. I was disappointed that more of the +corps was not already up, and as the precious minutes went by without +any apparent effort to hurry the troops on to the field, this +disappointment grew into disgust. At last I expressed to Warren my +fears that the cavalry might expend all their ammunition before the +attack could be made, that the sun would go down before the battle +could be begun, or that troops from Lee's right, which, be it +remembered, was less than three miles away from my right, might, by +striking my rear, or even by threatening it, prevent the attack on +Pickett. + +Warren did not seem to me to be at all solicitous; his manner +exhibited decided apathy, and he remarked with indifference that +"Bobby Lee was always getting people into trouble." With unconcern +such as this, it is no wonder that fully three hours' time was +consumed in marching his corps from J.[G] Boisseau's to Gravelly Run +Church, though the distance was but two miles. However, when my +patience was almost worn out, Warren reported his troops ready, +Ayres's division being formed on the west side of the Gravelly Church +road, Crawford's on the east side, and Griffin in reserve behind the +right of Crawford, a little different from my instructions. The +corps had no artillery present, its batteries, on account of the mud, +being still north of Gravelly Run. Meanwhile Merritt had been busy +working his men close up to the intrenchments from the angle of the +return west, along the White Oak road. + +About 4 o'clock Warren began the attack. He was to assault the left +flank of the Confederate infantry at a point where I knew Pickett's +intrenchments were refused, almost at right angles with the White Oak +road. I did not know exactly how far toward Hatcher's Run this part +of the works extended, for here the videttes of Mumford's cavalry +were covering, but I did know where the refusal began. This return, +then, was the point I wished to assail, believing that if the assault +was made with spirit, the line could be turned. I therefore intended +that Ayres and Crawford should attack the refused trenches squarely, +and when these two divisions and Merritt's cavalry became hotly +engaged, Griffin's division was to pass around the left of the +Confederate line; and I personally instructed Griffin how I wished +him to go in, telling him also that as he advanced, his right flank +would be taken care of by Mackenzie, who was to be pushed over toward +the Ford road and Hatcher's Run. + +The front of the corps was oblique to the White Oak road; and on +getting there, it was to swing round to the left till perpendicular +to the road, keeping closed to the left. Ayres did his part well, +and to the letter, bringing his division square up to the front of +the return near the angle; but Crawford did not wheel to the left, as +was intended. On the contrary, on receiving fire from Mumford's +cavalry, Crawford swerved to the right and moved north from the +return, thus isolating his division from Ayres; and Griffin, +uncertain of the enemy's position, naturally followed Crawford. + +The deflection of this division on a line of march which finally +brought it out on the Ford road near C. Young's house, frustrated the +purpose I had in mind when ordering the attack, and caused a gap +between Ayres and Crawford, of which the enemy quickly took +advantage, and succeeded in throwing a part of Ayres's division into +confusion. At this juncture I sent word to General Warren to have +Crawford recalled; for the direction he was following was not only a +mistaken one, but, in case the assault at the return failed, he ran +great risk of capture. Warren could not be found, so I then sent for +Griffin--first by Colonel Newhall, and then by Colonel Sherman--to +come to the aid of Ayres, who was now contending alone with that part +of the enemy's infantry at the return. By this time Griffin had +observed and appreciated Crawford's mistake, however, and when the +staff-officers reached him, was already faced to the left; so, +marching across Crawford's rear, he quickly joined Ayres, who +meanwhile had rallied his troops and carried the return. + +When Ayres's division went over the flank of the enemy's works, +Devin's division of cavalry, which had been assaulting the front, +went over in company with it; and hardly halting to reform, the +intermingling infantry and dismounted cavalry swept down inside the +intrenchments, pushing to and beyond Five Forks, capturing thousands +of prisoners. The only stand the enemy tried to make was when he +attempted to form near the Ford road. Griffin pressed him so hard +there, however, that he had to give way in short order, and many of +his men, with three pieces of artillery, fell into the hands of +Crawford while on his circuitous march. + +The right of Custer's division gained a foothold on the enemy's works +simultaneously with Devin's, but on the extreme left Custer had a +very severe combat with W. H. F. Lee's cavalry, as well as with +Corse's and Terry's infantry. Attacking Terry and Corse with +Pennington's brigade dismounted, he assailed Lee's cavalry with his +other two brigades mounted, but Lee held on so obstinately that +Custer gained but little ground till our troops, advancing behind the +works, drove Corse and Terry out. Then Lee made no further stand +except at the west side of the Gillian field, where, assisted by +Corse's brigade, he endeavored to cover the retreat, but just before +dark Custer, in concert with some Fifth Corps regiments under Colonel +Richardson, drove ihe last of the enemy westward on the White Oak +road. + +Our success was unqualified; we had overthrown Pickett, taken six +guns, thirteen battle-flags, and nearly six thousand prisoners. When +the battle was practically over, I turned to consider my position +with reference to the main Confederate army. My troops, though +victorious, were isolated from the Army of the Potomac, for on the +31st of March the extreme left of that army had been thrown back +nearly to the Boydton plank-road, and hence there was nothing to +prevent the enemy's issuing from his trenches at the intersection of +the White Oak and Claiborne roads and marching directly on my rear. +I surmised that he might do this that night or early next morning. +It was therefore necessary to protect myself in this critical +situation, and General Warren having sorely disappointed me, both in +the moving of his corps and in its management during the battle, I +felt that he was not the man to rely upon under such circumstances, +and deeming that it was to the best interest of the service as well +as but just to myself, I relieved him, ordering him to report to +General Grant. + +I then put Griffin in command of the Fifth Corps, and directed him to +withdraw from the pursuit as quickly as he could after following the +enemy a short distance, and form in line of battle near Gravelly Run +Church, at right angles with the White Oak road, with Ayres and +Crawford facing toward the enemy at the junction of the White Oak and +Claiborne roads, leaving Bartlett, now commanding Griffin's division, +near the Ford road. Mackenzie also was left on the Ford road at the +crossing of Hatcher's Run, Merritt going into camp on the Widow +Gillian's plantation. As I had been obliged to keep Crook's division +along Stony Creek throughout the day, it had taken no active part in +the battle. + +Years after the war, in 1879, a Court of Inquiry was given General +Warren in relation to his conduct on the day of the battle. He +assumed that the delay in not granting his request for an inquiry, +which was first made at the close of the war, was due to opposition +on my part. In this he was in error; I never opposed the ordering of +the Court, but when it was finally decided to convene it I naturally +asked to be represented by counsel, for the authorization of the +Inquiry was so peculiarly phrased that it made me practically a +respondent. + + +"NEW YORK CITY, May 3, 1880 + +"MAJOR-GENERAL W. S. HANCOCK, U. S. A. +"President Court of Inquiry, Governor's Island. + +"Sir: Since my arrival in this city, under a subpoena to appear and +testify before the Court of which you are president, I have been +indirectly and unofficially informed that the Court some time ago +forwarded an invitation to me (which has not been received) to appear +personally or by counsel, in order to aid it in obtaining a knowledge +as to the facts concerning the movements terminating in the battle of +'Five Forks,' with reference to the direct subjects of its inquiry. +Any invitation of this character I should always and do consider it +incumbent on me to accede to, and do everything in my power in +furtherance of the specific purposes for which courts of inquiry are +by law instituted. + +"The order convening the Court (a copy of which was not received by +me at my division headquarters until two days after the time +appointed for the Court to assemble) contemplates an inquiry based on +the application of Lieutenant Colonel G. K. Warren, Corps of +Engineers, as to his conduct while major-general commanding the Fifth +Army Corps, under my command, in reference to accusations or +imputations assumed in the order to have been made against him, and I +understand through the daily press that my official report of the +battle of Five Forks has been submitted by him as a basis of inquiry. + +"If it is proposed to inquire, either directly or indirectly, as to +any action of mine so far as the commanding general Fifth Army Corps +was concerned, or my motives for such action, I desire to be +specifically informed wherein such action or transaction is alleged +to contain an accusation or imputation to become a subject of +inquiry, so that, knowing what issues are raised, I may intelligently +aid the Court in arriving at the facts. + +"It is a long time since the battle of Five Forks was fought, and +during the time that has elapsed the official reports of that battle +have been received and acknowledged by the Government; but now, when +the memory of events has in many instances grown dim, and three of +the principal actors on that field are dead--Generals Griffin, +Custer, and Devin, whose testimony would have been valuable--an +investigation is ordered which might perhaps do injustice unless the +facts pertinent to the issues are fully developed. + +"My duties are such that it will not be convenient for me to be +present continuously during the sessions of the Court. In order, +however, that everything may be laid before it in my power pertinent +to such specific issues as are legally raised, I beg leave to +introduce Major Asa Bird Gardner as my counsel. + +"Very respectfully, + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Lieut.-General." + + +Briefly stated, in my report of the battle of Five Forks there were +four imputations concerning General Warren. The first implied that +Warren failed to reach me on the 1st of April, when I had reason to +expect him; the second, that the tactical handling of his corps was +unskillful; the third, that he did not exert himself to get his corps +up to Gravelly Run Church; and the fourth, that when portions of his +line gave way he did not exert himself to restore confidence to his +troops. The Court found against him on the first and second counts, +and for him on the third and fourth. This finding was unsatisfactory +to General Warren, for he hoped to obtain such an unequivocal +recognition of his services as to cast discredit on my motives for +relieving him. These were prompted by the conditions alone--by the +conduct of General Warren as described, and my consequent lack of +confidence in him. + +It will be remembered that in my conversation with General Grant on +the 30th, relative to the suspension of operations because of the +mud, I asked him to let me have the Sixth Corps to help me in +breaking in on the enemy's right, but that it could not be sent me; +it will be recalled also that the Fifth Corps was afterward tendered +and declined. From these facts it has been alleged that I was +prejudiced against General Warren, but this is not true. As we had +never been thrown much together I knew but little of him. I had no +personal objection to him, and certainly could have none to his +corps. I was expected to do an extremely dangerous piece of work, +and knowing the Sixth Corps well--my cavalry having campaigned with +it so successfully in the Shenandoah Valley, I naturally preferred +it, and declined the Fifth for no other reason. But the Sixth could +not be given, and the turn of events finally brought me the Fifth +after my cavalry, under the most trying difficulties, had drawn the +enemy from his works, and into such a position as to permit the +realization of General Grant's hope to break up with my force Lee's +right flank. Pickett's isolation offered an opportunity which we +could not afford to neglect, and the destruction of his command would +fill the measure of General Grant's expectations as well as meet my +own desires. The occasion was not an ordinary one, and as I thought +that Warren had not risen to its demand in the battle, I deemed it +injudicious and unsafe under the critical conditions existing to +retain him longer. That I was justified in this is plain to all who +are disposed to be fair-minded, so with the following extract from +General Sherman's review of the proceedings of the Warren Court, and +with which I am convinced the judgment of history will accord, I +leave the subject: + +"....It would be an unsafe and dangerous rule to hold the commander +of an army in battle to a technical adherence to any rule of conduct +for managing his command. He is responsible for results, and holds +the lives and reputations of every officer and soldier under his +orders as subordinate to the great end--victory. The most important +events are usually compressed into an hour, a minute, and he cannot +stop to analyze his reasons. He must act on the impulse, the +conviction, of the instant, and should be sustained in his +conclusions, if not manifestly unjust. The power to command men, and +give vehement impulse to their joint action, is something which +cannot be defined by words, but it is plain and manifest in battles, +and whoever commands an army in chief must choose his subordinates by +reason of qualities which can alone be tested in actual conflict. + +"No one has questioned the patriotism, integrity, and great +intelligence of General Warren. These are attested by a long record +of most excellent service, but in the clash of arms at and near Five +Forks, March 31 and April 1, 1865, his personal activity fell short +of the standard fixed by General Sheridan, on whom alone rested the +great responsibility for that and succeeding days. + +"My conclusion is that General Sheridan was perfectly justified in +his action in this case, and he must be fully and entirely sustained +if the United States expects great victories by her arms in the +future." + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +RESULT OF THE BATTLE OF FIVE FORKS--RETREAT OF LEE--AN INTERCEPTED +DESPATCH--AT AMELIA COURT HOUSE--BATTLE OF SAILOR'S CREEK--THE +CONFEDERATES' STUBBORN RESISTANCE--A COMPLETE VICTORY--IMPORTANCE OF +THE BATTLE. + +When the news of the battle at Five Forks reached General Grant, he +realized that the decisive character of our victory would necessitate +the immediate abandonment of Richmond and Petersburg by the enemy; +and fearing that Lee would escape without further injury, he issued +orders, the propriety of which must be settled by history, to assault +next morning the whole intrenched line. But Lee could not retreat at +once. He had not anticipated dissster at Five Forks, and hence was +unprepared to withdraw on the moment; and the necessity of getting +off his trains and munitions of war, as well as being obliged to +cover the flight of the Confederate Government, compelled him to hold +on to Richmond and Petersburg till the afternoon of the 2d, though +before that Parke, Ord, and Wright had carried his outer +intrenchments at several points, thus materially shortening the line +of investment. + +The night of the 1st of April, General Humphreys's corps--the Second +--had extended its left toward the White Oak road, and early next +morning, under instructions from General Grant, Miles's division of +that corps reported to me, and supporting him with Ayres's and +Crawford's divisions of the Fifth Corps, I then directed him to +advance toward Petersburg and attack the enemy's works at the +intersection of the Claiborne and White Oak roads. + +Such of the enemy as were still in the works Miles easily forced +across Hatcher's Run, in the direction of Sutherland's depot, but the +Confederates promptly took up a position north of the little stream, +and Miles being anxious to attack, I gave him leave, but just at this +time General Humphreys came up with a request to me from General +Meade to return Miles. On this request I relinquished command of the +division, when, supported by the Fifth Corps it could have broken in +the enemy's right at a vital point; and I have always since regretted +that I did so, for the message Humphreys conveyed was without +authority from General Grant, by whom Miles had been sent to me, but +thinking good feeling a desideratum just then, and wishing to avoid +wrangles, I faced the Fifth Corps about and marched it down to Five +Forks, and out the Ford road to the crossing of Hatcher's Run. After +we had gone, General Grant, intending this quarter of the field to be +under my control, ordered Humphreys with his other two divisions to +move to the right, in toward Petersburg. This left Miles entirely +unsupported, and his gallant attack made soon after was unsuccessful +at first, but about 3 o'clock in the afternoon he carried the point +which covered the retreat from Petersburg and Richmond. + +Merritt had been sent westward, meanwhile, in the direction of Ford's +Station, to break the enemy's horse which had been collecting to the +north of Hatcher's Run. Meeting, with but little opposition, Merritt +drove this cavalry force in a northerly direction toward Scott's +Corners, while the Fifth Corps was pushed toward Sutherland's depot, +in the hope of coming in on the rear of the force that was +confronting Miles when I left him. Crawford and Merritt engaged the +enemy lightly just before night, but his main column, retreating +along the river road south of the Appomattox, had got across Namozine +Creek, and the darkness prevented our doing more than to pick up some +stragglers. The next morning the pursuit was resumed, the cavalry +again in advance, the Fifth Corps keeping up with it all the while, +and as we pressed our adversaries hundreds and hundreds of prisoners, +armed and unarmed, fell into our hands, together with many wagons and +five pieces of artillery. At Deep Creek the rearguard turned on us, +and a severe skirmish took place. Merritt, finding the enemy very +strong, was directed to await the arrival of Crook and for the rear +division of the Fifth Corps; but by the time they reached the creek, +darkness had again come to protect the Confederates, and we had to be +content with meagre results at that point. + +From the beginning it was apparent that Lee, in his retreat, was +making for Amelia Court House, where his columns north and south of +the Appomattox River could join, and where, no doubt, he expected to +meet supplies, so Crook was ordered to march early on April 4 to +strike the Danville railroad, between Jettersville and Burkeville, +and then move south along the railroad toward Jettersville, Merritt +to move toward Amelia Court House, and the Fifth Corps to +Jettersville itself. + +The Fifth Corps got to Jettersville about 5 in the afternoon, and I +immediately intrenched it across the Burkeville road with the +determination to stay there till the main army could come up, for I +hoped we could force Lee to surrender at Amelia Court House, since a +firm hold on Jettersville would cut him off from his line of retreat +toward Burkeville. + +Accompanied only by my escort--the First United States Cavalry, about +two hundred strong--I reached Jettersville some little time before +the Fifth Corps, and having nothing else at hand I at once deployed +this handful of men to cover the crossroads till the arrival of the +corps. Just as the troopers were deploying, a man on a mule, heading +for Burkeville, rode into my pickets. He was arrested, of course, +and being searched there was found in his boots this telegram in +duplicate, signed by Lee's Commissary General. + +"The army is at Amelia Court House, short of provisions. Send +300,000 rations quickly to Burkeville Junction." One copy was +addressed to the supply department at Danville, and the other to that +at Lynchburg. I surmised that the telegraph lines north of +Burkeville had been broken by Crook after the despatches were +written, which would account for their being transmitted by +messenger. There was thus revealed not only the important fact that +Lee was concentrating at Amelia Court House, but also a trustworthy +basis for estimating his troops, so I sent word to Crook to strike up +the railroad toward me, and to Merritt--who, as I have said, had +followed on the heels of the enemy--to leave Mackenzie there and +himself close in on Jettersville. Staff-officers were also +despatched to hurry up Griffin with the Fifth Corps, and his tired men +redoubled their strides. + +My troops too were hard up for rations, for in the pursuit we could +not wait for our trains, so I concluded to secure if possible these +provisions intended for Lee. To this end I directed Young to send +four of his best scouts to Burkeville Junction. There they were to +separate, two taking the railroad toward Lynchburg and two toward +Danville, and as soon as a telegraph station was reached the telegram +was to be transmitted as it had been written and the provisions thus +hurried forward. + +Although the Fifth Corps arrived at Jettersville the evening of April +4, as did also Crook's and Merritt's cavalry, yet none of the army of +the Potomac came up till about 3 o'clock the afternoon of the 5th, +the Second Corps, followed by the Sixth, joining us then. General +Meade arrived at Jettersville an hour earlier, but being ill, +requested me to put his troops in position. The Fifth Corps being +already intrenched across the Amelia Court House road facing north, I +placed the Sixth on its right and the Second on its left as they +reached the ground. + +As the enemy had been feeling us ever since morning--to learn what he +was up to I directed Crook to send Davies's brigade on a +reconnoissance to Paine's crossroads. Davies soon found out that Lee +was trying to escape by that flank, for at the crossroads he found +the Confederate trains and artillery moving rapidly westward. Having +driven away the escort, Davies succeeded in burning nearly two +hundred wagons, and brought off five pieces of artillery. Among +these wagons were some belonging to General, Lee's and to General +Fitzhugh Lee's headquarters. This work through, Davies withdrew and +rejoined Crook, who, with Smith and Gregg, was established near Flat +Creek. + +It being plain that Lee would attempt to escape as soon as his trains +were out of the way, I was most anxious to attack him when the Second +Corps began to arrive, for I felt certain that unless we did so he +would succeed in passing by our left flank, and would thus again make +our pursuit a stern-chase; but General Meade, whose plan of attack +was to advance his right flank on Amelia Court House, objected to +assailing before all his troops were up. + +I then sent despatches to General Grant, explaining what Davies had +done, and telling him that the Second Corps was arriving, and that I +wished he himself was present. I assured him of my confidence in our +capturing Lee if we properly exerted ourselves, and informed him, +finally, that I would put all my cavalry, except Mackenzie, on my +left, and that, with such a disposition of my forces, I could see no +escape for Lee. I also inclosed him this letter, which had just been +captured: + +"AMELIA C. H., April 5, 1865. + +"DEAR MAMMA: + +"Our army is ruined, I fear. We are all safe as yet. Shyron left us +sick. John Taylor is well--saw him yesterday. We are in line of +battle this morning. General Robert Lee is in the field near us. My +trust is still in the justice of our cause, and that of God. General +Hill is killed. I saw Murray a few minutes since. Bernard, Terry +said, was taken prisoner, but may yet get out. I send this by a +negro I see passing up the railroad to Mechlenburg. Love to all. + +"Your devoted son, + +"Wm. B. TAYLOR, Colonel." + + +General Grant, who on the 5th was accompanying General Ord's column +toward Burkeville Junction, did not receive this intelligence till +nearly nightfall, when within about ten miles of the Junction. He +set out for Jettersville immediately, but did not reach us till near +midnight, too late of course to do anything that night. Taking me +with him, we went over to see Meade, whom he then directed to advance +early in the morning on Amelia Court House. In this interview Grant +also stated that the orders Meade had already issued would permit +Lee's escape, and therefore must be changed, for it was not the aim +only to follow the enemy, but to get ahead of him, remarking during +the conversation that, "he had no doubt Lee was moving right then." +On this same occasion Meade expressed a desire to have in the +proposed attack all the troops of the Army of the Potomac under his +own command, and asked for the return of the Fifth Corps. I made no +objections, and it was ordered to report, to him. + +When, on the morning of the 6th, Meade advanced toward Amelia Court +House, he found, as predicted, that Lee was gone. It turned out that +the retreat began the evening of the 5th and continued all night. +Satisfied that this would be the case, I did not permit the cavalry +to participate in Meade's useless advance, but shifted it out toward +the left to the road running from Deatonsville to Rice's station, +Crook leading and Merritt close up. Before long the enemy's trains +were discovered on this road, but Crook could make but little +impression on them, they were so strongly guarded; so, leaving +Stagg's brigade and Miller's battery about three miles southwest of +Deatonsville--where the road forks, with a branch leading north +toward the Appomattox--to harass the retreating column and find a +vulnerable point, I again shifted the rest of the cavalry toward the +left, across-country, but still keeping parallel to the enemy's line +of march. + +Just after crossing Sailor's Greek, a favorable opportunity offering, +both Merritt and Crook attacked vigorously, gained the Rice's Station +road, destroyed several hundred wagons, made many prisoners, and +captured sixteen pieces of artillery. This was important, but more +valuable still was the fact that we were astride the enemy's line of +retreat, and had cut off from joining Longstreet, waiting at Rice's +Station, a corps of Confederate infantry under General Ewell, +composed of Anderson's, Kershaw's, and Custis Lee's divisions. +Stagg's brigade and Miller's battery, which, as I have said, had been +left at the forks of the Deatonsville road, had meanwhile broken in +between the rear of Ewell's column and the head of Gordon's, forcing +Gordon to abandon his march for Rice's Station, and to take the +right-hand road at the forks, on which he was pursued by General +Humphreys. + +The complete isolation of Ewell from Longstreet in his front and +Gordon in his rear led to the battle of Sailor's Creek, one of the +severest conflicts of the war, for the enemy fought with desperation +to escape capture, and we, bent on his destruction, were no less +eager and determined. The capture of Ewell, with six of his generals +and most of his troops, crowned our success, but the fight was so +overshadowed by the stirring events of the surrender three days +later, that the battle has never been accorded the prominence it +deserves. + +The small creek from which the field takes its name flows in a +northwesterly direction across the road leading from Deatonsville to +Rice's Station. By shifting to the left, Merritt gained the Rice's +Station road west of the creek, making havoc of the wagon-trains, +while Crook struck them further on and planted himself square across +the road. This blocked Ewell, who, advancing Anderson to some high +ground west of the creek, posted him behind barricades, with the +intention of making a hard fight there, while the main body should +escape through the woods in a westerly direction to roads that led to +Farmville. This was prevented, however, by Crook forming his +division, two brigades dismounted and one mounted, and at once +assaulting all along Anderson's front and overlapping his right, +while Merritt fiercely attacked to the right of Crook. The enemy +being thus held, enabled the Sixth Corps--which in the meantime I had +sent for--to come upon the ground, and Ewell, still contending with +the cavalry, found himself suddenly beset by this new danger from his +rear. To, meet it, he placed Kershaw to the right and Custis Lee to +the left of the Rice's Station road, facing them north toward and +some little distance from Sailor's Creek, supporting Kershaw with +Commander Tucker's Marine brigade. Ewell's skirmishers held the line +of Sailor's Creek, which runs through a gentle valley, the north +slope of which was cleared ground. + +By General Grant's directions the Sixth Corps had been following my +route of march since the discovery, about 9 o'clock in the morning, +that Lee had decamped from Amelia Court House. Grant had promptly +informed me of this in a note, saying, "The Sixth Corps will go in +with a vim any place you may dictate," so when I sent word to Wright +of the enemy's isolation, and asked him to hurry on with all speed, +his gallant corps came as fast as legs could carry them, he sending +to me successively Major McClellan and Colonel Franklin, of his +staff, to report his approach. + +I was well advised as to the position of the enemy through +information brought me by an intelligent young soldier, William A. +Richardson, Company "A," Second Ohio, who, in one of the cavalry +charges on Anderson, had cleared the barricades and made his way back +to my front through Ewell's line. Richardson had told me just how +the main body of the enemy was posted, so as Seymour's division +arrived I directed General Wright to put it on the right of the road, +while Wheaton's men, coming up all hot and out of breath, promptly +formed on Seymour's left. Both divisions thus aligned faced +southwest toward Sailor's Creek, and the artillery of the corps being +massed to the left and front of the Hibbon house, without waiting for +Getty's division--for I feared that if we delayed longer the enemy +might effect his escape toward Farmville--the general attack was +begun. Seymour and Wheaton, moving forward together, assailed the +enemy's front and left, and Stagg's brigade, too, which in the mean +time had been placed between Wheaton's left and Devin's right, went +at him along with them, Merritt and Crook resuming the fight from +their positions in front of Anderson. The enemy, seeing little +chance of escape, fought like a tiger at bay, but both Seymour and +Wheaton pressed him vigorously, gaining ground at all points except +just to the right of the road, where Seymour's left was checked. +Here the Confederates burst back on us in a counter-charge, surging +down almost to the creek, but the artillery, supported by Getty, who +in the mean time had come on the ground, opened on them so terribly +that this audacious and furious onset was completely broken, though +the gallant fellows fell back to their original line doggedly, and +not until after they had almost gained the creek. Ewell was now +hemmed in on every side, and all those under his immediate command +were captured. Merritt and Crook had also broken up Anderson by this +time, but he himself, and about two thousand disorganized men escaped +by making their way through the woods toward the Appomattox River +before they could be entirely enveloped. Night had fallen when the +fight was entirely over, but Devin was pushed on in pursuit for about +two miles, part of the Sixth Corps following to clinch a victory +which not only led to the annihilation of one corps of Lee's +retreating army, but obliged Longstreet to move up to Farmville, so +as to take a road north of the Appomattox River toward Lynchburg +instead of continuing toward Danville. + +At the close of the battle I sent one of my staff--Colonel Redwood +Price--to General Grant to report what had been done; that we had +taken six generals and from nine to ten thousand prisoners. On his +way Price stopped at the headquarters of General Meade, where he +learned that not the slightest intelligence of the occurrence on my +line had been received, for I not being under Meade's command, he had +paid no attention to my movements. Price gave the story of the +battle, and General Meade, realizing its importance, sent directions +immediately to General Wright to make his report of the engagement to +the headquarters of the Army of the Potomac, assuming that Wright was +operating independently of me in the face of Grant's despatch Of +2 o'clock, which said that Wright was following the cavalry and would +"go in with a vim" wherever I dictated. Wright could not do else +than comply with Meade's orders in the case, and I, being then in +ignorance of Meade's reasons for the assumption, could say nothing. +But General Grant plainly intending, and even directing, that the +corps should be under my command, remedied this phase of the matter, +when informed of what had taken place, by requiring Wright to send a +report of the battle through me. What he then did, and what his +intentions and orders were, are further confirmed by a reference to +the episode in his "Memoirs," where he gives his reasons for ordering +the Sixth Corps to abandon the move on Amelia Court House and pass to +the left of the army. On the same page he also says, referring to +the 6th of April: "The Sixth Corps now remained with the cavalry +under Sheridan's direct command until after the surrender." He +unquestionably intended all of this, but his purpose was partly +frustrated by General Meade's action next morning in assuming +direction of the movements of the corps; and before General Grant +became aware of the actual conditions the surrender was at hand. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +LINCOLN'S LACONIC DESPATCH--CAPTURING LEE'S SUPPLIES--DELIGHTED +ENGINEERS--THE CONFEDERATES' LAST EFFORT--A FLAG OF TRUCE--GENERAL +GEARY'S "LAST DITCH" ABSURDITY--MEETING OF GRANT AND LEE--THE +SURRENDER--ESTIMATE OF GENERAL GRANT. + +The first report of the battle of Sailor's Creek that General Grant +received was, as already stated, an oral message carried by Colonel +Price, of my staff. Near midnight I sent a despatch giving the names +of the generals captured. These were Ewell, Kershaw, Barton, Corse, +Dubose, and Custis Lee. In the same despatch I wrote: "If the thing +is pressed, I think that Lee will surrender." When Mr. Lincoln, at +City Point, received this word from General Grant, who was +transmitting every item of news to the President, he telegraphed +Grant the laconic message: "Let the thing be pressed." The morning of +the 7th we moved out at a very early hour, Crook's division marching +toward Farmville in direct pursuit, while Merritt and Mackenzie were +ordered to Prince Edward's Court House to anticipate any effort Lee +might make to escape through that place toward Danville since it had +been discovered that Longstreet had slipped away already from the +front of General Ord's troops at Rice's Station. Crook overtook the +main body of the Confederates at Farmville, and promptly attacked +their trains on the north side of the Appomattox with Gregg's +brigade, which was fiercely turned upon and forced to re-cross the +river with the loss of a number of prisoner's, among them Gregg +himself. When Crook sent word of this fight, it was clear that Lee +had abandoned all effort to escape to the southwest by way of +Danville. Lynchburg was undoubtedly his objective point now; so, +resolving to throw my cavalry again across his path, and hold him +till the infantry could overtake him, I directed everything on +Appomattox depot, recalling Crook the night of the 7th to Prospect +Station, while Merritt camped at Buffalo Creek, and Mackenzie made a +reconnoissance along the Lynchburg railroad. + +At break of day, April 8, Merritt and Mackenzie united with Crook at +Prospect Station, and the cavalry all moved then toward Appomattox +depot. Hardly had it started when one of the scouts--Sergeant White +--informed me that there were four trains of cars at the depot loaded +with supplies for Lee's army; these had been sent from Lynchburg, in +compliance with the telegram of Lee's commissary-general, which +message, it will be remembered, was captured and transmitted to +Lynchburg by two of Young's scouts on the 4th. Sergeant White, who +had been on the lookout for the trains ever since sending the +despatch, found them several miles west of Appomattox depot feeling +their way along, in ignorance of Lee's exact position. As he had the +original despatch with him, and took pains to dwell upon the pitiable +condition of Lee's army, he had little difficulty in persuading the +men in charge of the trains to bring them east of Appomattox Station, +but fearing that the true state of affairs would be learned before +long, and the trains be returned to Lynchburg, he was painfully +anxious to have them cut off by breaking the track west of the +station. + +The intelligence as to the trains was immediately despatched to +Crook, and I pushed on to join him with Merritt's command. Custer +having the advance, moved rapidly, and on nearing the station +detailed two regiments to make a detour southward to strike the +railroad some distance beyond and break the track. These regiments +set off at a gallop, and in short order broke up the railroad enough +to prevent the escape of the trains, Custer meanwhile taking +possession of the station, but none too soon, for almost at the +moment he did so the advance-guard of Lee's army appeared, bent on +securing the trains. Without halting to look after the cars further, +Custer attacked this advance-guard and had a spirited fight, in which +he drove the Confederates away from the station, captured twenty-five +pieces of artillery, a hospital train, and a large park of wagons, +which, in the hope that they would reach Lynchburg next day, were +being pushed ahead of Lee's main body. + +Devin coming up a little before dusk, was put in on the right of +Custer, and one of Crook's brigades was sent to our left and the +other two held in reserve. I then forced the enemy back on the +Appomattox road to the vicinity of the Court House, and that the +Confederates might have no rest, gave orders to continue the +skirmishing throughout the night. Meanwhile the captured trains had +been taken charge of by locomotive engineers, soldiers of the +command, who were delighted evidently to get back at their old +calling. They amused themselves by running the trains to and fro, +creating much confusion, and keeping up such an unearthly screeching +with the whistles that I was on the point of ordering the cars +burned. They finally wearied of their fun, however, and ran the +trains off to the east toward General Ord's column. + +The night of the 8th I made my headquarters at a little frame house +just south of the station. I did not sleep at all, nor did anybody +else, the entire command being up all night long; indeed, there had +been little rest in the cavalry for the past eight days. The +necessity of getting Ord's column up was so obvious now that +staff-officer after staff-officer was sent to him and to General Grant +requesting that the infantry be pushed on, for if it could get to the +front, all knew that the rebellion would be ended on the morrow. +Merritt, Crook, Custer, and Devin were present at frequent intervals +during the night, and everybody was overjoyed at the prospect that +our weary work was about to end so happily. Before sun-up General +Ord arrived, and informed me of the approach of his column, it having +been marching the whole night. As he ranked me, of course I could +give him no orders, so after a hasty consultation as to where his +troops should be placed we separated, I riding to the front to +overlook my line near Appomattox Court House, while he went back to +urge along his weary troops. + +The night before General Lee had held a council with his principal +generals, when it was arranged that in the morning General Gordon +should undertake to break through my cavalry, and when I neared my +troops this movement was beginning, a heavy line of infantry bearing +down on us from the direction of the village. In front of Crook and +Mackenzie firing had already begun, so riding to a slight elevation +where a good view of the Confederates could be had, I there came to +the conclusion that it would be unwise to offer more resistance than +that necessary to give Ord time to form, so I directed Merritt to +fall back, and in retiring to shift Devin and Custer to the right so +as to make room for Ord, now in the woods to my rear. Crook, who +with his own and Mackenzie's divisions was on my extreme left +covering some by-roads, was ordered to hold his ground as long as +practicable without sacrificing his men, and, if forced to retire, to +contest with obstinacy the enemy's advance. + +As already stated, I could not direct General Ord's course, he being +my senior, but hastily galloping back to where he was, at the edge of +the timber, I explained to him what was taking place at the front. +Merritt's withdrawal inspired the Confederates, who forthwith began +to press Crook, their line of battle advancing with confidence till +it reached the crest whence I had reconnoitred them. From this +ground they could see Ord's men emerging from the woods, and the +hopelessness of a further attack being plain, the gray lines +instinctively halted, and then began to retire toward a ridge +immediately fronting Appomattox Court House, while Ord, joined on his +right by the Fifth Corps, advanced on them over the ground that +Merritt had abandoned. + +I now directed my steps toward Merritt, who, having mounted his +troopers, had moved them off to the right, and by the time I reached +his headquarters flag he was ready for work, so a move on the enemy's +left was ordered, and every guidon was bent to the front. As the +cavalry marched along parallel with the Confederate line, and in +toward its left, a heavy fire of artillery opened on us, but this +could not check us at such a time, and we soon reached some high +ground about half a mile from the Court House, and from here I could +see in the low valley beyond the village the bivouac undoubtedly of +Lee's army. The troops did not seem to be disposed in battle order, +but on the other side of the bivouac was a line of battle--a heavy +rear-guard--confronting, presumably, General Meade. + +I decided to attack at once, and formations were ordered at a trot +for a charge by Custer's and Devin's divisions down the slope leading +to the camps. Custer was soon ready, but Devin's division being in +rear its formation took longer, since he had to shift further to the +right; Devin's preparations were, therefore, but partially completed +when an aide-decamp galloped up to with the word from Custer, "Lee +has surrendered; do not charge; the white flag is up." The enemy +perceiving that Custer was forming for attack, had sent the flag out +to his front and stopped the charge just in time. I at once sent +word of the truce to General Ord, and hearing nothing more from +Custer himself, I supposed that he had gone down to the Court House +to join a mounted group of Confederates that I could see near there, +so I, too, went toward them, galloping down a narrow ridge, staff and +orderlies following; but we had not got half way to the Court House +when, from a skirt of timber to our right, not more than three +hundred yards distant, a musketry fire was opened on us. This halted +us, when, waving my hat, I called out to the firing party that we +were under a truce, and they were violating it. This did not stop +them, however, so we hastily took shelter in a ravine so situated as +to throw a ridge between us and the danger. + +We traveled in safety down this depression to its mouth, and thence +by a gentle ascent approached the Court House. I was in advance, +followed by a sergeant carrying my battleflag. When I got within +about a hundred and fifty yards of the enemy's line, which was +immediately in front of the Court House, some of the Confederates +leveled their pieces at us, and I again halted. Their officers kept +their men from firing, however, but meanwhile a single-handed contest +had begun behind me, for on looking back I heard a Confederate +soldier demanding my battle-flag from the color-bearer, thinking, no +doubt, that we were coming in as prisoners. The sergeant had drawn +his sabre and was about to cut the man down, but at a word from me he +desisted and carried the flag back to my staff, his assailant quickly +realizing that the boot was on the other leg. + +These incidents determined me to remain where I was till the return +of a staff-officer whom I had sent over to demand an explanation from +the group of Confederates for which I had been heading. He came back +in a few minutes with apologies for what had occurred, and informed +me that General Gordon and General Wilcox were the superior officers +in the group. As they wished me to join them I rode up with my +staff, but we had hardly met when in front of Merritt firing began. +At the sound I turned to General Gordon, who seemed embarrassed by +the occurrence, and remarked: "General, your men fired on me as I was +coming over here, and undoubtedly they are treating Merritt and +Custer the same way. We might as well let them fight it out." He +replied, "There must be some mistake." I then asked, "Why not send a +staff-officer and have your people cease firing; they are violating +the flag." He answered, "I have no staff-officer to send." Whereupon +I said that I would let him have one of mine, and calling for +Lieutenant Vanderbilt Allen, I directed him to carry General Gordon's +orders to General Geary, commanding a small brigade of South Carolina +cavalry, to discontinue firing. Allen dashed off with the message +and soon delivered it, but was made a prisoner, Geary saying, "I do +not care for white flags: South Carolinians never surrender...." By +this time Merritt's patience being exhausted, he ordered an attack, +and this in short order put an end to General Geary's "last ditch" +absurdity, and extricated Allen from his predicament. + +When quiet was restored Gordon remarked: "General Lee asks for a +suspension of hostilities pending the negotiations which he is having +with General Grant." I rejoined: "I have been constantly informed of +the progress of the negotiations, and think it singular that while +such discussions are going on, General Lee should have continued his +march and attempted to break through my lines this morning. I will +entertain no terms except that General Lee shall surrender to General +Grant on his arrival here. If these terms are not accepted we will +renew hostilities." Gordon replied: "General Lee's army is +exhausted. There is no doubt of his surrender to General Grant." + +It was then that General Ord joined us, and after shaking hands all +around, I related the situation to him, and Gordon went away agreeing +to meet us again in half an hour. When the time was up he came back +accompanied by General Longstreet, who brought with him a despatch, +the duplicate of one that had been sent General Grant through General +Meade's lines back on the road over which Lee had been retreating. + +General Longstreet renewed the assurances that already had been given +by Gordon, and I sent Colonel Newhall with the despatch to find +General Grant and bring him to the front. When Newhall started, +everything on our side of the Appomattox Court House was quiet, for +inevitable surrender was at hand, but Longstreet feared that Meade, +in ignorance of the new conditions on my front might attack the +Confederate rearguard. To prevent this I offered to send Colonel J. +W. Forsyth through the enemy's lines to let Meade know of my +agreement, for he too was suspicious that by a renewed correspondence +Lee was endeavoring to gain time for escape. My offer being +accepted, Forsyth set out accompanied by Colonel Fairfax, of +Longstreet's staff, and had no difficulty in accomplishing his +mission. + +About five or six miles from Appomattox, on the road toward Prospect +Station near its intersection with the Walker's Church road, my +adjutant-general, Colonel Newhall, met General Grant, he having +started from north of the Appomattox River for my front the morning +of April 9, in consequence of the following despatches which had been +sent him the night before, after we had captured Appomattox Station +and established a line intercepting Lee: + +"CAVALRY HEADQUARTERS, April 8, 1865--9:20 P. M. + +"LIEUTENANT-GENERAL U. S. GRANT, +"Commanding Armies of the U. S. + +"General: I marched early this morning from Buffalo Creek and +Prospect Station on Appomattox Station, where my scouts had reported +trains of cars with supplies for Lee's army. A short time before +dark General Custer, who had the advance, made a dash at the station, +capturing four trains of supplies with locomotives. One of the +trains was burned and the others were run back toward Farmville for +security. Custer then pushed on toward Appomattox Court House, +driving the enemy--who kept up a heavy fire of artillery--charging +them repeatedly and capturing, as far as reported, twenty-five pieces +of artillery and a number of prisoners and wagons. The First Cavalry +Division supported him on the right. A reconnoissance sent across +the Appomattox reports the enemy moving on the Cumberland road to +Appomattox Station, where they expect to get supplies. Custer is +still pushing on. If General Gibbon and the Fifth Corps can get up +to-night, we will perhaps finish the job in the morning. I do not +think Lee means to surrender until compelled to do so. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + + +"HEADQUARTERS CAVALRY, April 8, 1865--9:40 p.m. + +"LIEUTENANT-GENERAL U. S. GRANT. +"Commanding Armies U. S. + +"GENERAL: Since writing the accompanying despatch, General Custer +reports that his command has captured in all thirty-five pieces of +artillery, one thousand prisoners--including one general officer--and +from one hundred and fifty to two hundred wagons. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + +In attempting to conduct the lieutenant-general and staff back by a +short route, Newhall lost his bearings for a time, inclining in +toward the enemy's lines too far, but regained the proper direction +without serious loss of time. General Grant arrived about 1 o'clock +in the afternoon, Ord and I, dismounted, meeting him at the edge of +the town, or crossroads, for it was little more. He remaining +mounted, spoke first to me, saying simply, + +"How are you, Sheridan?" I assured him with thanks that I was +"first-rate," when, pointing toward the village, he asked, "Is +General Lee up there?" and I replied: "There is his army down in that +valley, and he himself is over in that house (designating McLean's +house) waiting to surrender to you." The General then said, "Come, +let us go over," this last remark being addressed to both Ord and me. +We two then mounted and joined him, while our staff-officers +followed, intermingling with those of the general-in-chief as the +cavalcade took its way to McLean's house near by, and where General +Lee had arrived some time before, in consequence of a message from +General Grant consenting to the interview asked for by Lee through +Meade's front that morning--the consent having been carried by +Colonel Babcock. + +When I entered McLean's house General Lee was standing, as was also +his military secretary, Colonel Marshall, his only staff-officer +present. General Lee was dressed in a new uniform and wore a +handsome sword. His tall, commanding form thus set off contrasted +strongly with the short figure of General Grant, clothed as he was in +a soiled suit, without sword or other insignia of his position except +a pair of dingy shoulder-straps. After being presented, Ord and I, +and nearly all of General Grant's staff, withdrew to await the +agreement as to terms, and in a little while Colonel Babcock came to +the door and said, "The surrender had been made; you can come in +again." + +When we re-entered General Grant was writing; and General Lee, having +in his hand two despatches, which I that morning requested might be +returned, as I had no copies of them, addressed me with the remark: +"I am sorry. It is probable that my cavalry at that point of the +line did not fully understand the agreement." These despatches had +been sent in the forenoon, after the fighting had been stopped, +notifying General Lee that some of his cavalry in front of Crook was +violating the suspension of hostilities by withdrawing. About +3 o'clock in the afternoon the terms of surrender were written out +and accepted, and General Lee left the house, as he departed +cordially shaking hands with General Grant. A moment later he +mounted his chunky gray horse, and lifting his hat as he passed out +of the yard, rode off toward his army, his arrival there being +announced to us by cheering, which, as it progressed, varying in +loudness, told he was riding through the bivouac of the Army of +Northern Virginia. + +The surrender of General Lee practically ended the war of the +rebellion. For four years his army had been the main-stay of the +Confederacy; and the marked ability with which he directed its +operations is evidenced both by his frequent successes and the length +of time he kept up the contest. Indeed, it may be said that till +General Grant was matched against him, he never met an opponent he +did not vanquish, for while it is true that defeat was inflicted on +the Confederates at Antietam and Gettysburg, yet the fruits of these +victories were not gathered, for after each of these battles Lee was +left unmolested till he had a chance to recuperate. + +The assignment of General Grant to the command of the Union armies in +the winter of 1863-64 gave presage of success from the start, for his +eminent abilities had already been proved, and besides, he was a +tower of strength to the Government, because he had the confidence of +the people. They knew that henceforth systematic direction would be +given to our armies in every section of the vast territory over which +active operations were being prosecuted, and further, that this +coherence, this harmony of plan, was the one thing needed to end the +war, for in the three preceding years there had been illustrated most +lamentable effects of the absence of system. From the moment he set +our armies in motion simultaneously, in the spring of 1864, it could +be seen that we should be victorious ultimately, for though on +different lines we were checked now and then, yet we were harassing +the Confederacy at so many vital points that plainly it must yield to +our blows. Against Lee's army, the forefront of the Confederacy, +Grant pitted himself; and it may be said that the Confederate +commander was now, for the first time, overmatched, for against all +his devices--the products of a mind fertile in defense--General Grant +brought to bear not only the wealth of expedient which had hitherto +distinguished him, but also an imperturbable tenacity, particularly +in the Wilderness and on the march to the James, without which the +almost insurmountable obstacles of that campaign could not have been +overcome. During it and in the siege of Petersburg he met with many +disappointments--on several occasions the shortcomings of generals, +when at the point of success, leading to wretched failures. But so +far as he was concerned, the only apparent effect of these +discomfitures was to make him all the more determined to discharge +successfully the stupendous trust committed to his care, and to bring +into play the manifold resources of his well ordered military mind. +He guided every subordinate then, and in the last days of the +rebellion, with a fund of common sense and superiority of intellect, +which have left an impress so distinct as to exhibit his great +personality. When his military history is analyzed after the lapse +of years, it will show, even more clearly than now, that during these +as well as in his previous campaigns he was the steadfast Centre +about and on which everything else turned. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +ORDERED TO GREENSBORO', N. C.--MARCH TO THE DAN RIVER--ASSIGNED TO +THE COMMAND WEST OF THE MISSISSIPPI--LEAVING WASHINGTON--FLIGHT OF +GENERAL EARLY--MAXIMILIAN--MAKING DEMONSTRATIONS ON THE UPPER RIO +GRANDE--CONFEDERATES JOIN MAXIMILIAN--THE FRENCH INVASION OF MEXICO +AND ITS RELATIONS TO THE REBELLION--ASSISTING THE LIBERALS +--RESTORATION OF THE REPUBLIC. + +The surrender at Appomattox put a stop to all military operations on +the part of General Grant's forces, and the morning of April 10 my +cavalry began its march to Petersburg, the men anticipating that they +would soon be mustered out and returned to their homes. At Nottoway +Court House I heard of the assassination of the President. The first +news came to us the night after the dastardly deed, the telegraph +operator having taken it from the wires while in transmission to +General Meade. The despatch ran that Mr. Lincoln had been, shot at +10 o'clock that morning at Willard's Hotel, but as I could conceive +of nothing to take the President there I set the story down as a +canard, and went to bed without giving it further thought. Next +morning, however, an official telegram confirmed the fact of the +assassination, though eliminating the distorted circumstances that +had been communicated the night before. + +When we reached Petersburg my column was halted, and instructions +given me to march the cavalry and the Sixth Corps to Greensboro', +North Carolina, for the purpose of aiding General Sherman (the +surrender of General Johnston having not yet been effected), so I +made the necessary preparations and moved on the 24th of April, +arriving at South Boston, on the Dan River, the 28th, the Sixth Corps +having reached Danville meanwhile. At South Boston I received a +despatch from General Halleck, who immediately after Lee's surrender +had been assigned to command at Richmond, informing me that General +Johnston had been brought to terms. The necessity for going farther +south being thus obviated we retraced our steps to Petersburg, from +which place I proceeded by steamer to Washington, leaving, the +cavalry to be marched thither by easy stages. + +The day after my arrival in Washington an important order was sent +me, accompanied by the following letter of instructions, transferring +me to a new field of operations: + + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES. +"Washington, D. C., May 17, 1865. + +"GENERAL: Under the orders relieving you from the command of the +Middle Military Division and assigning you to command west of the +Mississippi, you will proceed without delay to the West to arrange +all preliminaries for your new field of duties. + +"Your duty is to restore Texas, and that part of Louisiana held by +the enemy, to the Union in the shortest practicable time, in a way +most effectual for securing permanent peace. + +"To do this, you will be given all the troops that can be spared +by Major-General Canby, probably twenty-five thousand men of +all arms; the troops with Major-General J. J. Reynolds, in +Arkansas, say twelve thousand, Reynolds to command; the Fourth +Army Corps, now at Nashville, Tennessee, awaiting orders; and +the Twenty-Fifth Army Corps, now at City Point, Virginia, ready +to embark. + +"I do not wish to trammel you with instructions; I will state, +however, that if Smith holds out, without even an ostensible +government to receive orders from or to report to, he and his men are +not entitled to the considerations due to an acknowledged +belligerent. Theirs are the conditions of outlaws, making war +against the only Government having an existence over the territory +where war is now being waged. + +"You may notify the rebel commander west of the Mississippi--holding +intercourse with him in person, or through such officers of the rank +of major-general as you may select--that he will be allowed to +surrender all his forces on the same terms as were accorded to Lee +and Johnston. If he accedes, proceed to garrison the Red River as +high up as Shreveport, the seaboard at Galveston, Malagorda Bay, +Corpus Christi, and mouth of the Rio Grande. + +"Place a strong force on the Rio Grande, holding it at least to a +point opposite Camargo, and above that if supplies can be procured. + +"In case of an active campaign (a hostile one) I think a heavy force +should be put on the Rio Grande as a first preliminary. Troops for +this might be started at once. The Twenty-Fifth Corps is now +available, and to it should be added a force of white troops, say +those now under Major-General Steele. + +"To be clear on this last point, I think the Rio Grande should be +strongly held, whether the forces in Texas surrender or not, and that +no time should be lost in getting troops there. If war is to be +made, they will be in the right place; if Kirby Smith surrenders, +they will be on the line which is to be strongly garrisoned. + +"Should any force be necessary other than those designated, they can +be had by calling for them on Army Headquarters. + +"U. S. GRANT, +"Lieutenant-General. + +"To MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN, +"United States Army." + + +On receipt of these instructions I called at once on General Grant, +to see if they were to be considered so pressing as to preclude my +remaining in Washington till after the Grand Review, which was fixed +for the 23d and 24th of May, for naturally I had a strong desire to +head my command on that great occasion. But the General told me that +it was absolutely necessary to go at once to force the surrender of +the Confederates under Kirby Smith. He also told me that the States +lately in rebellion would be embraced in two or three military +departments, the commanders of which would control civil affairs +until Congress took action about restoring them to the Union, since +that course would not only be economical and simple, but would give +the Southern people confidence, and encourage them to go to work, +instead of distracting them with politics. + +At this same interview he informed me that there was an additional +motive in sending me to the new command, a motive not explained by +the instructions themselves, and went on to say that, as a matter of +fact, he looked upon the invasion of Mexico by Maximilian as a part +of the rebellion itself, because of the encouragement that invasion +had received from the Confederacy, and that our success in putting +down secession would never be complete till the French and Austrian +invaders were compelled to quit the territory of our sister republic. +With regard to this matter, though, he said it would be necessary for +me to act with great circumspection, since the Secretary of State, +Mr. Seward, was much opposed to the use of our troops along the +border in any active way that would be likely to involve us in a war +with European powers. + +Under the circumstances, my disappointment at not being permitted to +participate in the review had to be submitted to, and I left +Washington without an opportunity of seeing again in a body the men +who, while under my command, had gone through so many trials and +unremittingly pursued and, assailed the enemy, from the beginning of +the campaign of 1864 till the white flag came into their hands at +Appomattox Court House. + +I went first to St. Louis, and there took the steamboat for New +Orleans, and when near the mouth of the Red River received word from +General Canby that Kirby Smith had surrendered under terms similar to +those accorded Lee and Johnston. But the surrender was not carried +out in good faith, particularly by the Texas troops, though this I +did not learn till some little time afterward when I was informed +that they had marched off to the interior of the State in several +organized bodies, carrying with them their camp equipage, arms, +ammunition, and even some artillery, with the ultimate purpose of +going to Mexico. In consequence of this, and also because of the +desire of the Government to make a strong showing of force in Texas, +I decided to traverse the State with two columns of cavalry, +directing one to San Antonio under Merritt, the other to Houston +under Custer. Both commands were to start from the Red River +--Shreveport and Alexandria--being the respective initial points--and +in organizing the columns, to the mounted force already on the Red +River were added several regiments of cavalry from the east bank of +the Mississippi, and in a singular way one of these fell upon the +trail of my old antagonist, General Early. While crossing the river +somewhere below Vicksburg some of the men noticed a suspicious +looking party being ferried over in a rowboat, behind which two +horses were swimming in tow. Chase was given, and the horses, being +abandoned by the party, fell into the hands of our troopers, who, +however, failed to capture or identify the people in the boat. As +subsequently ascertained, the men were companions of Early, who was +already across the Mississippi, hidden in the woods, on his way with +two or three of these followers to join the Confederates in Texas, +not having heard of Kirby Smith's surrender. A week or two later I +received a letter from Early describing the affair, and the capture +of the horses, for which he claimed pay, on the ground that they were +private property, because he had taken them in battle. The letter +also said that any further pursuit of Early would be useless, as he +"expected to be on the deep blue sea" by the time his communication +reached me. The unfortunate man was fleeing from imaginary dangers, +however, for striking his trail was purely accidental, and no effort +whatever was being made to arrest him personally. Had this been +especially desired it might have been accomplished very readily just +after Lee's surrender, for it was an open secret that Early was then +not far away, pretty badly disabled with rheumatism. + +By the time the two columns were ready to set out for San Antonio and +Houston, General Frank Herron,--with one division of the Thirteenth +Corps, occupied Galveston, and another division under General Fred +Steele had gone to Brazos Santiago, to hold Brownsville and the line +of the Rio Grande, the object being to prevent, as far as possible, +the escaping Confederates from joining Maximilian. With this purpose +in view, and not forgetting Grant's conviction that the French +invasion of Mexico was linked with the rebellion, I asked for an +increase of force to send troops into Texas in fact, to concentrate +at available points in the State an army strong enough to move +against the invaders of Mexico if occasion demanded. The Fourth and +Twenty-fifth army corps being ordered to report to me, accordingly, I +sent the Fourth Corps to Victoria and San Antonio, and the bulk of +the Twenty-fifth to Brownsville. Then came the feeding and caring +for all these troops--a difficult matter--for those at Victoria and +San Antonio had to be provisioned overland from Indianola across the +"hog-wallow prairie," while the supplies for the forces at +Brownsville and along the Rio Grande must come by way of Brazos +Santiago, from which point I was obliged to construct, with the labor +of the men, a railroad to Clarksville, a distance of about eighteen +miles. + +The latter part of June I repaired to Brownsville myself to impress +the Imperialists, as much as possible, with the idea that we intended +hostilities, and took along my chief of scouts--Major Young--and four +of his most trusty men, whom I had had sent from Washington. From +Brownsville I despatched all these men to important points in +northern Mexico, to glean information regarding the movements of the +Imperial forces, and also to gather intelligence about the +ex-Confederates who had crossed the Rio Grande. On information +furnished by these scouts, I caused General Steele to make +demonstrations all along the lower Rio Grande, and at the same time +demanded the return of certain munitions of war that had been turned +over by ex-Confederates to the Imperial General (Mejia) commanding at +Matamoras. These demands, backed up as they were by such a +formidable show of force created much agitation and demoralization +among the Imperial troops, and measures looking to the abandonment of +northern Mexico were forthwith adopted by those in authority--a +policy that would have resulted in the speedy evacuation of the +entire country by Maximilian, had not our Government weakened; +contenting itself with a few pieces of the contraband artillery +varnished over with the Imperial apologies. A golden opportunity was +lost, for we had ample excuse for crossing the boundary, but Mr. +Seward being, as I have already stated, unalterably opposed to any +act likely to involve us in war, insisted on his course of +negotiation with Napoleon. + +As the summer wore away, Maximilian, under Mr. Seward's policy, +gained in strength till finally all the accessible sections of Mexico +were in his possession, and the Republic under President Juarez +almost succumbed. Growing impatient at this, in the latter part of +September I decided to try again what virtue there might be in a +hostile demonstration, and selected the upper Rio Grande for the +scene of my attempt. Merritt's cavalry and the Fourth Corps still +being at San Antonio, I went to that place and reviewed these troops, +and having prepared them with some ostentation for a campaign, of +course it was bruited about that we were going to invade Mexico. +Then, escorted by a regiment of horse I proceeded hastily to Fort +Duncan, on the Rio Grande just opposite the Mexican town of Piedras +Negras. Here I opened communication with President Juarez, through +one of his staff, taking care not to do this in the dark, and the +news, spreading like wildfire, the greatest significance was ascribed +to my action, it being reported most positively and with many +specific details that I was only awaiting the arrival of the troops, +then under marching orders at San Antonio, to cross the Rio Grande in +behalf of the Liberal cause. + +Ample corroboration of the reports then circulated was found in my +inquiries regarding the quantity of forage we could depend upon +getting in Mexico, our arrangements for its purchase, and my sending +a pontoon train to Brownsville, together with which was cited the +renewed activity of the troops along the lower Rio Grande. These +reports and demonstrations resulted in alarming the Imperialists so +much that they withdrew the French and Austrian soldiers from +Matamoras, and practically abandoned the whole of northern Mexico as +far down as Monterey, with the exception of Matamoras, where General +Mejia continued to hang on with a garrison of renegade Mexicans. + +The abandonment of so much territory in northern Mexico encouraged +General Escobedo and other Liberal leaders to such a degree that they +collected a considerable army of their followers at Comargo, Mier, +and other points. At the same time that unknown quantity, Cortinas, +suspended his free-booting for the nonce, and stoutly harassing +Matamoras, succeeded in keeping its Imperial garrison within the +fortifications. Thus countenanced and stimulated, and largely +supplied with arms and ammunition, which we left at convenient places +on our side of the river to fall into their hands, the Liberals, +under General Escobedo--a man of much force of character--were +enabled in northern Mexico to place the affairs of the Republic on a +substantial basis. + +But in the midst of what bade fair to cause a final withdrawal of the +foreigners, we were again checked by our Government, as a result of +representations of the French Minister at Washington. In October, he +wrote to Mr. Seward that the United States troops on the Rio Grande +were acting "in exact opposition to the repeated assurances Your +Excellency has given me concerning the desire of the Cabinet at +Washington to preserve the most strict neutrality in the events now +taking place in Mexico," and followed this statement with an emphatic +protest against our course. Without any investigation whatever by +our State Department, this letter of the French Minister was +transmitted to me, accompanied by directions to preserve a strict +neutrality; so, of course, we were again debarred from anything like +active sympathy. + +After this, it required the patience of Job to abide the slow and +poky methods of our State Department, and, in truth, it was often +very difficult to restrain officers and men from crossing the Rio +Grande with hostile purpose. Within the knowledge of my troops, +there had gone on formerly the transfer of organized bodies of +ex-Confederates to Mexico, in aid of the Imperialists, and at this +period it was known that there was in preparation an immigration +scheme having in view the colonizing, at Cordova and one or two other +places, of all the discontented elements of the defunct Confederacy +--Generals Price, Magruder, Maury, and other high personages being +promoters of the enterprise, which Maximilian took to readily. He +saw in it the possibilities of a staunch support to his throne, and +therefore not only sanctioned the project, but encouraged it with +large grants of land, inspirited the promoters with titles of +nobility, and, in addition, instituted a system of peonage, expecting +that the silver hook thus baited would be largely swallowed by the +Southern people. + +The announcement of the scheme was followed by the appointment of +commissioners in each of the Southern States to send out emigrants; +but before any were deluded into starting, I made to General Grant a +report of what was going on, with the recommendation that measures be +taken, through our State Department, looking to the suppression of +the colony; but, as usual, nothing could be effected through that +channel; so, as an alternative, I published, in April, 1866, by +authority of General Grant, an order prohibiting the embarkation from +ports in Louisiana and Texas, for ports in Mexico, of any person +without a permit from my headquarters. This dampened the ardor of +everybody in the Gulf States who had planned to go to Mexico; and +although the projectors of the Cordova Colonization Scheme--the name +by which it was known--secured a few innocents from other districts, +yet this set-back led ultimately to failure. + +Among the Liberal leaders along the Rio Grande during this period +there sprang up many factional differences from various causes, some +personal, others political, and some, I regret to say, from downright +moral obliquity--as, for example, those between Cortinas and Canales +--who, though generally hostile to the Imperialists, were freebooters +enough to take a shy at each other frequently, and now and then even +to join forces against Escobedo, unless we prevented them by coaxing +or threats. A general who could unite these several factions was +therefore greatly needed, and on my return to New Orleans I so +telegraphed General Grant, and he, thinking General Caravajal (then +in Washington seeking aid for the Republic) would answer the purpose, +persuaded him to report to me in New Orleans. Caravajal promptly +appeared, but he did not impress me very favorably. He was old and +cranky, yet, as he seemed anxious to do his best, I sent him over to +Brownsville, with credentials, authorizing him to cross into Mexico, +and followed him myself by the next boat. When I arrived in +Brownsville, matters in Matamoras had already reached a crisis. +General Mejia, feeling keenly the moral support we were giving the +Liberals, and hard pressed by the harassing attacks of Cortinas and +Canales, had abandoned the place, and Caravajal, because of +his credentials from our side, was in command, much to the +dissatisfaction of both those chiefs whose differences it was +intended he should reconcile. + +The day after I got to Brownsville I visited Matamoras, and had a +long interview with Caravajal. The outcome of this meeting was, on +my part, a stronger conviction than ever that he was unsuitable, and +I feared that either Canales or Cortinas would get possession of the +city. Caravajal made too many professions of what he would do--in +short, bragged too much--but as there was no help for the situation, +I made the best of it by trying to smooth down the ruffled feathers +of Canales and Cortinas. In my interview with Caravajal I +recommended Major Young as a confidential man, whom he could rely +upon as a "go-between" for communicating with our people at +Brownsville, and whom he could trust to keep him informed of the +affairs of his own country as well. + +A day or two afterward I recrossed the Gulf to New Orleans, and then, +being called from my headquarters to the interior of Texas, a +fortnight passed before I heard anything from Brownsville. In the +meanwhile Major Young had come to New Orleans, and organized there a +band of men to act as a body-guard for Caravajal, the old wretch +having induced him to accept the proposition by representing that it +had my concurrence. I at once condemned the whole business, but +Young, having been furnished with seven thousand dollars to recruit +the men and buy their arms, had already secured both, and was so +deeply involved in the transaction, he said, that he could not +withdraw without dishonor, and with tears in his eyes he besought me +to help him. He told me he had entered upon the adventure in the +firm belief that I would countenance it; that the men and their +equipment were on his hands; that he must make good his word at all +hazards; and that while I need not approve, yet I must go far enough +to consent to the departure of the men, and to loan him the money +necessary to provision his party and hire a schooner to carry them to +Brazos. It was hard in deed to resist the appeals of this man, who +had served me so long and so well, and the result of his pleading was +that I gave him permission to sail, and also loaned him the sum asked +for; but I have never ceased to regret my consent, for misfortune +fell upon the enterprise almost from its inception. + +By the time the party got across the Gulf and over to Brownsville, +Caravajal had been deposed by Canales, and the latter would not +accept their services. This left Young with about fifty men to whom +he was accountable, and as he had no money to procure them +subsistence, they were in a bad fix. The only thing left to do was +to tender their services to General Escobedo, and with this in view +the party set out to reach the General's camp, marching up the Rio +Grande on the American side, intending to cross near Ringgold Bar +racks. In advance of them, however, had spread far and wide the +tidings of who they were, what they proposed to do, and where they +were going, and before they could cross into Mexico they were +attacked by a party of ex-Confederates and renegade Mexican +rancheros. Being on American soil, Young forbade his men to return +the fire, and bent all his efforts to getting them over the river; +but in this attempt they were broken up, and became completely +demoralized. A number of the men were drowned while swimming the +river, Young himself was shot and killed, a few were captured, and +those who escaped--about twenty in all--finally joined Escobedo, but +in such a plight as to be of little use. With this distressing +affair came to an end pretty much all open participation of American +sympathizers with the Liberal cause, but the moral support afforded +by the presence of our forces continued, and this was frequently +supplemented with material aid in the shape of munitions of war, +which we liberally supplied, though constrained to do so by the most +secret methods. + +The term of office of Juarez as President of the Mexican Republic +expired in December, 1865, but to meet existing exigencies he had +continued himself in office by proclamation, a course rendered +necessary by the fact that no elections could be held on account of +the Imperial occupation of most of the country. The official who, by +the Mexican Constitution, is designated for the succession in such an +emergency, is the President of the Supreme Court, and the person then +eligible under this provision was General Ortega, but in the interest +of the Imperialists he had absented himself from Mexico, hence the +patriotic course of Juarez in continuing himself at the head of +affairs was a necessity of the situation. This action of the +President gave the Imperialists little concern at first, but with the +revival of the Liberal cause they availed themselves of every means +to divide its supporters, and Ortega, who had been lying low in the +United States, now came forward to claim the Presidency. Though +ridiculously late for such a step, his first act was to issue a +manifesto protesting against the assumption of the executive +authority by Juarez. The protest had little effect, however, and his +next proceeding was to come to New Orleans, get into correspondence +with other disaffected Mexicans, and thus perfect his plans. When he +thought his intrigue ripe enough for action, he sailed for Brazos, +intending to cross the Rio Grande and assert his claims with arms. +While he was scheming in New Orleans, however, I had learned what he +was up to, and in advance of his departure had sent instructions to +have him arrested on American soil. Colonel Sedgwick, commanding at +Brownsville, was now temporary master of Matamoras also, by reason of +having stationed some American troops there for the protection of +neutral merchants, so when Ortega appeared at Brazos, Sedgwick +quietly arrested him and held him till the city of Matamoras was +turned over to General Escobedo, the authorized representative of +Juarez; then Escobedo took charge, of Ortega, and with ease prevented +his further machinations. + +During the winter and spring of 1866 we continued covertly supplying +arms and ammunition to the Liberals--sending as many as 30,000 +muskets from Baton Rouge Arsenal alone--and by mid-summer Juarez, +having organized a pretty good sized army, was in possession of the +whole line of the Rio Grande, and, in fact, of nearly the whole of +Mexico down to San Louis Potosi. Then thick and fast came rumors +pointing to the tottering condition of Maximilian's Empire-first, +that Orizaba and Vera Cruz were being fortified; then, that the +French were to be withdrawn; and later came the intelligence that the +Empress Carlotta had gone home to beg assistance from Napoleon, the +author of all of her husband's troubles. But the situation forced +Napoleon to turn a deaf ear to Carlotta's prayers. The brokenhearted +woman besought him on her knees, but his fear of losing an army made +all pleadings vain. In fact, as I ascertained by the following +cablegram which came into my hands, Napoleon's instructions for the +French evacuation were in Mexico at the very time of this pathetic +scene between him and Carlotta. The despatch was in cipher when I +received it, but was translated by the telegraph operator at my +headquarters, who long before had mastered the key of the French +cipher: + +"PARIS, January 10, 1867. FRENCH CONSUL, New Orleans, La. + +"To GENERAL CASTELNAU, at Mexico. + +"Received your despatch of the 9th December. Do not compel the +Emperor to abdicate, but do not delay the departure of the troops; +bring back all those who will not remain there. Most of the fleet +has left. + +"NAPOLEON." + + +This meant the immediate withdrawal of the French. The rest of the +story--which has necessarily been but in outline--is soon told. +Maximilian, though deserted, determined to hold out to the last, and +with the aid of disloyal Mexicans stuck to his cause till the spring. +When taken prisoner at Queretaro, he was tried and executed under +circumstances that are well known. From promptings of humanity +Secretary Seward tried hard to save the Imperial prisoner, but +without success. The Secretary's plea for mercy was sent through me +at New Orleans, and to make speed I hired a steamer to proceed with +it across the Gulf to Tampico. The document was carried by Sergeant +White, one of my scouts, who crossed the country from Tampico, and +delivered it to Escobedo at Queretaro; but Mr. Seward's +representations were without avail--refused probably because little +mercy had been shown certain Liberal leaders unfortunate enough to +fall into Maximilian's hands during the prosperous days of his +Empire. + +At the close of our war there was little hope for the Republic of +Mexico. Indeed, till our troops were concentrated on the Rio Grande +there was none. Our appearance in such force along the border +permitted the Liberal leaders, refugees from their homes, to +establish rendezvous whence they could promulgate their plans in +safety, while the countenance thus given the cause, when hope was +well-nigh gone, incited the Mexican people to renewed resistance. +Beginning again with very scant means, for they had lost about all, +the Liberals saw their cause, under the influence of such significant +and powerful backing, progress and steadily grow so strong that +within two years Imperialism had received its death-blow. I doubt +very much whether such, results could have been achieved without the +presence of an American army on the Rio Grande, which, be it +remembered, was sent there because, in General Grant's words, the +French invasion of Mexico was so closely related to the rebellion as +to be essentially a part of it. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +A. J. HAMILTON APPOINTED PROVISIONAL GOVERNOR OF TEXAS--ASSEMBLES A +CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION--THE TEXANS DISSATISFIED--LAWLESSNESS +--OPPRESSIVE LEGISLATION--EX-CONFEDERATES CONTROLLING LOUISIANA--A +CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION--THE MEETING SUPPRESSED--A BLOODY RIOT--MY +REPORTS OF THE MASSACRE--PORTIONS SUPPRESSED BY PRESIDENT JOHNSON +--SUSTAINED BY A CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE--THE RECONSTRUCTION LAWS. + +Although in 1865-66 much of my attention was directed to +international matters along the Rio Grande, the civil affairs of +Texas and Louisiana required a certain amount of military supervision +also in the absence of regularly established civil authority. At the +time of Kirby Smith's surrender the National Government had +formulated no plan with regard to these or the other States lately in +rebellion, though a provisional Government had been set up in +Louisiana as early as 1864. In consequence of this lack of system, +Governor Pendleton Murray, of Texas, who was elected under +Confederate rule, continued to discharge the duties of Governor till +President Johnson, on June 17, in harmony with his amnesty +proclamation of May 29, 1865, appointed A. J. Hamilton provisional +Governor. Hamilton was empowered by the President to call a +Constitutional convention, the delegates to which were to be elected, +under certain prescribed qualifications, for the purpose of +organizing the political affairs of the State, the Governor to be +guided by instructions similar to those given the provisional +Governor of North Carolina (W. W. Holden), when appointed in May. + +The convening of this body gave rise to much dissatisfaction among +the people of Texas. They had assumed that affairs were to go on as +of old, and that the reintegration of the State was to take place +under the administration of Governor Murray, who, meanwhile, had +taken it upon himself, together with the Legislature, to authorize +the election of delegates to a State Convention, without restriction +as to who should be entitled to vote. Thus encouraged, the element +but lately in armed rebellion was now fully bent on restoring the +State to the Union without any intervention whatever of the Federal +Government; but the advent of Hamilton put an end to such illusions, +since his proclamation promptly disfranchised the element in +question, whose consequent disappointment and chagrin were so great +as to render this factor of the community almost uncontrollable. The +provisional Governor at once rescinded the edict of Governor Murray, +prohibited the assembling of his convention, and shortly after +called, one himself, the delegates to which were to b chosen by +voters who could take the amnesty-oath. The proclamation convening +this assemblage also announced the policy that would be pursued in +governing the State until its affairs were satisfactorily +reorganized, defined in brief the course to be followed by the +Judiciary, and provided for the appointment, by the Governor, of +county officials to succeed those known to be disloyal. As this +action of Hamilton's disfranchised all who could not take the amnesty +oath, and of course deprived them of the offices, it met at once with +pronounced and serious opposition, and he quickly realized that he +had on his hands an arduous task to protect the colored people, +particularly as in the transition state of society just after the +close of the war there prevailed much lawlessness, which vented +itself chiefly on the freedmen. It was greatly feared that political +rights were to be given those so recently in servitude, and as it was +generally believed that such enfranchisement would precipitate a race +war unless the freedmen were overawed and kept in a state of +subjection, acts of intimidation were soon reported from all parts of +the State. + +Hamilton, an able, determined, and fearless man, tried hard to curb +this terrorism, but public opinion being strong against him, he could +accomplish little without military aid. As department commander, I +was required, whenever called upon, to assist his government, and as +these requisitions for help became necessarily very frequent, the +result was that shortly after he assumed his duties, detachments of +troops were stationed in nearly every county of the State. By such +disposition of my forces fairly good order was maintained under the +administration of Hamilton, and all went well till the inauguration +of J. W. Throckmorton, who, elected Governor in pursuance of an +authorization granted by the convention which Hamilton had called +together, assumed the duties of the office August 9, 1866. + +One of Governor Throckmorton's first acts was to ask the withdrawal +or non-interference of the military. This was not all granted, but +under his ingenious persuasion President Johnson, on the 13th of +August, 1866, directed that the new State officials be entrusted with +the unhampered control of civil affairs, and this was more than +enough to revive the bulldozing methods that had characterized the +beginning of Hamilton's administration. Oppressive legislation in +the shape of certain apprentice and vagrant laws quickly followed, +developing a policy of gross injustice toward the colored people on +the part of the courts, and a reign of lawlessness and disorder +ensued which, throughout the remote districts of the State at least, +continued till Congress, by what are known as the Reconstruction +Acts, took into its own hands the rehabilitation of the seceded +States. + +In the State of Louisiana a provisional government, chosen by the +loyal element, had been put in operation, as already mentioned, as +early as 1864. This was effected under encouragement given by +President Lincoln, through the medium of a Constitutional convention, +which met at New Orleans in April, 1864, and adjourned in July. The +constitution then agreed upon was submitted to the people, and in +September, 1864, was ratified by a vote of the few loyal residents of +the State. + +The government provided under this constitution being looked upon as +provisional merely, was never recognized by Congress, and in 1865 the +returned Confederates, restored to citizenship by the President's +amnesty proclamation, soon got control of almost all the State. The +Legislature was in their hands, as well as most of the State and +municipal offices; so, when the President, on the 20th of August, +1866, by proclamation, extended his previous instructions regarding +civil affairs in Texas so as to have them apply to all the seceded +States, there at once began in Louisiana a system of discriminative +legislation directed against the freedmen, that led to flagrant +wrongs in the enforcement of labor contracts, and in the remote +parishes to numbers of outrages and murders. + +To remedy this deplorable condition of things, it was proposed, by +those who had established the government of 1864, to remodel the +constitution of the State; and they sought to do this by reassembling +the convention, that body before its adjournment having provided for +reconvening under certain conditions, in obedience to the call of its +president. Therefore, early in the summer of 1866, many members of +this convention met in conference at New Orleans, and decided that a +necessity existed for reconvening the delegates, and a proclamation +was issued accordingly by B. K. Howell, President-pro-tempore. + +Mayor John T. Monroe and the other officials of New Orleans looked +upon this proposed action as revolutionary, and by the time the +convention assembled (July 30), such bitterness of feeling prevailed +that efforts were made by the mayor and city police to suppress the +meeting. A bloody riot followed, resulting, in the killing and +wounding of about a hundred and sixty persons. + +I happened to be absent from the city at the time, returning from +Texas, where I had been called by affairs on the Rio Grande. On my +way up from the mouth of the Mississippi I was met on the night of +July 30 by one of my staff, who reported what had occurred, giving +the details of the massacre--no milder term is fitting--and informing +me that, to prevent further slaughter, General Baird, the senior +military officer present, had assumed control of the municipal +government. On reaching the city I made an investigation, and that +night sent the following report of the affair: + +"HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE GULF, +"NEW ORLEANS, LA., Aug. 1, 1866. + +"GENERAL U. S. GRANT: + +"You are doubtless aware of the serious riot which occurred in this +city on the 30th. A political body, styling themselves the +Convention of 1864, met on the 30th, for, as it is alleged, the +purpose of remodeling the present constitution of the State. The +leaders were political agitators and revolutionary men, and the +action of the convention was liable to produce breaches of the public +peace. I had made up my mind to arrest the head men, if the +proceedings of the convention were calculated to disturb the +tranquility of the Department; but I had no cause for action until +they committed the overt act. In the meantime official duty called +me to Texas, and the mayor of the city, during my absence suppressed +the convention by the use of the police force, and in so doing +attacked the members of the convention, and a party of two hundred +negroes, with fire-arms, clubs, and knives, in a manner so +unnecessary and atrocious as to compel me to say that it was murder. +About forty whites and blacks were thus killed, and about one hundred +and sixty wounded. Everything is now quiet, but I deem it best to +maintain a military supremacy in the city for a few days, until the +affair is fully investigated. I believe the sentiment of the general +community is great regret at this unnecessary cruelty, and that the +police could have made any arrest they saw fit without sacrificing +lives. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General Commanding." + + +On receiving the telegram, General Grant immediately submitted it +to the President. Much clamor being made at the North for the +publication of the despatch, Mr. Johnson pretended to give it to the +newspapers. It appeared in the issues of August 4, but with this +paragraph omitted, viz.: + +"I had made up my mind to arrest the head men, if the proceedings of +the convention were calculated to disturb the tranquility of the +Department, but I had no cause for action until they committed the +overt act. In the mean time official duty called me to Texas, and +the mayor of the city, during my absence, suppressed the convention +by the use of the police force, and in so doing attacked the members +of the convention, and a party of two hundred negroes, with +fire-arms, clubs, and knives, in a manner so unnecessary and atrocious +as to compel me to say it was murder." + +Against this garbling of my report--done by the President's own order +--I strongly demurred; and this emphatic protest marks the beginning of +Mr. Johnson's well-known personal hostility toward me. In the mean +time I received (on August 3) the following despatch from General Grant +approving my course: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"WAR DEPT., WASHINGTON, D. C., "August 3, 1866--5 p.m. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Commanding Mil. Div. of the Gulf, +"New Orleans, La. + +"Continue to enforce martial law, so far as may be necessary to +preserve the peace; and do not allow any of the civil authorities to +act, if you deem such action dangerous to the public safety. Lose no +time in investigating and reporting the causes that led to the riot, +and the facts which occurred. + +"U. S. GRANT, +"Lieutenant-General." + + +In obedience to the President's directions, My report of August 1 was +followed by another, more in detail, which I give in full, since it +tells the whole story of the riot: + +"HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE GULF, +"NEW ORLEANS, LA., August 6, 1866. + +"His EXCELLENCY ANDREW JOHNSON, +"President United States. + +"I have the honor to make the following reply to your despatch of +August 4. A very large number of colored people marched in +procession on Friday night, July twenty-seven (27), and were +addressed from the steps of the City Hall by Dr. Dostie, ex-Governor +Hahn, and others. The speech of Dostie was intemperate in language +and sentiment. The speeches of the others, so far as I can learn, +were characterized by moderation. I have not given you the words of +Dostie's speech, as the version published was denied; but from what I +have learned of the man, I believe they were intemperate. + +"The convention assembled at twelve (12) M. on the thirtieth (30), +the timid members absenting themselves because the tone of the +general public was ominous of trouble. I think there were about +twenty-six (26) members present. In front of the Mechanics +Institute, where the meeting was held, there were assembled some +colored men, women, and children, perhaps eighteen (18) or twenty +(20), and in the Institute a number of colored men, probably one +hundred and fifty (150). Among those outside and inside there might +have been a pistol in the possession of every tenth (10) man. + +"About one (1) p. m. a procession of say from sixty (60) to one +hundred and thirty (130) colored men marched up Burgundy Street and +across Canal Street toward the convention, carrying an American flag. +These men had about one pistol to every ten men, and canes and clubs +in addition. While crossing Canal Street a row occurred. There were +many spectators on the street, and their manner and tone toward the +procession unfriendly. A shot was fired, by whom I am not able to +state, but believe it to have been by a policeman, or some colored +man in the procession. This led to other shots and a rush after the +procession. On arrival at the front of the Institute there was some +throwing of brickbats by both sides. The police, who had been held +well in hand, were vigorously marched to the scene of disorder. The +procession entered the Institute with the flag, about six (6) or +eight (8) remaining outside. A row occurred between a policeman and +one of these colored men, and a shot was again fired by one of the +parties, which led to an indiscriminate fire on the building through +the windows by the policemen. This had been going on for a short +time, when a white flag was displayed from the windows of the +Institute, whereupon the firing ceased, and the police rushed into +the building. + +"From the testimony of wounded men, and others who were inside the +building, the policemen opened an indiscriminate fire upon the +audience until they had emptied their revolvers, when they retired, +and those inside barricaded the doors. The door was broken in, and +the firing again commenced, when many of the colored and white people +either escaped throughout the door or were passed out by the +policemen inside; but as they came out the policemen who formed the +circle nearest the building fired upon them, and they were again +fired upon by the citizens that formed the outer circle. Many of +those wounded and taken prisoners, and others who were prisoners and +not wounded, were fired upon by their captors and by citizens. The +wounded were stabbed while lying on the ground, and their heads +beaten with brickbats. In the yard of the building, whither some of +the colored men had escaped and partially secreted themselves, they +were fired upon and killed or wounded by policemen. Some were killed +and wounded several squares from the scene. Members of the +convention were wounded by the police while in their hands as +prisoners, some of them mortally. + +"The immediate cause of this terrible affair was the assemblage of +this Convention; the remote cause was the bitter and antagonistic +feeling which has been growing in this community since the advent of +the present Mayor, who, in the organization of his police force, +selected many desperate men, and some of them known murderers. +People of clear views were overawed by want of confidence in the +Mayor, and fear of the thugs, many of which he had selected for his +police force. I have frequently been spoken to by prominent citizens +on this subject, and have heard them express fear, and want of +confidence in Mayor Monroe. Ever since the intimation of this last +convention movement I must condemn the course of several of the city +papers for supporting, by their articles, the bitter feeling of bad +men. As to the merciless manner in which the convention was broken +up, I feel obliged to confess strong repugnance. + +"It is useless to disguise the hostility that exists on the part of a +great many here toward Northern men, and this unfortunate affair has +so precipitated matters that there is now a test of what shall be the +status of Northern men--whether they can live here without being in +constant dread or not, whether they can be protected in life and +property, and have justice in the courts. If this matter is +permitted to pass over without a thorough and determined prosecution +of those engaged in it, we may look out for frequent scenes of the +same kind, not only here, but in other places. No steps have as yet +been taken by the civil authorities to arrest citizens who were +engaged in this massacre, or policemen who perpetrated such +cruelties. The members of the convention have been indicted by the +grand jury, and many of them arrested and held to bail. As to +whether the civil authorities can mete out ample justice to the +guilty parties on both sides, I must say it is my opinion, +unequivocally, that they cannot. Judge Abell, whose course I have +closely watched for nearly a year, I now consider one of the most +dangerous men that we have here to the peace and quiet of the city. +The leading men of the convention--King, Cutler, Hahn, and others +--have been political agitators, and are bad men. I regret to say that +the course of Governor Wells has been vacillating, and that during the +late trouble he has shown very little of the man. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General Commanding." + + +Subsequently a military commission investigated the subject of the +riot, taking a great deal of testimony. The commission substantially +confirmed the conclusions given in my despatches, and still later +there was an investigation by a select committee of the House of +Representatives, of which the Honorables Samuel Shellabarger, of +Ohio, H. L. Elliot, of Massachusetts, and B. M. Boyer, of +Pennsylvania, were the members. The majority report of the committee +also corroborated, in all essentials, my reports of the distressing +occurrence. The committee likewise called attention to a violent +speech made by Mr. Johnson at St. Louis in September, 1866, charging +the origin of the riot to Congress, and went on to say of the speech +that "it was an unwarranted and unjust expression of hostile feeling, +without pretext or foundation in fact." A list of the killed and +wounded was embraced in the committee's report, and among other +conclusions reached were the following: "That the meeting of July 30 +was a meeting of quiet citizens, who came together without arms and +with intent peaceably to discuss questions of public concern.... +There has been no occasion during our National history when a riot +has occurred so destitute of justifiable cause, resulting in a +massacre so inhuman and fiend-like, as that which took place at New +Orleans on the 30th of July last. This riotous attack upon the +convention, with its terrible results of massacre and murder, was not +an accident. It was the determined purpose of the mayor of the city +of New Orleans to break up this convention by armed force." + +The statement is also made, that, "He [the President] knew that +'rebels' and 'thugs' and disloyal men had controlled the election of +Mayor Monroe, and that such men composed chiefly his police force." + +The committee held that no legal government existed in Louisiana, and +recommended the temporary establishment of a provisional government +therein; the report concluding that "in the meantime the safety of +all Union men within the State demands that such government be formed +for their protection, for the well being of the nation and the +permanent peace of the Republic." + +The New Orleans riot agitated the whole country, and the official and +other reports served to intensify and concentrate the opposition to +President Johnson's policy of reconstruction, a policy resting +exclusively on and inspired solely by the executive authority--for it +was made plain, by his language and his acts, that he was seeking to +rehabilitate the seceded States under conditions differing not a whit +from those existing before the rebellion; that is to say, without the +slightest constitutional provision regarding the status of the +emancipated slaves, and with no assurances of protection for men who +had remained loyal in the war. + +In December, 1866, Congress took hold of the subject with such vigor +as to promise relief from all these perplexing disorders, and, after +much investigation and a great deal of debate, there resulted the +so-called "Reconstruction Laws," which, for a clear understanding of +the powers conferred on the military commanders, I deem best to append +in full: + +AN ACT to provide for the more efficient government of the rebel +States. + +WHEREAS, no legal State governments or adequate protection for life +or property now exist in the rebel States of Virginia, North +Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, +Florida, Texas, and Arkansas; and whereas, it is necessary that peace +and good order should be enforced in said States until loyal and +republican State governments can be legally established; therefore, + +BE IT ENACTED by the Senate and House of Representatives of the +United States of America in Congress assembled, That said rebel +States shall be divided into military districts and made subject to +the military authority of the United States as hereinafter +prescribed; and for that purpose Virginia shall constitute the first +district; North Carolina and South Carolina, the second district; +Georgia, Alabama, and Florida, the third district; Mississippi and +Arkansas, the fourth district; and Louisiana and Texas, the fifth +district. + +SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of the +President to assign to the command of each of said districts an +officer of the army not below the rank of brigadier-general, and to +detail a sufficient military force to enable such officer to perform +his duties and enforce his authority within the district to which he +is assigned. + +SEC. 3. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of each +officer assigned as aforesaid to protect all persons in their rights +of person and property, to suppress insurrection, disorder, and +violence, and to punish, or cause to be punished, all disturbers of +the public peace and criminals, and to this end he may allow local +civil tribunals to take jurisdiction of and to try offenders, or, +when in his judgment it may be necessary for the trial of offenders, +he shall have power to organize military commissions or tribunals for +that purpose, and all interference, under cover of State authority, +with the exercise of military authority under this act, shall be null +and void. + +SEC. 4. And be it further enacted, That all persons put under +military arrest by virtue of this act shall be tried without +unnecessary delay, and no cruel or unjust punishment shall be +inflicted; and no sentence of any military commission or tribunal +hereby authorized affecting the life or liberty of any person, shall +be executed until it is approved by the officer in command of the +district; and the laws and regulations for the government of the army +shall not be affected by this act except in so far as they conflict +with its provisions: Provided, That no sentence of death, under the +provisions of this act, shall be carried into effect without the +approval of the President. + +SEC. 5. And be it further enacted, That when the people of any one of +said rebel States shall have formed a constitution of government in +conformity with the Constitution of the United States in all +respects, framed by a convention of delegates elected by the male +citizens of said State twenty-one years old and upward, of whatever +race, color, or previous condition, who have been resident in said +State for one year previous to the day of such election, except such +as may be disfranchised for participation in the rebellion, or for +felony at common law; and when such constitution shall provide that +the elective franchise shall be enjoyed by all such persons as have +the qualifications herein stated for electors of delegates; and when +such constitution shall be ratified by a majority of the persons +voting on the question of ratification who are qualified as electors +for delegates, and when such constitution shall have been submitted +to Congress for examination and approval, and Congress shall have +approved the same; and when said State, by a vote of its legislature +elected under said constitution, shall have adopted the amendment to +the Constitution of the United States proposed by the Thirty-ninth +Congress, and known as article fourteen; and when said article shall +have become a part of the Constitution of the United States, said +State shall be declared entitled to representation in Congress, and +senators and representatives shall be admitted therefrom on their +taking the oath prescribed by law; and then and thereafter the +preceding sections of this act shall be inoperative in said State: +Provided, That no person excluded from the privilege of holding +office by said proposed amendment to the Constitution of the United +States shall be eligible to election as a member of the convention to +frame a constitution for any of said rebel States, nor shall any such +person vote for members of such convention. + +SEC. 6. And be it further enacted, That until the people of said +rebel States shall be by law admitted to representation in the +Congress of the United States, any civil government which may exist +therein shall be deemed provisional only, and in all respects subject +to the paramount authority of the United States at any time to +abolish, modify, control, or supersede the same; and in all elections +to any office under such provisional governments all persons shall be +entitled to vote, and none others, who are entitled to vote under the +fifth section of this act; and no person shall be eligible to any +office under any such provisional governments who would be +disqualified from holding office under the provisions of the third +article of said constitutional amendment. + +SCHUYLER COLFAX, +Speaker of the House of Representatives. + +LAFAYETTE S. FOSTER, +President of the Senate pro tempore. + + +AN ACT supplementary to an act entitled "An act to provide for the +more efficient government of the rebel States," passed March second, +eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, and to facilitate restoration. + +Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the +United States of America in Congress assembled, That before the first +day of September, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, the commanding +general in each district defined by an act entitled "An act to +provide for the more efficient government of the rebel States," +passed March second, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, shall cause a +registration to be made of the male citizens of the United States, +twenty-one years of age and upwards, resident in each county or +parish in the State or States included in his district, which +registration shall include only those persons who are qualified to +vote for delegates by the act aforesaid, and who shall have taken and +subscribed the following oath or affirmation: "I,------, do +solemnly swear (or affirm), in the presence of the Almighty God, that +I am a citizen of the State of ---------; that I have resided in said +State for----- months next preceding this day, and now reside in the +county of -------, or the parish of --------, in said State, (as the +case may be); that I am twenty-one years old; that I have not been +disfranchised for participation in any rebellion or civil war against +the United States, nor for felony committed against the laws of any +State or of the United States; that I have never been a member of any +State Legislature, nor held any executive or judicial office in any +State, and afterwards engaged in insurrection or rebellion against +the United States, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof; +that I have never taken an oath as a member of Congress of the United +States, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any +State Legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any +State, to support the constitution of the United States, and +afterwards engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the United +States or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof; that I will +faithfully support the Constitution and obey the laws of the United +States, and will, to the best of my ability, encourage others so to +do: so help me God."; which oath or affirmation may be administered +by any registering officer. + +SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That after the completion of the +registration hereby provided for in any State, at such time and +places therein as the commanding general shall appoint and direct, of +which at least thirty days' public notice shall be given, an election +shall be held of delegates to a convention for the purpose of +establishing a constitution and civil government for such State loyal +to the Union, said convention in each State, except Virginia, to +consist of the same number of members as the most numerous branch of +the State Legislature of such State in the year eighteen hundred and +sixty, to be apportioned among the several districts, counties, or +parishes of such State by the commanding general, giving each +representation in the ratio of voters registered as aforesaid as +nearly as may be. The convention in Virginia shall consist of the +same number of members as represented the territory now constituting +Virginia in the most numerous branch of the Legislature of said State +in the year eighteen hundred and sixty, to be apportioned as +aforesaid. + +SEC. 3. And be it further enacted, That at said election the +registered voters of each State shall vote for or against a +convention to form a constitution therefor under this act. Those +voting in favor of such a convention shall have written or printed on +the ballots by which they vote for delegates, as aforesaid, the words +"For a convention," and those voting against such a convention shall +have written or printed on such ballot the words "Against a +convention." The persons appointed to superintend said election, and +to make return of the votes given thereat, as herein provided, shall +count and make return of the votes given for and against a +convention; and the commanding general to whom the same shall have +been returned shall ascertain and declare the total vote in each +State for and against a convention. If a majority of the votes given +on that question shall be for a convention, then such convention +shall be held as hereinafter provided; but if a majority of said +votes shall, be against a convention, then no such convention shall +be held under this act: Provided, That such convention shall not be +held unless a majority of all such registered voters shall have voted +on the question of holding such convention. + +SEC. 4. And be it further enacted, That the commanding general of +each district shall appoint as many boards of registration as may be +necessary, consisting of three loyal officers or persons, to make and +complete the registration, superintend the election, and make return +to him of the votes, list of voters, and of the persons elected as +delegates by a plurality of the votes cast at said election; and upon +receiving said returns he shall open the same, ascertain the persons +elected as delegates, according to the returns of the officers who +conducted said election, and make proclamation thereof; and if a +majority of the votes given on that question shall be for a +convention, the commanding general, within sixty days from the date +of election, shall notify the delegates to assemble in convention, at +a time and place to be mentioned in the notification, and said +convention, when organized, shall proceed to frame a constitution and +civil government according to the provisions of this act, and the act +to which it is supplementary; and when the same shall have been so +framed, said constitution shall be submitted by the convention for +ratification to the persons registered under the provisions of this +act at an election to be conducted by the officers or persons +appointed or to be appointed by the commanding general, as +hereinbefore provided, and to be held after the expiration of thirty +days from the date of notice thereof, to be given by said convention; +and the returns thereof shall be made to the commanding general of +the district. + +SEC. 5. And be it further enacted, That if, according to said +returns, the constitution shall be ratified by a majority of the +votes of the registered electors qualified as herein specified, cast +at said election, at least one-half of all the registered voters +voting upon the question of such ratification, the president of the +convention shall transmit a copy of the same, duly certified, to the +President of the United States, who shall forthwith transmit the same +to Congress, if then in session, and if not in session, then +immediately upon its next assembling; and if it shall moreover appear +to Congress that the election was one at which all the registered and +qualified electors in the State had an opportunity to vote freely, +and without restraint, fear, or the influence of fraud, and if the +Congress shall be satisfied that such constitution meets the approval +of a majority of all the qualified electors in the State, and if the +said constitution shall be declared by Congress to be in conformity +with the provisions of the act to which this is supplementary, and +the other provisions of said act shall have been complied with, and +the said constitution shall be approved by Congress, the State shall +be declared entitled to representation, and senators and +representatives shall be admitted therefrom as therein provided. + +SEC. 6. And be it further enacted, That all elections in the States +mentioned in the said "Act to provide for the more efficient +government of the rebel States" shall, during the operation of said +act, be by ballot; and all officers making the said registration of +voters and conducting said elections, shall, before entering upon the +discharge of their duties, take and subscribe the oath prescribed by +the act approved July second, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, +entitled "An act to prescribe an oath of office": Provided, That if +any person shall knowingly and falsely take and subscribe any oath in +this act prescribed, such person so offending and being thereof duly +convicted, shall be subject to the pains, penalties, and disabilities +which by law are provided for the punishment of the crime of wilful +and corrupt perjury. + +SEC. 7. And be if further enacted, That all expenses incurred by the +several commanding generals, or by virtue of any orders issued, or +appointments made, by them, under or by virtue of this act, shall be +paid out of any moneys in the treasury not otherwise appropriated. + +SEC. 8. And be it further enacted, That the convention for each State +shall prescribe the fees, salary, and compensation to be paid to all +delegates and other officers and agents herein authorized or +necessary to carry into effect the purposes of this act not herein +otherwise provided for, and shall provide for the levy and collection +of such taxes on the property in such State as may be necessary to +pay the same. + +SEC. 9. And be it further enacted, That the word "article," in the +sixth section of the act to which this is supplementary, shall be +construed to mean, "section." + +SCHUYLER COLFAX, +Speaker of the House of Representatives. + +B. F. WADE, +President of the Senate pro tempore. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +PASSAGE OF THE RECONSTRUCTION ACT OVER THE PRESIDENT'S VETO--PLACED +IN COMMAND OF THE FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT--REMOVING OFFICERS--MY +REASONS FOR SUCH ACTION--AFFAIRS IN LOUISIANA AND TEXAS--REMOVAL OF +GOVERNOR WELLS--REVISION OF THE JURY LISTS--RELIEVED FROM THE COMMAND +OF THE FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT. + +The first of the Reconstruction laws was passed March 2, 1867, and +though vetoed by the President, such was the unanimity of loyal +sentiment and the urgency demanding the measure, that the bill became +a law over the veto the day the President returned it to Congress. +March the 11th this law was published in General Orders No. 10, from +the Headquarters of the Army, the same order assigning certain +officers to take charge of the five military districts into which the +States lately in rebellion were subdivided, I being announced as the +commander of the Fifth Military District, which embraced Louisiana +and Texas, a territory that had formed the main portion of my command +since the close of the war. + +Between the date of the Act and that of my assignment, the Louisiana +Legislature, then in special session, had rejected a proposed repeal +of an Act it had previously passed providing for an election of +certain municipal officers in New Orleans. This election was set for +March 11, but the mayor and the chief of police, together with +General Mower, commanding the troops in the city, having expressed to +me personally their fears that the public peace would be disturbed by +the election, I, in this emergency, though not yet assigned to the +district, assuming the authority which the Act conferred on district +commanders, declared that the election should not take place; that no +polls should be opened on the day fixed; and that the whole matter +would stand postponed till the district commander should be +appointed, or special instructions be had. This, my first official +act under the Reconstruction laws, was rendered necessary by the +course of a body of obstructionists, who had already begun to give +unequivocal indications of their intention to ignore the laws of +Congress. + +A copy of the order embodying the Reconstruction law, together with +my assignment, having reached me a few days after, I regularly +assumed control of the Fifth Military District on March 19, by an +order wherein I declared the State and municipal governments of the +district to be provisional only, and, under the provisions of the +sixth section of the Act, subject to be controlled, modified, +superseded, or abolished. I also announced that no removals from +office would be made unless the incumbents failed to carry out the +provisions of the law or impeded reorganization, or unless willful +delays should necessitate a change, and added: "Pending the +reorganization, it is, desirable and intended to create as little +disturbance in the machinery of the various branches of the +provisional governments as possible, consistent with the law of +Congress and its successful execution, but this condition is +dependent upon the disposition shown by the people, and upon the +length of time required for reorganization." + +Under these limitations Louisiana and Texas retained their former +designations as military districts, the officers in command +exercising their military powers as heretofore. In addition, these +officers were to carry out in their respective commands all +provisions of the law except those specially requiring the action of +the district commander, and in cases of removals from and appointment +to office. + +In the course of legislation the first Reconstruction act, as I have +heretofore noted, had been vetoed. On the very day of the veto, +however, despite the President's adverse action, it passed each House +of Congress by such an overwhelming majority as not only to give it +the effect of law, but to prove clearly that the plan of +reconstruction presented was, beyond question, the policy endorsed by +the people of the country. It was, therefore, my determination to +see to the law's zealous execution in my district, though I felt +certain that the President would endeavor to embarrass me by every +means in his power, not only on account of his pronounced personal +hostility, but also because of his determination not to execute but +to obstruct the measures enacted by Congress. + +Having come to this conclusion, I laid down, as a rule for my +guidance, the principle of non-interference with the provisional +State governments, and though many appeals were made to have me +rescind rulings of the courts, or interpose to forestall some +presupposed action to be taken by them, my invariable reply was that +I would not take cognizance of such matters, except in cases of +absolute necessity. The same policy was announced also in reference +to municipal affairs throughout the district, so long as the action +of the local officers did not conflict with the law. + +In a very short time, however, I was obliged to interfere in +municipal matters in New Orleans, for it had become clearly apparent +that several of the officials were, both by acts of omission and +commission, ignoring the law, so on the 27th of March I removed from +office the Mayor, John T. Monroe; the Judge of the First District +Court, E. Abell; and the Attorney-General of the State, Andrew S. +Herron; at the same time appointing to the respective offices thus +vacated Edward Heath, W. W. Howe, and B. L. Lynch. The officials +thus removed had taken upon themselves from the start to pronounce +the Reconstruction acts unconstitutional, and to advise such a course +of obstruction that I found it necessary at an early dav to replace +them by men in sympathy with the law, in order to make plain my +determination to have its provisions enforced. The President at once +made inquiry, through General Grant, for the cause of the removal, +and I replied: + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT, +"New Orleans, La., April 19, 1867. + +"GENERAL: On the 27th day of March last I removed from office Judge +E. Abell, of the Criminal Court of New Orleans; Andrew S. Herron, +Attorney-General of the State of Louisiana; and John T. Monroe, Mayor +of the City of New Orleans. These removals were made under the +powers granted me in what is usually termed the 'military bill,' +passed March 2, 1867, by the Congress of the United States. + +"I did not deem it necessary to give any reason for the removal of +these men, especially after the investigations made by the military +board on the massacre Of July 30, 1866, and the report of the +congressional committee on the same massacre; but as some inquiry has +been made for the cause of removal, I would respectfully state as +follows: + +"The court over which judge Abell presided is the only criminal court +in the city of New Orleans, and for a period of at least nine months +previous to the riot Of July 30 he had been educating a large portion +of the community to the perpetration of this outrage, by almost +promising no prosecution in his court against the offenders, in case +such an event occurred. The records of his court will show that he +fulfilled his promise, as not one of the guilty has been prosecuted. + +"In reference to Andrew J. Herron, Attorney-General of the State of +Louisiana, I considered it his duty to indict these men before this +criminal court. This he failed to do, but went so far as to attempt +to impose on the good sense of the whole nation by indicting the +victims of the riot instead of the rioters; in other words, making +the innocent guilty and the guilty innocent. He was therefore, in my +belief, an able coadjutor with judge Abell in bringing on the +massacre of July 30. + +"Mayor Monroe controlled the element engaged in this riot, and when +backed by an attorney-general who would not prosecute the guilty, and +a judge who advised the grand jury to find the innocent guilty and +let the murderers go free, felt secure in engaging his police force +in the riot and massacre. + +"With these three men exercising a large influence over the worst +elements of the population of this city, giving to those elements an +immunity for riot and bloodshed, the general-in-chief will see how +insecurely I felt in letting them occupy their respective positions +in the troubles which might occur in registration and voting in the +reorganization of this State. + +"I am, General, very respectfully, your obedient servant, + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General U. S. A. + + +"GENERAL U. S. GRANT, +"Commanding Armies of the United States, +"Washington, D. C." + + +To General Grant my reasons were satisfactory, but not so to the +President, who took no steps, however, to rescind my action, for he +knew that the removals were commended by well-nigh the entire +community in the city, for it will be understood that Mr. Johnson +was, through his friends and adherents in Louisiana and Texas, kept +constantly advised of every step taken by me. Many of these persons +were active and open opponents of mine, while others were spies, +doing their work so secretly and quickly that sometimes Mr. Johnson +knew of my official acts before I could report them to General Grant. + +The supplemental Reconstruction act which defined the method of +reconstruction became a law despite the President's veto on March 23. +This was a curative act, authorizing elections and prescribing +methods of registration. When it reached me officially I began +measures for carrying out its provisions, and on the 28th of March +issued an order to the effect that no elections for the State, +parish, or municipal officers would be held in Louisiana until the +provisions of the laws of Congress entitled "An act to provide for +the more efficient government of the rebel States," and of the act +supplemental thereto, should have been complied with. I also +announced that until elections were held in accordance with these +acts, the law of the Legislature of the State providing for the +holding over of those persons whose terms of office otherwise would +have expired, would govern in all cases excepting only those special +ones in which I myself might take action. There was one parish, +Livingston, which this order did no reach in time to prevent the +election previously ordered there, and which therefore took place, +but by a supplemental order this election was declare null and void. + +In April. I began the work of administering the Supplemental Law, +which, under certain condition of eligibility, required a +registration of the voter of the State, for the purpose of electing +delegate to a Constitutional convention. It therefore became +necessary to appoint Boards of Registration throughout the election +districts, and on April 10 the boards for the Parish of Orleans were +given out, those for the other parishes being appointed ten days +later. Before announcing these boards, I had asked to be advised +definitely as to what persons were disfranchised by the law, and was +directed by General Grant to act upon my own interpretation of it, +pending an opinion expected shortly from the Attorney-General--Mr. +Henry Stanbery--so, for the guidance of the boards, I gave the +following instructions: + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT. +"New Orleans, La., April 10, 1867. + +"Special Orders, No. 15. + +"....In obedience to the directions contained in the first section of +the Law of Congress entitled "An Act supplemental to an Act entitled +'An Act to provide for the more efficient government of the rebel +States'" the registration of the legal voters, according to that law +in the Parish of Orleans, will be commenced on the 15th instant, and +must be completed by the 15th of May. + +"The four municipal districts of the City of New Orleans and the +Parish of Orleans, right bank (Algiers), will each constitute a +Registration district. Election precincts will remain as at present +constituted. + +"....Each member of the Board of Registers, before commencing his +duties, will file in the office of the Assistant-Inspector-General at +these headquarters, the oath required in the sixth section of the Act +referred to, and be governed in the execution of his duty by the +provisions of the first section of that Act, faithfully administering +the oath therein prescribed to each person registered. + +"Boards of Registers will immediately select suitable offices within +their respective districts, having reference to convenience and +facility of registration, and will enter upon their duties on the day +designated. Each Board will be entitled to two clerks. Office-hours +for registration will be from 8 o'clock till 12 A. M., and from 4 +till 7 P. M. + +"When elections are ordered, the Board of Registers for each district +will designate the number of polls and the places where they shall be +opened in the election precincts within its district, appoint the +commissioners and other officers necessary for properly conducting +the elections, and will superintend the same. + +"They will also receive from the commissioners of elections of the +different precincts the result of the vote, consolidate the same, and +forward it to the commanding general. + +"Registers and all officers connected with elections will be held to +a rigid accountability and will be subject to trial by military +commission for fraud, or unlawful or improper conduct in the +performance of their duties. Their rate of compensation and manner +of payment will be in accordance with the provisions of sections six +and seven of the supplemental act. + +"....Every male citizen of the United States, twenty-one years old +and upward, of whatever race, color, or previous condition, who has +been resident in the State of Louisiana for one year and Parish of +Orleans for three months previous to the date at which he presents +himself for registration, and who has not been disfranchised by act +of Congress or for felony at common law, shall, after having taken +and subscribed the oath prescribed in the first section of the act +herein referred to, be entitled to be, and shall be, registered as a +legal voter in the Parish of Orleans and State of Louisiana. + +"Pending the decision of the Attorney-General of the United States on +the question as to who are disfranchised by law, registers will give +the most rigid interpretation to the law, and exclude from +registration every person about whose right to vote there may be a +doubt. Any person so excluded who may, under the decision of the +Attorney-General, be entitled to vote, shall be permitted to register +after that decision is received, due notice of which will be given. + +"By command of Major-General P. H. SHERIDAN, + +"GEO. L. HARTSUFF, +"Assistant Adjutant-General." + + +The parish Boards of Registration were composed of three members +each. Ability to take what was known as the "ironclad oath" was the +qualification exacted of the members, and they were prohibited from +becoming candidates for office. In the execution of their duties +they were to be governed by the provisions of the supplemental act. +It was also made one of their functions to designate the number and +location of the polling-places in the several districts, to appoint +commissioners for receiving the votes and in general to attend to +such other matters as were necessary, in order properly to conduct +the voting, and afterward to receive from the commissioners the +result of the vote and forward it to my headquarters. These +registers, and all other officers having to do with elections, were +to be held to a rigid accountability, and be subject to trial by +military commission for fraud or unlawful or improper conduct in the +performance of their duties; and in order to be certain that the +Registration Boards performed their work faithfully and +intelligently, officers of the army were appointed as supervisors. +To this end the parishes were grouped together conveniently in +temporary districts, each officer having from three to five parishes +to supervise. The programme thus mapped out for carrying out the law +in Louisiana was likewise adhered to in Texas, and indeed was +followed as a model in some of the other military districts. + +Although Military Commissions were fully authorized by the +Reconstruction acts, yet I did not favor their use in governing the +district, and probably would never have convened one had these acts +been observed in good faith. I much preferred that the civil courts, +and the State and municipal authorities already in existence, should +perform their functions without military control or interference, but +occasionally, because the civil authorities neglected their duty, I +was obliged to resort to this means to ensure the punishment Of +offenders. At this time the condition of the negroes in Texas and +Louisiana was lamentable, though, in fact, not worse than that of the +few white loyalists who had been true to the Union during the war. +These last were singled out as special objects of attack, and were, +therefore, obliged at all times to be on the alert for the protection +of their lives and property. This was the natural outcome of Mr. +Johnson's defiance of Congress, coupled with the sudden conversion to +his cause of persons in the North--who but a short time before had +been his bitterest enemies; for all this had aroused among the +disaffected element new hopes of power and place, hopes of being at +once put in political control again, with a resumption of their +functions in State and National matters without any preliminary +authorization by Congress. In fact, it was not only hoped, but +expected, that things were presently to go on just as if there had +been no war. + +In the State of Texas there were in 1865 about 200,000 of the colored +race-roughly, a third of the entire population--while in Louisiana +there were not less than 350,000, or more than one-half of all the +people in the State. Until the enactment of the Reconstruction laws +these negroes were without rights, and though they had been liberated +by the war, Mr. Johnson's policy now proposed that they should have +no political status at all, and consequently be at the mercy of a +people who, recently their masters, now seemed to look upon them as +the authors of all the misfortunes that had come upon the land. +Under these circumstances the blacks naturally turned for protection +to those who had been the means of their liberation, and it would +have been little less than inhuman to deny them sympathy. Their +freedom had been given them, and it was the plain duty of those in +authority to make it secure, and screen them from the bitter +political resentment that beset them, and to see that they had a fair +chance in the battle of life. Therefore, when outrages and murders +grew frequent, and the aid of the military power was an absolute +necessity for the protection of life, I employed it unhesitatingly +--the guilty parties being brought to trial before military +commissions--and for a time, at least, there occurred a halt in the +march of terrorism inaugurated by the people whom Mr. Johnson had +deluded. + +The first, Military Commission was convened to try the case of John +W. Walker, charged with shooting a negro in the parish of St. John. +The proper civil authorities had made no effort to arrest Walker, and +even connived at his escape, so I had him taken into custody in New +Orleans, and ordered him tried, the commission finding him guilty, +and sentencing him to confinement in the penitentiary for six months. +This shooting was the third occurrence of the kind that had taken +place in St. John's parish, a negro being wounded in each case, and +it was plain that the intention was to institute there a practice of +intimidation which should be effective to subject the freedmen to the +will of their late masters, whether in making labor contracts, or in +case these newly enfranchised negroes should evince a disposition to +avail themselves of the privilege to vote. + +The trial and conviction of Walker, and of one or two others for +similar outrages, soon put a stop to every kind of "bull-dozing" in +the country parishes; but about this time I discovered that many +members of the police force in New Orleans were covertly intimidating +the freedmen there, and preventing their appearance at the +registration offices, using milder methods than had obtained in the +country, it is true, but none the less effective. + +Early in 1866 the Legislature had passed an act which created for the +police of New Orleans a residence qualification, the object of which +was to discharge and exclude from the force ex-Union soldiers. This +of course would make room for the appointment of ex-Confederates, and +Mayor Monroe had not been slow in enforcing the provisions of the +law. It was, in fact, a result of this enactment that the police was +so reorganized as to become the willing and efficient tool which it +proved to be in the riot of 1866; and having still the same +personnel, it was now in shape to prevent registration by threats, +unwarranted arrests, and by various other influences, all operating +to keep the timid blacks away from the registration places. + +That the police were taking a hand in this practice of repression, I +first discovered by the conduct of the assistant to the chief of the +body, and at once removed the offender, but finding this ineffectual +I annulled that part of the State law fixing the five years' +residence restriction, and restored the two years' qualification, +thus enabling Mayor Heath, who by my appointment had succeeded +Monroe, to organize the force anew, and take about one-half of its +members from ex-Union soldiers who when discharged had settled in New +Orleans. This action put an end to intimidation in the parish of +Orleans; and now were put in operation in all sections the processes +provided by the supplemental Reconstruction law for the summoning of +a convention to form a Constitution preparatory to the readmission of +the State, and I was full of hope that there would now be much less +difficulty in administering the trust imposed by Congress. + +During the two years previous great damage had been done the +agricultural interests of Louisiana by the overflow of the +Mississippi, the levees being so badly broken as to require extensive +repairs, and the Legislature of 1866 had appropriated for the purpose +$4,000,000, to be raised by an issue of bonds. This money was to be +disbursed by a Board of Levee Commissioners then in existence, but +the term of service of these commissioners, and the law creating the +board, would expire in the spring of 1867. In order to overcome this +difficulty the Legislature passed a bill continuing the commissioners +in office but as the act was passed inside of ten days before the +adjournment of the Legislature, Governor Wells pocketed the bill, and +it failed to become a law. The Governor then appointed a board of +his own, without any warrant of law whatever. The old commissioners +refused to recognize this new board, and of course a conflict of +authority ensued, which, it was clear, would lead to vicious results +if allowed to continue; so, as the people of the State had no +confidence in either of the boards, I decided to end the contention +summarily by appointing an entirely new commission, which would +disburse the money honestly, and further the real purpose for which +it had been appropriated. When I took this course the legislative +board acquiesced, but Governor Wells immediately requested the +President to revoke my order, which, however, was not done, but +meanwhile the Secretary of War directed me to suspend all proceedings +in the matter, and make a report of the facts. I complied in the +following telegram: + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT, +"NEW ORLEANS, La., June 3, 1867. + +"SIR: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your telegram of +this date in reference to the Levee Commissioners in this State. + +"The following were my reasons for abolishing the two former boards, +although I intended that my order should be sufficiently explanatory: + +"Previous to the adjournment of the Legislature last winter it passed +an act continuing the old Levee board in office, so that the four +millions of dollars ($4,000,000) in bonds appropriated by the +Legislature might be disbursed by a board of rebellious antecedents. + +"After its adjournment the Governor of the State appointed a board of +his own, in violation of this act, and made the acknowledgment to me +in person that his object was to disburse the money in the interest +of his own party by securing for it the vote of the employees at the +time of election. + +"The board continued in office by the Legislature refused to turn +over to the Governor's board, and each side appealed to me to sustain +it, which I would not do. The question must then have gone to the +courts, which, according to the Governor's judgment when he was +appealing to me to be sustained, would require one year for decision. +Meantime the State was overflowed, the Levee boards tied up by +political chicanery, and nothing done to relieve the poor people, now +fed by the charity of the Government and charitable associations of +the North. + +"To obviate this trouble, and to secure to the overflowed districts +of the State the immediate relief which the honest disbursement of +the four millions ($4,000,000) would give, my order dissolving both +boards was issued. + +"I say now, unequivocally, that Governor Wells is a political +trickster and a dishonest man. I have seen him myself, when I first +came to this command, turn out all the Union men who had supported +the Government, and put in their stead rebel soldiers who had not yet +doffed their gray uniform. I have seen him again, during the July +riot of 1866, skulk away where I could not find him to give him a +guard, instead of coming out as a manly representative of the State +and joining those who were preserving the peace. I have watched him +since, and his conduct has been as sinuous as the mark left in the +dust by the movement of a snake. + +"I say again that he is dishonest, and that dishonesty is more than +must be expected of me. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General, U. S. A. + +"Hon. E. M. STANTON, +"Secretary of War, Washington, D. C." + + +The same day that I sent my report to the Secretary of War I removed +from office Governor Wells himself, being determined to bear no +longer with the many obstructions he had placed in the way of +reorganizing the civil affairs of the State. I was also satisfied +that he was unfit to retain the place, since he was availing himself +of every opportunity to work political ends beneficial to himself. +In this instance Wells protested to me against his removal, and also +appealed to the President for an opinion of the Attorney-General as +to my power in the case; and doubtless he would have succeeded in +retaining his office, but for the fact that the President had been +informed by General James B. Steadman and others placed to watch me +that Wells was wholly unworthy. + + +"NEW ORLEANS, June 19, 1867. +"ANDREW JOHNSON, President United States, +"Washington City: + +"Lewis D. Campbell leaves New Orleans for home this evening. Want +of respect for Governor Wells personally, alone represses the +expression of indignation felt by all honest and sensible men at the +unwarranted usurpation of General Sheridan in removing the civil +officers of Louisiana. It is believed here that you will reinstate +Wells. He is a bad man, and has no influence. + +"I believe Sheridan made the removals to embarrass you, believing the +feeling at the North would sustain him. My conviction is that on +account of the bad character of Wells and Monroe, you ought not to +reinstate any who have been removed, because you cannot reinstate any +without reinstating all, but you ought to prohibit the exercise of +this power in the future. + +"Respectfully yours, + +"JAMES B. STEADMAN." + + +I appointed Mr. Thomas J. Durant as Wells's successor, but he +declining, I then appointed Mr. Benjamin F. Flanders, who, after I +had sent a staff-officer to forcibly eject Wells in case of +necessity, took possession of the Governor's office. Wells having +vacated, Governor Flanders began immediately the exercise of his +duties in sympathy with the views of Congress, and I then notified +General Grant that I thought he need have no further apprehension +about the condition of affairs in Louisiana, as my appointee was a +man of such integrity and ability that I already felt relieved of +half my labor. I also stated in the same despatch that nothing would +answer in Louisiana but a bold and firm course, and that in taking +such a one I felt that I was strongly supported; a statement that was +then correct, for up to this period the better classes were disposed +to accept the Congressional plan of reconstruction. + +During the controversy over the Levee Commissioners, and the +correspondence regarding the removal of Governor Wells, registration +had gone on under the rules laid down for the boards. The date set +for closing the books was the 30th of June, but in the parish of +Orleans the time was extended till the 15th of July. This the +President considered too short a period, and therefore directed the +registry lists not to be closed before the 1st of August, unless +there was some good reason to the contrary. This was plainly +designed to keep the books open in order that under the +Attorney-General's interpretation of the Reconstruction laws, published +June 20, many persons who had been excluded by the registration boards +could yet be registered, so I decided to close the registration, unless +required by the President unconditionally, and in specific orders, to +extend the time. My motives were manifold, but the main reasons were +that as two and a half months had been given already, the number of +persons who, under the law, were qualified for registry was about +exhausted; and because of the expense I did not feel warranted in +keeping up the boards longer, as I said, "to suit new issues coming in +at the eleventh hour," which would but open a "broad macadamized road +for perjury and fraud." + +When I thus stated what I intended to do, the opinion of the +Attorney-General had not yet been received. When it did reach me it +was merely in the form of a circular signed by Adjutant-General +Townsend, and had no force of law. It was not even sent as an order, +nor was it accompanied by any instructions, or by anything except the +statement that it was transmitted to the 11 respective military +commanders for their information, in order that there might be +uniformity in the execution of the Reconstruction acts. To adopt +Mr. Stanbery's interpretation of the law and reopen registration +accordingly, would defeat the purpose of Congress, as well as add to +my perplexities. Such a course would also require that the officers +appointed by me for the performance of specified duties, under laws +which I was empowered to interpret and enforce, should receive their +guidance and instructions from an unauthorized source, so on +communicating with General Grant as to how I should act, he directed +me to enforce my own construction of the military bill until ordered +to do otherwise. + +Therefore the registration continued as I had originally directed, +and nothing having been definitely settled at Washington in relation +to my extending the time, on the 10th of July I ordered all the +registration boards to select, immediately, suitable persons to act +as commissioners of election, and at the same time specified the +number of each set of commissioners, designated the polling-places, +gave notice that two days would be allowed for voting, and followed +this with an order discontinuing registration the 31st of July, and +then another appointing the 27th and 28th of September as the time +for the election of delegates to the State convention. + +In accomplishing the registration there had been little opposition +from the mass of the people, but the press of New Orleans, and the +office-holders and office-seekers in the State generally, antagonized +the work bitterly and violently, particularly after the promulgation +of the opinion of the Attorney-General. These agitators condemned +everybody and everything connected with the Congressional plan of +reconstruction; and the pernicious influence thus exerted was +manifested in various ways, but most notably in the selection of +persons to compose the jury lists in the country parishes it also +tempted certain municipal officers in New Orleans to perform illegal +acts that would seriously have affected the credit of the city had +matters not been promptly corrected by the summary removal from +office of the comptroller and the treasurer, who had already issued a +quarter of a million dollars in illegal certificates. On learning of +this unwarranted and unlawful proceeding, Mayor Heath demanded an +investigation by the Common Council, but this body, taking its cue +from the evident intention of the President to render abortive the +Reconstruction acts, refused the mayor's demand. Then he tried to +have the treasurer and comptroller restrained by injunction, but the +city attorney, under the same inspiration as the council, declined to +sue out a writ, and the attorney being supported in this course by +nearly all the other officials, the mayor was left helpless in his +endeavors to preserve the city's credit. Under such circumstances he +took the only step left him--recourse to the military commander; and +after looking into the matter carefully I decided, in the early part +of August, to give the mayor officials who would not refuse to make +an investigation of the illegal issue of certificates, and to this +end I removed the treasurer, surveyor, comptroller, city attorney, +and twenty-two of the aldermen; these officials, and all of their +assistants, having reduced the financial credit of New Orleans to a +disordered condition, and also having made efforts--and being then +engaged in such--to hamper the execution of the Reconstruction laws. + +This action settled matters in the city, but subsequently I had to +remove some officials in the parishes--among them a justice of the +peace and a sheriff in the parish of Rapides; the justice for +refusing to permit negro witnesses to testify in a certain murder +case, and for allowing the murderer, who had foully killed a colored +man, to walk out of his court on bail in the insignificant sum of +five hundred dollars; and the sheriff, for conniving at the escape +from jail of another alleged murderer. Finding, however, even after +these removals, that in the country districts murderers and other +criminals went unpunished, provided the offenses were against negroes +merely (since the jurors were selected exclusively from the whites, +and often embraced those excluded from the exercise of the election +franchise) I, having full authority under the Reconstruction laws, +directed such a revision of the jury lists as would reject from them +every man not eligible for registration as a voter. This order was +issued August 24, and on its promulgation the President relieved me +from duty and assigned General Hancock as my successor. + + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT, +"NEW ORLEANS, LA., August 24, 1867. + +"SPECIAL ORDERS, No. 125. + +"The registration of voters of the State of Louisiana, according to +the law of Congress, being complete, it is hereby ordered that no +person who is not registered in accordance with said law shall be +considered as, a duly qualified voter of the State of Louisiana. All +persons duly registered as above, and no others, are consequently +eligible, under the laws of the State of Louisiana, to serve as +jurors in any of the courts of the State. + +"The necessary revision of the jury lists will immediately be made by +the proper officers. + +"All the laws of the State respecting exemptions, etc., from jury +duty will remain in force. + +"By command of Major-General P. H. SHERIDAN. + +"GEO. L. HARTNUFF, Asst. Adj't-General." + + +Pending the arrival of General Hancock, I turned over the command of +the district September 1 to General Charles Griffin; but he dying of +yellow fever, General J. A. Mower succeeded him, and retained command +till November 29, on which date General Hancock assumed control. +Immediately after Hancock took charge, he revoked my order of August +24 providing for a revision of the jury lists; and, in short, +President Johnson's policy now became supreme, till Hancock himself +was relieved in March, 1868. + +My official connection with the reconstruction of Louisiana and Texas +practically closed with this order concerning the jury lists. In my +judgment this had become a necessity, for the disaffected element, +sustained as it was by the open sympathy of the President, had grown +so determined in its opposition to the execution of the +Reconstruction acts that I resolved to remove from place and power +all obstacles; for the summer's experience had convinced me that in +no other way could the law be faithfully administered. + +The President had long been dissatisfied with my course; indeed, he +had harbored personal enmity against me ever since he perceived that +he could not bend me to an acceptance of the false position in which +he had tried to place me by garbling my report of the riot of 1866. +When Mr. Johnson decided to remove me, General Grant protested in +these terms, but to no purpose: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"WASHINGTON, D. C., August 17, 1867 + +"SIR: I am in receipt of your order of this date directing the +assignment of General G. H. Thomas to the command of the Fifth +Military District, General Sheridan to the Department of the +Missouri, and General Hancock to the Department of the Cumberland; +also your note of this date (enclosing these instructions), saying: +'Before you issue instructions to carry into effect the enclosed +order, I would be pleased to hear any suggestions you may deem +necessary respecting the assignments to which the order refers.' + +"I am pleased to avail myself of this invitation to urge--earnestly +urge--urge in the name of a patriotic people, who have sacrificed +hundreds of thousands of loyal lives and thousands of millions of +treasure to preserve the integrity and union of this country--that +this order be not insisted on. It is unmistakably the expressed wish +of the country that General Sheridan should not be removed from his +present command. + +"This is a republic where the will of the people is the law of the +land. I beg that their voice may be heard. + +"General Sheridan has performed his civil duties faithfully and +intelligently. His removal will only be regarded as an effort to +defeat the laws of Congress. It will be interpreted by the +unreconstructed element in the South--those who did all they could to +break up this Government by arms, and now wish to be the only element +consulted as to the method of restoring order--as a triumph. It will +embolden them to renewed opposition to the will of the loyal masses, +believing that they have the Executive with them. + +"The services of General Thomas in battling for the Union entitle him +to some consideration. He has repeatedly entered his protest against +being assigned to either of the five military districts, and +especially to being assigned to relieve General Sheridan. + +"There are military reasons, pecuniary reasons, and above all, +patriotic reasons, why this should not be insisted upon. + +"I beg to refer to a letter marked 'private,' which I wrote to the +President when first consulted on the subject of the change in the +War Department. It bears upon the subject of this removal, and I had +hoped would have prevented it. + +"I have the honor to be, with great respect, your obedient servant, + +"U. S. GRANT, +"General U. S. A., Secretary of War ad interim. + +"His Excellency A. JOHNSON, +"President of the United States." + + +I was ordered to command the Department of the Missouri (General +Hancock, as already noted, finally becoming my successor in the Fifth +Military District), and left New Orleans on the 5th of September. I +was not loath to go. The kind of duty I had been performing in +Louisiana and Texas was very trying under the most favorable +circumstances, but all the more so in my case, since I had to contend +against the obstructions which the President placed in the way from +persistent opposition to the acts of Congress as well as from +antipathy to me--which obstructions he interposed with all the +boldness and aggressiveness of his peculiar nature. + +On more than one occasion while I was exercising this command, +impurity of motive was imputed to me, but it has never been +truthfully shown (nor can it ever be) that political or corrupt +influences of any kind controlled me in any instance. I simply tried +to carry out, without fear or favor, the Reconstruction acts as they +came to me. They were intended to disfranchise certain persons, and +to enfranchise certain others, and, till decided otherwise, were the +laws of the land; and it was my duty to execute them faithfully, +without regard, on the one hand, for those upon whom it was thought +they bore so heavily, nor, on the other, for this or that political +party, and certainly without deference to those persons sent to +Louisiana to influence my conduct of affairs. + +Some of these missionaries were high officials, both military and +civil, and I recall among others a visit made me in 1866 by a +distinguished friend of the President, Mr. Thomas A. Hendricks. The +purpose of his coming was to convey to me assurances of the very high +esteem in which I was held by the President, and to explain +personally Mr. Johnson's plan of reconstruction, its flawless +constitutionality, and so on. But being on the ground, I had before +me the exhibition of its practical working, saw the oppression and +excesses growing out of it, and in the face of these experiences even +Mr. Hendricks's persuasive eloquence was powerless to convince me of +its beneficence. Later General Lovell H. Rousseau came down on a +like mission, but was no more successful than Mr. Hendricks. + +During the whole period that I commanded in Louisiana and Texas my +position was a most unenviable one. The service was unusual, and the +nature of it scarcely to be understood by those not entirely familiar +with the conditions existing immediately after the war. In +administering the affairs of those States, I never acted except by +authority, and always from conscientious motives. I tried to guard +the rights of everybody in accordance with the law. In this I was +supported by General Grant and opposed by President Johnson. The +former had at heart, above every other consideration, the good of his +country, and always sustained me with approval and kind suggestions. +The course pursued by the President was exactly the opposite, and +seems to prove that in the whole matter of reconstruction he was +governed less by patriotic motives than by personal ambitions. Add +to this his natural obstinacy of character and personal enmity toward +me, and no surprise should be occasioned when I say that I heartily +welcomed the order that lifted from me my unsought burden. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +AT FORT LEAVENWORTH--THE TREATY OF MEDICINE LODGE--GOING TO FORT +DODGE--DISCONTENTED INDIANS--INDIAN OUTRAGES--A DELEGATION OF CHIEFS +--TERRIBLE INDIAN RAID--DEATH OF COMSTOCK--VAST HERDS OF BUFFALO +--PREPARING FOR A WINTER CAMPAIGN--MEETING "BUFFALO BILL" +--HE UNDERTAKES A DANGEROUS TASK--FORSYTH'S GALLANT FIGHT--RESCUED. + +The headquarters of the military department to which I was assigned +when relieved from duty at New Orleans was at Fort Leavenworth, +Kansas, and on the 5th of September I started for that post. In due +time I reached St. Louis, and stopped there a day to accept an +ovation tendered in approval of the course I had pursued in the Fifth +Military District--a public demonstration apparently of the most +sincere and hearty character. + +From St. Louis to Leavenworth took but one night, and the next day I +technically complied with my orders far enough to permit General +Hancock to leave the department, so that he might go immediately to +New Orleans if he so desired, but on account of the yellow fever +epidemic then prevailing, he did not reach the city till late in +November. + +My new command was one of the four military departments that composed +the geographical division then commanded by Lieutenant-General +Sherman. This division had been formed in 1866, with a view to +controlling the Indians west of the Missouri River, they having +become very restless and troublesome because of the building of the +Pacific railroads through their hunting-grounds, and the +encroachments of pioneers, who began settling in middle and western +Kansas and eastern Colorado immediately after the war. + +My department embraced the States of Missouri and Kansas, the Indian +Territory, and New Mexico. Part of this section of country--western +Kansas particularly--had been frequently disturbed and harassed +during two or three years past, the savages every now and then +massacring an isolated family, boldly attacking the surveying and +construction parties of the Kansas-Pacific railroad, sweeping down on +emigrant trains, plundering and burning stage-stations and the like +along the Smoky Hill route to Denver and the Arkansas route to New +Mexico. + +However, when I relieved Hancock, the department was comparatively +quiet. Though some military operations had been conducted against +the hostile tribes in the early part of the previous summer, all +active work was now suspended in the attempt to conclude a permanent +peace with the Cheyennes, Arapahoes, Kiowas, and Comanches, in +compliance with the act of Congress creating what was known as the +Indian Peace Commission of 1867. + +Under these circumstances there was little necessity for my remaining +at Leavenworth, and as I was much run down in health from the +Louisiana climate, in which I had been obliged to live continuously +for three summers (one of which brought epidemic cholera, and another +a scourge of yellow fever), I took a leave of absence for a few +months, leaving Colonel A. J. Smith, of the Seventh Cavalry, +temporarily in charge of my command. + +On this account I did not actually go on duty in the department of +the Missouri till March, 1868. On getting back I learned that the +negotiations of the Peace Commissioners held at Medicine Lodge, about +seventy miles south of Fort Larned had resulted in a treaty with the +Cheyennes, Arapahoes, Kiowas, and Comanches, by which agreement it +was supposed all troubles had been settled. The compact, as +concluded, contained numerous provisions, the most important to us +being one which practically relinquished the country between the +Arkansas and Platte rivers for white settlement; another permitted +the peaceable construction of the Pacific railroads through the same +region; and a third requiring the tribes signing the treaty to retire +to reservations allotted them in the Indian Territory. Although the +chiefs and head-men were well-nigh unanimous in ratifying these +concessions, it was discovered in the spring of 1868 that many of the +young men were bitterly opposed to what had been done, and claimed +that most of the signatures had been obtained by misrepresentation +and through proffers of certain annuities, and promises of arms and +ammunition to be issued in the spring of 1868. This grumbling was +very general in extent, and during the winter found outlet in +occasional marauding, so, fearing a renewal of the pillaging and +plundering at an early day, to prepare myself for the work evidently +ahead the first thing I did on assuming permanent command was to make +a trip to Fort Larned and Fort Dodge, near which places the bulk of +the Indians had congregated on Pawnee and Walnut creeks. I wanted to +get near enough to the camps to find out for myself the actual state +of feeling among the savages, and also to familiarize myself with the +characteristics of the Plains Indians, for my previous experience had +been mainly with mountain tribes on the Pacific coast. Fort Larned I +found too near the camps for my purpose, its proximity too readily +inviting unnecessary "talks," so I remained here but a day or two, +and then went on to Dodge, which, though considerably farther away +from the camps, was yet close enough to enable us to obtain easily +information of all that was going on. + +It took but a few days at Dodge to discover that great discontent +existed about the Medicine Lodge concessions, to see that the young +men were chafing and turbulent, and that it would require much tact +and good management on the part of the Indian Bureau to persuade the +four tribes to go quietly to their reservations, under an agreement +which, when entered into, many of them protested had not been fully +understood. + +A few hours after my arrival a delegation of prominent chiefs called +on me and proposed a council, where they might discuss their +grievances, and thus bring to the notice of the Government the +alleged wrongs done them; but this I refused, because Congress had +delegated to the Peace Commission the whole matter of treating with +them, and a council might lead only to additional complications. My +refusal left them without hope of securing better terms, or of even +delaying matters longer; so henceforth they were more than ever +reckless and defiant. Denunciations of the treaty became outspoken, +and as the young braves grew more and more insolent every day, it +amounted to conviction that, unless by some means the irritation was +allayed, hostilities would surely be upon us when the buffalo +returned to their summer feeding-grounds between the Arkansas and the +Platte. + +The principal sufferers in this event would be the settlers in middle +and western Kansas, who, entirely ignorant of the dangers hanging +over them, were laboring to build up homes in a new country. Hence +the maintenance of peace was much to be desired, if it could be +secured without too great concessions, and although I would not meet +the different tribes in a formal council, yet, to ward off from +settlers as much as possible the horrors of savage warfare, I showed, +by resorting to persuasive methods, my willingness to temporize a +good deal. An abundant supply of rations is usually effective to +keep matters quiet in such cases, so I fed them pretty freely, and +also endeavored to control them through certain men who, I found, +because of former associations, had their confidence. These men, +employed as scouts, or interpreters, were Mr. William Comstock, Mr. +Abner S. Grover, and Mr. Richard Parr. They had lived on the Plains +for many years with different tribes of Indians, had trapped and +hunted with them, and knew all the principal chiefs and headmen. +Through such influences, I thought I saw good chances of preserving +peace, and of inducing the discontented to go quietly to their +reservations in the Indian Territory as soon as General Hazen, the +representative of the Peace Commissioners, was ready to conduct them +there from Fort Larned. + +Before returning to Leavenworth I put my mediators (as I may call +them) under charge of an officer of the army, Lieutenant F. W. +Beecher, a very intelligent man, and directed him to send them out to +visit among the different tribes, in order to explain what was +intended by the treaty of Medicine Lodge, and to make every effort +possible to avert hostilities. Under these instructions Comstock and +Grover made it their business to go about among the Cheyennes--the +most warlike tribe of all--then camping about the headwaters of +Pawnee and Walnut creeks, and also to the north and west of Fort +Wallace, while Parr spent his time principally with the Kiowas and +Comanches. + +From the different posts--Wallace, Dodge, and Larned Lieutenant +Beecher kept up communication with all three scouts, and through him +I heard from them at least once a week. Every now and then some +trouble along the railroad or stage routes would be satisfactorily +adjusted and quiet restored, and matters seemed to be going on very +well, the warm weather bringing the grass and buffalo in plenty, and +still no outbreak, nor any act of downright hostility. So I began to +hope that we should succeed in averting trouble till the favorite war +season of the Indians was over, but the early days of August rudely +ended our fancied tranquility. + +In July the encampments about Fort Dodge began to break up, each band +or tribe moving off to some new location north of the Arkansas, +instead of toward its proper reservation to the south of that river. +Then I learned presently that a party of Cheyennes had made a raid on +the Kaws--a band of friendly Indians living near Council Grove--and +stolen their horses, and also robbed the houses of several white +people near Council Grove. This raid was the beginning of the Indian +war of 1868. Immediately following it, the Comanches and Kiowas came +to Fort Larned to receive their annuities, expecting to get also the +arms and ammunition promised them at Medicine Lodge, but the raid to +Council Grove having been reported to the Indian Department, the +issue of arms was suspended till reparation was made. This action of +the Department greatly incensed the savages, and the agent's offer of +the annuities without guns and pistols was insolently refused, the +Indians sulking back to their camps, the young men giving themselves +up to war-dances, and to powwows with "medicine-men," till all hope +of control was gone. + +Brevet Brigadier-General Alfred Sully, an officer of long experience +in Indian matters, who at this time was in command of the District of +the Arkansas, which embraced Forts Larned and Dodge, having notified +me of these occurrences at Larned, and expressed the opinion that the +Indians were bent on mischief, I directed him there immediately to +act against them. After he reached Larned, the chances for peace +appeared more favorable. The Indians came to see him, and protested +that it was only a few bad young men who had been depredating, and +that all would be well and the young men held in check if the agent +would but issue the arms and ammunition. Believing their promises, +Sully thought that the delivery of the arms would solve all the +difficulties, so on his advice the agent turned them over along with +the annuities, the Indians this time condescendingly accepting. + +This issue of arms and ammunition was a fatal mistake; Indian +diplomacy had overreached Sully's experience, and even while the +delivery was in progress a party of warriors had already begun a raid +of murder and rapine, which for acts of devilish cruelty perhaps has +no parallel in savage warfare. The party consisted of about two +hundred Cheyennes and a few Arapahoes, with twenty Sioux who had been +visiting their friends, the Cheyennes. As near as could be +ascertained, they organized and left their camps along Pawnee Creek +about the 3d of August. Traveling northeast, they skirted around +Fort Harker, and made their first appearance among the settlers in +the Saline Valley, about thirty miles north of that post. Professing +friendship and asking food at the farm-houses, they saw the +unsuspecting occupants comply by giving all they could spare from +their scanty stores. Knowing the Indian's inordinate fondness for +coffee, particularly when well sweetened, they even served him this +luxury freely. With this the demons began their devilish work. +Pretending to be indignant because it was served them in tin cups, +they threw the hot contents into the women's faces, and then, first +making prisoners of the men, they, one after another, ravished the +women till the victims became insensible. For some inexplicable +reason the two farmers were neither killed nor carried off, so after +the red fiends had gone, the unfortunate women were brought in to +Fort Harker, their arrival being the first intimation to the military +that hostilities had actually begun. + +Leaving the Saline, this war-party crossed over to the valley of the +Solomon, a more thickly settled region, and where the people were in +better circumstances, their farms having been started two or three +years before. Unaware of the hostile character of the raiders, the +people here received them in the friendliest way, providing food, and +even giving them ammunition, little dreaming of what was impending. +These kindnesses were requited with murder and pillage, and worse, +for all the women who fell into their hands were subjected to horrors +indescribable by words. Here also the first murders were committed, +thirteen men and two women being killed. Then, after burning five +houses and stealing all the horses they could find, they turned back +toward the Saline, carrying away as prisoners two little girls named +Bell, who have never been heard of since. + +It was probably the intention to finish, as they marched back to the +south, the devilish work begun on the Saline, but before they reached +that valley on the return, the victims left there originally had fled +to Fort Harker, as already explained, and Captain Benteen was now +nearing the little settlement with a troop of cavalry, which he had +hurriedly marched from Fort Zarah. The savages were attacking the +house of a Mr. Schermerhorn, where a few of the settlers had +collected for defense, when Benteen approached. Hearing the firing, +the troopers rode toward the sound at a gallop, but when they +appeared in view, coming over the hills, the Indians fled in all +directions, escaping punishment through their usual tactics of +scattering over the Plains, so as to leave no distinctive trail. + +When this frightful raid was taking place, Lieutenant Beecher, with +his three scouts--Comstock, Grover, and Parr--was on Walnut Creek. +Indefinite rumors about troubles on the Saline and Solomon reaching +him, he immediately sent Comstock and Grover over to the headwaters +of the Solomon, to the camp of a band of Cheyennes, whose chief was +called "Turkey Leg," to see if any of the raiders belonged there; to +learn the facts, and make explanations, if it was found that the +white people had been at fault. For years this chief had been a +special friend of Comstock and Grover. They had trapped, hunted, and +lived with his band, and from this intimacy they felt confident of +being able to get "Turkey Leg" to quiet his people, if any of them +were engaged in the raid; and, at all events, they expected, through +him and his band, to influence the rest of the Cheyennes. From the +moment they arrived in the Indian village, however, the two scouts +met with a very cold reception. Neither friendly pipe nor food was +offered them, and before they could recover from their chilling +reception, they were peremptorily ordered out of the village, with +the intimation that when the Cheyennes were on the war-path the +presence of whites was intolerable. The scouts were prompt to leave, +of course, and for a few miles were accompanied by an escort of seven +young men, who said they were sent with them to protect the two from +harm. As the party rode along over the prairie, such a depth +of attachment was professed for Comstock and Grover that, +notwithstanding all the experience of their past lives, they were +thoroughly deceived, and in the midst of a friendly conversation some +of the young warriors fell suddenly to the rear and treacherously +fired on them. + +At the volley Comstock fell from his horse instantly killed. Grover, +badly wounded in the shoulder, also fell to the ground near Comstock +Seeing his comrade was dead, Grover made use of his friend's body to +protect himself, lying close behind it. Then took place a remarkable +contest, Grover, alone and severely wounded, obstinately fighting the +seven Indians, and holding them at bay for the rest of the day. +Being an expert shot, and having a long-range repeating rifle, he +"stood off" the savages till dark. Then cautiously crawling away on +his belly to a deep ravine, he lay close, suffering terribly from his +wound, till the following night, when, setting out for Fort Wallace, +he arrived there the succeeding day, almost crazed from pain and +exhaustion. + +Simultaneously with the fiendish atrocities committed on the Saline +and Solomon rivers and the attack on Comstock and Grover, the +pillaging and murdering began on the Smoky Hill stage-route, along +the upper Arkansas River and on the headwaters of the Cimarron. That +along the Smoky Hill and north of it was the exclusive work of, the +Cheyennes, a part of the Arapahoes, and the few Sioux allies +heretofore mentioned, while the raiding on the Arkansas and Cimarron +was done principally by the Kiowas under their chief, Satanta, aided +by some of the Comanches. The young men of these tribes set out on +their bloody work just after the annuities and guns were issued at +Larned, and as soon as they were well on the road the rest of the +Comanches and Kiowas escaped from the post and fled south of the +Arkansas. They were at once pursued by General Sully with a small +force, but by the time he reached the Cimarron the war-party had +finished its raid on the upper Arkansas, and so many Indians combined +against Sully that he was compelled to withdraw to Fort Dodge, which +he reached not without considerable difficulty, and after three +severe fights. + +These, and many minor raids which followed, made it plain that a +general outbreak was upon us. The only remedy, therefore, was to +subjugate the savages immediately engaged in the forays by forcing +the several tribes to settle down on the reservations set apart by +the treaty of Medicine Lodge. The principal mischief-makers were the +Cheyennes. Next in deviltry were the Kiowas, and then the Arapahoes +and Comanches. Some few of these last two tribes continued friendly, +or at least took no active part in the raiding, but nearly all the +young men of both were the constant allies of the Cheyennes and +Kiowas. All four tribes together could put on the war-path a +formidable force of about 6,000 warriors. The subjugation of this +number of savages would be no easy task, so to give the matter my +undivided attention I transferred my headquarters from Leavenworth to +Fort Hays, a military post near which the prosperous town of Hays +City now stands. + +Fort Hays was just beyond the line of the most advanced settlements, +and was then the terminus of the Kansas-Pacific railroad. For this +reason it could be made a depot of supplies, and was a good point +from which to supervise matters in the section of country to be +operated in, which district is a part of the Great American Plains, +extending south from the Platte River in Nebraska to the Red River in +the Indian Territory, and westward from the line of frontier +settlements to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, a vast region +embracing an area of about 150,000 square miles. With the exception +of a half-dozen military posts and a few stations on the two overland +emigrant routes--the Smoky Hill to Denver, and the Arkansas to New +Mexico--this country was an unsettled waste known only to the Indians +and a few trappers. There were neither roads nor well-marked trails, +and the only timber to be found--which generally grew only along the +streams--was so scraggy and worthless as hardly to deserve the name. +Nor was water by any means plentiful, even though the section is +traversed by important streams, the Republican, the Smoky Hill, the +Arkansas, the Cimarron, and the Canadian all flowing eastwardly, as +do also their tributaries in the main. These feeders are sometimes +long and crooked, but as a general thing the volume of water is +insignificant except after rain-falls. Then, because of unimpeded +drainage, the little streams fill up rapidly with torrents of water, +which quickly flows off or sinks into the sand, leaving only an +occasional pool without visible inlet or outlet. + +At the period of which I write, in 1868, the Plains were covered with +vast herds of buffalo--the number has been estimated at 3,000,000 +head--and with such means of subsistence as this everywhere at hand, +the 6,000 hostiles were wholly unhampered by any problem of +food-supply. The savages were rich too according to Indian standards, +many a lodge owning from twenty to a hundred ponies; and +consciousness of wealth and power, aided by former temporizing, had +made them not only confident but defiant. Realizing that their +thorough subjugation would be a difficult task, I made up my mind to +confine operations during the grazing and hunting season to +protecting the people of the new settlements and on the overland +routes, and then, when winter came, to fall upon the savages +relentlessly, for in that season their ponies would be thin, and weak +from lack of food, and in the cold and snow, without strong ponies to +transport their villages and plunder, their movements would be so +much impeded that the troops could overtake them. + +At the outbreak of hostilities I had in all, east of New Mexico, a +force of regulars numbering about 2,600 men--1,200 mounted and 1,400 +foot troops. The cavalry was composed of the Seventh and Tenth +regiments; the infantry, of the Third and Fifth regiments and four +companies of the Thirty-Eighth. With these few troops all the posts +along the Smoky Hill and Arkansas had to be garrisoned, emigrant +trains escorted, and the settlements and routes of travel and the +construction parties on the Kansas-Pacific railway protected. Then, +too, this same force had to furnish for the field small movable +columns, that were always on the go, so it will be rightly inferred +that every available man was kept busy from the middle of August till +November; especially as during this period the hostiles attacked over +forty widely dispersed places, in nearly all cases stealing horses, +burning houses, and killing settlers. It was of course impossible to +foresee where these descents would be made, but as soon as an attack +was heard of assistance was always promptly rendered, and every now +and then we succeeded in killing a few savages. As a general thing, +though, the raiders escaped before relief arrived, and when they had +a few miles the start, all efforts to catch them were futile. I +therefore discouraged long pursuits, and, in fact, did not approve of +making any at all unless the chances of obtaining paying results were +very evident, otherwise the troops would be worn out by the time the +hard work of the winter was demanded from them. + +To get ready for a winter campaign of six months gave us much to do. +The thing most needed was more men, so I asked for additional +cavalry, and all that could be spareds--even troops of the Fifth +Cavalry--was sent tome. Believing this reinforcement insufficient, +to supplement it I applied for a regiment of Kansas volunteers, which +request being granted, the organization of the regiment was +immediately begun at Topeka. It was necessary also to provide a +large amount of transportation and accumulate quantities of stores, +since the campaign probably would not end till spring. Another +important matter was to secure competent guides for the different +columns of troops, for, as I have said, the section of country to be +operated in was comparatively unknown. + +In those days the railroad town of Hays City was filled with so +called "Indian scouts," whose common boast was of having slain scores +of redskins, but the real scout--that is, a 'guide and trailer +knowing the habits of the Indians--was very scarce, and it was hard +to find anybody familiar with the country south of the Arkansas, +where the campaign was to be made. Still, about Hays City and the +various military posts there was some good material to select from, +and we managed to employ several men, who, from their experience on +the Plains in various capacities, or from natural instinct and +aptitude, soon became excellent guides and courageous and valuable +scouts, some of them, indeed, gaining much distinction. Mr. William +F. Cody ("Buffalo Bill"), whose renown has since become world-wide, +was one of the men thus selected. He received his sobriquet from his +marked success in killing buffaloes for a contractor, to supply fresh +meat to the construction parties, on the Kansas-Pacific railway. He +had given up this business, however, and was now in the employ of the +quartermaster's department of the army, and was first brought to my +notice by distinguishing himself in bringing me an important despatch +from Fort Larned to Fort Hays, a distance of sixty-five miles, +through a section infested with Indians. The despatch informed me +that the Indians near Larned were preparing to decamp, and this +intelligence required that certain orders should be carried to Fort +Dodge, ninety-five miles south of Hays. This too being a +particularly dangerous route--several couriers having been killed on +it--it was impossible to get one of the various "Petes," "Jacks," or +"Jims" hanging around Hays City to take my communication. Cody +learning of the strait I was in, manfully came to the rescue, and +proposed to make the trip to Dodge, though he had just finished his +long and perilous ride from Larned. I gratefully accepted his offer, +and after four or five hours' rest he mounted a fresh horse and +hastened on his journey, halting but once to rest on the way, and +then only for an hour, the stop being made at Coon Creek, where he +got another mount from a troop of cavalry. At Dodge he took six +hours' sleep, and then continued on to his own post--Fort Larned +--with more despatches. After resting twelve hours at Larned, he was +again in the saddle with tidings for me at Fort Hays, General Hazen +sending him, this time, with word that the villages had fled to the +south of the Arkansas. Thus, in all, Cody rode about 350 miles in less +than sixty hours, and such an exhibition of endurance and courage was +more than enough to convince me that his services would be extremely +valuable in the campaign, so I retained him at Fort Hays till the +battalion of the Fifth Cavalry arrived, and then made him chief of +scouts for that regiment. + +The information brought me by Cody on his second trip from Larned +indicated where the villages would be found in the winter, and I +decided to move on them about the 1st of November. Only the women +and children and the decrepit old men were with the villages, however +enough, presumably, to look after the plunder most of the warriors +remaining north of the Arkansas to continue their marauding. Many +severe fights occurred between our troops and these marauders, and in +these affairs, before November 1 over a hundred Indians were killed, +yet from the ease with which the escaping savages would disappear +only to fall upon remote settlements with pillage and murder, the +results were by no means satisfactory. One of the most noteworthy of +these preliminary affairs was the gallant fight made on the +Republican River the 17th of September by my Aide, Colonel George A. +Forsyth, and party, against about seven hundred Cheyennes and Sioux. +Forsyth, with Lieutenant Beecher, and Doctor J. H. Mooers as surgeon, +was in charge of a company of citizen scouts, mostly expert +rifle-shots, but embracing also a few Indian fighters, among these +Grover and Parr. The company was organized the latter part of August +for immediate work in defense of the settlements, and also for future +use in the Indian Territory when the campaign should open there. About +the time the company had reached its complement--it was limited to +forty-seven men and three officers--a small band of hostiles began +depredations near Sheridan City, one of the towns that grew up +over-night on the Kansas-Pacific railway. Forsyth pursued this party, +but failing to overtake it, made his way into Fort Wallace for rations, +intending to return from there to Fort Hays. Before he started back, +however, another band of Indians appeared near the post and stole some +horses from the stage company. This unexpected raid made Forsyth hot +to go for the marauders, and he telegraphed me for permission, which I +as promptly gave him. He left the post on the 10th of September, the +command consisting of himself, Lieutenant Beecher, Acting Assistant +Surgeon Mooers, and the full strength, forty-seven men, with a few pack +mules carrying about ten days' rations. + +He headed north toward the Republican River. For the first two days +the trail was indistinct and hard to follow. During the next three +it continued to grow much larger, indicating plainly that the number +of Indians ahead was rapidly increasing. Of course this sign meant a +fight as soon as a large enough force was mustered, but as this was +what Forsyth was after, he pushed ahead with confidence and alacrity. +The night of the 16th of September he encamped on the Arickaree +branch of the Republican, not far from the forks of the river, with +the expectation of resuming the march as usual next day, for the +indications were that the main body of the savages must be still a +long way off, though in the preceding twenty-four hours an occasional +Indian had been seen. + +But the enemy was much nearer than was thought, for at daybreak on +the morning of the 17th he made known his immediate presence by a +sudden dash at Forsyth's horses, a few of which were stampeded and +captured before the scouts could reach them. This dash was made by a +small party only to get the horses, so those engaged in it were soon +driven off, but a few minutes later hundreds of savages--it was +afterward learned that seven hundred warriors took part in the fight +--hitherto invisible, showed themselves on the hills overlooking the +camp and so menacingly as to convince Forsyth that his defense must +be one of desperation. The only place at hand that gave any hope of +successful resistance was a small island in the Arickaree, the +channel on one side being about a foot deep while on the other it was +completely dry; so to this position a hurried retreat was made. All +the men and the remaining animals reached the island in safety, but +on account of the heavy fire poured in from the neighboring hills the +packs containing the rations and medicines had to be abandoned. + +On seeing Forsyth's hasty move, the Indians, thinking they had him, +prepared to overwhelm the scouts by swooping down on one side of the +island with about five hundred mounted warriors, while about two +hundred, covered by the tall grass in the river-bottom attacked the +other side, dismounted. But the brave little band sadly disappointed +them. When the charge came it was met with such a deadly fire that a +large number of the fiends were killed, some of them even after +gaining the bank of the island. This check had the effect of making +the savages more wary, but they were still bold enough to make two +more assaults before mid-day. Each of these ending like the first, +the Indians thereafter contented themselves with shooting +all the horses, which had been tied up to some scraggy little +cottonwood-trees, and then proceeded to lay siege to the party. + +The first man struck was Forsyth himself. He was hit three times in +all--twice in one leg, both serious wounds, and once on the head, a +slight abrasion of the scalp. A moment later Beecher was killed and +Doctor Mooers mortally wounded: and in addition to these misfortunes +the scouts kept getting hit, till several were killed, and the whole +number of casualties had reached twenty-one in a company of +forty-seven. Yet with all this, and despite the seeming hopelessness +of the situation, the survivors kept up their pluck undiminished, and +during a lull succeeding the third repulse dug into the loose soil till +the entire party was pretty well protected by rifle-pits. Thus covered +they stood off the Indians for the next three days, although of course +their condition became deplorable from lack of food, while those who +were hurt suffered indescribable agony, since no means were at hand for +dressing their wounds. + +By the third day the Indians, seeming to despair of destroying the +beleaguered party before succor might arrive, began to draw off, and +on the fourth wholly disappeared. The men were by this time nearly +famished for food. Even now there was nothing to be had except +horse-meat from the carcasses of the animals killed the first day, +and this, though decidedly unpalatable, not to say disgusting, had to +be put up with, and so on such unwholesome stuff they managed to live +for four days longer, at the end of which time they were rescued by a +column of troops under Colonel Bankhead, which had hastened from Fort +Wallace in response to calls for help, carried there by two brave +fellows--Stilwell and Truedell--who, volunteering to go for relief, +had slipped through the Indians, and struck out for that post in the +night after the first day's fight. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII, + +FITTING OUT THE WINTER EXPEDITION--ACCOMPANYING THE MAIN FORCE--THE +OTHER COLUMNS--STRUCK BY A BLIZZARD--CUSTER'S FIGHT ON THE WASHITA +--DEFEAT AND DEATH OF BLACK KETTLE--MASSACRE OF ELLIOTT'S PARTY +--RELIEF OF COLONEL CRAWFORD. + +The end of October saw completed the most of my arrangements for the +winter campaign, though the difficulties and hardships to be +encountered had led several experienced officers of the army, and +some frontiersmen like Mr. James Bridger, the famous scout and, guide +of earlier days, to discourage the project. Bridger even went so far +as to come out from St. Louis to dissuade me, but I reasoned that as +the soldier was much better fed and clothed than the Indian, I had +one great advantage, and that, in short, a successful campaign could +be made if the operations of the different columns were energetically +conducted. To see to this I decided to go in person with the main +column, which was to push down into the western part of the Indian +Territory, having for its initial objective the villages which, at +the beginning of hostilities, had fled toward the head-waters of the +Red River, and those also that had gone to the same remote region +after decamping from the neighborhood of Larned at the time that +General Hazen sent Buffalo Bill to me with the news. + +The column which was expected to do the main work was to be composed +of the Nineteenth Kansas Volunteer Cavalry, commanded by Colonel +Crawford; eleven troops of the Seventh United States Cavalry, under +General Custer, and a battalion of five companies of infantry under +Brevet Major John H. Page. To facilitate matters, General Sully, the +district commander, was ordered to rendezvous these troops and +establish a supply depot about a hundred miles south of Fort Dodge, +as from such a point operations could be more readily conducted. He +selected for the depot a most suitable place at the confluence of +Beaver and Wolf creeks, and on his arrival there with Custer's and +Page's commands, named the place Camp Supply. + +In conjunction with the main column, two others also were to +penetrate the Indian Territory. One of these, which was to march +east from New Mexico by way of Fort Bascom was to be composed of six +troops of the Third Cavalry and two companies of infantry, the whole +under Colonel A. W. Evans. The other, consisting of seven troops of +the Fifth Cavalry, and commanded by Brevet Brigadier-General Eugene +A. Carr, was to march southeast from Fort Lyon; the intention being +that Evans and Carr should destroy or drive in toward old Fort Cobb +any straggling bands that might be prowling through the country west +of my own line of march; Carr, as he advanced, to be joined by Brevet +Brigadier-General W. H. Penrose, with five troops of cavalry already +in the field southeast of Lyon. The Fort Bascom column, after +establishing a depot of supplies at Monument Creek, was to work down +the main Canadian, and remain out as long as it could feed itself +from New Mexico; Carr, having united with Penrose on the North +Canadian, was to operate toward the Antelope Hills and headwaters of +the Red River; while I, with the main column was to move southward to +strike the Indians along the Washita, or still farther south on +branches of the Red River. + +It was no small nor easy task to outfit all these troops by the time +cold weather set in, and provide for them during the winter, but by +the 1st of November I had enough supplies accumulated at Forts Dodge +and Lyon for my own and Carr's columns, and in addition directed +subsistence and forage for three months to be sent to Fort Gibson for +final delivery at Fort Arbuckle, as I expected to feed the command +from this place when we arrived in the neighborhood of old Fort Cobb, +but through some mismanagement few of these stores got further than +Gibson before winter came on. + +November 1, all being ready, Colonel Grawford was furnished with +competent guides, and, after sending two troops to Fort Dodge to act +as my escort, with the rest of his regiment he started from Topeka +November 5, under orders to march straight for the rendezvous at the +junction of Beaver and Wolf creeks. He was expected to reach his +destination about the 20th, and there unite with the Seventh Cavalry +and the battalion of infantry, which in the mean time were on the +march from Dodge. A few days later Carr and Evans began their march +also, and everything being now in motion, I decided to go to Camp +Supply to give the campaign my personal attention, determined to +prove that operations could be successfully conducted in spite of +winter, and bent on showing the Indians that they were not secure +from punishment because of inclement weather--an ally on which they +had hitherto relied with much assurance. + +We started from Fort Hays on the 15th of November, and the first +night out a blizzard struck us and carried away our tents; and as the +gale was so violent that they could not be put up again, the rain and +snow drenched us to the skin. Shivering from wet and cold, I took +refuge under a wagon, and there spent such a miserable night that, +when at last morning came, the gloomy predictions of old man Bridger +and others rose up before me with greatly increased force. As we +took the road the sleet and snow were still falling, but we labored +on to Dodge that day in spite of the fact that many of the mules +played out on the way. We stayed only one night at Dodge, and then +on the 17th, escorted by a troop of cavalry and Forsyth's scouts, now +under the command of Lieutenant Lewis Pepoon, crossed the Arkansas +and camped the night of the 18th at Bluff Creek, where the two troops +of the Nineteenth Kansas, previously detailed as my escort, were +awaiting our coming. As we were approaching this camp some +suspicious looking objects were seen moving off at a long distance to +the east of us, but as the scouts confidently pronounced them +buffalo, we were unaware of their true character till next morning, +when we became satisfied that what we had seen were Indians, for +immediately after crossing Beaver Creek we struck a trail, leading to +the northeast, of a war party that evidently came up from the +head-waters of the Washita River. + +The evening of November 21st arrived at the Camp Supply depot, having +traveled all day in another snowstorm that did not end till +twenty-four hours later. General Sully, with Custer's regiment and the +infantry battalion, had reached the place several days before, but the +Kansas regiment had not yet put in an appearance. All hands were hard +at work trying to shelter the stores and troops, but from the trail +seen that morning, believing that an opportunity offered to strike an +effective blow, I directed Custer to call in his working parties and +prepare to move immediately, without waiting for Crawford's regiment, +unaccountably absent. Custer was ready to start by the 23d, and he was +then instructed to march north to where the trail had been seen near +Beaver Creek and follow it on the back track, for, being convinced that +the war party had come from the Washita, I felt certain that this plan +would lead directly to the villages. + +The difficulties attending a winter campaign were exhibited now with +their full force, as the march had to be conducted through a +snow-storm that hid surrounding objects, and so covered the country as +to alter the appearance of the prominent features, making the task of +the guides doubly troublesome; but in spite of these obstacles fifteen +miles had been traversed when Custer encamped for the night. The next +day the storm had ceased, and the weather was clear and cold. The +heavy fall of snow had of course obliterated the trail in the bottoms, +and everywhere on the level; but, thanks to the wind, that had swept +comparatively bare the rough places and high ground, the general +direction could be traced without much trouble. The day's march, which +was through a country abounding with buffalo, was unattended by any +special incident at first, but during the afternoon, after getting the +column across the Canadian River--an operation which, on account of the +wagons, consumed considerable time--Custer's scouts (friendly Osages) +brought back word that, some miles ahead, they had struck fresh signs, +a trail coming into the old one from the north, which, in their +opinion, indicated that the war party was returning to the villages. + +On the receipt of this news, Custer, leaving a guard with the wagons, +hastily assembled the rest of his men' and pushing on rapidly, +overtook the scouts and a detailed party from his regiment which had +accompanied them, all halted on the new trail awaiting his arrival. +A personal examination satisfied Custer that the surmises of his +scouts were correct; and also that the fresh trail in the deep snow +could at night be followed with ease. After a short halt for supper +and rest the pursuit was resumed, the Osage scouts in advance, and +although the hostile Indians were presumed to be yet some distance +off, every precaution was taken to prevent detection and to enable +our troops to strike them unawares. The fresh trail, which it was +afterward ascertained had been made by raiders from Black Kettle's +village of Cheyennes, and by some Arapahoes, led into the valley of +the Washita, and growing fresher as the night wore on, finally +brought the Osages upon a campfire, still smoldering, which, it was +concluded, had been built by the Indian boys acting as herders of the +ponies during the previous day. It was evident, then, that the +village could be but a few miles off; hence the pursuit was continued +with redoubled caution until, a few hours before dawn of the 27th, as +the leading scouts peered over a rise on the line of march, they +discovered a large body of animals in the valley below. + +As soon as they reported this discovery, Custer determined to +acquaint himself with the situation by making a reconnoissance in +person, accompanied by his principal officers. So, sending back word +to halt the cavalry, he directed the officers to ride forward with +him; then dismounting, the entire party crept cautiously to a high +point which overlooked the valley, and from where, by the bright moon +then shining, they saw just how the village was situated. Its +position was such as to admit of easy approach from all sides. So, +to preclude an escape of the Indians, Custer decided to attack at +daybreak, and from four different directions. + +The plan having been fully explained to the officers, the remaining +hours of the night were employed in making the necessary +dispositions. Two of the detachments left promptly, since they had +to make a circuitous march of several miles to Teach the points +designated for their attack; the third started a little later; and +then the fourth and last, under Custer himself, also moved into +position. As the first light grew visible in the east, each column +moved closer in to the village, and then, all dispositions having +been made according to the prearranged plan, from their appointed +places the entire force to the opening notes of "Garry Owen," played +by the regimental band as the signal for the attack--dashed at a +gallop into the village. The sleeping and unsuspecting savages were +completely surprised by the onset; yet after the first confusion, +during which the impulse to escape principally actuated them, they +seized their weapons, and from behind logs and trees, or plunging +into the stream and using its steep bank as a breastwork, they poured +upon their assailants a heavy fire, and kept on fighting with every +exhibition of desperation. In such a combat mounted men were +useless, so Custer directed his troopers to fight on, foot, and the +Indians were successively driven from one point of vantage to +another, until, finally, by 9 o'clock the entire camp was in his +possession and the victory complete. Black Kettle and over one +hundred of his warriors were killed, and about fifty women and +children captured; but most of the noncombatants, as well as a few +warriors and boys, escaped in the confusion of the fight. Making +their way down the river, these fugitives alarmed the rest of the +Cheyennes and Arapahoes, and also the Kiowas and Comanches, whose +villages were in close proximity--the nearest not more than two miles +off. + +Then of course all the warriors of these tribes rallied to attack +Custer, who meantime was engaged burning Black Kettle's camp and +collecting his herds of ponies. But these new foes were rather wary +and circumspect, though they already had partial revenge in an +unlooked for way by cutting off Major Elliott and fifteen men, who +had gone off in pursuit of a batch of young warriors when the fight +was going on at the village. In fact, the Indians had killed +Elliott's whole party, though neither the fate of the poor fellows, +nor how they happened to be caught, was known till long afterward. +It was then ascertained that the detachment pursued a course due +south, nearly at right angles to the Washita River, and after +galloping a couple of miles over the hills, crossing a small branch +of the Washita on the way, they captured some of the fugitives. In +bringing the prisoners back, Elliott was in turn attacked on the open +prairie by a large number of savages from farther down the Washita, +who by this time were swarming to the aid of Black Kettle's village. +The little band fought its way gallantly to within rifle-range of the +small creek referred to, but could get no farther, for the Indians +had taken up a position in the bed of the stream, and from under +cover of its banks Elliott and all his remaining men were quickly +killed. No relief was sent them, for Custer, not having seen Elliott +set out, knew nothing of the direction taken, and, besides, was busy +burning the villages and securing the ponies, and deeply concerned, +too, with defending himself from the new dangers menacing him. +Elliott and his brave little party were thus left to meet their fate +alone. + +While Custer was burning the lodges and plunder and securing the +ponies, the Indians from the villages down the Washita were gathering +constantly around him till by mid-day they had collected in +thousands, and then came a new problem as to what should be done. If +he attacked the other villages, there was great danger of his being +overwhelmed, and should he start back to Camp Supply by daylight, he +would run the risk of losing his prisoners and the ponies, so, +thinking the matter over, he decided to shoot all the ponies, and +keep skirmishing with the savages till nightfall, and then, under +cover of the darkness, return to Camp Supply; a programme that was +carried out successfully, but Custer's course received some severe +criticism because no effort was made to discover what had become of +Elliott. + +Custer had, in all, two officers and nineteen men killed, and two +officers and eleven men wounded. The blow struck was a most +effective one, and, fortunately, fell on one of the most villainous of +the hostile bands that, without any provocation whatever, had +perpetrated the massacres on the Saline and Solomon, committing +atrocities too repulsive for recital, and whose hands were still red +from their bloody work on the recent raid. Black Kettle, the chief, +was an old man, and did not himself go with the raiders to the Saline +and Solomon, and on this account his fate was regretted by some. But +it was old age only that kept him back, for before the demons set out +from Walnut Creek he had freely encouraged them by "making medicine," +and by other devilish incantations that are gone through with at war +and scalp dances. + +When the horrible work was over he undertook to shield himself by +professions of friendship, but being put to the test by my offering +to feed and care for all of his band who would come in to Fort Dodge +and remain there peaceably, he defiantly refused. The consequence of +this refusal was a merited punishment, only too long delayed. + +I received the first news of Custer's fight on the Washita on the +morning of November 29. It was brought to me by one of his white +scouts, "California Joe," a noted character, who had been +experiencing the ups and downs of pioneer life ever since crossing +the Plains in 1849. Joe was an invaluable guide and Indian fighter +whenever the clause of the statute prohibiting liquors in the Indian +country happened to be in full force. At the time in question the +restriction was by no means a dead letter, and Joe came through in +thirty-six hours, though obliged to keep in hiding during daylight of +the 28th. The tidings brought were joyfully received by everybody at +Camp Supply, and they were particularly agreeable tome, for, besides +being greatly worried about the safety of the command in the extreme +cold and deep snows, I knew that the immediate effect a victory would +be to demoralize the rest of the hostiles, which of course would +greatly facilitate and expedite our ultimate success. Toward evening +the day after Joe arrived the head of Custer's column made its +appearance on the distant hills, the friendly Osage scouts and the +Indian prisoners in advance. As they drew near, the scouts began a +wild and picturesque performance in celebration of the victory, +yelling, firing their guns, throwing themselves on the necks and +sides of their horses to exhibit their skill in riding, and going +through all sorts of barbaric evolutions and gyrations, which were +continued till night, when the rejoicings were ended with the hideous +scalp dance. + +The disappearance of Major Elliott and his party was the only damper +upon our pleasure, and the only drawback to the very successful +expedition. There was no definite information as to the detachment, +--and Custer was able to report nothing more than that he had not +seen Elliott since just before the fight began. His theory was, +however, that Elliott and his men had strayed off on account of +having no guide, and would ultimately come in all right to Camp +Supply or make their way back to Fort Dodge; a very unsatisfactory +view of the matter, but as no one knew the direction Elliott had +taken, it was useless to speculate on other suppositions, and +altogether too late to make any search for him. I was now anxious to +follow up Custer's stroke by an immediate move to the south with the +entire column, but the Kansas regiment had not yet arrived. At first +its nonappearance did not worry me much, for I attributed the delay +to the bad weather, and supposed Colonel Crawford had wisely laid up +during the worst storms. Further, waiting, however, would give the +Indians a chance to recover from the recent dispiriting defeat, so I +sent out scouting parties to look Crawford up and hurry him along. +After a great deal of searching, a small detachment of the regiment +was found about fifty miles below us on the North Canadian, seeking +our camp. This detachment was in a pretty bad plight, and when +brought in, the officer in charge reported that the regiment, by not +following the advice of the guide sent to conduct it to Camp Supply, +had lost its way. Instead of relying on the guides, Crawford had +undertaken to strike through the canyons of the Cimarron by what +appeared to him a more direct route, and in the deep gorges, filled +as they were with snow, he had been floundering about for days +without being able to extricate his command. Then, too, the men were +out of rations, though they had been able to obtain enough buffalo +meat to keep from starving. As for the horses, since they could get +no grass, about seven hundred of them had already perished from +starvation and exposure. Provisions and guides were immediately sent +out to the regiment, but before the relief could reach Crawford his +remaining horses were pretty much all gone, though the men were +brought in without loss of life. Thus, the regiment being dismounted +by this misfortune at the threshold of the campaign, an important +factor of my cavalry was lost to me, though as foot-troops the Kansas +volunteers continued to render very valuable services till mustered +out the next spring. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +A WINTER EXPEDITION--HERDS OF BUFFALO--WOLVES--BLIZZARDS--A TERRIBLE +NIGHT--FINDING THE BODIES OF ELLIOTT'S PARTY--THE ABANDONED INDIAN +CAMPS--PUSHING DOWN THE WASHITA--THE CAPTURED CHIEFS--EVANS'S +SUCCESSFUL FIGHT--ESTABLISHING FORT SILL--"CALIFORNIA JOE"--DUPLICITY +OF THE CHEYENNES--ORDERED TO REPAIR TO WASHINGTON. + +A few days were necessarily lost setting up and refitting the Kansas +regiment after its rude experience in the Cimarron canyons. This +through with, the expedition, supplied with thirty days' rations, +moved out to the south on the 7th of December, under my personal +command. We headed for the Witchita Mountains, toward which rough +region all the villages along the Washita River had fled after +Custer's fight with Black Kettle. My line of march was by way of +Custer's battle-field, and thence down the Washita, and if the +Indians could not sooner be brought to terms, I intended to follow +them into the Witchita Mountains from near old Fort Cobb. The snow +was still deep everywhere, and when we started the thermometer was +below zero, but the sky being clear and the day very bright, the +command was in excellent spirits. The column was made up of ten +companies of the Kansas regiment, dismounted; eleven companies of the +Seventh Cavalry, Pepoon's scouts, and the Osage scouts. In addition +to Pepoon's men and the Osages, there was also "California Joe," and +one or two other frontiersmen besides, to act as guides and +interpreters. Of all these the principal one, the one who best knew +the country, was Ben Clark, a young man who had lived with the +Cheyennes during much of his boyhood, and who not only had a pretty +good knowledge of the country, but also spoke fluently the Cheyenne +and Arapahoe dialects, and was an adept in the sign language. + +The first day we made only about ten miles, which carried us to the +south bank of Wolf Creek. A considerable part of the day was devoted +to straightening out matters in the command, and allowing time for +equalizing the wagon loads, which as a general thing, on a first +day's march, are unfairly distributed. And then there was an +abundance of fire-wood at Wolf Creek; indeed, here and on Hackberry +Creek--where I intended to make my next camp--was the only timber +north of the Canadian River; and to select the halting places near a +plentiful supply of wood was almost indispensable, for as the men +were provided with only shelter-tents, good fires were needed in +order to keep warm. + +The second day, after marching for hours through vast herds of +buffalo, we made Hackberry Creek; but not, however, without several +stampedes in the wagon-train, the buffalo frightening the mules so +that it became necessary to throw out flankers to shoot the leading +bulls and thus turn off the herds. In the wake of every drove +invariably followed a band of wolves. This animal is a great coward +usually, but hunger had made these so ravenous that they would come +boldly up to the column, and as quick as a buffalo was killed, or +even disabled, they would fall upon the carcass and eagerly devour +it. Antelope also were very numerous, and as they were quite tame +--being seldom chased--and naturally very inquisitive, it was not an +unfrequent thing to see one of the graceful little creatures run in +among the men and be made a prisoner. Such abundance of game +relieved the monotony of the march to Hackberry Creek, but still, +both men and animals were considerably exhausted by their long tramp, +for we made over thirty miles that day. + +We camped in excellent shape on the creek and it was well we did, for +a "Norther," or "blizzard," as storms on the Plains are now termed +struck us in the night. During the continuance of these blizzards, +which is usually about three days, the cold wind sweeps over the +Plains with great force, and, in the latitude of the Indian +Territory, is weighted with great quantities of sleet and snow, +through which it is often impossible to travel; indeed, these +"Northers" have many times proved fatal to the unprotected +frontiersman. With our numbers the chance of any one's being lost, +and perishing alone (one of the most common dangers in a blizzard), +was avoided; but under any circumstances such a storm could but +occasion intense suffering to all exposed to it, hence it would have +been well to remain in camp till the gale was over, but the time +could not be spared. We therefore resumed the march at an early hour +next morning, with the expectation of making the south bank of the +main Canathan and there passing the night, as Clark assured me that +timber was plentiful on that side of the river. The storm greatly +impeded us, however, many of the mules growing discouraged, and some +giving out entirely, so we could not get to Clark's "good camp," for +with ten hours of utmost effort only about half a day's distance +could be covered, when at last, finding the struggle useless, we were +forced to halt for the night in a bleak bottom on the north bank of +the river. But no one could sleep, for the wind swept over us with +unobstructed fury, and the only fuel to be had was a few green +bushes. As night fell a decided change of temperature added much to +our misery, the mercury, which had risen when the "Norther" began, +again falling to zero. It can be easily imagined that under such +circumstances the condition of the men was one of extreme discomfort; +in truth, they had to tramp up and down the camp all night long to +keep from freezing. Anything was a relief to this state of things, +so at the first streak of day we quit the dreadful place and took up +the march. + +A seemingly good point for crossing the Canadian was found a couple +of miles down the stream, where we hoped to get our train over on the +ice, but an experiment proving that it was not strong enough, a ford +had to be made, which was done by marching some of the cavalry +through the river, which was about half a mile wide, to break up the +large floes when they had been cut loose with axes. After much hard +work a passage-way was thus opened, and by noon the command was +crossed to the south bank, and after thawing out and drying our +clothes before big fires, we headed for a point on the Washita, where +Clark said there was plenty of wood, and good water too, to make us +comfortable till the blizzard had blown over. + +We reached the valley of the Washita a little before dark, and camped +some five or six miles above the scene of Custer's fight, where I +concluded to remain at least a day, to rest the command and give it a +chance to refit. In the mean time I visited the battle-field in +company with Custer and several other officers, to see if there was a +possibility of discovering any traces of Elliotts party. On arriving +at the site of the village, and learning from Custer what +dispositions had been made in approaching for the attack, the +squadron of the escort was deployed and pushed across the river at +the point where Elliott had crossed. Moving directly to the south, +we had not gone far before we struck his trail, and soon the whole +story was made plain by our finding, on an open level space about two +miles from the destroyed village, the dead and frozen bodies of the +entire party. The poor fellows were all lying within a circle not +more than fifteen or twenty paces in diameter, and the little piles +of empty cartridge shells near each body showed plainly that every +man had made a brave fight. None were scalped, but most of them were +otherwise horribly mutilated, which fiendish work is usually done by +the squaws. All had been stripped of their clothing, but their +comrades in the escort were able to identify the bodies, which being +done, we gave them decent burial. Their fate was one that has +overtaken many of our gallant army in their efforts to protect the +frontiersmen's homes and families from savages who give no quarter, +though they have often received it, and where the possibility of +defeat in action carries with it the certainty of death and often of +preceding torture. + +From the meadow where Elliott was found we rode to the Washita, and +then down the river through the sites of the abandoned villages, that +had been strung along almost continuously for about twelve miles in +the timber skirting the stream. On every hand appeared ample +evidence that the Indians had intended to spend the winter here, for +the ground was littered with jerked meat, bales of buffalo robes, +cooking utensils, and all sorts of plunder usually accumulated in a +permanent Indian camp. There were, also, lying dead near the +villages hundreds of ponies, that had been shot to keep them from +falling into our hands, the scant grazing and extreme cold having +made them too weak to be driven along in the flight. The wholesale +slaughter of these ponies was a most cheering indication that our +campaign would be ultimately successful, and we all prayed for at +least a couple of months more of cold weather and plenty of snow. + +At the Kiowa village we found the body of a white woman--a Mrs. +Blynn--and also that of her child. These captives had been taken by +the Kiowas near Fort Lyon the previous summer, and kept close +prisoners until the stampede began, the poor woman being reserved to +gratify the brutal lust of the chief, Satanta; then, however, Indian +vengeance demanded the murder of the poor creatures, and after +braining the little child against a tree, the mother was shot through +the forehead, the weapon, which no doubt brought her welcome release, +having been fired so close that the powder had horribly disfigured +her face. The two bodies were wrapped in blankets and taken to camp, +and afterward carried along in our march, till finally they were +decently interred at Fort Arbuckle.. + +At an early hour on December 12 the command pulled out from its cosy +camp and pushed down the valley of the Washita, following immediately +on the Indian trail which led in the direction of Fort Cobb, but +before going far it was found that the many deep ravines and canyons +on this trail would delay our train very much, so we moved out of the +valley and took the level prairie on the divide. Here the traveling +was good, and a rapid gait was kept up till mid-day, when, another +storm of sleet and snow coming on, it became extremely difficult for +the guides to make out the proper course; and fearing that we might +get lost or caught on the open plain without wood or water--as we had +been on the Canadian--I turned the command back to the valley, +resolved to try no more shortcuts involving the risk of a disaster to +the expedition. But to get back was no slight task, for a dense fog +just now enveloped us, obscuring all landmarks. However, we were +headed right when the fog set in, and we had the good luck to reach +the valley before night-fall, though there was a great deal of +floundering about, and also much disputing among the guides as to +where the river would be found Fortunately we struck the stream right +at a large grove of timber, and established ourselves, admirably. By +dark the ground was covered with twelve or fifteen inches of fresh +snow, and as usual the temperature rose very sensibly while the storm +was on, but after night-fall the snow ceased and the skies cleared +up. Daylight having brought zero weather again, our start on the +morning of the 17th was painful work, many of the men freezing their +fingers while handling the horse equipments, harness, and tents. +However, we got off in fairly good season, and kept to the trail +along the Washita notwithstanding the frequent digging and bridging +necessary to get the wagons over ravines. + +Continuing on this line for three days, we at length came to a point +on the Washita where all signs indicated that we were nearing some of +the villages. Wishing to strike them as soon as possible, we made a +very early start next morning, the 17th. A march of four or five +miles brought us to a difficult ravine, and while we were making +preparations to get over, word was brought that several Indians had +appeared in our front bearing a white flag and making signs that they +had a communication to deliver. We signaled back that they would be +received, when one of the party came forward alone and delivered a +letter, which proved to be from General Hazen, at Fort Cobb. The +letter showed that Hazen was carrying on negotiations with the +Indians, and stated that all the tribes between Fort Cobb and my +column were friendly, but the intimation was given that the +Cheyennes and Arapahoes were still hostile, having moved off +southward toward the Red River. It was added that Satanta and Lone +Wolf--the chiefs of the Kiowas--would give information of the +whereabouts of the hostiles; and such a communication coming direct +from the representative of the Indian Department, practically took +the Kiowas--the village at hand was of that tribe--under its +protection, and also the Comanches, who were nearer in to Cobb. Of +course, under such circumstances I was compelled to give up the +intended attack, though I afterward regretted that I had paid any +heed to the message, because Satanta and Lone Wolf proved, by +trickery and double dealing, that they had deceived Hazen into +writing the letter. + +When I informed the Klowas that I would respect Hazen's letter +provided they all came into Fort Cobb and gave themselves up, the two +chiefs promised submission, and, as an evidence of good faith, +proposed to accompany the column to Fort Cobb with a large body of +warriors, while their villages moved to the same point by easy +stages, along the opposite bank of the river--claiming this to be +necessary from the poor condition of the ponies. I had some +misgivings as to the sincerity of Satanta and Lone Wolf, but as I +wanted to get the Kiowas where their surrender would be complete, so +that the Cheyennes and Arapahoes could then be pursued, I agreed to +the proposition, and the column moved on. All went well that day, +but the next it was noticed that the warriors were diminishing, and +an investigation showed that a number of them had gone off on various +pretexts--the main one being to help along the women and children +with the villages. With this I suspected that they were playing me +false, and my suspicions grew into certainty when Satanta himself +tried to make his escape by slipping beyond the flank of the column +and putting spurs to his pony. Fortunately, several officers saw +him, and quickly giving chase, overhauled him within a few hundred +yards. I then arrested both him and Lone Wolf and held them as +hostages--a measure that had the effect of bringing back many of the +warriors already beyond our reach. + +When we arrived at Fort Cobb we found some of the Comanches already +there, and soon after the rest of them, excepting one band, came in +to the post. The Kiowas, however, were not on hand, and there were +no signs to indicate their coming. At the end of two days it was +plain enough that they were acting in bad faith, and would continue +to unless strong pressure was brought to bear. Indeed, they had +already started for the Witchita Mountains, so I put on the screws at +once by issuing an order to hang Satanta and Lone Wolf, if their +people did not surrender at Fort Cobb within forty-eight hours. The +two chiefs promised prompt compliance, but begged for more time, +seeking to explain the non-arrival of the women and children through +the weak condition of the ponies; but I was tired of their duplicity, +and insisted on my ultimatum. + +The order for the execution brought quick fruit. Runners were sent +out with messages, by the two prisoners, appealing to their people to +save the lives of their chiefs, and the result was that the whole +tribe came in to the post within the specified time. The two +manacled wretches thus saved their necks; but it is to be regretted +that the execution did not come off; for some years afterward their +devilish propensities led them into Texas, where both engaged in the +most horrible butcheries. + +The Kiowas were now in our hands, and all the Comanches too, except +one small band, which, after the Custer fight, had fled toward the +headwaters of the Red River. This party was made up of a lot of very +bad Indians--outlaws from the main tribe--and we did not hope to +subdue them except by a fight, and of this they got their fill; for +Evans, moving from Monument Creek toward the western base of the +Witchita Mountains on Christmas Day, had the good fortune to strike +their village. In the snow and cold his approach was wholly +unexpected, and he was thus enabled to deal the band a blow that +practically annihilated it. Twenty-five warriors were killed +outright, most of the women and children captured, and all the +property was destroyed. Only a few of the party escaped, and some of +these made their way in to Fort Cobb, to join the rest of their tribe +in confinement; while others, later in the season, surrendered at +Fort Bascom. + +This sudden appearance of Evans in the Red River region also alarmed +the Cheyennes and Arapahoes, and their thoughts now began to turn to +submission. Food was growing scarce with them, too, as there was but +little game to be found either in the Witchita Mountains or on the +edge of the Staked Plains, and the march of Carr's column from +Antelope Hills precluded their returning to where the buffalo ranged. +Then, too, many of their ponies were dead or dying, most of their +tepees and robes had been abandoned, and the women and children, +having been kept constantly on the move in the winter's storms, were +complaining bitterly of their sufferings. + +In view of this state of things they intimated, through their +Comanche-Apache friends at Fort Cobb, that they would like to make +terms. On receiving their messages I entered into negotiations with +Little Robe, chief of the Cheyennes, and Yellow Bear, chief of the +Arapahoes, and despatched envoys to have both tribes understand +clearly that they must recognize their subjugation by surrendering at +once, and permanently settling on their reservations in the spring. +Of course the usual delays of Indian diplomacy ensued, and it was +some weeks before I heard the result. + +Then one of my messengers returned with word that Little Robe and +Yellow Bear were on their way to see me. They arrived a few days +later, and, promptly acceding to the terms, promised to bring their +people in, but as many of them would have to come on foot on account +of the condition of the ponies, more time was solicited. Convinced +of the sincerity of their professions I gave them a reasonable +extension, and eventually Yellow Bear made good his word, but Little +Robe, in spite of earnest and repeated efforts, was unable to deliver +his people till further operations were begun against them. + +While these negotiations were in progess I came to the conclusion +that a permanent military post ought to be established well down on +the Kiowa and Comanche reservation, in order to keep an eye on these +tribes in the future, Fort Cobb, being an unsuitable location, +because too far to the north to protect the Texas frontier, and too +far away from where it was intended to permanently place the Indians. +With this purpose in view I had the country thoroughly explored, and +afterward a place was fixed upon not far from the base of the +Witchita Mountains, and near the confluence of Medicine Bluff and +Cash creeks, where building stone and timber could be obtained in +plenty, and to this point I decided to move. The place was named +Camp Sill-now Fort Sill--in honor of my classmate, General Sill, +killed at Stone River; and to make sure of the surrendered Indians, I +required them all, Kiowas, Comanches, and Comanche-Apaches, to +accompany us to the new post, so they could be kept under military +control till they were settled. + +During the march to the new camp the weather was not so cold as that +experienced in coming down from Camp Supply; still, rains were +frequent, and each was invariably followed by a depression of +temperature and high winds, very destructive to our animals, much +weakened by lack of food. The men fared pretty well, however, for on +the rough march along the Washita, and during our stay at Fort Cobb, +they had learned to protect themselves materially from the cold. For +this they had contrived many devices, the favorite means being +dugouts--that is, pits dug in the ground, and roofed over, with +shelter-tents, and having at one end a fire-place and chimney +ingeniously constructed with sod. In these they lived very snugly +--four men in each--and would often amuse themselves by poking their +heads out and barking at the occupants of adjacent huts in imitation +of the prairie-dog, whose comfortable nests had probably suggested +the idea of dugouts. The men were much better off, in fact, than +many of the officers, for the high winds frequently made havoc with +our wall-tents. The horses and mules suffered most of all. They +could not be sheltered, and having neither grain nor grass, the poor +beasts were in no condition to stand the chilling blasts. Still, by +cutting down cottonwood-trees, and letting the animals browse on the +small soft branches, we managed to keep them up till, finally even +this wretched food beginning to grow scarce, I had all except a few +of the strongest sent to Fort Arbuckle, near which place we had been +able, fortunately, to purchase some fields of corn from the +half-civilized Chickasaws and Choctaws. + +Through mismanagement, as previously noted, the greater part of the +supplies which I had ordered hauled to Arbuckle the preceding fall +had not got farther on the way than Fort Gibson, which post was about +four hundred miles off, and the road abominable, particularly east of +Arbuckle, where it ran through a low region called "boggy bottom." +All along this route were abandoned wagons, left sticking in the mud, +and hence the transportation was growing so short that I began to +fear trouble in getting subsistence up for the men. Still, it would +not do to withdraw, so I made a trip to Arbuckle chiefly for the +purpose of reorganizing the transportation, but also with a view to +opening a new route to that post, the road to lie on high ground, so +as to avoid the creeks and mud that had been giving us so much +trouble. If such a road could be made, I hoped to get up enough +rations and grain from the cornfields purchased to send out a +formidable expedition against the Cheyennes, so I set out for +Arbuckle accompanied by my quartermaster, Colonel A. J. McGonigle. +"California Joe" also went along to guide us through the scrub-oaks +covering the ridge, but even the most thorough exploration failed to +discover any route more practicable than that already in use; indeed, +the high ground was, if anything, worse than the bottom land, our +horses in the springy places and quicksands often miring to their +knees. The ground was so soft and wet, in fact, that we had to make +most of the way on foot, so by the time we reached Arbuckle I was +glad to abandon the new road project. + +Finding near Arbuckle more fields of corn than those already +purchased, I had them bought also, and ordered more of the horses +back there to be fed. I next directed every available mule to be put +to hauling rations, having discovered that the full capacity of the +transportation had not yet been brought into play in forwarding +stores from Gibson, and with this regulation of the supply question I +was ready to return immediately to Camp Sill. But my departure was +delayed by California Joe, who, notwithstanding the prohibitory laws +of the Territory, in some unaccountable way had got gloriously tipsy, +which caused a loss of time that disgusted me greatly; but as we +could not well do without Joe, I put off starting till the next day, +by which time it was thought he would sober up. But I might just as +well have gone at first, for at the end of the twenty-four hours the +incorrigible old rascal was still dead drunk. How he had managed to +get the grog to keep up his spree was a mystery which we could not +solve, though we had had him closely watched, so I cut the matter +short by packing him into my ambulance and carrying him off to Camp +Sill. + +By the time I got back to Sill, the Arapahoes were all in at the +post, or near at hand. The promised surrender of the Cheyennes was +still uncertain of fulfillment, however, and although Little Robe and +his family had remained with us in evidence of good faith, the +messages he sent to his followers brought no assurance of the tribe's +coming in--the runners invariably returning with requests for more +time, and bringing the same old excuse of inability to move because +the ponies were so badly off. But more time was just what I was +determined not to grant, for I felt sure that if a surrender was not +forced before the spring grass came, the ponies would regain their +strength, and then it would be doubtful if the Cheyennes came in at +all. + +To put an end to these delays, Custer proposed to go out and see the +Cheyennes himself, taking with him for escort only such number of men +as could be fairly well mounted from the few horses not sent back to +Arbuckle. At first I was inclined to disapprove Custer's +proposition, but he urged it so strongly that I finally consented, +though with some misgivings, for I feared that so small a party might +tempt the Cheyennes to forget their pacific professions and seek to +avenge the destruction of Black Kettle's band. However, after +obtaining my approval, Custer, with characteristic energy, made his +preparations, and started with three or four officers and forty +picked men, taking along as negotiators Yellow Bear and Little Robe, +who were also to conduct him to the head-waters of the Red River, +where it was supposed the Cheyennes would be found. His progress was +reported by couriers every few days, and by the time he got to the +Witchita foot-hills he had grown so sanguine that he sent California +Joe back to me with word that he was certain of success. Such +hopeful anticipation relieved me greatly, of course, but just about +the time I expected to hear that his mission had been achieved I was +astonished by the party's return. Inquiring as to the trouble, I +learned that out toward the Staked Plains every sign of the Cheyennes +had disappeared. Surprised and disappointed at this, and discouraged +by the loneliness of his situation--for in the whole region not a +trace of animal life was visible, Custer gave up the search, and none +too soon, I am inclined to believe, to save his small party from +perishing. + +This failure put a stop to all expeditions till the latter part of +February, by which time I had managed to lay in enough rations to +feed the command for about thirty days; and the horses back at +Arbuckle having picked up sufficiently for field service they were +ordered to Sill, and this time I decided to send Custer out with his +own and the Kansas regiment, with directions to insist on the +immediate surrender of the Cheyennes, or give them a sound thrashing. +He was ordered to get everything ready by March 1, and then move to +the mouth of Salt Creek, on the North Fork of the Red River, at which +place I proposed to establish a new depot for feeding the command. +Trains could reach this point from Camp Supply more readily than from +Arbuckle, and wishing to arrange this part of the programme in +person, I decided to return at once to Supply, and afterward rejoin +Custer at Salt Creek, on what, I felt sure, was to be the final +expedition of the campaign. I made the three hundred and sixty miles +from Sill to Supply in seven days, but much to my surprise there +found a despatch from General Grant directing me to repair +immediately to Washington. These orders precluded, of course, my +rejoining the command; but at the appointed time it set out on the +march, and within three weeks brought the campaign to a successful +close. + +In this last expedition, for the first few days Custer's route was by +the same trail he had taken in January--that is to say, along the +southern base of the Witchita Mountains--but this time there was more +to encourage him than before, for, on getting a couple of marches +beyond old Camp Radziminski, on all sides were fresh evidences of +Indians, and every effort was bent to strike them. + +From day to day the signs grew hotter, and toward the latter part of +March the game was found. The Indians being in a very forlorn +condition, Custer might have destroyed most of the tribe, and +certainly all their villages, but in order to save two white women +whom, it was discovered, they held as captives, he contented himself +with the renewal of the Cheyennes' agreement to come in to Camp +Supply. In due time the entire tribe fulfilled its promise except +one small band under "Tall Bull," but this party received a good +drubbing from General Carr on the Republican early in May. After +this fight all the Indians of the southern Plains settled down on +their reservations, and I doubt whether the peace would ever again +have been broken had they not in after years been driven to +hostilities by most unjust treatment. + +It was the 2d of March that I received at Camp Supply Grant's +despatch directing me to report immediately in Washington. It had +been my intention, as I have said, to join Custer on the North Fork +of the Red River, but this new order required me to recast my plans, +so, after arranging to keep the expedition supplied till the end of +the campaign, I started for Washington, accompanied by three of my +staff--Colonels McGonigle and Crosby, and Surgeon Asch, and Mr. Deb. +Randolph Keim, a representative of the press, who went through the +whole campaign, and in 1870 published a graphic history of it. The +day we left Supply we, had another dose of sleet and snow, but +nevertheless we made good time, and by night-fall reached Bluff +Creek. In twenty-four hours more we made Fort Dodge, and on the 6th +of March arrived at Fort Hays. Just south of the Smoky Hill River, a +little before we got to the post, a courier heading for Fort Dodge +passed us at a rapid gait. Suspecting that he had despatches for me, +I directed my outrider to overtake him and find out. The courier +soon turned back, and riding up to my ambulance handed me a telegram +notifying me that General Grant, on the day of his inauguration, +March 4, 1869, had appointed me Lieutenant-General of the Army. When +I reported in Washington, the President desired me to return to New +Orleans and resume command of the Fifth Military District, but this +was not at all to my liking, so I begged off, and was assigned to +take charge of the Division of the Missouri, succeeding General +Sherman, who had just been ordered to assume command of the Army. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +INSPECTING MILITARY POSTS IN UTAH AND MONTANA--DESIRE TO WITNESS THE +FRANCO-GERMAN WAR--ON A SAND-BAR IN THE MISSOURI--A BEAR HUNT--AN +INDIAN SCARE--MYRIADS OF MOSQUITOES--PERMISSION GIVEN TO VISIT +EUROPE--CALLING ON PRESIDENT GRANT--SAILING FOR LIVERPOOL--ARRIVAL IN +BERLIN. + +After I had for a year been commanding the Division of the Missouri, +which embraced the entire Rocky Mountain region, I found it necessary +to make an inspection of the military posts in northern Utah and +Montana, in order by personal observation to inform myself of their +location and needs, and at the same time become acquainted with the +salient geographical and topographical features of that section of my +division. Therefore in May, 1870, I started west by the +Union-Pacific railroad, and on arriving at Corinne' Station, the next +beyond Ogden, took passage by stage-coach for Helena, the capital of +Montana Territory. Helena is nearly five hundred miles north of +Corinne, and under ordinary conditions the journey was, in those +days, a most tiresome one. As the stage kept jogging on day and +night, there was little chance for sleep, and there being with me a +sufficient number of staff-officers to justify the proceeding, we +chartered the "outfit," stipulating that we were to stop over one +night on the road to get some rest. This rendered the journey more +tolerable, and we arrived at Helena without extraordinary fatigue. + +Before I left Chicago the newspapers were filled with rumors of +impending war between Germany and France. I was anxious to observe +the conflict, if it was to occur, but reports made one day concerning +the beginning of hostilities would be contradicted the next, and it +was not till I reached Helena that the despatches lost their doubtful +character, and later became of so positive a nature as to make it +certain that the two nations would fight. I therefore decided to cut +short my tour of inspection, so that I could go abroad to witness the +war, if the President would approve. This resolution limited my stay +in Helena to a couple of days, which were devoted to arranging for an +exploration of what are now known as the Upper and the Lower Geyser +Basins of the Yellowstone Park. While journeying between Corinne and +Helena I had gained some vague knowledge of these geysers from an old +mountaineer named Atkinson, but his information was very indefinite, +mostly second-hand; and there was such general uncertainty as to the +character of this wonderland that I authorized an escort of soldiers +to go that season from Fort Ellis with a small party, to make such +superficial explorations as to justify my sending an engineer officer +with a well-equipped expedition there next summer to scientifically +examine and report upon the strange country. When the arrangements +for this preliminary expedition were completed I started for Fort +Benton, the head of navigation on the Missouri River, on the way +passing through Fort Shaw, on Sun River. I expected to take at +Benton a steamboat to Fort Stevenson, a military post which had been +established about eighty miles south of Fort Buford, near a +settlement of friendly Mandan and Arickaree Indians, to protect them +from the hostile Sioux. From there I was to make my way overland, +first to Fort Totten near Devil's lake in Dakota, and thence by way +of Fort Abercrombie to Saint Cloud, Minnesota, the terminus of the +railroad. + +Luckily I met with no delay in getting a boat at Benton, and though +the water was extremely low, we steamed down the channel of the +Missouri with but slight detention till we got within fifty miles of +Fort Buford. Here we struck on a sandbar with such force of steam +and current as to land us almost out of the water from stem to +midships. This bad luck was tantalizing, for to land on a bar when +your boat is under full headway down-stream in the Missouri River is +no trifling matter, especially if you want to make time, for the +rapid and turbid stream quickly depositing sand under the hull, makes +it commonly a task of several days to get your boat off again. As +from our mishap the loss of much time was inevitable, I sent a +messenger to Fort Buford for a small escort, and for horses to take +my party in to the post. Colonel Morrow, the commandant, came +himself to meet us, bringing a strong party of soldiers and some +friendly Indian scouts, because, he said, there were then in the +region around Buford so many treacherous band of Sioux as to make +things exceedingly unsafe. + +Desiring to reach the post without spending more than one night on +the way, we abandoned our steamer that evening, and set off at an +early hour the next morning. We made camp at the end of the day's +march within ten miles of Buford, and arrived at the post without +having had any incident of moment, unless we may dignify as one a +battle with three grizzly bears, discovered by our friendly Indians +the morning of our second day's journey. While eating our breakfast +--a rather slim one, by the way--spread on a piece of canvas, the +Indians, whose bivouac was some distance off, began shouting +excitedly, "Bear! bear!" and started us all up in time to see, out on +the plain some hundreds of yards away, an enormous grizzly and two +almost full-grown cubs. Chances like this for a bear hunt seldom +offered, so there was hurried mounting--the horses being already +saddled--and a quick advance made on the game from many directions, +Lieutenant Townsend, of the escort, and five or six of the Indians +going with me. Alarmed by the commotion, bruin and her cubs turned +about, and with an awkward yet rapid gait headed for a deep ravine, +in which there was brushwood shelter. + +My party rode directly across the prairie and struck the trail not +far behind the game. Then for a mile or more the chase was kept up, +but with such poor shooting because of the "buck fever" which had +seized most of us, that we failed to bring down any of the grizzlies, +though the cubs grew so tired that the mother was often obliged to +halt for their defense, meanwhile urging them on before her. When +the ravine was gained she hid the cubs away in the thick brushwood, +and then coming out where we could plainly see her, stood on the +defense just within the edge of the thicket, beyond the range of our +rifles though, unless we went down into the canyon, which we would +have to do on foot, since the precipitous wall precluded going on +horseback. For an adventure like this I confess I had little +inclination, and on holding a council of war, I found that the +Indians had still less, but Lieutenant Townsend, who was a fine shot, +and had refrained from firing hitherto in the hope that I might bag +the game, relieved the embarrassing situation and saved the credit of +the party by going down alone to attack the enemy. Meanwhile I +magnanimously held his horse, and the Sioux braves did a deal of +shouting, which they seemed to think of great assistance. + +Townsend, having descended to the bottom of the ravine, approached +within range, when the old bear struck out, dashing into and out of +the bushes so rapidly, however, that he could not get fair aim at +her, but the startled cubs running into full view, he killed one at +the first shot and at the second wounded the other. This terribly +enraged the mother, and she now came boldly out to fight, exposing +herself in the open ground so much as to permit a shot, that brought +her down too, with a broken shoulder. Then the Indians and I, +growing very brave, scrambled down to--take part in the fight. It +was left for me to despatch the wounded cub and mother, and having +recovered possession of my nerves, I did the work effectively, and we +carried off with us the skins of the three animals as trophies of the +hunt and evidence of our prowess. + +As good luck would have it, when we reached Buford we found a +steamboat there unloading stores, and learned that it would be ready +to start down the river the next day. Embarking on her, we got to +Stevenson in a few hours, and finding at the post camp equipage that +had been made ready for our use in crossing overland to Fort Totten, +we set out the following forenoon, taking with us a small escort of +infantry, transported in two light wagons, a couple of Mandans and +the post interpreter going along as mounted guides. + +To reach water we had to march the first day to a small lake forty +miles off, and the oppressive heat, together with the long distance +traveled, used up one of the teams so much that, when about to start +out the second morning, we found the animals unable to go on with any +prospect of finishing the trip, so I ordered them to be rested +forty-eight hours longer, and then taken back to Stevenson. This +diminished the escort by one-half, yet by keeping the Indians and +interpreter on the lookout, and seeing that our ambulance was kept +closed up on the wagon carrying the rest of the detachment, we could, +I thought, stand off any ordinary party of hostile Indians. + +About noon I observed that the scouts in advance had left the trail +and begun to reconnoitre a low ridge to their right, the sequel of +which was that in a few minutes they returned to the wagons on a dead +run and reported Sioux just ahead. Looking in the direction +indicated, I could dimly see five or six horsemen riding in a circle, +as Indians do when giving warning to their camp, but as our halt +disclosed that we were aware of their proximity, they darted back +again behind the crest of the ridge. Anticipating from this move an +immediate attack, we hastily prepared for it by unhooking the mules +from the wagon and ambulance, so that we could use the vehicles as a +barricade. This done, I told the interpreter to take the Mandan +scouts and go over toward the ridge and reconnoitre again. As the +scouts neared the crest two of them dismounted, and, crawling slowly +on their bellies to the summit, took a hasty look and returned at +once to their horses, coming back with word that in the valley beyond +was a camp of at least a hundred Sioux lodges, and that the Indians +were hurriedly getting ready to attack us. The news was anything but +cheering, for with a village of that size the warriors would number +two or three hundred, and could assail us from every side. + +Still, nothing could be done, but stand and take what was to come, +for there was no chance of escape--it being supreme folly to +undertake in wagons a race with Indians to Fort Stevenson, sixty +miles away. To make the best of the situation, we unloaded the +baggage, distributing and adjusting the trunks, rolls of bedding, +crackerboxes, and everything else that would stop a bullet, in such +manner as to form a square barricade, two sides of which were the +wagons, with the mules haltered to the wheels. Every man then +supplied himself with all the ammunition he could carry, and the +Mandan scouts setting up the depressing wail of the Indian +death-song, we all awaited the attack with the courage of despair. + +But no attack came; and time slipping by, and we still unmolested, +the interpreter and scouts were sent out to make another +reconnoissance. Going through just such precautions as before in +approaching the ridge, their slow progress kept us in painful +suspense; but when they got to the crest the strain on our nerves was +relieved by seeing them first stand up boldly at full height, and +then descend beyond. Quickly returning, they brought welcome word +that the whole thing was a mistake, and no Sioux were there at all. +What had been taken for a hundred Indian lodges turned out to be the +camp of a Government train on its way to Fort Stevenson, and the +officer in charge seeing the scouts before they discovered him, and +believing them to be Sioux, had sent out to bring his herds in. It +would be hard to exaggerate the relief that this discovery gave us, +and we all breathed much easier. The scare was a bad one, and I have +no hesitation in saying that, had we been mounted, it is more than +likely that, instead of showing fight, we would have taken up a +lively pace for Fort Stevenson. + +After reciprocal explanations with the officer in charge of the +train, the march was resumed, and at the close of that day we camped +near a small lake about twenty miles from Fort Totten. From Totten +we journeyed on to Fort Abercrombie. The country between the two +posts is low and flat, and I verily believe was then the favorite +abiding-place of the mosquito, no matter where he most loves to dwell +now; for myriads of the pests rose up out of the tall rank grass +--more than I ever saw before or since--and viciously attacked both +men and animals. We ourselves were somewhat protected by gloves and +head-nets, provided us before leaving Totten, but notwithstanding these +our sufferings were well-nigh intolerable; the annoyance that the poor +mules experienced must, therefore, have been extreme; indeed, they were +so terribly stung that the blood fairly trickled down their sides. +Unluckily, we had to camp for one night in this region; but we partly +evaded the ravenous things by banking up our tent walls with earth, and +then, before turning in, sweeping and smoking out such as had got +inside. Yet with all this there seemed hundreds left to sing and sting +throughout the night. The mules being without protection, we tried +hard to save them from the vicious insects by creating a dense smoke +from a circle of smothered fires, within which chain the grateful +brutes gladly stood; but this relief was only partial, so the moment +there was light enough to enable us to hook up we pulled out for +Abercrombie in hot haste. + +From Abercrombie we drove on to Saint Cloud, the terminus of the +railroad, where, considerably the worse for our hurried trip and +truly wretched experience with the mosquitoes, we boarded the welcome +cars. Two days later we arrived in Chicago, and having meanwhile +received word from General Sherman that there would be no objection +to my going to Europe, I began making arrangements to leave, securing +passage by the steamship Scotia. + +President Grant invited me to come to see him at Long Branch before I +should sail, and during my brief visit there he asked which army I +wished to accompany, the German or the French. I told him the +German, for the reason that I thought more could be seen with the +successful side, and that the indications pointed to the defeat of +the French. My choice evidently pleased him greatly, as he had the +utmost contempt for Louis Napoleon, and had always denounced him as a +usurper and a charlatan. Before we separated, the President gave me +the following letter to the representatives of our Government abroad, +and with it I not only had no trouble in obtaining permission to go +with the Germans, but was specially favored by being invited to +accompany the headquarters of the King of Prussia: + +"LONG BRANCH, N. J., July 25, 1870. + +"Lieutenant-General P. H. Sheridan, of the United State Army, is +authorized to visit Europe, to return at his own pleasure, unless +otherwise ordered. He is commended to the good offices of all +representatives of this Government whom he may meet abroad. + +"To citizens and representatives of other Governments I introduce +General Sheridan as one of the most skillful, brave and deserving +soldiers developed by the great struggle through which the United +States Government has just passed. Attention paid him will be duly +appreciated by the country he has served so faithfully and +efficiently. + +"U. S. GRANT." + + +Word of my intended trip was cabled to Europe in the ordinary press +despatches, and our Minister to France, Mr. Elihu B. Washburn, being +an intimate friend of mine, and thinking that I might wish to attach +myself to the French army, did me the favor to take preliminary steps +for securing the necessary authority. He went so far as to broach +the subject to the French Minister of War, but in view of the +informality of the request, and an unmistakable unwillingness to +grant it being manifested, Mr. Washburn pursued the matter no +further. I did not learn of this kindly interest in my behalf till +after the capitulation of Paris, when Mr. Washburn told me what he +had done of his own motion. Of course I thanked him gratefully, but +even had he succeeded in getting the permission he sought I should +not have accompanied the French army. + +I sailed from New York July 27, one of my aides-de-camp, General +James W. Forsyth, going with me. We reached Liverpool August 6, and +the next day visited the American Legation in London, where we saw +all the officials except our Minister, Mr. Motley, who, being absent, +was represented by Mr. Moran, the Secretary of the Legation. We left +London August 9 for Brussels, where we were kindly cared for by the +American Minister, Mr. Russell Jones who the same evening saw us off +for Germany. Because of the war we secured transportation only as +far as Vera, and here we received information that the Prussian +Minister of War had telegraphed to the Military Inspector of +Railroads to take charge of us on our arrival a Cologne, and send us +down to the headquarter of the Prussian army, but the Inspector, for +some unexplained reason, instead of doing this, sent us on to Berlin. +Here our Minister, Mr. George Bancroft, met us with a telegram from +the German Chancellor, Count Bismarck, saying we were expected to +come direct to the King's headquarters and we learned also that a +despatch had been sent to the Prussian Minister at Brussels directing +him to forward us from Cologne to the army, instead of allowing us to +go on to Berlin, but that we had reached and quit Brussels without +the Minister's knowledge. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +LEAVING FOR THE SEAT OF WAR--MEETING WITH PRINCE BISMARCK--HIS +INTEREST IN PUBLIC OPINION IN AMERICA--HIS INCLINATIONS IN EARLY +LIFE--PRESENTED TO THE KING--THE BATTLE OF GRAVELOTTE--THE GERMAN +PLAN--ITS FINAL SUCCESS--SENDING NEWS OF THE VICTORY--MISTAKEN FOR A +FRENCHMAN. + +Shortly after we arrived in Berlin the Queen sent a messenger +offering us an opportunity to pay our respects, and fixed an hour for +the visit, which was to take place the next day; but as the tenor of +the despatch Mr. Bancroft had received from Count Bismarck indicated +that some important event which it was desired I should witness was +about to happen at the theatre of war, our Minister got us excused +from our visit of ceremony, and we started for the headquarters of +the German army that evening--our stay in the Prussian capital having +been somewhat less than a day. + +Our train was a very long one, of over eighty cars, and though drawn +by three locomotives, its progress to Cologne was very slow and the +journey most tedious. From Cologne we continued on by rail up the +valley of the Rhine to Bingebruck, near Bingen, and thence across +through Saarbrucken to Remilly, where we left the railway and rode in +a hay-wagon to Pont-a-Mousson, arriving there August 17, late in the +afternoon. This little city had been ceded to France at the Peace of +Westphalia, and although originally German, the people had become, in +the lapse of so many years, intensely French in sentiment. The town +was so full of officers and men belonging to the German army that it +was difficult to get lodgings, but after some delay we found quite +comfortable quarters at one of the small hotels, and presently, after +we had succeeded in getting a slender meal, I sent my card to Count +von Bismarck, the Chancellor of the North German Confederation, who +soon responded by appointing an hour--about 9 o'clock the same +evening--for an interview. + +When the Count received me he was clothed in the undress uniform of +the Cuirassier regiment, of which he was the colonel. During the +interview which ensued, he exhibited at times deep anxiety regarding +the conflict now imminent, for it was the night before the battle of +Gravelotte, but his conversation was mostly devoted to the state of +public sentiment in America, about which he seemed much concerned, +inquiring repeatedly as to which side--France or Prussia--was charged +with bringing on the war. Expressing a desire to witness the battle +which was expected to occur the next day, and remarking that I had +not had sufficient time to provide the necessary transportation, he +told me to be ready at 4 o'clock in the morning, and he would take me +out in his own carriage and present me to the King--adding that he +would ask one of his own staff-officers, who he knew had one or two +extra horses, to lend me one. As I did not know just what my status +would be, and having explained to the President before leaving +America that I wished to accompany the German army unofficially, I +hardly knew whether to appear in uniform or not, so I spoke of this +matter too, and the Count, after some reflection, thought it best for +me to wear my undress uniform, minus the sword, however, because I +was a non combatant. + +At 4 o'clock the next morning, the 18th, I repaired to the +Chancellor's quarters. The carriage was at the door, also the +saddle-horse, but as no spare mount could be procured for General +Forsyth, he had to seek other means to reach the battle-field. The +carriage was an open one with two double seats, and in front a single +one for a messenger; it had also a hand-brake attached. + + +Count Bismarck and I occupied the rear seat, and Count +Bismarck-Bohlen--the nephew and aide-decamp to the Chancellor--and +Doctor Busch were seated facing us. The conveyance was strong, +serviceable, and comfortable, but not specially prepossessing, and +hitched to it were four stout horses--logy, ungainly animals, whose +clumsy harness indicated that the whole equipment was meant for heavy +work. Two postilions in uniform, in high military saddles on the nigh +horse of each span, completed the establishment. + +All being ready, we took one of the roads from Pont-a-Mousson to +Rezonville, which is on the direct road from Metz to Chalons, and +near the central point of the field where, on the 16th of August, the +battle of Mars-la-Tour had been fought. It was by this road that the +Pomeranians, numbering about 30,000 men, had been ordered to march to +Gravelotte, and after proceeding a short distance we overtook the +column. As this contingent came from Count Bismarck's own section of +Germany, there greeted us as we passed along, first in the dim light +of the morning, and later in the glow of the rising sun, continuous +and most enthusiastic cheering for the German Chancellor. + +On the way Count Bismarck again recurred to the state of public +opinion in America with reference to the war. He also talked much +about our form of government, and said that in early life his +tendencies were all toward republicanism, but that family influence +had overcome his preferences, and intimated that, after adopting a +political career, he found that Germany was not sufficiently advanced +for republicanism. He said, further, that he had been reluctant to +enter upon this public career, that he had always longed to be a +soldier, but that here again family opposition had turned him from +the field of his choice into the sphere of diplomacy. + +Not far from Mars-la-Tour we alighted, and in a little while an +aide-de-camp was introduced, who informed me that he was there to +conduct and present me to his Majesty, the King of Prussia. As we were +walking along together, I inquired whether at the meeting I should +remove my cap, and he said no; that in an out-of-door presentation it +was not etiquette to uncover if in uniform. We were soon in presence +of the King, where--under the shade of a clump of second-growth +poplar-trees, with which nearly all the farms in the north of France +are here and there dotted--the presentation was made in the simplest +and most agreeable manner. + +His Majesty, taking my hand in both of his, gave me a thorough +welcome, expressing, like Count Bismarck, though through an +interpreter, much interest as to the sentiment in my own country +about the war. At this time William the First of Prussia was +seventy-three years of age, and, dressed in the uniform of the +Guards, he seemed to be the very ideal soldier, and graced with most +gentle and courteous manners. The conversation, which was brief, as +neither of us spoke the other's native tongue, concluded by his +Majesty's requesting me in the most cordial way to accompany his +headquarters during the campaign. Thanking him for his kindness, I +rejoined Count Bismarck's party, and our horses having arrived +meantime, we mounted and moved off to the position selected for the +King to witness the opening of the battle. + +This place was on some high ground overlooking the villages of +Rezonville and Gravelotte, about the centre of the battlefield of +Mars-la-Tour, and from it most of the country to the east toward Metz +could also be seen. The point chosen was an excellent one for the +purpose, though in one respect disagreeable, since the dead bodies of +many of the poor fellows killed there two days before were yet +unburied. In a little while the King's escort began to remove these +dead, however, bearing them away on stretchers improvised with their +rifles, and the spot thus cleared was much more acceptable. Then, +when such unexploded shells as were lying around loose had been +cautiously carried away, the King, his brother, Prince Frederick +Charles Alexander, the chief-of-staff, General von Moltke, the +Minister of War, General von Roon, and Count von Bismarck assembled +on the highest point, and I being asked to join the group, was there +presented to General von Moltke. He spoke our language fluently, and +Bismarck having left the party for a time to go to a neighboring +house to see his son, who had been wounded at Mars-la-Tour, and about +whom he was naturally very anxious, General von Moltke entertained me +by explaining the positions of the different corps, the nature and +object of their movements then taking place, and so on. + +Before us, and covering Metz, lay the French army, posted on the +crest of a ridge extending north, and about its centre curving +slightly westward toward the German forces. The left of the French +position was but a short distance from the Moselle, and this part of +the line was separated from the Germans by a ravine, the slopes, +fairly well wooded, rising quite sharply; farther north, near the +centre, this depression disappeared, merged in the general swell of +the ground, and thence on toward the right the ground over which an +approach to the French line must be made was essentially a natural +open glacis, that could be thoroughly swept by the fire of the +defenders. + +The line extended some seven or eight miles. To attack this +position, formidable everywhere, except perhaps on the right flank, +the Germans were bringing up the combined forces of the First and +Second armies, troops that within the past fortnight had already +successfully met the French in three pitched battles. On the right +was the First Army, under command of General Von Steinmetz, the +victors, August 6, of Spicheren, near Saar, and, eight days later, of +Colombey, to the east of Metz; while the centre and left were +composed of the several corps of the Second Army, commanded by Prince +Frederick Charles of Prussia, a part of whose troops had just been +engaged in the sanguinary battle of Mars-la-Tour, by which Bazaine +was cut off from the Verdun road, and forced back toward Metz. + +At first the German plan was simply to threaten with their right, +while the corps of the Second Army advanced toward the north, to +prevent the French, of whose intentions there was much doubt, from +escaping toward Chalons; then, as the purposes of the French might +be, developed, these corps were to change direction toward the enemy +successively, and seek to turn his right flank. But the location of +this vital turning-point was very uncertain, and until it was +ascertained and carried, late in the afternoon, the action raged with +more or less intensity along the entire line. + +But as it is not my purpose to describe in detail the battle of +Gravelotte, nor any other, I will speak of some of its incidents +merely. About noon, after many preliminary skirmishes, the action +was begun according to the plan I have already outlined, the Germans +advancing their left while holding on strongly with their right, and +it was this wing (the First Army) that came under my observation from +the place where the King's headquarters were located. From here we +could see, as I have said, the village of Gravelotte. Before it lay +the German troops, concealed to some extent, especially to the left, +by clumps of timber here and there. Immediately in front of us, +however, the ground was open, and the day being clear and sunny, with +a fresh breeze blowing (else the smoke from a battle between four +hundred thousand men would have obstructed the view altogether), the +spectacle presented Was of unsurpassed magnificence and sublimity. +The German artillery opened the battle, and while the air was filled +with shot and shell from hundreds of guns along their entire line, +the German centre and left, in rather open order, moved out to the +attack, and as they went forward the reserves, in close column, took +up positions within supporting distances, yet far enough back to be +out of range. + +The French artillery and mitrailleuses responded vigorously to the +Krupps, and with deadly effect, but as far as we could see the German +left continued its advance, and staff-officers came up frequently to +report that all was going on well at points hidden from our view +These reports were always made to the King first, and whenever +anybody arrived with tidings of the fight we clustered around to hear +the news, General Von Moltke unfolding a map meanwhile, and +explaining the situation. This done, the chief of the staff, while +awaiting the next report, would either return to a seat that had been +made for him with some knapsacks, or would occupy the time walking +about, kicking clods of dirt or small stones here and there, his +hands clasped behind his back, his face pale and thoughtful. He was +then nearly seventy years old, but because of his emaciated figure, +the deep wrinkles in his face, and the crow's-feet about his eyes, he +looked even older, his appearance being suggestive of the practice of +church asceticisms rather than of his well-known ardent devotion to +the military profession. + +By the middle of the afternoon the steady progress of the German left +and centre had driven the French from their more advanced positions +from behind stone walls and hedges, through valleys and hamlets, in +the direction of Metz, but as yet the German right had accomplished +little except to get possession of the village of Gravelotte, +forcing the French across the deep ravine I have mentioned, which +runs north and south a little distance east of ihe town. + +But it was now time for the German right to move in earnest to carry +the Rozerieulles ridge, on which crest the French had evidently +decided to make an obstinate fight to cover their withdrawal to Metz. +As the Germans moved to the attack here, the French fire became heavy +and destructive, so much so, indeed, as to cause General Von +Steinmetz to order some cavalry belonging to the right wing to make a +charge. Crossing the ravine before described, this body of horse +swept up the slope beyond, the front ranks urged forward by the +momentum from behind. The French were posted along a sunken road, +behind stone walls and houses, and as the German cavalry neared these +obstructions it received a dreadful fire without the least chance of +returning it, though still pushed on till the front ranks were +crowded into the deep cut of the road. Here the slaughter was +terrible, for the horsemen could make no further headway; and because +of the blockade behind, of dead and wounded men and animals, an +orderly retreat was impossible, and disaster inevitable. + +About the time the charge was ordered, the phase of the battle was +such that the King concluded to move his headquarters into the +village of Gravelotte; and just after getting there, we first learned +fully of the disastrous result of the charge which had been entered +upon with such spirit; and so much indignation was expressed against +Steinmetz, who, it was claimed, had made an unnecessary sacrifice of +his cavalry, that I thought he would be relieved on the spot; though +this was not done. + +Followed by a large staff, General Steinmetz appeared in the village +presently, and approached the King. When near, he bowed with great +respect, and I then saw that he was a very old man though his +soldierly figure, bronzed face, and shortcropped hair gave some +evidence of vigor still. When the King spoke to him I was not close +enough to learn what was said; but his Majesty's manner was +expressive of kindly feeling, and the fact that in a few moments the +veteran general returned to the command of his troops, indicated +that, for the present at least, his fault had been overlooked. + +The King then moved out of the village, and just a little to the east +and north of it the headquarters were located on high, open ground, +whence we could observe the right of the German infantry advancing up +the eastern face of the ravine. The advance, though slow and +irregular, resulted in gradually gaining ground, the French resisting +stoutly with a stubborn musketry fire all along the slopes. Their +artillery was silent, however; and from this fact the German +artillery officers grew jubilant, confidently asserting that their +Krupp guns had dismounted the French batteries and knocked their +mitrailleuses to pieces. I did not indulge in this confidence, +however; for, with the excellent field-glass I had, I could +distinctly see long columns of French troops moving to their right, +for the apparent purpose of making a vigorous fight on that flank; +and I thought it more than likely that their artillery would be heard +from before the Germans could gain the coveted ridge. + +The Germans labored up the glacis slowly at the most exposed places; +now crawling on their bellies, now creeping on hands and knees, but, +in the main, moving with erect and steady bearing. As they +approached within short range, they suddenly found that the French +artillery and mitrallleuses had by no means been silenced--about two +hundred pieces opening on them with fearful effect, while at the same +time the whole crest blazed with a deadly fire from the Chassepot +rifles. Resistance like this was so unexpected by the Germans that +it dismayed them; and first wavering a moment, then becoming +panic-stricken, they broke and fled, infantry, cavalry, and artillery +coming down the slope without any pretence of formation, the French +hotly following and pouring in a heavy and constant fire as the +fugitives fled back across the ravine toward Gravelotte. With this +the battle on the right had now assumed a most serious aspect, and +the indications were that the French would attack the heights of +Gravelotte; but the Pomeranian corps coming on the field at this +crisis, was led into action by Von Moltke, himself, and shortly after +the day was decided in favor of the Germans. + +When the French guns opened fire, it was discovered that the King's +position was within easy range, many of the shells falling near +enough to make the place extremely uncomfortable; so it was suggested +that he go to a less exposed point. At first he refused to listen to +this wise counsel, but yielded finally--leaving the ground with +reluctance, however--and went back toward Rezonville. I waited for +Count Bismarck, who did not go immediately with the King, but +remained at Gravelotte, looking after some of the escort who had been +wounded. When he had arranged for their care, we set out to rejoin +the King, and before going far, overtook his Majesty, who had stopped +on the Chalons road, and was surrounded by a throng of fugitives, +whom he was berating in German so energetic as to remind me forcibly +of the "Dutch" swearing that I used to hear in my boyhood in Ohio. +The dressing down finished to his satisfaction, the King resumed his +course toward Re'zonville, halting, however, to rebuke in the same +emphatic style every group of runaways he overtook. + +Passing through Rezonville, we halted just beyond the village; there +a fire was built, and the King, his brother, Prince Frederick +Charles, and Von Roon were provided with rather uncomfortable seats +about it, made by resting the ends of a short ladder on a couple of +boxes. With much anxiety and not a little depression of spirits news +from the battle-field was now awaited, but the suspense did not last +long, for presently came the cheering intelligence that the French +were retiring, being forced back by the Pomeranian corps, and some of +the lately broken right wing organizations, that had been rallied on +the heights of Gravelotte. The lost ground being thus regained, and +the French having been beaten on their right, it was not long before +word came that Bazaine's army was falling back to Metz, leaving the +entire battle-field in possession of the Germans. + +During the excitement of the day I had not much felt the want of +either food or water, but now that all was over I was nearly +exhausted, having had neither since early morning. Indeed, all of +the party were in like straits; the immense armies had not only eaten +up nearly everything in the country, but had drunk all the wells dry, +too, and there seemed no relief for us till, luckily, a squad of +soldiers came along the road with a small cask of wine in a cart. +One of the staff-officers instantly appropriated the keg, and +proceeded to share his prize most generously. Never had I tasted +anything so refreshing and delicious, but as the wine was the +ordinary sour stuff drunk by the peasantry of northern France, my +appreciation must be ascribed to my famished condition rather than to +any virtues of the beverage itself. + +After I had thus quenched my thirst the King's, brother called me +aside, and drawing from his coat-tail pocket a piece of stale black +bread, divided it with me, and while munching on this the Prince +began talking of his son--General Prince Frederick Charles, popularly +called the Red Prince--who was in command of the Second Army in this +battle--the German left wing. In recounting his son's professional +career the old man's face was aglow with enthusiasm, and not without +good cause, for in the war between Prussia and Austria in 1866, as +well as in the present campaign, the Red Prince had displayed the +highest order of military genius. + +The headquarters now became the scene of much bustle, despatches +announcing the victory being sent in all directions. The first one +transmitted was to the Queen, the King directing Count Bismarck to +prepare it for his signature; then followed others of a more official +character, and while these matters were being attended to I thought I +would ride into the village to find, if possible, some water for my +horse. Just as I entered the chief street, however, I was suddenly +halted by a squad of soldiers, who, taking me for a French officer +(my coat and forage cap resembling those of the French), leveled +their pieces at me. They were greatly excited, so much so, indeed, +that I thought my hour had come, for they could not understand +English, and I could not speak German, and dare not utter +explanations in French. Fortunately a few disconnected German words +came to me in the emergency. With these I managed to delay my +execution, and one of the party ventured to come up to examine the +"suspect" more closely. The first thing he did was to take off my +cap, and looking it over carefully, his eyes rested on the three +stars above the visor, and, pointing to them, he emphatically +pronounced me French. Then of course they all became excited again, +more so than before, even, for they thought I was trying to practice +a ruse, and I question whether I should have lived to recount the +adventure had not an officer belonging to the King's headquarters +been passing by just then, when, hearing the threatenings and +imprecations, he rode up to learn the cause of the hubbub, and +immediately recognized and released me. When he told my wrathy +captors who I was, they were much mortified of course, and made the +most profuse apologies, promising that no such mistake should occur +again, and so on; but not feeling wholly reassured, for my uniform +was still liable to mislead, I was careful to return to headquarters +in company with my deliverer. There I related what had occurred, and +after a good laugh all round, the King provided me with a pass which +he said would preclude any such mishap in the future, and would also +permit me to go wherever I pleased--a favor rarely bestowed. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +SEARCHING FOR QUARTERS--HUNTING UP PROVISIONS--A SLENDER BREAKFAST +--GOING OVER THE BATTLEFIELD--THE GERMAN ARTILLERY--A GROUP OF WOUNDED +--DINING WITH THE KING--ON THE MARCH--THE BAVARIANS--KIRSCHWASSER +--URGING ON THE TROOPS. + +While I was absent, as related in the preceding chapter, it had been +decided that the King's quarters should be established for the night +in the village of Rezonville; and as it would be very difficult, at +such a late hour, to billet the whole party regularly, Count Bismarck +and I went off to look for shelter for ourselves. Remembering that I +had seen, when seeking to water my horse, a partly burned barn with +some fresh-looking hay in it, I suggested that we lodge there. He +too thought it would answer our purpose, but on reaching it we found +the unburned part of the barn filled with wounded, and this +necessitating a further search we continued on through the village in +quest of some house not yet converted into a hospital. Such, +however, seemed impossible to come upon, so at last the Count fixed +on one whose upper floor, we learned, was unoccupied, though the +lower one was covered with wounded. + +Mounting a creaky ladder--there was no stairway--to the upper story, +we found a good-sized room with three large beds, one of which the +Chancellor assigned to the Duke of Mecklenburg and aide, and another +to Count Bismarck-Bohlen and me, reserving the remaining one for +himself. Each bed, as is common in Germany and northern France, was +provided with a feather tick, but the night being warm, these spreads +were thrown off, and discovering that they would make a comfortable +shakedown on the floor, I slept there leaving Bismarck-Bohlen +unembarrassed by companionship--at least of a human kind. + +At daylight I awoke, and seeing that Count Bismarck was already +dressed and about to go down the ladder, I felt obliged to follow his +example, so I too turned out, and shortly descended to the +ground-floor, the only delays of the toilet being those incident to +dressing, for there were no conveniences for morning ablutions. Just +outside the door I met the Count, who, proudly exhibiting a couple of +eggs he had bought from the woman of the house, invited me to +breakfast with him, provided we could beg some coffee from the king's +escort. Putting the eggs under my charge, with many injunctions as +to their safe-keeping, he went off to forage for the coffee, and +presently returned, having been moderately successful. One egg +apiece was hardly enough, however, to appease the craving of two +strong men ravenous from long fasting. Indeed, it seemed only to +whet the appetite, and we both set out on an eager expedition for +more food. Before going far I had the good luck to meet a sutler's +wagon, and though its stock was about all sold, there were still left +four large bologna sausages, which I promptly purchased--paying a +round sum for them too--and hastening back found the Count already +returned, though without bringing anything at all to eat; but he had +secured a couple of bottles of brandy, and with a little of this--it +was excellent, too--and the sausages, the slim ration of eggs and +coffee was amply reinforced. + +Breakfast over, the Chancellor invited me to accompany him in a ride +to the battle-field, and I gladly accepted, as I very much desired to +pass over the ground in front of Gravelotte, particularly so to see +whether the Krupp guns had really done the execution that was claimed +for them by the German artillery officers. Going directly through +the village of Gravelotte, following the causeway over which the +German cavalry had passed to make its courageous but futile charge, +we soon reached the ground where the fighting had been the most +severe. Here the field was literally covered with evidences of the +terrible strife, the dead and wounded strewn thick on every side. + +In the sunken road the carnage had been awful; men and horses having +been slaughtered there by hundreds, helpless before the murderous +fire delivered from behind a high stone wall impracticable to mounted +troops. The sight was sickening to an extreme, and we were not slow +to direct our course elsewhere, going up the glacis toward the French +line, the open ground over which we crossed being covered with +thousands of helmets, that had been thrown off by the Germans during +the fight and were still dotting the field, though details of +soldiers from the organizations which had been engaged here were +about to begin to gather up their abandoned headgear. + +When we got inside the French works, I was astonished to observe how +little harm had been done the defenses by the German artillery, for +although I had not that serene faith in the effectiveness of their +guns held by German artillerists generally, yet I thought their +terrific cannonade must have left marked results. All I could +perceive, however, was a disabled gun, a broken mitrailleuse, and two +badly damaged caissons. + +Everything else, except a little ammunition in the trenches, had been +carried away, and it was plain to see, from the good shape in which +the French left wing had retired to Metz, that its retreat had been +predetermined by the disasters to the right wing. + +By this hour the German cavalry having been thrown out to the front +well over toward Metz, we, following it to get a look at the city, +rode to a neighboring summit, supposing it would be a safe point of +observation; but we shortly realized the contrary, for scarcely had +we reached the crest when some of the French pickets, lying concealed +about six hundred yards off, opened fire, making it so very hot for +us that, hugging the necks of our horses, we incontinently fled. +Observing what had taken place, a troop of German cavalry charged the +French outpost and drove it far enough away to make safe our return, +and we resumed possession of the point, but only to discover that the +country to the east was so broken and hilly that no satisfactory view +of Metz could be had. + +Returning to Gravelotte, we next visited that part of the battlefield +to the northeast of the village, and before long Count Bismarck +discovered in a remote place about twenty men dreadfully wounded. +These poor fellows had had no attention whatever, having been +overlooked by the hospital corps, and their condition was most +pitiful. Yet there was one very handsome man in the group--a captain +of artillery--who, though shot through the right breast, was +talkative and cheerful, and felt sure of getting well. Pointing, +however, to a comrade lying near, also shot in the breast, he +significantly shook his head; it was easy to see on this man's face +the signs--of fast approaching death. + +An orderly was at once despatched for a surgeon, Bismarck and I doing +what we could meanwhile to alleviate the intense sufferings of the +maimed men, bringing them water and administering a little brandy, +for the Count still had with him some of the morning's supply. When +the surgeons came, we transferred the wounded to their care, and +making our way to Rezonville, there took the Count's carriage to +rejoin the King's headquarters, which in the mean time had been moved +to Pont-a-Mousson. Our route led through the village of Gorze, and +here we found the streets so obstructed with wagons that I feared it +would take us the rest of the day to get through, for the teamsters +would not pay the slightest heed to the cries of our postilions. The +Count was equal to the emergency, however, for, taking a pistol from +behind his cushion, and bidding me keep my seat, he jumped out and +quickly began to clear the street effectively, ordering wagons to the +right and left. Marching in front of the carriage and making way for +us till we were well through the blockade, he then resumed his seat, +remarking, "This is not a very dignified business for the Chancellor +of the German Confederation, but it's the only way to get through." + +At Pont-a-Mousson I was rejoined by my aide, General Forsyth, and for +the next two days our attention was almost wholly devoted to securing +means of transportation. This was most difficult to obtain, but as I +did not wish to impose on the kindness of the Chancellor longer, we +persevered till, finally, with the help of Count Bismarck-Bohlen, we +managed to get tolerably well equipped with a saddle-horse apiece, +and a two-horse carriage. Here also, on the afternoon of August 21, +I had the pleasure of dining with the King. The dinner was a simple +one, consisting of soup, a joint, and two or three vegetables; the +wines vin ordinaire and Burgundy. There were a good many persons of +high rank present, none of whom spoke English, however, except +Bismarck, who sat next the King and acted as interpreter when his +Majesty conversed with me. Little was said of the events taking +place around us, but the King made many inquiries concerning the war +of the rebellion, particularly with reference to Grant's campaign at +Vicksburg; suggested, perhaps, by the fact that there, and in the +recent movements of the German army, had been applied many similar +principles of military science. + +The French army under Marshal Bazaine having retired into the +fortifications of Metz, that stronghold was speedily invested by +Prince Frederick Charles. Meantime the Third Army, under the Crown +Prince of Prussia--which, after having fought and won the battle of +Worth, had been observing the army of Marshal MacMahon during and +after the battle of Gravelotte--was moving toward Paris by way of +Nancy, in conjunction with an army called the Fourth, which had been +organized from the troops previously engaged around Metz, and on the +22d was directed toward Bar-le-Duc under the command of the Crown +Prince of Saxony. In consequence of these operations the King +decided to move to Commercy, which place we reached by carriage, +traveling on a broad macadamized road lined on both sides with +poplar-trees, and our course leading through a most beautiful country +thickly dotted with prosperous-looking villages. + +On reaching Commercy, Forsyth and I found that quarters had been +already selected for us, and our names written on the door with chalk +the quartermaster charged with the billeting of the officers at +headquarters having started out in advance to perform this duty and +make all needful preparations for the King before he arrived, which +course was usually pursued thereafter, whenever the royal +headquarters took up a new location. + +Forsyth and I were lodged with the notary of the village, who over +and over again referred to his good fortune in not having to +entertain any of the Germans. He treated us most hospitably, and +next morning, on departing, we offered compensation by tendering a +sum--about what our bill would have been at a good hotel--to be used +for the "benefit of the wounded or the Church." Under this +stipulation the notary accepted, and we followed that plan of paying +for food and lodging afterward, whenever quartered in private houses. + +The next day I set out in advance of the headquarters, and reached +Bar-le-Duc about noon, passing on the way the Bavarian contingent of +the Crown Prince's army. These Bavarians were trim-looking soldiers, +dressed in neat uniforms of light blue; they looked healthy and +strong, but seemed of shorter stature than the North Germans I had +seen in the armies of Prince Frederick Charles and General von +Steinmetz. When, later in the day the King arrived, a guard for him +was detailed from this Bavarian contingent; a stroke of policy no +doubt, for the South Germans were so prejudiced against their +brothers of the North that no opportunity to smooth them down was +permitted to go unimproved. + +Bar-le-Duc, which had then a population of about 15,000, is one of +the prettiest towns I saw in France, its quaint and ancient buildings +and beautiful boulevards charming the eye as well as exciting deep +interest. The King and his immediate suite were quartered on one of +the best boulevards in a large building--the Bank of France--the +balcony of which offered a fine opportunity to observe a part of the +army of the Crown Prince the next day on its march toward Vitry. +This was the first time his Majesty had had a chance to see any of +these troops--as hitherto he had accompanied either the army of +Prince Frederick Charles, or that of General Steinmetz--and the +cheers with which he was greeted by the Bavarians left no room for +doubting their loyalty to the Confederation, notwithstanding ancient +jealousies. + +While the troops were passing, Count Bismarck had the kindness to +point out to me the different organizations, giving scraps of their +history, and also speaking concerning the qualifications of the +different generals commanding them. When the review was over we went +to the Count's house, and there, for the first time in my life, I +tasted kirschwasser, a very strong liquor distilled from cherries. +Not knowing anything about the stuff, I had to depend on Bismarck's +recommendation, and he proclaiming it fine, I took quite a generous +drink, which nearly strangled me and brought on a violent fit of +coughing. The Chancellor said, however, that this was in no way due +to the liquor, but to my own inexperience, and I was bound to believe +the distinguished statesman, for he proved his words by swallowing a +goodly dose with an undisturbed and even beaming countenance, +demonstrating his assertion so forcibly that I forthwith set out with +Bismarck-Bohlen to lay in a supply for myself. + +I spent the night in a handsome house, the property of an +exceptionally kind and polite gentleman bearing the indisputably +German name of Lager, but who was nevertheless French from head to +foot, if intense hatred of the Prussians be a sign of Gallic +nationality. At daybreak on the 26th word came for us to be ready to +move by the Chalons road at 7 o'clock, but before we got off, the +order was suspended till 2 in the afternoon. In the interval General +von Moltke arrived and held a long conference with the King, and when +we did pull out we traveled the remainder of the afternoon in company +with a part of the Crown Prince's army, which after this conference +inaugurated the series of movements from Bar-le-Duc northward, that +finally compelled the surrender at Sedan. This sudden change of +direction I did not at first understand, but soon learned that it was +because of the movements of Marshal MacMahon, who, having united the +French army beaten at Worth with three fresh corps at Chalons, was +marching to relieve Metz in obedience to orders from the Minister of +War at Paris. + +As we passed along the column, we noticed that the Crown Prince's +troops were doing their best, the officers urging the men to their +utmost exertions, persuading weary laggards and driving up +stragglers. As a general thing, however, they marched in good shape, +notwithstanding the rapid gait and the trying heat, for at the outset +of the campaign the Prince had divested them of all impedimenta +except essentials, and they were therefore in excellent trim for a +forced march. + +The King traveled further than usual that day--to Clermont--so we did +not get shelter till late, and even then not without some confusion, +for the quartermaster having set out toward Chalons before the change +of programme was ordered, was not at hand to provide for us. I had +extreme good luck, though, in being quartered with a certain +apothecary, who, having lived for a time in the United States, +claimed it as a privilege even to lodge me, and certainly made me his +debtor for the most generous hospitality. It was not so with some of +the others, however; and Count Bismarck was particularly unfortunate, +being billeted in a very small and uncomfortable house, where, +visiting him to learn more fully what was going on, I found him, +wrapped in a shabby old dressing-gown, hard at work. He was +established in a very small room, whose only furnishings consisted of +a table--at which he was writing--a couple of rough chairs, and the +universal feather-bed, this time made on the floor in one corner of +the room. On my remarking upon the limited character of his +quarters, the Count replied, with great good-humor, that they were +all right, and that he should get along well enough. Even the tramp +of his clerks in the attic, and the clanking of his orderlies' sabres +below, did not disturb him much; he said, in fact, that he would have +no grievance at all were it not for a guard of Bavarian soldiers +stationed about the house for his safety, he presumed the sentinels +from which insisted on protecting and saluting the Chancellor of the +North German Confederation in and out of season, a proceeding that +led to embarrassment sometimes, as he was much troubled with a severe +dysentery. Notwithstanding his trials, however, and in the midst of +the correspondence on which he was so intently engaged, he graciously +took time to explain that the sudden movement northward from +Bar-le-Duc was, as I have previously recounted, the result of +information that Marshal MacMahon was endeavoring to relieve Metz by +marching along the Belgian frontier; "a blundering manoeuvre," remarked +the Chancellor, "which cannot be accounted for, unless it has been +brought about by the political situation of the French." + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +AFTER MacMAHON--THE BATTLE AT BEAUMONT--THE FRENCH SURPRISED--THE +MARCHING OF THE GERMAN SOLDIERS--THE BATTLE OF SEDAN--GALLANT CAVALRY +CHARGES--DEFEAT OF THE FRENCH--THE SURRENDER OF NAPOLEON--BISMARCK +AND THE KING--DECORATING THE SOLDIERS. + +All night long the forced march of the army went on through Clermont, +and when I turned out, just after daylight, the columns were still +pressing forward, the men looking tired and much bedraggled, as +indeed they had reason to be, for from recent rains the roads were +very sloppy. Notwithstanding this, however, the troops were pushed +ahead with all possible vigor to intercept MacMahon and force a +battle before he could withdraw from his faulty movement, for which +it has since been ascertained he was not at all responsible. Indeed, +those at the royal headquarters seemed to think of nothing else than +to strike MacMahon, for, feeling pretty confident that Metz could not +be relieved, they manifested not the slightest anxiety on that score. + +By 8 o'clock, the skies having cleared, the headquarters set out for +Grand Pre', which place we reached early in the afternoon, and that +evening I again had the pleasure of dining with the King. The +conversation at table was almost wholly devoted to the situation, of +course, everybody expressing surprise at the manoeuvre of the French +at this time, their march along the Belgian frontier being credited +entirely to Napoleon. Up to bed-time there was still much +uncertainty as to the exact positions of the French, but next morning +intelligence being received which denoted the probability of a +battle, we drove about ten miles, to Buzancy, and there mounting our +horses, rode to the front. + +The French were posted not far from Buzancy in a strong position, +their right resting near Stonne and the left extending over into the +woods beyond Beaumont. About 10 o'clock the Crown Prince of Saxony +advanced against this line, and while a part of his army turned the +French right, compelling it to fall back rapidly, the German centre +and right attacked with great vigor and much skill, surprising one of +the divisions of General De Failly's corps while the men were in the +act of cooking their breakfast. + +The French fled precipitately, leaving behind their tents and other +camp equipage, and on inspecting the ground which they had abandoned +so hastily, I noticed on all sides ample evidence that not even the +most ordinary precautions had been taken to secure the division from +surprise, The artillery horses had not been harnessed, and many of +them had been shot down at the picket-rope where they had been +haltered the night before, while numbers of men were lying dead with +loaves of bread or other food instead of their muskets in their +hands. + +Some three thousand prisoners and nearly all the artillery and +mitrailleuses of the division--were captured, while the fugitives +were pursued till they found shelter behind--Douay's corps and the +rest of De Failly's beyond Beaumont. The same afternoon there were +several other severe combats along the Meuse, but I had no chance of +witnessing any of them, and just before night-fall I started back to +Buzancy, to which place the King's headquarters had been brought +during the day. + +The morning of the 31st the King moved to Vendresse. First sending +our carriage back to Grand Pre' for our trunks, Forsyth and I mounted +our horses and rode to the battle-field accompanied by an English +nobleman, the Duke of Manchester. The part of the field we traversed +was still thickly strewn with the dead of both armies, though all the +wounded had been collected in the hospitals. In the village of +Beaumont, we stopped to take a look at several thousand French +prisoners, whose worn clothing and evident dejection told that they +had been doing a deal of severe marching under great discouragements. + +The King reached the village shortly after, and we all continued on +to Chemery, just beyond where his Majesty alighted from his carriage +to observe his son's troops file past as they came in from the +direction of Stonne. This delay caused us to be as late as 9 o'clock +before we got shelter that night, but as it afforded me the best +opportunity I had yet had for seeing the German soldiers on the +march, I did not begrudge the time. They moved in a somewhat open +and irregular column of fours, the intervals between files being +especially intended to give room for a peculiar swinging gait, with +which the men seemed to urge themselves over the ground with ease and +rapidity. There was little or no straggling, and being strong, lusty +young fellows, and lightly equipped--they carried only needle-guns, +ammunition, a very small knapsack, a water-bottle, and a haversack +--they strode by with an elastic step, covering at least three miles an +hour. + +It having been definitely ascertained that the demoralized French +were retiring to Sedan, on the evening of August 31 the German army +began the work of hemming them in there, so disposing the different +corps as to cover the ground from Donchery around by Raucourt to +Carignan. The next morning this line was to be drawn in closer on +Sedan; and the Crown Prince of Saxony was therefore ordered to take +up a position to the north of Bazeilles, beyond the right bank of the +Meuse, while the Crown Prince of Prussia was to cross his right wing +over the Meuse at Remilly, to move on Bazeilles, his centre meantime +marching against a number of little hamlets still held by the French +between there and Donchery. At this last-mentioned place strong +reserves were to be held, and from it the Eleventh Corps, followed by +the Fifth and a division of cavalry, was to march on St. Menges. + +Forsyth and I started early next morning, September 1, and in a thick +fog-which, however, subsequently gave place to bright sunshine--we +drove to the village of Chevenges, where, mounting our horses, we +rode in a northeasterly direction to the heights of Frenois and +Wadelincourt, bordering the river Meuse on the left bank, where from +the crest we had a good view of the town of Sedan with its circling +fortifications, which, though extensive, were not so formidable as +those around Metz. The King and his staff were already established +on these heights, and at a point so well chosen that his Majesty +could observe the movements of both armies immediately east and south +of Sedan, and also to the northwest toward Floing and the Belgian +frontier. + +The battle was begun to the east and northeast of Sedan as early as +half-past 4 o'clock by the German right wing--the fighting being +desultory--and near the same hour the Bavarians attacked Bazeilles. +This village, some two miles southeast of Sedan, being of importance, +was defended with great obstinacy, the French contesting from street +to street and house to house the attack of the Bavarians till near +10 o'clock, when, almost every building being knocked to pieces, they +were compelled to relinquish the place. The possession of this +village gave the Germans to the east of Sedan a continuous line, +extending from the Meuse northward through La Moncelle and Daigny to +Givonne, and almost to the Belgian frontier. + +While the German centre and right were thus engaged, the left had +moved in accordance with the prescribed plan. Indeed, some of these +troops had crossed the Meuse the night before, and now, at a little +after 6 o'clock, their advance could be seen just north of the +village of Floing. Thus far these columns, under the immediate eye +of the Crown Prince of Prussia, had met with no opposition to their +march, and as soon as they got to the high ground above the village +they began extending to the east, to connect with the Army of the +Meuse. This juncture was effected at Illy without difficulty, and +the French army was now completely encompassed. + +After a severe fight, the Crown Prince drove the French through +Floing, and as the ground between this village and Sedan is an +undulating open plain, everywhere visible, there was then offered a +rare opportunity for seeing the final conflict preceding the +surrender. Presently up out of the little valley where Floing is +located came the Germans, deploying just on the rim of the plateau a +very heavy skirmish-line, supported by a line of battle at close +distance. When these skirmishers appeared, the French infantry had +withdrawn within its intrenched lines, but a strong body of their +cavalry, already formed in a depression to the right of the Floing +road, now rode at the Germans in gallant style, going clear through +the dispersed skirmishers to the main line of battle. Here the +slaughter of the French was awful, for in addition to the deadly +volleys from the solid battalions of their enemies, the skirmishers, +who had rallied in knots at advantageous places, were now delivering +a severe and effective fire. The gallant horsemen, therefore, had to +retire precipitately, but re-forming in the depression, they again +undertook the hopeless task of breaking the German infantry, making +in all four successive charges. Their ardor and pluck were of no +avail, however, for the Germans, growing stronger every minute by the +accession of troops from Floing, met the fourth attack in such large +force that, even before coming in contact with their adversaries, the +French broke and retreated to the protection of the intrenchments, +where, from the beginning of the combat, had been lying plenty of +idle infantry, some of which at least, it seemed plain to me, ought +to have been thrown into the fight. This action was the last one of +consequence around Sedan, for, though with the contraction of the +German lines their batteries kept cannonading more or less, and the +rattle of musketry continued to be heard here and there, yet the hard +fighting of the day practically ended on the plateau of Floing. + +By 3 o'clock, the French being in a desperate and hopeless situation, +the King ordered the firing to be stopped, and at once despatched one +of his staff--Colonel von Bronsart--with a demand for a surrender. +Just as this officer was starting off, I remarked to Bismarck that +Napoleon himself would likely be one of the prizes, but the Count, +incredulous, replied, "Oh no; the old fox is too cunning to be caught +in such a trap; he has doubtless slipped off to Paris"--a belief +which I found to prevail pretty generally about headquarters. + +In the lull that succeeded, the King invited many of those about him +to luncheon, a caterer having provided from some source or other a +substantial meal of good bread, chops and peas, with a bountiful +supply of red and sherry wines. Among those present were Prince +Carl, Bismarck, Von Moltke, Von Roon, the Duke of Weimar, the Duke of +Coburg, the Grand-Duke of Mecklenburg, Count Hatzfeldt, Colonel +Walker, of the English army, General Forsyth, and I. The King was +agreeable and gracious at all times, but on this occasion he was +particularly so, being naturally in a happy frame of mind because +this day the war had reached a crisis which presaged for the near +future the complete vanquishment of the French. + +Between 4 and 5 o'clock Colonel von Bronsart returned from his +mission to Sedan, bringing word to the King that the commanding +officer there General Wimpffen, wished to know, in order that the +further effusion of blood might be spared, upon what terms he might +surrender. The Colonel brought the intelligence also that the French +Emperor was in the town. Soon after Von Bronsart's arrival a French +officer approached from Sedan, preceded by a white flag and two +German officers. Coming up the road till within a few hundred yards +of us, they halted; then one of the Germans rode forward to say that +the French officer was Napoleon's adjutant, bearing an autograph +letter from the Emperor to the King of Prussia. At this the King, +followed by Bismarck, Von Moltke, and Von Roon, walked out to the +front a little distance and halted, his Majesty still in advance, the +rest of us meanwhile forming in a line some twenty paces to the rear +of the group. The envoy then approached, at first on horseback, but +when within about a hundred yards he dismounted, and uncovering, came +the remaining distance on foot, bearing high up in his right hand the +despatch from Napoleon. The bearer proved to be General Reille, and +as he handed the Emperor's letter to the King, his Majesty saluted +him with the utmost formality and precision. Napoleon's letter was +the since famous one, running so characteristically, thus: "Not +having been able to die in the midst of my troops, there is nothing +left me but to place my sword in your Majesty's hands." The reading +finished, the King returned to his former post, and after a +conference with Bismarck, Von Moltke, and Von Roon, dictated an +answer accepting Napoleon's surrender, and requesting him to +designate an officer with power to treat for the capitulation of the +army, himself naming Von Moltke to represent the Germans. The King +then started for Vendresse, to pass the night. It was after +7 o'clock now, and hence too late to arrange anything more where we +were, so further negotiations were deferred till later in the +evening; and I, wishing to be conveniently near Bismarck, resolved to +take up quarters in Donchery. On our way thither we were met by the +Count's nephew, who assuring us that it would be impossible to find +shelter there in the village, as all the houses were filled with +wounded, Forsyth and I decided to continue on to Chevenge. On the +other hand, Bismarck-Bohlen bore with him one great comfort--some +excellent brandy. Offering the flask to his uncle, he said: "You've +had a hard day of it; won't you refresh yourself?" The Chancellor, +without wasting time to answer, raised the bottle to his lips, +exclaiming: "Here's to the unification of Germany!" which sentiment +the gurgling of an astonishingly long drink seemed to emphasize. The +Count then handed the bottle back to his nephew, who, shaking it, +ejaculated, "Why, we can't pledge you in return--there is nothing +left!" to which came the waggish response, "I beg pardon; it was so +dark I couldn't see"; nevertheless there was a little remaining, as I +myself can aver. + +Having left our carriage at Chevenge, Forsyth and I stopped there to +get it, but a long search proving fruitless, we took lodging in the +village at the house of the cure, resolved to continue the hunt in +the morning. But then we had no better success, so concluding that +our vehicle had been pressed into the hospital service, we at an +early hour on the 2d of September resumed the search, continuing on +down the road in the direction of Sedan. Near the gate of the city +we came on the German picket-line, and one of the Officers, +recognizing our uniforms--he having served in the war of the +rebellion--stepped forward and addressed me in good English. We +naturally fell into conversation, and in the midst of it there came +out through the gate an open carriage, or landau, containing two men, +one of whom, in the uniform of a general and smoking a cigarette, we +recognized, when the conveyance drew near, as the Emperor Louis +Napoleon. The landau went on toward Donchery at a leisurely pace, +and we, inferring that there was something more important at hand +just then than the recovery of our trap, followed at a respectful +distance. Not quite a mile from Donchery is a cluster of three or +four cottages, and at the first of these the landau stopped to await, +as we afterward ascertained, Count Bismarck, with whom the diplomatic +negotiations were to be settled. Some minutes elapsed before he +came, Napoleon remaining seated in his carriage meantime, still +smoking, and accepting with nonchalance the staring of a group of +German soldiers near by, who were gazing on their fallen foe with +curious and eager interest. + +Presently a clattering of hoofs was heard, and looking toward the +sound, I perceived the Chancellor cantering down the road. When +abreast of the carriage he dismounted, and walking up to it, saluted +the Emperor in a quick, brusque way that seemed to startle him. +After a word or two, the party moved perhaps a hundred yards further +on, where they stopped opposite the weaver's cottage so famous from +that day. This little house is on the east side of the Donchery +road, near its junction with that to Frenois, and stands about twenty +paces back from the highway. In front is a stone wall covered with +creeping vines, and from a gate in this wall runs to the front door a +path, at this time bordered on both sides with potato vines. + +The Emperor having alighted at the gate, he and Bismarck walked +together along the narrow path and entered the cottage. Reappearing +in about a quarter of an hour, they came out and seated themselves in +the open air, the weaver having brought a couple of chairs. Here +they engaged in an animated conversation, if much gesticulation is +any indication. The talk lasted fully an hour, Bismarck seeming to +do most of it, but at last he arose, saluted the Emperor, and strode +down the path toward his horse. Seeing me standing near the gate, he +joined me for a moment, and asked if I had noticed how the Emperor +started when they first met, and I telling him that I had, he added, +"Well, it must have been due to my manners, not my words, for these +we're, 'I salute your Majesty just as I would my King.'" Then the +Chancellor continued to chat a few minutes longer, assuring me that +nothing further was to be done there, and that we had better go to +the Chateau Bellevue, where, he said, the formal surrender was to +take place. With this he rode off toward Vendresse to communicate +with his sovereign, and Forsyth and I made ready to go to the Chateau +Bellevue. + +Before we set out, however, a number of officers of the King's suite +arrived at the weaver's cottage, and from them I gathered that there +were differences at the royal headquarters as to whether peace should +be made then at Sedan, or the war continued till the French capital +was taken. I further heard that the military advisers of the King +strongly advocated an immediate move on Paris, while the Chancellor +thought it best to make peace now, holding Alsace and Lorraine, and +compelling the payment of an enormous levy of money; and these rumors +were most likely correct, for I had often heard Bismarck say that +France being the richest country in Europe, nothing could keep her +quiet but effectually to empty her pockets; and besides this, he +impressed me as holding that it would be better policy to preserve +the Empire. + +On our way to the chateau we fell in with a number of artillery +officers bringing up their guns hurriedly to post them closer in to +the beleaguered town on a specially advantageous ridge. Inquiring +the cause of this move, we learned that General Wimpffen had not yet +agreed to the terms of surrender; that it was thought he would not, +and that they wanted to be prepared for any such contingency. And +they were preparing with a vengeance too, for I counted seventy-two +Krupp guns in one continuous line trained on the Chateau Bellevue and +Sedan. + +Napoleon went directly from the weaver's to the Chateau Bellevue, and +about 10 o'clock the King of Prussia arrived from Frenois, +accompanied by a few of his own suite and the Crown Prince with +several members of his staff; and Von Moltke and Wimpffen having +settled their points of difference before the two monarchs met, +within the next half-hour the articles of capitulation were formally +signed. + +On the completion of the surrender--the occasion being justly +considered a great one--the Crown Prince proceeded to distribute +among the officers congregated in the chateau grounds 'the order of +the Iron Cross'--a generous supply of these decorations being carried +in a basket by one of his orderlies, following him about as he walked +along. Meantime the King, leaving Napoleon in the chateau to +ruminate on the fickleness of fortune, drove off to see his own +victorious soldiers, who greeted him with huzzas that rent the air, +and must have added to the pangs of the captive Emperor. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +RIDING OVER THE BATTLEFIELD--DESTRUCTION OF BAZEILLES--MISTAKES OF +THE FRENCH--MARSHAL BAZAINE ON TO PARIS--A WEEK IN MEAUX--RHEIMS--ON +THE PICKETLINE-UNDER FIRE--A SURRENDER--AT VERSAILLES--GENERAL +BURNSIDE AND Mr. FORBES IN PARIS. + +The Crown Prince having got to the bottom of his medal basket-that is +to say, having finished his liberal distribution of decorations to +his officers--Forsyth and I rode off by way of Wadelincourt to +Bazeilles to see what had taken place on that part of the field, and +the sight that met our eyes as we entered the village was truly +dreadful to look upon. Most of the houses had been knocked down or +burned the day before, but such as had been left standing were now in +flames, the torch having been applied because, as it was claimed, +Frenchmen concealed in them had fired on the wounded. The streets +were still encumbered with both German and French dead, and it was +evident that of those killed in the houses the bodies had not been +removed, for the air was loaded with odors of burning flesh. From +Bazeille we rode on toward the north about two miles, along where the +fight had been largely an artillery duel, to learn what we could of +the effectiveness of the Krupp gun. Counting all the French dead we +came across killed by artillery, they figured up about three hundred +--a ridiculously small number; in fact, not much more than one dead +man for each Krupp gun on that part of the line. Although the number +of dead was in utter disproportion to the terrific six-hour +cannonade, yet small as it was the torn and mangled bodies made such +a horrible sight that we turned back toward Bazeilles without having +gone further than Givonne. + +At Bazeilles we met the King, accompanied by Bismarck and several of +the staff. They too had been riding over the field, the King making +this a practice, to see that the wounded were not neglected. As I +drew up by the party, Bismarck accosted me with, "Well, General, +aren't you hungry? This is just the place to whet one's appetite +--these burning Frenchmen--Ugh!" and shrugging his shoulders in evident +disgust, he turned away to join his Majesty in further explorations, +Forsyth and I continuing on to Chevenges. Here we got the first +inkling of what had become of our carriage since leaving it two days +before: it had been pressed into service to carry wounded officers from +the field during the battle, but afterward released, and was now safe +at the house in Vendresse where we had been quartered the night of the +31st, so, on hearing this, we settled to go there again to lodge, but +our good friend, the cure', insisting that we should stay with him, we +remained in Chevenges till next morning. + +On September 3 the King removed from Vendresse to Rethel, where he +remained two days; in the mean while the Germans, 240,000 strong, +beginning their direct march to Paris. The French had little with +which to oppose this enormous force, not more, perhaps, than 50,000 +regular troops; the rest of their splendid army had been lost or +captured in battle, or was cooped up in the fortifications of Metz, +Strasburg, and other places, in consequence of blunders without +parallel in history, for which Napoleon and the Regency in Paris must +be held accountable. The first of these gross faults was the fight +at Worth, where MacMahon, before his army was mobilized, accepted +battle with the Crown Prince, pitting 50,000 men against 175,000; the +next was Bazaine's fixing upon Metz as his base, and stupidly putting +himself in position to be driven back to it, when there was no +possible obstacle to his joining forces with MacMahon at Chalons; +while the third and greatest blunder of all was MacMahon's move to +relieve Metz, trying to slip 140,000 men along the Belgian frontier. +Indeed, it is exasperating and sickening to think of all this; to +think that Bazaine carried into Metz--a place that should have been +held, if at all, with not over 25,000 men--an army of 180,000, +because it contained, the excuse was, "an accumulation of stores." +With all the resources of rich France to draw upon, I cannot conceive +that this excuse was sincere; on the contrary, I think that the +movement of Bazaine must have been inspired by Napoleon with a view +to the maintenance of his dynasty rather than for the good of France. + +As previously stated, Bismarck did not approve of the German army's +moving on Paris after the battle of Sedan. Indeed, I think he +foresaw and dreaded the establishment of a Republic, his idea being +that if peace was made then, the Empire could be continued in the +person of the Prince Imperial who--, coming to the throne under +German influences, would be pliable in his hands. These views found +frequent expression in private, and in public too; I myself +particularly remember the Chancellor's speaking thus most unguardedly +at a dinner in Rheims. But he could not prevent the march to Paris; +it was impossible to stop the Germans, flushed with success. "On to +Paris" was written by the soldiers on every door, and every +fence-board along the route to the capital, and the thought of a +triumphant march down the Champs Elysees was uppermost with every +German, from the highest to the lowest grade. + +The 5th of September we set out for Rheims. There it was said the +Germans would meet with strong resistance, for the French intended to +die to the last man before giving up that city. But this proved all +fudge, as is usual with these "last ditch" promises, the garrison +decamping immediately at the approach of a few Uhlans. So far as I +could learn, but a single casualty happened; this occurred to an +Uhlan, wounded by a shot which it was reported was fired from a house +after the town was taken; so, to punish this breach of faith, a levy +of several hundred bottles of champagne was made, and the wine +divided about headquarters, being the only seizure made in the city, +I believe, for though Rheims, the centre of the champagne district, +had its cellars well stocked, yet most of them being owned by German +firms, they received every protection. + +The land about Rheims is of a white, chalky character, and very poor, +but having been terraced and enriched with fertilizers, it produces +the champagne grape in such abundance that the region, once +considered valueless, and named by the peasantry the "land of the +louse," now supports a dense population. We remained in Rheims eight +days, and through the politeness of the American Consul--Mr. Adolph +Gill--had the pleasure of seeing all the famous wine cellars, and +inspecting the processes followed in champagne making, from the step +of pressing the juice from the grape to that which shows the wine +ready for the market. Mr. Gill also took us to see everything else +of special interest about the city, and there being much to look at +--fine old churches, ancient fortifications, a Roman gateway, etc. +--the days slipped by very quickly, though the incessant rains +somewhat interfered with our enjoyment. + +For three or four days all sorts of rumors were rife as to what was +doing in Paris, but nothing definite was learned till about the 9th; +then Count Bismarck informed me that the Regency had been overthrown +on the 4th, and that the Empress Eugenie had escaped to Belgium. The +King of Prussia offered her an asylum with the Emperor at +Wilhelmshohe, "where she ought to go," said the Chancellor, "for her +proper place is with her husband," but he feared she would not. On +the same occasion he also told me that Jules Favre--the head of the +Provisional Government--had sent him the suggestion that, the Empire +being gone, peace should be made and the Germans withdrawn, but that +he (Bismarck) was now compelled to recognize the impossibility of +doing this till Paris was taken, for although immediately after the +surrender of Sedan he desired peace, the past few days had made it +plain that the troops would not be satisfied with anything short of +Paris, no matter what form of Government the French should ultimately +adopt. + +The German army having met with no resistance whatever in its march +on Paris, its advance approached the capital rapidly, and by the 14th +of September the royal headquarters moved by a fine macadamized road +to the Chateau Thierry, and on the 5th reached Meaux, about +twenty-eight miles from Paris, where we remained four days awaiting the +reconstruction of some railroad and canal bridges. The town of Meaux +has a busy population of about 10,000 souls, in peaceable times +principally occupied in manufacturing flour for the Paris market, +having a fine waterpower for the many mills. These were kept going day +and night to supply the German army; and it was strange to see with +what zeal Frenchmen toiled to fill the stomachs of their inveterate +enemies, and with what alacrity the mayor and other officials filled +requisitions for wine, cheese, suits of livery, riding-whips, and even +squab pigeons. + +During our stay at Meaux the British Minister Lord Lyons, endeavored +to bring about a cessation of hostilities, to this end sending his +secretary out from Paris with a letter to Count Bismarck, offering to +serve as mediator. The Chancellor would not agree to this, however, +for he conjectured that the action of the British Minister had been +inspired by Jules Favre, who, he thought, was trying to draw the +Germans into negotiations through the medium of a third party only +for purposes of delay. So the next morning Lord Lyons's secretary, +Mr. Edward Malet, returned to Paris empty-handed, except that he bore +a communication positively declining mediation; which message, +however, led no doubt to an interview between Bismarck and Favre a +couple of days later. + +The forenoon of September 19 the King removed to the Chateau +Ferrieres--a castle belonging to the Rothschild family, where +Napoleon had spent many happy days in the time of his prosperity. +His Majesty took up his quarters here at the suggestion of the owner, +we were told, so that by the presence of the King the magnificent +chateau and its treasures of art would be unquestionably protected +from all acts of vandalism. + +All of the people at headquarters except the King's immediate suite +were assigned quarters at Lagny; and while Forsyth and I, accompanied +by Sir Henry Havelock, of the British army, were driving thither, we +passed on the road the representative of the National Defense +Government, Jules Favre, in a carriage heading toward Meaux. +Preceded by a flag of truce and accompanied by a single, companion, +he was searching for Count Bismarck, in conformity, doubtless, with +the message the Chancellor had sent to Paris on the 17th by the +British secretary. A half-mile further on we met Bismarck. He too +was traveling toward Meaux, not in the best of humor either, it +appeared, for having missed finding the French envoy at the +rendezvous where they had agreed to meet, he stopped long enough to +say that the "air was full of lies, and that there were many persons +with the army bent on business that did not concern them." + +The armies of the two Crown Princes were now at the outskirts of +Paris. They had come from Sedan mainly by two routes--the Crown +Prince of Saxony marching by the northern line, through Laon and +Soissons, and the Crown Prince of Prussia by the southern line, +keeping his right wing on the north bank of the Marne, while his left +and centre approached the French capital by roads between that river +and the Seine. + +The march of these armies had been unobstructed by any resistance +worth mentioning, and as the routes of both columns lay through a +region teeming with everything necessary for their support, and rich +even in luxuries, it struck me that such campaigning was more a vast +picnic than like actual war. The country supplied at all points +bread, meat, and wine in abundance, and the neat villages, never more +than a mile or two apart, always furnished shelter; hence the +enormous trains required to feed and provide camp equipage for an +army operating in a sparsely settled country were dispensed with; in +truth, about the only impedimenta of the Germans was their wagons +carrying ammunition, pontoon-boats, and the field-telegraph. + +On the morning of the 20th I started out accompanied by Forsyth and +Sir Henry Havelock, and took the road through Boissy St. George, +Boissy St. Martins and Noisy Le Grand to Brie. Almost every foot of +the way was strewn with fragments of glass from wine bottles, emptied +and then broken by the troops. There was, indeed, so much of this +that I refrain from making any estimate of the number of bottles, +lest I be thought to exaggerate, but the road was literally paved +with glass, and the amount of wine consumed (none was wasted) must +have been enormous, far more, even, than I had seen evidence of at +any time before. There were two almost continuous lines of broken +bottles along the roadsides all the way down from Sedan; but that +exhibit was small compared with what we saw about Brie. + +At Brie we were taken charge of by the German commandant of the +place. He entertained us most hospitably for an hour or so, and +then, accompanied by a lieutenant, who was to be our guide, I set out +ahead of my companions to gain a point on the picket-line where I +expected to get a good look at the French, for their rifle-pits were +but a few hundred yards off across the Marne, their main line being +just behind the rifle-pits. As the lieutenant and I rode through the +village, some soldiers warned us that the adventure would be +dangerous, but that we could probably get to the desired place unhurt +if we avoided the French fire by forcing our horses to a run in +crossing some open streets where we would be exposed. On getting to +the first street my guide galloped ahead to show the way, and as the +French were not on the lookout for anything of the kind at these +dangerous points, only a few stray shots were drawn by the +lieutenant, but when I followed, they were fully up to what was going +on, and let fly a volley every time they saw me in the open. +Fortunately, however, in their excitement they overshot, but when I +drew rein alongside of my guide under protection of the bluff where +the German picket was posted, my hair was all on end, and I was about +as badly scared as ever I had been in my life. As soon as I could +recover myself I thought of Havelock and Forsyth, with the hope that +they would not follow; nor did they, for having witnessed my +experience, they wisely concluded that, after all, they did not care +so much to see the French rifle-pits. + +When I had climbed to the top of the bluff I was much disappointed, +for I could see but little--only the advanced rifle-pits across the +river, and Fort Nogent beyond them, not enough, certainly, to repay a +non-combatant for taking the risk of being killed. The next question +was to return, and deciding to take no more such chances as those we +had run in coming out, I said we would wait till dark, but this +proved unnecessary, for to my utter astonishment my guide informed me +that there was a perfectly safe route by which we might go back. I +asked why we had not taken it in coming, and he replied that he had +thought it "too long and circuitous." To this I could say nothing, +but I concluded that that was not quite the correct reason; the truth +is that early that morning the young fellow had been helping to empty +some of the many wine bottles I saw around Brie, and consequently had +a little more "Dutch courage"--was a little more rash--than would +have been the case under other conditions. + +I rode back to Brie by the "long and circuitous" route, and inquiring +there for my companions, found Havelock waiting to conduct me to the +village of Villiers, whither, he said, Forsyth had been called to +make some explanation about his passport, which did not appear to be +in satisfactory shape. Accordingly we started for Villiers, and +Havelock, being well mounted on an English "hunter," and wishing to +give me an exhibition of the animal's training and power, led the way +across ditches and fences, but my horse, never having followed "the +hounds," was unsafe to experiment with, so, after trying a low fence +or two, I decided to leave my friend alone in his diversion, and a +few moments later, seeing both horse and rider go down before a ditch +and high stone wall, I was convinced that my resolution was a +discreet one. After this mishap, which luckily resulted in no harm, +I hoped Sir Henry would give up the amusement, but by failure +becoming only the more determined, in a second effort he cleared the +wall handsomely and rode across-country to the villages. Following +the road till it passed under a railway bridge, I there thought I saw +a chance to gain Villiers by a short-cut, and changing my course +accordingly, I struck into a large vineyard to the left, and +proceeding a few hundred yards through the vines, came suddenly upon +a German picket-post. The guard immediately leveled their rifles at +me, when, remembering my Rezonville experience of being taken for a +French officer because of my uniform, I hastily flung myself from the +saddle in token of surrender. The action being rightly interpreted, +the men held their fire, and as my next thought was the King's pass I +reached under my coat-skirt for the document, but this motion being +taken as a grab for my pistol, the whole lot of them--some ten in +number--again aimed at me, and with such loud demands for surrender +that I threw up my hands and ran into their ranks. The officer of +the guard then coming up, examined my credentials, and seeing that +they were signed by the King of Prussia, released me and directed the +recovery of my horse, which was soon caught, and I was then conducted +to the quarters of the commandant, where I found Forsyth with his +pass properly vised, entirely ignorant of my troubles, and +contentedly regaling himself on cheese and beer. Havelock having got +to the village ahead of me, thanks to his cross-country ride, was +there too, sipping beer with Forsyth; nor was I slow to follow their +example, for the ride of the day, though rather barren in other +results, at any rate had given me a ravenous appetite. + +Late that evening, the 20th, we resumed our old quarters at Lagny, +and early next day I made a visit to the royal headquarters at +Ferrires, where I observed great rejoicing going on, the occasion for +it being an important victory gained near Mendon, a French corps of +about 30,000 men under General Ducrot having been beaten by the Fifth +Prussian and Second Bavarian corps. Ducrot had been stubbornly +holding ground near Mendon for two or three days, much to the +embarrassment of the Germans too, since he kept them from closing a +gap in their line to the southwest of Paris; but in the recent fight +he had been driven from the field with such heavy loss as to render +impossible his maintaining the gap longer. The Crown Prince of +Prussia was thus enabled to extend his left, without danger, as far +as Bougival, north of Versailles, and eventually met the right of the +Crown Prince of Saxony, already at Denil, north of St. Denis. The +unbroken circle of investment around Paris being well-nigh assured, +news of its complete accomplishment was momentarily expected; +therefore everybody was jubilant on account of the breaking up of +Ducrot, but more particularly because word had been received the same +morning that a correspondence had begun between Bazaine and Prince +Frederick Charles, looking to the capitulation of Metz, for the +surrender of that place would permit the Second Army to join in the +siege of Paris. + +Learning all this, and seeing that the investment was about +completed, I decided to take up my quarters at Versailles, and +started for that place on the 22d, halting at Noisy le Grand to take +luncheon with some artillery officers, whose acquaintance we had made +the day of the surrender at Sedan. During the meal I noticed two +American flags flying on a couple of houses near by. Inquiring the +significance of this, I was told that the flags had been put up to +protect the buildings--the owners, two American citizens, having in a +bad fright abandoned their property, and, instead of remaining +outside, gone into Paris,--"very foolishly," said our hospitable +friends, "for here they could have obtained food in plenty, and been +perfectly secure from molestation." + +We arrived at Versailles about 7 o'clock that evening and settled +ourselves in the Hotel Reservoir, happy to find there two or three +American families, with whom, of course, we quickly made +acquaintance. This American circle was enlarged a few days later by +the arrival of General Wm. B. Hazen, of our army, General Ambrose E. +Burnside, and Mr. Paul Forbes. Burnside and Forbes were hot to see, +from the French side, something of the war, and being almost beside +themselves to get into Paris, a permit was granted them by Count +Bismarck, and they set out by way of Sevres, Forsyth and I +accompanying them as far as the Palace of St. Cloud, which we, +proposed to see, though there were strict orders against its being +visited generally. After much trouble we managed, through the "open +sesame" of the King's pass, to gain access to the palace; but to our +great disappointment we found that all the pictures had been cut from +the frames and carried off to Paris, except one portrait, that of +Queen Victoria, against whom the French were much incensed. All +other works of art had been removed, too--a most fortunate +circumstance, for the palace being directly on the German line, was +raked by the guns from the fortress of Mont Valerien, and in a few +days burned to the ground. + +In less than a week Burnside and Forbes returned from Paris. They +told us their experience had been interesting, but were very reticent +as to particulars, and though we tried hard to find out what they had +seen or done, we could get nothing from them beyond the general +statement that they had had a good time, and that General Trochu had +been considerate enough to postpone a sortie, in order to let them +return; but this we did not quite swallow. After a day or two they +went into Paris again, and I then began to suspect that they were +essaying the role of mediators, and that Count Bismarck was feeding +their vanity with permits, and receiving his equivalent by learning +the state of affairs within the beleaguered city. + +From about the 1st of October on, the Germans were engaged in making +their enveloping lines impenetrable, bringing up their reserves, +siege guns, and the like, the French meanwhile continuing to drill +and discipline the National Guard and relieving the monotony +occasionally by a more or less spirited, but invariably abortive, +sortie. The most notable of these was that made by General Vinoy +against the heights of Clamart, the result being a disastrous repulse +by the besiegers. After this, matters settled down to an almost +uninterrupted quietude, only a skirmish here and there; and it being +plain that the Germans did not intend to assault the capital, but +would accomplish its capture by starvation, I concluded to find out +from Count Bismarck about when the end was expected, with the purpose +of spending the interim in a little tour through some portions of +Europe undisturbed by war, returning in season for the capitulation. +Count Bismarck having kindly advised me as to the possible date. + +Forsyth and I, on the 14th of October, left Versailles, going first +direct to the Chateau Ferrieres to pay our respects to the King, +which we did, and again took luncheon with him. From the chateau we +drove to Meaux, and there spent the night; resuming our journey next +morning, we passed through Epernay, Rheims, and Rethel to Sedan, +where we tarried a day, and finally, on October 18, reached Brussels. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +BRUSSELS--DECIDING TO VISIT EASTERN EUROPE--AUSTRIA--DOWN THE DANUBE +--IN CONSTANTINOPLE--THE LADIES OF THE HAREM--THE SULTAN--TURKISH +SOLDIERS--A BANQUET--A VISIT IN ATHENS--KING GEORGE OF GREECE--VICTOR +EMMANUEL--"BEDEVILED WITH CARES OF STATE"--DEER SHOOTING--A MILITARY +DINNER--RETURN TO VERSAILLES--GERMANS ENTERING PARIS--CRITICISM ON +THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR--CONCLUSION. + +On reaching Brussels, one of the first things to do was to pay my +respects to the King of Belgium, which I did, accompanied by our +Minister, Mr. Russell Jones. Later I dined with the King and Queen, +meeting at the dinner many notable people, among them the Count and +Countess of Flanders. A day or two in Brussels sufficed to mature +our plans for spending the time up to the approximate date of our +return to Paris; and deciding to visit eastern Europe, we made Vienna +our first objective, going there by way of Dresden. + +At Vienna our Minister, Mr. John Jay, took charge of us--Forsyth was +still with me--and the few days' sojourn was full of interest. The +Emperor being absent from the capital, we missed seeing him; but the +Prime Minister, Count von Beust, was very polite to us, and at his +house we had the pleasure of meeting at dinner Count Andrassy, the +Prime Minister of Hungary. + +From Vienna we went to Buda-Pesth, the Hungarian capital; and thence, +in a I small, crowded, and uncomfortable steamboat, down the Danube +to Rustchuck, whence we visited Bucharest--all who travel in eastern +Europe do so--and then directing our course southward, we went first +to Varna, and from that city by steamer through the Black Sea to +Constantinople. + +We reached the Turkish capital at the time of Ramadan, the period of +the year (about a month) during which the Mohammedans are commanded +by the Koran to keep a rigorous fast every day from sunrise till +sunset. All the followers of the Prophet were therefore busy with +their devotions--holding a revival, as it were; hence there was no +chance whatever to be presented to the Sultan, Abdul Aziz, it being +forbidden during the penitential season for him to receive +unbelievers, or in fact any one except the officials of his +household. However, the Grand Vizier brought me many messages of +welcome, and arranged that I should be permitted to see and salute +his Serene Highness on the Esplanade as he rode by on horseback to +the mosque. + +So, the second day after arrival, the Grand Vizier drove me in a +barouche to the Esplanade, where we took station about midway of its +length an hour or so before the Sultan was to appear. Shortly after +we reached the Esplanade, carriages occupied by the women of the +Sultan's harem began to appear, coming out from the palace grounds +and driving up and down the roadway. Only a few of the women were +closely veiled, a majority of them wearing an apology for veiling, +merely a strip of white lace covering the forehead down to the +eyebrows. Some were yellow, and some white-types of the Mongolian +and Caucasian races. Now and then a pretty face was seen, rarely a +beautiful one. Many were plump, even to corpulence, and these were +the closest veiled, being considered the greatest beauties I presume, +since with the Turk obesity is the chief element of comeliness. As +the carriages passed along in review, every now and then an occupant, +unable or unwilling to repress her natural promptings, would indulge +in a mild flirtation, making overtures by casting demure +side-glances, throwing us coquettish kisses, or waving strings of amber +beads with significant gestures, seeming to say: "Why don't you +follow?" But this we could not do if we would, for the Esplanade +throughout its entire length was lined with soldiers, put there +especially to guard the harem first, and later, the Sultan on his +pilgrimage to the mosque. + +But as it was now time for His Serene Highness to make his appearance +the carriages containing his wives drove off into the palace grounds, +which were inclosed by a high wall, leaving the Esplanade wholly +unencumbered except by the soldiers. Down between the two ranks, +which were formed facing each other, came the Sultan on a white +steed--a beautiful Arabian--and having at his side his son, a boy +about ten or twelve years old, who was riding a pony, a diminutive +copy of his father's mount, the two attended by a numerous +body-guard, dressed in gorgeous Oriental uniforms. As the procession +passed our carriage, I, as pre-arranged, stood up and took off my +hat, His Serene Highness promptly acknowledging the salute by raising +his hand to the forehead. This was all I saw of him, yet I received +every kindness at his hands, being permitted to see many of his +troops, to inspect all the ordnance, equipment, and other military +establishments about Constantinople, and to meet numbers of the high +functionaries of the Empire. + +Among other compliments tendered through his direction, and which I +gladly accepted, was a review of all the troops then in Stamboul +--about 6,000--comprising infantry, cavalry, and artillery. + +They were as fine looking a body of soldiers as I ever saw--well +armed and well clothed, the men all large and of sturdy appearance. + +After the review we attended a grand military dinner given by the +Grand Vizier. At the hour set for this banquet we presented +ourselves at the palace of the Grand Vizier, and being ushered into a +large drawing-room, found already assembled there the guests invited +to meet us. Some few spoke French, and with these we managed to +exchange an occasional remark; but as the greater number stood about +in silence, the affair, thus far, was undeniably a little stiff. +Just before the dinner was announced, all the Turkish officers went +into an adjoining room, and turning their faces to the east, +prostrated themselves to the floor in prayer. Then we were all +conducted to a large salon, where each being provided with a silver +ewer and basin, a little ball of highly perfumed soap and a napkin, +set out on small tables, each guest washed his hands. Adjacent to +this salon was the dining-room, or, rather, the banqueting room, a +very large and artistically frescoed hall, in the centre of which +stood a crescent-shaped table, lighted with beautiful silver +candelabra, and tastefully decorated with flowers and fruits. The +viands were all excellent; cooked, evidently, by a French chef, and +full justice was done the dishes, especially by the Turks, who, of +course, had been fasting all day. + +At the close of the banquet, which consisted of not less than fifteen +courses, we withdrew to a smoking-room, where the coffee was served +and cigarettes and chibouks offered us--the latter a pipe having a +long flexible stem with an amber mouthpiece. I chose the chibouk, +and as the stem of mine was studded with precious stones of enormous +value, I thought I should enjoy it the more; but the tobacco being +highly flavored with some sort of herbs, my smoke fell far short of +my anticipations. The coffee was delicious, however, and I found +this to be the case wherever I went in Constantinople, whether in +making calls or at dinner, the custom of offering coffee and tobacco +on these occasions being universal. + +The temptations to linger at Constantinople were many indeed, not the +least being the delightful climate; and as time pressed, we set out +with much regret on the return journey, stopping a few days at +Athens, whence we made several short excursions into the interior. +King George and Queen Olga made our stay in Athens one of extreme +interest and exceeding pleasure. Throwing aside all ceremony, they +breakfasted and dined us informally, gave us a fine ball, and in +addition to these hospitalities showed us much personal attention, +his Majesty even calling upon me, and the Queen sending her children +to see us at our hotel. + +Of course we visited all that remained of the city's ancient +civilization--the Acropolis, temples, baths, towers, and the like; +nor did we omit to view the spot where St. Paul once instructed the +Athenians in lessons of Christianity. We traveled some little +through the country districts outside of Athens, and I noticed that +the peasantry, in point of picturesqueness of dress and color of +complexion, were not unlike the gypsies we see at times in America. +They had also much of the same shrewdness, and, as far as I could +learn, were generally wholly uneducated, ignorant, indeed, except as +to one subject--politics--which I was told came to them intuitively, +they taking to it, and a scramble for office, as naturally as a duck +to water. In fact, this common faculty for politics seems a +connecting link between the ancient and modern Greek. + +Leaving Athens with the pleasantest recollections, we sailed for +Messina, Sicily, and from there went to Naples, where we found many +old friends; among them Mr. Buchanan Reed, the artist and poet, and +Miss Brewster, as well as a score or more of others of our +countrymen, then or since distinguished, in art and letters at home +and abroad. We remained some days in Naples, and during the time +went to Pompeii to witness a special excavation among the ruins of +the buried city, which search was instituted on account of our visit. +A number of ancient household articles were dug up, and one, a terra +cotta lamp bearing upon its crown in bas-relief the legend of "Leda +and the Swan," was presented to me as a souvenir of the occasion, +though it is usual for the Government to place in its museums +everything of such value that is unearthed. + +From Naples to Rome by rail was our next journey. In the Eternal +City we saw picture-galleries, churches, and ruins in plenty, but all +these have been so well described by hundreds of other travelers that +I shall not linger even to name them. While at Rome we also +witnessed an overflow of the Tiber, that caused great suffering and +destroyed much property. The next stage of our tour took us to +Venice, then to Florence--the capital of Italy--for although the +troops of the King of Italy had taken possession of Rome the +preceding September, the Government itself had not yet removed +thither. + +At Florence, our Minister, Mr. Marsh, though suffering with a lame +foot, took me in charge, and in due course of time I was presented to +King Victor-Emmanuel. His Majesty received me informally at his +palace in a small, stuffy room--his office, no doubt--and an untidy +one it was too. He wore a loose blouse and very baggy trousers; a +comfortable suit, certainly, but not at all conducing to an ideal +kingliness of appearance. + +His Majesty's hobby was hunting, and no sooner had I made my bow than +he began a conversation on that subject, thrusting his hands nearly +up to the elbows into the pockets of his trousers. He desired to +learn about the large game of America, particularly the buffalo, and +when I spoke of the herds of thousands and thousands I had seen on +the plains of western Kansas, he interrupted me to bemoan the fate +which kept him from visiting America to hunt, even going so far as to +say that "he didn't wish to be King of Italy, anyhow, but would much +prefer to pass his days hunting than be bedeviled with the cares of +state." On one of his estates, near Pisa, he had several large herds +of deer, many wild boars, and a great deal of other game. Of this +preserve he was very proud, and before we separated invited me to go +down there to shoot deer, adding that he would be there himself if he +could, but feared that a trip which he had to take to Milan would +interfere, though he wished me to go in any event. + +I gladly accepted the invitation, and in two or three days was +notified when I would be expected at the estate. At the designated +time I was escorted to Pisa by an aide-de-camp, and from there we +drove the few miles to the King's chateau, where we fortified +ourselves for the work in hand by an elaborate and toothsome +breakfast of about ten courses. Then in a carriage we set out for +the King's stand in the hunting-grounds, accompanied by a crowd of +mounted game-keepers, who with great difficulty controlled the pack +of sixty or seventy hounds, the dogs and keepers together almost +driving me to distraction with their yelping and yelling. On +reaching the stand, I was posted within about twenty' yards of a +long, high picket-fence, facing the fence and covered by two trees +very close together. It was from behind these that the King usually +shot, and as I was provided with a double-barreled shot-gun, I +thought I could do well, especially since close in rear of me stood +two game-keepers to load and hand me a second gun when the first was +emptied. + +Meantime the huntsmen and the hounds had made a circuit of the park +to drive up the game. The yelps of the hounds drawing near, I +cautiously looked in the direction of the sound, and the next moment +saw a herd of deer close in to the fence, and coming down at full +speed. Without a miss, I shot the four leading ones as they tried +to run the gauntlet, for in passing between the stand and the fence, +the innocent creatures were not more than ten to fifteen paces from +me. At the fourth I stopped, but the gamekeepers insisted on more +butchery, saying, "No one but the King ever did the like" (I guess no +one else had ever had the chance), so, thus urged, I continued firing +till I had slaughtered eleven with eleven shots--an easy task with a +shot-gun and buckshot cartridges. + +The "hunt" being ended--for with this I had had enough, and no one +else was permitted to do any shooting--the aide-decamp directed the +game to be sent to me in Florence, and we started for the chateau. +On the way back I saw a wild boar the first and only one I ever saw +--my attention being drawn to him by cries from some of the +game-keepers. There was much commotion, the men pointing out the game +and shouting excitedly, "See the wild boar!" otherwise I should not +have known what was up, but now, looking in the indicated direction, I +saw scudding over the plain what appeared to me to be nothing but a +halfgrown black pig, or shoat. He was not in much of a hurry either, +and gave no evidence of ferocity, yet it is said that this +insignificant looking animal is dangerous when hunted with the spear +--the customary way. After an early dinner at the chateau we returned +to Florence, and my venison next day arriving, it was distributed among +my American friends in the city. + +Shortly after the hunt the King returned from Milan, and then honored +me with a military dinner, his Majesty and all the guests, numbering +eighty, appearing in full uniform. The banqueting hall was lighted +with hundreds of wax candles, there was a profusion of beautiful +flowers, and to me the scene altogether was one of unusual +magnificence. The table service was entirely of gold--the celebrated +set of the house of Savoy--and behind the chair of each guest stood a +servant in powdered wig and gorgeous livery of red plush. I sat at +the right of the King, who--his hands resting on his sword, the hilt +of which glittered with jewels--sat through the hour and a half at +table without once tasting food or drink, for it was his rule to eat +but two meals in twenty-four hours--breakfast at noon, and dinner at +midnight. The King remained silent most of the time, but when he did +speak, no matter on what subject, he inevitably drifted back to +hunting. He never once referred to the Franco-Prussian war, nor to +the political situation in his own country, then passing through a +crisis. In taking leave of his Majesty I thanked him with deep +gratitude for honoring me so highly, and his response was that if +ever he came to America to hunt buffalo, he should demand my +assistance. + +From Florence I went to Milan and Geneva, then to Nice, Marseilles, +and Bordeaux. Assembled at Bordeaux was a convention which had been +called together by the government of the National Defense for the +purpose of confirming or rejecting the terms of an armistice of +twenty-one days, arranged between Jules Favre and Count Bismarck in +negotiations begun at Versailles the latter part of January. The +convention was a large body, chosen from all parts of France, and was +unquestionably the most noisy, unruly and unreasonable set of beings +that I ever saw in a legislative assembly. The frequent efforts of +Thiers, Jules Favre, and other leading men to restrain the more +impetuous were of little avail. When at the sittings a delegate +arose to speak on some question, he was often violently pulled to his +seat and then surrounded by a mob of his colleagues, who would throw +off their coats and gesticulate wildly, as though about to fight. + +But the bitter pill of defeat had to be swallowed in some way, so the +convention delegated M. Thiers to represent the executive power of +the country, with authority to construct a ministry three +commissioners were appointed by the Executive, to enter into further +negotiations with Count Bismarck at Versailles and arrange a peace, +the terms of which, however, were to be submitted to the convention +for final action. Though there had been so much discussion, it took +but a few days to draw up and sign a treaty at Versailles, the +principal negotiators being Thiers and Jules Favre for France, and +Bismarck on the part of the Germans. The terms agreed upon provided +for the occupation of Paris till ratification should be had by the +convention at Bordeaux; learning of which stipulation from our +Minister, Mr. Washburn, I hurried off to Paris to see the conquerors +make their triumphal entry. + +In the city the excitement was at fever heat, of course; the entire +population protesting with one voice that they would never, never +look upon the hated Germans marching through their beloved city. No! +when the day arrived they would hide themselves in their houses, or +shut their eyes to such a hateful sight. But by the 1st of March a +change had come over the fickle Parisians, for at an early hour the +sidewalks were jammed with people, and the windows and doors of the +houses filled with men, women, and children eager to get a look at +the conquerors. Only a few came in the morning, however--an +advance-guard of perhaps a thousand cavalry and infantry. The main +column marched from the Arc-de-Triomphe toward the middle of the +afternoon. In its composition it represented United Germany--Saxons, +Bavarians, and the Royal Guard of Prussia--and, to the strains of +martial music, moving down the Champ Elysees to the Place de la +Concorde, was distributed thence over certain sections of the city +agreed upon beforehand. Nothing that could be called a disturbance +took place during the march; and though there was a hiss now and then +and murmurings of discontent, yet the most noteworthy mutterings were +directed against the defunct Empire. Indeed, I found everywhere that +the national misfortunes were laid at Napoleon's door--he, by this +time, having become a scapegoat for every blunder of the war. + +The Emperor William (he had been proclaimed German Emperor at +Versailles the 18th of January) did not accompany his troops into +Paris, though he reviewed them at Long Champs before they started. +After the occupation of the city he still remained at Versailles, and +as soon as circumstances would permit, I repaired to the Imperial +headquarters to pay my respects to his Majesty under his new title +and dignities, and to say good-bye. + +Besides the Emperor, the only persons I me at Versailles were General +von Moltke and Bismarck. His Majesty was in a very agreeable frame +of mind, and as bluff and hearty as usual. His increased rank and +power had effected no noticeable change of any kind in him, and by +his genial and cordial ways he made me think that my presence with +the German army had contributed to his pleasure. Whether this was +really so or not, I shall always believe it true, for his kind words +and sincere manner could leave no other conclusion. + +General von Moltke was, as usual, quiet and reserved, betraying not +the slightest consciousness of his great ability, nor the least +indication of pride on account of his mighty work. I say this +advisedly, for it is an undoubted fact that it was his marvelous +mind that perfected the military system by which 800,000 men were +mobilized with unparalleled celerity and moved with such certainty of +combination that, in a campaign of seven months, the military power +of France was destroyed and her vast resources sorely crippled. + +I said good-bye to Count Bismarck, also, for at that busy time the +chances of seeing him again were very remote. The great Chancellor +manifested more joy over the success of the Germans than did anyone +else at the Imperial headquarters. Along with his towering strength +of mind and body, his character partook of much of the enthusiasm and +impulsiveness commonly restricted to younger men, and now in his +frank, free way be plainly showed his light-heartedness and +gratification at success. That which for years his genius had been +planning and striving for--permanent unification of the German +States, had been accomplished by the war. It had welded them +together in a compact Empire which no power in Europe could disrupt, +and as such a union was the aim of Bismarck's life, he surely had a +right to feel jubilant. + +Thanks to the courtesies extended me, I had been able to observe the +principal battles, and study many of the minor details of a war +between two of the greatest military nations of the world, and to +examine critically the methods followed abroad for subsisting, +equipping, and manoeuvring vast bodies of men during a stupendous, +campaign. Of course I found a great deal to interest and instruct +me, yet nowadays war is pretty much the same everywhere, and this one +offered no marked exception to my previous experiences. The methods +pursued on the march were the same as we would employ, with one most +important exception. Owing to the density of population throughout +France it was always practicable for the Germans to quarter their +troops in villages, requiring the inhabitants to subsist both +officers and men. Hence there was no necessity for camp and garrison +equipage, nor enormous provision trains, and the armies were +unencumbered by these impedimenta, indispensable when operating in a +poor and sparsely settled country. As I have said before, the only +trains were those for ammunition, pontoon-boats, and the field +telegraph, and all these were managed by special corps. If +transportation was needed for other purposes, it was obtained by +requisition from the invaded country, just as food and forage were +secured. Great celerity of combination was therefore possible, the +columns moving in compact order, and as all the roads were broad and +macadamized, there was little or nothing to delay or obstruct the +march of the Germans, except when their enemy offered resistance, but +even this was generally slight and not very frequent, for the French +were discouraged by disaster from the very outset of the campaign. + +The earlier advantages gained by the Germans may be ascribed to the +strikingly prompt mobilization of their armies, one of the most +noticeable features of their perfect military system, devised by +almost autocratic power; their later successes were greatly aided by +the blunders of the French, whose stupendous errors materially +shortened the war, though even if prolonged it could, in my opinion, +have had ultimately no other termination. + +As I have previously stated, the first of these blunders was the +acceptance of battle by MacMahon at Worth; the second in attaching +too much importance to the fortified position of Metz, resulting in +three battles Colombey, Mars-la-Tour, and Gravelotte--all of which +were lost; and the third, the absurd movement of MacMahon along the +Belgian frontier to relieve Metz, the responsibility for which, I am +glad to say, does not belong to him. + +With the hemming in of Bazaine at Metz and the capture of MacMahon's +army at Sedan the crisis of the war was passed, and the Germans +practically the victors. The taking of Paris was but a sentiment +--the money levy could have been made and the Rhine provinces held +without molesting that city, and only the political influences +consequent upon the changes in the French Government caused peace to +be deferred. + +I did not have much opportunity to observe the German cavalry, either +on the march or in battle. The only time I saw any of it engaged was +in the unfortunate charge at Gravelotte. That proved its mettle good +and discipline fair, but answered no other purpose. Such of it as +was not attached to the infantry was organized in divisions, and +operated in accordance with the old idea of covering the front and +flanks of the army, a duty which it thoroughly performed. But thus +directed it was in no sense an independent corps, and hence cannot +be, said to have accomplished anything in the campaign, or have had a +weight or influence at all proportionate to its strength. The method +of its employment seemed to me a mistake, for, being numerically +superior to the French cavalry, had it been massed and manoeuvred +independently of the infantry, it could easily have broken up the +French communications, and done much other work of weighty influence +in the prosecution of the war. + +The infantry was as fine as I ever saw, the men young and hardy in +appearance, and marching always with an elastic stride. The infantry +regiment, however, I thought too large--too many men for a colonel to +command unless he has the staff of a general--but this objection may +be counterbalanced by the advantages resulting from associating +together thus intimately the men from the same district, or county as +we would call it; the celerity of mobilization, and, in truth, the +very foundation of the German system, being based on this local or +territorial scheme of recruiting. + +There was no delay when the call sounded for the march; all turned +out promptly, and while on the road there was very little straggling, +only the sick falling out. But on such fine, smooth roads, and with +success animating the men from the day they struck the first blow, it +could hardly be expected that the columns would not keep well closed +up. Then, too, it must be borne in mind that, as already stated, +'campaigning' in France--that is, the marching, camping, and +subsisting of an army--is an easy matter, very unlike anything we, +had during the war of the rebellion. To repeat: the country is rich, +beautiful, and densely populated, subsistence abundant, and the +roads--all macadamized highways; thus the conditions; are altogether +different from those existing with us. I think that under the same +circumstances our troops would have done as well as the Germans, +marched as admirably, made combinations as quickly and accurately, +and fought with as much success. I can but leave to conjecture how. +the Germans would have got along on bottomless roads--often none at +all--through the swamps and quicksands of northern Virginia, from, +the Wilderness to Petersburg, and from Chattanooga to Atlanta and the +sea. + +Following the operations of the German armies from the battle of +Gravelotte to the siege of Paris, I may, in conclusion, say that I +saw no new military principles developed, whether of strategy or +grand tactics, the movements of the different armies and corps being +dictated and governed by the same general laws that have so long +obtained, simplicity of combination and manoeuvre, and the +concentration of a numerically superior force at the vital point. + +After my brief trip to Versailles, I remained in Paris till the +latter part of March. In company with Mr. Washburn, I visited the +fortifications for the defense of the city, and found them to be +exceptionally heavy; so strong, indeed, that it would have been very +hard to carry the place by a general assault. The Germans, knowing +the character of the works, had refrained from the sacrifice of life +that such an attempt must entail, though they well knew that many of +the forts were manned by unseasoned soldiers. With only a combat +here and there, to tighten their lines or repulse a sortie, they +wisely preferred to wait till starvation should do the work with +little loss and absolute certainty. + +The Germans were withdrawn from Paris on the 3d of March, and no +sooner were they gone than factional quarrels, which had been going +on at intervals ever since the flight of the Empress and the fall of +her regency on the 4th of September, were renewed with revolutionary +methods that eventually brought about the Commune. Having witnessed +one or two of these outbreaks, and concluding that while such +turbulence reigned in the city it would be of little profit for me to +tarry there, I decided to devote the rest of the time I could be away +from home to travel in England, Ireland, and Scotland. My journeys +through those countries were full of pleasure and instruction, but as +nothing I saw or did was markedly different from what has been so +often described by others, I will save the reader this part of my +experience. I returned to America in the fall, having been absent a +little more than a year, and although I saw much abroad of absorbing +interest, both professional and general, yet I came back to my native +land with even a greater love for her, and with increased admiration +for her institutions. + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Memoirs of General P. H. Sheridan, +Vol. 2, by General Philip Henry Sheridan + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MEMOIRS OF GENERAL SHERIDAN *** + +***** This file should be named 2652.txt or 2652.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/6/5/2652/ + +Produced by David Widger + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you +do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the +rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose +such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and +research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do +practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is +subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution. + + + +*** START: FULL LICENSE *** + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE +PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK + +To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work +(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project +Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project +Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at +https://gutenberg.org/license). + + +Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic works + +1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to +and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property +(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all +the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy +all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. +If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the +terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or +entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + +1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be +used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who +agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few +things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works +even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See +paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement +and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. See paragraph 1.E below. + +1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" +or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an +individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are +located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from +copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative +works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg +are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project +Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by +freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of +this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with +the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by +keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project +Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. + +1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern +what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in +a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check +the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement +before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or +creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project +Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning +the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United +States. + +1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + +1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate +access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently +whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project +Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, +copied or distributed: + +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 + +1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived +from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is +posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied +and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees +or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work +with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the +work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 +through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the +Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or +1.E.9. + +1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted +with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution +must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional +terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked +to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the +permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + +1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this +work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. + +1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this +electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without +prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with +active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project +Gutenberg-tm License. + +1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, +compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any +word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version +posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other +form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + +1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, +performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works +unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + +1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing +access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided +that + +- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method + you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is + owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he + has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the + Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments + must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you + prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax + returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and + sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the + address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to + the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm + License. You must require such a user to return or + destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium + and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of + Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any + money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days + of receipt of the work. + +- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set +forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from +both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael +Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the +Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. + +1.F. + +1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable +effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread +public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm +collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain +"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual +property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a +computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by +your equipment. + +1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right +of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project +Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal +fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT +LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE +PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE +TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE +LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR +INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH +DAMAGE. + +1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a +defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can +receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a +written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you +received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with +your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with +the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a +refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity +providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to +receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy +is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further +opportunities to fix the problem. + +1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth +in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + +1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied +warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. +If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the +law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be +interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by +the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any +provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. + +1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the +trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone +providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance +with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, +promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, +harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, +that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do +or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm +work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any +Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. + + +Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm + +Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of +electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers +including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists +because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from +people in all walks of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the +assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's +goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will +remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure +and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. +To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 +and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org. + + +Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the +state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal +Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification +number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at +https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent +permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S. +Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at +809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact +information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official +page at https://pglaf.org + +For additional contact information: + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + +Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation + +Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide +spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of +increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be +freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest +array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations +($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt +status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United +States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a +considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up +with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations +where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To +SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any +particular state visit https://pglaf.org + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we +have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition +against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who +approach us with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make +any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from +outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation +methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including including checks, online payments and credit card +donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + +Each eBook is in a subdirectory of the same number as the eBook's +eBook number, often in several formats including plain vanilla ASCII, +compressed (zipped), HTML and others. + +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks replace the old file and take over +the old filename and etext number. The replaced older file is renamed. +VERSIONS based on separate sources are treated as new eBooks receiving +new filenames and etext numbers. + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + https://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. + +EBooks posted prior to November 2003, with eBook numbers BELOW #10000, +are filed in directories based on their release date. If you want to +download any of these eBooks directly, rather than using the regular +search system you may utilize the following addresses and just +download by the etext year. + + https://www.gutenberg.org/etext06 + + (Or /etext 05, 04, 03, 02, 01, 00, 99, + 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90) + +EBooks posted since November 2003, with etext numbers OVER #10000, are +filed in a different way. The year of a release date is no longer part +of the directory path. The path is based on the etext number (which is +identical to the filename). The path to the file is made up of single +digits corresponding to all but the last digit in the filename. For +example an eBook of filename 10234 would be found at: + + https://www.gutenberg.org/1/0/2/3/10234 + +or filename 24689 would be found at: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/4/6/8/24689 + +An alternative method of locating eBooks: + https://www.gutenberg.org/GUTINDEX.ALL diff --git a/2652.zip b/2652.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4ebfe5a --- /dev/null +++ b/2652.zip diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..aac21d6 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #2652 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/2652) diff --git a/old/2shdn10.txt b/old/2shdn10.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..2d6053c --- /dev/null +++ b/old/2shdn10.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9809 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Personal Memoirs of P. H.Sheridan: V2 of 2 + + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world, be sure to check +the copyright laws for your country before posting these files!! + +Please take a look at the important information in this header. +We encourage you to keep this file on your own disk, keeping an +electronic path open for the next readers. Do not remove this. + +*It must legally be the first thing seen when opening the book.* +In fact, our legal advisors said we can't even change margins. + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*These Etexts Prepared By Hundreds of Volunteers and Donations* + +Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get Etexts, and +further information is included below. We need your donations. + + +Title: Personal Memoirs of P.H.Sheridan V2 of 2 + +Author: Philip Henry Sheridan + +May, 2001 [Etext #2652] + + +Project Gutenberg's Personal Memoirs of P. H.Sheridan: V2 of 2 +*****This file should be named 2shdn10.txt or 2shdn10.zip****** + +Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, 2shdn11.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 2shdn10a.txt + + +Etext prepared for Gutenberg by David Widger, widger@cecomet.net + +Project Gutenberg Etexts are usually created from multiple editions, +all of which are in the Public Domain in the United States, unless a +copyright notice is included. Therefore, we usually do NOT keep any +of these books in compliance with any particular paper edition. + + +We are now trying to release all our books one month in advance +of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing. + +Please note: neither this list nor its contents are final till +midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement. +The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at +Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A +preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment +and editing by those who wish to do so. To be sure you have an +up to date first edition [xxxxx10x.xxx] please check file sizes +in the first week of the next month. Since our ftp program has +a bug in it that scrambles the date [tried to fix and failed] a +look at the file size will have to do, but we will try to see a +new copy has at least one byte more or less. + + +Information about Project Gutenberg (one page) + +We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The +time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours +to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright +searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. This +projected audience is one hundred million readers. If our value +per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2 +million dollars per hour this year as we release thirty-six text +files per month, or 432 more Etexts in 1999 for a total of 2000+ +If these reach just 10% of the computerized population, then the +total should reach over 200 billion Etexts given away this year. + +The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext +Files by December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000 = 1 Trillion] +This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers, +which is only ~5% of the present number of computer users. + +At our revised rates of production, we will reach only one-third +of that goal by the end of 2001, or about 3,333 Etexts unless we +manage to get some real funding; currently our funding is mostly +from Michael Hart's salary at Carnegie-Mellon University, and an +assortment of sporadic gifts; this salary is only good for a few +more years, so we are looking for something to replace it, as we +don't want Project Gutenberg to be so dependent on one person. + +We need your donations more than ever! + + +All donations should be made to "Project Gutenberg/CMU": and are +tax deductible to the extent allowable by law. (CMU = Carnegie- +Mellon University). + +For these and other matters, please mail to: + +Project Gutenberg +P. O. Box 2782 +Champaign, IL 61825 + +When all other email fails. . .try our Executive Director: +Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com> +hart@pobox.com forwards to hart@prairienet.org and archive.org +if your mail bounces from archive.org, I will still see it, if +it bounces from prairienet.org, better resend later on. . . . + +We would prefer to send you this information by email. + +****** + +To access Project Gutenberg etexts, use any Web browser +to view http://promo.net/pg. This site lists Etexts by +author and by title, and includes information about how +to get involved with Project Gutenberg. You could also +download our past Newsletters, or subscribe here. This +is one of our major sites, please email hart@pobox.com, +for a more complete list of our various sites. + +To go directly to the etext collections, use FTP or any +Web browser to visit a Project Gutenberg mirror (mirror +sites are available on 7 continents; mirrors are listed +at http://promo.net/pg). + +Mac users, do NOT point and click, typing works better. + +Example FTP session: + +ftp metalab.unc.edu +login: anonymous +password: your@login +cd pub/docs/books/gutenberg +cd etext90 through etext99 or etext00 through etext01, etc. +dir [to see files] +get or mget [to get files. . .set bin for zip files] +GET GUTINDEX.?? [to get a year's listing of books, e.g., GUTINDEX.99] +GET GUTINDEX.ALL [to get a listing of ALL books] + +*** + +**Information prepared by the Project Gutenberg legal advisor** + +(Three Pages) + + +***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START*** +Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers. +They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with +your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from +someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our +fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement +disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how +you can distribute copies of this etext if you want to. + +*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT +By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm +etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept +this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive +a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by +sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person +you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical +medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request. + +ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS +This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG- +tm etexts, is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor +Michael S. Hart through the Project Gutenberg Association at +Carnegie-Mellon University (the "Project"). Among other +things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright +on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and +distribute it in the United States without permission and +without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth +below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext +under the Project's "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark. + +To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable +efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain +works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any +medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other +things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other +intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged +disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer +codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment. + +LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES +But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below, +[1] the Project (and any other party you may receive this +etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including +legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR +UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT, +INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE +OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE +POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. + +If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of +receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any) +you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that +time to the person you received it from. If you received it +on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and +such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement +copy. If you received it electronically, such person may +choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to +receive it electronically. + +THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS +TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT +LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A +PARTICULAR PURPOSE. + +Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or +the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the +above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you +may have other legal rights. + +INDEMNITY +You will indemnify and hold the Project, its directors, +officers, members and agents harmless from all liability, cost +and expense, including legal fees, that arise directly or +indirectly from any of the following that you do or cause: +[1] distribution of this etext, [2] alteration, modification, +or addition to the etext, or [3] any Defect. + +DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm" +You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by +disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this +"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg, +or: + +[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this + requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the + etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however, + if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable + binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form, + including any form resulting from conversion by word pro- + cessing or hypertext software, but only so long as + *EITHER*: + + [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and + does *not* contain characters other than those + intended by the author of the work, although tilde + (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may + be used to convey punctuation intended by the + author, and additional characters may be used to + indicate hypertext links; OR + + [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at + no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent + form by the program that displays the etext (as is + the case, for instance, with most word processors); + OR + + [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at + no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the + etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC + or other equivalent proprietary form). + +[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this + "Small Print!" statement. + +[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Project of 20% of the + net profits you derive calculated using the method you + already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you + don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are + payable to "Project Gutenberg Association/Carnegie-Mellon + University" within the 60 days following each + date you prepare (or were legally required to prepare) + your annual (or equivalent periodic) tax return. + +WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO? +The Project gratefully accepts contributions in money, time, +scanning machines, OCR software, public domain etexts, royalty +free copyright licenses, and every other sort of contribution +you can think of. Money should be paid to "Project Gutenberg +Association / Carnegie-Mellon University". + +We are planning on making some changes in our donation structure +in 2000, so you might want to email me, hart@pobox.com beforehand. + + + + +*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END* + + + + + +Etext prepared for Gutenberg by David Widger, widger@cecomet.net + + + + + +PERSONAL MEMOIRS OF P. H. SHERIDAN. + +by Philip Henry Sheridan + + + + +VOLUME II. + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +ORGANIZING SCOUTS--MISS REBECCA WRIGHT--IMPORTANT INFORMATION--DECIDE +TO MOVE ON NEWTOWN--MEETING GENERAL GRANT--ORGANIZATION OF THE UNION +ARMY--OPENING OF THE BATTLE OF THE OPEQUON--DEATH OF GENERAL RUSSELL- +-A TURNING MOVEMENT--A SUCCESSFUL CAVALRY CHARGE--VICTORY--THREE +LOYAL GIRLS--APPOINTED A BRIGADIER-GENERAL IN THE REGULAR ARMY-- +REMARKS ON THE BATTLE. + +While occupying the ground between Clifton and Berryville, referred +to in the last chapter of the preceding volume, I felt the need of an +efficient body of scouts to collect information regarding the enemy, +for the defective intelligence-establishment with which I started out +from Harper's Ferry early in August had not proved satisfactory. I +therefore began to organize my scouts on a system which I hoped would +give better results than bad the method hitherto pursued in the +department, which was to employ on this service doubtful citizens and +Confederate deserters. If these should turn out untrustworthy, the +mischief they might do us gave me grave apprehension, and I finally +concluded that those of our own soldiers who should volunteer for the +delicate and hazardous duty would be the most valuable material, and +decided that they should have a battalion organization and be +commanded by an officer, Major H. K. Young, of the First Rhode Island +Infantry. These men were disguised in Confederate uniforms whenever +necessary, were paid from the Secret-Service Fund in proportion to +the value of the intelligence they furnished, which often stood us in +good stead in checking the forays of Gilmore, Mosby, and other +irregulars. Beneficial results came from the plan in many other ways +too, and particularly so when in a few days two of my scouts put me +in the way of getting news conveyed from Winchester. They had +learned that just outside of my lines, near Millwood, there was +living an old colored man, who had a permit from the Confederate +commander to go into Winchester and return three times a week, for +the purpose of selling vegetables to the inhabitants. The scouts had +sounded this man, and, finding him both loyal and shrewd, suggested +that he might be made useful to us within the enemy's lines; and the +proposal struck me as feasible, provided there could be found in +Winchester some reliable person who would be willing to co-operate +and correspond with me. I asked General Crook, who was acquainted +with many of the Union people of Winchester, if he knew of such a +person, and he recommended a Miss Rebecca Wright, a young lady whom +he had met there before the battle of Kernstown, who, he said, was a +member of the Society of Friends and the teacher of a small private +school. He knew she was faithful and loyal to the Government, and +thought she might be willing to render us assistance, but he could +not be certain of this, for on account of her well known loyalty she +was under constant surveillance. I hesitated at first, but finally +deciding to try it, despatched the two scouts to the old negro's +cabin, and they brought him to my headquarters late that night. I +was soon convinced of the negro's fidelity, and asking him if he was +acquainted with Miss Rebecca Wright, of Winchester, he replied that +he knew her well. There upon I told him what I wished to do, and +after a little persuasion he agreed to carry a letter to her on his +next marketing trip. My message was prepared by writing it on tissue +paper, which was then compressed into a small pellet, and protected +by wrapping it in tin-foil so that it could be safely carried in the +man's mouth. The probability, of his being searched when he came to +the Confederate picket-line was not remote, and in such event he was +to swallow the pellet. The letter appealed to Miss Wright's loyalty +and patriotism, and requested her to furnish me with information +regarding the strength and condition of Early's army. The night +before the negro started one of the scouts placed the odd-looking +communication in his hands, with renewed injunctions as to secrecy +and promptitude. Early the next morning it was delivered to Miss +Wright, with an intimation that a letter of importance was enclosed +in the tin-foil, the negro telling her at the same time that she +might expect him to call for a message in reply before his return +home. At first Miss Wright began to open the pellet nervously, but +when told to be careful, and to preserve the foil as a wrapping for +her answer, she proceeded slowly and carefully, and when the note +appeared intact the messenger retired, remarking again that in the +evening he would come for an answer. + +On reading my communication Miss Wright was much startled by the +perils it involved, and hesitatingly consulted her mother, but her +devoted loyalty soon silenced every other consideration, and the +brave girl resolved to comply with my request, notwithstanding it +might jeopardize her life. The evening before a convalescent +Confederate officer had visited her mother's house, and in +conversation about the war had disclosed the fact that Kershaw's +division of infantry and Cutshaw's battalion of artillery had started +to rejoin General Lee. At the time Miss Wright heard this she +attached little if any importance to it, but now she perceived the +value of the intelligence, and, as her first venture, determined to +send it to me at once, which she did with a promise that in the +future she would with great pleasure continue to transmit information +by the negro messenger. + + + +"SEPTEMBER 15, 1864. + +"I learn from Major-General Crook that you are a loyal lady, and +still love the old flag. Can you inform me of the position of +Early's forces, the number of divisions in his army, and the strength +of any or all of them, and his probable or reported intentions? Have +any more troops arrived from Richmond, or are any more coming, or +reported to be coming? + +"You can trust the bearer." + +"I am, very respectfully, your most obedient servant, + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General Commanding. + + + +"SEPTEMBER 16, 1864. + +"I have no communication whatever with the rebels, but will tell you +what I know. The division of General Kershaw, and Cutshaw's +artillery, twelve guns and men, General Anderson commanding, have +been sent away, and no more are expected, as they cannot be spared +from Richmond. I do not know how the troops are situated, but the +force is much smaller than represented. I will take pleasure +hereafter in learning all I can of their strength and position, and +the bearer may call again. + +"Very respectfully yours, +............ + + + +Miss Wright's answer proved of more value to me than she anticipated, +for it not only quieted the conflicting reports concerning Anderson's +corps, but was most important in showing positively that Kershaw was +gone, and this circumstance led, three days later, to the battle of +the Opequon, or Winchester as it has been unofficially called. Word +to the effect that some of Early's troops were under orders to return +to Petersburg, and would start back at the first favorable +opportunity, had been communicated to me already from many sources, +but we had not been able to ascertain the date for their departure. +Now that they had actually started, I decided to wait before offering +battle until Kershaw had gone so far as to preclude his return, +feeling confident that my prudence would be justified by the improved +chances of victory; and then, besides, Mr. Stanton kept reminding me +that positive success was necessary to counteract the political +dissatisfaction existing in some of the Northern States. This course +was advised and approved by General Grant, but even with his powerful +backing it was difficult to resist the persistent pressure of those +whose judgment, warped by their interests in the Baltimore and Ohio +railroad, was often confused and misled by stories of scouts (sent +out from Washington), averring that Kershaw and Fitzhugh Lee had +returned to Petersburg, Breckenridge to southwestern Virginia, and at +one time even maintaining that Early's whole army was east of the +Blue Ridge, and its commander himself at Gordonsville. + +During the inactivity prevailing in my army for the ten days +preceding Miss Wright's communication the infantry was quiet, with +the exception of Getty's division, which made a reconnoissance to the +Opequon, and developed a heavy force of the enemy at Edwards's +Corners. The cavalry, however, was employed a good deal in this +interval skirmishing heavily at times to maintain a space about six +miles in width between the hostile lines, for I wished to control +this ground so that when I was released from the instructions of +August 12, I could move my men into position for attack without the +knowledge of Early. The most noteworthy of these mounted encounters +was that of McIntosh's brigade, which captured the Eighth South +Carolina at Abraham's Creek September 13. + +It was the evening of the 16th of September that I received from Miss +Wright the positive information that Kershaw was in march toward +Front Royal on his way by Chester Gap to Richmond. Concluding that +this was my opportunity, I at once resolved to throw my whole force +into Newtown the next day, but a despatch from General Grant +directing me to meet him at Charlestown, whither he was coming to +consult with me, caused me to defer action until after I should see +him. In our resulting interview at Charlestown, I went over the +situation very thoroughly, and pointed out with so much confidence +the chances of a complete victory should I throw my army across the +Valley pike near Newtown that he fell in with the plan at once, +authorized me to resume the offensive, and to attack Early as soon as +I deemed it most propitious to do so; and although before leaving +City Point he had outlined certain operations for my army, yet he +neither discussed nor disclosed his plans, my knowledge of the +situation striking him as being so much more accurate than his own. + + +[Extract from Grant's Memoirs," page 328.] + +"....Before starting I had drawn up a plan of campaign for Sheridan, +which I had brought with me; but seeing that he was so clear and so +positive in his views, and so confident of success, I said nothing +about this, and did not take it out of my pocket...." + + + +The interview over, I returned to my army to arrange for its movement +toward Newtown, but while busy with these preparations, a report came +to me from General Averell which showed that Early was moving with +two divisions of infantry toward Martinsburg. This considerably +altered the state of affairs, and I now decided to change my plan and +attack at once the two divisions remaining about Winchester and +Stephenson's depot, and later, the two sent to Martinsburg; the +disjointed state of the enemy giving me an opportunity to take him in +detail, unless the Martinsburg column should be returned by forced +marches. + +While General Early was in the telegraph office at Martinsburg on the +morning of the 18th, he learned of Grant's visit to me; and +anticipating activity by reason of this circumstance, he promptly +proceeded to withdraw so as to get the two divisions within +supporting distance of Ramseur's, which lay across the Berryville +pike about two miles east of Winchester, between Abraham's Creek and +Red Bud Run, so by the night of the 18th Wharton's division, under +Breckenridge, was at Stephenson's depot, Rodes near there, and +Gordon's at Bunker Hill. At daylight of the 19th these positions of +the Confederate infantry still obtained, with the cavalry of Lomax, +Jackson, and Johnson on the right of Ramseur, while to the left and +rear of the enemy;s general line was Fitzhugh Lee, covering from +Stephenson's depot west across the Valley pike to Applepie Ridge. + +My army moved at 3 o'clock that morning. The plan was for Torbert to +advance with Merritt's division of cavalry from Summit Point, carry +the crossings of the Opequon at Stevens's and Lock's fords, and form +a junction near Stephenson's depot, with Averell, who was to move +south from Darksville by the Valley pike. Meanwhile, Wilson was to +strike up the Berryville pike, carry the Berryville crossing of the +Opequon, charge through the gorge or canyon on the road west of the +stream, and occupy the open ground at the head of this defile. +Wilson's attack was to be supported by the Sixth and Nineteenth +corps, which were ordered to the Berryville crossing, and as the +cavalry gained the open ground beyond the gorge, the two infantry +corps, under command of General Wright, were expected to press on +after and occupy Wilson's ground, who was then to shift to the south +bank of Abraham's Creek and cover my left; Crook's two divisions, +having to march from Summit Point, were to follow the Sixth and +Nineteenth corps to the Opcquon, and should they arrive before the +action began, they were to be held in reserve till the proper moment +came, and then, as a turning-column, be thrown over toward the Valley +pike, south of Winchester. + +McIntosh's brigade of Wilson's division drove the enemy's pickets +away from the Berryville crossing at dawn, and Wilson following +rapidly through the gorge with the rest of the division, debouched +from its western extremity with such suddenness as to capture a small +earthwork in front of General Ramseur's main line; and not- +withstanding the Confederate infantry, on recovering from its +astonishment, tried hard to dislodge them, Wilson's troopers +obstinately held the work till the Sixth Corps came up. I followed +Wilson to select the ground on which to form the infantry. The Sixth +Corps began to arrive about 8 o'clock, and taking up the line Wilson +had been holding, just beyond the head of the narrow ravine, the +cavalry was transferred to the south side of Abraham's Creek. + +The Confederate line lay along some elevated ground about two miles +east of Winchester, and extended from Abraham's Creek north across +the Berryville pike, the left being hidden in the heavy timber on Red +Bud Run. Between this line and mine, especially on my right, clumps +of woods and patches of underbrush occurred here and there, but the +undulating ground consisted mainly of open fields, many of which were +covered with standing corn that had already ripened. + +Much time was lost in getting all of the Sixth and Nineteenth corps +through the narrow defile, Grover's division being greatly delayed +there by a train of ammunition wagons, and it was not until late in +the forenoon that the troops intended for the attack could be got +into line ready to advance. General Early was not slow to avail +himself of the advantages thus offered him, and my chances of +striking him in detail were growing less every moment, for Gordon and +Rodes were hurrying their divisions from Stephenson's depot--across- +country on a line that would place Gordon in the woods south of Red +Bud Run, and bring Rodes into the interval between Gordon and +Ramseur. + +When the two corps had all got through the canyon they were formed +with Getty's division of the Sixth to the left of the Berryville +pike, Rickett's division to the right of the pike, and Russell's +division in reserve in rear of the other two. Grover's division of +the Nineteenth Corps came next on the right of Rickett's, with Dwight +to its rear in reserve, while Crook was to begin massing near the +Opequon crossing about the time Wright and Emory were ready to +attack. + +Just before noon the line of Getty, Ricketts, and Grover moved +forward, and as we advanced, the Confederates, covered by some heavy +woods on their right, slight underbrush and corn-fields along their +Centre, and a large body of timber on their left along the Red Bud, +opened fire from their whole front. We gained considerable ground at +first, especially on our left but the desperate resistance which the +right met with demonstrated that the time we had unavoidably lost in +the morning had been of incalculable value to Early, for it was +evident that he had been enabled already to so far concentrate his +troops as to have the different divisions of his army in a connected +line of battle, in good shape to resist. + +Getty and Ricketts made some progress toward Winchester in connection +with Wilson's cavalry, which was beyond the Senseny road on Getty's +left, and as they were pressing back Ramseur's infantry and Lomax's +cavalry Grover attacked from the right with decided effect. Grover +in a few minutes broke up Evans's brigade of Gordon's division, but +his pursuit of Evans destroyed the continuity of my general line, and +increased an interval that had already been made by the deflection of +Ricketts to the 1eft, in obedience to instructions that had been +given him to guide his division on the Berryville pike. As the line +pressed forward, Ricketts observed this widening interval and +endeavored to fill it with the small brigade of Colonel Keifer, but +at this juncture both Gordon and Rodes struck the weak spot where the +right of the Sixth Corps and the left of the Nineteenth should have +been in conjunction, and succeeded in checking my advance by driving +back a part of Ricketts's division, and the most of Grover's. As +these troops were retiring I ordered Russell's reserve division to be +put into action, and just as the flank of the enemy's troops in +pursuit of Grover was presented, Upton's brigade, led in person by +both Russell and Upton, struck it in a charge so vigorous as to drive +the Confederates back in turn to their original ground. + +The success of Russell enabled me to re-establish the right of my +line some little distance in advance of the position from which it +started in the morning, and behind Russell's division (now commanded +by Upton) the broken regiments of Ricketts's division were rallied. +Dwight's division was then brought up on the right, and Grover's men +formed behind it. + +The charge of Russell was most opportune, but it cost many men in +killed and wounded. Among the former was the courageous Russell +himself; killed by a piece of shell that passed through his heart, +although he had previously been struck by a bullet in the left +breast, which wound, from its nature, must have proved mortal, yet of +which he had not spoken. Russell's death oppressed us all with +sadness, and me particularly. In the early days of my army life he +was my captain and friend, and I was deeply indebted to him, not only +for sound advice and good example, but for the inestimable service he +had just performed, and sealed with his life, so it may be inferred +how keenly I felt his loss. + +As my lines were being rearranged, it was suggested to me to put +Crook into the battle, but so strongly had I set my heart on using +him to take possession of the Valley pike and cut off the enemy, that +I resisted this advice, hoping that the necessity for putting him in +would be obviated by the attack near Stephenson's depot that +Torbert's cavalry was to make, and from which I was momentarily +expecting to hear. No news of Torbert's progress came, however, so, +yielding at last, I directed Crook to take post on the right of the +Nineteenth Corps and, when the action was renewed, to push his +command forward as a turning-column in conjunction with Emory. After +some delay in the annoying defile, Crook got his men up, and posting +Colonel Thoburn's division on the prolongation of the Nineteenth +Corps, he formed Colonel Duval's division to the right of Thoburn. +Here I joined Crook, informing him that I had just got word that +Torbert was driving the enemy in confusion along the Martinsburg pike +toward Winchester; at the same time I directed him to attack the +moment all of Duval's men were in line. Wright was instructed to +advance in concert with Crook, by swinging Emory and the right of the +Sixth Corps to the left together in a half-wheel. Then leaving +Crook, I rode along the Sixth and Nineteenth corps, the open ground +over which they were passing affording a rare opportunity to witness +the precision with which the attack was taken up from right to left. +Crook's success began the moment he started to turn the enemy's left; +and assured by the fact that Torbert had stampeded the Confederate +cavalry and thrown Breckenridge's infantry into such disorder that it +could do little to prevent the envelopment of Gordon's left, Crook +pressed forward without even a halt. + +Both Emory and Wright took up the fight as ordered, and as they did +so I sent word to Wilson, in the hope that he could partly perform +the work originally laid out for Crook, to push along the Senseny +road and, if possible, gain the valley pike south of Winchester. I +then returned toward my right flank, and as I reached the Nineteenth +Corps the enemy was contesting the ground in its front with great +obstinacy; but Emory's dogged persistence was at length rewarded with +success, just as Crook's command emerged from the morass of Red Bud +Run, and swept around Gordon, toward the right of Breckenridge, who, +with two of Wharton's brigades, was holding a line at right angles +with the Valley pike for the protection of the Confederate rear. +Early had ordered these two brigades back from Stephenson's depot in +the morning, purposing to protect with them his right flank and line +of retreat, but while they were en route to this end, he was obliged +to recall them to his left to meet Crook's attack. + +To confront Torbert, Patton's brigade of infantry and some of +Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry had been left back by Breckenridge, but, with +Averell on the west side of the Valley pike and Merritt on the east, +Torbert began to drive this opposing force toward Winchester the +moment he struck it near Stephenson's depot, keeping it on the go +till it reached the position held by Breckenridge, where it +endeavored to make a stand. + +The ground which Breckenridge was holding was open, and offered an +opportunity such as seldom had been presented during the war for a, +mounted attack, and Torbert was not slow to take advantage of it. +The instant Merritt's division could be formed for the charge, it +went at Breckenridge's infantry and Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry with such +momentum as to break the Confederate left, just as Averell was +passing around it. Merritt's brigades, led by Custer, Lowell, and +Devin, met from the start with pronounced success, and with sabre or +pistol in hand literally rode down a battery of five guns and took +about 1,200 prisoners. Almost simultaneously with this cavalry +charge, Crook struck Breckenridge's right and Gordon's left, forcing +these divisions to give way, and as they retired, Wright, in a +vigorous attack, quickly broke Rodes up and pressed Ramseur so hard +that the whole Confederate army fell back, contracting its lines +within some breastworks which had been thrown up at a former period +of the war, immediately in front of Winchester. + +Here Early tried hard to stem the tide, but soon Torbert's cavalry +began passing around his left flank, and as Crook, Emory, and Wright +attacked in front, panic took possession of the enemy, his troops, +now fugitives and stragglers, seeking escape into and through +Winchester. + +When this second break occurred, the Sixth and Nineteenth corps were +moved over toward the Millwood pike to help Wilson on the left, but +the day was so far spent that they could render him no assistance, +and Ramseur's division, which had maintained some organization, was +in such tolerable shape as to check him. Meanwhile Torbert passed +around to the west of Winchester to join Wilson, but was unable to do +so till after dark. Crook's command pursued the enemy through the +town to Mill Greek, I going along. + +Just after entering the town, Crook and I met, in the main street, +three young girls, who gave us the most hearty reception. One of +these young women was a Miss Griffith, the other two Miss Jennie and +Miss Susie Meredith. During the day they had been watching the +battle from the roof of the Meredith residence, with tears and +lamentations, they said, in the morning when misfortune appeared to +have overtaken the Union troops, but with unbounded exultation when, +later, the, tide set in against the Confederates. Our presence was, +to them, an assurance of victory, and their delight being +irrepressible, they indulged in the most unguarded manifestations and +expressions. When cautioned by Crook, who knew them well, and +reminded that the valley had hitherto been a race-course--one day in +the'possession of friends, and the next of enemies--and warned of the +dangers they were incurring by such demonstrations, they assured him +that they had no further fears of that kind now, adding that Early's +army was so demoralized by the defeat it had just sustained that it +would never be in condition to enter Winchester again. As soon as we +had succeeded in calming the excited girls a little I expressed a +desire to find some place where I could write a telegram to General +Grant informing him of the result of the battle, and General Crook +conducted me to the home of Miss Wright, where I met for the first +time the woman who had contributed so much to our success, and on a +desk in her school-room wrote the despatch announcing that we had +sent Early's army whirling up the valley. + +My losses in the battle of the Opequon were heavy, amounting to about +4,500 killed, wounded, and missing. Among the killed was General +Russell, commanding a division, and the wounded included Generals +Upton, McIntosh and Chapman, and Colonels Duval and Sharpe. The +Confederate loss in killed, wounded, and prisoners about equaled +mine, General Rodes being of the killed, while Generals Fitzhugh Lee +and York were severely wounded. + +We captured five pieces of artillery and nine battle-flags. The +restoration of the lower valley--from the Potomac to Strasburg--to +the control of the Union forces caused great rejoicing in the North, +and relieved the Administration from further solicitude for the +safety of the Maryland and Pennsylvania borders. The President's +appreciation of the victory was expressed in a despatch so like Mr. +Lincoln that I give a facsimile of it to the reader: + +[In the handwriting of President Lincoln] +"EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT +"WASHINGTON, Sep. 20, 1864 + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERMAN +"WINCHESTER, VA. + +"Have just heard of your geat victory. God bless you all, officers +and men. Strongly inclined to come up and see you. + +"A. LINCOLN + + +This he supplemented by promoting me to the grade of brigadier- +general in the regular army, and assigning me to the permanent +command of the Middle Military Department, and following that came +warm congratulations from Mr. Stanton and from Generals Grant, +Sherman, and Meade. + +The battle was not fought out on the plan in accordance with which +marching orders were issued to my troops, for I then hoped to take +Early in detail, and with Crook's force cut off his retreat. I +adhered to this purpose during the early part of the contest, but was +obliged to abandon the idea because of unavoidable delays by which I +was prevented from getting the Sixth and Nineteenth corps through the +narrow defile and into position early enough to destroy Ramseur while +still isolated. So much delay had not been anticipated, and this +loss of time was taken advantage of by the enemy to recall the troops +diverted to Bunker Hill and Martinsburg on the 17th, thus enabling +him to bring them all to the support of Ramseur before I could strike +with effect. My idea was to attack Ramseur and Wharton, +successively, at a very early hour and before they could get succor, +but I was not in condition to do it till nearly noon, by which time +Gordon and Rodes had been enabled to get upon the ground at a point +from which, as I advanced, they enfiladed my right flank, and gave it +such a repulse that to re-form this part of my line I was obliged to +recall the left from some of the ground it had gained. It was during +this reorganization of my lines that I changed my plan as to Crook, +and moved him from my left to my right. This I did with great +reluctance, for I hoped to destroy Early's army entirely if Crook +continued on his original line of march toward the Valley pike, south +of Winchester; and although the ultimate results did, in a measure +vindicate the change, yet I have always thought that by adhering to +the original plan we might have captured the bulk of Early's army. + + + + +CHAPTER 11. + +PURSUING EARLY--A SECRET MARCH--FISHER'S HILL--A GREAT SUCCESS-- +REMOVAL OF AVERELL--THE RETREAT--CAPTURING AN OLD COMRADE--THE MURDER +OF LIEUTENANT MEIGS. + +The night of the 19th of September I gave orders for following Early +up the valley next morning--the pursuit to begin at daybreak--and in +obedience to these directions Torbert moved Averell out on the Back +road leading to Cedar Creek, and Merritt up the Valley pike toward +Strasburg, while Wilson was directed on Front Royal by way of +Stevensburg. Merritt's division was followed by the infantry, +Emory's and Wright's columns marching abreast in the open country to +the right and left of the pike, and Crook's immediately behind them. +The enemy having kept up his retreat at night, presented no +opposition whatever until the cavalry discovered him posted at +Fisher's Hill, on the first defensive line where he could hope to +make any serious resistance. No effort was made to dislodge him, and +later in the day, after Wright and Emory came up, Torbert shifted +Merritt over toward the Back road till he rejoined Averell. As +Merritt moved to the right, the Sixth and Nineteenth corps crossed +Cedar Creek and took up the ground the cavalry was vacating, Wright +posting his own corps to the west of the Valley pike overlooking +Strasburg, and Emory's on his left so as to extend almost to the road +leading from Strasburg to Front Royal. Crook, as he came up the same +evening, went into position in some heavy timber on the north bank of +Cedar Creek. + +A reconnoissance made pending these movements convinced me that the +enemy's position at Fisher's Hill was so strong that a direct assault +would entail unnecessary destruction of life, and, besides, be of +doubtful result. At the point where Early's troops were in position, +between the Massanutten range and Little North Mountain, the valley +is only about three and a half miles wide. All along the precipitous +bluff which overhangs Tumbling Run on the south side, a heavy line of +earthworks had been constructed when Early retreated to this point in +August, and these were now being strengthened so as to make them +almost impregnable; in fact, so secure did Early consider himself +that, for convenience, his ammunition chests were taken from the +caissons and placed behind the breastworks. Wharton, now in command +of Breckenridge's division--its late commander having gone to +southwest Virginia--held the right of this line, with Gordon next +him; Pegram, commanding Ramseur's old division, joined Gordon. +Ramseur with Rodes's division, was on Pegram's left, while Lomax's +cavalry, now serving as foot-troops, extended the line to the Back +road. Fitzhugh Lee being wounded, his cavalry, under General +Wickham, was sent to Milford to prevent Fisher's Hill from being +turned through the Luray Valley. + +In consequence of the enemy's being so well protected from a direct +assault, I resolved on the night of the 20th to use again a turning- +column against his left, as had been done on the 19th at the Opequon. +To this end I resolved to move Crook, unperceived if possible, over +to the eastern face of Little North Mountain, whence he could strike +the left and rear of the Confederate line, and as he broke it up, I +could support him by a left half-wheel of my whole line of battle. +The execution of this plan would require perfect secrecy, however, +for the enemy from his signal-station on Three Top could plainly see +every movement of our troops in daylight. Hence, to escape such +observation, I marched Crook during the night of the 20th into some +heavy timber north of Cedar Creek, where he lay concealed all day the +21st. This same day Wright and Emory were moved up closer to the +Confederate works, and the Sixth Corps, after a severe fight, in +which Ricketts's and Getty were engaged, took up some high ground on +the right of the Manassas Gap railroad in plain view of the +Confederate works, and confronting a commanding point where much of +Early's artillery was massed. Soon after General Wright had +established this line I rode with him along it to the westward, and +finding that the enemy was still holding an elevated position further +to our right, on the north side of Tumbling Run, I directed this also +to be occupied. Wright soon carried the point, which gave us an +unobstructed view of the enemy's works and offered good ground for +our artillery. It also enabled me to move the whole of the Sixth +Corps to the front till its line was within about seven hundred yards +of the enemy's works; the Nineteenth Corps, on the morning of the +22d, covering the ground vacated by the Sixth by moving to the front +and extending to the right, but still keeping its reserves on the +railroad. + +In the darkness of the night of the gist, Crook was brought across +Cedar Creek and hidden in a clump of timber behind Hupp's Hill till +daylight of the 22d, when, under cover of the intervening woods and +ravines, he was marched beyond the right of the Sixth Corps and again +concealed not far from the Back road. After Crook had got into this +last position, Ricketts's division was pushed out until it confronted +the left of the enemy's infantry, the rest of the Sixth Corps +extending from Ricketts's left to the Manassas Gap railroad, while +the Nineteenth Corps filled in the space between the left of the +Sixth and the North Fork of the Shenandoah. + +When Ricketts moved out on this new line, in conjunction with +Averell's cavalry on his right, the enemy surmising, from information +secured from his signal-station, no doubt, that my attack was to be +made from Ricketts's front, prepared for it there, but no such +intention ever existed. Ricketts was pushed forward only that he +might readily join Crook's turning-column as it swung into the +enemy's rear. To ensure success, all that I needed now was enough +daylight to complete my arrangements, the secrecy of movement imposed +by the situation consuming many valuable hours. + +While Ricketts was occupying the enemy's attention, Crook, again +moving unobserved into the dense timber on the eastern face of Little +North Mountain, conducted his command south in two parallel columns +until he gained the rear of the enemy's works, when, marching his +divisions by the left flank, he led them in an easterly direction +down the mountain-side. As he emerged from the timber near the base +of the mountain, the Confederates discovered him, of course, and +opened with their batteries, but it was too late--they having few +troops at hand to confront the turning-column. Loudly cheering, +Crook's men quickly crossed the broken stretch in rear of the enemy's +left, producing confusion and consternation at every step. + +About a mile from the mountain's base Crook's left was joined by +Ricketts, who in proper time had begun to swing his division into the +action, and the two commands moved along in rear of the works so +rapidly that, with but slight resistance, the Confederates abandoned +the guns massed near the centre. The swinging movement of Ricketts +was taken up successively from right to left throughout my line, and +in a few minutes the enemy was thoroughly routed, the action, though +brief, being none the less decisive. Lomax's dismounted cavalry gave +way first, but was shortly followed by all the Confederate infantry +in an indescribable panic, precipitated doubtless by fears of being +caught and captured in the pocket formed by Tumbling Run and the +North Fork of the Shenandoah River. The stampede was complete, the +enemy leaving the field without semblance of organization, abandoning +nearly all his artillery and such other property as was in the works, +and the rout extending through the fields and over the roads toward +Woodstock, Wright and Emory in hot pursuit. + +Midway between Fisher's Hill and Woodstock there is some high ground, +where at night-fall a small squad endeavored to stay us with two +pieces of artillery, but this attempt at resistance proved fruitless, +and, notwithstanding the darkness, the guns were soon captured. The +chase was then taken up by Devin's brigade as soon as it could be +passed to the front, and continued till after daylight the next +morning, but the delays incident to a night pursuit made it +impossible for Devin to do more than pick up stragglers. + +Our success was very great, yet I had anticipated results still more +pregnant. Indeed, I had high hopes of capturing almost the whole of +Early's army before it reached New Market, and with this object in +view, during the manoeuvres of the 21st I had sent Torbert up the +Luray Valley with Wilson's division and two of Merritt's brigades, in +the expectation that he would drive Wickham out of the Luray Pass by +Early's right, and by crossing the Massanutten Mountain near New +Market, gain his rear. Torbert started in good season, and after +some slight skirmishing at Gooney Run, got as far as Milford, but +failed to dislodge Wickham. In fact, he made little or no attempt to +force Wickham from his position, and with only a feeble effort +withdrew. I heard nothing at all from Torbert during the 22d, and +supposing that everything was progressing favorably, I was astonished +and chagrined on the morning of the 23d, at Woodstock, to receive the +intelligence that he had fallen back to Front Royal and Buckton ford. +My disappointment was extreme, but there was now no help for the +situation save to renew and emphasize Torbert's orders, and this was +done at once, notwithstanding that I thought, the delay, had so much +diminished the chances of his getting in the rear of Early as to make +such a result a very remote possibility, unless, indeed, far greater +zeal was displayed than had been in the first attempt to penetrate +the Luray Valley. + +The battle of Fisher's Hill was, in a measure, a part of the battle +of the Opequon; that is to say, it was an incident of the pursuit +resulting from that action. In many ways, however, it was much more +satisfactory, and particularly so because the plan arranged on the +evening of the 20th was carried out to the very letter by Generals +Wright, Crook, and Emory, not only in all their preliminary +manoeuvres, but also during the fight itself. The only drawback was +with the cavalry, and to this day I have been unable to account +satisfactorily for Torbert's failure. No doubt, Wickham's position +near Milford was a strong one, but Torbert ought to have made a +fight. Had he been defeated in this, his withdrawal then to await +the result at Fisher's Hill would have been justified, but it does +not appear that he made any serious effort of all to dislodge the +Confederate cavalry: his impotent attempt not only chagrined me very +much, but occasioned much unfavorable comment throughout the army. + +We reached Woodstock early on the morning of the 23d, and halted +there some little time to let the troops recover their organization, +which had been broken in the night march they had just made. When +the commands had closed up we pushed on toward Edinburg, in the hope +of making more captures at Narrow Passage Creek; but the +Confederates, too fleet for us, got away; so General Wright halted +the infantry not far from Edinburg, till rations could be brought the +men. Meanwhile I, having remained at Woodstock, sent Dedin's brigade +to press the enemy under every favorable opportunity, and if possible +prevent him from halting long enough to reorganize. Notwithstanding +Devin's efforts the Confederates managed to assemble a considerable +force to resist him, and being too weak for the rearguard, he awaited +the arrival of Averell, who, I had informed him, would be hurried to +the front with all possible despatch, for I thought that Averell must +be close at hand. It turned out, however, that he was not near by at +all, and, moreover, that without good reason he had refrained from +taking any part whatever in pursuing the enemy in the flight from +Fisher's Hill; and in fact had gone into camp and left to the +infantry the work of pursuit. + +It was nearly noon when Averell came up, and a great deal of precious +time had been lost. We had some hot words, but hoping that he would +retrieve the mistake of the night before, I directed him to proceed +to the front at once, and in conjunction with Devin close with the +enemy. He reached Devin's command about 3 o'clock in the afternoon, +just as this officer was pushing the Confederates so energetically +that they were abandoning Mount Jackson, yet Averell utterly failed +to accomplish anything. Indeed, his indifferent attack was not at +all worthy the excellent soldiers he commanded, and when I learned +that it was his intention to withdraw from the enemy's front, and +this, too, on the indefinite report of a signal-officer that a +"brigade or division" of Confederates was turning his right flank, +and that he had not seriously attempted to verify the information, I +sent him this order: + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY DIVISION, +"Woodstock, Va., Sept. 23, 1864 + +"BREVET MAJOR-GENERAL AVERELL + +"Your report and report of signal-officer received. I do not want +you to let the enemy bluff you or your command, and I want you to +distinctly understand this note. I do not advise rashness, but I do +desire resolution and actual fighting, with necessary casualties, +before you retire. There must now be no backing or filling by you +without a superior force of the enemy actually engaging you. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General Commanding.' + + +Some little time after this note went to Averell, word was brought me +that he had already carried out the programme indicated when +forwarding the report of the expected turning of his right, and that +he had actually withdrawn and gone into camp near Hawkinsburg. I +then decided to relieve him from the command of his division, which I +did, ordering him to Wheeling, Colonel William H. Powell being +assigned to succeed him. + +The removal of Averell was but the culmination of a series of events +extending back to the time I assumed command of the Middle Military +Division. At the outset, General Grant, fearing discord on account +of Averell's ranking Torbert, authorized me to relieve the former +officer, but I hoped that if any trouble of this sort arose, it could +be allayed, or at least repressed, during the campaign against Early, +since the different commands would often have to act separately. +After that, the dispersion of my army by the return of the Sixth +Corps and Torbert's cavalry to the Army of the Potomac would take +place, I thought, and this would restore matters to their normal +condition ; but Averell's dissatisfaction began to show itself +immediately after his arrival at Martinsburg, on the 14th of August, +and, except when he was conducting some independent expedition, had +been manifested on all occasions since. I therefore thought that the +interest of the service would be subserved by removing one whose +growing indifference might render the best-laid plans inoperative. + + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY DIVISION. +"HARRISONBURG, VA., SEPT. 25, 1864 11:30 P. M. +"LIEUT-GENERAL GRANT, Comd'g, City Point, Va. + +"I have relieved Averell from his command. Instead of following the +enemy when he was broken at Fisher's Hill (so there was not a cavalry +organization left), he went into camp and let me pursue the enemy for +a distance of fifteen miles, with infantry, during the night. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + +The failure of Averell to press the enemy the evening of the 23d gave +Early time to collect his scattered forces and take up a position on +the east side of the North Fork of the Shenandoah, his left resting +on the west side of that stream at Rude's Hill, a commanding point +about two miles south of Mt. Jackson. Along this line he had +constructed some slight works during the night, and at daylight on +the 24th, I moved the Sixth and Nineteenth corps through Mt. Jackson +to attack him, sending Powell's division to pass around his left +flank, toward Timberville, and Devin's brigade across the North Fork, +to move along the base of Peaked Ridge and attack his right. The +country was entirely open, and none of these manoeuvres could be +executed without being observed, so as soon as my advance began, the +enemy rapidly retreated in line of battle up the valley through New +Market, closely followed by Wright and Emory, their artillery on the +pike and their columns on its right and left. Both sides moved with +celerity, the Confederates stimulated by the desire to escape, and +our men animated by the prospect of wholly destroying Early's army. +The stern-chase continued for about thirteen miles, our infantry +often coming within range, yet whenever we began to deploy, the +Confederates increased the distance between us by resorting to a +double quick, evading battle with admirable tact. While all this was +going on, the open country permitted us a rare and brilliant sight, +the bright sun gleaming from the arms and trappings of the thousands +of pursuers and pursued. + +Near New Market, as a last effort to hold the enemy, I pushed Devin's +cavalry--comprising about five hundred men--with two guns right up on +Early's lines, in the hope that the tempting opportunity given him to +capture the guns would stay his retreat long enough to let my +infantry deploy within range, but he refused the bait, and after +momentarily checking Devin he continued on with little loss and in +pretty good order. + +All hope of Torbert's appearing in rear of the Confederates vanished +as they passed beyond New Market. Some six miles south of this place +Early left the Valley Pike and took the road to Keezletown, a move +due in a measure to Powell's march by way of Timberville toward +Lacy's Springs, but mainly caused by the fact that the Keezletown +road ran immediately along the base of Peaked Mountain--a rugged +ridge affording protection to Early's right flank--and led in a +direction facilitating his junction with Kershaw, who had been +ordered back to him from Culpeper the day after the battle of the +Opequon. The chase was kept up on the Keezeltown road till darkness +overtook us, when my weary troops were permitted to go into camp; and +as soon as the enemy discovered by our fires that the pursuit had +stopped, he also bivouacked some five miles farther south toward Port +Republic. + +The next morning Early was joined by Lomax's cavalry from +Harrisonburg, Wickham's and Payne's brigades of cavalry also uniting +with him from the Luray Valley. His whole army then fell back to the +mouth of Brown's Gap to await Kershaw's division and Cutshaw's +artillery, now on their return. + +By the morning of the 25th the main body of the enemy had disappeared +entirely from my front, and the capture of some small, squads of +Confederates in the neighboring hills furnished us the only incidents +of the day. Among the prisoners was a tall and fine looking officer, +much worn with hunger and fatigue. The moment I saw him I recognized +him as a former comrade, George W. Carr, with whom I had served in +Washington Territory. He was in those days a lieutenant in the Ninth +Infantry, and was one of the officers who superintended the execution +of the nine Indians at the Cascades of the Columbia in 1856. Carr +was very much emaciated, and greatly discouraged by the turn events +had recently taken. For old acquaintance sake I gave him plenty to +eat, and kept him in comfort at my headquarters until the next batch +of prisoners was sent to the rear, when he went with them. He had +resigned from the regular army at the commencement of hostilities, +and, full of high anticipation, cast his lot with the Confederacy, +but when he fell into our hands, his bright dreams having been +dispelled by the harsh realities of war, he appeared to think that +for him there was no future. + +Picking up prisoners here and there, my troops resumed their march +directly south on the Valley pike, and when the Sixth and Nineteenth +corps reached Harrisonburg, they went into camp, Powell in the +meanwhile pushing on to Mt. Crawford, and Crook taking up a position +in our rear at the junction of the Keezletown road and the Valley +pike. Late in the afternoon Torbert's cavalry came in from New +Market arriving at that place many hours later than it had been +expected. + +The succeeding day I sent Merritt to Port Republic to occupy the +enemy's attention, while Torbert, with Wilson's division and the +regular brigade, was ordered to Staunton, whence he was to proceed to +Waynesboro' and blow up the railroad bridge. Having done this, +Torbert, as he returned, was to drive off whatever cattle he could +find, destroy all forage and breadstuffs, and burn the mills. He +took possession of Waynesboro' in due time, but had succeeded in only +partially demolishing the railroad bridge when, attacked by Pegram's +division of infantry and Wickham's cavalry, he was compelled to fall +back to Staunton. From the latter place he retired to Bridgewater, +and Spring Hill, on the way, however, fully executing his +instructions regarding the destructLon of supplies. + +While Torbert was on this expedition, Merritt had occupied Port +Republic, but he happened to get there the very day that Kershaw's +division was marching from Swift Run Gap to join Early. By accident +Kershaw ran into Merritt shortly after the latter had gained the +village. Kershaw's four infantry brigades attacked at once, and +Merrit, forced out of Port Republic, fell back toward Cross Keys; and +in anticipation that the Confederates could be coaxed to that point, +I ordered the infantry there, but Torbert's attack at Wavnesboro' had +alarmed Early, and in consequence he drew all his forces in toward +Rock-fish Gap. This enabled me to re-establish Merritt at Port +Republic, send the Sixth and Nineteenth corps to the neighborhood of +Mt. Crawford to await the return of Torbert, and to post Crook at +Harrisonburg; these dispositions practically obtained till the 6th of +October, I holding a line across the valley from Port Republic along +North River by Mt. Crawford to the Back road near the mouth of Briery +Branch Gap. + +It was during this period, about dusk on the evening of October 3, +that between Harrisonburg and Dayton my engineer officer, Lieutenant +John R. Meigs, was murdered within my lines. He had gone out with +two topographical assistants to plot the country, and late in the +evening, while riding along the public road on his return to camp, he +overtook three men dressed in our uniform. From their dress, and +also because the party was immediately behind our lines and within a +mile and a half of my headquarters, Meigs and his assistants +naturally thought that they were joining friends, and wholly +unsuspicious of anything to the contrary, rode on with the three men +some little distance; but their perfidy was abruptly discovered by +their suddenly turning upon Meigs with a call for his surrender. It +has been claimed that, refusing to submit, he fired on the +treacherous party, but the statement is not true, for one of the +topographers escaped--the other was captured--and reported a few +minutes later at my headquarters that Meigs was killed without +resistance of any kind whatever, and without even the chance to give +himself up. This man was so cool, and related all the circumstances +of the occurrence with such exactness, as to prove the truthfulness +of his statement. The fact that the murder had been committed inside +our lines was evidence that the perpetrators of the crime, having +their homes in the vicinity, had been clandestinely visiting them, +and been secretly harbored by some of the neighboring residents. +Determining to teach a lesson to these abettors of the foul deed--a +lesson they would never forget--I ordered all the houses within an +area of five miles to be burned. General Custer, who had succeeded +to the command of the Third Cavalry division (General Wilson having +been detailed as chief of cavalry to Sherman's army), was charged +with this duty, and the next morning proceeded to put the order into +execution. The prescribed area included the little village of +Dayton, but when a few houses in the immediate neighborhood of the +scene of the murder had been burned, Custer was directed to cease his +desolating work, but to fetch away all the able-bodied males as +prisoners. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +REASONS FOR NOT PURSUING EARLY THROUGH THE BLUE RIDGE--GENERAL +TORBERT DETAILED TO GIVE GENERAL ROSSER A "DRUBBING"--GENERAL ROSSER +ROUTED--TELEGRAPHED TO MEET STANTON--LONGSTREET'S MESSAGE--RETURN TO +WINCHESTER--THE RIDE TO CEDAR CREEK--THE RETREATING ARMY--RALLYING +THE TROOPS--REFORMING THE LINE--COMMENCING THE ATTACK--DEFEAT OF THE +CONFEDERATES--APPOINTED A MAJOR-GENERAL IN THE REGULAR ARMY--RESULTS +OF THE BATTLE. + +While we lay in camp at Harrisonburg it became necessary to decide +whether or not I would advance to Brown's Gap, and, after driving the +enemy from there, follow him through the Blue Ridge into eastern +Virginia. Indeed, this question began to cause me solicitude as soon +as I knew Early had escaped me at New Market, for I felt certain that +I should be urged to pursue the Confederates toward Charlottesville +and Gordonsville, and be expected to operate on that line against +Richmond. For many reasons I was much opposed to such a plan, but +mainly because its execution would involve the opening of the Orange +and Alexandria railroad. To protect this road against the raids of +the numerous guerrilla bands that infested the region through which +it passed, and to keep it in operation, would require a large force +of infantry, and would also greatly reduce my cavalry; besides, I +should be obliged to leave a force in the valley strong enough to +give security to the line of the upper Potomac and the Baltimore and +Ohio railroad, and this alone would probably take the whole of +Crook's command, leaving me a wholly inadequate number of fighting +men to prosecute a campaign against the city of Richmond. Then, too, +I was in doubt whether the besiegers could hold the entire army at +Petersburg; and in case they could not, a number of troops sufficient +to crush me might be detached by Lee, moved rapidly by rail, and, +after overwhelming me, be quickly returned to confront General Meade. +I was satisfied, moreover, that my transportation could not supply me +further than Harrisonburg, and if in penetrating the Blue Ridge I met +with protracted resistance, a lack of supplies might compel me to +abandon the attempt at a most inopportune time. + +I therefore advised that the Valley campaign be terminated north of +Staunton, and I be permitted to return, carrying out on the way my +original instructions for desolating the Shenandoah country so as to +make it untenable for permanent occupation by the Confederates. I +proposed to detach the bulk of my army when this work of destruction +was completed, and send it by way of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad +through Washington to the Petersburg line, believing that I could +move it more rapidly by that route than by any other. I was +confident that if a movement of this character could be made with +celerity it would culminate in the capture of Richmond and possibly +of General Lee's army, and I was in hopes that General Grant would +take the same view of the matter; but just at this time he was so +pressed by the Government and by public-opinion at the North, that he +advocated the wholly different conception of driving Early into +eastern Virginia, and adhered to this plan with some tenacity. +Considerable correspondence regarding the subject took place between +us, throughout which I stoutly maintained that we should not risk, by +what I held to be a false move, all that my army had gained. I being +on the ground, General Grant left to me the final decision of the +question, and I solved the first step by determining to withdraw down +the valley at least as far as Strasburg, which movement was begun on +the 6th of October. + +The cavalry as it retired was stretched across the country from the +Blue Ridge to the eastern slope of the Alleghanies, with orders to +drive off all stock and destroy all supplies as it moved northward. +The infantry preceded the cavalry, passing down the Valley pike, and +as we marched along the many columns of smoke from burning stacks, +and mills filled with grain, indicated that the adjacent country was +fast losing the features which hitherto had made it a great magazine +of stores for the Confederate armies. + +During the 6th and 7th of October, the enemy's horse followed us up, +though at a respectful distance. This cavalry was now under command +of General T. W. Rosser, who on October 5 had joined Early with an +additional brigade from Richmond. As we proceeded the Confederates +gained confidence, probably on account of the reputation with which +its new commander had been heralded, and on the third day's march had +the temerity to annoy my rear guard considerably. Tired of these +annoyances, I concluded to open the enemy's eyes in earnest, so that +night I told Torbert I expected him either to give Rosser a drubbing +next morning or get whipped himself, and that the infantry would be +halted until the affair was over; I also informed him that I proposed +to ride out to Round Top Mountain to see the fight. When I decided +to have Rosser chastised, Merritt was encamped at the foot of Round +Top, an elevation just north of Tom's Brook, and Custer some six +miles farther north and west, near Tumbling Run. In the night Custer +was ordered to retrace his steps before daylight by the Back road, +which is parallel to and about three miles from the Valley pike, and +attack the enemy at Tom's Brook crossing, while Merritt's +instructions were to assail him on the Valley pike in concert with +Custer. About 7 in the morning, Custer's division encountered Rosser +himself with three brigades, and while the stirring sounds of the +resulting artillery duel were reverberating through the valley +Merritt moved briskly to the front and fell upon Generals Lomax and +Johnson on the Valley pike. Merritt, by extending his right, quickly +established connection with Custer, and the two divisions moved +forward together under Torbert's direction, with a determination to +inflict on the enemy the sharp and summary punishment his rashness +had invited. + +The engagement soon became general across the valley, both sides +fighting mainly mounted. For about two hours the contending lines +struggled with each other along Tom's Brook, the charges and counter +charges at many points being plainly visible from the summit of Round +Top, where I had my headquarters for the time. + +The open country permitting a sabre fight, both sides seemed bent on +using that arm. In the centre the Confederates maintained their +position with much stubbornness, and for a time seemed to have +recovered their former spirit, but at last they began to give way on +both flanks, and as these receded, Merritt and Custer went at the +wavering ranks in a charge along the whole front. The result was a +general smash-up of the entire Confederate line, the retreat quickly +degenerating into a rout the like of which was never before seen. +For twenty-six miles this wild stampede kept up, with our troopers +close at the enemy's heels; and the ludicrous incidents of the chase +never ceased to be amusing topics around the camp-fires of Merritt +and Custer. In the fight and pursuit Torbert took eleven pieces of +artillery, with their caissons, all the wagons and ambulances the +enemy had on the ground, and three hundred prisoners. Some of +Rosser's troopers fled to the mountains by way of Columbia Furnace, +and some up the Valley pike and into the Massamitten Range, +apparently not discovering that the chase had been discontinued till +south of Mount Jackson they rallied on Early's infantry. + +After this catastrophe, Early reported to General Lee that his +cavalry was so badly demoralized that it should be dismounted; and +the citizens of the valley, intensely disgusted with the boasting and +swaggering that had characterized the arrival of the "Laurel Brigade" +in that section, baptized the action (known to us as Tom's Brook) the +"Woodstock Races," and never tired of poking fun at General Rosser +about his precipitate and inglorious flight. (When Rosser arrived +from Richmond with his brigade he was proclaimed as the savior of the +Valley, and his men came all bedecked with laurel branches.) + +On the l0th my army, resuming its retrograde movement, crossed to the +north side of Cedar Creek. The work of repairing the Manassas Gap +branch of the Orange and Alexandria railroad had been begun some days +before, out from Washington, and, anticipating that it would be in +readiness to transport troops by the time they could reach Piedmont, +I directed the Sixth Corps to continue its march toward Front Royal, +expecting to return to the Army of the Potomac by that line. By the +12th, however, my views regarding the reconstruction of this railroad +began to prevail, and the work on it was discontinued. The Sixth +Corps, therefore, abandoned that route, and moved toward Ashby's Gap +with the purpose of marching direct to Washington, but on the l3th I +recalled it to Cedar Creek, in consequence of the arrival of the +enemy's infantry at Fisher's Hill, and the receipt, the night before, +of the following despatch, which again opened the question of an +advance on Gordonsville and Charlottesville: + + +(Cipher.) +"WASHINGTON, October 12, 1864, 12 M. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN: + +"Lieutenant-General Grant wishes a position taken far enough south to +serve as a base for further operations upon Gordonsville and +Charlottesville. It must be strongly fortified and provisioned. +Some point in the vicinity of Manassas Gap would seem best suited for +all purposes. Colonel Alexander, of the Engineers, will be sent to +consult with you as soon as you connect with General Augur. + +"H. W. HALLECK, Major-General." + + +As it was well known in Washington that the views expressed in the +above despatch were counter to my convictions, I was the next day +required by the following telegram from Secretary Stanton to repair +to that city : + + +" WASHINGTON, October 13, 1864. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN +(through General Augur) + +"If you can come here, a consultation on several points is extremely +desirable. I propose to visit General Grant, and would like to see +you first. + +"EDWIN M. STANTON, +"Secretary of War." + + +I got all ready to comply with the terms of Secretary Stanton's +despatch, but in the meantime the enemy appeared in my front in +force, with infantry and cavalry, and attacked Colonel Thoburn, who +had been pushed out toward Strasburg from Crook's command, and also +Custer's division of cavalry on the Back road. As afterward +appeared, this attack was made in the belief that all of my troops +but Crook's had gone to Petersburg. From this demonstration there +ensued near Hupp's Hill a bitter skirmish between Kershaw and +Thoburn, and the latter was finally compelled to withdraw to the +north bank of Cedar Creek. Custer gained better results, however, on +the Back road, with his usual dash driving the enemy's cavalry away +from his front, Merritt's division then joining him and remaining on +the right. + +The day's events pointing to a probability that the enemy intended to +resume the offensive, to anticipate such a contingency I ordered the +Sixth Corps to return from its march toward Ashby's Gap. It reached +me by noon of the 14th, and went into position to the right and rear +of the Nineteenth Corps, which held a line along the north bank of +Cedar Creek, west of the Valley pike. Crook was posted on the left +of the Nineteenth Corps and east of the Valley pike, with Thoburn's +division advanced to a round hill, which commanded the junction of +Cedar Creek and the Shenandoah River, while Torbert retained both +Merritt and Custer on the right of the Sixth Corps, and at the same +time covered with Powell the roads toward Front Royal. My head- +quarters were at the Belle Grove House, which was to the west of the +pike and in rear of the Nineteenth Corps. It was my intention to +attack the enemy as soon as the Sixth Corps reached me, but General +Early having learned from his demonstration that I had not detached +as largely as his previous information had led him to believe, on the +night of the 13th withdrew to Fisher's Hill; so, concluding that he +could not do us serious hurt from there, I changed my mind as to +attacking, deciding to defer such action till I could get to +Washington, and come to some definite understanding about my future +operations. + +To carry out this idea, on the evening of the 15th I ordered all of +the cavalry under General Torbert to accompany me to Front Royal, +again intending to push it thence through Chester Gap to the Virginia +Central railroad at Charlottesville, to destroy the bridge over the +Rivanna River, while I passed through Manassas Gap to Rectortown, and +thence by rail to Washington. On my arrival with the cavalry near +Front Royal on the 16th, I halted at the house of Mrs. Richards, on +the north bank of the river, and there received the following +despatch and inclosure from General Wright, who had been left in +command at Cedar Creek : + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY Division, +"October 16, 1864. + +"GENERAL: + +"I enclose you despatch which explains itself. If the enemy should +be strongly reenforced in cavalry, he might, by turning our right, +give us a great deal of trouble. I shall hold on here until the +enemy's movements are developed, and shall only fear an attack on my +right, which I shall make every preparation for guarding against and +resisting. + +"Very respectfully, your obedient servant, + +"H. G. WRIGHT, Major-General Commanding. +"MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Commanding Middle Military Division." + + +[INCLOSURE.] "To LIEUTENANT-GENERAL EARLY: + +"Be ready to move as soon as my forces join you, and we will crush +Sheridan. + +"LONGSTREET, Lieutenant-General." + + +The message from Longstreet had been taken down as it was being +flagged from the Confederate signal-station on Three Top Mountain, +and afterward translated by our signal officers, who knew the +Confederate signal code. I first thought it a ruse, and hardly worth +attention, but on reflection deemed it best to be on the safe side, +so I abandoned the cavalry raid toward Charlottesville, in order to +give General Wright the, entire strength of the army, for it did not +seem wise to reduce his numbers while reinforcement for the enemy +might be near, and especially when such pregnant messages were +reaching Early from one of the ablest of the Confederate generals. +Therefore I sent the following note to General Wright: I + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY DIVISION, +"Front Royal, October 16, x864. + +"GENERAL: The cavalry is all ordered back to you; make your position +strong. If Longstreet's despatch is true, he is under the impression +that we have largely detached. I will go over to Augur, and may get +additional news. Close in Colonel Powell, who will be at this point. +If the enemy should make an advance, I know you will defeat him. +Look well to your ground and be well prepared. Get up everything +that can be spared. I will bring up all I can, and will be up on +Tuesday, if not sooner. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL H. G. WRIGHT, +"Commanding Sixth Army Corps." + + +At 5 o'clock on the evening of the 16th I telegraphed General Halleck +from Rectortown, giving him the information which had come to me from +Wright, asking if anything corroborative of it had been received from +General Grant, and also saying that I would like to see Halleck; the +telegram ending with the question: "Is it best for me to go to see +you?" Next morning I sent back to Wright all the cavalry except one +regiment, which escorted me through Manassas Gap to the terminus of +the railroad from Washington. I had with me Lieutenant-Colonel James +W. Forsyth, chief-of-staff, and three of my aides, Major George A. +Forsyth, Captain Joseph O'Keefe, and Captain Michael V. Sheridan. I +rode my black horse, Rienzi, and the others their own respective +mounts. + +Before leaving Cedar Creek I had fixed the route of my return to be +by rail from Washington to Martinsburg, and thence by horseback to +Winchester and Cedar Creek, and had ordered three hundred cavalry to +Martinsburg to escort me from that point to the front. At Rectortown +I met General Augur, who had brought a force out from Washington to +reconstruct and protect the line of railroad, and through him +received the following reply from General Halleck: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"WASHINGTON, D.C., October 16 1864 + +"To MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN, +"Rectortown, Va. + +General Grant says that Longstreet brought with him no troops from +Richmond, but I have very little confidence in the information +collected at his headquarters. If you can leave your command with +safety, come to Washington, as I wish to give you the views of the +authorities here. + +"H. W. HALLECK, Major-General, Chief-of-Staff. + + +In consequence of the Longstreet despatch, I felt a concern about my +absence which I could hardly repress, but after duly considering what +Halleck said, and believing that Longstreet could not unite with +Early before I got back, and that even if he did Wright would be able +to cope with them both, I and my staff, with our horses, took the +cars for Washington, where we arrived on the morning of the 17th at +about 8 o'clock. I proceeded at an early hour to the War Department, +and as soon as I met Secretary Stanton, asked him for a special train +to be ready at 12 o'clock to take me to Martinsburg, saying that in +view of existing conditions I must get back to my army as quickly as +possible. He at once gave the order for the train, and then the +Secretary, Halleck, and I proceeded to hold a consultation in regard +to my operating east of the Blue Ridge. The upshot was that my views +against such a plan were practically agreed to, and two engineer +officers were designated to return with me for the purpose of +reporting on a defensive line in the valley that could be held while +the bulk of my troops were being detached to Petersburg. Colonel +Alexander and Colonel Thom both of the Engineer Corps, reported to +accompany me, and at 12 o'clock we took the train. + +We arrived about dark at Martinsburg, and there found the escort of +three hundred men which I had ordered before leaving Cedar Creek. We +spent that night at Martinsburg, and early next morning mounted and +started up the Valley pike for Winchester, leaving Captain Sheridan +behind to conduct to the army the Commissioners whom the State of New +York had sent down to receive the vote of her troops in the coming +Presidential election. Colonel Alexander was a man of enormous +weight, and Colonel Thom correspondingly light, and as both were +unaccustomed to riding we had to go slowly, losing so much time, in +fact, that we did not reach Winchester till between 3 and 4 o'clock +in the afternoon, though the distance is but twenty-eight miles. As +soon as we arrived at Colonel Edwards's headquarters in the town, +where I intended stopping for the night, I sent a courier to the +front to bring me a report of the condition of affairs, and then took +Colonel Alexander out on the heights about Winchester, in order that +he might overlook the country, and make up his mind as to the utility +of fortifying there. By the time we had completed our survey it was +dark, and just as we reached Colonel Edwards's house on our return a +courier came in from Cedar Creek bringing word that everything was +all right, that the enemy was quiet at Fisher's Hill, and that a +brigade of Grover's division was to make a reconnoissance in the +morning, the 19th, so about 10 o'clock I went to bed greatly +relieved, and expecting to rejoin my headquarters at my leisure next +day. + +Toward 6 o'clock the morning of the 19th, the officer on picket duty +at Winchester came to my room, I being yet in bed, and reported +artillery firing from the direction of Cedar Creek. I asked him if +the firing was continuous or only desultory, to which he replied that +it was not a sustained fire, but rather irregular and fitful. I +remarked: "It's all right; Grover has gone out this morning to make a +reconnoissance, and he is merely feeling the enemy." I tried to go to +sleep again, but grew so restless that I could not, and soon got up +and dressed myself. A little later the picket officer came back and +reported that the firing, which could be distinctly heard from his +line on the heights outside of Winchester, was still going on. I +asked him if it sounded like a battle, and as he again said that it +did not, I still inferred that the cannonading was caused by Grover's +division banging away at the enemy simply to find out what he was up +to. However, I went down-stairs and requested that breakfast be +hurried up, and at the same time ordered the horses to be saddled and +in readiness, for I concluded to go to the front before any further +examinations were made in regard to the defensive line. + +We mounted our horses between half-past 8 and 9, and as we were +proceeding up the street which leads directly through Winchester, +from the Logan residence, where Edwards was quartered, to the Valley +pike, I noticed that there were many women at the windows and doors +of the houses, who kept shaking their skirts at us and who were +otherwise markedly insolent in their demeanor, but supposing this +conduct to be instigated by their well-known and perhaps natural +prejudices, I ascribed to it no unusual significance. On reaching +the edge of the town I halted a moment, and there heard quite +distinctly the sound of artillery firing in an unceasing roar. +Concluding from this that a battle was in progress, I now felt +confident that the women along the street had received intelligence +from the battle, field by the "grape-vine telegraph," and were in +raptures over some good news, while I as yet was utterly ignorant of +the actual situation. Moving on, I put my head down toward the +pommel of my saddle and listened intently, trying to locate and +interpret the sound, continuing in this position till we had crossed +Mill Creek, about half a mile from Winchester. The result of my +efforts in the interval was the conviction that the travel of the +sound was increasing too rapidly to be accounted for by my own rate +of motion, and that therefore my army must be falling back. + +At Mill Creek my escort fell in behind, and we were going ahead at a +regular pace, when, just as we made the crest of the rise beyond the +stream, there burst upon our view the appalling spectacle of a panic- +stricken army-hundreds of slightly wounded men, throngs of others +unhurt but utterly demoralized, and baggage-wagons by the score, all +pressing to the rear in hopeless confusion, telling only too plainly +that a disaster had occurred at the front. On accosting some of the +fugitives, they assured me that the army was broken up, in full +retreat, and that all was lost; all this with a manner true to that +peculiar indifference that takes possession of panic-stricken men. I +was greatly disturbed by the, sight, but at once sent word to Colonel +Edwards commanding the brigade in Winchester, to stretch his troops +across the valley, near Mill Creek, and stop all fugitives, directing +also that the transportation be, passed through and parked on the +north side of the town. + +As I continued at a walk a few hundred yards farther, thinking all +the time of Longstreet's telegram to Early, "Be ready when I join +you, and we will crush Sheridan," I was fixing in my mind what I +should do. My first thought was too stop the army in the suburbs of +Winchester as it came back, form a new line, and fight there; but as +the situation was more maturely considered a better conception +prevailed. I was sure the troops had confidence in me, for +heretofore we had been successful; and as at other times they had +seen me present at the slightest sign of trouble or distress, I felt +that I ought to try now to restore their broken ranks, or, failing in +that, to share their fate because of what they had done hitherto. + +About this time Colonel Wood, my chief commissary, arrived from the +front and gave me fuller intelligence, reporting that everything was +gone, my headquarters captured, and the troops dispersed. When I +heard this I took two of my aides-de-camp, Major. George A. Forsyth +and Captain Joseph O'Keefe, and with twenty men from the escort +started for the front, at the same time directing Colonel James W. +Forsyth and Colonels Alexander and Thom to remain behind and do what +they could to stop the runaways. + +For a short distance I traveled on the road, but soon found it so +blocked with wagons and wounded men that my progress was impeded, and +I was forced to take to the adjoining fields to make haste. When +most of the wagons and wounded were past I returned to the road, +which was thickly lined with unhurt men, who, having got far enough +to the rear to be out of danger, had halted, without any +organization, and begun cooking coffee, but when they saw me they +abandoned their coffee, threw up their hats, shouldered their +muskets, and as I passed along turned to follow with enthusiasm and +cheers. To acknowledge this exhibition of feeling I took off my hat, +and with Forsyth and O'Keefe rode some distance in advance of my +escort, while every mounted officer who saw me galloped out on either +side of the pike to tell the men at a distance that I had come back. +In this way the news was spread to the stragglers off the road, when +they, too, turned their faces to the front and marched toward the +enemy, changing in a moment from the depths of depression , to the +extreme of enthusiasm. I already knew that even in the ordinary +condition of mind enthusiasm is a potent element with soldiers, but +what I saw that day convinced me that if it can be excited from a +state of despondency its power is almost irresistible. I said +nothing except to remark as I rode among those on the road: "If I had +been, with you this morning this disaster would not have happened. +We must face the other way; we will go back and recover our camp." + +My first halt was made just north of Newtown, where I met a chaplain +digging his heels into the sides of his jaded horse, and making for +the rear with all possible speed. I drew up for an instant, and +inquired of him how matters were going at the front. He replied, +"Everything is lost; but all will be right when you get there"; yet +notwithstanding this expression of confidence in me, the parson at +once resumed his breathless pace to the rear. At Newtown I was +obliged to make a circuit to the left, to get round the village. I +could not pass through it, the streets were so crowded, but meeting +on this detour Major McKinley, of Crook's staff, he spread the news +of my return through the motley throng there. + +When nearing the Valley pike, just south of Newtown I saw about +three-fourths of a mile west of the pike a body of troops, which +proved to be Ricketts's and Wheaton's divisions of the Sixth Corps, +and then learned that the Nineteenth Corps had halted a little to the +right and rear of these; but I did not stop, desiring to get to the +extreme front. Continuing on parallel with the pike, about midway +between Newtown and Middletown I crossed to the west of it, and a +little later came up in rear of Getty's division of the Sixth Corps. +When I arrived, this division and the cavalry were the only troops in +the presence of and resisting the enemy; they were apparently acting +as a rear-guard at a point about three miles north of the line we +held at Cedar Creek when the battle began. General Torbert was the +first officer to meet me, saying as he rode up, "My God! I am glad +you've come." Getty's division, when I found it, was about a mile +north of Middletown, posted on the reverse slope of some slightly +rising ground, holding a barricade made with fence-rails, and +skirmishing slightly with the enemy's pickets. Jumping my horse over +the line of rails, I rode to the crest of the elevation, and there +taking off my hat, the men rose up from behind their barricade with +cheers of recognition. An officer of the Vermont brigade, Colonel A. +S. Tracy, rode out to the front, and joining me, informed me that +General Louis A. Grant was in command there, the regular division +commander, General Getty, having taken charge of the Sixth Corps in +place of Ricketts, wounded early in the action, while temporarily +commanding the corps. I then turned back to the rear of Getty's +division, and as I came behind it, a line of regimental flags rose up +out of the ground, as it seemed, to welcome me. They were mostly the +colors of Crook's troops, who had been stampeded and scattered in the +surprise of the morning. The color-bearers, having withstood the +panic, had formed behind the troops of Getty. The line with the +colors was largely composed of officers, among whom I recognized +Colonel R. B. Hayes, since president of the United States, one of the +brigade commanders. At the close of this incident I crossed the +little narrow valley, or depression, in rear of Getty's line, and +dismounting on the opposite crest, established that point as my +headquarters. In a few minutes some of my staff joined me, and the +first directions I gave were to have the Nineteenth Corps and the two +divisions of Wright's corps brought to the front, so they could be +formed on Getty's division, prolonged to the right; for I had already +decided to attack the enemy from that line as soon as I could get +matters in shape to take the offensive. Crook met me at this time, +and strongly favored my idea of attacking, but said, however, that +most of his troops were gone. General Wright came up a little later, +when I saw that he was wounded, a ball having grazed the point of his +chin so as to draw the blood plentifully. + +Wright gave me a hurried account of the day's events, and when told +that we would fight the enemy on the line which Getty and the cavalry +were holding, and that he must go himself and send all his staff to +bring up the troops, he zealously fell in with the scheme; and it was +then that the Nineteenth Corps and two divisions of the Sixth were +ordered to the front from where they had been halted to the right and +rear of Getty. + +After this conversation I rode to the east of the Valley pike and to +the left of Getty's division, to a point from which I could obtain a +good view of the front, in the mean time sending Major Forsyth to +communicate with Colonel Lowell (who occupied a position close in +toward the suburbs of Middletown and directly in front of Getty's +left) to learn whether he could hold on there. Lowell replied that +he could. I then ordered Custer's division back to the right flank, +and returning to the place where my headquarters had been established +I met near them Ricketts's division under General Keifer and General +Frank Wheaton's division, both marching to the front. When the men +of these divisions saw me they began cheering and took up the double +quick to the front, while I turned back toward Getty's line to point +out where these returning troops should be placed. Having done this, +I ordered General Wright to resume command of the Sixth Corps, and +Getty, who was temporarily in charge of it, to take command of his +own division. A little later the Nineteenth Corps came up and was +posted between the right of the Sixth Corps and Middle Marsh Brook. + +All this had consumed a great deal of time, and I concluded to visit +again the point to the east of the Valley pike, from where I had +first observed the enemy, to see what he was doing. Arrived there, I +could plainly see him getting ready for attack, and Major Forsyth now +suggested that it would be well to ride along the line of battle +before the enemy assailed us, for although the troops had learned of +my return, but few of them had seen me. Following his suggestion I +started in behind the men, but when a few paces had been taken I +crossed to the front and, hat in hand, passed along the entire length +of the infantry line; and it is from this circumstance that many of +the officers and men who then received me with such heartiness have +since supposed that that was my first appearance on the field. But +at least two hours had elapsed since I reached the ground, for it was +after mid-day, when this incident of riding down the front took +place, and I arrived not later, certainly, than half-past 10 o'clock. + +After re-arranging the line and preparing to attack I returned again +to observe the Confederates, who shortly began to advance on us. The +attacking columns did not cover my entire front, and it appeared that +their onset would be mainly directed against the Nineteenth Corps, +so, fearing that they might be too strong for Emory on account of his +depleted condition (many of his men not having had time to get up +from the rear), and Getty's division being free from assault I +transferred a part of it from the extreme left to the support of the +Nineteenth Corps. The assault was quickly repulsed by Emory, +however, and as the enemy fell back Getty's troops were returned to +their original place. This repulse of the Confederates made me feel +pretty safe from further offensive operations on their part, and I +now decided to suspend the fighting till my thin ranks were further +strengthened by the men who were continually coming up from the rear, +and particularly till Crook's troops could be assembled on the +extreme left. + +In consequence of the despatch already mentioned, "Be ready when I +join you, and we will crush Sheridan," since learned to have been +fictitious, I had been supposing all day that Longstreet's troops +were present, but as no definite intelligence on this point had been +gathered, I concluded, in the lull that now occurred, to ascertain +something positive regarding Longstreet; and Merritt having been +transferred to our left in the morning, I directed him to attack an +exposed battery then at the edge of Middletown, and capture some +prisoners. Merritt soon did this work effectually, concealing his +intention till his troops got close in to the enemy, and then by a +quick dash gobbling up a number of Confederates. When the prisoners +were brought in, I learned from them that the only troops of +Longstreet's in the fight were of Kershaw's division, which had +rejoined Early at Brown's Gap in the latter part of September, and +that the rest of Longstreet's corps was not on the field. The +receipt of this information entirely cleared the way for me to take +the offensive, but on the heels of it came information that +Longstreet was marching by the Front Royal pike to strike my rear at +Winchester, driving Powell's cavalry in as he advanced. This renewed +my uneasiness, and caused me to delay the general attack till after +assurances came from Powell denying utterly the reports as to +Longstreet, and confirming the statements of the prisoners. + +Between half-past and 4 o'clock, I was ready to assail, and decided +to do so by advancing my infantry line in a swinging movement, so as +to gain the Valley pike with my right between Middletown and the +Belle Grove House; and when the order was passed along, the men +pushed steadily forward with enthusiasm and confidence. General +Early's troops extended some little distance beyond our right, and +when my flank neared the overlapping enemy, he turned on it, with the +effect of causing a momentary confusion, but General McMillan quickly +realizing the danger, broke the Confederates at the reentering angle +by a counter charge with his brigade, doing his work so well that the +enemy's flanking troops were cut off from their main body and left to +shift for themselves. Custer, who was just then moving in from the +west side of Middle Marsh Brook, followed McMillan's timely blow with +a charge of cavalry, but before starting out on it, and while his men +were forming, riding at full speed himself, to throw his arms around +my neck. By the time he had disengaged himself from this embrace, +the troops broken by McMillan had gained some little distance to +their rear, but Custer's troopers sweeping across the Middletown +meadows and down toward Cedar Creek, took many of them prisoners +before they could reach the stream--so I forgave his delay. + +My whole line as far as the eye could see was now driving everything +before it, from behind trees, stone walls, and all such sheltering +obstacles, so I rode toward the left to ascertain how matters were +getting on there. As I passed along behind the advancing troops, +first General Grover, and then Colonel Mackenzie, rode up to welcome +me. Both were severely wounded, and I told them to leave the field, +but they implored permission to remain till success was certain. +When I reached the Valley pike Crook had reorganized his men, and as +I desired that they should take part in the fight, for they were the +very same troops that had turned Early's flank at Winchester and at +Fisher's Hill, I ordered them to be pushed forward; and the alacrity +and celerity with which they moved on Middletown demonstrated that +their ill-fortune of the morning had not sprung from lack of valor. + +Meanwhile Lowell's brigade of cavalry, which, it will be remembered, +had been holding on, dismounted, just north of Middletown ever since +the time I arrived from Winchester, fell to the rear for the purpose +of getting their led horses. A momentary panic was created in the +nearest brigade of infantry by this withdrawal of Lowell, but as soon +as his men were mounted they charged the enemy clear up to the stone +walls in the edge of Niiddletown; at sight of this the infantry +brigade renewed its attack, and the enemy's right gave way. The +accomplished Lowell received his death-wound in this courageous +charge. + +All our troops were now moving on the retreating Confederates, and as +I rode to the front Colonel Gibbs, who succeeded Lowell, made ready +for another mounted charge, but I checked him from pressing the +enemy's right, in the hope that the swinging attack from my right +would throw most of the Confederates to the east of the Valley pike, +and hence off their line of retreat through Strasburg to Fisher's +Hill. The eagerness of the men soon frustrated this anticipation, +however, the left insisting on keeping pace with the centre and +right, and all pushing ahead till we regained our old camps at Cedar +Creek. Beyond Cedar Creek, at Strasburg, the pike makes a sharp turn +to the west toward Fisher's Hill, and here Merritt uniting with +Custer, they together fell on the flank of the retreating columns, +taking many prisoners, wagons, and guns, among the prisoners being +Major-General Ramseur, who, mortally wounded, died the next day. + +When the news of the victory was received, General Grant directed a +salute of one hundred shotted guns to be fired into Petersburg, and +the President at once thanked the army in an autograph letter. A few +weeks after, he promoted me, and I received notice of this in a +special letter from the Secretary of War, saying: + +"that for the personal gallantry, military skill, and just confidence +in the courage and patriotism of your troops, displayed by you on the +19th day of October at Cedar Run, whereby, under the blessing of +Providence, your routed army was reorganized, a great National +disaster averted, and a brilliant victory achieved over the rebels +for the third time in pitched battle within thirty days, Philip H. +Sheridan is appointed a major-general in the United States Army." + +The direct result of the battle was the recapture of all the +artillery, transportation, and camp equipage we had lost, and in +addition twenty-four pieces of the enemy's artillery, twelve hundred +prisoners, and a number of battle-flags. But more still flowed from +this victory, succeeding as it did the disaster of the morning, for +the reoccupation of our old camps at once re-established a morale +which for some hours had been greatly endangered by ill-fortune. + +It was not till after the battle that I learned fully what had taken +place before my arrival, and then found that the enemy, having +gathered all the strength he could through the return of +convalescents and other absentees, had moved quietly from Fisher's +Hill, in the night of the 18th and early on the morning of the 19th, +to surprise my army, which, it should be remembered, was posted on +the north bank of Cedar Creek, Crook holding on the left of the +Valley pike, with Thoburn's division advanced toward the creek on +Duval's (under Colonel Rutherford B. Hayes) and Kitching's +provisional divisions to the north and rear of Thoburn. The +Nineteenth Corps was on the right of Crook, extending in a semi- +circular line from the pike nearly to Meadow Brook, while the Sixth +Corps lay to the west of the brook in readiness to be used as a +movable column. Merritt's division was to the right and rear of the +Sixth Corps, and about a mile and a half west of Merrit was Custer +covering the fords of Cedar Creek as far west as the Middle road. + +General Early's plan was for one column under General Gordon, +consisting of three divisions of infantry (Gordon's, Ramseur's, and +Pegram's), and Payne's brigade of cavalry to cross the Shenandoah +River directly east of the Confederate works at Fisher's Hill, march +around the northerly face of the Massanutten Mountain, and again +cross the Shenandoah at Bowman's and McInturff's fords. Payne's task +was to capture me at the Belle Grove House. General Early himself, +with Kershaw's and Wharton's divisions, was to move through +Strasburg, Kershaw, accompanied by Early, to cross Cedar Creek at +Roberts's ford and connect with Gordon, while Wharton was to continue +on the Valley pike to Hupp's Hill and join the left of Kershaw, when +the crossing of the Valley pike over Cedar Creek became free. + +Lomax's cavalry, then in the Luray Valley, was ordered to join the +right of Gordon on the field of battle, while Rosser was to carry the +crossing of Cedar Creek on the Back road and attack Custer. Early's +conceptions were carried through in the darkness with little accident +or delay, Kershaw opening the fight by a furious attack on Thoburn's +division, while at dawn and in a dense fog Gordon struck Crook's +extreme left, surprising his pickets, and bursting into his camp with +such suddenness as to stampede Crook's men. Gordon directing his +march on my headquarters (the Belle Grove House), successfully turned +our position as he gained the Valley pike, and General Wright was +thus forced to order the withdrawal of the Nineteenth Corps from its +post at the Cedar Creek crossing, and this enabled Wharton to get +over the stream there unmolested and join Kershaw early in the +action. + +After Crook's troops had been driven from their camps, General Wright +endeavored to form a line with the Sixth Corps to hold the Valley +pike to the left of the Nineteenth, but failing in this he ordered +the withdrawal of the latter corps, Ricketts, temporarily commanding +the Sixth Corps, checking Gordon till Emory had retired. As already +stated, Wharton was thus permitted to cross Cedar Creek on the pike, +and now that Early had a continuous line, he pressed his advantage so +vigorously that the whole Union army was soon driven from its camps +in more or less disorder; and though much disjointed resistance was +displayed, it may be said that no systematic stand was made until +Getty's division, aided by Torbert's cavalry, which Wright had +ordered to the left early in the action, took up the ground where, on +arriving from Winchester, I found them. + +When I left my command on the 16th, little did I anticipate that +anything like this would happen. Indeed, I felt satisfied that Early +was, of himself, too weak to take the offensive, and although I +doubted the Longstreet despatch, yet I was confident that, even +should it prove true, I could get back before the junction could be +made, and at the worst I felt certain that my army was equal to +confronting the forces of Longstreet and Early combined. Still, the +surprise of the morning might have befallen me as well as the general +on whom it did descend, and though it is possible that this could +have been precluded had Powell's cavalry been closed in, as suggested +in my despatch from Front Royal, yet the enemy's desperation might +have prompted some other clever and ingenious scheme for relieving +his fallen fortunes in the Shenandoah Valley. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +GENERAL EARLY REORGANIZES HIS FORCES--MOSBY THE GUERRILLA--GENERAL +MERRITT SENT TO OPERATE AGAINST MOSBY--ROSSER AGAIN ACTIVE--GENERAL +CUSTER SURPRISED--COLONEL YOUNG SENT TO CAPTURE GILMORE THE +GUERRILLA--COLONEL YOUNG'S SUCCESS--CAPTURE OF GENERAL KELLY AND +GENERAL CROOK--SPIES--WAS WILKES BOOTH A SPY?--DRIVING THE +CONFEDERATES OUT OF THE VALLEY--THE BATTLE OF WAYNESBORO'--MARCHING +TO JOIN THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC. + +Early's broken army practically made no halt in its retreat after the +battle of Cedar-Creek until it reached New Market, though at Fisher's +Hill was left a small rear-guard of cavalry, which hastily decamped, +however, when charged by Gibbs's brigade on the morning of the 20th. +Between the date of his signal defeat and the 11th of November, the +enemy's scattered forces had sufficiently reorganized to permit his +again making a reconnoissance in the valley as far north as Cedar +Creek, my army having meanwhile withdrawn to Kernstown, where it had +been finally decided that a defensive line should be held to enable +me to detach troops to General Grant, and where, by reconstructing +the Winchester and Potomac railroad from Stephenson's depot to +Harper's Ferry, my command might be more readily, supplied. Early's +reconnoissance north of Cedar Creek ended in a rapid withdrawal of +his infantry after feeling my front, and with the usual ill-fortune +to his cavalry; Merritt and Custer driving Rosser and Lomax with ease +across Cedar Creek on the Middle and Back roads, while Powell's +cavalry struck McCausland near Stony Point, and after capturing two +pieces of artillery and about three hundred officers and men chased +him into the Luray Valley. + +Early got back to New Market on the 14th of November, and, from lack +of subsistence, being unable to continue demonstrations to prevent my +reinforcement of General Grant, began himself to detach to General +Lee by returning Kershaw's division to Petersburg, as was definitely +ascertained by Torbert in a reconnoissance to Mount Jackson. At this +time General Grant wished me to send him the Sixth Corps, and it was +got ready for the purpose, but when I informed him that Torbert's +reconnoissance had developed the fact that Early still retained four +divisions of infantry and one of cavalry, it was decided, on my +suggestion, to let the Sixth Corps remain till the season should be a +little further advanced, when the inclemency of the weather would +preclude infantry campaigning. These conditions came about early in +December, and by the middle of the month the whole of the Sixth Corps +was at Petersburg; simultaneously with its transfer to that line +Early sending his Second Corps to Lee. + +During the entire campaign I had been annoyed by guerrilla bands +under such partisan chiefs as Mosby, White, Gilmore, McNeil, and +others, and this had considerably depleted my line-of-battle +strength, necessitating as it did large, escorts for my supply- +trains. The most redoubtable of these leaders was Mosby, whose force +was made up from the country around Upperville, east of the Blue +Ridge, to which section he always fled for a hiding-place when he +scented danger. I had not directed any special operations against +these partisans while the campaign was active, but as Mosby's men had +lately killed, within my lines, my chief quartermaster, Colonel +Tolles, and Medical Inspector Ohlenchlager, I concluded to devote +particular attention to these "irregulars" during the lull that now +occurred; so on the 28th of November, I directed General Merritt to +march to the Loudoun Valley and operate against Mosby, taking care to +clear the country of forage and subsistence, so as to prevent the +guerrillas from being harbored there in the future their destruction +or capture being well-nigh impossible, on account of their intimate +knowledge of the mountain region. Merritt carried out his +instructions with his usual sagacity and thoroughness, sweeping +widely over each side of his general line of march with flankers, who +burned the grain and brought in large herds of cattle, hogs and +sheep, which were issued to the troops. + +While Merritt was engaged in this service the Baltimore and Ohio +railroad once more received the attention of the enemy; Rosser, with +two brigades of cavalry, crossing the Great North Mountain, capturing +the post of New Creek, with about five hundred prisoners and seven +guns, destroying all the supplies of the garrison, and breaking up +the railroad track. This slight success of the Confederates in West +Virginia, and the intelligence that they were contemplating further +raids in that section, led me to send, Crook there with one division, +his other troops going to City Point; and, I hoped that all the +threatened places would thus be sufficiently protected, but +negligence at Beverly resulted in the capture of that station by +Rosser on the 11th of January. + +In the meanwhile, Early established himself with Wharton's division +at Staunton in winter quarters, posting his cavalry in that +neighborhood also, except a detachment at New Market, and another +small one at the signalstation on Three Top Mountain. The winter was +a most severe one, snow falling frequently to the depth of several +inches, and the mercury often sinking below zero. The rigor of the +season was very much against the success of any mounted operations, +but General Grant being very desirous to have the railroads broken up +about Gordonsville and Charlottesville, on the 19th of December I +started the cavalry out for that purpose, Torbert, with Merritt and +Powell, marching through Chester Gap, while Custer moved toward +Staunton to make a demonstration in Torbert's favor, hoping to hold +the enemy's troops in the valley. Unfortunately, Custer did not +accomplish all that was expected of him, and being surprised by +Rosser and Payne near Lacy's Springs before reveille, had to abandon +his bivouac and retreat down the valley, with the loss of a number of +prisoners, a few horses, and a good many horse equipments, for, +because of the suddenness of Rosser's attack, many of the men had no +time to saddle up. As soon as Custer's retreat was assured, +Wharton's division of infantry was sent to Charlottesville to check +Torbert, but this had already been done by Lomax, with the assistance +of infantry sent up from Richmond. Indeed, from the very beginning +of the movement the Confederates had been closely observing the +columns of Torbert and Custer, and in consequence of the knowledge +thus derived, Early had marched Lomax to Gordonsville in anticipation +of an attack there, at the same time sending Rosser down the valley +to meet Custer. Torbert in the performance of his task captured two +pieces of artillery from Johnson's and McCausland's brigades, at +Liberty Mills on the Rapidan River, but in the main the purpose of +the raid utterly failed, so by the 27th of December he returned, +many, of his men badly frost-bitten from the extreme cold which had +prevailed. + +This expedition practically closed all operations for the season, and +the cavalry was put into winter cantonment near Winchester. The +distribution of my infantry to Petersburg and West Virginia left with +me in the beginning of the new year, as already stated, but the one +small division of the Nineteenth Corps. On account of this +diminution of force, it became necessary for me to keep thoroughly +posted in regard to the enemy, and I now realized more than I had +done hitherto how efficient my scouts had become since under the +control of Colonel Young; for not only did they bring me almost every +day intelligence from within Early's lines, but they also operated +efficiently against the guerrillas infesting West Virginia. + +Harry Gilmore, of Maryland, was the most noted of these since the +death of McNeil, and as the scouts had reported him in Harrisonburg +the latter part of January, I directed two of the most trustworthy to +be sent to watch his movements and ascertain his purposes. In a few +days these spies returned with the intelligence that Gilmore was on +his way to Moorefield, the centre of a very disloyal section in West +Virginia, about ninety miles southwest of Winchester, where, under +the guise of a camp-meeting, a gathering was to take place, at which +he expected to enlist a number of men, be joined by a party of about +twenty recruits coming from Maryland, and then begin depredations +along the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. Believing that Gilmore might +be captured, I directed Young to undertake the task, and as a +preliminary step he sent to Moorefield two of his men who early in +the war had "refugeed" from that section and enlisted in one of the +Union regiments from West Virginia. In about a week these men came +back and reported that Gilmore was living at a house between three +and four miles from Moorefield, and gave full particulars as to his +coming and going, the number of men he had about there and where they +rendezvoused. + +With this knowledge at hand I directed Young to take twenty of his +best men and leave that night for Moorefield, dressed in Confederate +uniforms, telling him that I would have about three hundred cavalry +follow in his wake when he had got about fifteen miles start, and +instructing him to pass his party off as a body of recruits for +Gilmore coming from Maryland and pursued by the Yankee cavalry. I +knew this would allay suspicion and provide him help on the road; +and, indeed, as Colonel Whittaker, who alone knew the secret, +followed after the fleeing "Marylanders," he found that their advent +had caused so little remark that the trail would have been lost had +he not already known their destination. Young met with a hearty, +welcome wherever he halted on the way, and as he passed through the +town of Moorefield learned with satisfaction that Gilmore still made +his headquarters at the house where the report of the two scouts had +located him a few days before. Reaching the designated place about +12 o'clock on the night of the 5th of February, Young, under the +representation that he had come directly from Maryland and was being +pursued by the Union cavalry, gained immediate access to Gilmore's +room. He found the bold guerrilla snugly tucked in bed, with two +pistols lying on a chair near by. He was sleeping so soundly that to +arouse him Young had to give him a violent shake. As he awoke and +asked who was disturbing his slumbers, Young, pointing at him a +cocked six-shooter, ordered him to dress without delay, and in answer +to his inquiry, informed him that he was a prisoner to one of +Sheridan's staff. Meanwhile Gilmore's men had learned of his +trouble, but the early appearance of Colonel Whittaker caused them to +disperse; thus the last link between Maryland and the Confederacy was +carried a prisoner to Winchester, whence he was sent to Fort Warren. + +The capture of Gilmore caused the disbandment of the party he had +organized at the "camp-meeting," most of the men he had recruited +returning to their homes discouraged, though some few joined the +bands of Woodson and young Jesse McNeil, which, led by the latter, +dashed into Cumberland, Maryland, at 3 O'clock on the morning of the +21st of February and made a reprisal by carrying off General Crook +and General Kelly, and doing their work so silently and quickly that +they escaped without being noticed, and were some distance on their +way before the colored watchman at the hotel where Crook was +quartered could compose himself enough to give the alarm. A troop of +cavalry gave hot chase from Cumberland, striving to intercept the +party at Moorefield and other points, but all efforts were fruitless, +the prisoners soon being beyond reach. + +Although I had adopted the general rule of employing only soldiers as +scouts, there was an occasional exception to it. I cannot say that +these exceptions proved wholly that an ironclad observance of the +rule would have been best, but I am sure of it in one instance. A +man named Lomas, who claimed to be a Marylander, offered me his +services as a spy, and coming highly recommended from Mr. Stanton, +who had made use of him in that capacity, I employed him. He made +many pretensions, often appearing over anxious to impart information +seemingly intended to impress me with his importance, and yet was +more than ordinarily intelligent, but in spite of that my confidence +in him was by no means unlimited. I often found what he reported to +me as taking place within the Confederate lines corroborated by +Young's men, but generally there were discrepancies in his tales, +which led me to suspect that he was employed by the enemy as well as +by me. I felt, however, that with good watching he could do me +little harm, and if my suspicions were incorrect he might be very +useful, so I held on to him. + +Early in February Lomas was very solicitous for me to employ a man +who, he said, had been with Mosby, but on account of some quarrel in +the irregular camp had abandoned that leader. Thinking that with two +of them I might destroy the railroad bridges east of Lynchburg, I +concluded, after the Mosby man had been brought to my headquarters by +Lomas about 12 o'clock one night, to give him employment, at the same +time informing Colonel Young that I suspected their fidelity, +however, and that he must test it by shadowing their every movement. +When Lomas's companion entered my room he was completely disguised, +but on discarding the various contrivances by which his identity was +concealed he proved to be a rather slender, dark-complexioned, +handsome young man, of easy address and captivating manners. He gave +his name as Renfrew, answered all my questions satisfactorily, and +went into details about Mosby and his men which showed an intimacy +with them at some time. I explained to the two men the work I had +laid out for them, and stated the sum of money I would give to have +it done, but stipulated that in case of failure there would be no +compensation whatever beyond the few dollars necessary for their +expenses. They readily assented, and it was arranged that they +should start the following night. Meanwhile Young had selected his +men to shadow them, and in two days reported my spies as being +concealed at Strasburg, where they remained, without making the +slightest effort to continue on their mission, and were busy, no +doubt, communicating with the enemy, though I was not able to fasten +this on them. On the 16th of February they returned to Winchester, +and reported their failure, telling so many lies about their +hazardous adventure as to remove all remaining doubt as to their +double-dealing. Unquestionably they were spies from the enemy, and +hence liable to the usual penalties of such service; but it struck me +that through them, I might deceive Early as to the time of opening +the spring campaign, I having already received from General Grant an +intimation of what was expected of me. I therefore retained the men +without even a suggestion of my knowledge of their true character, +Young meanwhile keeping close watch over all their doings. + +Toward the last of February General Early had at Staunton two +brigades of infantry under Wharton. All the rest of the infantry +except Echol's brigade, which was in southwestern Virginia, had been +sent to Petersburg during the winter, and Fitz. Lee's two brigades of +cavalry also. Rosser's men were mostly at their homes, where, on +account of a lack of subsistence and forage in the valley, they had +been permitted to go, subject to call. Lomax's cavalry was at +Millboro', west of Staunton, where supplies were obtainable. It was +my aim to get well on the road before Early could collect these +scattered forces, and as many of the officers had been in the habit +of amusing themselves fox-hunting during the latter part of the +winter, I decided to use the hunt as an expedient for stealing a +march on the enemy, and had it given out officially that a grand fox- +chase would take place on the 29th of February. Knowing that Lomas, +and Renfrew would spread the announcement South, they were permitted +to see several red foxes that had been secured, as well as a large +pack of hounds which Colonel Young had collected for the sport, and +were then started on a second expedition to burn the bridges. Of +course, they were shadowed as usual, and two days later, after they +had communicated with friends from their hiding-place, in Newtown, +they were arrested. On the way north to Fort Warren they escaped +from their guards when passing through Baltimore, and I never heard +of them again, though I learned that, after the assassination of, Mr. +Lincoln, Secretary Stanton strongly suspected his friend Lomas of +being associated with the conspirators, and it then occurred to me +that the good-looking Renfrew may have been Wilkes Booth, for he +certainly bore a strong resemblance to Booth's pictures. + +On the 27th of February my cavalry entered upon the campaign which +cleared the Shenandoah Valley of every remnant of organized +Confederates. General Torbert being absent on leave at this time, I +did not recall him, but appointed General Merritt Chief of Cavalry. +for Torbert had disappointed me on two important occasions--in the +Luray Valley during the battle of Fisher's Hill, and on the recent +Gordonsville expedition--and I mistrusted his ability to conduct any +operations requiring much self-reliance. The column was composed of +Custer's and Devin's divisions of cavalry, and two sections of +artillery, comprising in all about 10,000 officers and men. On +wheels we had, to accompany this column, eight ambulances, sixteen +ammunition wagons, a pontoon train for eight canvas boats, and a +small supply-train, with fifteen days' rations of coffee, sugar, and +salt, it being intended to depend on the country for the meat and +bread ration, the men carrying in their haversacks nearly enough to +subsist them till out of the exhausted valley. + +Grant's orders were for me to destroy the Virginia Central railroad +and the James River canal, capture Lynchburg if practicable, and then +join General Sherman in North Carolina wherever he might be found, or +return to Winchester, but as to joining Sherman I was to be governed +by the state of affairs after the projected capture of Lynchburg. +The weather was cold, the valley and surrounding mountains being +still covered with snow; but this was fast disappearing, however, +under the heavy rain that was coming down as the column moved along +up the Valley pike at a steady gait that took us to Woodstock the +first day. The second day we crossed the North Fork of the +Shenandoah on our pontoon-bridge, and by night-fall reached Lacy's +Springs, having seen nothing of the enemy as yet but a few partisans +who hung on our flanks in the afternoon. + +March 1 we encountered General Rosser at Mt Crawford, he having been +able to call together only some five or six hundred of his troops, +our unsuspected march becoming known to Early only the day before. +Rosser attempted to delay us here, trying to burn the bridges over +the Middle Fork of the Shenandoah, but two regiments from Colonel +Capehart's brigade swam the stream and drove Rosser to Kline's Mills, +taking thirty prisoners and twenty ambulances and wagons. + +Meanwhile General Early was busy at Staunton, but not knowing my +objective point, he had ordered the return of Echol's brigade from +southwestern Virginia for the protection of Lynchburg, directed +Lomax's cavalry to concentrate at Pond Gap for the purpose of +harassing me if I moved toward Lynchburg, and at the same time +marched Wharton's two brigades of infantry, Nelson's artillery, and +Rosser's cavalry to Waynesboro', whither he went also to remain till +the object of my movement was ascertained. + +I entered Staunton the morning of March 2, and finding that Early had +gone to Waynesboro' with his infantry and Rosser, the question at +once arose whether I should continue my march to Lynchburg direct, +leaving my adversary in my rear, or turn east and open the way +through Rockfish Gap to the Virginia Central railroad and James River +canal. I felt confident of the success of the latter plan, for I +knew that Early numbered there not more than two thousand men; so, +influenced by this, and somewhat also by the fact that Early had left +word in Staunton that he would fight at Waynesboro', I directed +Merritt to move toward that place with Custer, to be closely followed +by Devin, who was to detach one brigade to destroy supplies at +Swoope's'depot. The by-roads were miry beyond description, rain +having fallen almost incessantly since we left Winchester, but +notwithstanding the down-pour the column pushed on, men and horses +growing almost unrecognizable from the mud covering them from head to +foot. + +General Early was true to the promise made his friends in Staunton, +for when Custer neared Waynesboro' he found, occupying a line of +breastworks on a ridge west of the town, two brigades of infantry, +with eleven pieces of artillery and Rosser's cavalry. Custer, when +developing the position of the Confederates, discovered that their +left was somewhat exposed instead of resting on South River; he +therefore made his dispositions for attack, sending around that flank +the dismounted regiments from Pennington's brigade, while he himself, +with two brigades, partly mounted and partly dismounted, assaulted +along the whole line of breastworks. Pennington's flanking movement +stampeded the enemy in short order, thus enabling Custer to carry the +front with little resistance, and as he did so the Eighth New York +and First Connecticut, in a charge in column, broke through the +opening made by Custer, and continued on through the town of +Waynesboro', never stopping till they crossed South River. There, +finding themselves immediately in the enemy's rear, they promptly +formed as foragers and held the east bank of the stream till all the +Confederates surrendered except Rosser, who succeeded in making his +way back to the valley, and Generals Early, Wharton, Long, and +Lilley, who, with fifteen or twenty men, escaped across the Blue +Ridge. I followed up the victory immediately by despatching Capehart +through Rock-fish Gap, with orders to encamp on the east side of the +Blue Ridge. By reason of this move all the enemy's stores and +transportation fell into our hands, while we captured on the field +seventeen battle flags, sixteen hundred officers and men, and eleven +pieces of artillery. This decisive victory closed hostilities in the +Shenandoah Valley. The prisoners and artillery were sent back to +Winchester next morning, under a guard of 1,500 men, commanded by +Colonel J. H. Thompson, of the First New Hampshire. + +The night of March 2 Custer camped at Brookfield, Devin remaining at +Waynesboro'. The former started for Charlottesville the next morning +early, followed by Devin with but two brigades, Gibbs having been +left behind to blow up the iron railroad bridge across South River. +Because of the incessant rains and spring thaws the roads were very +soft, and the columns cut them up terribly, the mud being thrown by +the sets of fours across the road in ridges as much as two feet high, +making it most difficult to get our wagons along, and distressingly +wearing on the animals toward the middle and rear of the columns. +Consequently I concluded to rest at Charlottesville for a couple of +days and recuperate a little, intending at the same time to destroy, +with small parties, the railroad from that point toward Lynchburg. +Custer reached Charlottesville the 3d, in the afternoon, and was met +at the outskirts by a deputation of its citizens, headed by the +mayor, who surrendered the town with medieval ceremony, formally +handing over the keys of the public buildings and of the University +of Virginia. But this little scene did not delay Custer long enough +to prevent his capturing, just beyond the village, a small body of +cavalry and three pieces of artillery. Gibbs's brigade, which was +bringing up my mud-impeded train, did not arrive until the 5th of +March. In the mean time Young's scouts had brought word that the +garrison of Lynchburg was being increased and the fortifications +strengthened, so that its capture would be improbable. I decided, +however, to move toward the place as far as Amherst Court House, +which is sixteen miles short of the town, so Devin, under Merritt's +supervision, marched along the James River, destroying the canal, +while Custer pushed ahead on the railroad and broke it up. The two +columns were to join at New Market, whence I intended to cross the +James River at some point east of Lynchburg, if practicable, so as to +make my way to Appomattox Court House, and destroy the Southside +railroad as far east as Farmville. Owing to its swollen condition +the river was unfordable but knowing that there was a covered bridge +at Duguidsville, I hoped to secure it by a dash, and cross there, but +the enemy, anticipating this, had filled the bridge with inflammable +material, and just as our troops got within striking distance it +burst into flames. The bridge at Hardwicksville also having been +burned by the enemy, there was now no means of crossing except by +pontoons. but, unfortunately, I had only eight of these, and they +could not be made to span the swollen river. + +Being thus unable to cross until the river should fall, and knowing +that it was impracticable to join General Sherman, and useless to +adhere to my alternative instructions to return to Winchester, I now +decided to destroy still more thoroughly the James River canal and +the Virginia Central railroad and then join General Grant in front of +Petersburg. I was master of the whole country north of the James as +far down as Goochland; hence the destruction of these arteries of +supply could be easily compassed, and feeling that the war was +nearing its end, I desired my cavalry to be in at the death. + +On March 9 the main column started eastward down the James River, +destroying locks, dams, and boats, having been preceded by Colonel +Fitzhugh's brigade of Devin's division in a forced march to Goochland +and Beaver Dam Creek, with orders to destroy everything below +Columbia. I made Columbia on the 10th, and from there sent a +communication to General Grant reporting what had occurred, informing +him of my condition and intention, asking him to send forage and +rations to meet me at the White House, and also a pontoon-bridge to +carry me over the Pamunkey, for in view of the fact that hitherto it +had been impracticable to hold Lee in the trenches around Petersburg, +I regarded as too hazardous a march down the south bank of the +Pamunkey, where the enemy, by sending troops out from Richmond, might +fall upon my flank and rear. It was of the utmost importance that +General Grant should receive these despatches without chance of +failure, in order that I might, depend absolutely on securing +supplies at the White House; therefore I sent the message in +duplicate, one copy overland direct to City Point by two scouts, +Campbell and Rowan, and the other by Fannin and Moore, who were to go +down the James River in a small boat to Richmond, join the troops in +the trenches in front of Petersburg, and, deserting to the Union +lines, deliver their tidings into General Grant's hands. Each set of +messengers got through, but the copy confided to Campbell and Rowan +was first at Grant's headquarters. + +I halted for one day at Columbia to let my trains catch up, for it +was still raining and the mud greatly delayed the teams, fatiguing +and wearying the mules so much that I believe we should have been +forced to abandon most of the wagons except for the invaluable help +given by some two thousand negroes who had attached themselves to the +column: they literally lifted the wagons out of the mud. From +Columbia Merritt, with Devin's division, marched to Louisa Court +House and destroyed the Virginia Central to Frederick's Hall. +Meanwhile Custer was performing similar work from Frederick's Hall to +Beaver Dam Station, and also pursued for a time General Early, who, +it was learned from despatches captured in the telegraph office at +Frederick's Hall, was in the neighborhood with a couple of hundred +men. Custer captured some of these men and two of Early's staff- +officers, but the commander of the Valley District, accompanied by a +single orderly, escaped across the South Anna and next day made his +way to Richmond, the last man of the Confederate army that had so +long contended with us in the Shenandoah Valley. + +At Frederick's Hall, Young's scouts brought me word from Richmond +that General Longstreet was assembling a force there to prevent my +junction with Grant, and that Pickett's division, which had been sent +toward Lynchburg to oppose my march, and Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry, were +moving east on the Southside railroad, with the object of +circumventing me. Reasoning that Longstreet could interpose +effectually only by getting to the White House ahead of me, I pushed +one column under Custer across the South Anna, by way of Ground +Squirrel bridge, to Ashland, where it united with Merritt, who had +meanwhile marched through Hanover Junction. Our appearance at +Ashland drew the Confederates out in that direction, as was hoped, +so, leaving Colonel Pennington's brigade there to amuse them, the +united command retraced its route to Mount Carmel church to cross the +North Anna. After dark Pennington came away, and all the troops +reached the church by midnight of the 15th. + +Resuming the march at an early hour next morning, we took the road by +way of King William Court House to the White House, where, arriving +on the 18th, we found, greatly to our relief, the supplies which I +had requested to be sent there. In the meanwhile the enemy had +marched to Hanover Court House, but being unable either to cross the +Pamunkey there or forestall me at the White House on the south side +of the river, he withdrew to Richmond without further effort to +impede my column. + +The hardships of this march far exceeded those of any previous +campaigns by the cavalry. Almost incessant rains had drenched us for +sixteen days and nights, and the swollen streams and well-nigh +bottomless roads east of Staunton presented grave difficulties on +every hand, but surmounting them all, we destroyed the enemy's means +of subsistence, in quantities beyond computation, and permanently +crippled the Virginia Central railroad, as well as the James River +canal, and as each day brought us nearer the Army of the Potomac, all +were filled with the comforting reflection that our work in the +Shenandoah Valley had been thoroughly done, and every one was buoyed +up by the cheering thought that we should soon take part in the final +struggle of the war. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +TRANSFERRED TO PETERSBURG--GENERAL RAWLINS CORDIAL WELCOME--GENERAL +GRANT's ORDERS AND PLANS--A TRIP WITH MR. LINCOLN AND GENERAL GRANT-- +MEETING GENERAL SHERMAN--OPPOSED TO JOINING THE ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE +--OPENING OF THE APPOMATTOX CAMPAIGN--GENERAL GRANT AND GENERAL +RAWLINS. + +The transfer of my command from the Shenandoah Valley to the field of +operations in front of Petersburg was not anticipated by General +Grant; indeed, the despatch brought from Columbia by my scouts, +asking that supplies be sent me at the White House, was the first +word that reached him concerning the move. In view of my message the +general-in-chief decided to wait my arrival before beginning spring +operations with the investing troops south of the James River, for he +felt the importance of having my cavalry at hand in a campaign which +he was convinced would wind up the war. We remained a few days at +the White House resting and refitting the cavalry, a large amount of +shoeing being necessary; but nothing like enough horses were at hand +to replace those that had died or been disabled on the mud march from +Staunton to the Pamunkey River, so a good many of the men were still +without mounts, and all such were sent by boat to the dismounted camp +near City Point. When all was ready the column set out for Hancock +Station, a point on the military railroad in front of Petersburg, and +arriving there on the 27th of March, was in orders reunited with its +comrades of the Second Division, who had been serving with the Army +of the Potomac since we parted from them the previous August. +General Crook, who had been exchanged within a few days, was now in +command of this Second Division. The reunited corps was to enter +upon the campaign as a separate army, I reporting directly to General +Grant; the intention being thus to reward me for foregoing, of my own +choice, my position as a department commander by joining the armies +at Petersburg. + +Taking the road across the Peninsula, I started from the White House +with Merritt's column on the 25th of March and encamped that night at +Harrison's Landing. Very early next morning, in conformity with a +request from General Grant, I left by boat for City Point, Merritt +meanwhile conducting the column across the James River to the point +of rendezvous, The trip to City Point did not take long, and on +arrival at army headquarters the first person I met was General John +A. Rawlins, General Grant's chief-of-staff. Rawlins was a man of +strong likes and dislikes, and positive always both in speech and +action, exhibiting marked feelings when greeting any one, and on this +occasion met me with much warmth. His demonstrations of welcome +over, we held a few minutes' conversation about the coming campaign, +he taking strong ground against a part of the plan of operations +adopted, namely, that which contemplated my joining General Sherman's +army. His language was unequivocal and vehement, and when he was +through talking, he conducted me to General Grant's quarters, but he +himself did not enter. + +General Grant was never impulsive, and always met his officers in an +unceremonious way, with a quiet "How are you" soon putting one at his +ease, since the pleasant tone in which he spoke gave assurance of +welcome, although his manner was otherwise impassive. When the +ordinary greeting was over, he usually waited for his visitor to open +the conversation, so on this occasion I began by giving him the +details of my march from Winchester, my reasons for not joining +Sherman, as contemplated in my instructions, and the motives which +had influenced me to march to the White House. The other provision +of my orders on setting out from Winchester--the alternative return +to that place--was not touched upon, for the wisdom of having ignored +that was fully apparent. Commenting on this recital of my doings, +the General referred only to the tortuous course of my march from +Waynesboro' down, our sore trials, and the valuable services of the +scouts who had brought him tidings of me, closing with the remark +that it was, rare a department commander voluntarily deprived himself +of independence, and added that I should not suffer for it. Then +turning to the business for which he had called rne to City Point, he +outlined what he expected me to do; saying that I was to cut loose +from the Army of the Potomac by passing its left flank to the +southward along the line of the Danville railroad, and after crossing +the Roanoke River, join General Sherman. While speaking, he handed +me a copy of a general letter of instructions that had been drawn up +for the army on the 24th. The letter contained these words +concerning the movements of my command: + +"The cavalry under General Sheridan, joined by the division now under +General Davies, will move at the same time (29th inst.) by the Weldon +road and the Jerusalem plank-road, turning west from the latter +before crossing the Nottoway, and west with the whole column before +reaching Stony Creek. General Sheridan will then move independently +under other instructions which will be given him. All dismounted +cavalry belonging to the Army of the Potomac, and the dismounted +cavalry from the Middle Military Division not required for guarding +property belonging to their arm of the service, will report to +Brigadier-General Benham to be added to the defenses of City Point." + +When I had gone over the entire letter I showed plainly that I was +dissatisfied with it, for, coupled with what the General had outlined +orally, which I supposed was the "other instructions," I believed it +foreshadowed my junction with General Sherman. Rawlins thought so +too, as his vigorous language had left no room to doubt, so I +immediately began to offer my objections to the programme. These +were, that it would be bad policy to send me down to the Carolinas +with a part of the Army of the Potomac, to come back to crush Lee +after the destruction of General Johnston's army; such a course would +give rise to the charge that his own forces around Petersburg were +not equal to the task, and would seriously affect public opinion in +the North; that in fact my cavalry belonged to the Army of the +Potomac, which army was able unaided to destroy Lee, and I could not +but oppose any dispersion of its strength. + +All this was said in a somewhat emphatic manner, and when I had +finished he quietly told me that the portion of my instructions from +which I so strongly dissented was intended as a "blind" to cover any +check the army in its general move, to the left might meet with, and +prevent that element in the North which held that the war could be +ended only through negotiation, from charging defeat. The fact that +my cavalry was not to ultimately join Sherman was a great relief to +me, and after expressing the utmost confidence in the plans unfolded +for closing the war by directing every effort to the annihilation of +Lee's army, I left him to go to General Ingalls's quarters. On the +way I again met Rawlins, who, when I told him that General Grant had +intimated his intention to modify the written plan of operations so +far as regarded the cavalry, manifested the greatest satisfaction, +and I judged from this that the new view of the matter had not +previously been communicated to the chief-of-staff, though he must +have been acquainted of course with the programme made out on the +24th of March. + +Toward noon General Grant sent for me to accompany him up the river. +When I joined the General he informed me that the President was on +board the boat--the steamer Mary Martin. For some days Mr. Lincoln +had been at City Point, established on the steamer River Queen, +having come down from Washington to be nearer his generals, no doubt, +and also to be conveniently situated for the reception of tidings +from the front when operations began, for he could not endure the +delays in getting news to Washington. This trip up the James had +been projected by General Meade, but on account of demands at the +front he could not go, so the President, General Grant, and I +composed the party. We steamed up to where my cavalry was crossing +on the pontoon-bridge below the mouth of the Dutch Gap canal, and for +a little while watched the column as it was passing over the river, +the bright sunshine presaging good weather, but only to delude, as +was proved by the torrents of rain brought by the succeeding days of +March. On the trip the President was not very cheerful. In fact, he +was dejected, giving no indication of his usual means of diversion, +by which (his quaint stories) I had often heard he could find relief +from his cares. He spoke to me of the impending operations and asked +many questions, laying stress upon the one, "What would be the result +when the army moved out to the left, if the enemy should come down +and capture City Point?" the question being prompted, doubtless, by +the bold assault on our lines and capture of Fort Steadman two days +before by General Gordon. I answered that I did not think it at all +probable that General Lee would undertake such a desperate measure to +relieve the strait he was in; that General Hartranft's successful +check to Gordon had ended, I thought, attacks of such a character; +and in any event General Grant would give Lee all he could attend to +on the left. Mr. Lincoln said nothing about my proposed route of +march, and I doubt if he knew of my instructions, or was in +possession at most of more than a very general outline of the plan of +campaign. It was late when the Mary Martin returned to City Point, +and I spent the night there with General Ingalls. + +The morning of the 27th I went out to Hancock Station to look after +my troops and prepare for moving two days later. In the afternoon I +received a telegram from General Grant, saying: "General Sherman will +be here this evening to spend a few hours. I should like to have you +come down." Sherman's coming was a surprise--at least to me it was-- +this despatch being my first intimation of his expected arrival. +Well knowing the zeal and emphasis with which General Sherman would +present his views, there again came into my mind many misgivings with +reference to the movement of the cavalry, and I made haste to start +for Grant's headquarters. I got off a little after 7 o'clock, taking +the rickety military railroad, the rails of which were laid on the +natural surface of the ground, with grading only here and there at +points of absolute necessity, and had not gone far when the +locomotive jumped the track. This delayed my arrival at City Point +till near midnight, but on repairing to the little cabin that +sheltered the general-in-chief, I found him and Sherman still up +talking over the problem whose solution was near at hand. As already +stated, thoughts as to the tenor of my instructions became uppermost +the moment I received the telegram in the afternoon, and they +continued to engross and disturb me all the way down the railroad, +for I feared that the telegram foreshadowed, under the propositions +Sherman would present, a more specific compliance with the written +instructions than General Grant had orally assured me would be +exacted. + +My entrance into the shanty suspended the conversation for a moment +only, and then General Sherman, without prelude, rehearsed his plans +for moving his army, pointing out with every detail how he would come +up through the Carolinas to join the troops besieging Petersburg and +Richmond, and intimating that my cavalry, after striking the +Southside and Danville railroads, could join him with ease. I made +no comments on the projects for moving, his own troops, but as soon +as opportunity offered, dissented emphatically from the proposition +to have me join the Army of the Tennessee, repeating in substance +what I had previously expressed to General Grant. + +My uneasiness made me somewhat too earnest, I fear, but General Grant +soon mollified me, and smoothed matters over by practically repeating +what he had told me in regard to this point at the close of our +interview the day before, so I pursued the subject no further. In a +little while the conference ended, and I again sought lodging at the +hospitable quarters of Ingalls. + +Very early the next morning, while I was still in bed, General +Sherman came to me and renewed the subject of my joining him, but +when he saw that I was unalterably opposed to it the conversation +turned into other channels, and after we had chatted awhile he +withdrew, and later in the day went up the river with the President, +General Grant, and Admiral Porter, I returning to my command at +Hancock Station, where my presence was needed to put my troops in +march next day. + +During the entire winter General Grant's lines fronting Petersburg +had extended south of the Appomattox River, practically from that +stream around to where the Vaughn road crosses Hatcher's Run, and +this was nearly the situation Wilien the cavalry concentrated at +Hancock Station, General Weitzel holding the line north of the +Appomattox, fronting Richmond and Bermuda Hundred. + +The instructions of the 24th of March contemplated that the campaign +should begin with the movement of Warren's corps (the Fifth) at +3 o'clock on the morning of the 29th, and Humphreys's (the Second) at +6; the rest of the infantry holding on in the trenches. The cavalry +was to move in conjunction with Warren and Humphreys, and make its +way out beyond our left as these corps opened the road. + +The night of the 28th I received the following additional +instructions, the general tenor of which again disturbed me, for +although I had been assured that I was not to join General Sherman, +it will be seen that the supplemental directions distinctly present +that alternative, and I therefore feared that during the trip up the +James River on the morning of the 28th General Grant had returned to +his original views: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"City Point, Va., March 28, 1865. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN: + +"The Fifth Army Corps will move by the Vaughn road at 3 A.M. +tomorrow morning. The Second moves at about 9 A.M., having but about +three miles to march to reach the point designated for it to take on +the right of the Fifth Corps, after the latter reaches Dinwiddie +Court House. + +"Move your cavalry at as early an hour as you can, and without being +confined to any particular road or roads. You may go out by the +nearest roads in rear of the Fifth Corps, pass by its left, and +passing near to or through Dinwiddie, reach the right and rear of the +enemy as soon as you can. It is not the intention to attack the +enemy in his intrenched position, but to force him out if possible. +Should he come out and attack us, or get himself where he can be +attacked, move in with your entire force in your own way, and with +the full reliance that the army will engage or follow the enemy, as +circumstances will dictate. I shall be on the field, and will +probably be able to communicate with you; should I not do so, and you +find that the enemy keeps within his main intrenched line, you may +cut loose and push for the Danville road. If you find it practicable +I would like you to cross the Southside road, between Petersburg and +Burkeville, and destroy it to some extent. I would not advise much +detention, however, until you reach the Danville road, which I would +like you to strike as near to the Appomattox as possible; make your +destruction of that road as complete as possible; you can then pass +on to the Southside road, west of Burkeville, and destroy that in +like manner. + +"After having accomplished the destruction of the two railroads, +which are now the only avenues of supply to Lee's army, you may +return to this army, selecting your road farther south, or you may go +on into North Carolina and join General Sherman. Should you select +the latter course, get the information to me as early as possible, so +that I may send orders to meet you at Goldsboro'. + +"U. S. GRANT, Lieut.-General." + + +These instructions did not alter my line of march for the morrow, and +I trusted matters would so come about as not to require compliance +with those portions relative to the railroads and to joining Sherman; +so early on the 29th I moved my cavalry out toward Ream's Station on +the Weldon road, Devin commanding the First Division, with Colonels +Gibbs, Stagg, and Fitzhugh in charge of the brigades; the Third +Division under Custer, Colonels Wells, Capehart and Pennington being +the brigade commanders. These two divisions united were commanded by +Merritt, as they had been since leaving Winchester. Crook headed the +Second Division, his brigades being under General Davies and Colonels +John I. Gregg and Smith. + +Our general direction was westward, over such routes as could be +found, provided they did not embarrass the march of the infantry. +The roads, from the winter's frosts and rains, were in a frightful +state, and when it was sought to avoid a spot which the head of the +column had proved almost bottomless, the bogs and quicksands of the +adjoining fields demonstrated that to make a detour was to go from +bad to worse. In the face of these discouragements we floundered on, +however, crossing on the way a series of small streams swollen to +their banks. Crook and Devin reached the county-seat of Dinwiddie +about 5 o'clock in the evening, having encountered only a small +picket, that at once gave way to our advance. Merritt left Custer at +Malon's crossing of Rowanty Creek to care for the trains containing +our subsistence and the reserve ammunition, these being stuck in the +mire at, intervals all the way back to the Jerusalem plank-road; and +to make any headway at all with the trains, Custer's men often had to +unload the wagons and lift them out of the boggy places. + +Crook and Devin camped near Dinwiddie Court House in such manner as +to cover the Vaughn, Flatfoot, Boydton, and Five Forks roads; for, as +these all intersected at Dinwiddie, they offered a chance for the +enemy's approach toward the rear of the Fifth Corps, as Warren +extended to the left across the Boydton road. Any of these routes +leading to the south or west might also be the one on which, in +conformity with one part of my instructions, I was expected to get +out toward the Danville and Southside railroads, and the Five Forks +road would lead directly to General Lee's right flank, in case +opportunity was found to comply with the other part. The place was, +therefore, of great strategic value, and getting it without cost +repaid us for floundering through the mud. + +Dinwiddie Court House, though a most important point in the campaign, +was far from attractive in feature, being made up of a half-dozen +unsightly houses, a ramshackle tavern propped up on two sides with +pine poles, and the weatherbeaten building that gave official name to +the cross-roads. We had no tents--there were none in the command--so +I took possession of the tavern for shelter for myself and staff, and +just as we had finished looking over its primitive interior a rain +storm set in. + +The wagon containing my mess equipment was back somewhere on the +road, hopelessly stuck in the mud, and hence we had nothing to eat +except some coffee which two young women living at the tavern kindly +made for us; a small quantity of the berry being furnished from the +haversacks of my escort. By the time we got the coffee, rain was +falling in sheets, and the evening bade fair to be a most dismal one; +but songs and choruses set up by some of my staff--the two young +women playing accompaniments on a battered piano--relieved the +situation and enlivened us a little. However, the dreary night +brought me one great comfort; for General Grant, who that day had +moved out to Gravelly Run, sent me instructions to abandon all idea +of the contemplated raid, and directed me to act in concert with the +infantry under his immediate command, to turn, if possible, the right +flank of Lee's army. The despatch made my mind easy with respect to +the objectionable feature of my original instructions, and of course +relieved me also from the anxiety growing out of the letter received +at Hancock Station the night of the 28th; so, notwithstanding the +suspicions excited by some of my staff concerning the Virginia +feather-bed that had been assigned me, I turned in at a late hour and +slept most soundly. + +The night of the 29th the left of General Grant's infantry--Warren's +corps--rested on the Boydton road, not far from its intersection with +the Quaker road. Humphreys's corps was next to Warren; then came +Ord, next Wright, and then Parke, with his right resting on the +Appomattox. The moving of Warren and Humphreys to the left during +the day was early discovered by General Lee. He met it by extending +the right of his infantry on the White Oak road, while drawing in the +cavalry of W. H. F. Lee and Rosser along the south bank of Stony +Creek to cover a crossroads called Five Forks, to anticipate me +there; for assuming that my command was moving in conjunction with +the infantry, with the ultimate purpose of striking the Southside +railroad, Lee made no effort to hold Dinwiddie, which he might have +done with his cavalry, and in this he made a fatal mistake. The +cavalry of Fitz. Lee was ordered at this same time from Sunderland +depot to Five Forks, and its chief placed in command of all the +mounted troops of General Lee's army. + +At daylight on ttie 3oth I proceeded to make dispositions under the +new conditions imposed by my modified instructions, and directed +Merritt to push Devin out as far as the White Oak road to make a +reconnoissance to Five Forks, Crook being instructed to send Davies's +brigade to support Devin. Crook was to hold, with Gregg's brigade, +the Stony Creek crossing of the Boydton plank road, retaining Smith's +near Dinwiddie, for use in any direction required. On the 29th W. H. +F. Lee conformed the march of his cavalry with that of ours, but my +holding Stony Creek in this way forced him to make a detour west of +Chamberlin's Run, in order to get in communication with his friends +at Five Forks. + +The rain that had been falling all night gave no sign of stopping, +but kept pouring down all day long, and the swamps and quicksands +mired the horses, whether they marched in the roads or across the +adjacent fields. Undismayed, nevertheless, each column set out for +its appointed duty, but shortly after the troops began to move I +received from General Grant this despatch, which put a new phase on +matters: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"GRAVELLY RUN, March 30, 1865. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN : + +"The heavy rain of to-day will make it impossible for us to do much +until it dries up a little, or we get roads around our rear repaired. +You may, therefore, leave what cavalry you deem necessary to protect +the left, and hold such positions as you deem necessary for that +purpose, and send the remainder back to Humphrey's Station where they +can get hay and grain. Fifty wagons loaded with forage will be sent +to you in the morning. Send an officer back to direct the wagons +back to where you want them. Report to me the cavalry you will leave +back, and the position you will occupy. Could not your cavalry go +back by the way of Stony Creek depot and destroy or capture the store +of supplies there? + +"U. S. GRANT, Lieut.-General." + + +When I had read and pondered this, I determined to ride over to +General Grant's headquarters on Gravelly Run, and get a clear idea of +what it was proposed to do, for it seemed to me that a suspension of +operations would be a serious mistake. Mounting a powerful gray +pacing horse called Breckenridge (from its capture from one of +Breckenridge's staff-officers at Missionary Ridge), and that I knew +would carry me through the mud, I set out accompanied by my Assistant +Adjutant-General, Colonel Frederick C. Newhall, and an escort of +about ten or fifteen men. At first we rode north up the Boydton +plank-road, and coming upon our infantry pickets from a direction +where the enemy was expected to appear, they began to fire upon us, +but seeing from our actions that we were friends, they ceased, and +permitted us to pass the outposts. We then struggled on in a +northeasterly direction across-country, till we struck the Vaughn +road. This carried us to army headquarters, which were established +south of Gravelly Run in an old cornfield. I rode to within a few +yards of the front of General Grant's tent, my horse plunging at +every step almost to his knees in the mud, and dismounted near a +camp-fire, apparently a general one, for all the staff-officers were +standing around it on boards and rails placed here and there to keep +them from sinking into the mire. + +Going directly to General Grant's tent, I found him and Rawlins +talking over the question of suspending operations till the weather +should improve. No orders about the matter had been issued yet, +except the despatch to me, and Rawlins, being strongly opposed to the +proposition, was frankly expostulating with General Grant, who, after +greeting me, remarked, in his quiet way: " Well, Rawlins, I think you +had better take command." Seeing that there was a difference up +between Rawlins and his chief, I made the excuse of being wet and +cold, and went outside to the fire. Here General Ingalls met me and +took me to his tent, where I was much more comfortable than when +standing outside, and where a few minutes later we were joined by +General Grant. Ingalls then retired, and General Grant began talking +of our fearful plight, resulting from the rains and mud, and saying +that because of this it seemed necessary to suspend operations. I at +once begged him not to do so, telling him that my cavalry was already +on the move in spite of the difficulties, and that although a +suspension of operations would not be fatal, yet it would give rise +to the very charge of disaster to which he had referred at City +Point, and, moreover, that we would surely be ridiculed, just as +General Burnside's army was after the mud march of 1863. His better +judgment was against suspending operations, but the proposition had +been suggested by all sorts of complaints as to the impossibility of +moving the trains and the like, so it needed little argument to +convince him, and without further discussion he said, in that manner +which with him meant a firmness of purpose that could not be changed +by further complainings, "We will go on." I then told him that I +believed I could break in the enemy's right if he would let me have +the Sixth Corps; but saying that the condition of the roads would +prevent the movement of infantry, he replied that I would have to +seize Five Forks with the cavalry alone. + +On my way back to Dinwiddie I stopped at the headquarters of General +Warren, but the General being asleep, I went to the tent of one of +his staff-officers. Colonel William T. Gentry, an old personal +friend with whom I had served in Oregon. In a few minutes Warren +came in and we had a short conversation, he speaking rather +despondently of the outlook, being influenced no doubt by the +depressing weather. + +>From Warren's headquarters I returned, by the Boydton road to +Dinwiddie Court House, fording Gravelly Run with ease. When I got as +far as the Dabney road I sent Colonel Newhall out on it toward Five +Forks, with orders for Merritt to develop the enemy's position and +strength, and then rode on to Dinwiddie to endeavor to get all my +other troops up. Merritt was halted at the intersection of the Five +Forks and Gravelly Church roads when Newhall delivered the orders, +and in compliance moving out Gibbs's brigade promptly, sharp +skirmishing was brought on, Gibbs driving the Confederates to Five +Forks, where he found them behind a line of breastworks running along +the White Oak road. The reconnoissance demonstrating the intention +of the enemy to hold this point, Gibbs was withdrawn. + +That evening, at 7 o'clock, I reported the position of the +Confederate cavalry, and stated that it had been reinforced by +Pickett's division of infantry. On receipt of this despatch, General +Grant offered me the Fifth Corps, but I declined to take it, and +again asked for the Sixth, saying that with it I believed I could +turn the enemy (Pickett's) left, or break through his lines. The +morning of the 31st General Grant replied the the Sixth Corps could +not be taken from its position in the line, and offered me the +Second; but in the mean time circumstances had changed, and no corps +was ordered. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +BATTLE OF DINWIDDIE COURT HOUSE--PICKETT REPULSED--REINFORCED BY THE +FIFTH CORPS--BATTLE OF FIVE FORKS--TURNING THE CONFEDERATE LEFT--AN +UNQUALIFIED SUCCESS--RELIEVING GENERAL WARREN--THE WARREN COURT OF +INQUIRY--GENERAL SHERMAN'S OPINION. + +The night of March 30 Merritt, with Devin's division and Davies's +brigade, was camped on the Five Forks road about two miles in front +of Dinwiddie, near J. Boisseau's. Crook, with Smith and Gregg's +brigades, continued to cover Stony Creek, and Custer was still back +at Rowanty Creek, trying to get the trains up. This force had been +counted while crossing the creek on the 29th, the three divisions +numbering 9,000 enlisted men, Crook having 3,300, and Custer and +Devin 5,700. + +During the 30th, the enemy had been concentrating his cavalry, and by +evening General W. H. F. Lee and General Rosser had joined Fitzhugh +Lee near Five Forks. To this force was added, about dark, five +brigades of infantry--three from Pickett's division, and two from +Johnson's--all under command of Pickett. The infantry came by the +White Oak road from the right of General Lee's intrenchments, and +their arrival became positively known to me about dark, the +confirmatory intelligence being brought in then by some of Young's +scouts who had been inside the Confederate lines. + +On the 31st, the rain having ceased, directions were given at an +early hour to both Merritt and Crook to make reconnoissances +preparatory to securing Five Forks, and about 9 o'clock Merritt +started for the crossroads, Davies's brigade supporting him. His +march was necessarily slow because of the mud, and the enemy's +pickets resisted with obstinacy also, but the coveted crossroads fell +to Merritt without much trouble, as the bulk of the enemy was just +then bent on other things. At the same hour that Merritt started, +Crook moved Smith's brigade out northwest from Dinwiddie to +Fitzgerald's crossing of Chamberlain's Creek, to cover Merritt's +left, supporting Smith by placing Gregg to his right and rear. The +occupation of this ford was timely, for Pickett, now in command of +both the cavalry and infantry, was already marching to get in +Merritt's rear by crossing Chamberlain's Creek. + +To hold on to Fitzgerald's ford Smith had to make a sharp fight, but +Mumford's cavalry attacking Devin, the enemy's infantry succeeded in +getting over Chamberlain's Creek at a point higher up than +Fitzgerald's ford, and assailing Davies, forced him back in a +northeasterly direction toward the Dinwiddie and Five Forks road in +company with Devin. The retreat of Davies permitted Pickett to pass +between Crook and Merritt, which he promptly did, effectually +separating them and cutting off both Davies and Devin from the road +to Dinwiddie, so that to get to that point they had to retreat across +the country to B. Boisseau's and then down the Boydton road. + +Gibbs's brigade had been in reserve near the intersection of the Five +Forks and Dabney roads, and directing Merritt to hold on there, I +ordered Gregg's brigade to be mounted and brought to Merritt's aid, +for if Pickett continued in pursuit north of the Five Forks road he +would expose his right and rear, and I determined to attack him, in +such case, from Gibbs's position. Gregg arrived in good season, and +as soon as his men were dismounted on Gibbs's left, Merritt assailed +fiercely, compelling Pickett to halt and face a new foe, thus +interrupting an advance that would finally have carried Pickett into +the rear of Warren's corps. + +It was now about 4 o'clock in the afternoon and we were in a critical +situation, but having ordered Merritt to bring Devin and Davies to +Dinwiddie by the Boydton road, staff-officers were sent to hurry +Custer to the same point, for with its several diverging roads the +Court House was of vital importance, and I determined to stay there +at all hazards. At the same time orders were sent to Smith's +brigade, which, by the advance of Pickett past its right flank and +the pressure of W. H. F. Lee on its front, had been compelled to give +up Fitzgerald's crossing, to fall back toward Dinwiddie but to +contest every inch of ground so as to gain time. + +When halted by the attack of Gregg and Gibbs, Pickett, desisting from +his pursuit of Devin, as already stated, turned his undivided +attention to this unexpected force, and with his preponderating +infantry pressed it back on the Five Forks road toward Dinwiddle, +though our men, fighting dismounted behind barricades at different +points, displayed such obstinacy as to make Pickett's progress slow, +and thus give me time to look out a line for defending the Court +House. I selected a place about three-fourths of a mile northwest of +the crossroads, and Custer coming up quickly with Capehart's brigade, +took position on the left of the road to Five Forks in some open +ground along the crest of a gentle ridge. Custer got Capehart into +place just in time to lend a hand to Smith, who, severely pressed, +came back on us here from his retreat along Chamberlain's "bed"--the +vernacular for a woody swamp such as that through which Smith +retired. A little later the brigades of Gregg and Gibbs, falling to +the rear slowly and steadily, took up in the woods a line which +covered the Boydton Road some distance to the right of Capehart, the +intervening gap to be filled with Pennington's brigade. By this time +our horse-artillery, which for two days had been stuck in the mud, +was all up, and every gun was posted in this line. + +It was now near sunset, and the enemy's cavalry thinking the day was +theirs, made a dash at Smith, but just as the assailants appeared in +the open fields, Capehart's men opened so suddenly on their left +flank as to cause it to recoil in astonishment, which permitted Smith +to connect his brigade with Custer unmolested. We were now in good +shape behind the familiar barricades, and having a continuous line, +excepting only the gap to be filled with Pennington, that covered +Dinwiddie and the Boydton Road. My left rested in the woods about +half a mile west of the Court House, and the barricades extended from +this flank in a semicircle through the open fields in a northeasterly +direction, to a piece-of thick timber on the right, near the Boydton +Road. + +A little before the sun went down the Confederate infantry was formed +for the attack, and, fortunately for us, Pennington's brigade came up +and filled the space to which it was assigned between Capehart and +Gibbs, just as Pickett moved out across the cleared fields in front +of Custer, in deep lines that plainly told how greatly we were +outnumbered. + +Accompanied by Generals Merritt and Custer and my staff, I now rode +along the barricades to encourage the men. Our enthusiastic +reception showed that they were determined to stay. The cavalcade +drew the enemy's fire, which emptied several of the saddles--among +others Mr. Theodore Wilson, correspondent of the New York Herald, +being wounded. In reply our horse-artillery opened on the advancing +Confederates, but the men behind the barricades lay still till +Pickett's troops were within short range. Then they opened, Custer's +repeating rifles pouring out such a shower of lead that nothing could +stand up against it. The repulse was very quick, and as the gray +lines retired to the woods from which but a few minutes before they +had so confidently advanced, all danger of their taking Dinwiddie or +marching to the left and rear of our infantry line was over, at least +for the night. The enemy being thus checked, I sent a staff-officer- +-Captain Sheridan--to General Grant to report what had taken place +during the afternoon, and to say that I proposed to stay at +Dinwiddie, but if ultimately compelled to abandon the place, I would +do so by retiring on the Vaughn road toward Hatcher's Run, for I then +thought the attack might be renewed next morning. Devin and Davies +joined me about dark, and my troops being now well in hand, I sent a +second staff-officer--Colonel John Kellogg--to explain my situation +more fully, and to assure General Grant that I would hold on at +Dinwiddie till forced to let go. + +By following me to Dinwiddie the enemy's infantry had completely +isolated itself, and hence there was now offered the Union troops a +rare opportunity. Lee was outside of his works, just as we desired, +and the general-in-chief realized this the moment he received the +first report of my situation; General Meade appreciated it too from +the information he got from Captain Sheridan, en route to army +headquarters with the first tidings, and sent this telegram to +General Grant : + +"HEADQUARTERS OF THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC, +"March 31, 1865. 9:45 p.m. + +"LIEUTENANT-GENERAL GRANT: + +"Would it not be well for Warren to go down with his whole corps and +smash up the force in front of Sheridan? Humphreys can hold the line +to the Boydton plank-road, and the refusal along with it. Bartlett's +brigade is now on the road from G. Boisseau's, running north, where +it crosses Gravelly Run, he having gone down the White Oak road. +Warren could go at once that way, and take the force threatening +Sheridan in rear at Dinwiddie, and move on the enemy's rear with the +other two. + +"G. G. MEADE, Major-General." + + +An hour later General Grant replied in these words: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"DABNEY'S MILLS, March 311, 1865. 10:15 P. M. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL MEADE, +"Commanding Army of the Potomac. + +Let Warren move in the way you propose, and urge him not to stop for +anything. Let Griffin (Griffin had been ordered by Warren to the +Boydton road to protect his rear) go on as he was first directed. + +"U. S. GRANT, Lieutenant-General." + + +These two despatches were the initiatory steps in sending the Fifth +Corps, under Major-General G. K. Warren, to report to me, and when I +received word of its coming and also that Genera Mackenzie's cavalry +from the Army of the James was likewise to be added to my command, +and that discretionary authority was given me to use all my forces +against Pickett, I resolved to destroy him, if it was within the +bounds of possibility, before he could rejoin Lee. + +In a despatch, dated 10:05 p.m., telling me of the coming of Warren +and Mackenzie, General Grant also said that the Fifth Corps should +reach me by 12 o'clock that night, but at that hour not only had none +of the corps arrived, but no report from it, so believing that if it +came all the way down to Dinwiddie the next morning, our opportunity +would be gone, I concluded that it would be best to order Warren to +move in on the enemy's rear while the cavalry attacked in front, and, +therefore, at 3 o'clock in the morning of April 1 sent this despatch +to General Warren: + +"CAVALRY HEADQUARTERS, DINWIDDIE C. H., +"April 1, 1865--3. A.M. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL WARREN, +"Commanding Fifth Army Corps. + +I am holding in front of Dinwiddie Court House, on the road leading +to Five Forks, for three-quarters of a mile with General Custer's +division. The enemy are in his immediate front, lying so as to cover +the road just this side of A. Adams's house, which leads across +Chamberlain's bed, or run. I understand you have a division at J.[G] +Boisseau's; if so, you are in rear of the enemy's line and almost on +his flank. I will hold on here. Possibly they may attack Custer at +daylight; if so, attack instantly and in full force. Attack at +daylight anyhow, and I will make an effort to get the road this side +of Adams's house, and if I do, you can capture the whole of them. +Any force moving down the road I am holding, or on the White Oak +road, will be in the enemy's rear, and in all probability get any +force that may escape you by a flank movement. Do not fear my +leaving here. If the enemy remains, I shall fight at daylight. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General. + + +With daylight came a slight fog, but it lifted almost immediately, +and Merritt moved Custer and Devin forward. As these divisions +advanced the enemy's infantry fell back on the Five Forks road, Devin +pressing him along the road, while Custer extended on the left over +toward Chamberlain's Run, Crook being held in watch along Stony +Creek, meanwhile, to be utilized as circumstances might require when +Warren attacked. + +The order of General Meade to Warren the night of March 31--a copy +being sent me also--was positive in its directions, but as midnight +came without a sign of or word from the Fifth Corps, notwithstanding +that was the hour fixed for its arrival, I nevertheless assumed that +there were good reasons for its non-appearance, but never once +doubted that measures would be taken to comply with my despatch Of +3 A. M. and therefore hoped that, as Pickett was falling back slowly +toward Five Forks, Griffin's and Crawford's divisions would come in +on the Confederate left and rear by the Crump road near J.[G] +Boisseau's house. + +But they did not reach there till after the enemy had got by. As a +matter of fact, when Pickett was passing the all-important point +Warren's men were just breaking from the bivouac in which their chief +had placed them the night before, and the head of Griffin's division +did not get to Boisseau's till after my cavalry, which meanwhile had +been joined by Ayres's division of the Fifth Corps by way of the +Boydton and Dabney roads. By reason of the delay in moving Griffin +and Crawford, the enemy having escaped, I massed the Fifth Corps at +J.[G] Boisseau's so that the men could be rested, and directed it to +remain there; General Warren himself had not then come up. General +Mackenzie, who had reported just after daybreak, was ordered at first +to stay at Dinwiddie Court House, but later was brought along the +Five Forks road to Dr. Smith's, and Crook's division was directed to +continue watching the crossings of Stony Creek and Chamberlain's Run. + +That we had accomplished nothing but to oblige our foe to retreat was +to me bitterly disappointing, but still feeling sure that he would +not give up the Five Forks crossroads without a fight, I pressed him +back there with Merritt's cavalry, Custer advancing on the Scott +road, while Devin drove the rearguard along that leading from J.[G] +Boisseau's to Five Forks. + +By 2 o'clock in the afternoon Merritt had forced the enemy inside his +intrenchments, which began with a short return about three-quarters +of a mile east of the Forks and ran along the south side of the White +Oak road to a point about a mile west of the Forks. From the left of +the return over toward Hatcher's Run was posted Mumford's cavalry, +dismounted. In the return itself was Wallace's brigade, and next on +its right came Ransom's, then Stewart's, then Terry's, then Corse's. +On the right of Corse was W. H. F. Lee's division of cavalry. Ten +pieces of artillery also were in this line, three on the right of the +works, three near the centre at the crossroads, and four on the left, +in the return. Rosser's cavalry was guarding the Confederate trains +north of Hatcher's Run beyond the crossing of the Ford road. + +I felt certain the enemy would fight at Five Forks--he had to--so, +while we were getting up to his intrenchments, I decided on my plan +of battle. This was to attack his whole front with Merritt's two +cavalry divisions, make a feint of turning his right flank, and with +the Fifth Corps assail his left. As the Fifth Corps moved into +action, its right flank was to be covered by Mackenzie's cavalry, +thus entirely cutting off Pickett's troops from communication with +Lee's right flank, which rested near the Butler house at the junction +of the Claiborne and White Oaks roads. In execution of this plan, +Merritt worked his men close in toward the intrenchments, and while +he was thus engaged, I ordered Warren to bring up the Fifth Corps, +sending the order by my engineer officer, Captain Gillespie, who had +reconnoitred the ground in the neighborhood of Gravelly Run Church, +where the infantry was to form for attack. + +Gillespie delivered the order about 1 o'clock, and when the corps was +put in motion, General Warren joined me at the front. Before he +came, I had received, through Colonel Babcock, authority from General +Grant to relieve him, but I did not wish to do it, particularly on +the eve of battle; so, saying nothing at all about the message +brought me, I entered at once on the plan for defeating Pickett, +telling Warren how the enemy was posted, explaining with considerable +detail, and concluding by stating that I wished his troops to be +formed on the Gravelly Church road, near its junction with the White +Oak road, with two divisions to the front, aligned obliquely to the +White Oak road, and one in reserve, opposite the centre of these two. + +General Warren seemed to understand me clearly, and then left to join +his command, while I turned my attention to the cavalry, instructing +Merritt to begin by making demonstrations as though to turn the +enemy's right, and to assault the front of the works with his +dismounted cavalry as soon as Warren became engaged. Afterward I +rode around to Gravelly Run Church, and found the head of Warren's +column just appearing, while he was sitting under a tree making a +rough sketch of the ground. I was disappointed that more of the +corps was not already up, and as the precious minutes went by without +any apparent effort to hurry the troops on to the field, this +disappointment grew into disgust. At last I expressed to Warren my +fears that the cavalry might expend all their ammunition before the +attack could be made, that the sun would go down before the battle +could be begun, or that troops from Lee's right, which, be it +remembered, was less than three miles away from my right, might, by +striking my rear, or even by threatening it, prevent the attack on +Pickett. + +Warren did not seem to me to be at all solicitous; his manner +exhibited decided apathy, and he remarked with indifference that +"Bobby Lee was always getting people into trouble." With unconcern +such as this, it is no wonder that fully three hours' time was +consumed in marching his corps from J.[G] Boisseau's to Gravelly Run +Church, though the distance was but two miles. However, when my +patience was almost worn out, Warren reported his troops ready, +Ayres's division being formed on the west side of the Gravelly Church +road, Crawford's on the east side, and Griffin in reserve behind the +right of Crawford, a little different from my instructions. The +corps had no artillery present, its batteries, on account of the mud, +being still north of Gravelly Run. Meanwhile Merritt had been busy +working his men close up to the intrenchments from the angle of the +return west, along the White Oak road. + +About 4 o'clock Warren began the attack. He was to assault the left +flank of the Confederate infantry at a point where I knew Pickett's +intrenchments were refused, almost at right angles with the White Oak +road. I did not know exactly how far toward Hatcher's Run this part +of the works extended, for here the videttes of Mumford's cavalry +were covering, but I did know where the refusal began. This return, +then, was the point I wished to assail, believing that if the assault +was made with spirit, the line could be turned. I therefore intended +that Ayres and Crawford should attack the refused trenches squarely, +and when these two divisions and Merritt's cavalry became hotly +engaged, Griffin's division was to pass around the left of the +Confederate line; and I personally instructed Griffin how I wished +him to go in, telling him also that as he advanced, his right flank +would be taken care of by Mackenzie,who was to be pushed over toward +the Ford road and Hatcher's Run. + +The front of the corps was oblique to the White Oak road; and on +getting there, it was to swing round to the left till perpendicular +to the road, keeping closed to the left. Ayres did his part well, +and to the letter, bringing his division square up to the front of +the return near the angle; but Crawford did not wheel to the left, as +was intended. On the contrary, on receiving fire from Mumford's +cavalry, Crawford swerved to the right and moved north from the +return, thus isolating his division from Ayres; and Griffin, +uncertain of the enemy's position, naturally followed Crawford. + +The deflection of this division on a line of march which finally +brought it out on the Ford road near C. Young's house, frustrated the +purpose I had in mind when ordering the attack, and caused a gap +between Ayres and Crawford, of which the enemy quickly took +advantage, and succeeded in throwing a part of Ayres's division into +confusion. At this juncture I sent word to General Warren to have +Crawford recalled; for the direction he was following was not only a +mistaken one, but, in case the assault at the return failed, he ran +great risk of capture. Warren could not be found, so I then sent for +Griffin--first by Colonel Newhall, and then by Colonel Sherman--to +come to the aid of Ayres, who was now contending alone with that part +of the enemy's infantry at the return. By this time Griffin had +observed and appreciated Crawford's mistake, however, and when the +staff-officers reached him, was already faced to the left; so, +marching across Crawford's rear, he quickly joined Ayres, who +meanwhile had rallied his troops and carried the return. + +When Ayres's division went over the flank of the enemy's works, +Devin's division of cavalry, which had been assaulting the front, +went over in company with it; and hardly halting to reform, the +intermingling infantry and dismounted cavalry swept down inside the +intrenchments, pushing to and beyond Five Forks, capturing thousands +of prisoners. The only stand the enemy tried to make was when he +attempted to form near the Ford road. Griffin pressed him so hard +there, however, that he had to give way in short order, and many of +his men, with three pieces of artillery, fell into the hands of +Crawford while on his circuitous march. + +The right of Custer's division gained a foothold on the enemy's works +simultaneously with Devin's, but on the extreme left Custer had a +very severe combat with W. H. F. Lee's cavalry, as well as with +Corse's and Terry's infantry. Attacking Terry and Corse with +Pennington's brigade dismounted, he assailed Lee's cavalry with his +other two brigades mounted, but Lee held on so obstinately that +Custer gained but little ground till our troops, advancing behind the +works, drove Corse and Terry out. Then Lee made no further stand +except at the west side of the Gillian field, where, assisted by +Corse's brigade, he endeavored to cover the retreat, but just before +dark Custer, in concert with some Fifth Corps regiments under Colonel +Richardson, drove ihe last of the enemy westward on the White Oak +road. + +Our success was unqualified; we had overthrown Pickett, taken six +guns, thirteen battle-flags, and nearly six thousand prisoners. When +the battle was practically over, I turned to consider my position +with reference to the main Confederate army. My troops, though +victorious, were isolated from the Army of the Potomac, for on the +31st of March the extreme left of that army had been thrown back +nearly to the Boydton plank-road, and hence there was nothing to +prevent the enemy's issuing from his trenches at the intersection of +the White Oak and Claiborne roads and marching directly on my rear. +I surmised that he might do this that night or early next morning. +It was therefore necessary to protect myself in this critical +situation, and General Warren having sorely disappointed me, both in +the moving of his corps and in its management during the battle, I +felt that he was not the man to rely upon under such circumstances, +and deeming that it was to the best interest of the service as well +as but just to myself, I relieved him, ordering him to report to +General Grant. + +I then put Griffin in command of the Fifth Corps, and directed him to +withdraw from the pursuit as quickly as he could after following the +enemy a short distance, and form in line of battle near Gravelly Run +Church, at right angles with the White Oak road, with Ayres and +Crawford facing toward the enemy at the junction of the White Oak and +Claiborne roads, leaving Bartlett, now commanding Griffin's division, +near the Ford road. Mackenzie also was left on the Ford road at the +crossing of Hatcher's Run, Merritt going into camp on the Widow +Gillian's plantation. As I had been obliged to keep Crook's division +along Stony Creek throughout the day, it had taken no active part in +the battle. + +Years after the war, in 1879, a Court of Inquiry was given General +Warren in relation to his conduct on the day of the battle. He +assumed that the delay in not granting his request for an inquiry, +which was first made at the close of the war, was due to opposition +on my part. In this he was in error; I never opposed the ordering of +the Court, but when it was finally decided to convene it I naturally +asked to be represented by counsel, for the authorization of the +Inquiry was so peculiarly phrased that it made me practically a +respondent. + + +"NEW YORK CITY, May 3, 1880 + +"MAJOR-GENERAL W. S. HANCOCK, U. S. A. +"President Court of Inquiry, Governor's Island. + +"Sir: Since my arrival in this city, under a subpoena to appear and +testify before the Court of which you are president, I have been +indirectly and unofficially informed that the Court some time ago +forwarded an invitation to me (which has not been received) to appear +personally or by counsel, in order to aid it in obtaining a knowledge +as to the facts concerning the movements terminating in the battle of +'Five Forks,' with reference to the direct subjects of its inquiry. +Any invitation of this character I should always and do consider it +incumbent on me to accede to, and do everything in my power in +furtherance of the specific purposes for which courts of inquiry are +by law instituted. + +"The order convening the Court (a copy of which was not received by +me at my division headquarters until two days after the time +appointed for the Court to assemble) contemplates an inquiry based on +the application of Lieutenant Colonel G. K. Warren, Corps of +Engineers, as to his conduct while major-general commanding the Fifth +Army Corps, under my command, in reference to accusations or +imputations assumed in the order to have been made against him, and I +understand through the daily press that my official report of the +battle of Five Forks has been submitted by him as a basis of inquiry. + +"If it is proposed to inquire, either directly or indirectly, as to +any action of mine so far as the commanding general Fifth Army Corps +was concerned, or my motives for such action, I desire to be +specifically informed wherein such action or transaction is alleged +to contain an accusation or imputation to become a subject of +inquiry, so that, knowing what issues are raised, I may intelligently +aid the Court in arriving at the facts. + +"It is a long time since the battle of Five Forks was fought, and +during the time that has elapsed the official reports of that battle +have been received and acknowledged by the Government; but now, when +the memory of events has in many instances grown dim, and three of +the principal actors on that field are dead--Generals Griffin, +Custer, and Devin, whose testimony would have been valuable--an +investigation is ordered which might perhaps do injustice unless the +facts pertinent to the issues are fully developed. + +"My duties are such that it will not be convenient for me to be +present continuously during the sessions of the Court. In order, +however, that everything may be laid before it in my power pertinent +to such specific issues as aie legally raised, I beg leave to +introduce Major Asa Bird Gardner as my counsel. + +"Very respectfully, + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Lieut.-General." + + +Briefly stated, in my report of the battle of Five Forks there were +four imputations concerning General Warren. The first implied that +Warren failed to reach me on the 1st of April, when I had reason to +expect him; the second, that the tactical handling of his corps was +unskillful; the third, that he did not exert himself to get his corps +up to Gravelly Run Church; and the fourth, that when portions of his +line gave way he did not exert himself to restore confidence to his +troops. The Court found against him on the first and second counts, +and for him on the third and fourth. This finding was unsatisfactory +to General Warren, for he hoped to obtain such an unequivocal +recognition of his services as to cast discredit on my motives for +relieving him. These were prompted by the conditions alone--by the +conduct of General Warren as described, and my consequent lack of +confidence in him. + +It will be remembered that in my conversation with General Grant on +the 30th, relative to the suspension of operations because of the +mud, I asked him to let me have the Sixth Corps to help me in +breaking in on the enemy's right, but that it could not be sent me; +it will be recalled also that the Fifth Corps was afterward tendered +and declined. From these facts it has been alleged that I was +prejudiced against General Warren, but this is not true. As we had +never been thrown much together I knew but little of him. I had no +personal objection to him, and certainly could have none to his +corps. I was expected to do an extremely dangerous piece of work, +and knowing the Sixth Corps well--my cavalry having campaigned with +it so successfully in the Shenandoah Valley, I naturally preferred +it, and declined the Fifth for no other reason. But the Sixth could +not be given, and the turn of events finally brought me the Fifth +after my cavalry, under the most trying difficulties, had drawn the +enemy from his works, and into such a position as to permit the +realization of General Grant's hope to break up with my force Lee's +right flank. Pickett's isolation offered an opportunity which we +could not afford to neglect, and the destruction of his command would +fill the measure of General Grant's expectations as well as meet my +own desires. The occasion was not an ordinary one, and as I thought +that Warren had not risen to its demand in the battle, I deemed it +injudicious and unsafe under the critical conditions existing to +retain him longer. That I was justified in this is plain to all who +are disposed to be fair-minded, so with the following extract from +General Sherman's review of the proceedings of the Warren Court, and +with which I am convinced the judgment of history will accord, I +leave the subject: + +"....It would be an unsafe and dangerous rule to hold the commander +of an army in battle to a technical adherence to any rule of conduct +for managing his command. He is responsible for results, and holds +the lives and reputations of every officer and soldier under his +orders as subordinate to the great end--victory. The most important +events are usually compressed into an hour, a minute, and he cannot +stop to analyze his reasons. He must act on the impulse, the +conviction, of the instant, and should be sustained in his +conclusions, if not manifestly unjust. The power to command men, and +give vehement impulse to their joint action, is something which +cannot be defined by words, but it is plain and manifest in battles, +and whoever commands an army in chief must choose his subordinates by +reason of qualities which can alone be tested in actual conflict. + +"No one has questioned the patriotism, integrity, and great +intelligence of General Warren. These are attested by a long record +of most excellent service, but in the clash of arms at and near Five +Forks, March 31 and April 1, 1865, his personal activity fell short +of the standard fixed by General Sheridan, on whom alone rested the +great responsibility for that and succeeding days. + +"My conclusion is that General Sheridan was perfectly justified in +his action in this case, and he must be fully and entirely sustained +if the United States expects great victories by her arms in the +future." + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +RESULT OF THE BATTLE OF FIVE FORKS--RETREAT OF LEE--AN INTERCEPTED +DESPATCH--AT AMELIA COURT HOUSE--BATTLE OF SAILOR'S CREEK--THE +CONFEDERATES' STUBBORN RESISTANCE--A COMPLETE VICTORY--IMPORTANCE OF +THE BATTLE. + +When the news of the battle at Five Forks reached General Grant, he +realized that the decisive character of our victory would necessitate +the immediate abandonment of Richmond and Petersburg by the enemy; +and fearing that Lee would escape without further injury, he issued +orders, the propriety of which must be settled by history, to assault +next morning the whole intrenched line. But Lee could not retreat at +once. He had not anticipated, dissster at Five Forks, and hence was +unprepared to withdraw on the moment; and the necessity of getting +off his trains and munitions of war, as well as being obliged to +cover the flight of the Confederate Government, compelled him to hold +on to Richmond and Petersburg till the afternoon of the 2d, though +before that Parke, Ord, and Wright had carried his outer +intrenchments at several points, thus materially shortening the line +of investment. + +The night of the 1st of April, General Humphreys's corps-the Second- +had extended its left toward the White Oak road, and early next +morning, under instructions from General Grant, Miles's division of +that corps reported to me, and supporting him with Ayres's and +Crawford's divisions of the Fifth Corps, I then directed him to +advance toward Petersburg and attack the enemy's works at the +intersection of the Claiborne and White Oak roads. + +Such of the enemy as were still in the works Miles easily forced +across Hatcher's Run, in the direction of Sutherland's depot, but the +Confederates promptly took up a position north of the little stream, +and Miles being anxious to attack, I gave him leave, but just at this +time General Humphreys came up with a request to me from General +Meade to return Miles. On this request I relinquished command of the +division, when, supported by the Fifth Corps it could have broken in +the enemy's right at a vital point; and I have always since regretted +that I did so, for the message Humphreys conveyed was without +authority from General Grant, by whom Miles had been sent to me, but +thinking good feeling a desideratum just then, and wishing to avoid +wrangles, I faced the Fifth Corps about and marched it down to Five +Forks, and out the Ford road to the crossing of Hatcher's Run. After +we had gone, General Grant, intending this quarter of the field to be +under my control, ordered Humphreys with his other two divisions to +move to the right, in toward Petersburg. This left Miles entirely +unsupported, and his gallant attack made soon after was unsuccessful +at first, but about 3 o'clock in the afternoon he carried the point +which covered the retreat from Petersburg and Richmond. + +Merritt had been sent westward, meanwhile, in the direction of Ford's +Station, to break the enemy's horse which had been collecting to the +north of Hatcher's Run. Meeting, with but little opposition, Merritt +drove this cavalry force in a northerly direction toward Scott's +Corners, while the Fifth Corps was pushed toward Sutherland's depot, +in the hope of coming in on the rear of the force that was +confronting Miles when I left him. Crawford and Merritt engaged the +enemy lightly just before night, but his main column, retreating +along the river road south of the Appomattox, had got across Namozine +Creek, and the darkness prevented our doing more than to pick up some +stragglers. The next morning the pursuit was resumed, the cavalry +again in advance, the Fifth Corps keeping up with it all the while, +and as we pressed our adversaries hundreds and hundreds of prisoners, +armed and unarmed, fell into our hands, together with many wagons and +five pieces of artillery. At Deep Creek the rearguard turned on us, +and a severe skirmish took place. Merritt, finding the enemy very +strong, was directed to await the arrival of Crook and for the rear +division of the Fifth Corps; but by the time they reached the creek, +darkness had again come to protect the Confederates, and we had to be +content with meagre results at that point. + +>From the beginning it was apparent that Lee, in his retreat, was +making for Amelia Court House, where his columns north and south of +the Appomattox River could join, and where, no doubt, he expected to +meet supplies, so Crook was ordered to march early on April 4 to +strike the Danville railroad, between Jettersville and Burkeville, +and then move south along the railroad toward JettersVille, Merritt +to move toward Amelia Court House, and the Fifth Corps to +Jettersville itself. + +The Fifth Corps got to Jettersville about 5 in the afternoon, and I +immediately intrenched it across the Burkeville road with the +determination to stay there till the main army could come up, for I +hoped we could force Lee to surrender at Amelia Court House, since a +firm hold on Jettersville would cut him off from his line of retreat +toward Burkeville. + +Accompanied only by my escort--the First United States Cavalry, about +two hundred strong--I reached Jettersville some little time before +the Fifth Corps, and having nothing else at hand I at once deployed +this handful of men to cover the crossroads till the arrival of the +corps. Just as the troopers were deploying, a man on a mule, heading +for Burkeville, rode into my pickets. He was arrested, of course, +and being searched there was found in his boots this telegram in +duplicate, signed by Lee's Commissary General. + +"The army is at Amelia Court House, short of provisions. Send +300,000 rations quickly to BurkeVille Junction." One copy was +addressed to the supply department at Danville, and the other to that +at Lynchburg. I surmised that the telegraph lines north of +Burkeville had been broken by Crook after the despatches were +written, which would account for their being transmitted by +messenger. There was thus revealed not only the important fact that +Lee was concentrating at Amelia Court House, but also a trustworthy +basis for estimating his troops, so I sent word to Crook to strike up +the railroad toward me, and to Merritt--who, as I have said, had +followed on the heels of the enemy--to leave Mackenzie there and +himself close in on Jettersville. Staff-officers were also +despatched to hurry up Griffin with theFifth Corps, and his tired men +redoubled their strides. + +My troops too were hard up for rations, for in the pursuit we could +not wait for our trains, so I concluded to secure if possible these +provisions intended for Lee. To this end I directed Young to send +four of his best scouts to Burkeville Junction. There they were to +separate, two taking the railroad toward Lynchburg and two toward +Danville, and as soon as a telegraph station was reached the telegram +was to be transmitted as it had been written and the provisions thus +hurried forward. + +Although the Fifth Corps arrived at Jettersville the evening of April +4, as did also Crook's and Merritt's cavalry, yet none of the army of +the Potomac came up till about 3 o'clock the afternoon of the 5th, +the Second Corps, followed by the Sixth, joining us then. General +Meade arrived at Jettersville an hour earlier, but being ill, +requested me to put his troops in position. The Fifth Corps being +already intrenched across the Amelia Court House road facing north, I +placed the Sixth on its right and the Second on its left as they +reached the ground. + +As the enemy had been feeling us ever since morning--to learn what he +was up to I directed Crook to send Davies's brigade on a +reconnoissance to Paine's crossroads. Davies soon found out that Lee +was trying to escape by that flank, for at the crossroads he found +the Confederate trains and artillery moving rapidly westward. Having +driven away the escort, Davies succeeded in burning nearly two +hundred wagons, and brought off five pieces of artillery. Among +these wagons were some belonging to General, Lee's and to General +Fitzhugh Lee's headquarters. This work through, Davies withdrew and +rejoined Crook, who, with Smith and Gregg, was established near Flat +Creek. + +It being plain that Lee would attempt to escape as soon as his trains +were out of the way, I was most anxious to attack him when the Second +Corps began to arrive, for I felt certain that unless we did so he +would succeed in passing by our left flank, and would thus again make +our pursuit a stern-chase; but General Meade, whose plan of attack +was to advance his right flank on Amelia Court House, objected to +assailing before all his troops were up. + +I then sent despatches to General Grant, explaining what Davies had +done, and telling him that the Second Corps was arriving, and that I +wished he himself was present. I assured him of my confidence in our +capturing Lee if we properly exerted ourselves, and informed him, +finally, that I would put all my cavalry, except Mackenzie, on my +left, and that, with such a disposition of my forces, I could see no +escape for Lee. I also inclosed him this letter, which had just been +captured: + +"AMELIA C. H., April 5, 1865. + +DEAR MAMMA: + +"Our army is ruined, I fear. We are all safe as yet. Shyron left us +sick. John Taylor is well--saw him yesterday. We are in line of +battle this morning. General Robert Lee is in the field near us. My +trust is still in the justice of our cause, and that of God. General +Hill is killed. I saw Murray a few minutes since. Bernard, Terry +said, was taken prisoner, but may yet get out. I send this by a +negro I see passing up the railroad to Mechlenburg. Love to all. + +"Your devoted son, + +"Wm. B. TAYLOR, Colonel." + + +General Grant, who on the 5th was accompanying General Ord's column +toward Burkeville Junction, did not receive this intelligence till +nearly nightfall, when within about ten miles of the Junction. He +set out for Jettersville immediately, but did not reach us till near +midnight, too late of course to do anything that night. Taking me +with him, we went over to see Meade, whom he then directed to advance +early in the morning on Amelia Court House. In this interview Grant +also stated that the orders Meade had already issued would permit +Lee's escape, and therefore must be changed, for it was not the aim +only to follow the enemy, but to get ahead of him, remarking during +the conversation that, "he had no doubt Lee was moving right then." +On this same occasion Meade expressed a desire to have in the +proposed attack all the troops of the Army of the Potomac under his +own command, and asked for the return of the Fifth Corps. I made no +objections, and it was ordered to report, to him. + +When, on the morning of the 6th, Meade advanced toward Amelia Court +House, he found, as predicted, that Lee was gone. It turned out that +the retreat began the evening of the 5th and continued all night. +Satisfied that this would be the case, I did not permit the cavalry +to participate in Meade's useless advance, but shifted it out toward +the left to the road running from Deatonsville to Rice's station, +Crook leading and Merritt close up. Before long the enemy's trains +were discovered on this road, but Crook could make but little +impression on them, they were so strongly guarded; so, leaving +Stagg's brigade and Miller's battery about three miles southwest of +Deatonsville--where the road forks, with a branch leading north +toward the Appomattox--to harass the retreating column and find a +vulnerable point, I again shifted the rest of the cavalry toward the +left, across-country, but still keeping parallel to the enemy's line +of march. + +Just after crossing Sailor's Greek, a favorable opportunity offering, +both Merritt and Crook attacked vigorously, gained the Rice's Station +road, destroyed several hundred wagons, made many prisoners, and +captured sixteen pieces of artillery. This was important, but more +valuable still was the fact that we were astride the enemy's line of +retreat, and had cut off from joining Longstreet, waiting at Rice's +Station, a corps of Confederate infantry under General Ewell, +composed of Anderson's, Kershaw's, and Custis Lee's divisions. +Stagg's brigade and Miller's battery, which, as I have said, had been +left at the forks of the Deatonsville road, had meanwhile broken in +between the rear of Ewell's column and the head of Gordon's, forcing +Gordon to abandon his march for Rice's Station, and to take the +right-hand road at the forks, on which he was pursued by General +Humphreys. + +The complete isolation of Ewell from Longstreet in his front and +Gordon in his rear led to the battle of Sailor's Creek, one of the +severest conflicts of the war, for the enemy fought with desperation +to escape capture, and we, bent on his destruction, were no less +eager and determined. The capture of Ewell, with six of his generals +and most of his troops, crowned our success, but the fight was so +overshadowed by the stirring events of the surrender three days +later, that the battle has never been accorded the prominence it +deserves. + +The small creek from which the field takes its name flows in a +northwesterly direction across the road leading from Deatonsville to +Rice's Station. By shifting to the left, Merritt gained the Rice's +Station road west of the creek, making havoc of the wagon-trains, +while Crook struck them further on and planted himself square across +the road. This blocked Ewell, who, advancing Anderson to some high +ground west of the creek, posted him behind barricades, with the +intention of making a hard fight there, while the main body should +escape through the woods in a westerly direction to roads that led to +Farmville. This was prevented, however, by Crook forming his +division, two brigades dismounted and one mounted, and at once +assaulting all along Anderson's front and overlapping his right, +while Merritt fiercely attacked to the right of Crook. The enemy +being thus held, enabled the Sixth Corps--which in the meantime I had +sent for--to come upon the ground, and Ewell, still contending with +the cavalry, found himself suddenly beset by this new danger from his +rear. To, meet it, he placed Kershaw to the right and Custis Lee to +the left of the Rice's Station road, facing them north toward and +some little distance from Sailor's Creek, supporting Kershaw with +Commander Tucker's Marine brigade. Ewell's skirmishers held the line +of Sailor's Creek, which runs through a gentle valley, the north +slope of which was cleared ground. + +By General Grant's directions the Sixth Corps had been following my +route of march since the discovery, about 9 o'clock in the morning, +that Lee had decamped from Amelia Court House. Grant had promptly +informed me of this in a note, saying, "The Sixth Corps will go in +with a vim any place you may dictate," so when I sent word to Wright +of the enemy's isolation, and asked him to hurry on with all speed, +his gallant corps came as fast as legs could carry them, he sending +to me successively Major McClellan and Colonel Franklin, of his +staff, to report his approach. + +I was well advised as to the position of the enemy through +information brought me by an intelligent young soldier, William A. +Richardson, Company "A," Second Ohio, who, in one of the cavalry +charges on Anderson, had cleared the barricades and made his way back +to my front through Ewell's line. Richardson had told me just how +the main body of the enemy was posted, so as Seymour's division +arrived I directed General Wright to put it on the right of the road, +while Wheaton's men, coming up all hot and out of breath, promptly +formed on Seymour's left. Both divisions thus aligned faced +southwest toward Sailor's Creek, and the artillery of the corps being +massed to the left and front of the Hibbon house, without waiting for +Getty's division--for I feared that if we delayed longer the enemy +might effect his escape toward Farmville--the general attack was +begun. Seymour and Wheaton, moving forward together, assailed the +enemy's front and left, and Stagg's brigade, too, which in the mean +time had been placed between Wheaton's left and Devin's right, went +at him along with them, Merritt and Crook resuming the fight from +their positions in front of Anderson. The enemy, seeing little +chance of escape, fought like a tiger at bay, but both Seymour and +Wheaton pressed him vigorously, gaining ground at all points except +just to the right of the road, where Seymour's left was checked. +Here the Confederates burst back on us in a counter-charge, surging +down almost to the creek, but the artillery, supported by Getty, who +in the mean time had come on the ground, opened on them so terribly +that this audacious and furious onset was completely broken, though +the gallant fellows fell back to their original line doggedly, and +not until after they had almost gained the creek. Ewell was now +hemmed in on every side, and all those under his immediate command +were captured. Merritt and Crook had also broken up Anderson by this +time, but he himself, and about two thousand disorganized men escaped +by making their way through the woods toward the Appomattox River +before they could be entirely enveloped. Night had fallen when the +fight was entirely over, but Devin was pushed on in pursuit for about +two miles, part of the Sixth Corps following to clinch a victory +which not only led to the annihilation of one corps of Lee's +retreating army, but obliged Longstreet to move up to Farmville, so +as to take a road north of the Appomattox River toward Lynchburg +instead of continuing toward Danville. + +At the close of the battle I sent one of my staff--Colonel Redwood +Price--to General Grant to report what had been done; that we had +taken six generals and from nine to ten thousand prisoners. On his +way Price stopped at the headquarters of General Meade, where he +learned that not the slightest intelligence of the occurrence on my +line had been received, for I not being under Meade's command, he had +paid no attention to my movements. Price gave the story of the +battle, and General Meade, realizing its importance, sent directions +immediately to General Wright to make his report of the engagement to +the headquarters of the Army of the Potomac, assuming that Wright was +operating independently of me in the face of Grant's despatch Of +2 o'clock, which said that Wright was following the cavalry and would +"go in with a vim" wherever I dictated. Wright could not do else +than comply with Meade's orders in the case, and I, being then in +ignorance of Meade's reasons for the assumption, could say nothing. +But General Grant plainly intending, and even directing, that the +corps should be under my command, remedied this phase of the matter, +when informed of what had taken place, by requiring Wright to send a +report of the battle through me. What he then did, and what his +intentions and orders were, are further confirmed by a reference to +the episode in his "Memoirs," where he gives his reasons for ordering +the Sixth Corps to abandon the move on Amelia Court House and pass to +the left of the army. On the same page he also says, referring to +the 6th of April: "The Sixth Corps now remained with the cavalry +under Sheridan's direct command until after the surrender." He +unquestionably intended all of this, but his purpose was partly +frustrated by General Meade's action next morning in assuming +direction of the movements of the corps; and before General Grant +became aware of the actual conditions the surrender was at hand. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +LINCOLN'S LACONIC DESPATCH--CAPTURING LEE'S SUPPLIES--DELIGHTED +ENGINEERS--THE CONFEDERATES' LAST EFFORT--A FLAG OF TRUCE--GENERAL +GEARY'S "LAST DITCH" ABSURDITY--MEETING OF GRANT AND LEE--THE +SURRENDER--ESTIMATE OF GENERAL GRANT. + +The first report of the battle of Sailor's Creek that General Grant +received was, as already stated, an oral message carried by Colonel +Price, of my staff. Near midnight I sent a despatch giving the names +of the generals captured. These were Ewell, Kershaw, Barton, Corse, +Dubose, and Custis Lee. In the same despatch I wrote: "If the thing +is pressed, I think that Lee will surrender." When Mr. Lincoln, at +City Point, received this word from General Grant, who was +transmitting every item of news to the President, he telegraphed +Grant the laconic message: "Let the thing be pressed." The morning of +the 7th we moved out at a very early hour, Crook's division marching +toward Farmville in direct pursuit, while Merritt and Mackenzie were +ordered to Prince Edward's Court House to anticipate any effort Lee +might make to escape through that place toward Danville since it had +been discovered that Longstreet had slipped away already from the +front of General Ord's troops at Rice's Station. Crook overtook the +main body of the Confederates at Farmville, and promptly attacked +their trains on the north side of the Appomattox with Gregg's +brigade, which was fiercely turned upon and forced to re-cross the +river with the loss of a number of prisoner's, among them Gregg +himself. When Crook sent word of this fight, it was clear that Lee +had abandoned all effort to escape to the southwest by way of +Danville. Lynchburg was undoubtedly his objective point now; so, +resolving to throw my cavalry again across his path, and hold him +till the infantry could overtake him, I directed everything on +Appomattox depot, recalling Crook the night of the 7th to Prospect +Station, while Merritt camped at Buffalo Creek, and Mackenzie made a +reconnoissance along the Lynchburg railroad. + +At break of day, April 8, Merritt and Mackenzie united with Crook at +Prospect Station, and the cavalry all moved then toward Appomattox +depot. Hardly had it started when one of the scouts--Sergeant White- +-informed me that there were four trains of cars at the depot loaded +with supplies for Lee's army; these had been sent from Lynchburg, in +compliance with the telegram of Lee's commissary-general, which +message, it will be remembered, was captured and transmitted to +Lynchburg by two of Young's scouts on the 4th. Sergeant White, who +had been on the lookout for the trains ever since sending the +despatch, found them several miles west of Appomattox depot feeling +their way along, in ignorance of Lee's exact position. As he had the +original despatch with him, and took pains to dwell upon the pitiable +condition of Lee's army, he had little difficulty in persuading the +men in charge of the trains to bring them east of Appomattox Station, +but fearing that the true state of affairs would be learned before +long, and the trains be returned to Lynchburg, he was painfully +anxious to have them cut off by breaking the track west of the +station. + +The intelligence as to the trains was immediately despatched to +Crook, and I pushed on to join him with Merritt's command. Custer +having the advance, moved rapidly, and on nearing the station +detailed two regiments to make a detour southward to strike the +railroad some distance beyond and break the track. These regiments +set off at a gallop, and in short order broke up the railroad enough +to prevent the escape of the trains, Custer meanwhile taking +possession of the station, but none too soon, for almost at the +moment he did so the advance-guard of Lee's army appeared, bent on +securing the trains. Without halting to look after the cars further, +Custer attacked this advance-guard and had a spirited fight, in which +he drove the Confederates away from the station, captured twenty-five +pieces of artillery, a hospital train, and a large park of wagons, +which, in the hope that they would reach Lynchburg next day, were +being pushed ahead of Lee's main body. + +Devin coming up a little before dusk, was put in on the right of +Custer, and one of Crook's brigades was sent to our left and the +other two held in reserve. I then forced the enemy back on the +Appomattox road to the vicinity of the Court House, and that the +Confederates might have no rest, gave orders to continue the +skirmishing throughout the night. Meanwhile the captured trains had +been taken charge of by locomotive engineers, soldiers of the +command, who were delighted evidently to get back at their old +calling. They amused themselves by running the trains to and fro, +creating much confusion, and keeping up such an unearthly screeching +with the whistles that I was on the point of ordering the cars +burned. They finally wearied of their fun, however, and ran the +trains off to the east toward General Ord's column. + +The night of the 8th I made my headquarters at a little frame house +just south of the station. I did not sleep at all, nor did anybody +else, the entire command being up all night long; indeed, there had +been little rest in the, cavalry for the past eight days. The +necessity of getting Ord's column up was so obvious now that staff- +officer after staff-officer was sent to him and to General Grant +requesting that the infantry be pushed on, for if it could get to the +front, all knew that the rebellion would be ended on the morrow. +Merritt, Crook, Custer, and Devin were present at frequent intervals +during the night, and everybody was overjoyed at the prospect that +our weary work was about to end so happily. Before sun-up General +Ord arrived, and informed me of the approach of his column, it having +been marching the whole night. As he ranked me, of course I could +give him no orders, so after a hasty consultation as to where his +troops should be placed we separated, I riding to the front to +overlook my line near Appomattox Court House, while he went back to +urge along his weary troops. + +The night before General Lee had held a council with his principal +generals, when it was arranged that in the morning General Gordon +should undertake to break through my cavalry, and when I neared my +troops this movement was beginning, a heavy line of infantry bearing +down on us from the direction of the village. In front of Crook and +Mackenzie firing had already begun, so riding to a slight elevation +where a good view of the Confederates could be had, I there came to +the conclusion that it would be unwise to offer more resistance than +that necessary to give Ord time to form, so I directed Merritt to +fall back, and in retiring to shift Devin and Custer to the right so +as to make room for Ord, now in the woods to my rear. Crook, who +with his own and Mackenzie's divisions was on my extreme left +covering some by-roads, was ordered to hold his ground as long as +practicable without sacrificing his men, and, if forced to retire, to +contest with obstinacy the enemy's advance. + +As already stated, I could not direct General Ord's course, he being +my senior, but hastily galloping back to where he was, at the edge of +the timber, I explained to him what was taking place at the front. +Merritt's withdrawal inspired the Confederates, who forthwith began +to press Crook, their line of battle advancing with confidence till +it reached the crest whence I had reconnoitred them. From this +ground they could see Ord's men emerging from the woods, and the +hopelessness of a further attack being plain, the gray lines +instinctively halted, and then began to retire toward a ridge +immediately fronting Appomattox Court House, while Ord, joined on his +right by the Fifth Corps, advanced on them over the ground that +Merritt had abandoned. + +I now directed my steps toward Merritt, who, having mounted his +troopers, had moved them off to the right, and by the time I reached +his headquarters flag he was ready for work, so a move on the enemy's +left was ordered, and every guidon was bent to the front. As the +cavalry marched along parallel with the Confederate line, and in +toward its left, a heavy fire of artillery opened on us, but this +could not check us at such a time, and we soon reached some high +ground about half a mile from the Court House, and from here I could +see in the low valley beyond the village the bivouac undoubtedly of +Lee's army. The troops did not seem to be disposed in battle order, +but on the other side of the bivouac was a line of battle--a heavy +rear-guard--confronting, presumably, General Meade. + +I decided to attack at once, and formations were ordered at a trot +for a charge by Custer's and Devin's divisions down the slope leading +to the camps. Custer was soon ready, but Devin's division being in +rear its formation took longer, since he had to shift further to the +right; Devin's preparations were, therefore, but partially completed +when an aide-decamp galloped up to with the word from Custer, "Lee +has surrendered; do not charge; the white flag is up." The enemy +perceiving that Custer was forming for attack, had sent the flag out +to his front and stopped the charge just in time. I at once sent +word of the truce to General Ord, and hearing nothing more from +Custer himself, I supposed that he had gone down to the Court House +to join a mounted group of Confederates that I could see near there, +so I, too, went toward them, galloping down a narrow ridge, staff and +orderlies following; but we had not got half way to the Court House +when, from a skirt of timber to our right, not more than three +hundred yards distant, a musketry fire was opened on us. This halted +us, when, waving my hat, I called out to the firing party that we +were under a truce, and they were violating it. This did not stop +them, however, so we hastily took shelter in a ravine so situated as +to throw a ridge between us and the danger. + +We traveled in safety down this depression to its mouth, and thence +by a gentle ascent approached the Court House. I was in advance, +followed by a sergeant carrying my battleflag. When I got within +about a hundred and fifty yards of the enemy's line, which was +immediately in front of the Court House, some of the Confederates +leveled their pieces at us, and I again halted. Their officers kept +their men from firing, however, but meanwhile a single-handed contest +had begun behind me, for on looking back I heard a Confederate +soldier demanding my battle-flag from the color-bearer, thinking, no +doubt, that we were coming in as prisoners. The sergeant had drawn +his sabre and was about to cut the man down, but at a word from me he +desisted and carried the flag back to my staff, his assailant quickly +realizing that the boot was on the other leg. + +These incidents determined me to remain where I was till the return +of a staff-officer whom I had sent over to demand an explanation from +the group of Confederates for which I had been heading. He came back +in a few minutes with apologies for what had occurred, and informed +me that General Gordon and General Wilcox were the superior officers +in the group. As they wished me to join them I rode up with my +staff, but we had hardly met when in front of Merritt firing began. +At the sound I turned to General Gordon, who seemed embarrassed by +the occurrence, and remarked: "General, your men fired on me as I was +coming over here, and undoubtedly they are treating Merritt and +Custer the same way. We might as well let them fight it out." He +replied, "There must be some mistake." I then asked, "Why not send a +staff-officer and have your people cease firing; they are violating +the flag." He answered, "I have no staff-officer to send." Whereupon +I said that I would let him have one of mine, and calling for +Lieutenant Vanderbilt Allen, I directed him to carry General Gordon's +orders to General Geary, commanding a small brigade of South Carolina +cavalry, to discontinue firing. Allen dashed off with the message +and soon delivered it, but was made a prisoner, Geary saying, "I do +not care for white flags: South Carolinians never surrender...." By +this time Merritt's patience being exhausted, he ordered an attack, +and this in short order put an end to General Geary's "last ditch" +absurdity, and extricated Allen from his predicament. + +When quiet was restored Gordon remarked: "General Lee asks for a +suspension of hostilities pending the negotiations which he is having +with General Grant." I rejoined: "I have been constantly informed of +the progress of the negotiations, and think it singular that while +such discussions are going on, General Lee should have continued his +march and attempted to break through my lines this morning. I will +entertain no terms except that General Lee shall surrender to General +Grant on his arrival here. If these terms are not accepted we will +renew hostilities." Gordon replied: "General Lee's army is +exhausted. There is no doubt of his surrender to General Grant." + +It was then that General Ord joined us, and after shaking hands all +around, I related the situation to him, and Gordon went away agreeing +to meet us again in half an hour. When the time was up he came back +accompanied by General Longstreet, who brought with him a despatch, +the duplicate of one that had been sent General Grant through General +Meade's lines back on the road over which Lee had been retreating. + +General Longstreet renewed the assurances that already had been given +by Gordon, and I sent Colonel Newhall with the despatch to find +General Grant and bring him to the front. When Newhall started, +everything on our side of the Appomattox Court House was quiet, for +inevitable surrender was at hand, but Longstreet feared that Meade, +in ignorance of the new conditions on my front might attack the +Confederate rearguard. To prevent this I offered to send Colonel J. +W. Forsyth through the enemy's lines to let Meade know of my +agreement, for he too was suspicious that by a renewed correspondence +Lee was endeavoring to gain time for escape. My offer being +accepted, Forsyth set out accompanied by Colonel Fairfax, of +Longstreet's staff, and had no difficulty in accomplishing his +mission. + +About five or six miles from Appomattox, on the road toward Prospect +Station near its intersection with the Walker's Church road, my +adjutant-general, Colonel Newhall, met General Grant, he having +started from north of the Appomattox River for my front the morning +of April 9, in consequence of the following despatches which had been +sent him the night before, after we had captured Appomattox Station +and established a line intercepting Lee: + +"CAVALRY HEADQUARTERS, April 8, 1865--9:20 P. M. + +"LIEUTENANT-GENERAL U. S. GRANT, +"Commanding Armies of the U. S. + +"General: I marched early this morning from Buffalo Creek and +Prospect Station on Appomattox Station, where my scouts had reported +trains of cars with supplies for Lee's army. A short time before +dark General Custer, who had the advance, made a dash at the station, +capturing four trains of supplies with locomotives. One of the +trains was burned and the others were run back toward Farmville for +security. Custer then pushed on toward Appomattox Court House, +driving the enemy--who kept up a heavy fire of artillery--charging +them repeatedly and capturing, as far as reported, twenty-five pieces +of artillery and a number of prisoners and wagons. The First Cavalry +Division supported him on the right. A reconnoissance sent across +the Appomattox reports the enemy moving on the Cumberland road to +Appomattox Station, where they expect to get supplies. Custer is +still pushing on. If General Gibbon and the Fifth Corps can get up +to-night, we will perhaps finish the job in the morning. I do not +think Lee means to surrender until compelled to do so. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + + +"HEADQUARTERS CAVALRY, April 8, 1865--9:40 p.m. + +"LIEUTENANT-GENERAL U. S. GRANT. +"Commanding Armies U. S. + +"GENERAL: Since writing tne accompanying despatch, General Custer +reports that his command has captured in all thirty-five pieces of +artillery, one thousand prisoners--including one general officer--and +from one hundred and fifty to two hundred wagons. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + +In attempting to conduct the lieutenant-general and staff back by a +short route, Newhall lost his bearings for a time, inclining in +toward the enemy's lines too far, but regained the proper direction +without serious loss of time. General Grant arrived about 1 o'clock +in the afternoon, Ord and I, dismounted, meeting him at the edge of +the town, or crossroads, for it was little more. He remaining +mounted, spoke first to me, saying simply, + +"How are you, Sheridan?" I assured him with thanks that I was +"first-rate," when, pointing toward the village, he asked, "Is +General Lee up there?" and I replied: There is his army down in that +valley, and he himself is over in that house (designating McLean's +house) waiting to surrender to you." The General then said, "Come, +let us go over," this last remark being addressed to both Ord and me. +We two then mounted and joined him, while our staff-officers +followed, intermingling with those of the general-in-chief as the +cavalcade took its way to McLean's house near by, and where General +Lee had arrived some time before, in consequence of a message from +General Grant consenting to the interview asked for by Lee through +Meade's front that morning--the consent having been carried by +Colonel Babcock. + +When I entered McLean's house General Lee was standing, as was also +his military secretary, Colonel Marshall, his only staff-officer +present. General Lee was dressed in a new uniform and wore a +handsome sword. His tall, commanding form thus set off contrasted +strongly with the short figure of General Grant, clothed as he was in +a soiled suit, without sword or other insignia of his position except +a pair of dingy shoulder-straps. After being presented, Ord and I, +and nearly all of General Grant's staff, withdrew to await the +agreement as to terms, and in a little while Colonel Babcock came to +the door and said, "The surrender had been made; you can come in +again." + +When we re-entered General Grant was writing; and General Lee, having +in his hand two despatches, which I that morning requested might be +returned, as I had no copies of them, addressed me with the remark: +"I am sorry. It is probable that my cavalry at that point of the +line did not fully understand the agreement." These despatches had +been sent in the forenoon, after the fighting had been stopped, +notifying General Lee that some of his cavalry in front of Crook was +violating the suspension of hostilities by withdrawing. About +3 o'clock in the afternoon the terms of surrender were written out +and accepted, and General Lee left the house, as he departed +cordially shaking hands with General Grant. A moment later he +mounted his chunky gray horse, and lifting his hat as he passed out +of the yard, rode off toward his army, his arrival there being +announced to us by cheering, which, as it progressed, varying in +loudness, told he was riding through the bivouac of the Army of +Northern Virginia. + +The surrender of General Lee practically ended the war of the +rebellion. For four years his army had been the main-stay of the +Confederacy; and the marked ability with which he directed its +operations is evidenced both by his frequent successes and the length +of time he kept up the contest. Indeed, it may be said that till +General Grant was matched against him, he never met an opponent he +did not vanquish, for while it is true that defeat was inflicted on +the Confederates at Antietam and Gettysburg, yet the fruits of these +victories were not gathered, for after each of these battles Lee was +left unmolested till he had a chance to recuperate. + +The assignment of General Grant to the command of the Union armies in +the winter of 1863-64 gave presage of success from the start, for his +eminent abilities had already been proved, and besides, he was a +tower of strength to the Government, because he had the confidence of +the people. They knew that henceforth systematic direction would be +given to our armies in every section of the vast territory over which +active operations were being prosecuted, and further, that this +coherence, this harmony of plan, was the one thing needed to end the +war, for in the three preceding years there had been illustrated most +lamentable effects of the absence of system. From the moment he set +our armies in motion simultaneously, in the spring of 1864, it could +be seen that we should be victorious ultimately, for though on +different lines we were checked now and then, yet we were harassing +the Confederacy at so many vital points that plainly it must yield to +our blows. Against Lee's army, the forefront of the Confederacy, +Grant pitted himself; and it may be said that the Confederate +commander was now, for the first time, overmatched, for against all +his devices--the products of a mind fertile in defense--General Grant +brought to bear not only the wealth of expedient which had hitherto +distinguished him, but also an imperturbable tenacity, particularly +in the Wilderness and on the march to the James, without which the +almost insurmountable obstacles of that campaign could not have been +overcome. During it and in the siege of Petersburg he met with many +disappointments--on several occasions the shortcomings of generals, +when at the point of success, leading to wretched failures. But so +far as he was concerned, the only apparent effect of these +discomfitures was to make him all the more determined to discharge +successfully the stupendous trust committed to his care, and to bring +into play the manifold resources of his well ordered military mind. +He guided every subordinate then, and in the last days of the +rebellion, with a fund of common sense and superiority of intellect, +which have left an impress so distinct as to exhibit his great +personality. When his military history is analyzed after the lapse +of years, it will show, even more clearly than now, that during these +as well as in his previous campaigns he was the steadfast Centre +about and on which everything else turned. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +ORDERED TO GREENSBORO', N. C.--MARCH TO THE DAN RIVER--ASSIGNED TO +THE COMMAND WEST OF THE MISSISSIPPI--LEAVING WASHINGTON--FLIGHT OF +GENERAL EARLY--MAXIMILIAN--MAKING DEMONSTRATIONS ON THE UPPER RIO +GRANDE--CONFEDERATES JOIN MAXIMILIAN--THE FRENCH INVASION OF MEXICO +AND ITS RELATIONS TO THE REBELLION--ASSISTING THE LIBERALS-- +RESTORATION OF THE REPUBLIC. + +The surrender at Appomattox put a stop to all military operations on +the part of General Grant's forces, and the morning of April 10 my +cavalry began its march to Petersburg, the men anticipating that they +would soon be mustered out and returned to their homes. At Nottoway +Court House I heard of the assassination of the President. The first +news came to us the night after the dastardly deed, the telegraph +operator having taken it from the wires while in transmission to +General Meade. The despatch ran that Mr. Lincoln had been, shot at +10 o'clock that morning at Willard's Hotel, but as I could conceive +of nothing to take the President there I set the story down as a +canard, and went to bed without giving it further thought. Next +morning, however, an official telegram confirmed the fact of the +assassination, though eliminating the distorted circumstances that +had been communicated the night before. + +When we reached Petersburg my column was halted, and instructions +given me to march the cavalry and the Sixth Corps to Greensboro', +North Carolina, for the purpose of aiding General Sherman (the +surrender of General Johnston having not yet been effected), so I +made the necessary preparations and moved on the 24th of April, +arriving at South Boston, on the Dan River, the 28th, the Sixth Corps +having reached Danville meanwhile. At South Boston I received a +despatch from General Halleck, who immediately after Lee's surrender +had been assigned to command at Richmond, informing me that General +Johnston had been brought to terms. The necessity for going farther +south being thus obviated we retraced our steps to Petersburg, from +which place I proceeded by steamer to Washington, leaving, the +cavalry to be marched thither by easy stages. + +The day after my arrival in Washington an important order was sent +me, accompanied by the following letter of instructions, transferring +me to a new field of operations: + + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES. +"Washington, D. C., May 17, 1865. + +"GENERAL : Under the orders relieving you from the command of the +Middle Military Division and assigning you to command west of the +Mississippi, you will proceed without delay to the West to arrange +all preliminaries for your new field of duties. + +"Your duty is to restore Texas, and that part of Louisiana held by +the enemy, to the Union in the shortest practicable time, in a way +most effectual for securing permanent peace. + +"To do this, you will be given all the troops that can be spared +by Major-General Canby, probably twenty-five thousand men of +all arms; the troops with Major-General J. J. Reynolds, in Arkansas, +say twelve thousand, Reynolds to command; the Fourth +Army Corps, now at Nashville, Tennessee, awaiting orders; and +the Twenty-Fifth Army Corps, now at City Point, Virginia, ready +to embark. + +"I do not wish to trammel you with instructions; I will state, +however, that if Smith holds out, without even an ostensible +government to receive orders from or to report to, he and his men are +not entitled to the considerations due to an acknowledged +belligerent. Theirs are the conditions of outlaws, making war +against the only Government having an existence over the territory +where war is now being waged. + +"You may notify the rebel commander west of the Mississippi--holding +intercourse with him in person, or through such officers of the rank +of major-general as you may select--that he will be allowed to +surrender all his forces on the same terms as were accorded to Lee +and Johnston. If he accedes, proceed to garrison the Red River as +high up as Shreveport, the seaboard at Galveston, Malagorda Bay, +Corpus Christi, and mouth of the Rio Grande. + +"Place a strong force on the Rio Grande, holding it at least to a +point opposite Camargo, and above that if supplies can be procured. + +"In case of an active campaign (a hostile one) I think a heavy force +should be put on the Rio Grande as a first preliminary. Troops for +this might be started at once. The Twenty-Fifth Corps is now +available, and to it should be added a force of white troops, say +those now under Major-General Steele. + +"To be clear on this last point, I think the Rio Grande should be +strongly held, whether the forces in Texas surrender or not, and that +no time should be lost in getting troops there. If war is to be +made, they will be in the right place; if Kirby Smith surrenders, +they will be on the line which is to be strongly garrisoned. + +"Should any force be necessary other than those designated, they can +be had by calling for them on Army Headquarters. + +"U. S. GRANT, +"Lieutenant-General. + +"To MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN, +"United States Army." + + +On receipt of these instructions I called at once on General Grant, +to see if they were to be considered so pressing as to preclude my +remaining in Washington till after the Grand Review, which was fixed +for the 23d and 24th of May, for naturally I had a strong desire to +head my command on that great occasion. But the General told me that +it was absolutely necessary to go at once to force the surrender of +the Confederates under Kirby Smith. He also told me that the States +lately in rebellion would be embraced in two or three military +departments, the commanders of which would control civil affairs +until Congress took action about restoring them to the Union, since +that course would not only be economical and simple, but would give +the Southern people confidence, and encourage them to go to work, +instead of distracting them with politics. + +At this same interview he informed me that there was an additional +motive in sending me to the new command, a motive not explained by +the instructions themselves, and went on to say that, as a matter of +fact, he looked upon the invasion of Mexico by Maximilian as a part +of the rebellion itself, because of the encouragement that invasion +had received from the Confederacy, and that our success in putting +down secession would never be complete till the French and Austrian +invaders were compelled to quit the territory of our sister republic. +With regard to this matter, though, he said it would be necessary for +me to act with great circumspection, since the Secretary of State, +Mr. Seward, was much opposed to the use of our troops along the +border in any active way that would be likely to involve us in a war +with European powers. + +Under the circumstances, my disappointment at not being permitted to +participate in the review had to be submitted to, and I left +Washington without an opportunity of seeing again in a body the men +who, while under my command, had gone through so many trials and +unremittingly pursued and, assailed the enemy, from the beginning of +the campaign of 1864 till the white flag came into their hands at +Appomattox Court House. + +I went first to St. Louis, and there took the steamboat for New +Orleans, and when near the mouth of the Red River received word from +General Canby that Kirby Smith had surrendered under terms similar to +those accorded Lee and Johnston. But the surrender was not carried +out in good faith, particularly by the Texas troops, though this I +did not learn till some little time afterward when I was informed +that they had marched off to the interior of the State in several +organized bodies, carrying with them their camp equipage, arms, +ammunition, and even some artillery, with the ultimate purpose of +going to Mexico. In consequence of this, and also because of the +desire of the Government to make a strong showing of force in Texas, +I decided to traverse the State with two columns of cavalry, +directing one to San Antonio under Merritt, the other to Houston +under Custer. Both commands were to start from the Red River-- +Shreveport and Alexandria--being the respective initial points--and +in organizing the columns, to the mounted force already on the Red +River were added several regiments of cavalry from the east bank of +the, Mississippi, and in a singular way one of these fell upon the +trail of my old antagonist, General Early. While crossing the river +somewhere below Vicksburg some of the men noticed a suspicious +looking party being ferried over in a rowboat, behind which two +horses were swimming in tow. Chase was given, and the horses, being +abandoned by the party, fell into the hands of our troopers, who, +however, failed to capture or identify the people in the boat. As +subsequently ascertained, the men were companions of Early, who was +already across the Mississippi, hidden in the woods, on his way with +two or three of these followers to join the Confederates in Texas, +not having heard of Kirby Smith's surrender. A week or two later I +received a letter from Early describing the affair, and the capture +of the horses, for which he claimed pay, on the ground that they were +private property, because he had taken them in battle. The letter +also said that any further pursuit of Early would be useless, as he +"expected to be on the deep blue sea" by the time his communication +reached me. The unfortunate man was fleeing from imaginary dangers, +however, for striking his trail was purely accidental, and no effort +whatever was being made to arrest him personally. Had this been +especially desired it might have been accomplished very readily just +after Lee's surrender, for it was an open secret that Early was then +not far away, pretty badly disabled with rheumatism. + +By the time the two columns were ready to set out for San Antonio and +Houston, General Frank Herron,--with one division of the Thirteenth +Corps, occupied Galveston, and another division under General Fred +Steele had gone to Brazos Santiago, to hold Brownsville and the line +of the Rio Grande, the object being to prevent, as far as possible, +the escaping Confederates from joining Maximilian. With this purpose +in view, and not forgetting Grant's conviction that the French +invasion of Mexico was linked with the rebellion, I asked for an +increase of force to send troops into Texas in fact, to concentrate +at available points in the State an army strong enough to move +against the invaders of Mexico if occasion demanded. The Fourth and +Twenty-fifth army corps being ordered to report to me, accordingly, I +sent the Fourth Corps to Victoria and San Antonio, and the bulk of +the Twenty-fifth to Brownsville. Then came the feeding and caring +for all these troops--a difficult matter--for those at Victoria and +San Antonio had to be provisioned overland from Indianola across the +"hog-wallow prairie," while the supplies for the forces at +Brownsville and along the Rio Grande must come by way of Brazos +Santiago, from which point I was obliged to construct, with the labor +of the men, a railroad to Clarksville, a distance of about eighteen +miles. + +The latter part of June I repaired to Brownsville myself to impress +the Imperialists, as much as possible, with the idea that we intended +hostilities, and took along my chief of scouts--Major Young--and four +of his most trusty men, whom I had had sent from Washington. From +Brownsville I despatched all these men to important points in +northern Mexico, to glean information regarding the movements of the +Imperial forces, and also to gather intelligence about the ex- +Confederates who had crossed the Rio Grande. On information +furnished by these scouts, I caused General Steele to make +demonstrations all along the lower Rio Grande, and at the same time +demanded the return of certain munitions of war that had been turned +over by ex-Confederates to the Imperial General (Mejia) commanding at +Matamoras. These demands, backed up as they were by such a +formidable show of force created much agitation and demoralization +among the Imperial troops, and measures looking to the abandonment of +northern Mexico were forthwith adopted by those in authority--a +policy that would have resulted in the speedy evacuation of the +entire country by Maximilian, had not our Government weakened; +contenting itself with a few pieces of the contraband artillery +varnished over with the Imperial apologies. A golden opportunity was +lost, for we had ample excuse for crossing the boundary, but Mr. +Seward being, as I have already stated, unalterably opposed to any +act likely to involve us in war, insisted on his course of +negotiation with Napoleon. + +As the summer wore away, Maximilian, under Mr. Seward's policy, +gained in strength till finally all the accessible sections of Mexico +were in his possession, and the Republic under President Juarez +almost succumbed. Growing impatient at this, in the latter part of +September I decided to try again what virtue there might be in a +hostile demonstration, and selected the upper Rio Grande for the +scene of my attempt. Merritt's cavalry and the Fourth Corps still +being at San Antonio, I went to that place and reviewed these troops, +and having prepared them with some ostentation for a campaign, of +course it was bruited about that we were going to invade Mexico. +Then, escorted by a regiment of horse I proceeded hastily to Fort +Duncan, on the Rio Grande just opposite the Mexican town of Piedras +Negras. Here I opened communication with President Juarez, through +one of his staff, taking care not to do this in the dark, and the +news, spreading like wildfire, the greatest significance was ascribed +to my action, it being reported most positively and with many +specific details that I was only awaiting the arrival of the troops, +then under marching orders at San Antonio, to cross the Rio Grande in +behalf of the Liberal cause. + +Ample corroboration of the reports then circulated was found in my +inquiries regarding the quantity of forage we could depend upon +getting in Mexico, our arrangements for its purchase, and my sending +a pontoon train to Brownsville, together with which was cited the +renewed activity of the troops along the lower Rio Grande. These +reports and demonstrations resulted in alarming the Imperialists so +much that they withdrew the French and Austrian soldiers from +Matamoras, and practically abandoned the whole of northern Mexico as +far down as Monterey, with the exception of Matamoras, where General +Mejia continued to hang on with a garrison of renegade Mexicans. + +The abandonment of so much territory in northern Mexico encouraged +General Escobedo and other Liberal leaders to such a degree that they +collected a considerable army of their followers at Comargo, Mier, +and other points. At the same time that unknown quantity, Cortinas, +suspended his free-booting for the nonce, and stoutly harassing +Matamoras, succeeded in keeping its Imperial garrison within the +fortifications. Thus countenanced and stimulated, and largely +supplied with arms and ammunition, which we left at convenient places +on our side of the river to fall into their hands, the Liberals, +under General Escobedo--a man of much force of character--were +enabied in northern Mexico to place the affairs of the Republic on a +substantial basis. + +But in the midst of what bade fair to cause a final withdrawal of the +foreigners, we were again checked by our Government, as a result of +representations of the French Minister at Washington. In October, he +wrote to Mr. Seward that the United States troops on the Rio Grande +were acting "in exact opposition to the repeated assurances Your +Excellency has given me concerning the desire of the Cabinet at +Washington to preserve the most strict neutrality in the events now +taking place in Mexico," and followed this statement with an emphatic +protest against our course. Without any investigation whatever by +our State Department, this letter of the French Minister was +transmitted to me, accompanied by directions to preserve a strict +neutrality; so, of course, we were again debarred from anything like +active sympathy. + +After this, it required the patience of Job to abide the slow and +poky methods of our State Department, and, in truth, it was often +very difficult to restrain officers and men from crossing the Rio +Grande with hostile purpose. Within the knowledge of my troops, +there had gone on formerly the transfer of organized bodies of ex- +Confederates to Mexico, in aid of the Imperialists, and at this +period it was known that there was in preparation an immigration +scheme having in view the colonizing, at Cordova and one or two other +places, of all the discontented elements of the defunct Confederacy-- +Generals Price, Magruder, Maury, and other high personages being +promoters of the enterprise, which Maximilian took to readily. He +saw in it the possibilities of a staunch support to his throne, and +therefore not only sanctioned the project, but encouraged it with +large grants of land, inspirited the promoters with titles of +nobility, and, in addition, instituted a system of peonage, expecting +that the silver hook thus baited would be largely swallowed by the +Southern people. + +The announcement of the scheme was followed by the appointment of +commissioners in each of the Southern States to send out emigrants; +but before any were deluded into starting, I made to General Grant a +report of what was going on, with the recommendation that measures be +taken, through our State Department, looking to the suppression of +the colony; but, as usual, nothing could be effected through that +channel; so, as an alternative, I published, in April, 1866, by +authority of General Grant, an order prohibiting the embarkation from +ports in Louisiana and Texas, for ports in Mexico, of any person +without a permit from my headquarters. This dampened the ardor of +everybody in the Gulf States who had planned to go to Mexico; and +although the projectors of the Cordova Colonization Scheme--the name +by which it was known--secured a few innocents from other districts, +yet this set-back led ultimately to failure. + +Among the Liberal leaders along the Rio Grande during this period +there sprang up many factional differences from various causes, some +personal, others political, and some, I regret to say, from downright +moral obliquity--as, for example, those between Cortinas and Canales- +-who, though generally hostile to the Imperialists, were freebooters +enough to take a shy at each other frequently, and now and then even +to join forces against Escobedo, unless we prevented them by coaxing +or threats. A general who could unite these several factions was +therefore greatly needed, and on my return to New Orleans I so +telegraphed General Grant, and he, thinking General Caravajal (then +in Washington seeking aid for the Republic) would answer the purpose, +persuaded him to report to me in New Orleans. Caravajal promptly +appeared, but he did not impress me very favorably. He was old and +cranky, yet, as he seemed anxious to do his best, I sent him over to +Brownsville, with credentials, authorizing him to cross into Mexico, +and followed him myself by the next boat. When I arrived in +Brownsville, matters in Matamoras had already reached a crisis. +General Mejia, feeling keenly the moral support we were giving the +Liberals, and hard pressed by the harassing attacks of Cortinas and +Canales, had abandoned the place, and Caravajal, because of his +credentials from our side, was in command, much to the +dissatisfaction of both those chiefs whose differences it was +intended he should reconcile. + +The, day after I got to Brownsville I visited Matamoras, and had a +long interview with Caravajal. The outcome of this meeting was, on +my part, a stronger conviction than ever that he was unsuitable, and +I feared that either Canales or Cortinas would get possession of the +city. Caravajal made too many professions of what he would do--in +short, bragged too much--but as there was no help for the situation, +I made the best of it by trying to smooth down the ruffled feathers +of Canales and Cortinas. In my interview with Caravajal I +recommended Major Young as a confidential man, whom he could rely +upon as a "go-between " for communicating with our people at +Brownsville, and whom he could trust to keep him informed of the +affairs of his own country as well. + +A day or two afterward I recrossed the Gulf to New Orleans, and then, +being called from my headquarters to the interior of Texas, a +fortnight passed before I heard anything from Brownsville. In the +meanwhile Major Young had come to New Orleans, and organized there a +band of men to act as a body-guard for Caravajal, the old wretch +having induced him to accept the proposition by representing that it +had my concurrence. I at once condemned the whole business, but +Young, having been furnished with seven thousand dollars to recruit +the men and buy their arms, had already secured both, and was so +deeply involved in the transaction, he said, that he could not +withdraw without dishonor, and with tears in his eyes he besought me +to help him. He told me he had entered upon the adventure in the +firm belief that I would countenance it; that the men and their +equipment were on his hands; that he must make good his word at all +hazards; and that while I need not approve, yet I must go far enough +to consent to the departure of the men, and to loan him the money +necessary to provision his party and hire a schooner to carry them to +Brazos. It was hard in deed to resist the appeals of this man, who +had served me so long and so well, and the result of his pleading was +that I gave him permission to sail, and also loaned him the sum asked +for; but I have never ceased to regret my consent, for misfortune +fell upon the enterprise almost from its inception. + +By the time the party got across the Gulf and over to Brownsville, +Caravajal had been deposed by Canales, and the latter would not +accept their services. This left Young with about fifty men to whom +he was accountable, and as he had no money to procure them +subsistence, they were in a bad fix. The only thing left to do was +to tender their services to General Escobedo, and with this in view +the party set out to reach the General's camp, marching up the Rio +Grande on the American side, intending to cross near Ringgold Bar +racks. In advance of them, however, had spread far and wide the +tidings of who they were, what they proposed to do, and where they +were going, and before they could cross into Mexico they were +attacked by a party of ex-Confederates and renegade Mexican +rancheros. Being on American soil, Young forbade his men to return +the fire, and bent all his efforts to getting them over the river; +but in this attempt they were broken up, and became completely +demoralized. A number of the men were drowned while swimming the +river, Young himself was shot and killed, a few were captured, and +those who escaped--about twenty in all--finally joined Escobedo, but +in such a plight as to be of little use. With this distressing +affair came to an end pretty much all open participation of American +sympathizers with the Liberal cause, but the moral support afforded +by the presence of our forces continued, and this was frequently +supplemented with material aid in the shape of munitions of war, +which we liberally supplied, though constrained to do so by the most +secret methods. + +The term of office of Juarez as President of the Mexican Republic +expired in December, 1865, but to meet existing exigencies he had +continued himself in office by proclamation, a course rendered +necessary by the fact that no elections could be held on account of +the Imperial occupation of most of the country. The official who, by +the Mexican Constitution, is designated for the succession in such an +emergency, is the President of the Supreme Court, and the person then +eligible under this provision was General Ortega, but in the interest +of the Imperialists he had absented himself from Mexico, hence the +patriotic course of Juarez in continuing himself at the head of +affairs was a necessity of the situation. This action of the +President gave the Imperialists little concern at first, but with the +revival of the Liberal cause they availed themselves of every means +to divide its supporters, and Ortega, who had been lying low in the +United States, now came forward to claim the Presidency. Though +ridiculously late for such a step, his first act was to issue a +manifesto protesting against the assumption of the executive +authority by Juarez. The protest had little effect, however, and his +next proceeding was to come to New Orleans, get into correspondence +with other disaffected Mexicans, and thus perfect his plans. When he +thought his intrigue ripe enough for action, he sailed for Brazos, +intending to cross the Rio Grande and assert his claims with arms. +While he was scheming in New Orleans, however, I had learned what he +was up to, and in advance of his departure had sent instructions to +have him arrested on American soil. Colonel Sedgwick, commanding at +Brownsville, was now temporary master of Matamoras also, by reason of +having stationed some American troops there for the protection of +neutral merchants, so when Ortega appeared at Brazos, Sedgwick +quietly arrested him and held him till the city of Matamoras was +turned over to General Escobedo, the authorized representative of +Juarez; then Escobedo took charge, of Ortega, and with ease prevented +his further machinations. + +During the winter and spring of 1866 we continued covertly supplying +arms and ammunition to the Liberals--sending as many as 30,000 +muskets from Baton Rouge Arsenal alone--and by mid-summer Juarez, +having organized a pretty good sized army, was in possession of the +whole line of the Rio Grande, and, in fact, of nearly the whole of +Mexico down to San Louis Potosi. Then thick and fast came rumors +pointing to the tottering condition of Maximilian's Empire-first, +that Orizaba and Vera Cruz were being fortified; then, that the +French were to be withdrawn; and later came the intelligence that the +Empress Carlotta had gone home to beg assistance from Napoleon, the +author of all of her husband's troubles. But the situation forced +Napoleon to turn a deaf ear to Carlotta's prayers. The brokenhearted +woman besought him on her knees, but his fear of losing an army made +all pleadings vain. In fact, as I ascertained by the following +cablegram which came into my hands, Napoleon's instructions for the +French evacuation were in Mexico at the very time of this pathetic +scene between him and Carlotta. The despatch was in cipher when I +received it, but was translated by the telegraph operator at my +headquarters, who long before had mastered the key of the French +cipher: + +"PARIS, January 10, 1867. FRENCH CONSUL, New Orleans, La. + +"To GENERAL CASTELNAU, at Mexico. + +"Received your despatch of the 9th December. Do not compel the +Emperor to abdicate, but do not delay the departure of the troops; +bring back all those who will not remain there. Most of the fleet +has left. + +"NAPOLEON." + + +This meant the immediate withdrawal of the French. The rest of the +story--which has necessarily been but in outline--is soon told. +Maximilian, though deserted, determined to hold out to the last, and +with the aid of disloyal Mexicans stuck to his cause till the spring. +When taken prisoner at Queretaro, he was tried and executed under +circumstances that are well known. From promptings of humanity +Secretary Seward tried hard to save the Imperial prisoner, but +without success. The Secretary's plea for mercy was sent through me +at New Orleans, and to make speed I hired a steamer to proceed with +it across the Gulf to Tampico. The document was carried by Sergeant +White, one of my scouts, who crossed the country from Tampico, and +delivered it to Escobedo at Queretaro; but Mr. Seward's +representations were without avail--refused probably because little +mercy had been shown certain Liberal leaders unfortunate enough to +fall into Maximilian's hands during the prosperous days of his +Empire. + +At the close of our war there was little hope for the Republic of +Mexico. Indeed, till our troops were concentrated on the Rio Grande +there was none. Our appearance in such force along the border +permitted the Liberal leaders, refugees from their homes, to +establish rendezvous whence they could promulgate their plans in +safety, while the countenance thus given the cause, when hope was +well-nigh gone, incited the Mexican people to renewed resistance. +Beginning again with very scant means, for they had lost about all, +the Liberals saw their cause, under the influence of such significant +and powerful backing, progress and steadily grow so strong that +within two years Imperialism had received its death-blow. I doubt +very much whether such, results could have been achieved without the +presence of an American army on the Rio Grande, which, be it +remembered, was sent there because, in General Grant's words, the +French invasion of Mexico was so closely related to the rebellion as +to be essentially a part of it. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +A. J. HAMILTON APPOINTED PROVISIONAL GOVERNOR OF TEXAS--ASSEMBLES A +CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION--THE TEXANS DISSATISFIED--LAWLESSNESS-- +OPPRESSIVE LEGISLATION--EX-CONFEDERATES CONTROLLING LOUISIANA--A +CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION--THE MEETING SUPPRESSED--A BLOODY RIOT--MY +REPORTS OF THE MASSACRE--PORTIONS SUPPRESSED BY PRESIDENT JOHNSON-- +SUSTAINED BY A CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE--THE RECONSTRUCTION LAWS. + +Although in 1865-66 much of my attention was directed to +international matters along the Rio Grande, the civil affairs of +Texas and Louisiana required a certain amount of military supervision +also in the absence of regularly established civil authority. At the +time of Kirby Smith's surrender the National Government had +formulated no plan with regard to these or the other States lately in +rebellion, though a provisional Government had been set up in +Louisiana as early as 1864. In consequence of this lack of system, +Governor Pendleton Murray, of Texas, who was elected under +Confederate rule, continued to discharge the duties of Governor till +President Johnson, on June 17, in harmony with his amnesty +proclamation of May 29, 1865, appointed A. J. Hamilton provisional +Governor. Hamilton was empowered by the President to call a +Constitutional convention, the delegates to which were to be elected, +under certain prescribed qualifications, for the purpose of +organizing the political affairs of the State, the Governor to be +guided by instructions similar to those given the provisional +Governor of North Carolina (W. W. Holden), when appointed in May. + +The convening of this body gave rise to much dissatisfaction among +the people of Texas. They had assumed that affairs were to go on as +of old, and that the reintegration of the State was to take place +under the administration of Governor Murray, who, meanwhile, had +taken it upon himself, together with the Legislature, to authorize +the election of delegates to a State Convention, without restriction +as to who should be entitled to vote. Thus encouraged, the element +but lately in armed rebellion was now fully bent on restoring the +State to the Union without any intervention whatever of the Federal +Government; but the advent of Hamilton put an end to such illusions, +since his proclamation promptly disfranchised the element in +question, whose consequent disappointment and chagrin were so great +as to render this factor of the community almost uncontrollable. The +provisional Governor at once rescinded the edict of Governor Murray, +prohibited the assembling of his convention, and shortly after +called, one himself, the delegates to which were to b chosen by +voters who could take the amnesty-oath. The proclamation convening +this assemblage also announced the policy that would be pursued in +governing the State until its affairs were satisfactorily +reorganized, defined in brief the course to be followed by the +Judiciary, and provided for the appointment, by the Governor, of +county officials to succeed those known to be disloyal. As this +action of Hamilton's disfranchised all who could not take the amnesty +oath, and of course deprived them of the offices, it met at once with +pronounced and serious opposition, and he quickly realized that he +had on his hands an arduous task to protect the colored people, +particularly as in the transition state of society just after the +close of the war there prevailed much lawlessness, which vented +itself chiefly on the freedmen. It was greatly feared that political +rights were to be given those so recently in servitude, and as it was +generally believed that such enfranchisement would precipitate a race +war unless the freedmen were overawed and kept in a state of +subjection, acts of intimidation were soon reported from all parts of +the State. + +Hamilton, an able, determined, and fearless man, tried hard to curb +this terrorism, but public opinion being strong against him, he could +accomplish little without military aid. As department commander, I +was required, whenever called upon, to assist his government, and as +these requisitions for help became necessarily very frequent, the +result was that shortly after he assumed his duties, detachments of +troops were stationed in nearly every county of the State. By such +disposition of my forces fairly good order was maintained under the +administration of Hamilton, and all went well till the inauguration +of J. W. Throckmorton, who, elected Governor in pursuance of an +authorization granted by the convention which Hamilton had called +together, assumed the duties of the office August 9, 1866. + +One of Governor Throckmorton's first acts was to ask the withdrawal +or non-interference of the military. This was not all granted, but +under his ingenious persuasion President Johnson, on the 13th of +August, 1866, directed that the new State officials be entrusted with +the unhampered control of civil affairs, and this was more than +enough to revive the bulldozing methods that had characterized the +beginning of Hamilton's administration. Oppressive legislation in +the shape of certain apprentice and vagrant laws quickly followed, +developing a policy of gross injustice toward the colored people on +the part of the courts, and a reign of lawlessness and disorder +ensued which, throughout the remote districts of the State at least, +continued till Congress, by what are known as the Reconstruction +Acts, took into its own hands the rehabilitation of the seceded +States. + +In the State of Louisiana a provisional government, chosen by the +loyal element, had been put in operation, as already mentioned, as +early as 1864. This was effected under encouragement given by +President Lincoln, through the medium of a Constitutional convention, +which met at New Orleans in April, 1864, and adjourned in July. The +constitution then agreed upon was submitted to the people, and in +September, 1864, was ratified by a vote of the few loyal residents of +the State. + +The government provided under this constitution being looked upon as +provisional merely, was never recognized by Congress, and in 1865 the +returned Confederates, restored to citizenship by the President's +amnesty proclamation, soon got control of almost all the State. The +Legislature was in their hands, as well as most of the State and +municipal offices; so, when the President, on the 20th of August, +1866, by proclamation, extended his previous instructions regarding +civil affairs in Texas so as to have them apply to all the seceded +States, there at once began in Louisiana a system of discriminative +legislation directed against the freedmen, that led to flagrant +wrongs in the enforcement of labor contracts, and in the remote +parishes to numbers of outrages and murders. + +To remedy this deplorable condition of things, it was proposed, by +those who had established the government of 1864, to remodel the +constitution of the State; and they sought to do this by reassembling +the convention, that body before its adjournment having provided for +reconvening under certain conditions, in obedience to the call of its +president. Therefore, early in the summer of 1866, many members of +this convention met in conference at New Orleans, and decided that a +necessity existed for reconvening the delegates, and a proclamation +was issued accordingly by B. K. Howell, President-pro-tempore. + +Mayor John T. Monroe and the other officials of New Orleans looked +upon this proposed action as revolutionary, and by the time the +convention assembled (July 30), such bitterness of feeling prevailed +that efforts were made by the mayor and city police to suppress the +meeting. A bloody riot followed, resulting, in the killing and +wounding of about a hundred and sixty persons. + +I happened to be absent from the city at the time, returning from +Texas, where I had been called by affairs on the Rio Grande. On my +way up from the mouth of the Mississippi I was met on the night of +July 30 by one of my staff, who reported what had occurred, giving +the details of the massacre--no milder term is fitting--and informing +me that, to prevent further slaughter, General Baird, the senior +military officer present, had assumed control of the municipal +government. On reaching the city I made an investigation, and that +night sent the following report of the affair: + +"HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE GULF, +"NEW ORLEANS, LA., Aug. 1, 1866. + +"GENERAL U. S. GRANT: + +"You are doubtless aware of the serious riot which occurred in this +city on the 30th. A political body, styling themselves the +Convention of 1864, met on the 30th, for, as it is alleged, the +purpose of remodeling the present constitution of the State. The +leaders were political agitators and revolutionary men, and the +action of the convention was liable to produce breaches of the public +peace. I had made up my mind to arrest the head men, if the +proceedings of the convention were calculated to disturb the +tranquility of the Department; but I had no cause for action until +they committed the overt act. In the meantime official duty called +me to Texas, and the mayor of the city, during my absence suppressed +the convention by the use of the police force, and in so doing +attacked the members of the convention, and a party of two hundred +negroes, with fire-arms, clubs, and knives, in a manner so +unnecessary and atrocious as to compel me to say that it was murder. +About forty whites and blacks were thus killed, and about one hundred +and sixty wounded. Everything is now quiet, but I deem it best to +maintain a military supremacy in the city for a few days, until the +affair is fully investigated. I believe the sentiment of the general +community is great regret at this unnecessary cruelty, and that the +police could have made any arrest they saw fit without sacrificing +lives. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General Commanding." + + +On receiving the telegram, General. Grant immediately submitted. it +to the President. Much clamor being made at the North for the +publication of the despatch, Mr. Johnson pretended to give it to the +newspapers. It appeared in the issues of August 4, but with this +paragraph omitted, viz.: + +"I had made up my mind to arrest the head men, if the proceedings of +the convention were calculated to disturb the tranquility of the +Department, but I had no cause for action until they committed the +overt act. In the mean time official duty called me to Texas, and +the mayor of the city, during my absence, suppressed the convention +by the use of the police force, and in so doing attacked the members +of the convention, and a party of two hundred negroes, with fire- +arms, clubs, and knives, in a manner so unnecessary and atrocious as +to compel me to say it was murder." + +Against this garbling of my report-done by the President's own order- +I strongly demurred; and this emphatic protest marks the beginning of +Mr. Johnson's well-known personal hostility toward me. In the mean +time I received (on August 3) the following despatch from General +Grant approving my course: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"WAR DEPT., WASHINGTON, D. C., "August 3, 1866--5 p.m. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Commanding Mil. Div. of the Gulf, +"New Orleans, La. + +"Continue to enforce martial law, so far as may be necessary to +preserve the peace; and do not allow any of the civil authorities to +act, if you deem such action dangerous to the public safety. Lose no +time in investigating and reporting the causes that led to the riot, +and the facts which occurred. + +"U. S. GRANT, +"Lieutenant-General." + + +In obedience to the President's directions, My report of August 1 was +followed by another, more in detail, which I give in full, since it +tells the whole story of the riot : + +"HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE GULF, +"NEW ORLEANS, LA., August 6, 1866. + +"His EXCELLENCY ANDREW JOHNSON, +"President United States + +"I have the honor to make the following reply to your despatch of +August 4. A very large number of colored people marched in +procession on Friday night, July twenty-seven (27), and were +addressed from the steps of the City Hall by Dr. Dostie, ex-Governor +Hahn, and others. The speech of Dostie was intemperate in language +and sentiment. The speeches of the others, so far as I can learn, +were characterized by moderation. I have not given you the words of +Dostie's speech, as the version published was denied; but from what I +have learned of the man, I believe they were intemperate. + +"The convention assembled at twelve (12) M. on the thirtieth (30), +the timid members absenting themselves because the tone of the +general public was ominous of trouble. I think there were about +twenty-six (26) members present. In front of the Mechanics +Institute, where the meeting was held, there were assembled some +colored men, women, and children, perhaps eighteen (18) or twenty +(20), and in the Institute a number of colored men, probably one +hundred and fifty (150). Among those outside and inside there might +have been a pistol in the possession of every tenth (10) man. + +"About one (1) p. m. a procession of say from sixty (60) to one +hundred and thirty (130) colored men marched up Burgundy Street and +across Canal Street toward the convention, carrying an American flag. +These men had about one pistol to every ten men, and canes and clubs +in addition. While crossing Canal Street a row occurred. There were +many spectators on the street, and their manner and tone toward the +procession unfriendly. A shot was fired, by whom I am not able to +state, but believe it to have been by a policeman, or some colored +man in the procession. This led to other shots and a rush after the +procession. On arrival at the front of the Institute there was some +throwing of brickbats by both sides. The police, who had been held +well in hand, were vigorously marched to the scene of disorder. The +procession entered the Institute with the flag, about six (6) or +eight (8) remaining outside. A row occurred between a policeman and +one of these colored men, and a shot was again fired by one of the +parties, which led to an indiscriminate fire on the building through +the windows by the policemen. This had been going on for a short +time, when a white flag was displayed from the windows of the +Institute, whereupon the firing ceased, and the police rushed into +the building. + +"From the testimony of wounded men, and others who were inside the +building, the policemen opened an indiscriminate fire upon the +audience until they had emptied their revolvers, when they retired, +and those inside barricaded the doors. The door was broken in, and +the firing again commenced, when many of the colored and white people +either escaped throughout the door or were passed out by the +policemen inside; but as they came out the policemen who formed the +circle nearest the building fired upon them, and they were again +fired upon by the citizens that formed the outer circle. Many of +those wounded and taken prisoners, and others who were prisoners and +not wounded, were fired upon by their captors and by citizens. The +wounded were stabbed while lying on the grgund, and their heads +beaten with brickbats. In the yard of the building, whither some of +the colored men had escaped and partially secreted themselves, they +were fired upon and killed or wounded by policemen. Some were killed +and wounded several squares from the scene. Members of the +convention were wounded by the police while in their hands as +prisoners, some of them mortally. + +"The immediate cause of this terrible affair was the assemblage of +this Convention; the remote cause was the bitter and antagonistic +feeling which has been growing in this community since the advent of +the present Mayor, who, in the organization of his police force, +selected many desperate men, and some of them known murderers. +People of clear views were overawed by want of confidence in the +Mayor, and fear of the thugs, many of which he had selected for his +police force. I have frequently been spoken to by prominent citizens +on this subject, and have heard them express fear, and want of +confidence in Mayor Monroe. Ever since the intimation of this last +convention movement I must condemn the course of several of the city +papers for supporting, by their articles, the bitter feeling of bad +men. As to the merciless manner in which the convention was broken +up, I feel obliged to confess strong repugnance. + +"It is useless to disguise the hostility that exists on the part of a +great many here toward Northern men, and this unfortunate affair has +so precipitated matters that there is now a test of what shall be the +status of Northern men--whether they can live here without being in +constant dread or not, whether they can be protected in life and +property, and have justice in the courts. If this matter is +permitted to pass over without a thorough and determined prosecution +of those engaged in it, we may look out for frequent scenes of the +same kind, not only here, but in other places. No steps have as yet +been taken by the civil authorities to arrest citizens who were +engaged in this massacre, or policemen who perpetrated such +cruelties. The members of the convention have been indicted by the +grand jury, and many of them arrested and held to bail. As to +whether the civil authorities can mete out ample justice to the +guilty parties on both sides, I must say it is my opinion, +unequivocally, that they cannot. Judge Abell, whose course I have +closely watched for nearly a year, I now consider one of the most +dangerous men that we have here to the peace and quiet of the city. +The leading men of the convention--King, Cutler, Hahn, and others-- +have been political agitators, and are bad men. I regret to say that +the course of Governor Wells has been vacillating, and that during +the late trouble he has shown very little of the man. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General Commanding." + + +Subsequently a military commission investigated the subject of the +riot, taking a great deal of testimony. The commission substantially +confirmed the conclusions given in my despatches, and still later +there was an investigation by a select committee of the House of +Representatives, of which the Honorables Samuel Shellabarger, of +Ohio, H. L. Elliot, of Massachusetts, and B. M. Boyer, of +Pennsylvania, were the members. The majority report of the committee +also corroborated, in all essentials, my reports of the distressing +occurrence. The committee likewise called attention to a violent +speech made by Mr. Johnson at St. Louis in September, 1866, charging +the origin of the riot to Congress, and went on to say of the speech +that "it was an unwarranted and unjust expression of hostile feeling, +without pretext or foundation in fact." A list of the killed and +wounded was embraced in the committee's report, and among other +conclusions reached were the following: "That the meeting of July 30 +was a meeting of quiet citizens, who came together without arms and +with intent peaceably to discuss questions of public concern.... +There has been no occasion during our National history when a riot +has occurred so destitute of justifiable cause, resulting in a +massacre so inhuman and fiend-like, as that which took place at New +Orleans on the 30th of July last. This riotous attack upon the +convention, with its terrible results of massacre and murder, was not +an accident. It was the determined purpose of the mayor of the city +of New Orleans to break up this convention by armed force." + +The statement is also made, that, "He [the President] knew that +'rebels' and 'thugs' and disloyal men had controlled the election of +Mayor Monroe, and that such men composed chiefly his police force." + +The committee held that no legal government existed in Louisiana, and +recommended the temporary establishment of a provisional government +therein; the report concluding that "in the meantime the safety of +all Union men within the State demands that such government be formed +for their protection, for the well being of the nation and the +permanent peace of the Republic." + +The New Orleans riot agitated the whole country, and the official and +other reports served to intensify and concentrate the opposition to +President Johnson's policy of reconstruction, a policy resting +exclusively on and inspired solely by the executive authority--for it +was made plain, by his language and his acts, that he was seeking to +rehabilitate the seceded States under conditions differing not a whit +from those existing before the rebellion; that is to say, without the +slightest constitutional provision regarding the status of the +emancipated slaves, and with no assurances of protection for men who +had remained loyal in the war. + +In December, 1866, Congress took hold of the subject with such vigor +as to promise relief from all these perplexing disorders, and, after +much investigation and a great deal of debate, there resulted the so- +called "Reconstruction Laws," which, for a clear understanding of the +powers conferred on the military commanders, I deem best to append in +full: + +AN ACT to provide for the more efficient government of the rebel +States. + +WHEREAS, no legal State governments or adequate protection for life +or property now exist in the rebel States of Virginia, North +Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, +Florida, Texas, and Arkansas; and whereas, it is necessary that peace +and good order should be enforced in said States until loyal and +republican State governments can be legally established; therefore, + +BE IT ENACTED by the Senate and House of Representatives of the +United States of America in Congress assembled, That said rebel +States shall be divided into military districts and made subject to +the military authority of the United States as hereinafter +prescribed; and for that purpose Virginia shall constitute the first +district; North Carolina and South Carolina, the second district; +Georgia, Alabama, and Florida, the third district; Mississippi and +Arkansas, the fourth district; and Louisiana and Texas, the fifth +district. + +SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of the +President to assign to the command of each of said districts an +officer of the army not below the rank of brigadier-general, and to +detail a sufficient military force to enable such officer to perform +his duties and enforce his authority within the district to which he +is assigned. + +SEC. 3. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of each +officer assigned as aforesaid to protect all persons in their rights +of person and property, to suppress insurrection, disorder, and +violence, and to punish, or cause to be punished, all disturbers of +the public peace and criminals, and to this end he may allow local +civil tribunals to take jurisdiction of and to try offenders, or, +when in his judgment it may be necessary for the trial of offenders, +he shall have power to organize military commissions or tribunals for +that purpose, and all interference, under cover of State authority, +with the exercise of military authority under this act, shall be null +and void. + +SEC. 4. And be it further enacted, That all persons put under +military arrest by virtue of this act shall be tried without +unnecessary delay, and no cruel or unjust punishment shall be +inflicted; and no sentence of any military commission or tribunal +hereby authorized affecting the life or liberty of any person, shall +be executed untill it is approved by the officer in command of the +district; and the laws and regulations for the government of the army +shall not be affected by this act except in so far as they conflict +with its provisions: Provided, That no sentence of death, under the +provisions of this act, shall be carried into effect without the +approval of the President. + +SEC. 5. And be it further enacted, That when the people of any one of +said rebel States shall have formed a constitution of government in +conformity with the Constitution of the United States in all +respects, framed by a convention of delegates elected by the male +citizens of said State twenty-one years old and upward, of whatever +race, color, or previous condition, who have been resident in said +State for one year previous to the day of such election, except such +as may be disfranchised for participation in the rebellion, or for +felony at common law; and when such constitution shall provide that +the elective franchise shall be enjoyed by all such persons as have +the qualifications herein stated for electors of delegates; and when +such constitution shall be ratified by a majority of the persons +voting on the question of ratification who are qualified as electors +for delegates, and when such constitution shall have been submitted +to Congress for examination and approval, and Congress shall have +approved the same; and when said State, by a vote of its legislature +elected under said constitution, shall have adopted the amendment to +the Constitution of the United States proposed by the Thirty-ninth +Congress, and known as article fourteen; and when said article shall +have become a part of the Constitution of the United States, said +State shall be declared entitled to representation in Congress, and +senators and representatives shall be admitted therefrom on their +taking the oath prescribed by law; and then and thereafter the +preceding sections of this act shall be inoperative in said State: +Provided, That no person excluded from the privilege of holding +office by said proposed amendment to the Constitution of the United +States shall be eligible to election as a member of the convention to +frame a constitution for any of said rebel States, nor shall any such +person vote for members of such convention. + +SEC. 6. And be it further enacted, That until the people of said +rebel States shall be by law admitted to representation in the +Congress of the United States, any civil government which may exist +therein shall be deemed provisional only, and in all respects subject +to the paramount authority of the United States at any time to +abolish, modify, control, or supersede the same; and in all elections +to any office under such provisional governments all persons shall be +entitled to vote, and none others, who are entitled to vote under the +fifth section of this act; and no person shall be eligible to any +office under any such provisional governments who would be +disqualified from holding office under the provisions of the third +article of said constitutional amendment. + +SCHUYLER COLFAX, +Speaker of the House of Representatives. + +LAFAYETTE S. FOSTER, +President of the Senate pro tempore. + + +AN ACT supplementary to an act entitled "An act to provide for the +more efficient government of the rebel States," passed March second, +eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, and to facilitate restoration. + +Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the +United States of America in Congress assembled, That before the first +day of September, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, the commanding +general in each district defined by an act entitled "An act to +provide for the more efficient government of the rebel States," +passed March second, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, shall cause a +registration to be made of the male citizens of the United States, +twenty-one years of age and upwards, resident in each county or +parish in the State or States included in his district, which +registration shall include only those persons who are qualified to +vote for delegates by the act aforesaid, and who shall have taken and +subscribed the following oath or affirmation : " I,------, do +solemnly swear (or affirm), in the presence of the Almighty God, that +I am a citizen of the State of ---------; that I have resided in said +State for----- months next preceding this day, and now reside in the +county of -------, or the parish of --------, in said State, (as the +case may be); that I am twenty-one years old; that I have not been +disfranchised for participation in any rebellion or civil war against +the United States, nor for felony committed against the laws of any +State or of the United States; that I have never been a member of any +State Legislature, nor held any executive or judicial office in any +State, and afterwards engaged in insurrection or rebellion against +the United States, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof; +that I have never taken an oath as a member of Congress of the United +States, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any +State Legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any +State, to support the constitution of the United States, and +afterwards engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the United +States or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof; that I will +faithfully support the Constitution and obey the laws of the United +States, and will, to the best of my ability, encourage others so to +do: so help me God."; which oath or affirmation may be administered +by any registering officer. + +SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That after the completion of the +registration hereby provided for in any State, at such time and +places therein as the commanding general shall appoint and direct, of +which at least thirty days' public notice shall be given, an election +shall be held of delegates to a convention for the purpose of +establishing a constitution and civil government for such State loyal +to the Union, said convention in each State, except Virginia, to +consist of the same number of members as the most numerous branch of +the State Legislature of such State in the year eighteen hundred and +sixty, to be apportioned among the several districts, counties, or +parishes of such State by the commanding general, giving each +representation in the ratio of voters registered as aforesaid as +nearly as may be. The convention in Virginia shall consist of the +same number of members as represented the territory now constituting +Virginia in the most numerous branch of the Legislature of said State +in the year eighteen hundred and sixty, to be apportioned as +aforesaid. + +SEC. 3. And be it further enacted, That at said election the +registered voters of each State shall vote for or against a +convention to form a constitution therefor under this act. Those +voting in favor of such a convention shall have written or printed on +the ballots by which they vote for delegates, as aforesaid, the words +"For a convention," and those voting against such a convention shall +have written or printed on such ballot the words "Against a +convention." The persons appointed to superintend said election, and +to make return of the votes given thereat, as herein provided, shall +count and make return of the votes given for and against a +convention; and the commanding general to whom the same shall have +been returned shall ascertain and declare the total vote in each +State for and against a convention. If a majority of the votes given +on that question shall be for a convention, then such convention +shall be held as hereinafter provided; but if a majority of said +votes shall, be against a convention, then no such convention shall +be held under this act: Provided, That such convention shall not be +held unless a majority of all such registered voters shall have voted +on the question of holding such convention. + +SEC. 4. And be it further enacted, That the commanding general of +each district shall appoint as many boards of registration as may be +necessary, consisting of three loyal officers or persons, to make and +complete the registration, superintend the election, and make return +to him of the votes, list of voters, and of the persons elected as +delegates by a plurality of the votes cast at said election; and upon +receiving said returns he shall open the same, ascertain the persons +elected as delegates, according to the returns of the officers who +conducted said election, and make proclamation thereof; and if a +majority of the votes given on that question shall be for a +convention, the commanding general, within sixty days from the date +of election, shall notify the delegates to assemble in convention, at +a time and place to be mentioned in the notification, and said +convention, when organized, shall proceed to frame a constitution and +civil government according to the provisions of this act, and the act +to which it is supplementary; and when the same shall have been so +framed, said constitution shall be submitted by the convention for +ratification to the persons registered under the provisions of this +act at an election to be conducted by the officers or persons +appointed or to be appointed by the commanding general, as +hereinbefore provided, and to be held after the expiration of thirty +days from the date of notice thereof, to be given by said convention; +and the returns thereof shall be made to the commanding general of +the district. + +SEC. 5. And be it further enacted, That if, according to said +returns, the constitution shall be ratified by a majority of the +votes of the registered electors qualified as herein specified, cast +at said election, at least one-half of all the registered voters +voting upon the question of such ratification, the president of the +convention shall transmit a copy of the same, duly certified, to the +President of the United States, who shall forthwith transmit the same +to Congress, if then in session, and if not in session, then +immediately upon its next assembling; and if it shall moreover appear +to Congress that the election was one at which all the registered and +qualified electors in the State had an opportunity to vote freely, +and without restraint, fear, or the influence of fraud, and if the +Congress shall be satisfied that such constitution meets the approval +of a majority of all the qualified electors in the State, and if the +said constitution shall be declared by Congress to be in conformity +with the provisions of the act to which this is supplementary, and +the other provisions of said act shall have been complied with, and +the said constitution shall be approved by Congress, the State shall +be declared entitled to representation, and senators and +representatives shall be admitted therefrom as therein provided. + +SEC. 6. And be it further enacted, That all elections in the States +mentioned in the said "Act to provide for the more efficient +government of the rebel States" shall, during the operation of said +act, be by ballot; and all officers making the said registration of +voters and conducting said elections, shall, before entering upon the +discharge of their duties, take and subscribe the oath prescribed by +the act approved July second, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, +entitled "An act to prescribe an oath of office": Provided, That if +any person shall knowingly and falsely take and subscribe any oath in +this act prescribed, such person so offending and being thereof duly +convicted, shall be subject to the pains, penalties, and disabilities +which by law are provided for the punishment of the crime of wilful +and corrupt perjury. + +SEC. 7. And be if further enacted, That all expenses incurred by the +several commanding generals, or by virtue of any orders issued, or +appointments made, by them, under or by virtue of this act, shall be +paid out of any moneys in the treasury not otherwise appropriated. + +SEC. 8. And be it further enacted, That the convention for each State +shall prescribe the fees, salary, and compensation to be paid to all +delegates and other officers and agents herein authorized or +necessary to carry into effect the purposes of this act not herein +otherwise provided for, and shall provide for the levy and collection +of such taxes on the property in such State as may be necessary to +pay the same. + +SEC. 9. And be it further enacted, That the word "article," in the +sixth section of the act to which this is supplementary, shall be +construed to mean, "section." + +SCHUYLER COLFAX, +Speaker of the House of Representatives. + +B. F. WADE, +President of the Senate pro tempore. + + + + +CHAPTER X1. + +PASSAGE OF THE RECONSTRUCTION ACT OVER THE PRESIDENT'S VETO--PLACED +IN COMMAND OF THE FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT--REMOVING OFFICERS--MY +REASONS FOR SUCH ACTION--AFFAIRS IN LOUISIANA AND TEXAS--REMOVAL OF +GOVERNOR WELLS--REVISION OF THE JURY LISTS--RELIEVED FROM THE COMMAND +OF THE FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT. + +The first of the Reconstruction laws was passed March 2, 1867, and +though vetoed by the President, such was the unanimity of loyal +sentiment and the urgency demanding the measure, that the bill became +a law over the veto the day the President returned it to Congress. +March the 11th this law was published in General Orders No . 10, from +the Headquarters of the Army, the same order assigning certain +officers to take charge of the five military districts into which the +States lately in rebellion were subdivided, I being announced as the +commander of the Fifth Military District, which embraced Louisiana +and Texas, a territory that had formed the main portion of my command +since the close of the war. + +Between the date of the Act and that of my assignment, the Louisiana +Legislature, then in special session, had rejected a proposed repeal +of an Act it had previously passed providing for an election of +certain municipal officers in New Orleans. This election was set for +March 11, but the mayor and the chief of police, together with +General Mower, commanding the troops in the city, having expressed to +me personally their fears that the public peace would be disturbed by +the election, I, in this emergency, though not yet assigned to the +district, assuming the authority which the Act conferred on district +commanders, declared that the election should not take place; that no +polls should be opened on the day fixed; and that the whole matter +would stand postponed till the district commander should be +appointed, or special instructions be had. This, my first official +act under the Reconstruction laws, was rendered necessary by the +course of a body of obstructionists, who had already begun to give +unequivocal indications of their intention to ignore the laws of +Congress. + +A copy of the order embodying the Reconstruction law, together with +my assignment, having reached me a few days after, I regularly +assumed control of the Fifth Military District on March 19, by an +order wherein I declared the State and municipal governments of the +district to be provisional only, and, under the provisions of the +sixth section of the Act, subject to be controlled, modified, +superseded, or abolished. I also announced that no removals from +office would be made unless the incumbents failed to carry out the +provisions of the law or impeded reorganization, or unless willful +delays should necessitate a change, and added: "Pending the +reorganization, it is, desirable and intended to create as little +disturbance in the machinery of the various branches of the +provisional governments as possible, consistent with the law of +Congress and its successful execution, but this condition is +dependent upon the disposition shown by the people, and upon the +length of time required for reorganization." + +Under these limitations Louisiana and Texas retained their former +designations as military districts, the officers in command +exercising their military powers as heretofore. In addition, these +officers were to carry out in their respective commands all +provisions of the law except those specially requiring the action of +the district commander, and in cases of removals from and appointment +to office. + +In the course of legislation the first Reconstruction act, as I have +heretofore noted, had been vetoed. On the very day of the veto, +however, despite the President's adverse action, it passed each House +of Congress by such an overwhelming majority as not only to give it +the effect of law, but to prove clearly that the plan of +reconstruction presented was, beyond question, the policy endorsed by +the people of the country. It was, therefore, my determination to +see to the law's zealous execution in my district, though I felt +certain that the President would endeavor to embarrass me by every +means in his power, not only on account of his pronounced personal +hostility, but also because of his determination not to execute but +to obstruct the measures enacted by Congress. + +Having come to this conclusion, I laid down, as a rule for my +guidance, the principle of non-interference with the provisional +State governments, and though many appeals were made to have me +rescind rulings of the courts, or interpose to forestall some +presupposed action to be taken by them, my invariable reply was that +I would not take cognizance of such matters, except in cases of +absolute necessity. The same policy was announced also in reference +to municipal affairs throughout the district, so long as the action +of the local officers did not conflict with the law. + +In a very short time, however, I was obliged to interfere in +municipal matters in New Orleans, for it had become clearly apparent +that several of the officials were, both by acts of omission and +commission, ignoring the law, so on the 27th of March I removed from +office the Mayor, John T. Monroe; the Judge of the First District +Court, E. Abell; and the Attorney-General of the State, Andrew S. +Herron; at the same time appointing to the respective offices thus +vacated Edward Heath, W. W. Howe, and B. L. Lynch. The officials +thus removed had taken upon themselves from the start to pronounce +the Reconstruction acts unconstitutional, and to advise such a course +of obstruction that I found it necessary at an early dav to replace +them by men in sympathy with the law, in order to make plain my +determination to have its provisions enforced. The President at once +made inquiry, through General Grant, for the cause of the removal, +and I replied : + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT, +"New Orleans, La., April 19, 1867. + +"GENERAL: On the 27th day of March last I removed from office Judge +E. Abell, of the Criminal Court of New Orleans; Andrew S. Herron, +Attorney-General of the State of Louisiana; and John T. Monroe, Mayor +of the City of New Orleans. These removals were made under the +powers granted me in what is usually termed the 'military bill,' +passed March 2, 1867, by the Congress of the United States. + +"I did not deem it necessary to give any reason for the removal of +these men, especially after the investigations made by the military +board on the massacre Of July 30, 1866, and the report of the +congressional committee on the same massacre; but as some inquiry has +been made for the cause of removal, I would respectfully state as +follows : + +"The court over which judge Abell presided is the only criminal court +in the city of New Orleans, and for a period of at least nine months +previous to the riot Of July 30 he had been educating a large portion +of the community to the perpetration of this outrage, by almost +promising no prosecution in his court against the offenders, in case +such an event occurred. The records of his court will show that he +fulfilled his promise, as not one of the guilty has been prosecuted. + +"In reference to Andrew J. Herron, Attorney-General of the State of +Louisiana, I considered it his duty to indict these men before this +criminal court. This he failed to do, but went so far as to attempt +to impose on the good sense of the whole nation by indicting the +victims of the riot instead of the rioters; in other words, making +the innocent guilty and the guilty innocent. He was therefore, in my +belief, an able coadjutor with judge Abell in bringing on the +massacre of July 30. + +"Mayor Monroe controlled the element engaged in this riot, and when +backed by an attorney-general who would not prosecute the guilty, and +a judge who advised the grand jury to find the innocent guilty and +let the murderers go free, felt secure in engaging his police force +in the riot and massacre. + +"With these three men exercising a large influence over the worst +elements of the population of this city, giving to those elements an +immunity for riot and bloodshed, the general-in-chief will see how +insecurely I felt in letting them occupy their respective positions +in the troubles which might occur in registration and voting in the +reorganization of this State. + +"I am, General, very respectfully, your obedient servant, + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General U. S. A. + + +"GENERAL U. S. GRANT, + +"Commanding Armies of the United States, +"Washington, D. C." + + +To General Grant my reasons were satisfactory, but not so to the +President, who took no steps, however, to rescind my action, for he +knew that the removals were commended by well-nigh the entire +community in the city, for it will be understood that Mr. Johnson +was, through his friends and adherents in Louisiana and Texas, kept +constantly advised of every step taken by me. Many of these persons +were active and open opponents of mine, while others were spies, +doing their work so secretly and quickly that sometimes Mr. Johnson +knew of my official acts before I could report them to General Grant. + +The supplemental Reconstruction act which defined the method of +reconstruction became a law despite the President's veto on March 23. +This was a curative act, authorizing elections and prescribing +methods of registration. When it reached me officially I began +measures for carrying out its provisions, and on the 28th of March +issued an order to the effect that no elections for the State, +parish, or municipal officers would be held in Louisiana until the +provisions of the laws of Congress entitled "An act to provide for +the more efficient government of the rebel States," and of the act +supplemental thereto, should have been complied with. I also +announced that until elections were held in accordance with these +acts, the law of the Legislature of the State providing for the +holding over of those persons whose terms of office otherwise would +have expired, would govern in all cases excepting only those special +ones in which I myself might take action. There was one parish, +Livingston, which this order did no reach in time to prevent the +election previously ordered there, and which therefore took place, +but by a supplemental order this election was declare null and void. + +In April. I began the work of administering th Supplemental Law, +which, under certain condition of eligibility, required a +registration of the voter of the State, for the purpose of electing +delegate to a Constitutional convention. It therefore became +necessary to appoint Boards of Registration throughout the election +districts, and on April 10 the boards for the Parish of Orleans were +given out, those for the other parishes being appointed ten days +later. Before announcing these boards, I had asked to be advised +definitely as to what persons were disfranchised by the law, and was +directed by General Grant to act upon my own interpretation of it, +pending an opinion expected shortly from the Attorney-General--Mr. +Henry Stanbery--so, for the guidance of the boards, I gave the +following instructions: + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT. +"New Orleans, La., April io, 1867. + +"Special Orders, No. 15. + +"....In obedience to the directions contained in the first section of +the Law of Congress entitled "An Act supplemental to an Act entitled +'An Act to provide for the more efficient government of the rebel +States'" the registration of the legal voters, according to that law +in the Parish of Orleans, will be commenced on the 15th instant, and +must be completed by the 15th of May. + +"The four municipal districts of the City of New Orleans and the +Parish of Orleans, right bank (Algiers), will each constitute a +Registration district. Election precincts will remain as at present +constituted. + +"....Each member of the Board of Registers, before commencing his +duties, will file in the office of the Assistant-Inspector-General at +these headquarters, the oath required in the sixth section of the Act +referred to, and be governed in the execution of his duty by the +provisions of the first section of that Act, faithfully administering +the oath therein prescribed to each person registered. + +"Boards of Registers will immediately select suitable offices within +their respective districts, having reference to convenience and +facility of registration, and will enter upon their duties on the day +designated. Each Board will be entitled to two clerks. Office-hours +for registration will be from 8 o'clock till 12 A. M., and from 4 +till 7 P. m. + +"When elections are ordered, the Board of Registers for each district +will designate the number of polls and the places where they shall be +opened in the election precincts within its district, appoint the +commissioners and other officers necessary for properly conducting +the elections, and will superintend the same. + +"They will also receive from the commissioners of elections of the +different precincts the result of the vote, consolidate the same, and +forward it to the commanding general. + +"Registers and all officers connected with elections will be held to +a rigid accountability and will be subject to trial by military +commission for fraud, or unlawful or improper conduct in the +performance of their duties. Their rate of compensation and manner +of payment will be in accordance with the provisions of sections six +and seven of the supplemental act. + +"....Every male citizen of the United States, twenty-one years old +and upward, of whatever race, color, or previous condition, who has +been resident in the State of Louisiana for one year and Parish of +Orleans for three months previous to the date at which he presents +himself for registration, and who has not been disfranchised by act +of Congress or for felony at common law, shall, after having taken +and subscribed the oath prescribed in the first section of the act +herein referred to, be entitled to be, and shall be, registered as a +legal voter in the Parish of Orleans and State of Louisiana. + +"Pending the decision of the Attorney-General of the United States on +the question as to who are disfranchised by law, registers will give +the most rigid interpretation to the law, and exclude from +registration every person about whose right to vote there may be a +doubt. Any person so excluded who may, under the decision of the +Attorney-General, be entitled to vote, shall be permitted to register +after that decision is received, due notice of which will be given. + +"By command of Major-General P. H. SHERIDAN, + +"GEO. L. HARTSUFF, +"Assistant Adjutant-General." + + +The parish Boards of Registration were composed of three members +each. Ability to take what was known as the "ironclad oath" was the +qualification exacted of the members, and they were prohibited from +becoming candidates for office. In the execution of their duties +they were to be governed by the provisions of the supplemental act. +It was also made one of their functions to designate the number and +location of the polling-places in the several districts, to appoint +commissioners for receiving the votes and in general to attend to +such other matters as were necessary, in order properly to conduct +the voting, and afterward to receive from the commissioners the +result of the vote and forward it to my headquarters. These +registers, and all other officers having to do with elections, were +to be held to a rigid accountability, and be subject to trial by +military commission for fraud or unlawful or improper conduct in the +performance of their duties; and in order to be certain that the +Registration Boards performed their work faithfully and +intelligently, officers of the army were appointed as supervisors. +To this end the parishes were grouped together conveniently in +temporary districts, each officer having from three to five parishes +to supervise. The programme thus mapped out for carrying out the law +in Louisiana was likewise adhered to in Texas, and indeed was +followed as a model in some of the other military districts. + +Although Military Commissions were fully authorized by the +Reconstruction acts, yet I did not favor their use in governing the +district, and probably would never have convened one had these acts +been observed in good faith. I much preferred that the civil courts, +and the State and municipal authorities already in existence, should +perform their functions without military control or interference, but +occasionally, because the civil authorities neglected their duty, I +was obliged to resort to this means to ensure the punishment Of +offenders. At this time the condition of the negroes in Texas and +Louisiana was lamentable, though, in fact, not worse than that of the +few white loyalists who had been true to the Union during the war. +These last were singled out as special objects of attack, and were, +therefore, obliged at all times to be on the alert for the protection +of their lives and property. This was the natural outcome of Mr. +Johnson's defiance of Congress, coupled with the sudden conversion to +his cause of persons in the North--who but a short time before had +been his bitterest enemies; for all this had aroused among the +disaffected element new hopes of power and place, hopes of being at +once put in political control again, with a resumption of their +functions in State and National matters without any preliminary +authorization by Congress. In fact, it was not only hoped, but +expected, that things were presently to go on just as if there had +been no war. + +In the State of Texas there were in 1865 about 200,000 of the colored +race-roughly, a third of the entire population--while in Louisiana +there were not less than 350,000, or more than one-half of all the +people in the State. Until the enactment of the Reconstruction laws +these negroes were without rights, and though they had been liberated +by the war, Mr. Johnson's policy now proposed that they should have +no political status at all, and consequently be at the mercy of a +people who, recently their masters, now seemed to look upon them as +the authors of all the misfortunes that had come upon the land. +Under these circumstances the blacks naturally turned for protection +to those who had been the means of their liberation, and it would +have been little less than inhuman to deny them sympathy. Their +freedom had been given them, and it was the plain duty of those in +authority to make it secure, and screen them from the bitter +political resentment that beset them, and to see that they had a fair +chance in the battle of life. Therefore, when outrages and murders +grew frequent, and the aid of the military power was an absolute +necessity for the protection of life, I employed it unhesitatingly-- +the guilty parties being brought to trial before military +commissions--and for a time, at least, there occurred a halt in the +march of terrorism inaugurated by the people whom Mr. Johnson had +deluded. + +The first, Military Commission was convened to try the case of John +W. Walker, charged with shooting a negro in the parish of St. John. +The proper civil authorities had made no effort to arrest Walker, and +even connived at his escape, so I had him taken into custody in New +Orleans, and ordered him tried, the commission finding him guilty, +and sentencing him to confinement in the penitentiary for six months. +This shooting was the third occurrence of the kind that had taken +place in St. John's parish, a negro being wounded in each case, and +it was plain that the intention was to institute there a practice of +intimidation which should be effective to subject the freedmen to the +will of their late masters, whether in making labor contracts, or in +case these newly enfranchised negroes should evince a disposition to +avail themselves of the privilege to vote. + +The trial and conviction of Walker, and of one or two others for +similiar outrages, soon put a stop to every kind of "bull-dozing " in +the country parishes; but about this time I discovered that many +members of the police force in New Orleans were covertly intimidating +the freedmen there, and preventing their appearance at the +registration offices, using milder methods than had obtained in the +country, it is true, but none the less effective. + +Early in 1866 the Legislature had passed an act which created for the +police of New Orleans a residence qualification, the object of which +was to discharge and exclude from the force ex-Union soldiers. This +of course would make room for the appointment of ex-Confederates, and +Mayor Monroe had not been slow in enforcing the provisions of the +law. It was, in fact, a result of this enactment that the police was +so reorganized as to become the willing and efficient tool which it +proved to be in the riot of 1866; and having still the same +personnel, it was now in shape to prevent registration by threats, +unwarranted arrests, and by various other influences, all operating +to keep the timid blacks away from the registration places. + +That the police were taking a hand in this practice of repression, I +first discovered by the conduct of the assistant to the chief of the +body, and at once removed the offender, but finding this ineffectual +I annulled that part of the State law fixing the five years' +residence restriction, and restored the two years' qualification, +thus enabling Mayor Heath, who by my appointment had succeeded +Monroe, to organize the force anew, and take about one-half of its +members from ex-Union soldiers who when discharged had settled in New +Orleans. This action put an end to intimidation in the parish of +Orleans; and now were put in operation in all sections the processes +provided by the supplemental Reconstruction law for the summoning of +a convention to form a Constitution preparatory to the readmission of +the State, and I was full of hope that there would now be much less +difficulty in administering the trust imposed by Congress. + +During the two years previous great damage had been done the +agricultural interests of Louisiana by the overflow of the +Mississippi, the levees being so badly broken as to require extensive +repairs, and the Legislature of 1866 had appropriated for the purpose +$4,000,000, to be raised by an issue of bonds. This money was to be +disbursed by a Board of Levee Commissioners then in existence, but +the term of service of these commissioners, and the law creating the +board, would expire in the spring of 1867. In order to overcome this +difficulty the Legislature passed a bill continuing the commissioners +in office but as the act was passed inside of ten days before the +adjournment of the Legislature, Governor Wells pocketed the bill, and +it failed to become a law. The Governor then appointed a board of +his own, without any warrant of law whatever. The old commissioners +refused to recognize this new board, and of course a conflict of +authority ensued, which, it was clear, would lead to vicious results +if allowed to continue; so, as the people of the State had no +confidence in either of the boards, I decided to end the contention +summarily by appointing an entirely new commission, which would +disburse the money honestly, and further the real purpose for which +it had been appropriated. When I took this course the legislative +board acquiesced, but Governor Wells immediately requested the +President to revoke my order, which, however, was not done, but +meanwhile the Secretary of War directed me to suspend all proceedings +in the matter, and make a report of the facts. I complied in the +following telegram: + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT, +"NEW ORLEANS, La., June 3, 1867. + +"SIR: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your telegram of +this date in reference to the Levee Commissioners in this State. + +"The following were my reasons for abolishing the two former boards, +although I intended that my order should be sufficiently explanatory: + +"Previous to the adjournment of the Legislature last winter it passed +an act continuing the old Levee board in office, so that the four +millions of dollars ($4,000,000) in bonds appropriated by the +Legislature might be disbursed by a board of rebellious antecedents. + +"After its adjournment the Governor of the State appointed a board of +his own, in violation of this act, and made the acknowledgment to me +in person that his object was to disburse the money in the interest +of his own party by securing for it the vote of the employees at the +time of election. + +"The board continued in office by the Legislature refused to turn +over to the Governor's board, and each side appealed to me to sustain +it, which I would not do. The question must then have gone to the +courts, which, according to the Governor's judgment when he was +appealing to me to be sustained, would require one year for decision. +Meantime the State was overflowed, the Levee boards tied up by +political chicanery, and nothing done to relieve the poor people, now +fed by the charity of the Government and charitable associations of +the North. + +"To obviate this trouble, and to secure to the overflowed districts +of the State the immediate relief which the honest disbursement of +the four millions ($4,000,000) would give, my order dissolving both +boards was issued. + +"I say now, unequivocally, that Governor Wells is a political +trickster and a dishonest man. I have seen him myself, when I first +came to this command, turn out all the Union men who had supported +the Government, and put in their stead rebel soldiers who had not yet +doffed their gray uniform. I have seen him again, during the July +riot of 1866, skulk away where I could not find him to give him a +guard, instead of coming out as a manly representative of the State +and joining those who were preserving the peace. I have watched him +since, and his conduct has been as sinuous as the mark left in the +dust by the movement of a snake. + +"I say again that he is dishonest, and that dishonesty is more than +must be expected of me. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General, U. S. A. + +"Hon. E. M. STANTON, +"Secretary of War, Washington, D. C." + + +The same day that I sent my report to the Secretary of War I removed +from office Governor Wells himself, being determined to bear no +longer with the many obstructions he had placed in the way of +reorganizing the civil affairs of the State. I was also satisfied +that he was unfit to retain the place, since he was availing himself +of every opportunity to work political ends beneficial to himself. +In this instance Wells protested to me against his removal, and also +appealed to the President for an opinion of the Attorney-General as +to my power in the case; and doubtless he would have succeeded in +retaining his office, but for the fact that the President had been +informed by General James B. Steadman and others placed to watch me +that Wells was wholly unworthy. + + +"NEW ORLEANS, June 19, 1867. +"ANDREW JOHNSON, President United States, +"Washington City: + +"Lewis D. Campbell leaves New Orleans for home this evening. Want +of respect for Governor Wells personally, alone represses the +expression of indignation felt by all honest and sensible men at the +unwarranted usurpation of General Sheridan in removing the civil +officers of Louisiana. It is believed here that you will reinstate +Wells. He is a bad man, and has no influence. + +"I believe Sheridan made the removals to embarrass you, believing the +feeling at the North would sustain him. My conviction is that on +account of the bad character of Wells and Monroe, you ought not to +reinstate any who have been removed, because you cannot reinstate any +without reinstating all, but you ought to prohibit the exercise of +this power in the future. + +"Respectfully yours, + +"JAMES B. STEADMAN." + + +I appointed Mr. Thomas J. Durant as Wells's successor, but he +declining, I then appointed Mr. Benjamin F. Flanders, who, after I +had sent a staff-officer to forcibly eject Wells in case of +necessity, took possession of the Governor's office. Wells having +vacated, Governor Flanders began immediately the exercise of his +duties in sympathy with the views of Congress, and I then notified +General Grant that I thought he need have no further apprehension +about the condition of affairs in Louisiana, as my appointee was a +man of such integrity and ability that I already felt relieved of +half my labor. I also stated in the same despatch that nothing would +answer in Louisiana but a bold and firm course, and that in taking +such a one I felt that I was strongly supported; a statement that was +then correct, for up to this period the better classes were disposed +to accept the Congressional plan of reconstruction. + +During the controversy over the Levee Commissioners, and the +correspondence regarding the removal of Governor Wells, registration +had gone on under the rules laid down for the boards. The date set +for closing the books was the 3oth of June, but in the parish of +Orleans the time was extended till the 15th of July. This the +President considered too short a period, and therefore directed the +registry lists not to be closed before the 1st of August, unless +there was some good reason to the contrary. This was plainly +designed to keep the books open in order that under the Attorney- +General's interpretation of the Reconstruction laws, published June +20, many persons who had been excluded by the registration boards +could yet be registered, so I decided to close the registration, +unless required by the President unconditionally, and in specific +orders, to extend the time. My motives were manifold, but the main +reasons were that as two and a half months had been given already, +the number of persons who, under the law, were qualified for registry +was about exhausted; and because of the expense I did not feel +warranted in keeping up the boards longer, as I said, "to suit new +issues coming in at the eleventh hour," which would but open a "broad +macadamized road for perjury and fraud." + +When I thus stated what I intended to do, the opinion of the +Attorney-General had not yet been received. When it did reach me it +was merely in the form of a circular signed by Adjutant-General +Townsend, and had no force of law. It was not even sent as an order, +nor was it accompanied by any instructions, or by anything except the +statement that it was transmitted to the 11 respective military +commanders for their information, in order that there might be +uniformity in the execution of the Reconstruction acts. To adopt +Mr. Stanbery's interpretation of the law and reopen registration +accordingly, would defeat the purpose of Congress, as well as add to +my perplexities. Such a course would also require that the officers +appointed by me for the performance of specified duties, under laws +which I was empowered to interpret and enforce, should receive their +guidance and instructions from an unauthorized source, so on +communicating with General Grant as to how I should act, he directed +me to enforce my own construction of the military bill until ordered +to do otherwise. + +Therefore the registration continued as I had originally directed, +and nothing having been definitely settled at Washington in relation +to my extending the time, on the 10th of July I ordered all the +registration boards to select, immediately, suitable persons to act +as commissioners of election, and at the same time specified the +number of each set of commissioners, designated the polling-places, +gave notice that two days would be allowed for voting, and followed +this with an order discontinuing registration the 31st of July, and +then another appointing the 27th and 28th of September as the time +for the election of delegates to the State convention. + +In accomplishing the registration there had been little opposition +from the mass of the people, but the press of New Orleans, and the +office-holders and office-seekers in the State generally, antagonized +the work bitterly and violently, particularly after the promulgation +of the opinion of the Attorney-General. These agitators condemned +everybody and everything connected with the Congressional plan of +reconstruction; and the pernicious influence thus exerted was +manifested in various ways, but most notably in the selection of +persons to compose the jury lists in the country parishes it also +tempted certain municipal officers in New Orleans to perform illegal +acts that would seriously have affected the credit of the city had +matters not been promptly corrected by the summary removal from +office of the comptroller and the treasurer, who had already issued a +quarter of a million dollars in illegal certificates. On learning of +this unwarranted and unlawful proceeding, Mayor Heath demanded an +investigation by the Common Council, but this body, taking its cue +from the evident intention of the President to render abortive the +Reconstruction acts, refused the mayor's demand. Then he tried to +have the treasurer and comptroller restrained by injunction, but the +city attorney, under the same inspiration as the council, declined to +sue out a writ, and the attorney being supported in this course by +nearly all the other officials, the mayor was left helpless in his +endeavors to preserve the city's credit. Under such circumstances he +took the only step left him--recourse to the military commander; and +after looking into the matter carefully I decided, in the early part +of August, to give the mayor officials who would not refuse to make +an investigation of the illegal issue of certificates, and to this +end I removed the treasurer, surveyor, comptroller, city attorney, +and twenty-two of the aldermen; these officials, and all of their +assistants, having reduced the financial credit of New Orleans to a +disordered condition, and also having made efforts--and being then +engaged in such--to hamper the execution of the Reconstruction laws. + +This action settled matters in the city, but subsequently I had to +remove some officials in the parishes--among them a justice of the +peace and a sheriff in the parish of Rapides; the justice for +refusing to permit negro witnesses to testify in a certain murder +case, and for allowing the murderer, who had foully killed a colored +man, to walk out of his court on bail in the insignificant sum of +five hundred dollars; and the sheriff, for conniving at the escape +from jail of another alleged murderer. Finding, however, even after +these removals, that in the country districts murderers and other +criminals went unpunished, provided the offenses were against negroes +merely (since the jurors were selected exclusively from the whites, +and often embraced those excluded from the exercise of the election +franchise) I, having full authority under the Reconstruction laws, +directed such a revision of the jury lists as would reject from them +every man not eligible for registration as a voter. This order was +issued August 24, and on its promulgation the President relieved me +from duty and assigned General Hancock as my successor. + + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT, +"NEW ORLEANS, LA., August 24, 1867. + +"SPECIAL ORDERS, No. 125. + +"The registration of voters of the State of Louisiana, according to +the law of Congress, being complete, it is hereby ordered that no +person who is not registered in accordance with said law shall be +considered as, a duly qualified voter of the State of Louisiana. All +persons duly registered as above, and no others, are consequently +eligible, under the laws of the State of Louisiana, to serve as +jurors in any of the courts of the State. + +"The necessary revision of the jury lists will immediately be made by +the proper officers. + +"All the laws of the State respecting exemptions, etc., from jury +duty will remain in force. + +By command of Major-General P. H. SHERIDAN. + +"GEO. L. HARTNUFF, Asst. Adj't-General." + + +Pending the arrival of General Hancock, I turned over the command of +the district September 1 to General Charles Griffin; but he dying of +yellow fever, General J. A. Mower succeeded him, and retained command +till November 29, on which date General Hancock assumed control. +Immediately after Hancock took charge, he revoked my order of August +24 providing for a revision of the jury lists; and, in short, +President Johnson's policy now became supreme, till Hancock himself +was relieved in March, 1868. + +My official connection with the reconstruction of Louisiana and Texas +practically closed with this order concerning the jury lists. In my +judgment this had become a necessity, for the disaffected element, +sustained as it was by the open sympathy of the President, had grown +so determined in its opposition to the execution of the +Reconstruction acts that I resolved to remove from place and power +all obstacles; for the summer's experience had convinced me that in +no other way could the law be faithfully administered. + +The President had long been dissatisfied with my course; indeed, he +had harbored personal enmity against me ever since he perceived that +he could not bend me to an acceptance of the false position in which +he had tried to place me by garbling my report of the riot of 1866. +When Mr. Johnson decided to remove me, General Grant protested in +these terms, but to no purpose: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"WASHINGTON, D. C., August 17, 1867 + +"SIR: I am in receipt of your order of this date directing the +assignment of General G. H. Thomas to the command of the Fifth +Military District, General Sheridan to the Department of the +Missouri, and General Hancock to the Department of the Cumberland; +also your note of this date (enclosing these instructions), saying: +'Before you issue instructions to carry into effect the enclosed +order, I would be pleased to hear any suggestions you may deem +necessary respecting the assignments to which the order refers.' + +"I am pleased to avail myself of this invitation to urge--earnestly +urge--urge in the name of a patriotic people, who have sacrificed +hundreds of thousands of loyal lives and thousands of millions of +treasure to preserve the integrity and union of this country--that +this order be not insisted on. It is unmistakably the expressed wish +of the country that General Sheridan should not be removed from his +present command. + +"This is a republic where the will of the people is the law of the +land. I beg that their voice may be heard. + +"General Sheridan has performed his civil duties faithfully and +intelligently. His removal will only be regarded as an effort to +defeat the laws of Congress. It will be interpreted by the +unreconstructed element in the South--those who did all they could to +break up this Government by arms, and now wish to be the only element +consulted as to the method of restoring order--as a triumph. It will +embolden them to renewed opposition to the will of the loyal masses, +believing that they have the Executive with them. + +"The services of General Thomas in battling for the Union entitle him +to some consideration. He has repeatedly entered his protest against +being assigned to either of the five military districts, and +especially to being assigned to relieve General Sheridan. + +"There are military reasons, pecuniary reasons, and above all, +patriotic reasons, why this should not be insisted upon. + +"I beg to refer to a letter marked 'private,' which I wrote to the +President when first consulted on the subject of the change in the +War Department. It bears upon the subject of this removal, and I had +hoped would have prevented it. + +"I have the honor to be, with great respect, your obedient servant, + +"U. S. GRANT, +"General U. S. A., Secretary of War ad interim. + +"His Excellency A. JOHNSON, +"President of the United States." + + +I was ordered to command the Department of the Missouri (General +Hancock, as already noted, finally becoming my successor in the Fifth +Military District), and left New Orleans on the 5th of September. I +was not loath to go. The kind of duty I had been performing in +Louisiana and Texas was very trying under the most favorable +circumstances, but all the more so in my case, since I had to contend +against the obstructions which the President placed in the way from +persistent opposition to the acts of Congress as well as from +antipathy to me--which obstructions he interposed with all the +boldness and aggressiveness of his peculiar nature. + +On more than one occasion while I was exercising this command, +impurity of motive was imputed to me, but it has never been +truthfully shown (nor can it ever be) that political or corrupt +influences of any kind controlled me in any instance. I simply tried +to carry out, without fear or favor, the Reconstruction acts as they +came to me. They were intended to disfranchise certain persons, and +to enfranchise certain others, and, till decided otherwise, were the +laws of the land; and it was my duty to execute them faithfully, +without regard, on the one hand, for those upon whom it was thought +they bore so heavily, nor, on the other, for this or that political +party, and certainly without deference to those persons sent to +Louisiana to influence my conduct of affairs. + +Some of these missionaries were high officials, both military and +civil, and I recall among others a visit made me in 1866 by a +distinguished friend of the President, Mr. Thomas A. Hendricks. The +purpose of his coming was to convey to me assurances of the very high +esteem in which I was held by the President, and to explain +personally Mr. Johnson's plan of reconstruction, its flawless +constitutionality, and so on. But being on the ground, I had before +me the exhibition of its practical working, saw the oppression and +excesses growing out of it, and in the face of these experiences even +Mr. Hendricks's persuasive eloquence was powerless to convince me of +its beneficence. Later General Lovell H. Rousseau came down on a +like mission, but was no more successful than Mr. Hendricks. + +During the whole period that I commanded in Louisiana and Texas my +position was a most unenviable one. The service was unusual, and the +nature of it scarcely to be understood by those not entirely familiar +with the conditions existing immediately after the war. In +administering the affairs of those States, I never acted except by +authority, and always from conscientious motives. I tried to guard +the rights of everybody in accordance with the law. In this I was +supported by General Grant and opposed by President Johnson. The +former had at heart, above every other consideration, the good of his +country, and always sustained me with approval and kind suggestions. +The course pursued by the President was exactly the opposite, and +seems to prove that ,in the whole matter of reconstruction he was +governed less by patriotic motives than by personal ambitions. Add +to this his natural obstinacy of character and personal enmity toward +me, and no surprise should be occasioned when I say that I heartily +welcomed the order that lifted from me my unsought burden. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +AT FORT LEAVENWORTH--THE TREATY OF MEDICINE LODGE--GOING TO FORT +DODGE--DISCONTENTED INDIANS--INDIAN OUTRAGES--A DELEGATION OF CHIEFS- +-TERRIBLE INDIAN RAID--DEATH OF COMSTOCK--VAST HERDS OF BUFFALO--PRE +PARING FOR A WINTER CAMPAIGN--MEETING "BUFFALO BILL"--HE UNDERTAKES A +DANGEROUS TASK--FORSYTH'S GALLANT FIGHT--RESCUED. + +The headquarters of the military department to which I was assigned +when relieved from duty at New Orleans was at Fort Leavenworth, +Kansas, and on the 5th of September I started for that post. In due +time I reached St. Louis, and stopped there a day to accept an +ovation tendered in approval of the course I had pursued in the Fifth +Military District--a public demonstration apparently of the most +sincere and hearty character. + +>From St. Louis to Leavenworth took but one night, and the next day I +technically complied with my orders far enough to permit General +Hancock to leave the department, so that he might go immediately to +New Orleans if he so desired, but on account of the yellow fever +epidemic then prevailing, he did not reach the city till late in +November. + +My new command was one of the four military departments that composed +the geographical division then commanded by Lieutenant-General +Sherman. This division had been formed in 1866, with a view to +controlling the Indians west of the Missouri River, they having +become very restless and troublesome because of the building of the +Pacific railroads through their hunting-grounds, and the +encroachments of pioneers, who began settling in middle and western +Kansas and eastern Colorado immediately after the war. + +My department embraced the States of Missouri and Kansas, the Indian +Territory, and New Mexico. Part of this section of country--western +Kansas particularly--had been frequently disturbed and harassed +during two or three years past, the savages every now and then +massacring an isolated family, boldly attacking the surveying and +construction parties of the Kansas-Pacific railroad, sweeping down on +emigrant trains, plundering and burning stage-stations and the like +along the Smoky Hill route to Denver and the Arkansas route to New +Mexico. + +However, when I relieved Hancock, the department was comparatively +quiet. Though some military operations had been conducted against +the hostile tribes in the early part of the previous summer, all +active work was now suspended in the attempt to conclude a permanent +peace with the Cheyennes, Arapahoes, Kiowas, and Comanches, in +compliance with the act of Congress creating what was known as the +Indian Peace Commission of 1867. + +Under these circumstances there was little necessity for my remaining +at Leavenworth, and as I was much run down in health from the +Louisiana climate, in which I had been obliged to live continuously +for three summers (one of which brought epidemic cholera, and another +a scourge of yellow fever), I took a leave of absence for a few +months, leaving Colonel A. J. Smith, of the Seventh Cavalry, +temporarily in charge of my command. + +On this account I did not actually go on duty in the department of +the Missouri till March, 1868. On getting back I learned that the +negotiations of the Peace Commissioners held at Medicine Lodge, about +seventy miles south of Fort Larned had resulted in a treaty with the +Cheyennes, Arapahoes, Kiowas, and Comanches, by which agreement it +was supposed all troubles had been settled. The compact, as +concluded, contained numerous provisions, the most important to us +being one which practically relinquished the country between the +Arkansas and Platte rivers for white settlement; another permitted +the peaceable construction of the Pacific railroads through the same +region; and a third requiring the tribes signing the treaty to retire +to reservations allotted them in the Indian Territory. Although the +chiefs and head-men were well-nigh unanimous in ratifying these +concessions, it was discovered in the spring of 1868 that many of the +young men were bitterly opposed to what had been done, and claimed +that most of the signatures had been obtained by misrepresentation +and through proffers of certain annuities, and promises of arms and +ammunition to be issued in the spring of 1868. This grumbling was +very general in extent, and during the winter found outlet in +occasional marauding, so, fearing a renewal of the pillaging and +plundering at an early day, to prepare myself for the work evidently +ahead the first thing I did on assuming permanent command was to make +a trip to Fort Larned and Fort Dodge, near which places the bulk of +the Indians had congregated on Pawnee and Walnut creeks. I wanted to +get near enough to the camps to find out for myself the actual state +of feeling among the savages, and also to familiarize myself with the +characteristics of the Plains Indians, for my previous experience had +been mainly with mountain tribes on Ehe Pacific coast. Fort Larned I +found too near the camps for my purpose, its proximity too readily +inviting unnecessary "talks," so I remained here but a day or two, +and then went on to Dodge, which, though considerably farther away +from the camps, was yet close enough to enable us to obtain easily +information of all that was going on. + +It took but a few days at Dodge to discover that great discontent +existed about the Medicine Lodge concessions, to see that the young +men were chafing and turbulent, and that it would require much tact +and good management on the part of the Indian Bureau to persuade the +four tribes to go quietly to their reservations, under an agreement +which, when entered into, many of them protested had not been fully +understood. + +A few hours after my arrival a delegation of prominent chiefs called +on me and proposed a council, where they might discuss their +grievances, and thus bring to the notice of the Government the +alleged wrongs done them; but this I refused, because Congress had +delegated to the Peace Commission the whole matter of treating with +them, and a council might lead only to additional complications. My +refusal left them without hope of securing better terms, or of even +delaying matters longer; so henceforth they were more than ever +reckless and defiant. Denunciations of the treaty became outspoken, +and as the young braves grew more and more insolent every day, it +amounted to conviction that, unless by some means the irritation was +allayed, hostilities would surely be upon us when the buffalo +returned to their summer feeding-grounds between the Arkansas and the +Platte. + +The principal sufferers in this event would be the settlers in middle +and western Kansas, who, entirely ignorant of the dangers hanging +over them, were laboring to build up homes in a new country. Hence +the maintenance of peace was much to be desired, if it could be +secured without too great concessions, and although I would not meet +the different tribes in a formal council, yet, to ward off from +settlers as much as possible the horrors of savage warfare, I showed, +by resorting to persuasive methods, my willingness to temporize a +good deal. An abundant supply of rations is usually effective to +keep matters quiet in such cases, so I fed them pretty freely, and +also endeavored to control them through certain men who, I found, +because of former associations, had their confidence. These men, +employed as scouts, or interpreters, were Mr. William Comstock, Mr. +Abner S. Grover, and Mr. Richard Parr. They had lived on the Plains +for many years with different tribes of Indians, had trapped and +hunted with them, and knew all the principal chiefs and headmen. +Through such influences, I thought I saw good chances of preserving +peace, and of inducing the discontented to go quietly to their +reservations in the Indian Territory as soon as General Hazen, the +representative of the Peace Commissioners, was ready to conduct them +there from Fort Larned. + +Before returning to Leavenworth I put my mediators (as I may call +them) under charge of an officer of the army, Lieutenant F. W. +Beecher, a very intelligent man, and directed him to send them out to +visit among the different tribes, in order to explain what was +intended by the treaty of Medicine Lodge, and to make every effort +possible to avert hostilities. Under these instructions Comstock and +Grover made it their business to go about among the Cheyennes--the +most warlike tribe of all--then camping about the headwaters of +Pawnee and Walnut creeks, and also to the north and west of Fort +Wallace, while Parr spent his time principally with the Kiowas and +Comanches. + +>From the different posts--Wallace, Dodge, and Larned Lieutenant +Beecher kept up communication with all three scouts, and through him +I heard from them at least once a week. Every now and then some +trouble along the railroad or stage routes would be satisfactorily +adjusted and quiet restored, and matters seemed to be going on very +well, the warm weather bringing the grass and buffalo in plenty, and +still no outbreak, nor any act of downright hostility. So I began to +hope that we should succeed in averting trouble till the favorite war +season of the Indians was over, but the early days of August rudely +ended our fancied tranquility. + +In July the encampments about Fort Dodge began to break up, each band +or tribe moving off to some new location north of the Arkansas, +instead of toward its proper reservation to the south of that river. +Then I learned presently that a party of Cheyennes had made a raid on +the Kaws--a band of friendly Indians living near Council Grove--and +stolen their horses, and also robbed the houses of several white +people near Council Grove. This raid was the beginning of the Indian +war of 1868. Immediately following it, the Comanches and Kiowas came +to Fort Larned to receive their annuities, expecting to get also the +arms and ammunition promised them at Medicine Lodge, but the raid to +Council Grove having been reported to the Indian Department, the +issue of arms was suspended till reparation was made. This action of +the Department greatly incensed the savages, and the agent's offer of +the annuities without guns and pistols was insolently refused, the +Indians sulking back to their camps, the young men giving themselves +up to war-dances, and to powwows with " medicine-men," till all hope +of control was gone. + +Brevet Brigadier-General Alfred Sully, an officer of long experience +in Indian matters, who at this time was in command Qf the District of +the Arkansas, which embraced Forts Larned and Dodge, having notified +me of these occurrences at Larned, and expressed the opinion that the +Indians were bent on mischief, I directed him there immediately to +act against them. After he reached Larned, the chances for peace +appeared more favorable. The Indians came to see him, and protested +that it was only a few bad young men who had been depredating, and +that all would be well and the young men held in check if the agent +would but issue the arms and ammunition. Believing their promises, +Sully thought that the delivery of the arms would solve all the +difficulties, so on his advice the agent turned them over along with +the annuities, the Indians this time condescendingly accepting. + +This issue of arms and ammunition was a fatal mistake; Indian +diplomacy had overreached Sully's experience, and even while the +delivery was in progress a party of warriors had already begun a raid +of murder and rapine, which for acts of devilish cruelty perhaps has +no parallel in savage warfare. The party consisted of about two +hundred Cheyennes and a few Arapahoes, with twenty Sioux who had been +visiting their friends, the Cheyennes. As near as could be +ascertained, they organized and left their camps along Pawnee Creek +about the 3d of August. Traveling northeast, they skirted around +Fort Harker, and made their first appearance among the settlers in +the Saline Valley, about thirty miles north of that post. Professing +friendship and asking food at the farm-houses, they saw the +unsuspecting occupants comply by giving all they could spare from +their scanty stores. Knowing the Indian's inordinate fondness for +coffee, particularly when well sweetened, they even served him this +luxury freely. With this the demons began their devilish work. +Pretending to be indignant because it was served them in tin cups, +they threw the hot contents into the women's faces, and then, first +making prisoners of the men, they, one after another, ravished the +women till the victims became insensible. For some inexplicable +reason the two farmers were neither killed nor carried off, so after +the red fiends had gone, the unfortunate women were brought in to +Fort Harker, their arrival being the first intimation to the military +that hostilities had actually begun. + +Leaving the Saline, this war-party crossed over to the valley of the +Solomon, a more thickly settled region, and where the people were in +better circumstances, their farms having been started two or three +years before. Unaware of the hostile character of the raiders, the +people here received them in the friendliest way, providing food, and +even giving them ammunition, little dreaming of what was impending. +These kindnesses were requited with murder and pillage, and worse, +for all the women who fell into their hands were subjected to horrors +indescribable by words. Here also the first murders were committed, +thirteen men and two women being killed. Then, after burning five +houses and stealing all the horses they could find, they turned back +toward the Saline, carrying away as prisoners two little girls named +Bell, who have never been heard of since. + +It was probably the intention to finish, as they marched back to the +south, the devilish work begun on the Saline, but before they reached +that valley on the return, the victims left there originally had fled +to Fort Harker, as already explained, and Captain Benteen was now +nearing the little settlement with a troop of cavalry, which he had +hurriedly marched from Fort Zarah. The savages were attacking the +house of a Mr. Schermerhorn, where a few of the settlers had +collected for defense, when Benteen approached. Hearing the firing, +the troopers rode toward the sound at a gallop, but when they +appeared in view, coming over the hills, the Indians fled in all +directions, escaping punishment through their usual tactics of +scattering over the Plains, so as to leave no distinctive trail. + +When this frightful raid was taking place, Lieutenant Beecher, with +his three scouts--Comstock, Grover, and Parr--was on Walnut Creek. +Indefinite rumors about troubles on the Saline and Solomon reaching +him, he immediately sent Comstock and Grover over to the headwaters +of the Solomon, to the camp of a band of Cheyennes, whose chief was +called "Turkey Leg," to see if any of the raiders belonged there; to +learn the facts, and make explanations, if it was found that the +white people had been at fault. For years this chief had been a +special friend of Comstock and Grover. They had trapped, hunted, and +lived with his band, and from this intimacy they felt confident of +being able to get "Turkey Leg" to quiet his people, if any of them +were engaged in the raid; and, at all events, they expected, through +him and his band, to influence the rest of the Cheyennes. From the +moment they arrived in the Indian village, however, the two scouts +met with a very cold reception. Neither friendly pipe nor food was +offered them, and before they could recover from their chilling +reception, they were peremptorily ordered out of the village, with +the intimation that when the Cheyennes were on the war-path the +presence of whites was intolerable. The scouts were prompt to leave, +of course, and for a few miles were accompanied by an escort of seven +young men, who said they were sent with them to protect the two from +harm. As the party rode along over the prairie, such a depth of +attachment was professed for Comstock and Grover that, +notwithstanding all the experience of their past lives, they were +thoroughly deceived, and in the midst of a friendly conversation some +of the young warriors fell suddenly to the rear and treacherously +fired on them. + +At the volley Comstock fell from his horse instantly killed. Grover, +badly wounded in the shoulder, also fell to the ground near Comstock +Seeing his comrade was dead,Grover made use of his friend's body to +protect himself, lying close behind it. Then took place a remarkable +contest, Grover, alone and severely wounded, obstinately fighting the +seven Indians, and holding them at bay for the rest of the day. +Being an expert shot, and having a long-range repeating rifle, he +"stood off " the savages till dark. Then cautiously crawling away on +his belly to a deep ravine, he lay close, suffering terribly from his +wound, till the following night, when, setting out for Fort Wallace, +he arrived there the succeeding day, almost crazed from pain and +exhaustion. + +Simultaneously with the fiendish atrocities committed on the Saline +and Solomon rivers and the attack on Comstock and Grover, the +pillaging and murdering began on the Smoky Hill stage-route, along +the upper Arkansas River and on the headwaters of the Cimarron. That +along the Smoky Hill and north of it was the exclusive work of, the +Cheyennes, a part of the Arapahoes, and the few Sioux allies +heretofore mentioned, while the raiding on the Arkansas and Cimarron +was done principally by the Kiowas under their chief, Satanta, aided +by some of the Comanches. The young men of these tribes set out on +their bloody work just after the annuities and guns were issued at +Larned, and as soon as they were well on the road the rest of the +Comanches and Kiowas escaped from the post and fled south of the +Arkansas. They were at once pursued by General Sully with a small +force, but by the time he reached the Cimarron the war-party had +finished its raid on tHe upper Arkansas, and so many Indians combined +against Sully that he was compelled to withdraw to Fort Dodge, which +he reached not without considerable difficulty, and after three +severe fights. + +These, and many minor raids which followed, made it plain that a +general outbreak was upon us. The only remedy, therefore, was to +subjugate the savages immediately engaged in the forays by forcing +the several tribes to settle down on the reservations set apart by +the treaty of Medicine Lodge. The principal mischief-makers were the +Cheyennes. Next in deviltry were the Kiowas, and then the Arapahoes +and Comanches. Some few of these last two tribes continued friendly, +or at least took no active part in the raiding, but nearly all the +young men of both were the constant allies of the Cheyennes and +Kiowas. All four tribes together could put on the war-path a +formidable force of about 6,000 warriors. The subjugation of this +number of savages would be no easy task, so to give the matter my +undivided attention I transferred my headquarters from Leavenworth to +Fort Hays, a military post near which the prosperous town of Hays +City now stands. + +Fort Hays was just beyond the line of the most advanced settlements, +and was then the terminus of the Kansas-Pacific railroad. For this +reason it could be made a depot of supplies, and was a good point +from which to supervise matters in the section of country to be +operated in, which district is a part of the Great American Plains, +extending south from the Platte River in Nebraska to the Red River in +the Indian Territory, and westward from the line of frontier +settlements to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, a vast region +embracing an area of about 150,000 square miles. With the exception +of a half-dozen military posts and a few stations on the two overland +emigrant routes--the Smoky Hill to Denver, and the Arkansas to New +Mexico--this country was an unsettled waste known only to the Indians +and a few trappers. There were neither roads nor well-marked trails, +and the only timber to be found--which generally grew only along the +streams--was so scraggy and worthless as hardly to deserve the name. +Nor was water by any means plentiful, even though the section is +traversed by important streams, the Republican, the Smoky Hill, the +Arkansas, the Cimarron, and the Canadian all flowing eastwardly, as +do also their tributaries in the main. These feeders are sometimes +long and crooked, but as a general thing the volume of water is +insignificant except after rain-falls. Then, because of unimpeded +drainage, the little streams fill up rapidly with torrents of water, +which quickly flows off or sinks into the sand, leaving only an +occasional pool without visible inlet or outlet. + +At the period of which I write, in 1868, the Plains were covered with +vast herds of buffalo--the number has been estimated at 3,000,000 +head--and with such means of subsistence as this everywhere at hand, +the 6,000 hostiles were wholly unhampered by any problem of food- +supply. The savages were rich too according to Indian standards, +many a lodge owning from twenty to a hundred ponies; and +consciousness of wealth and power, aided by former temporizing, had +made them not only confident but defiant. Realizing that their +thorough subjugation would be a difficult task, I made up my mind to +confine operations during the grazing and hunting season to +protecting the people of the new settlements and on the overland +routes, and then, when winter came, to fall upon the savages +relentlessly, for in that season their ponies would be thin, and weak +from lack of food, and in the cold and snow, without strong ponies to +transport their villages and plunder, their movements would be so +much impeded that the troops could overtake them. + +At the outbreak of hostilities I had in all, east of New Mexico, a +force of regulars numbering about 2,600 men--1,200 mounted and 1,400 +foot troops. The cavalry was composed of the Seventh and Tenth +regiments; the infantry, of the Third and Fifth regiments and four +companies of the Thirty-Eighth. With these few troops all the posts +along the Smoky Hill and Arkansas had to be garrisoned, emigrant +trains escorted, and the settlements and routes of travel and the +construction parties on the Kansas-Pacific railway protected. Then, +too, this same force had to furnish for the field small movable +columns, that were always on the go, so it will be rightly inferred +that every available man was kept busy from the middle of August till +November; especially as during this period the hostiles attacked over +forty widely dispersed places, in nearly all cases stealing horses, +burning houses, and killing settlers. It was of course impossible to +foresee where these descents would be made, but as soon as an attack +was heard of assistance was always promptly rendered, and every now +and then we succeeded in killing a few savages. As a general thing, +though, the raiders escaped before relief arrived, and when they had +a few miles the start, all efforts to catch them were futile. I +therefore discouraged long pursuits, and, in fact, did not approve of +making any at all unless the chances of obtaining paying results were +very evident, otherwise the troops would be worn out by the time the +hard work of the winter was demanded from them. + +To get ready for a winter campaign of six months gave us much to do. +The thing most needed was more men, so I asked for additional +cavalry, and all that could be spareds--even troops of the Fifth +Cavalry--was sent tome. Believing this reinforcement insufficient, +to supplement it I applied for a regiment of Kansas volunteers, which +request being granted, the organization of the regiment was +immediately begun at Topeka. It was necessary also to provide a +large amount of transportation and accumulate quantities of stores, +since the campaign probably would not end till spring. Another +important matter was to secure competent guides for the different +columns of troops, for, as I have said, the section of country to be +operated in was comparatively unknown. + +In those days the railroad town of Hays City was filled with so +called "Indian scouts," whose common boast was of having slain scores +of redskins, but the real scout--that is, a 'guide and trailer +knowing the habits of the Indians--was very scarce, and it was hard +to find anybody familiar with the country south of the Arkansas, +where the campaign was to be made. Still, about Hays City and the +various military posts there was some good material to select from, +and we managed to employ several men, who, from their experience on +the Plains in various capacities, or from natural instinct and +aptitude, soon became excellent guides and courageous and valuable +scouts, some of them, indeed, gaining much distinction. Mr. William +F. Cody ("Buffalo Bill"), whose renown has since become world-wide, +was one of the men thus selected. He received his sobriquet from his +marked success in killing buffaloes for a contractor, to supply fresh +meat to the construction parties, on the Kansas-Pacific railway. He +had given up this business, however, and was now in the employ of the +quartermaster's department of the army, and was first brought to my +notice by distinguishing himself in bringing me an important despatch +from Fort Larned to Fort Hays, a distance of sixty-five miles, +through a section infested with Indians. The despatch informed me +that the Indians near Larned were preparing to decamp, and this +intelligence required that certain orders should be carried to Fort +Dodge, ninety-five miles south of Hays. This too being a +particularly dangerous route--several couriers having been killed on +it--it was impossible to get one of the various "Petes," "Jacks," or +"Jims" hanging around Hays City to take my communication. Cody +learning of the strait I was in, manfully came to the rescue, and +proposed to make the trip to Dodge, though he had just finished his +long and perilous ride from Larned. I gratefully accepted his offer, +and after four or five hours' rest he mounted a fresh horse and +hastened on his journey, halting but once to rest on the way, and +then only for an hour, the stop being made at Coon Creek, where he +got another mount from a troop of cavalry. At Dodge he took six +hours' sleep, and then continued on to his own post--Fort Larned-- +with more despatches. After resting twelve hours at Larned, he was +again in the saddle with tidings for me at Fort Hays, General Hazen +sending him, this time, with word that the villages had fled to the +south of the Arkansas. Thus, in all, Cody rode about 350 miles in +less than sixty hours, and such an exhibition of endurance and +courage was more than enough to convince me that his services would +be extremely valuable in the campaign, so I retained him at Fort Hays +till the battalion of the Fifth Cavalry arrived, and then made him +chief of scouts for that regiment. + +The information brought me by Cody on his second trip from Larned +indicated where the villages would be found in the winter, and I +decided to move on them about the 1st of November. Only the women +and children and the decrepit old men were with the villages, however +enough, presumably, to look after the plunder most of the warriors +remaining north of the Arkansas to continue their marauding. Many +severe fights occurred between our troops and these marauders, and in +these affairs, before November 1 over a hundred Indians were killed, +yet from the ease with which the escaping savages would disappear +only to fall upon remote settlements with pillage and murder, the +results were by no means satisfactory. One of the most noteworthy of +these preliminary affairs was the gallant fight made on the +Republican River the 17th of September by my Aide, Colonel George A. +Forsyth, and party, against about seven hundred Cheyennes and Sioux. +Forsyth, with Lieutenant Beecher, and Doctor J. H. Mooers as surgeon, +was in charge of a company of citizen scouts, mostly expert rifle- +shots, but embracing also a few Indian fighters, among these Grover +and Parr. The company was organized the latter part of August for +immediate work in defense of the settlements, and also for future use +in the Indian Territory when the campaign should open there. About +the time the company had reached its complement--it was limited to +forty-seven men and three officers--a small band of hostiles began +depredations near Sheridan City, one of the towns that grew up over- +night on the Kansas-Pacific railway. Forsyth pursued this party, but +failing to overtake it, made his way into Fort Wallace for rations, +intending to return from there to Fort Hays. Before he started back, +however, another band of Indians appeared near the post and stole +some horses from the stage company. This unexpected raid made +Forsyth hot to go for the marauders, and he telegraphed me for +permission, which I as promptly gave him. He left the post on the +10th of September, the command consisting of himself, Lieutenant +Beecher, Acting Assistant Surgeon Mooers, and the full strength, +forty-seven men, with a few pack mules carrying about ten days' +rations. + +He headed north toward the Republican River. For the first two days +the trail was indistinct and hard to follow. During the next three +it continued to grow much larger, indicating plainly that the number +of Indians ahead was rapidly increasing. Of course this sign meant a +fight as soon as a large enough force was mustered, but as this was +what Forsyth was after, he pushed ahead with confidence and alacrity. +The night of the 16th of September he encamped on the Arickaree +branch of the Republican, not far from the forks of the river, with +the expectation of resuming the march as usual next day, for the +indications were that the main body of the savages must be still a +long way off, though in the preceding twenty-four hours an occasional +Indian had been seen. + +But the enemy was much nearer than was thought, for at daybreak on +the morning of the 17th he made known his immediate presence by a +sudden dash at Forsyth's horses, a few of which were stampeded and +captured before the scouts could reach them. This dash was made by a +small party only to get the horses, so those engaged in it were soon +driven off, but a few minutes later hundreds of savages--it was +afterward learned that seven hundred warriors took part in the fight- +-hitherto invisible, showed themselves on the hills overlooking the +camp and so menacingly as to convince Forsyth that his defense must +be one of desperation. The only place at hand that gave any hope of +successful resistance was a small island in the Arickaree, the +channel on one side being about a foot deep while on the other it was +completely dry; so to this position a hurried retreat was made. All +the men and the remaining animals reached the island in safety, but +on account of the heavy fire poured in from the neighboring hills the +packs containing the rations and medicines had to be abandoned. + +On seeing Forsyth's hasty move, the Indians, thinking they had him, +prepared to overwhelm the scouts by swooping down on one side of the +island with about five hundred mounted warriors, while about two +hundred, covered by the tall grass in the river-bottom attacked the +other side, dismounted. But the brave little band sadly disappointed +them. When the charge came it was met with such a deadly fire that a +large number of the fiends were killed, some of them even after +gaining the bank of the island. This check had the effect of making +the savages more wary, but they were still bold enough to make two +more assaults before mid-day. Each of these ending like the first, +the Indians thereafter contented themselves with shooting all the +horses, which had been tied up to some scraggy little cottonwood- +trees, and then proceeded to lay siege to the party. + +The first man struck was Forsyth himself. He was hit three times in +all--twice in one leg, both serious wounds, and once on the head, a +slight abrasion of the scalp. A moment later Beecher was killed and +Doctor Mooers mortally wounded: and in addition to these misfortunes +the scouts kept getting hit, till several were killed, and the whole +number of casualties had reached twenty-one in a company of forty- +seven. Yet with all this, and despite the seeming hopelessness of +the situation, the survivors kept up their pluck undiminished, and +during a lull succeeding the third repulse dug into the loose soil +till the entire party was pretty well protected by rifle-pits. Thus +covered they stood off the Indians for the next three days, although +of course their condition became deplorable from lack of food, while +those who were hurt suffered indescribable agony, since no means were +at hand for dressing their wounds. + +By the third day the Indians, seeming to despair of destroying the +beleaguered party before succor might arrive, began to draw off, and +on the fourth wholly disappeared. The men were by this time nearly +famished for food. Even now there was nothing to be had except +horse-meat from the carcasses of the animals killed the first day, +and this, though decidedly unpalatable, not to say disgusting, had to +be put up with, and so on such unwholesome stuff they managed to live +for four days longer, at the end of which time they were rescued by a +column of troops under Colonel Bankhead, which had hastened from Fort +Wallace in response to calls for help, carried there by two brave +fellows--Stilwell and Truedell--who, volunteering to go for relief, +had slipped through the Indians, and struck out for that post in the +night after the first day's fight. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII, + +FITTING OUT THE WINTER EXPEDITION--ACCOMPANYING THE MAIN FORCE--THE +OTHER COLUMNS--STRUCK BY A BLIZZARD--CUSTER'S FIGHT ON THE WASHITA-- +DEFEAT AND DEATH OF BLACK KETTLE--MASSACRE OF ELLIOTT'S PARTY--RELIEF +OF COLONEL CRAWFORD. + +The end of October saw completed the most of my arrangements for the +winter campaign, though the difficulties and hardships to be +encountered had led several experienced officers of the army, and +some frontiersmen like Mr. James Bridger, the famous scout and, guide +of earlier days, to discourage the project. Bridger even went so far +as to come out from St. Louis to dissuade me, but I reasoned that as +the soldier was much better fed and clothed than the Indian, I had +one great advantage, and that, in short, a successful campaign could +be made if the operations of the different columns were energetically +conducted. To see to this I decided to go in person with the main +column, which was to push down into the western part of the Indian +Territory, having for its initial objective the villages which, at +the beginning of hostilities, had fled toward the head-waters of the +Red River, and those also that had gone to the same remote region +after decamping from the neighborhood of Larned at the time that +General Hazen sent Buffalo Bill to me with the news. + +The column which was expected to do the main work was to be composed +of the Nineteenth Kansas Volunteer Cavalry, commanded by Colonel +Crawford; eleven troops of the Seventh United States Cavalry, under +General Custer, and a battalion of five companies of infantry under +Brevet Major John H. Page. To facilitate matters, General Sully, the +district commander, was ordered to rendezvous these troops and +establish a supply depot about a hundred miles south of Fort Dodge, +as from such a point operations could be more readily conducted. He +selected for the depot a most suitable place at the confluence of +Beaver and Wolf creeks, and on his arrival there with Custer's and +Page's commands, named the place Camp Supply. + +In conjunction with the main column, two others also were to +penetrate the Indian Territory. One of these, which was to march +east from New Mexico by way of Fort Bascom was to be composed of six +troops of the Third Cavalry and two companies of infantry, the whole +under Colonel A. W. Evans. The other, consisting of seven troops of +the Fifth Cavalry, and commanded by Brevet Brigadier-General Eugene +A. Carr, was to march southeast from Fort Lyon; the intention being +that Evans and Carr should destroy or drive in toward old Fort Cobb +any straggling bands that might be prowling through the country west +of my own line of march; Carr, as he advanced, to be joined by Brevet +Brigadier-General W. H. Penrose, with five troops of cavalry already +in the field southeast of Lyon. The Fort Bascom column, after +establishing a deepot of supplies at Monument Creek, was to work down +the main Canadian, and remain out as long as it could feed itself +from New Mexico; Carr, having united with Penrose on the North +Canadian, was to operate toward the Antelope Hills and headwaters of +the Red River; while I, with the main column was to move southward to +strike the Indians along the Washita, or still farther. south on +branches of the Red River. + +It was no small nor easy task to outfit all these troops by the time +cold weather set in, and provide for them during the winter, but by +the 1st of November I had enough supplies accumulated at Forts Dodge +and Lyon for my own and Carr's columns, and in addition directed +subsistence and forage for three months to be sent to Fort Gibson for +final delivery at Fort Arbuckle, as I expected to feed the command +from this place when we arrived in the neighborhood of old Fort Cobb, +but through some mismanagement few of these stores got further than +Gibson before winter came on. + +November 1, all being ready, Colonel Grawford was furnished with +competent guides, and, after sending two troops to Fort Dodge to act +as my escort, with the rest of his regiment he started from Topeka +November 5, under orders to march straight for the rendezvous at the +junction of Beaver and Wolf creeks. He was expected to reach his +destination about the 20th, and there unite with the Seventh Cavalry +and the battalion of infantry, which in the mean time were on the +march from Dodge. A few days later Carr and Evans began their march +also, and everything being now in motion, I decided to go to Camp +Supply to give the campaign my personal attention, determined to +prove that operations could be successfully conducted in spite of +winter, and bent on showing the Indians that they were not secure +from punishment because of inclement weather--an ally on which they +had hitherto relied with much assurance. + +We started from Fort Hays on the 15th of N6vember, and the first +night out a blizzard struck us and carried away our tents; and as the +gale was so violent that they could not be put up again, the rain and +snow drenched us to the skin. Shivering from wet and cold, I took +refuge under a wagon, and there spent such a miserable night that, +when at last morning came, the gloomy predictions of old man Bridger +and others rose up before me with greatly increased force. As we +took the road the sleet and snow were still falling, but we labored +on to Dodge that day in spite of the fact that many of the mules +played out on the way. We stayed only one night at Dodge, and then +on the 17th, escorted by a troop of cavalry and Forsyth's scouts, now +under the command of Lieutenant Lewis Pepoon, crossed the Arkansas +and camped the night of the 18th at Bluff Creek, where the two troops +of the Nineteenth Kansas, previously detailed as my escort, were +awaiting our coming. As we were approaching this camp some +suspicious looking objects were seen moving off at a long distance to +the east of us, but as the scouts confidently pronounced them +buffalo, we were unaware of their true character till next morning, +when we became satisfied that what we had seen were Indians, for +immediately after crossing Beaver Creek we struck a trail, leading to +the northeast, of a war party that evidently came up from the head- +waters of the Washita River. + +The evening of November 21we arrived at the Camp Supply depot, having +traveled all day in another snowstorm that did not end till twenty- +four hours later. General Sully, with Custer's regiment and the +infantry battalion, had reached the place several days before, but +the Kansas regiment had not yet put in an appearance. All hands were +hard at work trying to shelter the stores and troops, but from the +trail seen that morning, believing that an opportunity offered to +strike an effective blow, I directed Custer to call in his working +parties and prepare to move immediately, without waiting for +Crawford's regiment, unaccountably absent. Custer was ready to start +by the 23d, and he was then instructed to march north to where the +trail had been seen near Beaver Creek and follow it on the back +track, for, being convinced that the war party had come from the +Washita, I felt certain that this plan would lead directly to the +villages. + +The difficulties attending a winter campaign were exhibited now with +their full force, as the march had to be conducted through a snow- +storm that hid surrounding objects, and so covered the country as to +alter the appearance of the prominent features, making the task of +the guides doubly troublesome; but in spite of these obstacles +fifteen miles had been traversed when Custer encamped for the night. +The next day the storm had ceased, and the weather was clear and +cold. The heavy fall of snow had of course obliterated the trail in +the bottoms, and everywhere on the level; but, thanks to the wind, +that had swept comparatively bare the rough places and high ground, +the general direction could be traced without much trouble. The +day's march, which was through a country abounding with buffalo, was +unattended by any special incident at first, but during the +afternoon, after getting the column across the Canadian River--an +operation which, on account of the wagons, consumed considerable +time--Custer's scouts (friendly Osages) brought back word that, some +miles ahead, they had struck fresh signs, a trail coming into the old +one from the north, which, in their opinion, indicated that the war +party was returning to the villages. + +On the receipt of this news, Custer, leaving a guard with the wagons, +hastily assembled the rest of his men' and pushing on rapidly, +overtook the scouts and a detailed party from his regiment which had +accompanied them, all halted on the new trail awaiting his arrival. +A personal examination satisfied Custer that the surmises of his +scouts were correct; and also that the fresh trail in the deep snow +could at night be followed with ease. After a short halt for supper +and rest the pursuit was resumed, the Osage scouts in advance, and +although the hostile Indians were presumed to be yet some distance +off, every precaution was taken to prevent detection and to enable +our troops to strike them unawares. The fresh trail, which it was +afterward ascertained had been made by raiders from Black Kettle's +village of Cheyennes, and by some Arapahoes, led into the valley of +the Washita, and growing fresher as the night wore on, finally +brought the Osages upon a campfire, still smoldering, which, it was +concluded, had been built by the Indian boys acting as herders of the +ponies during the previous day. It was evident, then, that the +village could be but a few miles off; hence the pursuit was continued +with redoubled caution until, a few hours before dawn of the 27th, as +the leading scouts peered over a rise on the line of march, they +discovered a large body of animals in the valley below. + +As soon as they reported this discovery, Custer determined to +acquaint himself with the situation by making a reconnoissance in +person, accompanied by his principal officers. So, sending back word +to halt the cavalry, he directed the officers to ride forward with +him; then dismounting, the entire party crept cautiously to a high +point which overlooked the valley, and from where, by the bright moon +then shining, they saw just how the village was situated. Its +position was such as to admit of easy approach from all sides. So, +to preclude an escape of the Indians, Custer decided to attack at +daybreak, and from four different directions. + +The plan having been fully explained to the officers, the remaining +hours of the night were employed in making the necessary +dispositions. Two of the detachments left promptly, since they had +to make a circuitous march of several miles to Teach the points +designated for their attack; the third started a little later; and +then the fourth and last, under Custer himself, also moved into +position. As the first light grew visible in the east, each column +moved closer in to the village, and then, all dispositions having +been made according to the prearranged plan, from their appointed +places the entire force to the opening notes of "Garry Owen," played +by the regimental band as the signal for the attack--dashed at a +gallop into the village. The sleeping and unsuspecting savages were +completely surprised by the onset; yet after the first confusion, +during which the impulse to escape principally actuated them, they +seized their weapons, and from behind logs and trees, or plunging +into the stream and using its steep bank as a breastwork, they poured +upon their assailants a heavy fire, and kept on fighting with every +exhibition of desperation. In such a combat mounted men were +useless, so Custer directed his troopers to fight on, foot, and the +Indians were successively driven from one point of vantage to +another, until, finally, by 9 o'clock the entire camp was in his +possession and the victory complete. Black Kettle and over one +hundred of his warriors were killed, and about fifty women and +children captured; but most of the noncombatants, as well as a few +warriors and boys, escaped in the confusion of the fight. Making +their way down the river, these fugitives alarmed the rest of the +Cheyennes and Arapahoes, and also the Kiowas and Comanches, whose +villages were in close proximity--the nearest not more than two miles +off. + +Then of course all the warriors of these tribes rallied to attack +Custer, who meantime was engaged burning Black Kettle's camp and +collecting his herds of ponies. But these new foes were rather wary +and circumspect, though they already had partial revenge in an +unlooked for way by cutting off Major Elliott and fifteen men, who +had gone off in pursuit of a batch of young warriors when the fight +was going on at the village. In fact, the Indians had killed +Elliott's whole party, though neither the fate of the poor fellows, +nor how they happened to be caught, was known till long afterward. +It was then ascertained that the detachment pursued a course due +south, nearly at right angles to the Washita River, and after +galloping a couple of miles over the hills, crossing a small branch +of the Washita on the way, they captured some of the fugitives. In +bringing the prisoners back, Elliott was in turn attacked on the open +prairie by a large number of savages from farther down the Washita, +who by this time were swarming to the aid of Black Kettle's village. +The little band fought its way gallantly to within rifle-range of the +small creek referred to, but could get no farther, for the Indians +had taken up a position in the bed of the stream, and from under +cover of its banks Elliott and all his remaining men were quickly +killed. No relief was sent them, for Custer, not having seen Elliott +set out, knew nothing of the direction taken, and, besides, was busy +burning the villages and securing the ponies, and deeply concerned, +too, with defending himself from the new dangers menacing him. +Elliott and his brave little party were thus left to meet their fate +alone. + +While Custer was burning the lodges and plunder and securing the +ponies, the Indians from the villages down the Washita were gathering +constantly around him till by mid-day they had collected in +thousands, and then came a new problem as to what should be done. If +he attacked the other villages, there was great danger of his being +overwhelmed, and should he start back to Camp Supply by daylight, he +would run the risk of losing his prisoners and the ponies, so, +thinking the matter over, he decided to shoot all the ponies, and +keep skirmishing with the savages till nightfall, and then, under +cover of the darkness, return to Camp Supply; a programme that was +carried out successfully, but Custer's course received some severe +criticism because no effort was made to discover what had become of +Elliott. + +Custer had, in all, two officers and nineteen men killed, and two +officers and eleven men wounded. The blow struck was a most +effective one, and, fortunately, fell on one of the most villanous of +the hostile bands that, without any provocation whatever, had +perpetrated the massacres on the Saline and Solomon, committing +atrocities too repulsive for recital, and whose hands were still red +from their bloody work on the recent raid. Black Kettle, the chief, +was an old man, and did not himself go with the raiders to the Saline +and Solomon, and on this account his fate was regretted by some. But +it was old age only that kept him back, for before the demons set out +from Walnut Creek he had freely encouraged them by "making medicine," +and by other devilish incantations that are gone through with at war +and scalp dances. + +When the horrible work was over he undertook to shield himself by +professions of friendship, but being put to the test by my offering +to feed and care for all of his band who would come in to Fort Dodge +and remain there peaceably, he defiantly refused. The consequence of +this refusal was a merited punishment, only too long delayed. + +I received the first news of Custer's fight on theWashita on the +morning of November 29. It was brought to me by one of his white +scouts, "California Joe," a noted character, who had been +experiencing the ups and downs of pioneer life ever since crossing +the Plains in 1849. Joe was an invaluable guide and Indian fighter +whenever the clause of the statute prohibiting liquors in theIndian +country happened to be in full force. At the time in question the +restriction was by no means a dead letter, and Joe came through in +thirty-six hours, though obliged to keep in hiding during daylight of +the 28th. The tidings brought were joyfully received by everybody at +Camp Supply, and they were particularly agreeable tome, for, besides +being greatly worried about the safety of the command in the extreme +cold and deep snows, I knew that the immediate effect a victory would +be to demoralize the rest of the hostiles, which of course would +greatly facilitate and expedite our ultimate success. Toward evening +the day after Joe arrived the head of Custer's column made its +appearance on the distant hills, the friendly Osage scouts and the +Indian prisoners in advance. As they drew near, the scouts began a +wild and picturesque performance in celebration of the victory, +yelling, firing their guns, throwing themselves on the necks and +sides of their horses to exhibit their skill in riding, and going +through all sorts of barbaric evolutions and gyrations, which were +continued till night, when the rejoicings were ended with the hideous +scalp dance. + +The disappearance of Major Elliott and his party was the only damper +upon our pleasure, and the only drawback to the very successful +expedition. There was no definite information as to the detachment, +--and Custer was able to report nothing more than that he had not +seen Elliott since just before the fight began. His theory was, +however, that Elliott and his men had strayed off on account of +having no guide, and would ultimately come in all right to Camp +Supply or make their way back to Fort Dodge; a very unsatisfactory +view of the matter, but as no one knew the direction Elliott had +taken, it was useless to speculate on other suppositions, and +altogether too late to make any search for him. I was now anxious to +follow up Custer's stroke by an immediate move to the south with the +entire column, but the Kansas regiment had not yet arrived. At first +its nonappearance did not worry me much, for I attributed the delay +to the bad weather, and supposed Colonel Crawford had wisely laid up +during the worst storms. Further ,waiting, however, would give the +Indians a chance to recover from the recent dispiriting defeat, so I +sent out scouting parties to look Crawford up and hurry him along. +After a great deal of searching, a small detachment of the regiment +was found about fifty miles below us on the North Canadian, seeking +our camp. This detachment was in a pretty bad plight, and when +brought in, the officer in charge reported that the regiment, by not +following the advice of the guide sent to conduct it to Camp Supply, +had lost its way. Instead of relying on the guides, Crawford had +undertaken to strike through the canyons of the Cimarron by what +appeared to him a more direct route, and in the deep gorges, filled +as they were with snow, he had been floundering about for days +without being able to extricate his command. Then, too, the men were +out of rations, though they had been able to obtain enough buffalo +meat to keep from starving. As for the horses, since they could get +no grass, about seven hundred of them had already perished from +starvation and exposure. Provisions and guides were immediately sent +out to the regiment, but before the relief could reach Crawford his +remaining horses were pretty much all gone, though the men were +brought in without loss of life. Thus, the regiment being dismounted +by this misfortune at the threshold of the campaign, an important +factor of my cavalry was lost to me, though as foot-troops the Kansas +volunteers continued to render very valuable services till mustered +out the next spring. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +A WINTER EXPEDITION--HERDS OF BUFFALO--WOLVES--BLIZZARDS--A TERRIBLE +NIGHT--FINDING THE BODIES OF ELLIOTT'S PARTY--THE ABANDONED INDIAN +CAMPS--PUSHING DOWN THE WASHITA--THE CAPTURED CHIEFS--EVANS'S +SUCCESSFUL FIGHT--ESTABLISHING FORT SILL--"CALIFORNIA JOE"--DUPLICITY +OF THE CHEYENNES--ORDERED TO REPAIR TO WASHINGTON. + +A few days were necessarily lost setting up and refitting the Kansas +regiment after its rude experience in the Cimarron canyons. This +through with, the expedition, supplied with thirty days' rations, +moved out to the south on the 7th of December, under my personal +command. We headed for the Witchita Mountains, toward which rough +region all the villages along the Washita River had fled after +Custer' s fight with Black Kettle. My line of march was by way of +Custer's battle-field, and thence down the Washita, and if the +Indians could not sooner be brought to terms, I intended to follow +them into the Witchita Mountains from near old Fort Cobb. The snow +was still deep everywhere, and when we started the thermometer was +below zero, but the sky being clear and the day very bright, the +command was in excellent spirits. The column was made up of ten +companies of the Kansas regiment, dismounted; eleven companies of the +Seventh Cavalry, Pepoon's scouts, and the Osage scouts. In addition +to Pepoon's men and the Osages, there was also "California Joe," and +one or two other frontiersmen besides, to act as guides and +interpreters. Of all these the principal one, the one who best knew +the country, was Ben Clark, a young man who had lived with the +Cheyennes during much of his boyhood, and who not only had a pretty +good knowledge of the country, but also spoke fluently the Cheyenne +and Arapahoe dialects, and was an adept in the sign language. + +The first day we made only about ten miles, which carried us to the +south bank of Wolf Creek. A considerable part of the day was devoted +to straightening out matters in the command, and allowing time for +equalizing the wagon loads, which as a general thing, on a first +day's march, are unfairly distributed. And then there was an +abundance of fire-wood at Wolf Creek; indeed, here and on Hackberry +Creek--where I intended to make my next camp--was the only timber +north of the Canadian River; and to select the halting places near a +plentiful supply of wood was almost indispensable, for as the men +were provided with only shelter-tents, good fires were needed in +order to keep warm. + +The second day, after marching for hours through vast herds of +buffalo, we made Hackberry Creek; but not, however, without several +stampedes in the wagon-train, the buffalo frightening the mules so +that it became necessary to throw out flankers to shoot the leading +bulls and thus turn off the herds. In the wake of every drove +invariably followed a band of wolves. This animal is a great coward +usually, but hunger had made these so ravenous that they would come +boldly up to the column, and as quick as a buffalo was killed, or +even disabled, they would fall upon the carcass and eagerly devour +it. Antelope also were very numerous, and as they were quite tame-- +being seldom chased--and naturally very inquisitive, it was not an +unfrequent thing to see one of the graceful little creatures run in +among the men and be made a prisoner. Such abundance of game +relieved the monotony of the march to Hackberry Creek, but still, +both men and animals were considerably exhausted by their long tramp, +for we made over thirty miles that day. + +We camped in excellent shape on the creek and it was well we did, for +a "Norther," or , "blizzard," as storms on the Plains are now termed +struck us in the night. During the continuance of these blizzards, +which is usually about three days, the cold wind sweeps over the +Plains with great force, and, in the latitude of the Indian +Territory, is weighted with great quantities of sleet and snow, +through which it is often impossible to travel; indeed, these +"Northers" have many times proved fatal to the unprotected +frontiersman. With our numbers the chance of any one's being lost, +and perishing alone (one of the most common dangers in a blizzard), +was avoided; but under any circumstances such a storm could but +occasion intense suffering to all exposed to it, hence it would have +been well to remain in camp till the gale was over, but the time +could not be spared. We therefore resumed the march at an early hour +next morning, with the expectation of making the south bank of the +main Canathan and there passing the night, as Clark assured me that +timber was plentiful on that side of the river. The storm greatly +impeded us, however, many of the mules growing discouraged, and some +giving out entirely, so we could not get to Clark's "good camp," for +with ten hours of utmost effort only about half a day's distance +could be covered, when at last, finding the struggle useless, we were +forced to halt for the night in a bleak bottom on the north bank of +the river. But no one could sleep, for the wind swept over us with +unobstructed fury, and the only fuel to be had was a few green +bushes. As night fell a decided change of temperature added much to +our misery, the mercury, which had risen when the "Norther" began, +again falling to zero. It can be easily imagined that under such +circumstances the condition of the men was one of extreme discomfort; +in truth, they had to tramp up and down the camp all night long to +keep from freezing. Anything was a relief to this state of things, +so at the first streak of day we quit the dreadful place and took up +the march. + +A seemingly good point for crossing the Canadian was found a couple +of miles down the stream, where we hoped to get our train over on the +ice, but an experiment proving that it was not strong enough, a ford +had to be made, which was done by marching some of the cavalry +through the river, which was about half a mile wide, to break up the +large floes when they had been cut loose with axes. After much hard +work a passage-way was thus opened, and by noon the command was +crossed to the south bank, and after thawing out and drying our +clothes before big fires, we headed for a point on the Washita, where +Clark said there was plenty of wood, and good water too, to make us +comfortable till the blizzard had blown over. + +We reached the valley of the Washita a little before dark, and camped +some five or six miles above the scene of Custer's fight, where I +concluded to remain at least a day, to rest the command and give it a +chance to refit. In the mean time I visited the battle-field in +company with Custer and several other officers, to see if there was a +possibility of discovering any traces of Elliotts party. On arriving +at the site of the village, and learning from Custer what +dispositions had been made in approaching for the attack, the +squadron of the escort was deployed and pushed across the river at +the point where Elliott had crossed. Moving directly to the south, +we had not gone far before we struck his trail, and soon the whole +story was made plain by our finding, on an open level space about two +miles from the destroyed village, the dead and frozen bodies of the +entire party. The poor fellows were all lying within a circle not +more than fifteen or twenty paces in diameter, and the little piles +of empty cartridge shells near each body showed plainly that every +man had made a brave fight. None were scalped, but most of them were +otherwise horribly mutilated, which fiendish work is usually done by +the squaws. All had been stripped of their clothing, but their +comrades in the escort were able to identify the bodies, which being +done, we gave them decent burial. Their fate was one that has +overtaken many of our gallant army in their efforts to protect the +frontiersmen's homes and families from savages who give no quarter, +though they have often received it, and where the possibility of +defeat in action carries with it the certainty of death and often of +preceding torture. + +>From the meadow where Elliott was found we rode to the Washita, and +then down the river through the sites of the abandoned villages, that +had been strung along almost continuously for about twelve miles in +the timber skirting the stream. On every hand appeared ample +evidence that the Indians had intended to spend the winter here, for +the ground was littered with jerked meat, bales of buffalo robes, +cooking utensils, and all sorts of plunder usually accumulated in a +permanent Indian camp. There were, also, lying dead near the +villages hundreds of ponies, that had been shot to keep them from +falling into our hands, the scant grazing and extreme cold having +made them too weak to be driven along in the flight. The wholesale +slaughter of these ponies was a most cheering indication that our +campaign would be ultimately successful, and we all prayed for at +least a couple of months more of cold weather and plenty of snow. + +At the Kiowa village we found the body of a white woman--a Mrs. +Blynn--and also that of her child. These captives had been taken by +the Kiowas near Fort Lyon the previous summer, and kept close +prisoners until the stampede began, the poor woman being reserved to +gratify the brutal lust of the chief, Satanta; then, however, Indian +vengeance demanded the murder of the poor creatures, and after +braining the little child against a tree, the mother was shot through +the forehead, the weapon, which no doubt brought her welcome release, +having been fired so close that the powder had horribly disfigured +her face. The two bodies were wrapped in blankets and taken to camp, +and afterward carried along in our march, till finally they were +decently interred at Fort Arbuckle.. + +At an early hour on December 12 the command pulled out from its cosy +camp and pushed down the valley of the Washita, following immediately +on the Indian trail which led in the direction of Fort Cobb, but +before going far it was found that the many deep ravines and canyons +on this trail would delay our train very much, so we moved out of the +valley and took the level prairie on the divide. Here the traveling +was good, and a rapid gait was kept up till mid-day, when, another +storm of sleet and snow coming on, it became extremely difficult for +the guides to make out the proper course; and fearing that we might +get lost or caught on the open plain without wood or water--as we had +been on the Canadian--I turned the command back to the valley, +resolved to try no more shortcuts involving the risk of a disaster to +the expedition. But to get back was no slight task, for a dense fog +just now enveloped us, obscuring all landmarks. However, we were +headed right when the fog set in, and we had the good luck to reach +the valley before night-fall, though there was a great deal of +floundering about, and also much disputing among the guides as to +where the river would be found Fortunately we struck the stream right +at a large grove of timber, and established ourselves, admirably. By +dark the ground was covered with twelve or fifteen inches of fresh +snow, and as usual the temperature rose very sensibly while the storm +was on, but after night-fall the snow ceased and the skies cleared +up. Daylight having brought zero weather again, our start on the +morning of the 17th was painful work, many of the men freezing their +fingers while handling the horse equipments, harness, and tents. +However, we got off in fairly good season, and kept to the trail +along the Washita notwithstanding the frequent digging and bridging +necessary to get the wagons over ravines. + +Continuing on this line for three days, we at length came to a point +on the Washita where all signs indicated that we were nearing some of +the villages. Wishing to strike them as soon as possible, we made a +very early start next morning, the 17th. A march of four or five +miles brought us to a difficult ravine, and while we were making +preparations to get over, word was brought that several Indians had +appeared in our front bearing a white flag and making signs that they +had a communication to deliver. We signaled back that they would be +received, when one of the party came forward alone and delivered a +letter, which proved to be from General Hazen, at Fort Cobb. The +letter showed that Hazen was carrying on negotiations with the +Indians, and stated that all the tribes between Fort Cobb and my +column were friendly , but the intimation was given that the +Cheyennes and Arapahoes were still hostile, having moved off +southward toward, the Red River. It was added that Satanta and Lone +Wolf--the chiefs of the Kiowas--would give information of the +whereabouts of the hostiles; and such a communication coming direct +from the representative of the Indian Department, practically took +the Kiowas--the village at hand was of that tribe--under its +protection, and also the Comanches, who were nearer in to Cobb. Of +course, under such circumstances I was compelled to give up the +intended attack, though I afterward regretted that I had paid any +heed to the message, because Satanta and Lone Wolf proved, by +trickery and double dealing, that they had deceived Hazen into +writing the letter. + +When I informed the Klowas that I would respect Hazen's letter +provided they all came into Fort Cobb and gave themselves up, the two +chiefs promised submission, and, as an evidence of good faith, +proposed to accompany the column to Fort Cobb with a large body of +warriors, while their villages moved to the same point by easy +stages, along the opposite bank of the river--claiming this to be +necessary from the poor condition of the ponies. I had some +misgivings as to the sincerity of Satanta and Lone Wolf, but as I +wanted to get the Kiowas where their surrender would be complete, so +that the Cheyennes and Arapahoes could then be pursued, I agreed to +the proposition, and the column moved on. All went well that day, +but the next it was noticed that the warriors were diminishing, and +an investigation showed that a number of them had gone off on various +pretexts--the main one being to help along the women and children +with the villages. With this I suspected that they were playing me +false, and my suspicions grew into certainty when Satanta himself +tried to make his escape by slipping beyond the flank of the column +and putting spurs to his pony. Fortunately, several officers saw +him, and quickly giving chase, overhauled him within a few hundred +yards. I then arrested both him and Lone Wolf and held them as +hostages--a measure that had the effect of bringing back many of the +warriors already beyond our reach. + +When we arrived at Fort Cobb we found some of the Comanches already +there, and soon after the rest. of them, excepting one band, came in +to the post. The Kiowas, however, were not on hand, and there were +no signs to indicate their coming. At the end of two days it was +plain enough that they were acting in bad faith, and would continue +to unless strong pressure was brought to bear. Indeed, they had +already started for the Witchita Mountains, so I put on the screws at +once by issuing an order to hang Satanta and Lone Wolf, if their +people did not surrender at Fort Cobb within forty-eight hours. The +two chiefs promised prompt compliance, but begged for more time, +seeking to explain the non-arrival of the women and children through +the weak condition of the ponies; but I was tired of their duplicity, +and insisted on my ultimatum. + +The order for the execution brought quick fruit. Runners were sent +out with messages, by the two prisoners, appealing to their people to +save the lives of their chiefs, and the result was that the whole +tribe came in to the post within the specified time. The two +manacled wretches thus saved their necks; but it is to be regretted +that the execution did not come off; for some years afterward their +devilish propensities led them into Texas, where both engaged in the +most horrible butcheries. + +The Kiowas were now in our hands, and all the Comanches too, except +one small band, which, after the Custer fight, had fled toward the +headwaters of the Red River. This party was made up of a lot of very +bad Indians--outlaws from the main tribe--and we did not hope to +subdue them except by a fight, and of this they got their fill; for +Evans, moving from Monument Creek toward the western base of the +Witchita Mountains on Christmas Day, had the good fortune to strike +their village. In the snow and cold his approach was wholly +unexpected, and he was thus enabled to deal the band a blow that +practically annihilated it. Twenty-five warriors were killed +outright, most of the women and children captured, and all the +property was destroyed. Only a few of the party escaped, and some of +these made their way in to Fort Cobb, to join the rest of their tribe +in confinement; while others, later in the season, surrendered at +Fort Bascom. + +This sudden appearance of Evans in the Red River region also alarmed +the Cheyennes and Arapahoes, and their thoughts now began to turn to +submission. Food was growing scarce with them, too, as there was but +little game to be found either in the Witchita Mountains or on the +edge of the Staked Plains, and the march of Carr's column from +Antelope Hills precluded their returning to where the buffalo ranged. +Then, too, many of their ponies were dead or dying, most of their +tepees and robes had been abandoned, and the women and children, +having been kept constantly on the move in the winter's storms, were +complaining bitterly of their sufferings. + +In view of this state of things they intimated, through their +Comanche-Apache friends at Fort Cobb, that they would like to make +terms. On receiving their messages I entered into negotiations with +Little Robe, chief of the Cheyennes, and Yellow Bear, chief of the +Arapahoes, and despatched envoys to have both tribes understand +clearly that they must recognize their subjugation by surrendering at +once, and permanently settling on their reservations in the spring. +Of course the usual delays of Indian diplomacy ensued, and it was +some weeks before I heard the result. + +Then one of my messengers returned with word that Little Robe and +Yellow Bear were on their way to see me. They arrived a few days +later, and, promptly acceding to the terms, promised to bring their +people in, but as many of them would have to come on foot on account +of the condition of the ponies, more time was solicited. Convinced +of the sincerity of their professions I gave them a reasonable +extension, and eventually Yellow Bear made good his word, but Little +Robe, in spite of earnest and repeated efforts, was unable to deliver +his people till further operations were begun against them. + +While these negotiations were in progess I came to the conclusion +that a permanent military post ought to be established well down on +the Kiowa and Comanche reservation, in order to keep an eye on these +tribes in the future, Fort Cobb, being an unsuitable location, +because too far to the north to protect the Texas frontier, and too +far away from where it was intended to permanently place the Indians. +With this purpose in view I had the country thoroughly explored, and +afterward a place was fixed upon not far from the base of the +Witchita Mountains, and near the confluence of Medicine Bluff and +Cash creeks, where building stone and timber could be obtained in +plenty, and to this point I decided to move. The place was named +Camp Sill-now Fort Sill--in honor of my classmate, General Sill, +killed at Stone River; and to make sure of the surrendered Indians, I +required them all, Kiowas, Comanches, and Comanche-Apaches, to +accompany us to the new post, so they could be kept under military +control till they were settled. + +During the march to the new camp the weather was not so cold as that +experienced in coming down from Camp Supply; still, rains were +frequent, and each was invariably followed by a depression of +temperature and high winds, very destructive to our animals, much +weakened by lack of food. The men fared pretty well, however, for on +the rough march along the Washita, and during our stay at Fort Cobb, +they had learned to protect themselves materially from the cold. For +this they had contrived many devices, the favorite means being +dugouts--that is, pits dug in the ground, and roofed over, with +shelter-tents, and having at one end a fire-place and chimney +ingeniously constructed with sod. In these they lived very snugly-- +four men in each--and would often amuse themselves by poking their +heads out and barking at the occupants of adjacent huts in imitation +of the prairie-dog, whose comfortable nests had probably suggested +the idea of dugouts. The men were much better off, in fact, than +many of the officers, for the high winds frequently made havoc with +our wall-tents. The horses and mules suffered most of all. They +could not be sheltered, and having neither grain nor grass, the poor +beasts were in no condition to stand the chilling blasts. Still, by +cutting down cottonwood-trees, and letting the animals browse on the +small soft branches, we managed to keep them up till, finally even +this wretched food beginning to grow scarce, I had all except a few +of the strongest sent to Fort Arbuckle, near which place we had been +able, fortunately, to purchase some fields of corn from the half- +civilized Chickasaws and Choctaws. + +Through mismanagement, as previously noted, the greater part of the +supplies which I had ordered hauled to Arbuckle the preceding fall +had not got farther on the way than Fort Gibson, which post was about +four hundred miles off, and the road abominable, particularly east of +Arbuckle, where it ran through a low region called "boggy bottom." +All along this route were abandoned wagons, left sticking in the mud, +and hence the transportation was growing so short that I began to +fear trouble in getting subsistence up for the men. Still, it would +not do to withdraw, so I made a trip to Arbuckle chiefly for the +purpose of reorganizing the transportation, but also with a view to +opening a new route to that post, the road to lie on high ground, so +as to avoid the creeks and mud that had been giving us so much +trouble. If such a road could be made, I hoped to get up enough +rations and grain from the cornfields purchased to send out a +formidable expedition against the Cheyennes, so I set out for +Arbuckle accompanied by my quartermaster, Colonel A. J. McGonigle. +"California Joe" also went along to guide us through the scrub-oaks +covering the ridge, but even the most thorough exploration failed to +discover any route more practicable than that already in use; indeed, +the high ground was, if anything, worse than the bottom land, our +horses in the springy places and quicksands often miring to their +knees. The ground was so soft and wet, in fact, that we had to make +most of the way on foot, so by the time we reached Arbuckle I was +glad to abandon the new road project. + +Finding near Arbuckle more fields of corn than those already +purchased, I had them bought also, and ordered more of the horses +back there to be fed. I next directed every available mule to be put +to hauling rations, having discovered that the full capacity of the +transportation had not yet been brought into play in forwarding +stores from Gibson, and with this regulation of the supply question I +was ready to return immediately to Camp Sill. But my departure was +delayed by California Joe, who, notwithstanding the prohibitory laws +of the Territory, in some unaccountable way had got gloriously tipsy, +which caused a loss of time that disgusted me greatly; but as we +could not well do without Joe, I put off starting till the next day, +by which time it was thought he would sober up. But I might just as +well have gone at first, for at the end of the twenty-four hours the +incorrigible old rascal was still dead drunk. How he had managed to +get the grog to keep up his spree was a mystery which we could not +solve, though we had had him closely watched, so I cut the matter +short by packing him into my ambulance and carrying him off to Camp +Sill. + +By the time I got back to Sill, the Arapahoes were all in at the +post, or near at hand. The promised surrender of the Cheyennes was +still uncertain of fulfillment, however, and although Little Robe and +his family had remained with us in evidence of good faith, the +messages he sent to his followers brought no assurance of the tribe's +coming in--the runners invariably returning with requests for more +time, and bringing the same old excuse of inability to move because +the ponies were so badly off. But more time was just what I was +determined not to grant, for I felt sure that if a surrender was not +forced before the spring grass came, the ponies would regain their +strength, and then it would be doubtful if the Cheyennes came in at +all. + +To put an end to these delays, Custer proposed to go out and see the +Cheyennes himself, taking with him for escort only such number of men +as could be fairly well mounted from the few horses not sent back to +Arbuckle. At first I was inclined to disapprove Custer's +proposition, but he urged it so strongly that I finally consented, +though with some misgivings, for I feared that so small a party might +tempt the Cheyennes to forget their pacific professions and seek to +avenge the destruction of Black Kettle's band. However, after +obtaining my approval, Custer, with characteristic energy, made his +preparations, and started with three or four officers and forty +picked men, taking along as negotiators Yellow Bear and Little Robe, +who were also to conduct him to the head-waters of the Red River, +where it was supposed the Cheyennes would be found. His progress was +reported by couriers every few days, and by the time he got to the +Witchita foot-hills he had grown so sanguine that he sent California +Joe back to me with word that he was certain of success. Such +hopeful anticipation relieved me greatly, of course, but just about +the time I expected to hear that his mission had been achieved I was +astonished by the party's return. Inquiring as to the trouble, I +learned that out toward the Staked Plains every sign of the Cheyennes +had disappeared. Surprised and disappointed at this, and discouraged +by the loneliness of his situation--for in the whole region not a +trace of animal life was visible, Custer gave up the search, and none +too soon, I am inclined to believe, to save his small party from +perishing. + +This failure put a stop to all expeditions till the latter part of +February, by which time I had managed to lay in enough rations to +feed the command for about thirty days; and the horses back at +Arbuckle having picked up sufficiently for field service they were +ordered to Sill, and this time I decided to send Custer out with his +own and the Kansas regiment, with directions to insist on the +immediate surrender of the Cheyennes, or give them a sound thrashing. +He was ordered to get everything ready by March 1, and then move to +the mouth of Salt Creek, on the North Fork of the Red River, at which +place I proposed to establish a new depot for feeding the command. +Trains could reach this point from Camp Supply more readily than from +Arbuckle, and wishing to arrange this part of the programme in +person, I decided to return at once to Supply, and afterward rejoin +Custer at Salt Creek, on what, I felt sure, was to be the final +expedition of the campaign. I made the three hundred and sixty miles +from Sill to Supply in seven days, but much to my surprise there +found a despatch from General Grant directing me to repair +immediately to Washington. These orders precluded, of course, my +rejoining the command; but at the appointed time it set out on the +march, and within three weeks brought the campaign to a successful +close. + +In this last expedition, for the first few days Custer's route was by +the same trail he had taken in January--that is to say, along the +southern base of the Witchita Mountains--but this time there was more +to encourage him than before, for, on getting a couple of marches +beyond old Camp Radziminski, on all sides were fresh evidences of +Indians, and every effort was bent to strike them. + +>From day to day the signs grew hotter, and toward the latter part of +March the game was found. The Indians being in a very forlorn +condition, Custer might have destroyed most of the tribe, and +certainly all their villages, but in order to save two white women +whom, it was discovered, they held as captives, he contented himself +with the renewal of the Cheyennes' agreement to come in to Camp +Supply. In due time the entire tribe fulfilled its promise except +one small band under "Tall Bull," but this party received a good +drubbing from General Carr on the Republican early in May. After +this fight all the Indians of the southern Plains settled down on +their reservations, and I doubt whether the peace would ever again +have been broken had they not in after years been driven to +hostilities by most unjust treatment. + +It was the 2d of March that I received at Camp Supply Grant's +despatch directing me to report immediately in Washington. It had +been my intention, as I have said, to join Custer on the North Fork +of the Red River, but this new order required me to recast my plans, +so, after arranging to keep the expedition supplied till the end of +the campaign, I started for Washington, accompanied by three of my +staff--Colonels McGonigle and Crosby, and Surgeon Asch, and Mr. DeB. +Randolph Keim, a representative of the press, who went through the +whole campaign, and in 1870 published a graphic history of it. The +day we left Supply we, had another dose of sleet and snow, but +nevertheless we made good time, and by night-fall reached Bluff +Creek. In twenty-four hours more we made Fort Dodge, and on the 6th +of March arrived at Fort Hays. Just south of the Smoky Hill River, a +little before we got to the post, a courier heading for Fort Dodge +passed us at a rapid gait. Suspecting that he had despatches for me, +I directed my outrider to overtake him and find out. The courier +soon turned back, and riding up to my ambulance handed me a telegram +notifying me that General Grant, on the day of his inauguration, +March 4, 1869, had appointed me Lieutenant-General of the Army. When +I reported in Washington, the President desired me to return to New +Orleans and resume command of the Fifth Military District, but this +was not at all to my liking, so I begged off, and was assigned to +take charge of the Division of the Missouri, succeeding General +Sherman, who had just been ordered to assume command of the Army. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +INSPECTING MILITARY POSTS IN UTAH AND MONTANA--DESIRE TO WITNESS THE +FRANCO-GERMAN WAR--ON A SAND-BAR IN THE MISSOURI--A BEAR HUNT--AN +INDIAN SCARE--MYRIADS OF MOSQUITOES--PERMISSION GIVEN TO VISIT +EUROPE--CALLING ON PRESIDENT GRANT--SAILING FOR LIVERPOOL--ARRIVAL IN +BERLIN. + +After I had for a year been commanding the Division of the Missouri, +which embraced the entire Rocky Mountain region, I found it necessary +to make an inspection of the military posts in northern Utah and +Montana, in order by personal observation to inform myself of their +location and needs, and at the same time become acquainted with the +salient geographical and topographical features of that section of my +division. Therefore in May, 1870, I started west by the Union- +Pacific railroad, and on arriving at Corinne' Station, the next +beyond Ogden, took passage by stage-coach for Helena, the capital of +Montana Territory. Helena is nearly five hundred miles north of +Corinne, and under ordinary conditions the journey was, in those +days, a most tiresome one. As the stage kept jogging on day and +night, there was little chance for sleep, and there being with me a +sufficient number of staff-officers to justify the proceeding, we +chartered the "outfit," stipulating that we were to stop over one +night on the road to get some rest. This rendered the journey more +tolerable, and we arrived at Helena without extraordinary fatigue. + +Before I left Chicago the newspapers were filled with rumors of +impending war between Germany and France. I was anxious to observe +the conflict, if it was to occur, but reports made one day concerning +the beginning of hostilities would be contradicted the next, and it +was not till I reached Helena that the despatches lost their doubtful +character, and later became of so positive a nature as to make it +certain that the two nations would fight. I therefore decided to cut +short my tour of inspection, so that I could go abroad to witness the +war, if the President would approve. This resolution limited my stay +in Helena to a couple of days, which were devoted to arranging for an +exploration of what are now known as the Upper and the Lower Geyser +Basins of the Yellowstone Park. While journeying between Corinne and +Helena I had gained some vague knowledge of these geysers from an old +mountaineer named Atkinson, but his information was very indefinite, +mostly second-hand; and there was such general uncertainty as to the +character of this wonderland that I authorized an escort of soldiers +to go that season from Fort Ellis with a small party, to make such +superficial explorations as to justify my sending an engineer officer +with a well-equipped expedition there next summer to scientifically +examine and report upon the strange country. When the arrangements +for this preliminary expedition were completed I started for Fort +Benton, the head of navigation on the Missouri River, on the way +passing through Fort Shaw, on Sun River. I expected to take at +Benton a steamboat to Fort Stevenson, a military post which had been +established about eighty miles south of Fort Buford, near a +settlement of friendly Mandan and Arickaree Indians, to protect them +from the hosiile Sioux. From there I was to make my way overland, +first to Fort Totten near Devil's lake in Dakota, and thence by way +of Fort Abercrombie to Saint Cloud, Minnesota, the terminus of the +rallroad. + +Luckily I met with no delay in getting a boat at Benton, and though +the water was extremely low, we steamed down the channel of the +Missouri with but slight detention till we got within fifty miles of +Fort Buford. Here we struck on a sandbar with such force of steam +and current as to land us almost out of the water from stem to +midships. This bad luck was tantalizing, for to land on a bar when +your boat is under full headway down-stream in the Missouri River is +no trifling matter, especially if you want to make time, for the +rapid and turbid stream quickly depositing sand under the hull, makes +it commonly a task of several days to get your boat off again. As +from our mishap the loss of much time was inevitable, I sent a +messenger to Fort Buford for a small escort, and for horses to take +my party in to the post. Colonel Morrow, the commandant, came +himself to meet us, bringing a strong party of soldiers and some +friendly Indian scouts, because, he said, there were then in the +region around Buford so many treacherous band of Sioux as to make +things exceedingly unsafe. + +Desiring to reach the post without spending more than one night on +the way, we abandoned our steamer that evening, and set off at an +early hour the next morning. We made camp at the end of the day's +march within ten miles of Buford, and arrived at the post without +having had any incident of moment, unless we may dignify as one a +battle with three grizzly bears, discovered by our friendly Indians +the morning of our second day's journey. While eating our breakfast- +-a rather slim one, by the way--spread on a piece of canvas, the +Indians, whose bivouac was some distance off, began shouting +excitedly, "Bear! bear!" and started us all up in time to see, out on +the plain some hundreds of yards away, an enormous grizzly and two +almost full-grown cubs. Chances like this for a bear hunt seldom +offered, so there was hurried mounting--the horses being already +saddled--and a quick advance made on the game from many directions, +Lieutenant Townsend, of the escort, and five or six of the Indians +going with me. Alarmed by the commotion, bruin and her cubs turned +about, and with an awkward yet rapid gait headed for a deep ravine, +in which there was brushwood shelter. + +My party rode directly across the prairie and struck the trail not +far behind the game. Then for a mile or more the chase was kept up, +but with such poor shooting because of the "buck fever" which had +seized most of us, that we failed to bring down any of the grizzlies, +though the cubs grew so tired that the mother was often obliged to +halt for their defense, meanwhile urging them on before her. When +the ravine was gained she hid the cubs away in the thick brushwood, +and then coming out where we could plainly see her, stood on the +defense just within the edge of the thicket, beyond the range of our +rifles though, unless we went down into the canyon, which we would +have to do on foot, since the precipitous wall precluded going on +horseback. For an adventure like this I confess I had little +inclination, and on holding a council of war, I found that the +Indians had still less, but Lieutenant Townsend, who was a fine shot, +and had refrained from firing hitherto in the hope that I might bag +the game, relieved the embarrassing situation and saved the credit of +the party by going down alone to attack the enemy. Meanwhile I +magnanimously held his horse, and the Sioux braves did a deal of +shouting, which they seemed to think of great assistance. + +Townsend, having descended to the bottom of the ravine, approached +within range, when the old bear struck out, dashing into and out of +the bushes so rapidly, however, that he could not get fair aim at +her, but the startled cubs running into full view, he killed one at +the first shot and at the second wounded the other. This terribly +enraged the mother, and she now came boldly out to fight, exposing +herself in the open ground so much as to permit a shot, that brought +her down too, with a broken shoulder. Then the Indians and I, +growing very brave, scrambled down to--take part in the fight. It +was left for me to despatch the wounded cub and mother, and having +recovered possession of my nerves, I did the work effectively, and we +carried off with us the skins of the three animals as trophies of the +hunt and evidence of our prowess. + +As good luck would have it, when we reached Buford we found a +steamboat there unloading stores, and learned that it would be ready +to start down the river the next day. Embarking on her, we got to +Stevenson in a few hours, and finding at the post camp equipage that +had been made ready for our use in crossing overland to Fort Totten, +we set out the following forenoon, taking with us a small escort of +infantry, transported in two light wagons, a couple of Mandans and +the post interpreter going along as mounted guides. + +To reach water we had to march the first day to a small lake forty +miles off, and the oppressive heat, together with the long distance +traveled, used up one of the teams so much that, when about to start +out the second morning, we found the animals unable to go on with any +prospect of finishing the trip, so I ordered them to be rested forty- +eight hours longer, and then taken back to Stevenson. This +diminished the escort by one-half, yet by keeping the Indians and +interpreter on the lookout, and seeing that our ambulance was kept +closed up on the wagon carrying the rest of the detachment, we could, +I thought, stand off any ordinary party of hostile Indians. + +About noon I observed that the scouts in advance had left the trail +and begun to reconnoitre a low ridge to their right, the sequel of +which was that in a few minutes they returned to the wagons on a dead +run and reported Sioux just ahead. Looking in the direction +indicated, I could dimly see five or six horsemen riding in a circle, +as Indians do when giving warning to their camp, but as our halt +disclosed that we were aware of their proximity, they darted back +again behind the crest of the ridge. Anticipating from this move an +immediate attack, we hastily prepared for it by unhooking the mules +from the wagon and ambulance, so that we could use the vehicles as a +barricade. This done, I told the interpreter to take the Mandan +scouts and go over toward the ridge and reconnoitre again. As the +scouts neared the crest two of them dismounted, and, crawling slowly +on their bellies to the summit, took a hasty look and returned at +once to their horses, coming back with word that in the valley beyond +was a camp of at least a hundred Sioux lodges, and that the Indians +were hurriedly getting ready to attack us. The news was anything but +cheering, for with a village of that size the warriors would number +two or three hundred, and could assail us from every side. + +Still, nothing could be done, but stand and take what was to come, +for there was no chance of escape--it being supreme folly to +undertake in wagons a race with Indians to Fort Stevenson, sixty +miles away. To make the best of the situation, we unloaded the +baggage, distributing and adjusting the trunks, rolls of bedding, +crackerboxes, and everything else that would stop a bullet, in such +manner as to form a square barricade, two sides of which were the +wagons, with the mules haltered to the wheels. Every man then +supplied himself with all the ammunition he could carry, and the +Mandan scouts setting up the depressing wail of the Indian death- +song, we all awaited the attack with the courage of despair. + +But no attack came; and time slipping by, and we still unmolested, +the interpreter and scouts were sent out to make another +reconnoissance. Going through just such precautions as before in +approaching the ridge, their slow progress kept us in painful +suspense; but when they got to the crest the strain on our herves was +relieved by seeing them first stand up boldly at full height, and +then descend beyond. Quickly returning, they brought welcome word +that the whole thing was a mistake, and no Sioux were there at all. +What had been taken for a hundred Indian lodges turned out to be the +camp of a Government train on its way to Fort Stevenson, and the +officer in charge seeing the scouts before they discovered him, and +believing them to be Sioux, had sent out to bring his herds in. It +would be hard to exaggerate the relief that this discovery gave us, +and we all breathed much easier. The scare was a bad one, and I have +no hesitation in saying that, had we been mounted, it is more than +likely that, instead of showing fight, we would have taken up a +lively pace for Fort Stevenson. + +After reciprocal explanations with the officer in charge of the +train, the march was resumed, and at the close of that day we camped +near a small lake about twenty miles from Fort Totten. From Totten +we journeyed on to Fort Abercrombie. The country between the two +posts is low and flat, and I verily believe was then the favorite +abiding-place of the mosquito, no matter where he most loves to dwell +now; for myriads of the pests rose up out of the tall rank grass-- +more than I ever saw before or since--and viciously attacked both men +and animals. We ourselves were somewhat protected by gloves and +head-nets, provided us before leaving Totten, but notwithstanding +these our sufferings were well-nigh intolerable; the annoyance that +the poor mules experienced must, therefore, have been extreme; +indeed, they were so terribly stung that the blood fairly trickled +down their sides. Unluckily, we had to camp for one night in this +region; but we partly evaded the ravenous things by banking up our +tent walls with earth, and then, before turning in, sweeping and +smoking out such as had got inside. Yet with all this there seemed +hundreds left to sing and sting throughout the night. The mules +being without protection, we tried hard to save them from the vicious +insects by creating a dense smoke from a circle of smothered fires, +within which chain the grateful brutes gladly stood; but this relief +was only partial, so the moment there was light enough to enable us +to hook up we pulled out for Abercrombie in hot haste. + +>From Abercrombie we drove on to Saint Cloud, the terminus of the +railroad, where, considerably the worse for our hurried trip and +truly wretched experience with the mosquitoes, we boarded the welcome +cars. Two days later we arrived in Chicago, and having meanwhile +received word from General Sherman that there would be no objection +to my going to Europe, I began making arrangements to leave, securing +passage by the steamship Scotia. + +President Grant invited me to come to see him at Long Branch before I +should sail, and during my brief visit there he asked which army I +wished to accompany, the German or the French. I told him the +German, for the reason that I thought more could be seen with the +successful side, and that the indications pointed to the defeat of +the French. My choice evidently pleased him greatly, as he had the +utmost contempt for Louis Napoleon, and had always denounced him as a +usurper and a charlatan. Before we separated, the President gave me +the following letter to the representatives of our Government abroad, +and with it I not only had no trouble in obtaining permission to go +with the Germans, but was specially favored by being invited to +accompany the headquarters of the King of Prussia: + +"LONG BRANCH, N. J., July 25, 1870. + +"Lieutenant-General P. H. Sheridan, of the United State Army, is +authorized to visit Europe, to return at his own pleasure, unless +otherwise ordered. He is commended to the good offices of all +representatives of this Government whom he may meet abroad. + +"To citizens and representatives of other Governments I introduce +General Sheridan as one of the most skillful, brave and deserving +soldiers developed by the great struggle through which the United +States Government has just passed. Attention paid him will be duly +appreciated by the country he has served so faithfully and +efficiently. + +"U. S. GRANT." + + +Word of my intended trip was cabled to Europe in the ordinary press +despatches, and our Minister to France, Mr. Elihu B. Washburn, being +an intimate friend of mine, and thinking that I might wish to attach +myself to the French army, did me the favor to take preliminary steps +for securing the necessary authority. He went so far as to broach +the subject to the French Minister of War, but in view of the +informality of the request, and an unmistakable unwillingness to +grant it being manifested, Mr. Washburn pursued the matter no +further. I did not learn of this kindly interest in my behalf till +after the capitulation of Paris, when Mr. Washburn told me what he +had done of his own motion. Of course I thanked him gratefully, but +even had he succeeded in getting the permission he sought I should +not have accompanied the French army. + +I sailed from New York July 27, one of my aides-de-camp, General +James W. Forsyth, going with me. We reached Liverpool August 6, and +the next day visited the American Legation in London, where we saw +all the officials except our Minister, Mr. Motley, who, being absent, +was represented by Mr. Moran, the Secretary of the Legation. We left +London August 9 for Brussels, where we were kindly cared for by the +American Minister, Mr. Russell Jones who the same evening saw us off +for Germany. Because of the war we secured transportation only as +far as Vera, and here we received information that the Prussian +Minister of War had telegraphed to the Military Inspector of +Railroads to take charge of us on our arrival a Cologne, and send us +down to the headquarter of the Prussian army, but the Inspector, for +some unexplained reason, instead of doing this, sent us on to Berlin. +Here our Minister, Mr. George Bancroft, met us with a telegram from +the German Chancellor, Count Bismarck, saying we were expected to +come direct to the King's headquarters and we learned also that a +despatch had been sent to the Prussian Minister at Brussels directing +him to forward us from Cologne to the army, instead of allowing us to +go on to Berlin, but that we had reached and quit Brussels without +the Minister's knowledge. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +LEAVING FOR THE SEAT OF WAR--MEETING WITH PRINCE BISMARCK--HIS +INTEREST IN PUBLIC OPINION IN AMERICA--HIS INCLINATIONS IN EARLY +LIFE--PRESENTED TO THE KING--THE BATTLE OF GRAVELOTTE--THE GERMAN +PLAN--ITS FINAL SUCCESS--SENDING NEWS OF THE VICTORY--MISTAKEN FOR A +FRENCHMAN. + +Shortly after we arrived in Berlin the Queen sent a messenger +offering us an opportunity to pay our respects, and fixed an hour for +the visit, which was to take place the next day; but as the tenor of +the despatch Mr. Bancroft had received from Count Bismarck indicated +that some important event which it was desired I should witness was +about to happen at the theatre of war, our Minister got us excused +from our visit of ceremony, and we started for the headquarters of +the German army that evening--our stay in the Prussian capital having +been somewhat less than a day. + +Our train was a very long one, of over eighty cars, and though drawn +by three locomotives, its progress to Cologne was very slow and the +journey most tedious. From Cologne we continued on by rail up the +valley of the Rhine to Bingebruck, near Bingen, and thence across +through Saarbrucken to Remilly, where we left the railway and rode in +a hay-wagon to Pont-a-Mousson, arriving there August 17, late in the +afternoon. This little city had been ceded to France at the Peace of +Westphalia, and although originally German, the people had become, in +the lapse of so many years, intensely French in sentiment. The town +was so full of officers and men belonging to the German army that it +was difficult to get lodgings, but after some delay we found quite +comfortable quarters at one of the small hotels, and presently, after +we had succeeded in getting a slender meal, I sent my card to Count +von Bismarck, the Chancellor of the North German Confederation, who +soon responded by appointing an hour--about 9 o'clock the same +evening--for an interview. + +When the Count received me he was clothed in the undress uniform of +the Cuirassier regiment, of which he was the colonel. During the +interview which ensued, he exhibited at times deep anxiety regarding +the conflict now imminent, for it was the night before the battle of +Gravelotte, but his conversation was mostly devoted to the state of +public sentiment in America, about which he seemed much concerned, +inquiring repeatedly as to which side--France or Prussia--was charged +with bringing on the war. Expressing a desire to witness the battle +which was expected to occur the next day, and remarking that I had +not had sufficient time to provide the necessary transportation, he +told me to be ready at 4 o'clock in the morning, and he would take me +out in his own carriage and present me to the King--adding that he +would ask one of his own staff-officers, who he knew had one or two +extra horses, to lend me one. As I did not know just what my status +would be, and having explained to the President before leaving +America that I wished to accompany the German army unofficially, I +hardly knew whether to appear in uniform or not, so I spoke of this +matter too, and the Count, after some reflection, thought it best for +me to wear my undress uniform, minus the sword, however, because I +was a non combatant. + +At 4 o'clock the next morning, the 18th, I repaired to the +Chancellor's quarters. The carriage was at the door, also the +saddle-horse, but as no spare mount could be procured for General +Forsyth, he had to seek other means to reach the battle-field. The +carriage was an open one with two double seats, and in front a single +one for a messenger; it had also a hand-brake attached. + + +Count Bismarck and I occupied the rear seat, and Count Bismarck- +Bohlen--the nephew and aide-decamp to the Chancellor--and Doctor +Busch were seated facing us. The conveyance was strong, serviceable, +and comfortable, but not specially prepossessing, and hitched to it +were four stout horses--logy, ungainly animals, whose clumsy harness +indicated that the whole equipment was meant for heavy work. Two +postilions in uniform, in high military saddles on the nigh horse of +each span, completed the establishment. + +All being ready, we took one of the roads from Pont-a-Mousson to +Rezonville, which is on the direct road from Metz to Chalons, and +near the central point of the field where, on the 16th of August, the +battle of Mars-la-Tour had been fought. It was by this road that the +Pomeranians, numbering about 30,000 men, had been ordered to march to +Gravelotte, and after proceeding a short distance we overtook the +column. As this contingent came from Count Bismarck's own section of +Germany, there greeted us as we passed along, first in the dim light +of the morning, and later in the glow of the rising sun, continuous +and most enthusiastic cheering for the German Chancellor. + +On the way Count Bismarck again recurred to the state of public +opinion in America with reference to the war. He also talked much +about our form of government, and said that in early life his +tendencies were all toward republicanism, but that family influence +had overcome his preferences, and intimated that, after adopting a +political career, he found that Germany was not sufficiently advanced +for republicanism. He said, further, that he had been reluctant to +enter upon this public career, that he had always longed to be a +soldier, but that here again family opposition had turned him from +the field of his choice into the sphere of diplomacy. + +Not far from Mars-la-Tour we alighted, and in a little while an aide- +de-camp was introduced, who informed me that he was there to conduct +and present me to his Majesty, the King of Prussia. As we were +walking along together, I inquired whether at the meeting I should +remove my cap, and he said no; that in an out-of-door presentation it +was not etiquette to uncover if in uniform. We were soon in presence +of the King, where--under the shade of a clump of second-growth +poplar-trees, with which nearly all the farms in the north of France +are here and there dotted--the presentation was made in the simplest +and most agreeable manner. + +His Majesty, taking my hand in both of his, gave me a thorough +welcome, expressing, like Count Bismarck, though through an +interpreter, much interest as to the sentiment in my own country +about the war. At this time William the First of Prussia was +seventy-three years of age, and, dressed in the uniform of the +Guards, he seemed to be the very ideal soldier, and graced with most +gentle and courteous manners. The conversation, which was brief, as +neither of us spoke the other's native tongue, concluded by his +Majesty's requesting me in the most cordial way to accompany his +headquarters during the campaign. Thanking him for his kindness, I +rejoined Count Bismarck's party, and our horses having arrived +meantime, we mounted and moved off to the position selected for the +King to witness the opening of the battle. + +This place was on some high ground overlooking the villages of +Rezonville and Gravelotte, about the centre of the battlefield of +Mars-la-Tour, and from it most of the country to the east toward Metz +could also be seen. The point chosen was an excellent one for the +purpose, though in one respect disagreeable, since the dead bodies of +many of the poor fellows killed there two days before were yet +unburied. In a little while the King's escort began to remove these +dead, however, bearing them away on stretchers improvised with their +rifles, and the spot thus cleared was much more acceptable. Then, +when such unexploded shells as were lying around loose had been +cautiously carried away, the King, his brother, Prince Frederick +Charles Alexander, the chief-of-staff, General von Moltke, the +Minister of War, General von Roon, and Count von Bismarck assembled +on the highest point, and I being asked to join the group, was there +presented to General von Moltke. He spoke our language fluently, and +Bismarck having left the party for a time to go to a neighboring +house to see his son, who had been wounded at Mars-la-Tour, and about +whom he was naturally very anxious, General von Moltke entertained me +by explaining the positions of the different corps, the nature and +object of their movements then taking place, and so on. + +Before us, and covering Metz, lay the French army, posted on the +crest of a ridge extending north, and about its centre curving +slightly westward toward the German forces. The left of the French +position was but a short distance from the Moselle, and this part of +the line was separated from the Germans by a ravine, the slopes, +fairly well wooded, rising quite sharply; farther north, near the +centre, this depression disappeared, merged in the general swell of +the ground, and thence on toward the right the ground over which an +approach to the French line must be made was essentially a natural +open glacis, that could be thoroughly swept by the fire of the +defenders. + +The line extended some seven or eight miles. To attack this +position, formidable everywhere, except perhaps on the right flank, +the Germans were bringing up the combined forces of the First and +Second armies, troops that within the past fortnight had already +successfully met the French in three pitched battles. On the right +was the First Army, under command of General Von Steinmetz, the +victors, August 6, of Spicheren, near Saar, and, eight days later, of +Colombey, to the east of Metz; while the centre and left were +composed of the several corps of the Second Army, commanded by Prince +Frederick Charles of Prussia, a part of whose troops had just been +engaged in the sanguinary battle of Mars-la-Tour, by which Bazaine +was cut off from the Verdun road, and forced back toward Metz. + +At first the German plan was simply to threaten with their right, +while the corps of the Second Army advanced toward the north, to +prevent the French, of whose intentions there was much doubt, from +escaping toward Chalons; then, as the purposes of the French might +be, developed, these corps were to change direction toward the enemy +successively, and seek to turn his right flank. But the location of +this vital turning-point was very uncertain, and until it was +ascertained and carried, late in the afternoon, the action raged with +more or less intensity along the entire line. + +But as it is not my purpose to describe in detail the battle of +Gravelotte, nor any other, I will speak of some of its incidents +merely. About noon, after many preliminary skirmishes, the action +was begun according to the plan I have already outlined, the Germans +advancing their left while holding on strongly with their right, and +it was this wing (the First Army) that came under my observation from +the place where the King's headquarters were located. From here we +could see, as I have said, the village of Gravelotte. Before it lay +the German troops, concealed to some extent, especially to the left, +by clumps of timber here and there. Immediately in front of us, +however, the ground was open, and the day being clear and sunny, with +a fresh breeze blowing (else the smoke from a battle between four +hundred thousand men would have obstructed the view altogether), the +spectacle presented Was of unsurpassed magnificence and sublimity. +The German artillery opened the battle, and while the air was filled +with shot and shell from hundreds of guns along their entire line, +the German centre and left, in rather open order, moved out to the +attack, and as they went forward the reserves, in close column, took +up positions within supporting distances, yet far enough back to be +out of range. + +The French artillery and mitrailleuses responded vigorously to the +Krupps, and with deadly effect, but as far as we could see the German +left continued its advance, and staff-officers came up frequently to +report that all was going on well at points hidden from our view +These reports were always made to the King first, and whenever +anybody arrived with tidings of the fight we clustered around to hear +the news, General Von Moltke unfolding a map meanwhile, and +explaining the situation. This done, the chief of the staff, while +awaiting the next report, would either return to a seat that had been +made for him with some knapsacks, or would occupy the time walking +about, kicking clods of dirt or small stones here and there, his +hands clasped behind his back, his face pale and thoughtful. He was +then nearly seventy years old, but because of his emaciated figure, +the deep wrinkles in his face, and the crow's-feet about his eyes, he +looked even older, his appearance being suggestive of the practice of +church asceticisms rather than of his well-known ardent devotion to +the military profession. + +By the middle of the afternoon the steady progress of the German left +and centre had driven the French from their more advanced positions +from behind stone walls and hedges, through valleys and hamlets, in +the direction of Metz, but as yet the German right had accomplished +little except to get possession of the village of Gravelotte, +forcing the French across the deep ravine I have mentioned, which +runs north and south a little distance east of ihe town. + +But it was now time for the German right to move in earnest to carry +the Rozerieulles ridge, on which crest the French had evidently +decided to make an obstinate fight to cover their withdrawal to Metz. +As the Germans moved to the attack here, the French fire became heavy +and destructive, so much so, indeed, as to cause General Von +Steinmetz to order some cavalry belonging to the right wing to make a +charge. Crossing the ravine before described, this body of horse +swept up the slope beyond, the front ranks urged forward by the +momentum from behind. The French were posted along a sunken road, +behind stone walls and houses, and as the German cavalry neared these +obstructions it received a dreadful fire without the least chance of +returning it, though still pushed on till the front ranks were +crowded into the deep cut of the road. Here the slaughter was +terrible, for the horsemen could make no further headway; and because +of the blockade behind, of dead and wounded men and animals, an +orderly retreat was impossible, and disaster inevitable. + +About the time the charge was ordered, the phase of the battle was +such that the King concluded to move his headquarters into the +village of Gravelotte; and just after getting there, we first learned +fully of the disastrous result of the charge which had been entered +upon with such spirit; and so much indignation was expressed against +Steinmetz, who, it was claimed, had made an unnecessary sacrifice of +his cavalry, that I thought he would be relieved on the spot; though +this was not done. + +Followed by a large staff, General Steinmetz appeared in the village +presently, and approached the King. When near, he bowed with great +respect, and I then saw that he was a very old man though his +soldierly figure, bronzed face, and shortcropped hair gave some +evidence of vigor still. When the King spoke to him I was not close +enough to learn what was said; but his Majesty's manner was +expressive of kindly feeling, and the fact that in a few moments the +veteran general returned to the command of his troops, indicated +that, for the present at least, his fault had been overlooked. + +The King then moved out of the village, and just a little to the east +and north of it the headquarters were located on high, open ground, +whence we could observe the right of the German infantry advancing up +the eastern face of the ravine. The advance, though slow and +irregular, resulted in gradually gaining ground, the French resisting +stoutly with a stubborn musketry fire all along the slopes. Their +artillery was silent, however; and from this fact the German +artillery officers grew jubilant, confidently asserting that their +Krupp guns had dismounted the French batteries and knocked their +mitrailleuses to pieces. I did not indulge in this confidence, +however; for, with the excellent field-glass I had, I could +distinctly see long columns of French troops moving to their right, +for the apparent purpose of making a vigorous fight on that flank; +and I thought it more than likely that their artillery would be heard +from before the Germans could gain the coveted ridge. + +The Germans labored up the glacis slowly at the most exposed places; +now crawling on their bellies, now creeping on hands and knees, but, +in the main, moving with erect and steady bearing. As they +approached within short range, they suddenly found that the French +artillery and mitrallleuses had by no means been silenced--about two +hundred pieces opening on them with fearful effect, while at the same +time the whole crest blazed with a deadly fire from the Chassepot +rifles. Resistance like this was so unexpected by the Germans that +it dismayed them; and first wavering a moment, then becoming panic- +stricken, they broke and fled, infantry, cavalry, and artillery +coming down the slope without any pretence of formation, the French +hotly following and pouring in a heavy and constant fire as the +fugitives fled back across the ravine toward Gravelotte. With this +the battle on the right had now assumed a most serious aspect, and +the indications were that the French would attack the heights of +Gravelotte; but the Pomeranian corps coming on the field at this +crisis, was led into action by Von Moltke, himself, and shortly after +the day was decided in favor of the Germans. + +When the French guns opened fire, it was discovered that the King's +position was within easy range, many of the shells falling near +enough to make the place extremely uncomfortable; so it was suggested +that he go to a less exposed point. At first he refused to listen to +this wise counsel, but yielded finally--leaving the ground with +reluctance, however--and went back toward Rezonville. I waited for +Count Bismarck, who did not go immediately with the King, but +remained at Gravelotte, looking after some of the escort who had been +wounded. When he had arranged for their care, we set out to rejoin +the King, and before going far, overtook his Majesty, who had stopped +on the Chalons road, and was surrounded by a throng of fugitives, +whom he was berating in German so energetic as to remind me forcibly +of the "Dutch" swearing that I used to hear in my boyhood in Ohio. +The dressing down finished to his satisfaction, the King resumed his +course toward Re'zonville, halting, however, to rebuke in the same +emphatic style every group of runaways he overtook. + +Passing through Rezonville, we halted just beyond the village; there +a fire was built, and the King, his brother, Prince Frederick +Charles, and Von Roon were provided with rather uncomfortable seats +about it, made by resting the ends of a short ladder on a couple of +boxes. With much anxiety and not a little depression of spirits news +from the battle-field was now awaited, but the suspense did not last +long, for presently came the cheering intelligence that the French +were retiring, being forced back by the Pomeranian corps, and some of +the lately broken right wing organizations, that had been rallied on +the heights of Gravelotte. The lost ground being thus regained, and +the French having been beaten on their right, it was not long before +word came that Bazaine's army was falling back to Metz, leaving the +entire battle-field in possession of the Germans. + +During the excitement of the day I had not much felt the want of +either food or water, but now that all was over I was nearly +exhausted, having had neither since early morning. Indeed, all of +the party were in like straits; the immense armies had not only eaten +up nearly everything in the country, but had drunk all the wells dry, +too, and there seemed no relief for us till, luckily, a squad of +soldiers came along the road with a small cask of wine in a cart. +One of the staff-officers instantly appropriated the keg, and +proceeded to share his prize most generously. Never had I tasted +anything so refreshing and delicious, but as the wine was the +ordinary sour stuff drunk by the peasantry of northern France, my +appreciation must be ascribed to my famished condition rather than to +any virtues of the beverage itself. + +After I had thus quenched my thirst the King's, brother called me +aside, and drawing from his coat-tail pocket a piece of stale black +bread, divided it with me, and while munching on this the Prince +began talking of his son--General Prince Frederick Charles, popularly +called the Red Prince--who was in command of the Second Army in this +battle--the German left wing. In recounting his son's professional +career the old man's face was aglow with enthusiasm, and not without +good cause, for in the war between Prussia and Austria in 1866, as +well as in the present campaign, the Red Prince had displayed the +highest order of military genius. + +The headquarters now became the scene of much bustle, despatches +announcing the victory being sent in all directions. The first one +transmitted was to the Queen, the King directing Count Bismarck to +prepare it for his signature; then followed others of a more official +character, and while these matters were being attended to I thought I +would ride into the village to find, if possible, some water for my +horse. Just as I entered the chief street, however, I was suddenly +halted by a squad of soldiers, who, taking me for a French officer +(my coat and forage cap resembling those of the French), leveled +their pieces at me. They were greatly excited, so much so, indeed, +that I thought my hour had come, for they could not understand +English, and I could not speak German, and dare not utter +explanations in French. Fortunately a few disconnected German words +came to me in the emergency. With these I managed to delay my +execution, and one of the party ventured to come up to examine the +"suspect" more closely. The first thing he did was to take off my +cap, and looking it over carefully, his eyes rested on the three +stars above the visor, and, pointing to them, he emphatically +pronounced me French. Then of course they all became excited again, +more so than before, even, for they thought I was trying to practice +a ruse, and I question whether I should have lived to recount the +adventure had not an officer belonging to the King's headquarters +been passing by just then, when, hearing the threatenings and +imprecations, he rode up to learn the cause of the hubbub, and +immediately recognized and released me. When he told my wrathy +captors who I was, they were much mortified of course, and made the +most profuse apologies, promising that no such mistake should occur +again, and so on; but not feeling wholly reassured, for my uniform +was still liable to mislead, I was careful to return to headquarters +in company with my deliverer. There I related what had occurred, and +after a good laugh all round, the King provided me with a pass which +he said would preclude any such mishap in the future, and would also +permit me to go wherever I pleased--a favor rarely bestowed. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +SEARCHING FOR QUARTERS--HUNTING UP PROVISIONS--A SLENDER BREAKFAST-- +GOING OVER THE BATTLEFIELD--THE GERMAN ARTILLERY--A GROUP OF WOUNDED- +-DINING WITH THE KING--ON THE MARCH--THE BAVARIANS--KIRSCHWASSER-- +URGING ON THE TROOPS. + +While I was absent, as related in the preceding chapter, it had been +decided that the King's quarters should be established for the night +in the village of Rezonville; and as it would be very difficult, at +such a late hour, to billet the whole party regularly, Count Bismarck +and I went off to look for shelter for ourselves. Remembering that I +had seen, when seeking to water my horse, a partly burned barn with +some fresh-looking hay in it, I suggested that we lodge there. He +too thought it would answer our purpose, but on reaching it we found +the unburned part of the barn filled with wounded, and this +necessitating a further search we continued on through the village in +quest of some house not yet converted into a hospital. Such, +however, seemed impossible to come upon, so at last the Count fixed +on one whose upper floor, we learned, was unoccupied, though the +lower one was covered with wounded. + +Mounting a creaky ladder--there was no stairway--to the upper story, +we found a good-sized room with three large beds, one of which the +Chancellor assigned to the Duke of Mecklenburg and aide, and another +to Count Bismarck-Bohlen and me, reserving the remaining one for +himself. Each bed, as is common in Germany and northern France, was +provided with a feather tick, but the night being warm, these spreads +were thrown off, and discovering that they would make a comfortable +shakedown on the floor, I slept there leaving Bismarck-Bohlen +unembarrassed by companionship--at least of a human kind. + +At daylight I awoke, and seeing that Count Bismarck was already +dressed and about to go down the ladder, I felt obliged to follow his +example, so I too turned out, and shortly descended to the ground-- +floor, the only delays of the toilet being those incident to +dressing, for there were no conveniences for morning ablutions. Just +outside the door I met the Count, who, proudly exhibiting a couple of +eggs he had bought from the woman of the house, invited me to +breakfast with him, provided we could beg some coffee from the king's +escort. Putting the eggs under my charge, with many injunctions as +to their safe-keeping, he went off to forage for the coffee, and +presently returned, having been moderately successful. One egg +apiece was hardly enough, however, to appease the craving of two +strong men ravenous from long fasting. Indeed, it seemed only to +whet the appetite, and we both set out on an eager expedition for +more food. Before going far I had the good luck to meet a sutler's +wagon, and though its stock was about all sold, there were still left +four large bologna sausages, which I promptly purchased--paying a +round sum for them too--and hastening back found the Count already +returned, though without bringing anything at all to eat; but he had +secured a couple of bottles of brandy, and with a little of this--it +was excellent, too--and the sausages, the slim ration of eggs and +coffee was amply reinforced. + +Breakfast over, the Chancellor invited me to accompany him in a ride +to the battle-field, and I gladly accepted, as I very much desired to +pass over the ground in front of Gravelotte, particularly so to see +whether the Krupp guns had really done the execution that was claimed +for them by the German artillery officers. Going directly through +the village of Gravelotte, following the causeway over which the +German cavalry had passed to make its courageous but futile charge, +we soon reached the ground where the fighting had been the most +severe. Here the field was literally covered with evidences of the +terrible strife, the dead and wounded strewn thick on every side. + +In the sunken road the carnage had been awful; men and horses having +been slaughtered there by hundreds, helpless before the murderous +fire delivered from behind a high stone wall impracticable to mounted +troops. The sight was sickening to an extreme, and we were not slow +to direct our course elsewhere, going up the glacis toward the French +line, the open ground over which we crossed being covered with +thousands of helmets, that had been thrown off by the Germans during +the fight and were still dotting the field, though details of +soldiers from the organizations which had been engaged here were +about to begin to gather up their abandoned headgear. + +When we got inside the French works, I was astonished to observe how +little harm had been done the defenses by the German artillery, for +although I had not that serene faith in the effectiveness of their +guns held by German artillerists generally, yet I thought their +terrific cannonade must have left marked results. All I could +perceive, however, was a disabled gun, a broken mitrailleuse, and two +badly damaged caissons. + +Everything else, except a little ammunition in the trenches, had been +carried away, and it was plain to see, from the good shape in which +the French left wing had retired to Metz, that its retreat had been +predetermined by the disasters to the right wing. + +By this hour the German cavalry having been thrown out to the front +well over toward Metz, we, following it to get a look at the city, +rode to a neighboring summit, supposing it would be a safe point of +observation; but we shortly realized the contrary, for scarcely had +we reached the crest when some of the French pickets, lying concealed +about six hundred yards off, opened fire, making it so very hot for +us that, hugging the necks of our horses, we incontinently fled. +Observing what had taken place, a troop of German cavalry charged the +French outpost and drove it far enough away to make safe our return, +and we resumed possession of the point, but only to discover that the +country to the east was so broken and hilly that no satisfactory view +of Metz could be had. + +Returning to Gravelotte, we next visited that part of the battlefield +to the northeast of the village, and before long Count Bismarck +discovered in a remote place about twenty men dreadfully wounded. +These poor fellows had had no attention whatever, having been +overlooked by the hospital corps, and their condition was most +pitiful. Yet there was one very handsome man in the group--a captain +of artillery--who, though shot through the right breast, was +talkative and cheerful, and felt sure of getting well. Pointing, +however, to a comrade lying near, also shot in the breast, he +significantly shook his head; it was easy to see on this man's face +the signs--of fast approaching death. + +An orderly was at once despatched for a surgeon, Bismarck and I doing +what we could meanwhile to alleviate the intense sufferings of the +maimed men, bringing them water and administering a little brandy, +for the Count still had with him some of the morning's supply. When +the surgeons came, we transferred the wounded to their care, and +making our way to Rezonville, there took the Count's carriage to +rejoin the King's headquarters, which in the mean time had been moved +to Pont-a-Mousson. Our route led through the village of Gorze, and +here we found the streets so obstructed with wagons that I feared it +would take us the rest of the day to get through, for the teamsters +would not pay the slightest heed to the cries of our postilions. The +Count was equal to the emergency, however, for, taking a pistol from +behind his cushion, and bidding me keep my seat, he jumped out and +quickly began to clear the street effectively, ordering wagons to the +right and left. Marching in front of the carriage and making way for +us till we were well through the blockade, he then resumed his seat, +remarking, "This is not a very dignified business for the Chancellor +of the German Confederation, but it's the only way to get through." + +At Pont-a-Mousson I was rejoined by my aide, General Forsyth, and for +the next two days our attention was almost wholly devoted to securing +means of transportation. This was most difficult to obtain, but as I +did not wish to impose on the kindness of the Chancellor longer, we +persevered till, finally, with the help of Count Bismarck-Bohlen, we +managed to get tolerably well equipped with a saddle-horse apiece, +and a two-horse carriage. Here also, on the afternoon of August 21, +I had the pleasure of dining with the King. The dinner was a simple +one, consisting of soup, a joint, and two or three vegetables; the +wines vin ordinaire and Burgundy. There were a good many persons of +high rank present, none of whom spoke English, however, except +Bismarck, who sat next the King and acted as interpreter when his +Majesty conversed with me. Little was said of the events taking +place around us, but the King made many inquiries concerning the war +of the rebellion, particularly with reference to Grant's campaign at +Vicksburg; suggested, perhaps, by the fact that there, and in the +recent movements of the German army, had been applied many similar +principles of military science. + +The French army under Marshal Bazaine having retired into the +fortifications of Metz, that stronghold was speedily invested by +Prince Frederick Charles. Meantime the Third Army, under the Crown +Prince of Prussia--which, after having fought and won the battle of +Worth, had been observing the army of Marshal MacMahon during and +after the battle of Gravelotte--was moving toward Paris by way of +Nancy, in conjunction with an army called the Fourth, which had been +organized from the troops previously engaged around Metz, and on the +22d was directed toward Bar-le-Duc under the command of the Crown +Prince of Saxony. In consequence of these operations the King +decided to move to Commercy, which place we reached by carriage, +traveling on a broad macadamized road lined on both sides with +poplar-trees, and our course leading through a most beautiful country +thickly dotted with prosperous-looking villages. + +On reaching Commercy, Forsyth and I found that quarters had been +already selected for us, and our names written on the door with chalk +the quartermaster charged with the billeting of the officers at +headquarters having started out in advance to perform this duty and +make all needful preparations for the King before he arrived, which +course was usually pursued thereafter, whenever the royal +headquarters took up a new location. + +Forsyth and I were lodged with the notary of the village, who over +and over again referred to his good fortune in not having to +entertain any of the Germans. He treated us most hospitably, and +next morning, on departing, we offered compensation by tendering a +sum--about what our bill would have been at a good hotel--to be used +for the "benefit of the wounded or the Church." Under this +stipulation the notary accepted, and we followed that plan of paying +for food and lodging afterward, whenever quartered in private houses. + +The next day I set out in advance of the headquarters, and reached +Bar-le-Duc about noon, passing on the way the Bavarian contingent of +the Crown Prince's army. These Bavarians were trim-looking soldiers, +dressed in neat uniforms of light blue; they looked healthy and +strong, but seemed of shorter stature than the North Germans I had +seen in the armies of Prince Frederick Charles and General von +Steinmetz. When, later in the day the King arrived, a guard for him +was detailed from this Bavarian contingent; a stroke of policy no +doubt, for the South Germans were so prejudiced against their +brothers of the North that no opportunity to smooth them down was +permitted to go unimproved. + +Bar-le-Duc, which had then a population of about 15,000, is one of +the prettiest towns I saw in France, its quaint and ancient buildings +and beautiful boulevards charming the eye as well as exciting deep +interest. The King and his immediate suite were quartered on one of +the best boulevards in a large building--the Bank of France--the +balcony of which offered a fine opportunity to observe a part of the +army of the Crown Prince the next day on its march toward Vitry. +This was the first time his Majesty had had a chance to see any of +these troops--as hitherto he had accompanied either the army of +Prince Frederick Charles, or that of General Steinmetz--and the +cheers with which he was greeted by the Bavarians left no room for +doubting their loyalty to the Confederation, notwithstanding ancient +jealousies. + +While the troops were passing, Count Bismarck had the kindness to +point out to me the different organizations, giving scraps of their +history, and also speaking concerning the qualifications of the +different generals commanding them. When the review was over we went +to the Count's house, and there, for the first time in my life, I +tasted kirschwasser, a very strong liquor distilled from cherries. +Not knowing anything about the stuff, I had to depend on Bismarck's +recommendation, and he proclaiming it fine, I took quite a generous +drink, which nearly strangled me and brought on a violent fit of +coughing. The Chancellor said, however, that this was in no way due +to the liquor, but to my own inexperience, and I was bound to believe +the distinguished statesman, for he proved his words by swallowing a +goodly dose with an undisturbed and even beaming countenance, +demonstrating his assertion so forcibly that I forthwith set out with +Bismarck-Bohlen to lay in a supply for myself. + +I spent the night in a handsome house, the property of an +exceptionally kind and polite gentleman bearing the indisputably +German name of Lager, but who was nevertheless French from head to +foot, if intense hatred of the Prussians be a sign of Gallic +nationality. At daybreak on the 26th word came for us to be ready to +move by the Chalons road at 7 o'clock, but before we got off, the +order was suspended till 2 in the afternoon. In the interval General +von Moltke arrived and held a long conference with the King, and when +we did pull out we traveled the remainder of the afternoon in company +with a part of the Crown Prince's army, which after this conference +inaugurated the series of movements from Bar-le-Duc northward, that +finally compelled the surrender at Sedan. This sudden change of +direction I did not at first understand, but soon learned that it was +because of the movements of Marshal MacMahon, who, having united the +French army beaten at Worth with three fresh corps at Chalons, was +marching to relieve Metz in obedience to orders from the Minister of +War at Paris. + +As we passed along the column, we noticed that the Crown Prince's +troops were doing their best, the officers urging the men to their +utmost exertions, persuading weary laggards and driving up +stragglers. As a general thing, however, they marched in good shape, +notwithstanding the rapid gait and the trying heat, for at the outset +of the campaign the Prince had divested them of all impedimenta +except essentials, and they were therefore in excellent trim for a +forced march. + +The King traveled further than usual that day--to Clermont--so we did +not get shelter till late, and even then not without some confusion, +for the quartermaster having set out toward Chalons before the change +of programme was ordered, was not at hand to provide for us. I had +extreme good luck, though, in being quartered with a certain +apothecary, who, having lived for a time in the United States, +claimed it as a privilege even to lodge me, and certainly made me his +debtor for the most generous hospitality. It was not so with some of +the others, however; and Count Bismarck was particularly unfortunate, +being billeted in a very small and uncomfortable house, where, +visiting him to learn more fully what was going on, I found him, +wrapped in a shabby old dressing-gown, hard at work. He was +established in a very small room, whose only furnishings consisted of +a table--at which he was writing--a couple of rough chairs, and the +universal feather-bed, this time made on the floor in one corner of +the room. On my remarking upon the limited character of his +quarters, the Count replied, with great good-humor, that they were +all right, and that he should get along well enough. Even the tramp +of his clerks in the attic, and the clanking of his orderlies' sabres +below, did not disturb him much; he said, in fact, that he would have +no grievance at all were it not for a guard of Bavarian soldiers +stationed about the house for his safety, he presumed the sentinels +from which insisted on protecting and saluting the Chancellor of the +North German Confederation in and out of season, a proceeding that +led to embarrassment sometimes, as he was much troubled with a severe +dysentery. Notwithstanding his trials, however, and in the midst of +the correspondence on which he was so intently engaged, he graciously +took time to explain that the sudden movement northward from Bar-le- +Duc was, as I have previously recounted, the result of information +that Marshal MacMahon was endeavoring to relieve Metz by marching +along the Belgian frontier; "a blundering manoeuvre," remarked the +Chancellor, "which cannot be accounted for, unless it has been +brought about by the political situation of the French." + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +AFTER MacMAHON--THE BATTLE AT BEAUMONT--THE FRENCH SURPRISED--THE +MARCHING OF THE GERMAN SOLDIERS--THE BATTLE OF SEDAN--GALLANT CAVALRY +CHARGES--DEFEAT OF THE FRENCH--THE SURRENDER OF NAPOLEON--BISMARCK +AND THE KING--DECORATING THE SOLDIERS. + +All night long the forced march of the army went on through Clermont, +and when I turned out, just after daylight, the columns were still +pressing forward, the men looking tired and much bedraggled, as +indeed they had reason to be, for from recent rains the roads were +very sloppy. Notwithstanding this, however, the troops were pushed +ahead with all possible vigor to intercept MacMahon and force a +battle before he could withdraw from his faulty movement, for which +it has since been ascertained he was not at all responsible. Indeed, +those at the royal headquarters seemed to think of nothing else than +to strike MacMahon, for, feeling pretty confident that Metz could not +be relieved, they manifested not the slightest anxiety on that score. + +By 8 o'clock, the skies having cleared, the headquarters set out for +Grand Pre', which place we reached early in the afternoon, and that +evening I again had the pleasure of dining with the King. The +conversation at table was almost wholly devoted to the situation, of +course, everybody expressing surprise at the manoeuvre of the French +at this time, their march along the Belgian frontier being credited +entirely to Napoleon. Up to bed-time there was still much +uncertainty as to the exact positions of the French, but next morning +intelligence being received which denoted the probability of a +battle, we drove about ten miles, to Buzancy, and there mounting our +horses, rode to the front. + +The French were posted not far from Buzancy in a strong position, +their right resting near Stonne and the left extending over into the +woods beyond Beaumont. About 10 o'clock the Crown Prince of Saxony +advanced against this line, and while a part of his army turned the +French right, compelling it to fall back rapidly, the German centre +and right attacked with great vigor and much skill, surprising one of +the divisions of General De Failly's corps while the men were in the +act of cooking their breakfast. + +The French fled precipitately, leaving behind their tents and other +camp equipage, and on inspecting the ground which they had abandoned +so hastily, I noticed on all sides ample evidence that not even the +most ordinary precautions had been taken to secure the division from +surprise, The artillery horses had not been harnessed, and many of +them had been shot down at the picketrope where they had been +haltered the night before, while numbers of men were lying dead with +loaves of bread or other food instead of their muskets in their +hands. + +Some three thousand prisoners and nearly all the artillery and +mitrailleuses of the division--were captured, while the fugitives +were pursued till they found shelter behind--Douay's corps and the +rest of De Failly's beyond Beaumont. The same afternoon there were +several other severe combats along the Meuse, but I had no chance of +witnessing any of them, and just before night-fall I started back to +Buzancy, to which place the King's headquarters had been brought +during the day. + +The morning of the 31st the King moved to Vendresse. First sending +our carriage back to Grand Pre' for our trunks, Forsyth and I mounted +our horses and rode to the battle-field accompanied by an English +nobleman, the Duke of Manchester. The part of the field we traversed +was still thickly strewn with the dead of both armies, though all the +wounded had been collected in the hospitals. In the village of +Beaumont, we stopped to take a look at several thousand French +prisoners, whose worn clothing and evident dejection told that they +had been doing a deal of severe marching under great discouragements. + +The King reached the village shortly after, and we all continued on +to Chemery, just beyond where his Majesty alighted from his carriage +to observe his son's troops file past as they came in from the +direction of Stonne. This delay caused us to be as late as 9 o'clock +before we got shelter that night, but as it afforded me the best +opportunity I had yet had for seeing the German soldiers on the +march, I did not begrudge the time. They moved in a somewhat open +and irregular column of fours, the intervals between files being +especially intended to give room for a peculiar swinging gait, with +which the men seemed to urge themselves over the ground with ease and +rapidity. There was little or no straggling, and being strong, lusty +young fellows, and lightly equipped--they carried only needle-guns, +ammunition, a very small knapsack, a water-bottle, and a haversack- +they strode by with an elastic step, covering at least three miles an +hour. + +It having been definitely ascertained that the demoralized French +were retiring to Sedan, on the evening of August 31 the German army +began the work of hemming them in there, so disposing the different +corps as to cover the ground from Donchery around by Raucourt to +Carignan. The next morning this line was to be drawn in closer on +Sedan; and the Crown Prince of Saxony was therefore ordered to take +up a position to the north of Bazeilles, beyond the right bank of the +Meuse, while the Crown Prince of Prussia was to cross his right wing +over the Meuse at Remilly, to move on Bazeilles, his centre meantime +marching against a number of little hamlets still held by the French +between there and Donchery. At this last-mentioned place strong +reserves were to be held, and from it the Eleventh Corps, followed by +the Fifth and a division of cavalry, was to march on St. Menges. + +Forsyth and I started early next morning, September 1, and in a thick +fog-which, however, subsequently gave place to bright sunshine--we +drove to the village of Chevenges, where, mounting our horses, we +rode in a northeasterly direction to the heights of Frenois and +Wadelincourt, bordering the river Meuse on the left bank, where from +the crest we had a good view of the town of Sedan with its circling +fortifications, which, though extensive, were not so formidable as +those around Metz. The King and his staff were already established +on these heights, and at a point so well chosen that his Majesty +could observe the movements of both armies immediately east and south +of Sedan, and also to the northwest toward Floing and the Belgian +frontier. + +The battle was begun to the east and northeast of Sedan as early as +half-past 4 o'clock by the German right wing--the fighting being +desultory--and near the same hour the Bavarians attacked Bazeilles. +This village, some two miles southeast of Sedan, being of importance, +was defended with great obstinacy, the French contesting from street +to street and house to house the attack of the Bavarians till near +10 o'clock, when, almost every building being knocked to pieces, they +were compelled to relinquish the place. The possession of this +village gave the Germans to the east of Sedan a continuous line, +extending from the Meuse northward through La Moncelle and Daigny to +Givonne, and almost to the Belgian frontier. + +While the German centre and right were thus engaged, the left had +moved in accordance with the prescribed plan. Indeed, some of these +troops had crossed the Meuse the night before, and now, at a little +after 6 o'clock, their advance could be seen just north of the +village of Floing. Thus far these columns, under the immediate eye +of the Crown Prince of Prussia, had met with no opposition to their +march, and as soon as they got to the high ground above the village +they began extending to the east, to connect with the Army of the +Meuse. This juncture was effected at Illy without difficulty, and +the French army was now completely encompassed. + +After a severe fight, the Crown Prince drove the French through +Floing, and as the ground between this village and Sedan is an +undulating open plain, everywhere visible, there was then offered a +rare opportunity for seeing the final conflict preceding the +surrender. Presently up out of the little valley where Floing is +located came the Germans, deploying just on the rim of the plateau a +very heavy skirmish-line, supported by a line of battle at close +distance. When these skirmishers appeared, the French infantry had +withdrawn within its intrenched lines, but a strong body of their +cavalry, already formed in a depression to the right of the Floing +road, now rode at the Germans in gallant style, going clear through +the dispersed skirmishers to the main line of battle. Here the +slaughter of the French was awful, for in addition to the deadly +volleys from the solid battalions of their enemies, the skirmishers, +who had rallied in knots at advantageous places, were now delivering +a severe and effective fire. The gallant horsemen, therefore, had to +retire precipitately, but re-forming in the depression, they again +undertook the hopeless task of breaking the German infantry, making +in all four successive charges. Their ardor and pluck were of no +avail, however, for the Germans, growing stronger every minute by the +accession of troops from Floing, met the fourth attack in such large +force that, even before coming in contact with their adversaries, the +French broke and retreated to the protection of the intrenchments, +where, from the beginning of the combat, had been lying plenty of +idle infantry, some of which at least, it seemed plain to me, ought +to have been thrown into the fight. This action was the last one of +consequence around Sedan, for, though with the contraction of the +German lines their batteries kept cannonading more or less, and the +rattle of musketry continued to be heard here and there, yet the hard +fighting of the day practically ended on the plateau of Floing. + +By 3 o'clock, the French being in a desperate and hopeless situation, +the King ordered the firing to be stopped, and at once despatched one +of his staff--Colonel von Bronsart--with a demand for a surrender. +Just as this officer was starting off, I remarked to Bismarck that +Napoleon himself would likely be one of the prizes, but the Count, +incredulous, replied, "Oh no; the old fox is too cunning to be caught +in such a trap; he has doubtless slipped off to Paris"--a belief +which I found to prevail pretty generally about headquarters. + +In the lull that succeeded, the King invited many of those about him +to luncheon, a caterer having provided from some source or other a +substantial meal of good bread, chops and peas, with a bountiful +supply of red and sherry wines. Among those present were Prince +Carl, Bismarck, Von Moltke, Von Roon, the Duke of Weimar, the Duke of +Coburg, the Grand-Duke of Mecklenburg, Count Hatzfeldt, Colonel +Walker, of the English army, General Forsyth, and I. The King was +agreeable and gracious at all times, but on this occasion he was +particularly so, being naturally in a happy frame of mind because +this day the war had reached a crisis which presaged for the near +future the complete vanquishment of the French. + +Between 4 and 5 o'clock Colonel von Bronsart returned from his +mission to Sedan, bringing word to the King that the commanding +officer there General Wimpffen, wished to know, in order that the +further effusion of blood might be spared, upon what terms he might +surrender. The Colonel brought the intelligence also that the French +Emperor was in the town. Soon after Von Bronsart's arrival a French +officer approached from Sedan, preceded by a white flag and two +German officers. Coming up the road till within a few hundred yards +of us, they halted; then one of the Germans rode forward to say that +the French officer was Napoleon's adjutant, bearing an autograph +letter from the Emperor to the King of Prussia. At this the King, +followed by Bismarck, Von Moltke, and Von Roon, walked out to the +front a little distance and halted, his Majesty still in advance, the +rest of us meanwhile forming in a line some twenty paces to the rear +of the group. The envoy then approached, at first on horseback, but +when within about a hundred yards he dismounted, and uncovering, came +the remaining distance on foot, bearing high up in his right hand the +despatch from Napoleon. The bearer proved to be General Reille, and +as he handed the Emperor's letter to the King, his Majesty saluted +him with the utmost formality and precision. Napoleon's letter was +the since famous one, running so characteristically, thus: "Not +having been able to die in the midst of my troops, there is nothing +left me but to place my sword in your Majesty's hands." The reading +finished, the King returned to his former post, and after a +conference with Bismarck, Von Moltke, and Von Roon, dictated an +answer accepting Napoleon's surrender, and requesting him to +designate an officer with power to treat for the capitulation of the +army, himself naming Von Moltke to represent the Germans. The King +then started for Vendresse, to pass the night. It was after +7 o'clock now, and hence too late to arrange anything more where we +were, so further negotiations were deferred till later in the +evening; and I, wishing to be conveniently near Bismarck, resolved to +take up quarters in Donchery. On our way thither we were met by the +Count's nephew, who assuring us that it would be impossible to find +shelter there in the village, as all the houses were filled with +wounded, Forsyth and I decided to continue on to Chevenge. On the +other hand, Bismarck-Bohlen bore with him one great comfort--some +excellent brandy. Offering the flask to his uncle, he said: "You've +had a hard day of it; won't you refresh yourself?" The Chancellor, +without wasting time to answer, raised the bottle to his lips, +exclaiming: "Here's to the unification of Germany!" which sentiment +the gurgling of an astonishingly long drink seemed to emphasize. The +Count then handed the bottle back to his nephew, who, shaking it, +ejaculated, "Why, we can't pledge you in return--there is nothing +left!" to which came the waggish response, I beg pardon; it was so +dark I couldn't see"; nevertheless there was a little remaining, as I +myself can aver. + +Having left our carriage at Chevenge, Forsyth and I stopped there to +get it, but a long search proving fruitless, we took lodging in the +village at the house of the cure, resolved to continue the hunt in +the morning. But then we had no better success, so concluding that +our vehicle had been pressed into the hospital service, we at an +early hour on the 2d of September resumed the search, continuing on +down the road in the direction of Sedan. Near the gate of the city +we came on the German picket-line, and one of the Officers, +recognizing our uniforms--he having served in the war of the +rebellion--stepped forward and addressed me in good English. We +naturally fell into conversation, and in the midst of it there came +out through the gate an open carriage, or landau, containing two men, +one of whom, in the uniform of a general and smoking a cigarette, we +recognized, when the conveyance drew near, as the Emperor Louis +Napoleon. The landau went on toward Donchery at a leisurely pace, +and we, inferring that there was something more important at hand +just then than the recovery of our trap, followed at a respectful +distance. Not quite a mile from Donchery is a cluster of three or +four cottages, and at the first of these the landau stopped to await, +as we afterward ascertained, Count Bismarck, with whom the diplomatic +negotiations were to be settled. Some minutes elapsed before he +came, Napoleon remaining seated in his carriage meantime, still +smoking, and accepting with nonchalance the staring of a group of +German soldiers near by, who were gazing on their fallen foe with +curious and eager interest. + +Presently a clattering of hoofs was heard, and looking toward the +sound, I perceived the Chancellor cantering down the road. When +abreast of the carriage he dismounted, and walking up to it, saluted +the Emperor in a quick, brusque way that seemed to startle him. +After a word or two, the party moved perhaps a hundred yards further +on, where they stopped opposite the weaver's cottage so famous from +that day. This little house is on the east side of the Donchery +road, near its junction with that to Frenois, and stands about twenty +paces back from the highway. In front is a stone wall covered with +creeping vines, and from a gate in this wall runs to the front door a +path, at this time bordered on both sides with potato vines. + +The Emperor having alighted at the gate, he and Bismarck walked +together along the narrow path and entered the cottage. Reappearing +in about a quarter of an hour, they came out and seated themselves in +the open air, the weaver having brought a couple of chairs. Here +they engaged in an animated conversation, if much gesticulation is +any indication. The talk lasted fully an hour, Bismarck seeming to +do most of it, but at last he arose, saluted the Emperor, and strode +down the path toward his horse. Seeing me standing near the gate, he +joined me for a moment, and asked if I had noticed how the Emperor +started when they first met, and I telling him that I had, he added, +"Well, it must have been due to my manners, not my words, for these +we're, "I salute your Majesty just as I would my King." Then the +Chancellor continued to chat a few minutes longer, assuring me that +nothing further was to be done there, and that we had better go to +the Chateau Bellevue, where, he said, the formal surrender was to +take place. With this he rode off toward Vendresse to communicate +with his sovereign, and Forsyth and I made ready to go to the Chateau +Bellevue. + +Before we set out, however, a number of officers of the King's suite +arrived at the weaver's cottage, and from them I gathered that there +were differences at the royal headquarters as to whether peace should +be made then at Sedan, or the war continued till the French capital +was taken. I further heard that the military advisers of the King +strongly advocated an immediate move on Paris, while the Chancellor +thought it best to make peace now, holding Alsace and Lorraine, and +compelling the payment of an enormous levy of money; and these rumors +were most likely correct, for I had often heard Bismarck say that +France being the richest country in Europe, nothing could keep her +quiet but effectually to empty her pockets; and besides this, he +impressed me as holding that it would be better policy to preserve +the Empire. + +On our way to the chateau we fell in with a number of artillery +officers bringing up their guns hurriedly to post them closer in to +the beleaguered town on a specially advantageous ridge. Inquiring +the cause of this move, we learned that General Wimpffen had not yet +agreed to the terms of surrender; that it was thought he would not, +and that they wanted to be prepared for any such contingency. And +they were preparing with a vengeance too, for I counted seventy-two +Krupp guns in one continuous line trained on the Chateau Bellevue and +Sedan. + +Napoleon went directly from the weaver's to the Chateau Bellevue, and +about 10 o'clock the King of Prussia arrived from Frenois, +accompanied by a few of his own suite and the Crown Prince with +several members of his staff; and Von Moltke and Wimpffen having +settled their points of difference before the two monarchs met, +within the next half-hour the articles of capitulation were formally +signed. + +On the completion of the surrender--the occasion being justly +considered a great one--the Crown Prince proceeded to distribute +among the officers congregated in the chateau grounds 'the order of +the Iron Cross'--a generous supply of these decorations being carried +in a basket by one of his orderlies, following him about as he walked +along. Meantime the King, leaving Napoleon in the chateau to +ruminate on the fickleness of fortune, drove off to see his own +victorious soldiers, who greeted him with huzzas that rent the air, +and must have added to the pangs of the captive Emperor. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +RIDING OVER THE BATTLEFIELD--DESTRUCTION OF BAZEILLES--MISTAKES OF +THE FRENCH--MARSHAL BAZAINE ON TO PARIS--A WEEK IN MEAUX--RHEIMS--ON +THE PICKETLINE-UNDER FIRE--A SURRENDER--AT VERSAILLES--GENERAL +BURNSIDE AND Mr. FORBES IN PARIS. + +The Crown Prince having got to the bottom of his medal basket-that is +to say, having finished his liberal distribution of decorations to +his officers--Forsyth and I rode off by way of Wadelincourt to +Bazeilles to see what had taken place on that part of the field, and +the sight that met our eyes as we entered the village was truly +dreadful to look upon. Most of the houses had been knocked down or +burned the day before, but such as had been left standing were now in +flames, the torch having been applied because, as it was claimed, +Frenchmen concealed in them had fired on the wounded. The streets +were still encumbered with both German and French dead, and it was +evident that of those killed in the houses the bodies had not been +removed, for the air was loaded with odors of burning flesh. From +Bazeille we rode on toward the north about two miles, along where the +fight had been largely an artillery duel, to learn what we could of +the effectiveness of the Krupp gun. Counting all the French dead we +came across killed by artillery, they figured up about three hundred- +-a ridiculously small number; in fact, not much more than one dead +man for each Krupp gun on that part of the line. Although the number +of dead was in utter disproportion to the terrific six-hour +cannonade, yet small as it was the torn and mangled bodies made such +a horrible sight that we turned back toward Bazeilles without having +gone further than Givonne. + +At Bazeilles we met the King, accompanied by Bismarck and several of +the staff. They too had been riding over the field, the King making +this a practice, to see that the wounded were not neglected. As I +drew up by the party, Bismarck accosted me with, "Well, General, +aren't you hungry? This is just the place to whet one's appetite-- +these burning Frenchmen--Ugh!" and shrugging his shoulders in evident +disgust, he turned away to join his Majesty in further explorations, +Forsyth and I continuing on to Chevenges. Here we got the first +inkling of what had become of our carriage since leaving it two days +before: it had been pressed into service to carry wounded officers +from the field during the battle, but afterward released, and was now +safe at the house in Vendresse where we had been quartered the night +of the 31st, so, on hearing this, we settled to go there again to +lodge, but our good friend, the cure', insisting that we should stay +with him, we remained in Chevenges till next morning. + +On September 3 the King removed from Vendresse to Rethel, where he +remained two days; in the mean while the Germans, 240,000 strong, +beginning their direct march to Paris. The French had little with +which to oppose this enormous force, not more, perhaps, than 50,000 +regular troops; the rest of their splendid army had been lost or +captured in battle, or was cooped up in the fortifications of Metz, +Strasburg, and other places, in consequence of blunders without +parallel in history, for which Napoleon and the Regency in Paris must +be held accountable. The first of these gross faults was the fight +at Worth, where MacMahon, before his army was mobilized, accepted +battle with the Crown Prince, pitting 50,000 men against 175,000; the +next was Bazaine's fixing upon Metz as his base, and stupidly putting +himself in position to be driven back to it, when there was no +possible obstacle to his joining forces with MacMahon at Chalons; +while the third and greatest blunder of all was MacMahon's move to +relieve Metz, trying to slip 140,000 men along the Belgian frontier. +Indeed, it is exasperating and sickening to think of all this; to +think that Bazaine carried into Metz--a place that should have been +held, if at all, with not over 25,000 men--an army of 180,000, +because it contained, the excuse was, "an accumulation of stores." +With all the resources of rich France to draw upon, I cannot conceive +that this excuse was sincere; on the contrary, I think that the +movement of Bazaine must have been inspired by Napoleon with a view +to the maintenance of his dynasty rather than for the good of France. + +As previously stated, Bismarck did not approve of the German army's +moving on Paris after the battle of Sedan. Indeed, I think he +foresaw and dreaded the establishment of a Republic, his idea being +that if peace was made then, the Empire could be continued in the +person of the Prince Imperial who--, coming to the throne under +German influences, would be pliable in his hands. These views found +frequent expression in private, and in public too; I myself +particularly remember the Chancellor's speaking thus most unguardedly +at a dinner in Rheims. But he could not prevent the march to Paris; +it was impossible to stop the Germans, flushed with success. "On to +Paris" was written by the soldiers on every door, and every fence- +board along the route to the capital, and the thought of a triumphant +march down the Champs Elysees was uppermost with every German, from +the highest to the lowest grade. + +The 5th of September we set out for Rheims. There it was said the +Germans would meet with strong resistance, for the French intended to +die to the last man before giving up that city. But this proved all +fudge, as is usual with these "last ditch" promises, the garrison +decamping immediately at the approach of a few Uhlans. So far as I +could learn, but a single casualty happened; this occurred to an +Uhlan, wounded by a shot which it was reported was fired from a house +after the town was taken; so, to punish this breach of faith, a levy +of several hundred bottles of champagne was made, and the wine +divided about headquarters, being the only seizure made in the city, +I believe, for though Rheims, the centre of the champagne district, +had its cellars well stocked, yet most of them being owned by German +firms, they received every protection. + +The land about Rheims is of a white, chalky character, and very poor, +but having been terraced and enriched with fertilizers, it produces +the champagne grape in such abundance that the region, once +considered valueless, and named by the peasantry the "land of the +louse," now supports a dense population. We remained in Rheims eight +days, and through the politeness of the American Consul--Mr. Adolph +Gill--had the pleasure of seeing all the famous wine cellars, and +inspecting the processes followed in champagne making, from the step +of pressing the juice from the grape to that which shows the wine +ready for the market. Mr. Gill also took us to see everything else +of special interest about the city, and there being much to look at-- +fine old churches, ancient fortifications, a Roman gateway, etc.--the +days slipped by very quickly, though the incessant rains somewhat +interfered with our enjoyment. + +For three or four days all sorts of rumors were rife as to what was +doing in Paris, but nothing definite was learned till about the 9th; +then Count Bismarck informed me that the Regency had been overthrown +on the 4th, and that the Empress Eugenie had escaped to Belgium. The +King of Prussia offered her an asylum with the Emperor at +Wilhelmshohe, "where she ought to go," said the Chancellor, "for her +proper place is with her husband," but he feared she would not. On +the same occasion he also told me that Jules Favre--the head of the +Provisional Government--had sent him the suggestion that, the Empire +being gone, peace should be made and the Germans withdrawn, but that +he (Bismarck) was now compelled to recognize the impossibility of +doing this till Paris was taken, for although immediately after the +surrender of Sedan he desired peace, the past few days had made it +plain that the troops would not be satisfied with anything short of +Paris, no matter what form of Government the French should ultimately +adopt. + +The German army having met with no resistance whatever in its march +on Paris, its advance approached the capital rapidly, and by the 14th +of September the royal headquarters moved by a fine macadamized road +to the Chateau Thierry, and on the 5th reached Meaux, about twenty- +eight miles from Paris, where we remained four days awaiting the +reconstruction of some railroad and canal bridges. The town of Meaux +has a busy population of about 10,000 souls, in peaceable times +principally occupied in manufacturing flour for the Paris market, +having a fine waterpower for the many mills. These were kept going +day and night to supply the German army; and it was strange to see +with what zeal Frenchmen toiled to fill the stomachs of their +inveterate enemies, and with what alacrity the mayor and other. +officials filled requisitions for wine, cheese, suits of livery, +riding-whips, and even squab pigeons. + +During our stay at Meaux the British Minister Lord Lyons, endeavored +to bring about a cessation of hostilities, to this end sending his +secretary out from Paris with a letter to Count Bismarck, offering to +serve as mediator. The Chancellor would not agree to this, however, +for he conjectured that the action of the British Minister had been +inspired by Jules Favre, who, he thought, was trying to draw the +Germans into negotiations through the medium of a third party only +for purposes of delay. So the next morning Lord Lyons's secretary, +Mr. Edward Malet, returned to Paris empty-handed, except that he bore +a communication positively declining mediation; which message, +however, led no doubt to an interview between Bismarck and Favre a +couple of days later. + +The forenoon of September 19 the King removed to the Chateau +Ferrieres--a castle belonging to the Rothschild family, where +Napoleon had spent many happy days in the time of his prosperity. +His Majesty took up his quarters here at the suggestion of the owner, +we were told, so that by the presence of the King the magnificent +chateau and its treasures of art would be unquestionably protected +from all acts of vandalism. + +All of the people at headquarters except the King's immediate suite +were assigned quarters at Lagny; and while Forsyth and I, accompanied +by Sir Henry Havelock, of the British army, were driving thither, we +passed on the road the representative of the National Defense +Government, Jules Favre, in a carriage heading toward Meaux. +Preceded by a flag of truce and accompanied by a single, companion, +be was searching for Count Bismarck, in conformity, doubtless, with +the message the Chancellor had sent to Paris on the 17th by the +British secretary. A half-mile further on we met Bismarck. He too +was traveling toward Meaux, not in the best of humor either, it +appeared, for having missed finding the French envoy at the +rendezvous where they had agreed to meet, he stopped long enough to +say that the "air was full of lies, and that there were many persons +with the army bent on business that did not concern them." + +The armies of the two Crown Princes were now at the outskirts of +Paris. They had come from Sedan mainly by two routes--the Crown +Prince of Saxony marching by the northern line, through Laon and +Soissons, and the Crown Prince of Prussia by the southern line, +keeping his right wing on the north bank of the Marne, while his left +and centre approached the French capital by roads between that river +and the Seine. + +The march of these armies had been unobstructed by any resistance +worth mentioning, and as the routes of both columns lay through a +region teeming with everything necessary for their support, and rich +even in luxuries, it struck me that such campaigning was more a vast +picnic than like actual war. The country supplied at all points +bread, meat, and wine in abundance, and the neat villages, never more +than a mile or two apart, always furnished shelter; hence the +enormous trains required to feed and provide camp equipage for an +army operating in a sparsely settled country were dispensed with; in +truth, about the only impedimenta of the Germans was their wagons +carrying ammunition, pontoon-boats, and the field-telegraph. + +On the morning of the 20th I started out accompanied by Forsyth and +Sir Henry Havelock, and took the road through Boissy St. George, +Boissy St. Martins and Noisy Le Grand to Brie. Almost every foot of +the way was strewn with fragments of glass from wine bottles, emptied +and then broken by the troops. There was, indeed, so much of this +that I refrain from making any estimate of the number of bottles, +lest I be thought to exaggerate, but the road was literally paved +with glass, and the amount of wine consumed (none was wasted) must +have been enormous, far more, even, than I had seen evidence of at +any time before. There were two almost continuous lines of broken +bottles along the roadsides all the way down from Sedan; but that +exhibit was small compared with what we saw about Brie. + +At Brie we were taken charge of by the German commandant of the +place. He entertained us most hospitably for an hour or so, and +then, accompanied by a lieutenant, who was to be our guide, I set out +ahead of my companions to gain a point on the picket-line where I +expected to get a good look at the French, for their rifle-pits were +but a few hundred yards off across the Marne, their main line being +just behind the rifle-pits. As the lieutenant and I rode through the +village, some soldiers warned us that the adventure would ,be +dangerous, but that we could probably get to the desired place unhurt +if we avoided the French fire by forcing our horses to a run in +crossing some open streets where we would be exposed. On getting to +the first street my guide galloped ahead to show the way, and as the +French were not on the lookout for anything of the kind at these +dangerous points, only a few stray shots were drawn by the +lieutenant, but when I followed, they were fully up to what was going +on, and let fly a volley every time they saw me in the open. +Fortunately, however, in their excitement they overshot, but when I +drew rein alongside of my guide under protection of the bluff where +the German picket was posted, my hair was all on end, and I was about +as badly scared as ever I had been in my life. As soon as I could +recover myself I thought of Havelock and Forsyth, with the hope that +they would not follow; nor did they, for having witnessed my +experience, they wisely concluded that, after all, they did not care +so much to see the French rifle-pits. + +When I had climbed to the top of the bluff I was much disappointed, +for I could see but little--only the advanced rifle-pits across the +river, and Fort Nogent beyond them, not enough, certainly, to repay a +non-combatant for taking the risk of being killed. The next question +was to return, and deciding to take no more such chances as those we +had run in coming out, I said we would wait till dark, but this +proved unnecessary, for to my utter astonishment my guide informed me +that there was a perfectly safe route by which we might go back. I +asked why we had not taken it in coming, and he replied that he had +thought it "too long and circuitous." To this I could say nothing, +but I concluded that that was not quite the correct reason; the truth +is that early that morning the young fellow had been helping to empty +some of the many wine bottles I saw around Brie, and consequently had +a little more "Dutch courage"--was a little more rash--than would +have been the case under other conditions. + +I rode back to Brie by the "long and circuitous" route, and inquiring +there for my companions, found Havelock waiting to conduct me to the +village of Villiers, whither, he said, Forsyth had been called to +make some explanation about his passport, which did not appear to be +in satisfactory shape. Accordingly we started for Villiers, and +Havelock, being well mounted on an English "hunter," and wishing to +give me an exhibition of the animal's training and power, led the way +across ditches and fences, but my horse, never having followed "the +hounds," was unsafe to experiment with, so, after trying a low fence +or two, I decided to leave my friend alone in his diversion, and a +few moments later, seeing both horse and rider go down before a ditch +and high stone wall, I was convinced that my resolution was a +discreet one. After this mishap, which luckily resulted in no harm, +I hoped Sir Henry would give up the amusement, but by failure +becoming only the more determined, in a second effort he cleared the +wall handsomely and rode across-country to the villages. Following +the road till it passed under a railway bridge, I there thought I saw +a chance to gain Villiers by a short-cut, and changing my course +accordingly, I struck into a large vineyard to the left, and +proceeding a few hundred yards through the vines, came suddenly upon +a German picket-post. The guard immediately leveled their rifles at +me, when, remembering my Rezonville experience of being taken for a +French officer because of my uniform, I hastily flung myself from the +saddle in token of surrender. The action being rightly interpreted, +the men held their fire, and as my next thought was the King's pass I +reached under my coat-skirt for the document, but this motion being +taken as a grab for my pistol, the whole lot of them--some ten in +number--again aimed at me, and with such loud demands for surrender +that I threw up my hands and ran into their ranks. The officer of +the guard then coming up, examined my credentials, and seeing that +they were signed by the King of Prussia, released me and directed the +recovery of my horse, which was soon caught, and I was then conducted +to the quarters of the commandant, where I found Forsyth with his +pass properly vised, entirely ignorant of my troubles, and +contentedly regaling himself on cheese and beer. Havelock having got +to the village ahead of me, thanks to his cross-country ride, was +there too, sipping beer with Forsyth; nor was I slow to follow their +example, for the ride of the day, though rather barren in other +results, at any rate had given me a ravenous appetite. + +Late that evening, the 20th, we resumed our old quarters at Lagny, +and early next day I made a visit to the royal headquarters at +Ferrires, where I observed great rejoicing going on, the occasion for +it being an important victory gained near Mendon, a French corps of +about 30,000 men under General Ducrot having been beaten by the Fifth +Prussian and Second Bavarian corps. Ducrot had been stubbornly +holding ground near Mendon for two or three days, much to the +embarrassment of the Germans too, since he kept them from closing a +gap in their line to the southwest of Paris; but in the recent fight +he had been driven from the field with such heavy loss as to render +impossible his maintaining the gap longer. The Crown Prince of +Prussia was thus enabled to extend his left, without danger, as far +as Bougival, north of Versailles, and eventually met the right of the +Crown Prince of Saxony, already at Denil, north of St. Denis. The +unbroken circle of investment around Paris being well-nigh assured, +news of its complete accomplishment was momentarily expected; +therefore everybody was jubilant on account of the breaking up of +Ducrot, but more particularly because word had been received the same +morning that a correspondence had begun between Bazaine and Prince +Frederick Charles, looking to the capitulation of Metz, for the +surrender of that place would permit the Second Army to join in the +siege of Paris. + +Learning all this, and seeing that the investment was about +completed, I decided to take up my quarters at Versailles, and +started for that place on the 22d, halting at Noisy le Grand to take +luncheon with some artillery officers, whose acquaintance we had made +the day of the surrender at Sedan. During the meal I noticed two +American flags flying on a couple of houses near by. Inquiring the +significance of this, I was told that the flags had been put up to +protect the buildings--the owners, two American citizens, having in a +bad fright abandoned their property, and, instead of remaining +outside, gone into Paris,--"very foolishly," said our hospitable +friends, "for here they could have obtained food in plenty, and been +perfectly secure from molestation." + +We arrived at Versailles about 7 o'clock that evening and settled +ourselves in the Hotel Reservoir, happy to find there two or three +American families, with whom, of course, we quickly made +acquaintance. This American circle was enlarged a few days later by +the arrival of General Wm. B. Hazen, of our army, General Ambrose E. +Burnside, and Mr. Paul Forbes. Burnside and Forbes were hot to see, +from the French side, something of the war, and being almost beside +themselves to get into Paris, a permit was granted them by Count +Bismarck, and they set out by way of Sevres, Forsyth and I +accompanying them as far as the Palace of St. Cloud, which we, +proposed to see, though there were strict orders against its being +visited generally. After much trouble we managed, through the "open +sesame" of the King's pass, to gain access to the palace; but to our +great disappointment we found that all the pictures had been cut from +the frames and carried off to Paris, except one portrait, that of +Queen Victoria, against whom the French were much incensed. All +other works of art had been removed, too--a most fortunate +circumstance, for the palace being directly on the German line, was +raked by the guns from the fortress of Mont Valerien, and in a few +days burned to the ground. + +In less than a week Burnside and Forbes returned from Paris. They +told us their experience had been interesting, but were very reticent +as to particulars, and though we tried hard to find out what they had +seen or done, we could get nothing from them beyond the general +statement that they had had a good time, and that General Trochu had +been considerate enough to postpone a sortie, in order to let them +return; but this we did not quite swallow. After a day or two they +went into Paris again, and I then began to suspect that they were +essaying the role of mediators, and that Count Bismarck was feeding +their vanity with permits, and receiving his equivalent by learning +the state of affairs within the beleaguered city. + +>From about the 1st of October on, the Germans were engaged in making +their enveloping lines impenetrable, bringing up their reserves, +siege guns, and the like, the French meanwhile continuing to drill +and discipline the National Guard and relieving the monotony +occasionally by a more or less spirited, but invariably abortive, +sortie. The most notable of these was that made by General Vinoy +against the heights of Clamart, the result being a disastrous repulse +by the besiegers. After this, matters settled down to an almost +uninterrupted quietude, only a skirmish here and there; and it being +plain that the Germans did not intend to assault the capital, but +would accomplish its capture by starvation, I concluded to find out +from Count Bismarck about when the end was expected, with the purpose +of spending the interim in a little tour through some portions of +Europe undisturbed by war, returning in season for the capitulation. +Count Bismarck having kindly advised me as to the possible date, + +Forsyth and I, on the 14th of October, left Versailles, going first +direct to the Chateau Ferrieres to pay our respects to the King, +which we did, and again took luncheon with him. From the chateau we +drove to Meaux, and there spent the night; resuming our journey next +morning, we passed through Epernay, Rheims, and Rethel to Sedan, +where we tarried a day, and finally, on October 18, reached Brussels. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +BRUSSELS--DECIDING TO VISIT EASTERN EUROPE--AUSTRIA--DOWN THE DANUBE- +-IN CONSTANTINOPLE--THE LADIES OF THE HAREM--THE SULTAN--TURKISH +SOLDIERS--A BANQUET--A VISIT IN ATHENS--KING GEORGE OF GREECE--VICTOR +EMMANUEL--"BEDEVILED WITH CARES OF STATE"--DEER SHOOTING--A MILITARY +DINNER--RETURN TO VERSAILLES--GERMANS ENTERING PARIS--CRITICISM ON +THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR--CONCLUSION. + +On reaching Brussels, one of the first things to do was to pay my +respects to the King of Belgium, which I did, accompanied by our +Minister, Mr. Russell Jones. Later I dined with the King and Queen, +meeting at the dinner many notable people, among them the Count and +Countess of Flanders. A day or two in Brussels sufficed to mature +our plans for spending the time up to the approximate date of our +return to Paris; and deciding to visit eastern Europe, we made Vienna +our first objective, going there by way of Dresden. + +At Vienna our Minister, Mr. John Jay, took charge of us--Forsyth was +still with me--and the few days' sojourn was full of interest. The +Emperor being absent from the capital, we missed seeing him; but the +Prime Minister, Count von Beust, was very polite to us, and at his +house we had the pleasure of meeting at dinner Count Andrassy, the +Prime Minister of Hungary. + +>From Vienna we went to Buda-Pesth, the Hungarian capital; and thence, +in a I small, crowded, and uncomfortable steamboat, down the Danube +to Rustchuck, whence we visited Bucharest--all who travel in eastern +Europe do so--and then directing our course southward, we went first +to Varna, and from that city by steamer through the Black Sea to +Constantinople. + +We reached the Turkish capital at the time of Ramadan, the period of +the year (about a month) during which the Mohammedans are commanded +by the Koran to keep a rigorous fast every day from sunrise till +sunset. All the followers of the Prophet were therefore busy with +their devotions--holding a revival, as it were; hence there was no +chance whatever to be presented to the Sultan, Abdul Aziz, it being +forbidden during the penitential season for him to receive +unbelievers, or in fact any one except the officials of his +household. However, the Grand Vizier brought me many messages of +welcome, and arranged that I should be permitted to see and salute +his Serene Highness on the Esplanade as he rode by on horseback to +the mosque. + +So, the second day after arrival, the Grand Vizier drove me in a +barouche to the Esplanade, where we took station about midway of its +length an hour or so before the Sultan was to appear. Shortly after +we reached the Esplanade, carriages occupied by the women of the +Sultan's harem began to appear, coming out from the palace grounds +and driving up and down the roadway. Only a few of the women were +closely veiled, a majority of them wearing an apology for veiling, +merely a strip of white lace covering the forehead down to the +eyebrows. Some were yellow, and some white-types of the Mongolian +and Caucasian races. Now and then a pretty face was seen, rarely a +beautiful one. Many were plump, even to corpulence, and these were +the closest veiled, being considered the greatest beauties I presume, +since with the Turk obesity is the chief element of comeliness. As +the carriages passed along in review, every now and then an occupant, +unable or unwilling to repress her natural promptings, would indulge +in a mild flirtation, making overtures by casting demure side- +glances, throwing us coquettish kisses, or waving strings of amber +beads with significant gestures, seeming to say: "Why don't you +follow?" But this we could not do if we would, for the Esplanade +throughout its entire length was lined with soldiers, put there +especially to guard the harem first, and later, the Sultan on his +pilgrimage to the mosque. + +But as it was now time for His Serene Highness to make his appearance +the carriages containing his wives drove off into the palace grounds, +which were inclosed by a high wall, leaving the Esplanade wholly +unencumbered except by the soldiers. Down between the two ranks, +which were formed facing each other, came the Sultan on a white +steed--a beautiful Arabian--and having at his side his son, a boy +about ten or twelve years old, who was riding a pony, a diminutive +copy of his father's mount, the two attended by a numerous body- +guard, dressed in gorgeous Oriental uniforms. As the procession +passed our carriage, I, as pre-arranged, stood up and took off my +hat, His Serene Highness promptly acknowledging the salute by raising +his hand to the forehead. This was all I saw of him, yet I received +every kindness at his hands, being permitted to see many of his +troops, to inspect all the ordnance, equipment, and other military +establishments about Constantinople, and to meet numbers of the high +functionaries of the Empire. + +Among other compliments tendered through his direction, and which I +gladly accepted, was a review of all the troops then in Stamboul- +about 6,000--comprising infantry, cavalry, and artillery. + +They were as fine looking a body of soldiers as I ever saw--well +armed and well clothed, the men all large and of sturdy appearance. + +After the review we attended a grand military dinner given by the +Grand Vizier. At the hour set for this banquet we presented +ourselves at the palace of the Grand Vizier, and being ushered into a +large drawing-room, found already assembled there the guests invited +to meet us. Some few spoke French, and with these we managed to +exchange an occasional remark; but as the greater number stood about +in silence, the affair, thus far, was undeniably a little stiff. +Just before the dinner was announced, all the Turkish officers went +into an adjoining room, and turning their faces to the east, +prostrated themselves to the floor in prayer. Then we were all +conducted to a large salon, where each being provided with a silver +ewer and basin, a little ball of highly perfumed soap and a napkin, +set out on small tables, each guest washed his hands. Adjacent to +this salon was the dining-room, or, rather, the banqueting room, a +very large and artistically frescoed hall, in the centre of which +stood a crescent-shaped table, lighted with beautiful silver +candelabra, and tastefully decorated with flowers and fruits. The +viands were all excellent; cooked, evidently, by a French chef, and +full justice was done the dishes, especially by the Turks, who, of +course, had been fasting all day. + +At the close of the banquet, which consisted of not less than fifteen +courses, we withdrew to a smoking-room, where the coffee was served +and cigarettes and chibouks offered us--the latter a pipe having a +long flexible stem with an amber mouthpiece. I chose the chibouk, +and as the stem of mine was studded with precious stones of enormous +value, I thought I should enjoy it the more; but the tobacco being +highly flavored with some sort of herbs, my smoke fell far short of +my anticipations. The coffee was delicious, however, and I found +this to be the case wherever I went in Constantinople, whether in +making calls or at dinner, the custom of offering coffee and tobacco +on these occasions being universal. + +The temptations to linger at Constantinople were many indeed, not the +least being the delightful climate; and as time pressed, we set out +with much regret on the return journey, stopping a few days at +Athens, whence we made several short excursions into the interior. +King George and Queen Olga made our stay in Athens one of extreme +interest and exceeding pleasure. Throwing aside all ceremony, they +breakfasted and dined us informally, gave us a fine ball, and in +addition to these hospitalities showed us much personal attention, +his Majesty even calling upon me, and the Queen sending her children +to see us at our hotel. + +Of course we visited all that remained of the city's ancient +civilization--the Acropolis, temples, baths, towers, and the like; +nor did we oinit to view the spot where St. Paul once instructed the +Athenians in lessons of Christianity. We traveled some little +through the country districts outside of Athens, and I noticed that +the peasantry, in point of picturesqueness of dress and color of +complexion, were not unlike the gypsies we see at times in America. +They had also much of the same shrewdness, and, as far as I could +learn, were generally wholly uneducated, ignorant, indeed, except as +to one subject--politics--which I was told came to them intuitively, +they taking to it, and a scramble for office, as naturally as a duck +to water. In fact, this common faculty for politics seems a +connecting link between the ancient and modern Greek. + +Leaving Athens with the pleasantest recollections, we sailed for +Messina, Sicily, and from there went to Naples, where we found many +old friends; among them Mr. Buchanan Reed, the artist and poet, and +Miss Brewster, as well as a score or more of others of our +countrymen, then or since distinguished, in art and letters at home +and abroad. We remained some days in Naples, and during the time +went to Pompeii to witness a special excavation among the ruins of +the buried city, which search was instituted on account of our visit. +A number of ancient household articles were dug up, and one, a terra +cotta lamp bearing upon its crown in bas-relief the legend of "Leda +and the Swan," was presented to me as a souvenir of the occasion, +though it is usual for the Government to place in its museums +everything of such value that is unearthed. + +>From Naples to Rome by rail was our next journey. In the Eternal +City we saw picture-galleries, churches, and ruins in plenty, but all +these have been so well described by hundreds of other travelers that +I shall not linger even to name them. While at Rome we also +witnessed an overflow of the Tiber, that caused great suffering and +destroyed much property. The next stage of our tour took us to +Venice, then to Florence--the capital of Italy--for although the +troops of the King of Italy had taken possession of Rome the +preceding September, the Government itself had not yet removed +thither. + +At Florence, our Minister, Mr. Marsh, though suffering with a lame +foot, took me in charge, and in due course of time I was presented to +King Victor-Emmanuel. His Majesty received me informally at his +palace in a small, stuffy room--his office, no doubt--and an untidy +one it was too. He wore a loose blouse and very baggy trousers; a +comfortable suit, certainly, but not at all conducing to an ideal +kingliness of appearance. + +His Majesty's hobby was hunting, and no sooner had I made my bow than +he began a conversation on that subject, thrusting his hands nearly +up to the elbows into the pockets of his trousers. He desired to +learn about the large game of America, particularly the buffalo, and +when I spoke of the herds of thousands and thousands I had seen on +the plains of western Kansas, he interrupted me to bemoan the fate +which kept him from visiting America to hunt, even going so far as to +say that "he didn't wish to be King of Italy, anyhow, but would much +prefer to pass his days hunting than be bedeviled with the cares of +state." On one of his estates, near Pisa, he had several large herds +of deer, many wild boars, and a great deal of other game. Of this +preserve he was very proud, and before we separated invited me to go +down there to shoot deer, adding that he would be there himself if he +could, but feared that a trip which he had to take to Milan would +interfere, though he wished me to go in any event. + +I gladly accepted the invitation, and in two or three days was +notified when I would be expected at the estate. At the designated +time I was escorted to Pisa by an aide-de-camp, and from there we +drove the few miles to the King's chateau, where we fortified +ourselves for the work in hand by an elaborate and toothsome +breakfast of about ten courses. Then in a carriage we set out for +the King's stand in the hunting-grounds, accompanied by a crowd of +mounted game-keepers, who with great difficulty controlled the pack +of sixty or seventy hounds, the dogs and keepers together almost +driving me to distraction with their yelping and yelling. On +reaching the stand, I was posted within about twenty' yards of a +long, high picket-fence, facing the fence and covered by two trees +very close together. It was from behind these that the King usually +shot, and as I was provided with a double-barreled shot-gun, I +thought I could do well, especially since close in rear of me stood +two game-keepers to load and hand me a second gun when the first was +emptied. + +Meantime the huntsmen and the hounds had made a circuit of the park +to drive up the game. The yelps of the hounds drawing near, I +cautiously looked in the direction of the sound, and the next moment +saw a herd of deer close in to the fence, and coming down at full +speed. Without a miss, I shot the four leading ones as they tried +to run the gauntlet, for in passing between the stand and the fence, +the innocent creatures were not more than ten to fifteen paces from +me. At the fourth I stopped, but the gamekeepers insisted on more +butchery, saying, "No one but the King ever did the like" (I guess no +one else had ever had the chance), so, thus urged, I continued firing +till I had slaughtered eleven with eleven shots--an easy task with a +shot-gun and buckshot cartridges. + +The "hunt" being ended--for with this I had had enough, and no one +else was permitted to do any shooting--the aide-decamp directed the +game to be sent to me in Florence, and we started for the chateau. +On the way back I saw a wild boar the first and only one I ever saw-- +my attention being drawn to him by cries from some of the game- +keepers. There was much commotion, the men pointing out the game and +shouting excitedly, "See the wild boar!" otherwise I should not have +known what was up, but now, looking in the indicated direction, I saw +scudding over the plain what appeared to me to be nothing but a +halfgrown black pig, or shoat. He was not in much of a hurry either, +and gave no evidence of ferocity, yet it is said that this +insignificant looking animal is dangerous when hunted with the spear +--the customary way. After an early dinner at the chateau we +returned to Florence, and my venison next day arriving, it was +distributed among my American friends in the city. + +Shortly after the hunt the King returned from Milan, and then honored +me with a military dinner, his Majesty and all the guests, numbering +eighty, appearing in full uniform. The banqueting hall was lighted +with hundreds of wax candles, there was a profusion of beautiful +flowers, and to me the scene altogether was one of unusual +magnificence. The table service was entirely of gold--the celebrated +set of the house of Savoy--and behind the chair of each guest stood a +servant in powdered wig and gorgeous livery of red plush. I sat at +the right of the King, who--his hands resting on his sword, the hilt +of which glittered with jewels--sat through the hour and a half at +table without once tasting food or drink, for it was his rule to eat +but two meals in twenty-four hours--breakfast at noon, and dinner at +midnight. The King remained silent most of the time, but when he did +speak, no matter on what subject, he inevitably drifted back to +hunting. He never once referred to the Franco-Prussian war, nor to +the political situation in his own country, then passing through a +crisis. In taking leave of his Majesty I thanked him with deep +gratitude for honoring me so highly, and his response was that if +ever he came to America to hunt buffalo, he should demand my +assistance. + +>From Florence I went to Milan and Geneva, then to Nice, Marseilles, +and Bordeaux. Assembled at Bordeaux was a convention which had been +called together by the government of the National Defense for the +purpose of confirming or rejecting the terms of an armistice of +twenty-one days, arranged between Jules Favre and Count Bismarck in +negotiations begun at Versailles the latter part of January. The +convention was a large body, chosen from all parts of France, and was +unquestionably the most noisy, unruly and unreasonable set of beings +that I ever saw in a legislative assembly. The frequent efforts of +Thiers, Jules Favre, and other leading men to restrain the more +impetuous were of little avail. When at the sittings a delegate +arose to speak on some question, he was often violently pulled to his +seat and then surrounded by a mob of his colleagues, who would throw +off their coats and gesticulate wildly, as though about to fight. + +But the bitter pill of defeat had to be swallowed in some way, so the +convention delegated M. Thiers to represent the executive power of +the country, with authority to construct a ministry three +commissioners were appointed by the Executive, to enter into further +negotiations with Count Bismarck at Versailles and arrange a peace, +the terms of which, however, were to be submitted to the convention +for final action. Though there had been so much discussion, it took +but a few days to draw up and sign a treaty at Versailles, the +principal negotiators being Thiers and Jules Favre for France, and +Bismarck on the part of the Germans. The terms agreed upon provided +for the occupation of Paris till ratification should be had by the +convention at Bordeaux; learning of which stipulation from our +Minister, Mr. Washburn, I hurried off to Paris to see the conquerors +make their triumphal entry. + +In the city the excitement was at fever heat, of course; the entire +population protesting with one voice that they would never, never +look upon the hated Germans marching through their beloved city. No! +when the day arrived they would hide themselves in their houses, or +shut their eyes to such a hateful sight. But by the 1st of March a +change had come over the fickle Parisians, for at an early hour the +sidewalks were jammed with people, and the windows and doors of the +houses filled with men, women, and children eager to get a look at +the conquerors. Only a few came in the morning, however--an advance- +-guard of perhaps a thousand cavalry and infantry. The main column +marched from the Arc-de-Triomphe toward the middle of the afternoon. +In its composition it represented United Germany--Saxons, Bavarians, +and the Royal Guard of Prussia--and, to the strains of martial music, +moving down the Champ Elysees to the Place de la Concorde, was +distributed thence over certain sections of the city agreed upon +beforehand. Nothing that could be called a disturbance took place +during the march; and though there was a hiss now and then and +murmurings of discontent, yet the most noteworthy mutterings were +directed against the defunct Empire. Indeed, I found everywhere that +the national misfortunes were laid at Napoleon's door--he, by this +time, having become a scapegoat for every blunder of the war. + +The Emperor William (he had been proclaimed German Emperor at +Versailles the 18th of January) did not accompany his troops into +Paris, though he reviewed them at Long Champs before they started. +After the occupation of the city he still remained at Versailles, and +as soon as circumstances would permit, I repaired to the Imperial +headquarters to pay my respects to his Majesty under his new title +and dignities, and to say good-bye. + +Besides the Emperor, the only persons I me at Versailles were General +von Moltke and Bismarck. His Majesty was in a very agreeable frame +of mind, and as bluff and hearty as usual. His increased rank and +power had effected no noticeable change of any kind in him, and by +his genial and cordial ways he made me think that my presence with +the German army had contributed to his pleasure. Whether this was +really so or not, I shall always believe it true, for his kind words +and sincere manner could leave no other conclusion. + +General von Moltke was, as usual, quiet and reserved, betraying not +the slightest consciousness of his great ability, nor the least +indication of pride on account of his mighty work. I say this +advisedly, for it is an undoubted fact that it was. his marvelous +mind that perfected the military system by which 800,000 men were +mobilized with unparalleled celerity and moved with such certainty of +combination that, in a campaign of seven months, the military power +of France was destroyed and her vast resources sorely crippled. + +I said good-bye to Count Bismarck, also, for at that busy time the +chances of seeing him again were very remote. The great Chancellor +manifested more joy over the success of the Germans than did anyone +else at the Imperial headquarters. Along with his towering strength +of mind and body, his character partook of much of the enthusiasm and +impulsiveness commonly restricted to younger men, and now in his +frank, free way be plainly showed his light-heartedness and +gratification at success. That which for years his genius had been +planning and striving for--permanent unification of the German +States, had been accomplished by the war. It had welded them +together in a compact Empire which no power in Europe could disrupt, +and as such a union was the aim of Bismarck's life, he surely had a +right to feel jubilant. + +Thanks to the courtesies extended me, I had been able to observe the +principal battles, and study many of the minor details of a war +between two of the greatest military nations of the world, and to +examine critically the methods followed abroad for subsisting, +equipping, and manoeuvring vast bodies of men during a stupendous, +campaign. Of course I found a great deal to interest and instruct +me, yet nowadays war is pretty much the same everywhere, and this one +offered no marked exception to my previous experiences. The methods +pursued on the march were the same as we would employ, with one most +important exception. Owing to the density of population throughout +France it was always practicable for the Germans to quarter their +troops in villages, requiring the inhabitants to subsist both +officers and men. Hence there was no necessity for camp and garrison +equipage, nor enormous provision trains, and the armies were +unencumbered by these impedimenta, indispensable when operating in a +poor and sparsely settled country. As I have said before, the only +trains were those for ammunition, pontoon-boats, and the field +telegraph, and all these were managed by special corps. If +transportation was needed for other purposes, it was obtained by +requisition from the invaded country, just as food and forage were +secured. Great celerity of combination was therefore possible, the +columns moving in compact order, and as all the roads were broad and +macadamized, there was little or nothing to delay or obstruct the +march of the Germans, except when their enemy offered resistance, but +even this was generally slight and not very frequent, for the French +were discouraged by disaster from the very outset of the campaign + +The earlier advantages gained bythe Germans may be ascribed to the +strikingly prompt mobilization of their armies, one of the most +noticeable features of their perfect military system, devised by +almost autocratic power; their later successes were greatly aided by +the blunders of the French, whose stupendous errors materially +shortened the war, though even if prolonged it could, in my opinion, +have had ultimately no other termination. + +As I have previously stated, the first of these blunders was the +acceptance of battle by MacMahon at Worth; the second in attaching +too much importance to the fortified position of Metz, resulting in +three battles Colombey, Mars-la-Tour, and Gravelotte--all of which +were lost; and the third, the absurd movement of MacMahon along the +Belgian frontier to relieve Metz, the responsibility for which, I am +glad to say, does not belong to him. + +With the hemming in of Bazaine at Metz and the capture of MacMahon's +army at Sedan the crisis of the war was passed, and the Germans +practically the victors. The taking of Paris was but a sentiment-- +the money levy could have been made and the Rhine provinces held +without molesting that city, and only the political influences +consequent upon the changes in the French Government caused peace to +be deferred. + +I did not have much opportunity to observe the German cavalry, either +on the march or in battle. The only time I saw any of it engaged was +in the unfortunate charge at Gravelotte. That proved its mettle good +and discipline fair, but answered no other purpose. Such of it as +was not attached to the infantry was organized in divisions, and +operated in accordance with the old idea of covering the front and +flanks of the army, a duty which it thoroughly performed. But thus +directed it was in no sense an independent corps, and hence cannot +be, said to have accomplished anything in the campaign, or have had a +weight or influence at all proportionate to its strength. The method +of its employment seemed to me a mistake, for, being numerically +superior to the French cavalry, had it been massed and manoeuvred +independently of the infantry, it could easily have broken up the +French communications, and done much other work of weighty influence +in the prosecution of the war. + +The infantry was as fine as I ever saw, the men young and hardy in +appearance, and marching always with an elastic stride. The infantry +regiment, however, I thought too large--too many men for a colonel to +command unless he has the staff of a general--but this objection may +be counterbalanced by the advantages resulting from associating +together thus intimately the men from the same district, or county as +we would call it; the celerity of mobilization, and, in truth, the +very foundation of the German system, being based on this local or +territorial scheme of recruiting. + +There was no delay when the call sounded for the march; all turned +out promptly, and while on the road there was very little straggling, +only the sick falling out. But on such fine, smooth roads, and with +success animating the men from the day they struck the first blow, it +could hardly be expected that the columns would not keep well closed +up. Then, too, it must be borne in mind that, as already stated, +'campaigning' in France--that is, the marching, camping, and +subsisting of an army--is an easy matter, very unlike anything we, +had during the war of the rebellion. To repeat: the country is rich, +beautiful, and densely populated, subsistence abundant, and the +roads--all macadamized highways; thus the conditions; are altogether +different from those existing with us. I think that under the same +circumstances our troops would have done as well as the Germans, +marched as admirably, made combinations as quickly and accurately,, +and fought with as much success. I can but leave to conjecture how. +the Germans would have got along on bottomless roads--often none at +all--through the swamps and quicksands of northern Virginia, from, +the Wilderness to Petersburg, and from Chattanooga to Atlanta and the +sea. + +Following the operations of the German armies from the battle of +Gravelotte to the siege of Paris, I may, in conclusion, say that I +saw no new military principles developed, whether of strategy or +grand tactics, the movements of the different armies and corps being +dictated and governed by the same general laws that have so long +obtained, simplicity of combination and manoeuvre, and the +concentration of a numerically superior force at the vital point. + +After my brief trip to Versailles, I remained in Paris till the +latter part of March. In company with Mr. Washburn, I visited the +fortifications for the defense of the city, and found them to be +exceptionally heavy; so strong, indeed, that it would have been very +hard to carry the place by a general assault. The Germans, knowing +the character of the works, had refrained from the sacrifice of life +that such an attempt must entail, though they well knew that many of +the forts were manned by unseasoned soldiers. With only a combat +here and there, to tighten their lines or repulse a sortie, they +wisely preferred to wait till starvation should do the work with +little loss and absolute certainty. + +The Germans were withdrawn from Paris on the 3d of March, and no +sooner were they gone than factional quarrels, which had been going +on at intervals ever since the flight of the Empress and the fall of +her regency on the 4th of September, were renewed with revolutionary +methods that eventually brought about the Commune. Having witnessed +one or two of these outbreaks, and concluding that while such +turbulence reigned in the city it would be of little profit for me to +tarry there, I decided to devote the rest of the time I could be away +from home to travel in England, Ireland, and Scotland. My journeys +through those countries were full of pleasure and instruction, but as +nothing I saw or did was markedly different from what has been so +often described by others, I will save the reader this part of my +experience. I returned to America in the fall, having been absent a +little more than a year, and although I saw much abroad of absorbing +interest, both professional and general, yet I came back to my native +land with even a greater love for her, and with increased admiration +for her institutions. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Personal Memoirs of P. H.Sheridan: V2 of 2 + diff --git a/old/2shdn10.zip b/old/2shdn10.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5c60c09 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/2shdn10.zip diff --git a/old/2shdn11.txt b/old/2shdn11.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..73f50e2 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/2shdn11.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9871 @@ +The Project Gutenberg Etext of Memoirs of General P. H. Sheridan, v2 +#2 in our series by General Philip Henry Sheridan + +Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before distributing this or any other +Project Gutenberg file. + +We encourage you to keep this file, exactly as it is, on your +own disk, thereby keeping an electronic path open for future +readers. Please do not remove this. + +This header should be the first thing seen when anyone starts to +view the etext. Do not change or edit it without written permission. +The words are carefully chosen to provide users with the +information they need to understand what they may and may not +do with the etext. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**Etexts Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These Etexts Are Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + +Information on contacting Project Gutenberg to get etexts, and +further information, is included below. We need your donations. + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a 501(c)(3) +organization with EIN [Employee Identification Number] 64-6221541 + + + +Title: The Memoirs of General P. H. Sheridan, v2 + +Author: General Philip Henry Sheridan + +Release Date: June, 2001 [Etext #2652] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted in April, 2000] +[Most recently updated: December 2, 2001] + +Edition: 11 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +The Project Gutenberg Etext of Memoirs of General P. H. Sheridan, v2 +********This file should be named 2shdn11.txt or 2shdn11.zip******** + +Corrected EDITIONS of our etexts get a new NUMBER, 2shdn12.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, 2shdn11a.txt + +This etext was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net> + +Project Gutenberg Etexts are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not +keep etexts in compliance with any particular paper edition. + +We are now trying to release all our etexts one year in advance +of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing. +Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections, +even years after the official publication date. + +Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til +midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement. +The official release date of all Project Gutenberg Etexts is at +Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A +preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment +and editing by those who wish to do so. + +Most people start at our sites at: +http://gutenberg.net or +http://promo.net/pg + +These Web sites include award-winning information about Project +Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new +etexts, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!). + + +Those of you who want to download any Etext before announcement +can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is +also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the +indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an +announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter. + +http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext03 or +ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext03 + +Or /etext02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90 + +Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want, +as it appears in our Newsletters. + + +Information about Project Gutenberg (one page) + +We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The +time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours +to get any etext selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright +searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our +projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value +per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2 +million dollars per hour in 2001 as we release over 50 new Etext +files per month, or 500 more Etexts in 2000 for a total of 4000+ +If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total +should reach over 300 billion Etexts given away by year's end. + +The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away One Trillion Etext +Files by December 31, 2001. [10,000 x 100,000,000 = 1 Trillion] +This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers, +which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users. + +At our revised rates of production, we will reach only one-third +of that goal by the end of 2001, or about 4,000 Etexts. We need +funding, as well as continued efforts by volunteers, to maintain +or increase our production and reach our goals. + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created +to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium. + +We need your donations more than ever! + +As of November, 2001, contributions are being solicited from people +and organizations in: Alabama, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, +Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, +Louisiana, Maine, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New +Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, +Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, +Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Wisconsin, +and Wyoming. + +*In Progress + +We have filed in about 45 states now, but these are the only ones +that have responded. + +As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list +will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states. +Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state. + +In answer to various questions we have received on this: + +We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally +request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and +you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have, +just ask. + +While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are +not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting +donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to +donate. + +International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about +how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made +deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are +ways. + +All donations should be made to: + +Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +PMB 113 +1739 University Ave. +Oxford, MS 38655-4109 + +Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment +method other than by check or money order. + + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by +the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN +[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are +tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fundraising +requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be +made and fundraising will begin in the additional states. + +We need your donations more than ever! + +You can get up to date donation information at: + +http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html + + +*** + +If you can't reach Project Gutenberg, +you can always email directly to: + +Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com> + +Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message. + +We would prefer to send you information by email. + + +**The Legal Small Print** + + +(Three Pages) + +***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS**START*** +Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers. +They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with +your copy of this etext, even if you got it for free from +someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our +fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement +disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how +you may distribute copies of this etext if you want to. + +*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS ETEXT +By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm +etext, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept +this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive +a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this etext by +sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person +you got it from. If you received this etext on a physical +medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request. + +ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM ETEXTS +This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etexts, +is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart +through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project"). +Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright +on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and +distribute it in the United States without permission and +without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth +below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this etext +under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark. + +Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market +any commercial products without permission. + +To create these etexts, the Project expends considerable +efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain +works. Despite these efforts, the Project's etexts and any +medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other +things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other +intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged +disk or other etext medium, a computer virus, or computer +codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment. + +LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES +But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below, +[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may +receive this etext from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm etext) disclaims +all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including +legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR +UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT, +INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE +OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE +POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. + +If you discover a Defect in this etext within 90 days of +receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any) +you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that +time to the person you received it from. If you received it +on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and +such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement +copy. If you received it electronically, such person may +choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to +receive it electronically. + +THIS ETEXT IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS +TO THE ETEXT OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT +LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A +PARTICULAR PURPOSE. + +Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or +the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the +above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you +may have other legal rights. + +INDEMNITY +You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation, +and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated +with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm +texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including +legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the +following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this etext, +[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the etext, +or [3] any Defect. + +DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm" +You may distribute copies of this etext electronically, or by +disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this +"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg, +or: + +[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this + requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the + etext or this "small print!" statement. You may however, + if you wish, distribute this etext in machine readable + binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form, + including any form resulting from conversion by word + processing or hypertext software, but only so long as + *EITHER*: + + [*] The etext, when displayed, is clearly readable, and + does *not* contain characters other than those + intended by the author of the work, although tilde + (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may + be used to convey punctuation intended by the + author, and additional characters may be used to + indicate hypertext links; OR + + [*] The etext may be readily converted by the reader at + no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent + form by the program that displays the etext (as is + the case, for instance, with most word processors); + OR + + [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at + no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the + etext in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC + or other equivalent proprietary form). + +[2] Honor the etext refund and replacement provisions of this + "Small Print!" statement. + +[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the + gross profits you derive calculated using the method you + already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you + don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are + payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation" + the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were + legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent + periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to + let us know your plans and to work out the details. + +WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO? +Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of +public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed +in machine readable form. + +The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time, +public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses. +Money should be paid to the: +"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or +software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at: +hart@pobox.com + +[Portions of this header are copyright (C) 2001 by Michael S. Hart +and may be reprinted only when these Etexts are free of all fees.] +[Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be used in any sales +of Project Gutenberg Etexts or other materials be they hardware or +software or any other related product without express permission.] + +*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.10/04/01*END* + + + + + +This etext was produced by David Widger <widger@cecomet.net> + + + + + +PERSONAL MEMOIRES OF P. H. SHERIDAN, VOLUME 2. + +By Philip Henry Sheridan + + + +CHAPTER I. + +ORGANIZING SCOUTS--MISS REBECCA WRIGHT--IMPORTANT INFORMATION--DECIDE +TO MOVE ON NEWTOWN--MEETING GENERAL GRANT--ORGANIZATION OF THE UNION +ARMY--OPENING OF THE BATTLE OF THE OPEQUON--DEATH OF GENERAL RUSSELL- +-A TURNING MOVEMENT--A SUCCESSFUL CAVALRY CHARGE--VICTORY--THREE +LOYAL GIRLS--APPOINTED A BRIGADIER-GENERAL IN THE REGULAR ARMY-- +REMARKS ON THE BATTLE. + +While occupying the ground between Clifton and Berryville, referred +to in the last chapter of the preceding volume, I felt the need of an +efficient body of scouts to collect information regarding the enemy, +for the defective intelligence-establishment with which I started out +from Harper's Ferry early in August had not proved satisfactory. I +therefore began to organize my scouts on a system which I hoped would +give better results than bad the method hitherto pursued in the +department, which was to employ on this service doubtful citizens and +Confederate deserters. If these should turn out untrustworthy, the +mischief they might do us gave me grave apprehension, and I finally +concluded that those of our own soldiers who should volunteer for the +delicate and hazardous duty would be the most valuable material, and +decided that they should have a battalion organization and be +commanded by an officer, Major H. K. Young, of the First Rhode Island +Infantry. These men were disguised in Confederate uniforms whenever +necessary, were paid from the Secret-Service Fund in proportion to +the value of the intelligence they furnished, which often stood us in +good stead in checking the forays of Gilmore, Mosby, and other +irregulars. Beneficial results came from the plan in many other ways +too, and particularly so when in a few days two of my scouts put me +in the way of getting news conveyed from Winchester. They had +learned that just outside of my lines, near Millwood, there was +living an old colored man, who had a permit from the Confederate +commander to go into Winchester and return three times a week, for +the purpose of selling vegetables to the inhabitants. The scouts had +sounded this man, and, finding him both loyal and shrewd, suggested +that he might be made useful to us within the enemy's lines; and the +proposal struck me as feasible, provided there could be found in +Winchester some reliable person who would be willing to co-operate +and correspond with me. I asked General Crook, who was acquainted +with many of the Union people of Winchester, if he knew of such a +person, and he recommended a Miss Rebecca Wright, a young lady whom +he had met there before the battle of Kernstown, who, he said, was a +member of the Society of Friends and the teacher of a small private +school. He knew she was faithful and loyal to the Government, and +thought she might be willing to render us assistance, but he could +not be certain of this, for on account of her well known loyalty she +was under constant surveillance. I hesitated at first, but finally +deciding to try it, despatched the two scouts to the old negro's +cabin, and they brought him to my headquarters late that night. I +was soon convinced of the negro's fidelity, and asking him if he was +acquainted with Miss Rebecca Wright, of Winchester, he replied that +he knew her well. There upon I told him what I wished to do, and +after a little persuasion he agreed to carry a letter to her on his +next marketing trip. My message was prepared by writing it on tissue +paper, which was then compressed into a small pellet, and protected +by wrapping it in tin-foil so that it could be safely carried in the +man's mouth. The probability, of his being searched when he came to +the Confederate picket-line was not remote, and in such event he was +to swallow the pellet. The letter appealed to Miss Wright's loyalty +and patriotism, and requested her to furnish me with information +regarding the strength and condition of Early's army. The night +before the negro started one of the scouts placed the odd-looking +communication in his hands, with renewed injunctions as to secrecy +and promptitude. Early the next morning it was delivered to Miss +Wright, with an intimation that a letter of importance was enclosed +in the tin-foil, the negro telling her at the same time that she +might expect him to call for a message in reply before his return +home. At first Miss Wright began to open the pellet nervously, but +when told to be careful, and to preserve the foil as a wrapping for +her answer, she proceeded slowly and carefully, and when the note +appeared intact the messenger retired, remarking again that in the +evening he would come for an answer. + +On reading my communication Miss Wright was much startled by the +perils it involved, and hesitatingly consulted her mother, but her +devoted loyalty soon silenced every other consideration, and the +brave girl resolved to comply with my request, notwithstanding it +might jeopardize her life. The evening before a convalescent +Confederate officer had visited her mother's house, and in +conversation about the war had disclosed the fact that Kershaw's +division of infantry and Cutshaw's battalion of artillery had started +to rejoin General Lee. At the time Miss Wright heard this she +attached little if any importance to it, but now she perceived the +value of the intelligence, and, as her first venture, determined to +send it to me at once, which she did with a promise that in the +future she would with great pleasure continue to transmit information +by the negro messenger. + + + +"SEPTEMBER 15, 1864. + +"I learn from Major-General Crook that you are a loyal lady, and +still love the old flag. Can you inform me of the position of +Early's forces, the number of divisions in his army, and the strength +of any or all of them, and his probable or reported intentions? Have +any more troops arrived from Richmond, or are any more coming, or +reported to be coming? + +"You can trust the bearer." + +"I am, very respectfully, your most obedient servant, + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General Commanding." + + + +"SEPTEMBER 16, 1864. + +"I have no communication whatever with the rebels, but will tell you +what I know. The division of General Kershaw, and Cutshaw's +artillery, twelve guns and men, General Anderson commanding, have +been sent away, and no more are expected, as they cannot be spared +from Richmond. I do not know how the troops are situated, but the +force is much smaller than represented. I will take pleasure +hereafter in learning all I can of their strength and position, and +the bearer may call again. + +"Very respectfully yours," +............ + + + +Miss Wright's answer proved of more value to me than she anticipated, +for it not only quieted the conflicting reports concerning Anderson's +corps, but was most important in showing positively that Kershaw was +gone, and this circumstance led, three days later, to the battle of +the Opequon, or Winchester as it has been unofficially called. Word +to the effect that some of Early's troops were under orders to return +to Petersburg, and would start back at the first favorable +opportunity, had been communicated to me already from many sources, +but we had not been able to ascertain the date for their departure. +Now that they had actually started, I decided to wait before offering +battle until Kershaw had gone so far as to preclude his return, +feeling confident that my prudence would be justified by the improved +chances of victory; and then, besides, Mr. Stanton kept reminding me +that positive success was necessary to counteract the political +dissatisfaction existing in some of the Northern States. This course +was advised and approved by General Grant, but even with his powerful +backing it was difficult to resist the persistent pressure of those +whose judgment, warped by their interests in the Baltimore and Ohio +railroad, was often confused and misled by stories of scouts (sent +out from Washington), averring that Kershaw and Fitzhugh Lee had +returned to Petersburg, Breckenridge to southwestern Virginia, and at +one time even maintaining that Early's whole army was east of the +Blue Ridge, and its commander himself at Gordonsville. + +During the inactivity prevailing in my army for the ten days +preceding Miss Wright's communication the infantry was quiet, with +the exception of Getty's division, which made a reconnoissance to the +Opequon, and developed a heavy force of the enemy at Edwards's +Corners. The cavalry, however, was employed a good deal in this +interval skirmishing heavily at times to maintain a space about six +miles in width between the hostile lines, for I wished to control +this ground so that when I was released from the instructions of +August 12, I could move my men into position for attack without the +knowledge of Early. The most noteworthy of these mounted encounters +was that of McIntosh's brigade, which captured the Eighth South +Carolina at Abraham's Creek September 13. + +It was the evening of the 16th of September that I received from Miss +Wright the positive information that Kershaw was in march toward +Front Royal on his way by Chester Gap to Richmond. Concluding that +this was my opportunity, I at once resolved to throw my whole force +into Newtown the next day, but a despatch from General Grant +directing me to meet him at Charlestown, whither he was coming to +consult with me, caused me to defer action until after I should see +him. In our resulting interview at Charlestown, I went over the +situation very thoroughly, and pointed out with so much confidence +the chances of a complete victory should I throw my army across the +Valley pike near Newtown that he fell in with the plan at once, +authorized me to resume the offensive, and to attack Early as soon as +I deemed it most propitious to do so; and although before leaving +City Point he had outlined certain operations for my army, yet he +neither discussed nor disclosed his plans, my knowledge of the +situation striking him as being so much more accurate than his own. + + +[Extract from Grant's Memoirs," page 328.] + +"....Before starting I had drawn up a plan of campaign for Sheridan, +which I had brought with me; but seeing that he was so clear and so +positive in his views, and so confident of success, I said nothing +about this, and did not take it out of my pocket...." + + + +The interview over, I returned to my army to arrange for its movement +toward Newtown, but while busy with these preparations, a report came +to me from General Averell which showed that Early was moving with +two divisions of infantry toward Martinsburg. This considerably +altered the state of affairs, and I now decided to change my plan and +attack at once the two divisions remaining about Winchester and +Stephenson's depot, and later, the two sent to Martinsburg; the +disjointed state of the enemy giving me an opportunity to take him in +detail, unless the Martinsburg column should be returned by forced +marches. + +While General Early was in the telegraph office at Martinsburg on the +morning of the 18th, he learned of Grant's visit to me; and +anticipating activity by reason of this circumstance, he promptly +proceeded to withdraw so as to get the two divisions within +supporting distance of Ramseur's, which lay across the Berryville +pike about two miles east of Winchester, between Abraham's Creek and +Red Bud Run, so by the night of the 18th Wharton's division, under +Breckenridge, was at Stephenson's depot, Rodes near there, and +Gordon's at Bunker Hill. At daylight of the 19th these positions of +the Confederate infantry still obtained, with the cavalry of Lomax, +Jackson, and Johnson on the right of Ramseur, while to the left and +rear of the enemy's general line was Fitzhugh Lee, covering from +Stephenson's depot west across the Valley pike to Applepie Ridge. + +My army moved at 3 o'clock that morning. The plan was for Torbert to +advance with Merritt's division of cavalry from Summit Point, carry +the crossings of the Opequon at Stevens's and Lock's fords, and form +a junction near Stephenson's depot, with Averell, who was to move +south from Darksville by the Valley pike. Meanwhile, Wilson was to +strike up the Berryville pike, carry the Berryville crossing of the +Opequon, charge through the gorge or canyon on the road west of the +stream, and occupy the open ground at the head of this defile. +Wilson's attack was to be supported by the Sixth and Nineteenth +corps, which were ordered to the Berryville crossing, and as the +cavalry gained the open ground beyond the gorge, the two infantry +corps, under command of General Wright, were expected to press on +after and occupy Wilson's ground, who was then to shift to the south +bank of Abraham's Creek and cover my left; Crook's two divisions, +having to march from Summit Point, were to follow the Sixth and +Nineteenth corps to the Opcquon, and should they arrive before the +action began, they were to be held in reserve till the proper moment +came, and then, as a turning-column, be thrown over toward the Valley +pike, south of Winchester. + +McIntosh's brigade of Wilson's division drove the enemy's pickets +away from the Berryville crossing at dawn, and Wilson following +rapidly through the gorge with the rest of the division, debouched +from its western extremity with such suddenness as to capture a small +earthwork in front of General Ramseur's main line; and not- +withstanding the Confederate infantry, on recovering from its +astonishment, tried hard to dislodge them, Wilson's troopers +obstinately held the work till the Sixth Corps came up. I followed +Wilson to select the ground on which to form the infantry. The Sixth +Corps began to arrive about 8 o'clock, and taking up the line Wilson +had been holding, just beyond the head of the narrow ravine, the +cavalry was transferred to the south side of Abraham's Creek. + +The Confederate line lay along some elevated ground about two miles +east of Winchester, and extended from Abraham's Creek north across +the Berryville pike, the left being hidden in the heavy timber on Red +Bud Run. Between this line and mine, especially on my right, clumps +of woods and patches of underbrush occurred here and there, but the +undulating ground consisted mainly of open fields, many of which were +covered with standing corn that had already ripened. + +Much time was lost in getting all of the Sixth and Nineteenth corps +through the narrow defile, Grover's division being greatly delayed +there by a train of ammunition wagons, and it was not until late in +the forenoon that the troops intended for the attack could be got +into line ready to advance. General Early was not slow to avail +himself of the advantages thus offered him, and my chances of +striking him in detail were growing less every moment, for Gordon and +Rodes were hurrying their divisions from Stephenson's depot--across- +country on a line that would place Gordon in the woods south of Red +Bud Run, and bring Rodes into the interval between Gordon and +Ramseur. + +When the two corps had all got through the canyon they were formed +with Getty's division of the Sixth to the left of the Berryville +pike, Rickett's division to the right of the pike, and Russell's +division in reserve in rear of the other two. Grover's division of +the Nineteenth Corps came next on the right of Rickett's, with Dwight +to its rear in reserve, while Crook was to begin massing near the +Opequon crossing about the time Wright and Emory were ready to +attack. + +Just before noon the line of Getty, Ricketts, and Grover moved +forward, and as we advanced, the Confederates, covered by some heavy +woods on their right, slight underbrush and corn-fields along their +Centre, and a large body of timber on their left along the Red Bud, +opened fire from their whole front. We gained considerable ground at +first, especially on our left but the desperate resistance which the +right met with demonstrated that the time we had unavoidably lost in +the morning had been of incalculable value to Early, for it was +evident that he had been enabled already to so far concentrate his +troops as to have the different divisions of his army in a connected +line of battle, in good shape to resist. + +Getty and Ricketts made some progress toward Winchester in connection +with Wilson's cavalry, which was beyond the Senseny road on Getty's +left, and as they were pressing back Ramseur's infantry and Lomax's +cavalry Grover attacked from the right with decided effect. Grover +in a few minutes broke up Evans's brigade of Gordon's division, but +his pursuit of Evans destroyed the continuity of my general line, and +increased an interval that had already been made by the deflection of +Ricketts to the 1eft, in obedience to instructions that had been +given him to guide his division on the Berryville pike. As the line +pressed forward, Ricketts observed this widening interval and +endeavored to fill it with the small brigade of Colonel Keifer, but +at this juncture both Gordon and Rodes struck the weak spot where the +right of the Sixth Corps and the left of the Nineteenth should have +been in conjunction, and succeeded in checking my advance by driving +back a part of Ricketts's division, and the most of Grover's. As +these troops were retiring I ordered Russell's reserve division to be +put into action, and just as the flank of the enemy's troops in +pursuit of Grover was presented, Upton's brigade, led in person by +both Russell and Upton, struck it in a charge so vigorous as to drive +the Confederates back in turn to their original ground. + +The success of Russell enabled me to re-establish the right of my +line some little distance in advance of the position from which it +started in the morning, and behind Russell's division (now commanded +by Upton) the broken regiments of Ricketts's division were rallied. +Dwight's division was then brought up on the right, and Grover's men +formed behind it. + +The charge of Russell was most opportune, but it cost many men in +killed and wounded. Among the former was the courageous Russell +himself; killed by a piece of shell that passed through his heart, +although he had previously been struck by a bullet in the left +breast, which wound, from its nature, must have proved mortal, yet of +which he had not spoken. Russell's death oppressed us all with +sadness, and me particularly. In the early days of my army life he +was my captain and friend, and I was deeply indebted to him, not only +for sound advice and good example, but for the inestimable service he +had just performed, and sealed with his life, so it may be inferred +how keenly I felt his loss. + +As my lines were being rearranged, it was suggested to me to put +Crook into the battle, but so strongly had I set my heart on using +him to take possession of the Valley pike and cut off the enemy, that +I resisted this advice, hoping that the necessity for putting him in +would be obviated by the attack near Stephenson's depot that +Torbert's cavalry was to make, and from which I was momentarily +expecting to hear. No news of Torbert's progress came, however, so, +yielding at last, I directed Crook to take post on the right of the +Nineteenth Corps and, when the action was renewed, to push his +command forward as a turning-column in conjunction with Emory. After +some delay in the annoying defile, Crook got his men up, and posting +Colonel Thoburn's division on the prolongation of the Nineteenth +Corps, he formed Colonel Duval's division to the right of Thoburn. +Here I joined Crook, informing him that I had just got word that +Torbert was driving the enemy in confusion along the Martinsburg pike +toward Winchester; at the same time I directed him to attack the +moment all of Duval's men were in line. Wright was instructed to +advance in concert with Crook, by swinging Emory and the right of the +Sixth Corps to the left together in a half-wheel. Then leaving +Crook, I rode along the Sixth and Nineteenth corps, the open ground +over which they were passing affording a rare opportunity to witness +the precision with which the attack was taken up from right to left. +Crook's success began the moment he started to turn the enemy's left; +and assured by the fact that Torbert had stampeded the Confederate +cavalry and thrown Breckenridge's infantry into such disorder that it +could do little to prevent the envelopment of Gordon's left, Crook +pressed forward without even a halt. + +Both Emory and Wright took up the fight as ordered, and as they did +so I sent word to Wilson, in the hope that he could partly perform +the work originally laid out for Crook, to push along the Senseny +road and, if possible, gain the valley pike south of Winchester. I +then returned toward my right flank, and as I reached the Nineteenth +Corps the enemy was contesting the ground in its front with great +obstinacy; but Emory's dogged persistence was at length rewarded with +success, just as Crook's command emerged from the morass of Red Bud +Run, and swept around Gordon, toward the right of Breckenridge, who, +with two of Wharton's brigades, was holding a line at right angles +with the Valley pike for the protection of the Confederate rear. +Early had ordered these two brigades back from Stephenson's depot in +the morning, purposing to protect with them his right flank and line +of retreat, but while they were en route to this end, he was obliged +to recall them to his left to meet Crook's attack. + +To confront Torbert, Patton's brigade of infantry and some of +Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry had been left back by Breckenridge, but, with +Averell on the west side of the Valley pike and Merritt on the east, +Torbert began to drive this opposing force toward Winchester the +moment he struck it near Stephenson's depot, keeping it on the go +till it reached the position held by Breckenridge, where it +endeavored to make a stand. + +The ground which Breckenridge was holding was open, and offered an +opportunity such as seldom had been presented during the war for a, +mounted attack, and Torbert was not slow to take advantage of it. +The instant Merritt's division could be formed for the charge, it +went at Breckenridge's infantry and Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry with such +momentum as to break the Confederate left, just as Averell was +passing around it. Merritt's brigades, led by Custer, Lowell, and +Devin, met from the start with pronounced success, and with sabre or +pistol in hand literally rode down a battery of five guns and took +about 1,200 prisoners. Almost simultaneously with this cavalry +charge, Crook struck Breckenridge's right and Gordon's left, forcing +these divisions to give way, and as they retired, Wright, in a +vigorous attack, quickly broke Rodes up and pressed Ramseur so hard +that the whole Confederate army fell back, contracting its lines +within some breastworks which had been thrown up at a former period +of the war, immediately in front of Winchester. + +Here Early tried hard to stem the tide, but soon Torbert's cavalry +began passing around his left flank, and as Crook, Emory, and Wright +attacked in front, panic took possession of the enemy, his troops, +now fugitives and stragglers, seeking escape into and through +Winchester. + +When this second break occurred, the Sixth and Nineteenth corps were +moved over toward the Millwood pike to help Wilson on the left, but +the day was so far spent that they could render him no assistance, +and Ramseur's division, which had maintained some organization, was +in such tolerable shape as to check him. Meanwhile Torbert passed +around to the west of Winchester to join Wilson, but was unable to do +so till after dark. Crook's command pursued the enemy through the +town to Mill Greek, I going along. + +Just after entering the town, Crook and I met, in the main street, +three young girls, who gave us the most hearty reception. One of +these young women was a Miss Griffith, the other two Miss Jennie and +Miss Susie Meredith. During the day they had been watching the +battle from the roof of the Meredith residence, with tears and +lamentations, they said, in the morning when misfortune appeared to +have overtaken the Union troops, but with unbounded exultation when, +later, the, tide set in against the Confederates. Our presence was, +to them, an assurance of victory, and their delight being +irrepressible, they indulged in the most unguarded manifestations and +expressions. When cautioned by Crook, who knew them well, and +reminded that the valley had hitherto been a race-course--one day in +the'possession of friends, and the next of enemies--and warned of the +dangers they were incurring by such demonstrations, they assured him +that they had no further fears of that kind now, adding that Early's +army was so demoralized by the defeat it had just sustained that it +would never be in condition to enter Winchester again. As soon as we +had succeeded in calming the excited girls a little I expressed a +desire to find some place where I could write a telegram to General +Grant informing him of the result of the battle, and General Crook +conducted me to the home of Miss Wright, where I met for the first +time the woman who had contributed so much to our success, and on a +desk in her school-room wrote the despatch announcing that we had +sent Early's army whirling up the valley. + +My losses in the battle of the Opequon were heavy, amounting to about +4,500 killed, wounded, and missing. Among the killed was General +Russell, commanding a division, and the wounded included Generals +Upton, McIntosh and Chapman, and Colonels Duval and Sharpe. The +Confederate loss in killed, wounded, and prisoners about equaled +mine, General Rodes being of the killed, while Generals Fitzhugh Lee +and York were severely wounded. + +We captured five pieces of artillery and nine battle-flags. The +restoration of the lower valley--from the Potomac to Strasburg--to +the control of the Union forces caused great rejoicing in the North, +and relieved the Administration from further solicitude for the +safety of the Maryland and Pennsylvania borders. The President's +appreciation of the victory was expressed in a despatch so like Mr. +Lincoln that I give a facsimile of it to the reader: + +[In the handwriting of President Lincoln] +"EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT +"WASHINGTON, Sep. 20, 1864 + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERMAN +"WINCHESTER, VA. + +"Have just heard of your geat victory. God bless you all, officers +and men. Strongly inclined to come up and see you. + +"A. LINCOLN." + + +This he supplemented by promoting me to the grade of brigadier- +general in the regular army, and assigning me to the permanent +command of the Middle Military Department, and following that came +warm congratulations from Mr. Stanton and from Generals Grant, +Sherman, and Meade. + +The battle was not fought out on the plan in accordance with which +marching orders were issued to my troops, for I then hoped to take +Early in detail, and with Crook's force cut off his retreat. I +adhered to this purpose during the early part of the contest, but was +obliged to abandon the idea because of unavoidable delays by which I +was prevented from getting the Sixth and Nineteenth corps through the +narrow defile and into position early enough to destroy Ramseur while +still isolated. So much delay had not been anticipated, and this +loss of time was taken advantage of by the enemy to recall the troops +diverted to Bunker Hill and Martinsburg on the 17th, thus enabling +him to bring them all to the support of Ramseur before I could strike +with effect. My idea was to attack Ramseur and Wharton, +successively, at a very early hour and before they could get succor, +but I was not in condition to do it till nearly noon, by which time +Gordon and Rodes had been enabled to get upon the ground at a point +from which, as I advanced, they enfiladed my right flank, and gave it +such a repulse that to re-form this part of my line I was obliged to +recall the left from some of the ground it had gained. It was during +this reorganization of my lines that I changed my plan as to Crook, +and moved him from my left to my right. This I did with great +reluctance, for I hoped to destroy Early's army entirely if Crook +continued on his original line of march toward the Valley pike, south +of Winchester; and although the ultimate results did, in a measure +vindicate the change, yet I have always thought that by adhering to +the original plan we might have captured the bulk of Early's army. + + + + +CHAPTER 11. + +PURSUING EARLY--A SECRET MARCH--FISHER'S HILL--A GREAT SUCCESS-- +REMOVAL OF AVERELL--THE RETREAT--CAPTURING AN OLD COMRADE--THE MURDER +OF LIEUTENANT MEIGS. + +The night of the 19th of September I gave orders for following Early +up the valley next morning--the pursuit to begin at daybreak--and in +obedience to these directions Torbert moved Averell out on the Back +road leading to Cedar Creek, and Merritt up the Valley pike toward +Strasburg, while Wilson was directed on Front Royal by way of +Stevensburg. Merritt's division was followed by the infantry, +Emory's and Wright's columns marching abreast in the open country to +the right and left of the pike, and Crook's immediately behind them. +The enemy having kept up his retreat at night, presented no +opposition whatever until the cavalry discovered him posted at +Fisher's Hill, on the first defensive line where he could hope to +make any serious resistance. No effort was made to dislodge him, and +later in the day, after Wright and Emory came up, Torbert shifted +Merritt over toward the Back road till he rejoined Averell. As +Merritt moved to the right, the Sixth and Nineteenth corps crossed +Cedar Creek and took up the ground the cavalry was vacating, Wright +posting his own corps to the west of the Valley pike overlooking +Strasburg, and Emory's on his left so as to extend almost to the road +leading from Strasburg to Front Royal. Crook, as he came up the same +evening, went into position in some heavy timber on the north bank of +Cedar Creek. + +A reconnoissance made pending these movements convinced me that the +enemy's position at Fisher's Hill was so strong that a direct assault +would entail unnecessary destruction of life, and, besides, be of +doubtful result. At the point where Early's troops were in position, +between the Massanutten range and Little North Mountain, the valley +is only about three and a half miles wide. All along the precipitous +bluff which overhangs Tumbling Run on the south side, a heavy line of +earthworks had been constructed when Early retreated to this point in +August, and these were now being strengthened so as to make them +almost impregnable; in fact, so secure did Early consider himself +that, for convenience, his ammunition chests were taken from the +caissons and placed behind the breastworks. Wharton, now in command +of Breckenridge's division--its late commander having gone to +southwest Virginia--held the right of this line, with Gordon next +him; Pegram, commanding Ramseur's old division, joined Gordon. +Ramseur with Rodes's division, was on Pegram's left, while Lomax's +cavalry, now serving as foot-troops, extended the line to the Back +road. Fitzhugh Lee being wounded, his cavalry, under General +Wickham, was sent to Milford to prevent Fisher's Hill from being +turned through the Luray Valley. + +In consequence of the enemy's being so well protected from a direct +assault, I resolved on the night of the 20th to use again a turning- +column against his left, as had been done on the 19th at the Opequon. +To this end I resolved to move Crook, unperceived if possible, over +to the eastern face of Little North Mountain, whence he could strike +the left and rear of the Confederate line, and as he broke it up, I +could support him by a left half-wheel of my whole line of battle. +The execution of this plan would require perfect secrecy, however, +for the enemy from his signal-station on Three Top could plainly see +every movement of our troops in daylight. Hence, to escape such +observation, I marched Crook during the night of the 20th into some +heavy timber north of Cedar Creek, where he lay concealed all day the +21st. This same day Wright and Emory were moved up closer to the +Confederate works, and the Sixth Corps, after a severe fight, in +which Ricketts's and Getty were engaged, took up some high ground on +the right of the Manassas Gap railroad in plain view of the +Confederate works, and confronting a commanding point where much of +Early's artillery was massed. Soon after General Wright had +established this line I rode with him along it to the westward, and +finding that the enemy was still holding an elevated position further +to our right, on the north side of Tumbling Run, I directed this also +to be occupied. Wright soon carried the point, which gave us an +unobstructed view of the enemy's works and offered good ground for +our artillery. It also enabled me to move the whole of the Sixth +Corps to the front till its line was within about seven hundred yards +of the enemy's works; the Nineteenth Corps, on the morning of the +22d, covering the ground vacated by the Sixth by moving to the front +and extending to the right, but still keeping its reserves on the +railroad. + +In the darkness of the night of the gist, Crook was brought across +Cedar Creek and hidden in a clump of timber behind Hupp's Hill till +daylight of the 22d, when, under cover of the intervening woods and +ravines, he was marched beyond the right of the Sixth Corps and again +concealed not far from the Back road. After Crook had got into this +last position, Ricketts's division was pushed out until it confronted +the left of the enemy's infantry, the rest of the Sixth Corps +extending from Ricketts's left to the Manassas Gap railroad, while +the Nineteenth Corps filled in the space between the left of the +Sixth and the North Fork of the Shenandoah. + +When Ricketts moved out on this new line, in conjunction with +Averell's cavalry on his right, the enemy surmising, from information +secured from his signal-station, no doubt, that my attack was to be +made from Ricketts's front, prepared for it there, but no such +intention ever existed. Ricketts was pushed forward only that he +might readily join Crook's turning-column as it swung into the +enemy's rear. To ensure success, all that I needed now was enough +daylight to complete my arrangements, the secrecy of movement imposed +by the situation consuming many valuable hours. + +While Ricketts was occupying the enemy's attention, Crook, again +moving unobserved into the dense timber on the eastern face of Little +North Mountain, conducted his command south in two parallel columns +until he gained the rear of the enemy's works, when, marching his +divisions by the left flank, he led them in an easterly direction +down the mountain-side. As he emerged from the timber near the base +of the mountain, the Confederates discovered him, of course, and +opened with their batteries, but it was too late--they having few +troops at hand to confront the turning-column. Loudly cheering, +Crook's men quickly crossed the broken stretch in rear of the enemy's +left, producing confusion and consternation at every step. + +About a mile from the mountain's base Crook's left was joined by +Ricketts, who in proper time had begun to swing his division into the +action, and the two commands moved along in rear of the works so +rapidly that, with but slight resistance, the Confederates abandoned +the guns massed near the centre. The swinging movement of Ricketts +was taken up successively from right to left throughout my line, and +in a few minutes the enemy was thoroughly routed, the action, though +brief, being none the less decisive. Lomax's dismounted cavalry gave +way first, but was shortly followed by all the Confederate infantry +in an indescribable panic, precipitated doubtless by fears of being +caught and captured in the pocket formed by Tumbling Run and the +North Fork of the Shenandoah River. The stampede was complete, the +enemy leaving the field without semblance of organization, abandoning +nearly all his artillery and such other property as was in the works, +and the rout extending through the fields and over the roads toward +Woodstock, Wright and Emory in hot pursuit. + +Midway between Fisher's Hill and Woodstock there is some high ground, +where at night-fall a small squad endeavored to stay us with two +pieces of artillery, but this attempt at resistance proved fruitless, +and, notwithstanding the darkness, the guns were soon captured. The +chase was then taken up by Devin's brigade as soon as it could be +passed to the front, and continued till after daylight the next +morning, but the delays incident to a night pursuit made it +impossible for Devin to do more than pick up stragglers. + +Our success was very great, yet I had anticipated results still more +pregnant. Indeed, I had high hopes of capturing almost the whole of +Early's army before it reached New Market, and with this object in +view, during the manoeuvres of the 21st I had sent Torbert up the +Luray Valley with Wilson's division and two of Merritt's brigades, in +the expectation that he would drive Wickham out of the Luray Pass by +Early's right, and by crossing the Massanutten Mountain near New +Market, gain his rear. Torbert started in good season, and after +some slight skirmishing at Gooney Run, got as far as Milford, but +failed to dislodge Wickham. In fact, he made little or no attempt to +force Wickham from his position, and with only a feeble effort +withdrew. I heard nothing at all from Torbert during the 22d, and +supposing that everything was progressing favorably, I was astonished +and chagrined on the morning of the 23d, at Woodstock, to receive the +intelligence that he had fallen back to Front Royal and Buckton ford. +My disappointment was extreme, but there was now no help for the +situation save to renew and emphasize Torbert's orders, and this was +done at once, notwithstanding that I thought, the delay, had so much +diminished the chances of his getting in the rear of Early as to make +such a result a very remote possibility, unless, indeed, far greater +zeal was displayed than had been in the first attempt to penetrate +the Luray Valley. + +The battle of Fisher's Hill was, in a measure, a part of the battle +of the Opequon; that is to say, it was an incident of the pursuit +resulting from that action. In many ways, however, it was much more +satisfactory, and particularly so because the plan arranged on the +evening of the 20th was carried out to the very letter by Generals +Wright, Crook, and Emory, not only in all their preliminary +manoeuvres, but also during the fight itself. The only drawback was +with the cavalry, and to this day I have been unable to account +satisfactorily for Torbert's failure. No doubt, Wickham's position +near Milford was a strong one, but Torbert ought to have made a +fight. Had he been defeated in this, his withdrawal then to await +the result at Fisher's Hill would have been justified, but it does +not appear that he made any serious effort of all to dislodge the +Confederate cavalry: his impotent attempt not only chagrined me very +much, but occasioned much unfavorable comment throughout the army. + +We reached Woodstock early on the morning of the 23d, and halted +there some little time to let the troops recover their organization, +which had been broken in the night march they had just made. When +the commands had closed up we pushed on toward Edinburg, in the hope +of making more captures at Narrow Passage Creek; but the +Confederates, too fleet for us, got away; so General Wright halted +the infantry not far from Edinburg, till rations could be brought the +men. Meanwhile I, having remained at Woodstock, sent Dedin's brigade +to press the enemy under every favorable opportunity, and if possible +prevent him from halting long enough to reorganize. Notwithstanding +Devin's efforts the Confederates managed to assemble a considerable +force to resist him, and being too weak for the rearguard, he awaited +the arrival of Averell, who, I had informed him, would be hurried to +the front with all possible despatch, for I thought that Averell must +be close at hand. It turned out, however, that he was not near by at +all, and, moreover, that without good reason he had refrained from +taking any part whatever in pursuing the enemy in the flight from +Fisher's Hill; and in fact had gone into camp and left to the +infantry the work of pursuit. + +It was nearly noon when Averell came up, and a great deal of precious +time had been lost. We had some hot words, but hoping that he would +retrieve the mistake of the night before, I directed him to proceed +to the front at once, and in conjunction with Devin close with the +enemy. He reached Devin's command about 3 o'clock in the afternoon, +just as this officer was pushing the Confederates so energetically +that they were abandoning Mount Jackson, yet Averell utterly failed +to accomplish anything. Indeed, his indifferent attack was not at +all worthy the excellent soldiers he commanded, and when I learned +that it was his intention to withdraw from the enemy's front, and +this, too, on the indefinite report of a signal-officer that a +"brigade or division" of Confederates was turning his right flank, +and that he had not seriously attempted to verify the information, I +sent him this order: + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY DIVISION, +"Woodstock, Va., Sept. 23, 1864 + +"BREVET MAJOR-GENERAL AVERELL + +"Your report and report of signal-officer received. I do not want +you to let the enemy bluff you or your command, and I want you to +distinctly understand this note. I do not advise rashness, but I do +desire resolution and actual fighting, with necessary casualties, +before you retire. There must now be no backing or filling by you +without a superior force of the enemy actually engaging you. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General Commanding.' + + +Some little time after this note went to Averell, word was brought me +that he had already carried out the programme indicated when +forwarding the report of the expected turning of his right, and that +he had actually withdrawn and gone into camp near Hawkinsburg. I +then decided to relieve him from the command of his division, which I +did, ordering him to Wheeling, Colonel William H. Powell being +assigned to succeed him. + +The removal of Averell was but the culmination of a series of events +extending back to the time I assumed command of the Middle Military +Division. At the outset, General Grant, fearing discord on account +of Averell's ranking Torbert, authorized me to relieve the former +officer, but I hoped that if any trouble of this sort arose, it could +be allayed, or at least repressed, during the campaign against Early, +since the different commands would often have to act separately. +After that, the dispersion of my army by the return of the Sixth +Corps and Torbert's cavalry to the Army of the Potomac would take +place, I thought, and this would restore matters to their normal +condition; but Averell's dissatisfaction began to show itself +immediately after his arrival at Martinsburg, on the 14th of August, +and, except when he was conducting some independent expedition, had +been manifested on all occasions since. I therefore thought that the +interest of the service would be subserved by removing one whose +growing indifference might render the best-laid plans inoperative. + + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY DIVISION. +"HARRISONBURG, VA., SEPT. 25, 1864 11:30 P. M. +"LIEUT-GENERAL GRANT, Comd'g, City Point, Va. + +"I have relieved Averell from his command. Instead of following the +enemy when he was broken at Fisher's Hill (so there was not a cavalry +organization left), he went into camp and let me pursue the enemy for +a distance of fifteen miles, with infantry, during the night. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + +The failure of Averell to press the enemy the evening of the 23d gave +Early time to collect his scattered forces and take up a position on +the east side of the North Fork of the Shenandoah, his left resting +on the west side of that stream at Rude's Hill, a commanding point +about two miles south of Mt. Jackson. Along this line he had +constructed some slight works during the night, and at daylight on +the 24th, I moved the Sixth and Nineteenth corps through Mt. Jackson +to attack him, sending Powell's division to pass around his left +flank, toward Timberville, and Devin's brigade across the North Fork, +to move along the base of Peaked Ridge and attack his right. The +country was entirely open, and none of these manoeuvres could be +executed without being observed, so as soon as my advance began, the +enemy rapidly retreated in line of battle up the valley through New +Market, closely followed by Wright and Emory, their artillery on the +pike and their columns on its right and left. Both sides moved with +celerity, the Confederates stimulated by the desire to escape, and +our men animated by the prospect of wholly destroying Early's army. +The stern-chase continued for about thirteen miles, our infantry +often coming within range, yet whenever we began to deploy, the +Confederates increased the distance between us by resorting to a +double quick, evading battle with admirable tact. While all this was +going on, the open country permitted us a rare and brilliant sight, +the bright sun gleaming from the arms and trappings of the thousands +of pursuers and pursued. + +Near New Market, as a last effort to hold the enemy, I pushed Devin's +cavalry--comprising about five hundred men--with two guns right up on +Early's lines, in the hope that the tempting opportunity given him to +capture the guns would stay his retreat long enough to let my +infantry deploy within range, but he refused the bait, and after +momentarily checking Devin he continued on with little loss and in +pretty good order. + +All hope of Torbert's appearing in rear of the Confederates vanished +as they passed beyond New Market. Some six miles south of this place +Early left the Valley Pike and took the road to Keezletown, a move +due in a measure to Powell's march by way of Timberville toward +Lacy's Springs, but mainly caused by the fact that the Keezletown +road ran immediately along the base of Peaked Mountain--a rugged +ridge affording protection to Early's right flank--and led in a +direction facilitating his junction with Kershaw, who had been +ordered back to him from Culpeper the day after the battle of the +Opequon. The chase was kept up on the Keezeltown road till darkness +overtook us, when my weary troops were permitted to go into camp; and +as soon as the enemy discovered by our fires that the pursuit had +stopped, he also bivouacked some five miles farther south toward Port +Republic. + +The next morning Early was joined by Lomax's cavalry from +Harrisonburg, Wickham's and Payne's brigades of cavalry also uniting +with him from the Luray Valley. His whole army then fell back to the +mouth of Brown's Gap to await Kershaw's division and Cutshaw's +artillery, now on their return. + +By the morning of the 25th the main body of the enemy had disappeared +entirely from my front, and the capture of some small, squads of +Confederates in the neighboring hills furnished us the only incidents +of the day. Among the prisoners was a tall and fine looking officer, +much worn with hunger and fatigue. The moment I saw him I recognized +him as a former comrade, George W. Carr, with whom I had served in +Washington Territory. He was in those days a lieutenant in the Ninth +Infantry, and was one of the officers who superintended the execution +of the nine Indians at the Cascades of the Columbia in 1856. Carr +was very much emaciated, and greatly discouraged by the turn events +had recently taken. For old acquaintance sake I gave him plenty to +eat, and kept him in comfort at my headquarters until the next batch +of prisoners was sent to the rear, when he went with them. He had +resigned from the regular army at the commencement of hostilities, +and, full of high anticipation, cast his lot with the Confederacy, +but when he fell into our hands, his bright dreams having been +dispelled by the harsh realities of war, he appeared to think that +for him there was no future. + +Picking up prisoners here and there, my troops resumed their march +directly south on the Valley pike, and when the Sixth and Nineteenth +corps reached Harrisonburg, they went into camp, Powell in the +meanwhile pushing on to Mt. Crawford, and Crook taking up a position +in our rear at the junction of the Keezletown road and the Valley +pike. Late in the afternoon Torbert's cavalry came in from New +Market arriving at that place many hours later than it had been +expected. + +The succeeding day I sent Merritt to Port Republic to occupy the +enemy's attention, while Torbert, with Wilson's division and the +regular brigade, was ordered to Staunton, whence he was to proceed to +Waynesboro' and blow up the railroad bridge. Having done this, +Torbert, as he returned, was to drive off whatever cattle he could +find, destroy all forage and breadstuffs, and burn the mills. He +took possession of Waynesboro' in due time, but had succeeded in only +partially demolishing the railroad bridge when, attacked by Pegram's +division of infantry and Wickham's cavalry, he was compelled to fall +back to Staunton. From the latter place he retired to Bridgewater, +and Spring Hill, on the way, however, fully executing his +instructions regarding the destruction of supplies. + +While Torbert was on this expedition, Merritt had occupied Port +Republic, but he happened to get there the very day that Kershaw's +division was marching from Swift Run Gap to join Early. By accident +Kershaw ran into Merritt shortly after the latter had gained the +village. Kershaw's four infantry brigades attacked at once, and +Merrit, forced out of Port Republic, fell back toward Cross Keys; and +in anticipation that the Confederates could be coaxed to that point, +I ordered the infantry there, but Torbert's attack at Wavnesboro' had +alarmed Early, and in consequence he drew all his forces in toward +Rock-fish Gap. This enabled me to re-establish Merritt at Port +Republic, send the Sixth and Nineteenth corps to the neighborhood of +Mt. Crawford to await the return of Torbert, and to post Crook at +Harrisonburg; these dispositions practically obtained till the 6th of +October, I holding a line across the valley from Port Republic along +North River by Mt. Crawford to the Back road near the mouth of Briery +Branch Gap. + +It was during this period, about dusk on the evening of October 3, +that between Harrisonburg and Dayton my engineer officer, Lieutenant +John R. Meigs, was murdered within my lines. He had gone out with +two topographical assistants to plot the country, and late in the +evening, while riding along the public road on his return to camp, he +overtook three men dressed in our uniform. From their dress, and +also because the party was immediately behind our lines and within a +mile and a half of my headquarters, Meigs and his assistants +naturally thought that they were joining friends, and wholly +unsuspicious of anything to the contrary, rode on with the three men +some little distance; but their perfidy was abruptly discovered by +their suddenly turning upon Meigs with a call for his surrender. It +has been claimed that, refusing to submit, he fired on the +treacherous party, but the statement is not true, for one of the +topographers escaped--the other was captured--and reported a few +minutes later at my headquarters that Meigs was killed without +resistance of any kind whatever, and without even the chance to give +himself up. This man was so cool, and related all the circumstances +of the occurrence with such exactness, as to prove the truthfulness +of his statement. The fact that the murder had been committed inside +our lines was evidence that the perpetrators of the crime, having +their homes in the vicinity, had been clandestinely visiting them, +and been secretly harbored by some of the neighboring residents. +Determining to teach a lesson to these abettors of the foul deed--a +lesson they would never forget--I ordered all the houses within an +area of five miles to be burned. General Custer, who had succeeded +to the command of the Third Cavalry division (General Wilson having +been detailed as chief of cavalry to Sherman's army), was charged +with this duty, and the next morning proceeded to put the order into +execution. The prescribed area included the little village of +Dayton, but when a few houses in the immediate neighborhood of the +scene of the murder had been burned, Custer was directed to cease his +desolating work, but to fetch away all the able-bodied males as +prisoners. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +REASONS FOR NOT PURSUING EARLY THROUGH THE BLUE RIDGE--GENERAL +TORBERT DETAILED TO GIVE GENERAL ROSSER A "DRUBBING"--GENERAL ROSSER +ROUTED--TELEGRAPHED TO MEET STANTON--LONGSTREET'S MESSAGE--RETURN TO +WINCHESTER--THE RIDE TO CEDAR CREEK--THE RETREATING ARMY--RALLYING +THE TROOPS--REFORMING THE LINE--COMMENCING THE ATTACK--DEFEAT OF THE +CONFEDERATES--APPOINTED A MAJOR-GENERAL IN THE REGULAR ARMY--RESULTS +OF THE BATTLE. + +While we lay in camp at Harrisonburg it became necessary to decide +whether or not I would advance to Brown's Gap, and, after driving the +enemy from there, follow him through the Blue Ridge into eastern +Virginia. Indeed, this question began to cause me solicitude as soon +as I knew Early had escaped me at New Market, for I felt certain that +I should be urged to pursue the Confederates toward Charlottesville +and Gordonsville, and be expected to operate on that line against +Richmond. For many reasons I was much opposed to such a plan, but +mainly because its execution would involve the opening of the Orange +and Alexandria railroad. To protect this road against the raids of +the numerous guerrilla bands that infested the region through which +it passed, and to keep it in operation, would require a large force +of infantry, and would also greatly reduce my cavalry; besides, I +should be obliged to leave a force in the valley strong enough to +give security to the line of the upper Potomac and the Baltimore and +Ohio railroad, and this alone would probably take the whole of +Crook's command, leaving me a wholly inadequate number of fighting +men to prosecute a campaign against the city of Richmond. Then, too, +I was in doubt whether the besiegers could hold the entire army at +Petersburg; and in case they could not, a number of troops sufficient +to crush me might be detached by Lee, moved rapidly by rail, and, +after overwhelming me, be quickly returned to confront General Meade. +I was satisfied, moreover, that my transportation could not supply me +further than Harrisonburg, and if in penetrating the Blue Ridge I met +with protracted resistance, a lack of supplies might compel me to +abandon the attempt at a most inopportune time. + +I therefore advised that the Valley campaign be terminated north of +Staunton, and I be permitted to return, carrying out on the way my +original instructions for desolating the Shenandoah country so as to +make it untenable for permanent occupation by the Confederates. I +proposed to detach the bulk of my army when this work of destruction +was completed, and send it by way of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad +through Washington to the Petersburg line, believing that I could +move it more rapidly by that route than by any other. I was +confident that if a movement of this character could be made with +celerity it would culminate in the capture of Richmond and possibly +of General Lee's army, and I was in hopes that General Grant would +take the same view of the matter; but just at this time he was so +pressed by the Government and by public-opinion at the North, that he +advocated the wholly different conception of driving Early into +eastern Virginia, and adhered to this plan with some tenacity. +Considerable correspondence regarding the subject took place between +us, throughout which I stoutly maintained that we should not risk, by +what I held to be a false move, all that my army had gained. I being +on the ground, General Grant left to me the final decision of the +question, and I solved the first step by determining to withdraw down +the valley at least as far as Strasburg, which movement was begun on +the 6th of October. + +The cavalry as it retired was stretched across the country from the +Blue Ridge to the eastern slope of the Alleghanies, with orders to +drive off all stock and destroy all supplies as it moved northward. +The infantry preceded the cavalry, passing down the Valley pike, and +as we marched along the many columns of smoke from burning stacks, +and mills filled with grain, indicated that the adjacent country was +fast losing the features which hitherto had made it a great magazine +of stores for the Confederate armies. + +During the 6th and 7th of October, the enemy's horse followed us up, +though at a respectful distance. This cavalry was now under command +of General T. W. Rosser, who on October 5 had joined Early with an +additional brigade from Richmond. As we proceeded the Confederates +gained confidence, probably on account of the reputation with which +its new commander had been heralded, and on the third day's march had +the temerity to annoy my rear guard considerably. Tired of these +annoyances, I concluded to open the enemy's eyes in earnest, so that +night I told Torbert I expected him either to give Rosser a drubbing +next morning or get whipped himself, and that the infantry would be +halted until the affair was over; I also informed him that I proposed +to ride out to Round Top Mountain to see the fight. When I decided +to have Rosser chastised, Merritt was encamped at the foot of Round +Top, an elevation just north of Tom's Brook, and Custer some six +miles farther north and west, near Tumbling Run. In the night Custer +was ordered to retrace his steps before daylight by the Back road, +which is parallel to and about three miles from the Valley pike, and +attack the enemy at Tom's Brook crossing, while Merritt's +instructions were to assail him on the Valley pike in concert with +Custer. About 7 in the morning, Custer's division encountered Rosser +himself with three brigades, and while the stirring sounds of the +resulting artillery duel were reverberating through the valley +Merritt moved briskly to the front and fell upon Generals Lomax and +Johnson on the Valley pike. Merritt, by extending his right, quickly +established connection with Custer, and the two divisions moved +forward together under Torbert's direction, with a determination to +inflict on the enemy the sharp and summary punishment his rashness +had invited. + +The engagement soon became general across the valley, both sides +fighting mainly mounted. For about two hours the contending lines +struggled with each other along Tom's Brook, the charges and counter +charges at many points being plainly visible from the summit of Round +Top, where I had my headquarters for the time. + +The open country permitting a sabre fight, both sides seemed bent on +using that arm. In the centre the Confederates maintained their +position with much stubbornness, and for a time seemed to have +recovered their former spirit, but at last they began to give way on +both flanks, and as these receded, Merritt and Custer went at the +wavering ranks in a charge along the whole front. The result was a +general smash-up of the entire Confederate line, the retreat quickly +degenerating into a rout the like of which was never before seen. +For twenty-six miles this wild stampede kept up, with our troopers +close at the enemy's heels; and the ludicrous incidents of the chase +never ceased to be amusing topics around the camp-fires of Merritt +and Custer. In the fight and pursuit Torbert took eleven pieces of +artillery, with their caissons, all the wagons and ambulances the +enemy had on the ground, and three hundred prisoners. Some of +Rosser's troopers fled to the mountains by way of Columbia Furnace, +and some up the Valley pike and into the Massamitten Range, +apparently not discovering that the chase had been discontinued till +south of Mount Jackson they rallied on Early's infantry. + +After this catastrophe, Early reported to General Lee that his +cavalry was so badly demoralized that it should be dismounted; and +the citizens of the valley, intensely disgusted with the boasting and +swaggering that had characterized the arrival of the "Laurel Brigade" +in that section, baptized the action (known to us as Tom's Brook) the +"Woodstock Races," and never tired of poking fun at General Rosser +about his precipitate and inglorious flight. (When Rosser arrived +from Richmond with his brigade he was proclaimed as the savior of the +Valley, and his men came all bedecked with laurel branches.) + +On the 10th my army, resuming its retrograde movement, crossed to the +north side of Cedar Creek. The work of repairing the Manassas Gap +branch of the Orange and Alexandria railroad had been begun some days +before, out from Washington, and, anticipating that it would be in +readiness to transport troops by the time they could reach Piedmont, +I directed the Sixth Corps to continue its march toward Front Royal, +expecting to return to the Army of the Potomac by that line. By the +12th, however, my views regarding the reconstruction of this railroad +began to prevail, and the work on it was discontinued. The Sixth +Corps, therefore, abandoned that route, and moved toward Ashby's Gap +with the purpose of marching direct to Washington, but on the 13th I +recalled it to Cedar Creek, in consequence of the arrival of the +enemy's infantry at Fisher's Hill, and the receipt, the night before, +of the following despatch, which again opened the question of an +advance on Gordonsville and Charlottesville: + + +(Cipher.) +"WASHINGTON, October 12, 1864, 12 M. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN: + +"Lieutenant-General Grant wishes a position taken far enough south to +serve as a base for further operations upon Gordonsville and +Charlottesville. It must be strongly fortified and provisioned. +Some point in the vicinity of Manassas Gap would seem best suited for +all purposes. Colonel Alexander, of the Engineers, will be sent to +consult with you as soon as you connect with General Augur. + +"H. W. HALLECK, Major-General." + + +As it was well known in Washington that the views expressed in the +above despatch were counter to my convictions, I was the next day +required by the following telegram from Secretary Stanton to repair +to that city: + + +"WASHINGTON, October 13, 1864. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN +(through General Augur) + +"If you can come here, a consultation on several points is extremely +desirable. I propose to visit General Grant, and would like to see +you first. + +"EDWIN M. STANTON, +"Secretary of War." + + +I got all ready to comply with the terms of Secretary Stanton's +despatch, but in the meantime the enemy appeared in my front in +force, with infantry and cavalry, and attacked Colonel Thoburn, who +had been pushed out toward Strasburg from Crook's command, and also +Custer's division of cavalry on the Back road. As afterward +appeared, this attack was made in the belief that all of my troops +but Crook's had gone to Petersburg. From this demonstration there +ensued near Hupp's Hill a bitter skirmish between Kershaw and +Thoburn, and the latter was finally compelled to withdraw to the +north bank of Cedar Creek. Custer gained better results, however, on +the Back road, with his usual dash driving the enemy's cavalry away +from his front, Merritt's division then joining him and remaining on +the right. + +The day's events pointing to a probability that the enemy intended to +resume the offensive, to anticipate such a contingency I ordered the +Sixth Corps to return from its march toward Ashby's Gap. It reached +me by noon of the 14th, and went into position to the right and rear +of the Nineteenth Corps, which held a line along the north bank of +Cedar Creek, west of the Valley pike. Crook was posted on the left +of the Nineteenth Corps and east of the Valley pike, with Thoburn's +division advanced to a round hill, which commanded the junction of +Cedar Creek and the Shenandoah River, while Torbert retained both +Merritt and Custer on the right of the Sixth Corps, and at the same +time covered with Powell the roads toward Front Royal. My head- +quarters were at the Belle Grove House, which was to the west of the +pike and in rear of the Nineteenth Corps. It was my intention to +attack the enemy as soon as the Sixth Corps reached me, but General +Early having learned from his demonstration that I had not detached +as largely as his previous information had led him to believe, on the +night of the 13th withdrew to Fisher's Hill; so, concluding that he +could not do us serious hurt from there, I changed my mind as to +attacking, deciding to defer such action till I could get to +Washington, and come to some definite understanding about my future +operations. + +To carry out this idea, on the evening of the 15th I ordered all of +the cavalry under General Torbert to accompany me to Front Royal, +again intending to push it thence through Chester Gap to the Virginia +Central railroad at Charlottesville, to destroy the bridge over the +Rivanna River, while I passed through Manassas Gap to Rectortown, and +thence by rail to Washington. On my arrival with the cavalry near +Front Royal on the 16th, I halted at the house of Mrs. Richards, on +the north bank of the river, and there received the following +despatch and inclosure from General Wright, who had been left in +command at Cedar Creek: + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY Division, +"October 16, 1864. + +"GENERAL: + +"I enclose you despatch which explains itself. If the enemy should +be strongly reenforced in cavalry, he might, by turning our right, +give us a great deal of trouble. I shall hold on here until the +enemy's movements are developed, and shall only fear an attack on my +right, which I shall make every preparation for guarding against and +resisting. + +"Very respectfully, your obedient servant, + +"H. G. WRIGHT, Major-General Commanding. +"MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Commanding Middle Military Division." + + +[INCLOSURE.] "To LIEUTENANT-GENERAL EARLY: + +"Be ready to move as soon as my forces join you, and we will crush +Sheridan. + +"LONGSTREET, Lieutenant-General." + + +The message from Longstreet had been taken down as it was being +flagged from the Confederate signal-station on Three Top Mountain, +and afterward translated by our signal officers, who knew the +Confederate signal code. I first thought it a ruse, and hardly worth +attention, but on reflection deemed it best to be on the safe side, +so I abandoned the cavalry raid toward Charlottesville, in order to +give General Wright the, entire strength of the army, for it did not +seem wise to reduce his numbers while reinforcement for the enemy +might be near, and especially when such pregnant messages were +reaching Early from one of the ablest of the Confederate generals. +Therefore I sent the following note to General Wright: + +"HEADQUARTERS MIDDLE MILITARY DIVISION, +"Front Royal, October 16, 1864. + +"GENERAL: The cavalry is all ordered back to you; make your position +strong. If Longstreet's despatch is true, he is under the impression +that we have largely detached. I will go over to Augur, and may get +additional news. Close in Colonel Powell, who will be at this point. +If the enemy should make an advance, I know you will defeat him. +Look well to your ground and be well prepared. Get up everything +that can be spared. I will bring up all I can, and will be up on +Tuesday, if not sooner. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL H. G. WRIGHT, +"Commanding Sixth Army Corps." + + +At 5 o'clock on the evening of the 16th I telegraphed General Halleck +from Rectortown, giving him the information which had come to me from +Wright, asking if anything corroborative of it had been received from +General Grant, and also saying that I would like to see Halleck; the +telegram ending with the question: "Is it best for me to go to see +you?" Next morning I sent back to Wright all the cavalry except one +regiment, which escorted me through Manassas Gap to the terminus of +the railroad from Washington. I had with me Lieutenant-Colonel James +W. Forsyth, chief-of-staff, and three of my aides, Major George A. +Forsyth, Captain Joseph O'Keefe, and Captain Michael V. Sheridan. I +rode my black horse, Rienzi, and the others their own respective +mounts. + +Before leaving Cedar Creek I had fixed the route of my return to be +by rail from Washington to Martinsburg, and thence by horseback to +Winchester and Cedar Creek, and had ordered three hundred cavalry to +Martinsburg to escort me from that point to the front. At Rectortown +I met General Augur, who had brought a force out from Washington to +reconstruct and protect the line of railroad, and through him +received the following reply from General Halleck: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"WASHINGTON, D.C., October 16 1864 + +"To MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN, +"Rectortown, Va. + +General Grant says that Longstreet brought with him no troops from +Richmond, but I have very little confidence in the information +collected at his headquarters. If you can leave your command with +safety, come to Washington, as I wish to give you the views of the +authorities here. + +"H. W. HALLECK, Major-General, Chief-of-Staff." + + +In consequence of the Longstreet despatch, I felt a concern about my +absence which I could hardly repress, but after duly considering what +Halleck said, and believing that Longstreet could not unite with +Early before I got back, and that even if he did Wright would be able +to cope with them both, I and my staff, with our horses, took the +cars for Washington, where we arrived on the morning of the 17th at +about 8 o'clock. I proceeded at an early hour to the War Department, +and as soon as I met Secretary Stanton, asked him for a special train +to be ready at 12 o'clock to take me to Martinsburg, saying that in +view of existing conditions I must get back to my army as quickly as +possible. He at once gave the order for the train, and then the +Secretary, Halleck, and I proceeded to hold a consultation in regard +to my operating east of the Blue Ridge. The upshot was that my views +against such a plan were practically agreed to, and two engineer +officers were designated to return with me for the purpose of +reporting on a defensive line in the valley that could be held while +the bulk of my troops were being detached to Petersburg. Colonel +Alexander and Colonel Thom both of the Engineer Corps, reported to +accompany me, and at 12 o'clock we took the train. + +We arrived about dark at Martinsburg, and there found the escort of +three hundred men which I had ordered before leaving Cedar Creek. We +spent that night at Martinsburg, and early next morning mounted and +started up the Valley pike for Winchester, leaving Captain Sheridan +behind to conduct to the army the Commissioners whom the State of New +York had sent down to receive the vote of her troops in the coming +Presidential election. Colonel Alexander was a man of enormous +weight, and Colonel Thom correspondingly light, and as both were +unaccustomed to riding we had to go slowly, losing so much time, in +fact, that we did not reach Winchester till between 3 and 4 o'clock +in the afternoon, though the distance is but twenty-eight miles. As +soon as we arrived at Colonel Edwards's headquarters in the town, +where I intended stopping for the night, I sent a courier to the +front to bring me a report of the condition of affairs, and then took +Colonel Alexander out on the heights about Winchester, in order that +he might overlook the country, and make up his mind as to the utility +of fortifying there. By the time we had completed our survey it was +dark, and just as we reached Colonel Edwards's house on our return a +courier came in from Cedar Creek bringing word that everything was +all right, that the enemy was quiet at Fisher's Hill, and that a +brigade of Grover's division was to make a reconnoissance in the +morning, the 19th, so about 10 o'clock I went to bed greatly +relieved, and expecting to rejoin my headquarters at my leisure next +day. + +Toward 6 o'clock the morning of the 19th, the officer on picket duty +at Winchester came to my room, I being yet in bed, and reported +artillery firing from the direction of Cedar Creek. I asked him if +the firing was continuous or only desultory, to which he replied that +it was not a sustained fire, but rather irregular and fitful. I +remarked: "It's all right; Grover has gone out this morning to make a +reconnoissance, and he is merely feeling the enemy." I tried to go to +sleep again, but grew so restless that I could not, and soon got up +and dressed myself. A little later the picket officer came back and +reported that the firing, which could be distinctly heard from his +line on the heights outside of Winchester, was still going on. I +asked him if it sounded like a battle, and as he again said that it +did not, I still inferred that the cannonading was caused by Grover's +division banging away at the enemy simply to find out what he was up +to. However, I went down-stairs and requested that breakfast be +hurried up, and at the same time ordered the horses to be saddled and +in readiness, for I concluded to go to the front before any further +examinations were made in regard to the defensive line. + +We mounted our horses between half-past 8 and 9, and as we were +proceeding up the street which leads directly through Winchester, +from the Logan residence, where Edwards was quartered, to the Valley +pike, I noticed that there were many women at the windows and doors +of the houses, who kept shaking their skirts at us and who were +otherwise markedly insolent in their demeanor, but supposing this +conduct to be instigated by their well-known and perhaps natural +prejudices, I ascribed to it no unusual significance. On reaching +the edge of the town I halted a moment, and there heard quite +distinctly the sound of artillery firing in an unceasing roar. +Concluding from this that a battle was in progress, I now felt +confident that the women along the street had received intelligence +from the battle, field by the "grape-vine telegraph," and were in +raptures over some good news, while I as yet was utterly ignorant of +the actual situation. Moving on, I put my head down toward the +pommel of my saddle and listened intently, trying to locate and +interpret the sound, continuing in this position till we had crossed +Mill Creek, about half a mile from Winchester. The result of my +efforts in the interval was the conviction that the travel of the +sound was increasing too rapidly to be accounted for by my own rate +of motion, and that therefore my army must be falling back. + +At Mill Creek my escort fell in behind, and we were going ahead at a +regular pace, when, just as we made the crest of the rise beyond the +stream, there burst upon our view the appalling spectacle of a panic- +stricken army-hundreds of slightly wounded men, throngs of others +unhurt but utterly demoralized, and baggage-wagons by the score, all +pressing to the rear in hopeless confusion, telling only too plainly +that a disaster had occurred at the front. On accosting some of the +fugitives, they assured me that the army was broken up, in full +retreat, and that all was lost; all this with a manner true to that +peculiar indifference that takes possession of panic-stricken men. I +was greatly disturbed by the, sight, but at once sent word to Colonel +Edwards commanding the brigade in Winchester, to stretch his troops +across the valley, near Mill Creek, and stop all fugitives, directing +also that the transportation be, passed through and parked on the +north side of the town. + +As I continued at a walk a few hundred yards farther, thinking all +the time of Longstreet's telegram to Early, "Be ready when I join +you, and we will crush Sheridan," I was fixing in my mind what I +should do. My first thought was too stop the army in the suburbs of +Winchester as it came back, form a new line, and fight there; but as +the situation was more maturely considered a better conception +prevailed. I was sure the troops had confidence in me, for +heretofore we had been successful; and as at other times they had +seen me present at the slightest sign of trouble or distress, I felt +that I ought to try now to restore their broken ranks, or, failing in +that, to share their fate because of what they had done hitherto. + +About this time Colonel Wood, my chief commissary, arrived from the +front and gave me fuller intelligence, reporting that everything was +gone, my headquarters captured, and the troops dispersed. When I +heard this I took two of my aides-de-camp, Major. George A. Forsyth +and Captain Joseph O'Keefe, and with twenty men from the escort +started for the front, at the same time directing Colonel James W. +Forsyth and Colonels Alexander and Thom to remain behind and do what +they could to stop the runaways. + +For a short distance I traveled on the road, but soon found it so +blocked with wagons and wounded men that my progress was impeded, and +I was forced to take to the adjoining fields to make haste. When +most of the wagons and wounded were past I returned to the road, +which was thickly lined with unhurt men, who, having got far enough +to the rear to be out of danger, had halted, without any +organization, and begun cooking coffee, but when they saw me they +abandoned their coffee, threw up their hats, shouldered their +muskets, and as I passed along turned to follow with enthusiasm and +cheers. To acknowledge this exhibition of feeling I took off my hat, +and with Forsyth and O'Keefe rode some distance in advance of my +escort, while every mounted officer who saw me galloped out on either +side of the pike to tell the men at a distance that I had come back. +In this way the news was spread to the stragglers off the road, when +they, too, turned their faces to the front and marched toward the +enemy, changing in a moment from the depths of depression, to the +extreme of enthusiasm. I already knew that even in the ordinary +condition of mind enthusiasm is a potent element with soldiers, but +what I saw that day convinced me that if it can be excited from a +state of despondency its power is almost irresistible. I said +nothing except to remark as I rode among those on the road: "If I had +been, with you this morning this disaster would not have happened. +We must face the other way; we will go back and recover our camp." + +My first halt was made just north of Newtown, where I met a chaplain +digging his heels into the sides of his jaded horse, and making for +the rear with all possible speed. I drew up for an instant, and +inquired of him how matters were going at the front. He replied, +"Everything is lost; but all will be right when you get there"; yet +notwithstanding this expression of confidence in me, the parson at +once resumed his breathless pace to the rear. At Newtown I was +obliged to make a circuit to the left, to get round the village. I +could not pass through it, the streets were so crowded, but meeting +on this detour Major McKinley, of Crook's staff, he spread the news +of my return through the motley throng there. + +When nearing the Valley pike, just south of Newtown I saw about +three-fourths of a mile west of the pike a body of troops, which +proved to be Ricketts's and Wheaton's divisions of the Sixth Corps, +and then learned that the Nineteenth Corps had halted a little to the +right and rear of these; but I did not stop, desiring to get to the +extreme front. Continuing on parallel with the pike, about midway +between Newtown and Middletown I crossed to the west of it, and a +little later came up in rear of Getty's division of the Sixth Corps. +When I arrived, this division and the cavalry were the only troops in +the presence of and resisting the enemy; they were apparently acting +as a rear-guard at a point about three miles north of the line we +held at Cedar Creek when the battle began. General Torbert was the +first officer to meet me, saying as he rode up, "My God! I am glad +you've come." Getty's division, when I found it, was about a mile +north of Middletown, posted on the reverse slope of some slightly +rising ground, holding a barricade made with fence-rails, and +skirmishing slightly with the enemy's pickets. Jumping my horse over +the line of rails, I rode to the crest of the elevation, and there +taking off my hat, the men rose up from behind their barricade with +cheers of recognition. An officer of the Vermont brigade, Colonel A. +S. Tracy, rode out to the front, and joining me, informed me that +General Louis A. Grant was in command there, the regular division +commander, General Getty, having taken charge of the Sixth Corps in +place of Ricketts, wounded early in the action, while temporarily +commanding the corps. I then turned back to the rear of Getty's +division, and as I came behind it, a line of regimental flags rose up +out of the ground, as it seemed, to welcome me. They were mostly the +colors of Crook's troops, who had been stampeded and scattered in the +surprise of the morning. The color-bearers, having withstood the +panic, had formed behind the troops of Getty. The line with the +colors was largely composed of officers, among whom I recognized +Colonel R. B. Hayes, since president of the United States, one of the +brigade commanders. At the close of this incident I crossed the +little narrow valley, or depression, in rear of Getty's line, and +dismounting on the opposite crest, established that point as my +headquarters. In a few minutes some of my staff joined me, and the +first directions I gave were to have the Nineteenth Corps and the two +divisions of Wright's corps brought to the front, so they could be +formed on Getty's division, prolonged to the right; for I had already +decided to attack the enemy from that line as soon as I could get +matters in shape to take the offensive. Crook met me at this time, +and strongly favored my idea of attacking, but said, however, that +most of his troops were gone. General Wright came up a little later, +when I saw that he was wounded, a ball having grazed the point of his +chin so as to draw the blood plentifully. + +Wright gave me a hurried account of the day's events, and when told +that we would fight the enemy on the line which Getty and the cavalry +were holding, and that he must go himself and send all his staff to +bring up the troops, he zealously fell in with the scheme; and it was +then that the Nineteenth Corps and two divisions of the Sixth were +ordered to the front from where they had been halted to the right and +rear of Getty. + +After this conversation I rode to the east of the Valley pike and to +the left of Getty's division, to a point from which I could obtain a +good view of the front, in the mean time sending Major Forsyth to +communicate with Colonel Lowell (who occupied a position close in +toward the suburbs of Middletown and directly in front of Getty's +left) to learn whether he could hold on there. Lowell replied that +he could. I then ordered Custer's division back to the right flank, +and returning to the place where my headquarters had been established +I met near them Ricketts's division under General Keifer and General +Frank Wheaton's division, both marching to the front. When the men +of these divisions saw me they began cheering and took up the double +quick to the front, while I turned back toward Getty's line to point +out where these returning troops should be placed. Having done this, +I ordered General Wright to resume command of the Sixth Corps, and +Getty, who was temporarily in charge of it, to take command of his +own division. A little later the Nineteenth Corps came up and was +posted between the right of the Sixth Corps and Middle Marsh Brook. + +All this had consumed a great deal of time, and I concluded to visit +again the point to the east of the Valley pike, from where I had +first observed the enemy, to see what he was doing. Arrived there, I +could plainly see him getting ready for attack, and Major Forsyth now +suggested that it would be well to ride along the line of battle +before the enemy assailed us, for although the troops had learned of +my return, but few of them had seen me. Following his suggestion I +started in behind the men, but when a few paces had been taken I +crossed to the front and, hat in hand, passed along the entire length +of the infantry line; and it is from this circumstance that many of +the officers and men who then received me with such heartiness have +since supposed that that was my first appearance on the field. But +at least two hours had elapsed since I reached the ground, for it was +after mid-day, when this incident of riding down the front took +place, and I arrived not later, certainly, than half-past 10 o'clock. + +After re-arranging the line and preparing to attack I returned again +to observe the Confederates, who shortly began to advance on us. The +attacking columns did not cover my entire front, and it appeared that +their onset would be mainly directed against the Nineteenth Corps, +so, fearing that they might be too strong for Emory on account of his +depleted condition (many of his men not having had time to get up +from the rear), and Getty's division being free from assault I +transferred a part of it from the extreme left to the support of the +Nineteenth Corps. The assault was quickly repulsed by Emory, +however, and as the enemy fell back Getty's troops were returned to +their original place. This repulse of the Confederates made me feel +pretty safe from further offensive operations on their part, and I +now decided to suspend the fighting till my thin ranks were further +strengthened by the men who were continually coming up from the rear, +and particularly till Crook's troops could be assembled on the +extreme left. + +In consequence of the despatch already mentioned, "Be ready when I +join you, and we will crush Sheridan," since learned to have been +fictitious, I had been supposing all day that Longstreet's troops +were present, but as no definite intelligence on this point had been +gathered, I concluded, in the lull that now occurred, to ascertain +something positive regarding Longstreet; and Merritt having been +transferred to our left in the morning, I directed him to attack an +exposed battery then at the edge of Middletown, and capture some +prisoners. Merritt soon did this work effectually, concealing his +intention till his troops got close in to the enemy, and then by a +quick dash gobbling up a number of Confederates. When the prisoners +were brought in, I learned from them that the only troops of +Longstreet's in the fight were of Kershaw's division, which had +rejoined Early at Brown's Gap in the latter part of September, and +that the rest of Longstreet's corps was not on the field. The +receipt of this information entirely cleared the way for me to take +the offensive, but on the heels of it came information that +Longstreet was marching by the Front Royal pike to strike my rear at +Winchester, driving Powell's cavalry in as he advanced. This renewed +my uneasiness, and caused me to delay the general attack till after +assurances came from Powell denying utterly the reports as to +Longstreet, and confirming the statements of the prisoners. + +Between half-past and 4 o'clock, I was ready to assail, and decided +to do so by advancing my infantry line in a swinging movement, so as +to gain the Valley pike with my right between Middletown and the +Belle Grove House; and when the order was passed along, the men +pushed steadily forward with enthusiasm and confidence. General +Early's troops extended some little distance beyond our right, and +when my flank neared the overlapping enemy, he turned on it, with the +effect of causing a momentary confusion, but General McMillan quickly +realizing the danger, broke the Confederates at the reentering angle +by a counter charge with his brigade, doing his work so well that the +enemy's flanking troops were cut off from their main body and left to +shift for themselves. Custer, who was just then moving in from the +west side of Middle Marsh Brook, followed McMillan's timely blow with +a charge of cavalry, but before starting out on it, and while his men +were forming, riding at full speed himself, to throw his arms around +my neck. By the time he had disengaged himself from this embrace, +the troops broken by McMillan had gained some little distance to +their rear, but Custer's troopers sweeping across the Middletown +meadows and down toward Cedar Creek, took many of them prisoners +before they could reach the stream--so I forgave his delay. + +My whole line as far as the eye could see was now driving everything +before it, from behind trees, stone walls, and all such sheltering +obstacles, so I rode toward the left to ascertain how matters were +getting on there. As I passed along behind the advancing troops, +first General Grover, and then Colonel Mackenzie, rode up to welcome +me. Both were severely wounded, and I told them to leave the field, +but they implored permission to remain till success was certain. +When I reached the Valley pike Crook had reorganized his men, and as +I desired that they should take part in the fight, for they were the +very same troops that had turned Early's flank at Winchester and at +Fisher's Hill, I ordered them to be pushed forward; and the alacrity +and celerity with which they moved on Middletown demonstrated that +their ill-fortune of the morning had not sprung from lack of valor. + +Meanwhile Lowell's brigade of cavalry, which, it will be remembered, +had been holding on, dismounted, just north of Middletown ever since +the time I arrived from Winchester, fell to the rear for the purpose +of getting their led horses. A momentary panic was created in the +nearest brigade of infantry by this withdrawal of Lowell, but as soon +as his men were mounted they charged the enemy clear up to the stone +walls in the edge of Middletown; at sight of this the infantry +brigade renewed its attack, and the enemy's right gave way. The +accomplished Lowell received his death-wound in this courageous +charge. + +All our troops were now moving on the retreating Confederates, and as +I rode to the front Colonel Gibbs, who succeeded Lowell, made ready +for another mounted charge, but I checked him from pressing the +enemy's right, in the hope that the swinging attack from my right +would throw most of the Confederates to the east of the Valley pike, +and hence off their line of retreat through Strasburg to Fisher's +Hill. The eagerness of the men soon frustrated this anticipation, +however, the left insisting on keeping pace with the centre and +right, and all pushing ahead till we regained our old camps at Cedar +Creek. Beyond Cedar Creek, at Strasburg, the pike makes a sharp turn +to the west toward Fisher's Hill, and here Merritt uniting with +Custer, they together fell on the flank of the retreating columns, +taking many prisoners, wagons, and guns, among the prisoners being +Major-General Ramseur, who, mortally wounded, died the next day. + +When the news of the victory was received, General Grant directed a +salute of one hundred shotted guns to be fired into Petersburg, and +the President at once thanked the army in an autograph letter. A few +weeks after, he promoted me, and I received notice of this in a +special letter from the Secretary of War, saying: + +"--that for the personal gallantry, military skill, and just confidence +in the courage and patriotism of your troops, displayed by you on the +19th day of October at Cedar Run, whereby, under the blessing of +Providence, your routed army was reorganized, a great National +disaster averted, and a brilliant victory achieved over the rebels +for the third time in pitched battle within thirty days, Philip H. +Sheridan is appointed a major-general in the United States Army." + +The direct result of the battle was the recapture of all the +artillery, transportation, and camp equipage we had lost, and in +addition twenty-four pieces of the enemy's artillery, twelve hundred +prisoners, and a number of battle-flags. But more still flowed from +this victory, succeeding as it did the disaster of the morning, for +the reoccupation of our old camps at once re-established a morale +which for some hours had been greatly endangered by ill-fortune. + +It was not till after the battle that I learned fully what had taken +place before my arrival, and then found that the enemy, having +gathered all the strength he could through the return of +convalescents and other absentees, had moved quietly from Fisher's +Hill, in the night of the 18th and early on the morning of the 19th, +to surprise my army, which, it should be remembered, was posted on +the north bank of Cedar Creek, Crook holding on the left of the +Valley pike, with Thoburn's division advanced toward the creek on +Duval's (under Colonel Rutherford B. Hayes) and Kitching's +provisional divisions to the north and rear of Thoburn. The +Nineteenth Corps was on the right of Crook, extending in a semi- +circular line from the pike nearly to Meadow Brook, while the Sixth +Corps lay to the west of the brook in readiness to be used as a +movable column. Merritt's division was to the right and rear of the +Sixth Corps, and about a mile and a half west of Merrit was Custer +covering the fords of Cedar Creek as far west as the Middle road. + +General Early's plan was for one column under General Gordon, +consisting of three divisions of infantry (Gordon's, Ramseur's, and +Pegram's), and Payne's brigade of cavalry to cross the Shenandoah +River directly east of the Confederate works at Fisher's Hill, march +around the northerly face of the Massanutten Mountain, and again +cross the Shenandoah at Bowman's and McInturff's fords. Payne's task +was to capture me at the Belle Grove House. General Early himself, +with Kershaw's and Wharton's divisions, was to move through +Strasburg, Kershaw, accompanied by Early, to cross Cedar Creek at +Roberts's ford and connect with Gordon, while Wharton was to continue +on the Valley pike to Hupp's Hill and join the left of Kershaw, when +the crossing of the Valley pike over Cedar Creek became free. + +Lomax's cavalry, then in the Luray Valley, was ordered to join the +right of Gordon on the field of battle, while Rosser was to carry the +crossing of Cedar Creek on the Back road and attack Custer. Early's +conceptions were carried through in the darkness with little accident +or delay, Kershaw opening the fight by a furious attack on Thoburn's +division, while at dawn and in a dense fog Gordon struck Crook's +extreme left, surprising his pickets, and bursting into his camp with +such suddenness as to stampede Crook's men. Gordon directing his +march on my headquarters (the Belle Grove House), successfully turned +our position as he gained the Valley pike, and General Wright was +thus forced to order the withdrawal of the Nineteenth Corps from its +post at the Cedar Creek crossing, and this enabled Wharton to get +over the stream there unmolested and join Kershaw early in the +action. + +After Crook's troops had been driven from their camps, General Wright +endeavored to form a line with the Sixth Corps to hold the Valley +pike to the left of the Nineteenth, but failing in this he ordered +the withdrawal of the latter corps, Ricketts, temporarily commanding +the Sixth Corps, checking Gordon till Emory had retired. As already +stated, Wharton was thus permitted to cross Cedar Creek on the pike, +and now that Early had a continuous line, he pressed his advantage so +vigorously that the whole Union army was soon driven from its camps +in more or less disorder; and though much disjointed resistance was +displayed, it may be said that no systematic stand was made until +Getty's division, aided by Torbert's cavalry, which Wright had +ordered to the left early in the action, took up the ground where, on +arriving from Winchester, I found them. + +When I left my command on the 16th, little did I anticipate that +anything like this would happen. Indeed, I felt satisfied that Early +was, of himself, too weak to take the offensive, and although I +doubted the Longstreet despatch, yet I was confident that, even +should it prove true, I could get back before the junction could be +made, and at the worst I felt certain that my army was equal to +confronting the forces of Longstreet and Early combined. Still, the +surprise of the morning might have befallen me as well as the general +on whom it did descend, and though it is possible that this could +have been precluded had Powell's cavalry been closed in, as suggested +in my despatch from Front Royal, yet the enemy's desperation might +have prompted some other clever and ingenious scheme for relieving +his fallen fortunes in the Shenandoah Valley. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +GENERAL EARLY REORGANIZES HIS FORCES--MOSBY THE GUERRILLA--GENERAL +MERRITT SENT TO OPERATE AGAINST MOSBY--ROSSER AGAIN ACTIVE--GENERAL +CUSTER SURPRISED--COLONEL YOUNG SENT TO CAPTURE GILMORE THE +GUERRILLA--COLONEL YOUNG'S SUCCESS--CAPTURE OF GENERAL KELLY AND +GENERAL CROOK--SPIES--WAS WILKES BOOTH A SPY?--DRIVING THE +CONFEDERATES OUT OF THE VALLEY--THE BATTLE OF WAYNESBORO'--MARCHING +TO JOIN THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC. + +Early's broken army practically made no halt in its retreat after the +battle of Cedar-Creek until it reached New Market, though at Fisher's +Hill was left a small rear-guard of cavalry, which hastily decamped, +however, when charged by Gibbs's brigade on the morning of the 20th. +Between the date of his signal defeat and the 11th of November, the +enemy's scattered forces had sufficiently reorganized to permit his +again making a reconnoissance in the valley as far north as Cedar +Creek, my army having meanwhile withdrawn to Kernstown, where it had +been finally decided that a defensive line should be held to enable +me to detach troops to General Grant, and where, by reconstructing +the Winchester and Potomac railroad from Stephenson's depot to +Harper's Ferry, my command might be more readily, supplied. Early's +reconnoissance north of Cedar Creek ended in a rapid withdrawal of +his infantry after feeling my front, and with the usual ill-fortune +to his cavalry; Merritt and Custer driving Rosser and Lomax with ease +across Cedar Creek on the Middle and Back roads, while Powell's +cavalry struck McCausland near Stony Point, and after capturing two +pieces of artillery and about three hundred officers and men chased +him into the Luray Valley. + +Early got back to New Market on the 14th of November, and, from lack +of subsistence, being unable to continue demonstrations to prevent my +reinforcement of General Grant, began himself to detach to General +Lee by returning Kershaw's division to Petersburg, as was definitely +ascertained by Torbert in a reconnoissance to Mount Jackson. At this +time General Grant wished me to send him the Sixth Corps, and it was +got ready for the purpose, but when I informed him that Torbert's +reconnoissance had developed the fact that Early still retained four +divisions of infantry and one of cavalry, it was decided, on my +suggestion, to let the Sixth Corps remain till the season should be a +little further advanced, when the inclemency of the weather would +preclude infantry campaigning. These conditions came about early in +December, and by the middle of the month the whole of the Sixth Corps +was at Petersburg; simultaneously with its transfer to that line +Early sending his Second Corps to Lee. + +During the entire campaign I had been annoyed by guerrilla bands +under such partisan chiefs as Mosby, White, Gilmore, McNeil, and +others, and this had considerably depleted my line-of-battle +strength, necessitating as it did large, escorts for my supply- +trains. The most redoubtable of these leaders was Mosby, whose force +was made up from the country around Upperville, east of the Blue +Ridge, to which section he always fled for a hiding-place when he +scented danger. I had not directed any special operations against +these partisans while the campaign was active, but as Mosby's men had +lately killed, within my lines, my chief quartermaster, Colonel +Tolles, and Medical Inspector Ohlenchlager, I concluded to devote +particular attention to these "irregulars" during the lull that now +occurred; so on the 28th of November, I directed General Merritt to +march to the Loudoun Valley and operate against Mosby, taking care to +clear the country of forage and subsistence, so as to prevent the +guerrillas from being harbored there in the future their destruction +or capture being well-nigh impossible, on account of their intimate +knowledge of the mountain region. Merritt carried out his +instructions with his usual sagacity and thoroughness, sweeping +widely over each side of his general line of march with flankers, who +burned the grain and brought in large herds of cattle, hogs and +sheep, which were issued to the troops. + +While Merritt was engaged in this service the Baltimore and Ohio +railroad once more received the attention of the enemy; Rosser, with +two brigades of cavalry, crossing the Great North Mountain, capturing +the post of New Creek, with about five hundred prisoners and seven +guns, destroying all the supplies of the garrison, and breaking up +the railroad track. This slight success of the Confederates in West +Virginia, and the intelligence that they were contemplating further +raids in that section, led me to send, Crook there with one division, +his other troops going to City Point; and, I hoped that all the +threatened places would thus be sufficiently protected, but +negligence at Beverly resulted in the capture of that station by +Rosser on the 11th of January. + +In the meanwhile, Early established himself with Wharton's division +at Staunton in winter quarters, posting his cavalry in that +neighborhood also, except a detachment at New Market, and another +small one at the signalstation on Three Top Mountain. The winter was +a most severe one, snow falling frequently to the depth of several +inches, and the mercury often sinking below zero. The rigor of the +season was very much against the success of any mounted operations, +but General Grant being very desirous to have the railroads broken up +about Gordonsville and Charlottesville, on the 19th of December I +started the cavalry out for that purpose, Torbert, with Merritt and +Powell, marching through Chester Gap, while Custer moved toward +Staunton to make a demonstration in Torbert's favor, hoping to hold +the enemy's troops in the valley. Unfortunately, Custer did not +accomplish all that was expected of him, and being surprised by +Rosser and Payne near Lacy's Springs before reveille, had to abandon +his bivouac and retreat down the valley, with the loss of a number of +prisoners, a few horses, and a good many horse equipments, for, +because of the suddenness of Rosser's attack, many of the men had no +time to saddle up. As soon as Custer's retreat was assured, +Wharton's division of infantry was sent to Charlottesville to check +Torbert, but this had already been done by Lomax, with the assistance +of infantry sent up from Richmond. Indeed, from the very beginning +of the movement the Confederates had been closely observing the +columns of Torbert and Custer, and in consequence of the knowledge +thus derived, Early had marched Lomax to Gordonsville in anticipation +of an attack there, at the same time sending Rosser down the valley +to meet Custer. Torbert in the performance of his task captured two +pieces of artillery from Johnson's and McCausland's brigades, at +Liberty Mills on the Rapidan River, but in the main the purpose of +the raid utterly failed, so by the 27th of December he returned, +many, of his men badly frost-bitten from the extreme cold which had +prevailed. + +This expedition practically closed all operations for the season, and +the cavalry was put into winter cantonment near Winchester. The +distribution of my infantry to Petersburg and West Virginia left with +me in the beginning of the new year, as already stated, but the one +small division of the Nineteenth Corps. On account of this +diminution of force, it became necessary for me to keep thoroughly +posted in regard to the enemy, and I now realized more than I had +done hitherto how efficient my scouts had become since under the +control of Colonel Young; for not only did they bring me almost every +day intelligence from within Early's lines, but they also operated +efficiently against the guerrillas infesting West Virginia. + +Harry Gilmore, of Maryland, was the most noted of these since the +death of McNeil, and as the scouts had reported him in Harrisonburg +the latter part of January, I directed two of the most trustworthy to +be sent to watch his movements and ascertain his purposes. In a few +days these spies returned with the intelligence that Gilmore was on +his way to Moorefield, the centre of a very disloyal section in West +Virginia, about ninety miles southwest of Winchester, where, under +the guise of a camp-meeting, a gathering was to take place, at which +he expected to enlist a number of men, be joined by a party of about +twenty recruits coming from Maryland, and then begin depredations +along the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. Believing that Gilmore might +be captured, I directed Young to undertake the task, and as a +preliminary step he sent to Moorefield two of his men who early in +the war had "refugeed" from that section and enlisted in one of the +Union regiments from West Virginia. In about a week these men came +back and reported that Gilmore was living at a house between three +and four miles from Moorefield, and gave full particulars as to his +coming and going, the number of men he had about there and where they +rendezvoused. + +With this knowledge at hand I directed Young to take twenty of his +best men and leave that night for Moorefield, dressed in Confederate +uniforms, telling him that I would have about three hundred cavalry +follow in his wake when he had got about fifteen miles start, and +instructing him to pass his party off as a body of recruits for +Gilmore coming from Maryland and pursued by the Yankee cavalry. I +knew this would allay suspicion and provide him help on the road; +and, indeed, as Colonel Whittaker, who alone knew the secret, +followed after the fleeing "Marylanders," he found that their advent +had caused so little remark that the trail would have been lost had +he not already known their destination. Young met with a hearty, +welcome wherever he halted on the way, and as he passed through the +town of Moorefield learned with satisfaction that Gilmore still made +his headquarters at the house where the report of the two scouts had +located him a few days before. Reaching the designated place about +12 o'clock on the night of the 5th of February, Young, under the +representation that he had come directly from Maryland and was being +pursued by the Union cavalry, gained immediate access to Gilmore's +room. He found the bold guerrilla snugly tucked in bed, with two +pistols lying on a chair near by. He was sleeping so soundly that to +arouse him Young had to give him a violent shake. As he awoke and +asked who was disturbing his slumbers, Young, pointing at him a +cocked six-shooter, ordered him to dress without delay, and in answer +to his inquiry, informed him that he was a prisoner to one of +Sheridan's staff. Meanwhile Gilmore's men had learned of his +trouble, but the early appearance of Colonel Whittaker caused them to +disperse; thus the last link between Maryland and the Confederacy was +carried a prisoner to Winchester, whence he was sent to Fort Warren. + +The capture of Gilmore caused the disbandment of the party he had +organized at the "camp-meeting," most of the men he had recruited +returning to their homes discouraged, though some few joined the +bands of Woodson and young Jesse McNeil, which, led by the latter, +dashed into Cumberland, Maryland, at 3 O'clock on the morning of the +21st of February and made a reprisal by carrying off General Crook +and General Kelly, and doing their work so silently and quickly that +they escaped without being noticed, and were some distance on their +way before the colored watchman at the hotel where Crook was +quartered could compose himself enough to give the alarm. A troop of +cavalry gave hot chase from Cumberland, striving to intercept the +party at Moorefield and other points, but all efforts were fruitless, +the prisoners soon being beyond reach. + +Although I had adopted the general rule of employing only soldiers as +scouts, there was an occasional exception to it. I cannot say that +these exceptions proved wholly that an ironclad observance of the +rule would have been best, but I am sure of it in one instance. A +man named Lomas, who claimed to be a Marylander, offered me his +services as a spy, and coming highly recommended from Mr. Stanton, +who had made use of him in that capacity, I employed him. He made +many pretensions, often appearing over anxious to impart information +seemingly intended to impress me with his importance, and yet was +more than ordinarily intelligent, but in spite of that my confidence +in him was by no means unlimited. I often found what he reported to +me as taking place within the Confederate lines corroborated by +Young's men, but generally there were discrepancies in his tales, +which led me to suspect that he was employed by the enemy as well as +by me. I felt, however, that with good watching he could do me +little harm, and if my suspicions were incorrect he might be very +useful, so I held on to him. + +Early in February Lomas was very solicitous for me to employ a man +who, he said, had been with Mosby, but on account of some quarrel in +the irregular camp had abandoned that leader. Thinking that with two +of them I might destroy the railroad bridges east of Lynchburg, I +concluded, after the Mosby man had been brought to my headquarters by +Lomas about 12 o'clock one night, to give him employment, at the same +time informing Colonel Young that I suspected their fidelity, +however, and that he must test it by shadowing their every movement. +When Lomas's companion entered my room he was completely disguised, +but on discarding the various contrivances by which his identity was +concealed he proved to be a rather slender, dark-complexioned, +handsome young man, of easy address and captivating manners. He gave +his name as Renfrew, answered all my questions satisfactorily, and +went into details about Mosby and his men which showed an intimacy +with them at some time. I explained to the two men the work I had +laid out for them, and stated the sum of money I would give to have +it done, but stipulated that in case of failure there would be no +compensation whatever beyond the few dollars necessary for their +expenses. They readily assented, and it was arranged that they +should start the following night. Meanwhile Young had selected his +men to shadow them, and in two days reported my spies as being +concealed at Strasburg, where they remained, without making the +slightest effort to continue on their mission, and were busy, no +doubt, communicating with the enemy, though I was not able to fasten +this on them. On the 16th of February they returned to Winchester, +and reported their failure, telling so many lies about their +hazardous adventure as to remove all remaining doubt as to their +double-dealing. Unquestionably they were spies from the enemy, and +hence liable to the usual penalties of such service; but it struck me +that through them, I might deceive Early as to the time of opening +the spring campaign, I having already received from General Grant an +intimation of what was expected of me. I therefore retained the men +without even a suggestion of my knowledge of their true character, +Young meanwhile keeping close watch over all their doings. + +Toward the last of February General Early had at Staunton two +brigades of infantry under Wharton. All the rest of the infantry +except Echol's brigade, which was in southwestern Virginia, had been +sent to Petersburg during the winter, and Fitz. Lee's two brigades of +cavalry also. Rosser's men were mostly at their homes, where, on +account of a lack of subsistence and forage in the valley, they had +been permitted to go, subject to call. Lomax's cavalry was at +Millboro', west of Staunton, where supplies were obtainable. It was +my aim to get well on the road before Early could collect these +scattered forces, and as many of the officers had been in the habit +of amusing themselves fox-hunting during the latter part of the +winter, I decided to use the hunt as an expedient for stealing a +march on the enemy, and had it given out officially that a grand fox- +chase would take place on the 29th of February. Knowing that Lomas, +and Renfrew would spread the announcement South, they were permitted +to see several red foxes that had been secured, as well as a large +pack of hounds which Colonel Young had collected for the sport, and +were then started on a second expedition to burn the bridges. Of +course, they were shadowed as usual, and two days later, after they +had communicated with friends from their hiding-place, in Newtown, +they were arrested. On the way north to Fort Warren they escaped +from their guards when passing through Baltimore, and I never heard +of them again, though I learned that, after the assassination of, Mr. +Lincoln, Secretary Stanton strongly suspected his friend Lomas of +being associated with the conspirators, and it then occurred to me +that the good-looking Renfrew may have been Wilkes Booth, for he +certainly bore a strong resemblance to Booth's pictures. + +On the 27th of February my cavalry entered upon the campaign which +cleared the Shenandoah Valley of every remnant of organized +Confederates. General Torbert being absent on leave at this time, I +did not recall him, but appointed General Merritt Chief of Cavalry. +for Torbert had disappointed me on two important occasions--in the +Luray Valley during the battle of Fisher's Hill, and on the recent +Gordonsville expedition--and I mistrusted his ability to conduct any +operations requiring much self-reliance. The column was composed of +Custer's and Devin's divisions of cavalry, and two sections of +artillery, comprising in all about 10,000 officers and men. On +wheels we had, to accompany this column, eight ambulances, sixteen +ammunition wagons, a pontoon train for eight canvas boats, and a +small supply-train, with fifteen days' rations of coffee, sugar, and +salt, it being intended to depend on the country for the meat and +bread ration, the men carrying in their haversacks nearly enough to +subsist them till out of the exhausted valley. + +Grant's orders were for me to destroy the Virginia Central railroad +and the James River canal, capture Lynchburg if practicable, and then +join General Sherman in North Carolina wherever he might be found, or +return to Winchester, but as to joining Sherman I was to be governed +by the state of affairs after the projected capture of Lynchburg. +The weather was cold, the valley and surrounding mountains being +still covered with snow; but this was fast disappearing, however, +under the heavy rain that was coming down as the column moved along +up the Valley pike at a steady gait that took us to Woodstock the +first day. The second day we crossed the North Fork of the +Shenandoah on our pontoon-bridge, and by night-fall reached Lacy's +Springs, having seen nothing of the enemy as yet but a few partisans +who hung on our flanks in the afternoon. + +March 1 we encountered General Rosser at Mt. Crawford, he having been +able to call together only some five or six hundred of his troops, +our unsuspected march becoming known to Early only the day before. +Rosser attempted to delay us here, trying to burn the bridges over +the Middle Fork of the Shenandoah, but two regiments from Colonel +Capehart's brigade swam the stream and drove Rosser to Kline's Mills, +taking thirty prisoners and twenty ambulances and wagons. + +Meanwhile General Early was busy at Staunton, but not knowing my +objective point, he had ordered the return of Echol's brigade from +southwestern Virginia for the protection of Lynchburg, directed +Lomax's cavalry to concentrate at Pond Gap for the purpose of +harassing me if I moved toward Lynchburg, and at the same time +marched Wharton's two brigades of infantry, Nelson's artillery, and +Rosser's cavalry to Waynesboro', whither he went also to remain till +the object of my movement was ascertained. + +I entered Staunton the morning of March 2, and finding that Early had +gone to Waynesboro' with his infantry and Rosser, the question at +once arose whether I should continue my march to Lynchburg direct, +leaving my adversary in my rear, or turn east and open the way +through Rockfish Gap to the Virginia Central railroad and James River +canal. I felt confident of the success of the latter plan, for I +knew that Early numbered there not more than two thousand men; so, +influenced by this, and somewhat also by the fact that Early had left +word in Staunton that he would fight at Waynesboro', I directed +Merritt to move toward that place with Custer, to be closely followed +by Devin, who was to detach one brigade to destroy supplies at +Swoope's'depot. The by-roads were miry beyond description, rain +having fallen almost incessantly since we left Winchester, but +notwithstanding the down-pour the column pushed on, men and horses +growing almost unrecognizable from the mud covering them from head to +foot. + +General Early was true to the promise made his friends in Staunton, +for when Custer neared Waynesboro' he found, occupying a line of +breastworks on a ridge west of the town, two brigades of infantry, +with eleven pieces of artillery and Rosser's cavalry. Custer, when +developing the position of the Confederates, discovered that their +left was somewhat exposed instead of resting on South River; he +therefore made his dispositions for attack, sending around that flank +the dismounted regiments from Pennington's brigade, while he himself, +with two brigades, partly mounted and partly dismounted, assaulted +along the whole line of breastworks. Pennington's flanking movement +stampeded the enemy in short order, thus enabling Custer to carry the +front with little resistance, and as he did so the Eighth New York +and First Connecticut, in a charge in column, broke through the +opening made by Custer, and continued on through the town of +Waynesboro', never stopping till they crossed South River. There, +finding themselves immediately in the enemy's rear, they promptly +formed as foragers and held the east bank of the stream till all the +Confederates surrendered except Rosser, who succeeded in making his +way back to the valley, and Generals Early, Wharton, Long, and +Lilley, who, with fifteen or twenty men, escaped across the Blue +Ridge. I followed up the victory immediately by despatching Capehart +through Rock-fish Gap, with orders to encamp on the east side of the +Blue Ridge. By reason of this move all the enemy's stores and +transportation fell into our hands, while we captured on the field +seventeen battle flags, sixteen hundred officers and men, and eleven +pieces of artillery. This decisive victory closed hostilities in the +Shenandoah Valley. The prisoners and artillery were sent back to +Winchester next morning, under a guard of 1,500 men, commanded by +Colonel J. H. Thompson, of the First New Hampshire. + +The night of March 2 Custer camped at Brookfield, Devin remaining at +Waynesboro'. The former started for Charlottesville the next morning +early, followed by Devin with but two brigades, Gibbs having been +left behind to blow up the iron railroad bridge across South River. +Because of the incessant rains and spring thaws the roads were very +soft, and the columns cut them up terribly, the mud being thrown by +the sets of fours across the road in ridges as much as two feet high, +making it most difficult to get our wagons along, and distressingly +wearing on the animals toward the middle and rear of the columns. +Consequently I concluded to rest at Charlottesville for a couple of +days and recuperate a little, intending at the same time to destroy, +with small parties, the railroad from that point toward Lynchburg. +Custer reached Charlottesville the 3d, in the afternoon, and was met +at the outskirts by a deputation of its citizens, headed by the +mayor, who surrendered the town with medieval ceremony, formally +handing over the keys of the public buildings and of the University +of Virginia. But this little scene did not delay Custer long enough +to prevent his capturing, just beyond the village, a small body of +cavalry and three pieces of artillery. Gibbs's brigade, which was +bringing up my mud-impeded train, did not arrive until the 5th of +March. In the mean time Young's scouts had brought word that the +garrison of Lynchburg was being increased and the fortifications +strengthened, so that its capture would be improbable. I decided, +however, to move toward the place as far as Amherst Court House, +which is sixteen miles short of the town, so Devin, under Merritt's +supervision, marched along the James River, destroying the canal, +while Custer pushed ahead on the railroad and broke it up. The two +columns were to join at New Market, whence I intended to cross the +James River at some point east of Lynchburg, if practicable, so as to +make my way to Appomattox Court House, and destroy the Southside +railroad as far east as Farmville. Owing to its swollen condition +the river was unfordable but knowing that there was a covered bridge +at Duguidsville, I hoped to secure it by a dash, and cross there, but +the enemy, anticipating this, had filled the bridge with inflammable +material, and just as our troops got within striking distance it +burst into flames. The bridge at Hardwicksville also having been +burned by the enemy, there was now no means of crossing except by +pontoons. but, unfortunately, I had only eight of these, and they +could not be made to span the swollen river. + +Being thus unable to cross until the river should fall, and knowing +that it was impracticable to join General Sherman, and useless to +adhere to my alternative instructions to return to Winchester, I now +decided to destroy still more thoroughly the James River canal and +the Virginia Central railroad and then join General Grant in front of +Petersburg. I was master of the whole country north of the James as +far down as Goochland; hence the destruction of these arteries of +supply could be easily compassed, and feeling that the war was +nearing its end, I desired my cavalry to be in at the death. + +On March 9 the main column started eastward down the James River, +destroying locks, dams, and boats, having been preceded by Colonel +Fitzhugh's brigade of Devin's division in a forced march to Goochland +and Beaver Dam Creek, with orders to destroy everything below +Columbia. I made Columbia on the 10th, and from there sent a +communication to General Grant reporting what had occurred, informing +him of my condition and intention, asking him to send forage and +rations to meet me at the White House, and also a pontoon-bridge to +carry me over the Pamunkey, for in view of the fact that hitherto it +had been impracticable to hold Lee in the trenches around Petersburg, +I regarded as too hazardous a march down the south bank of the +Pamunkey, where the enemy, by sending troops out from Richmond, might +fall upon my flank and rear. It was of the utmost importance that +General Grant should receive these despatches without chance of +failure, in order that I might, depend absolutely on securing +supplies at the White House; therefore I sent the message in +duplicate, one copy overland direct to City Point by two scouts, +Campbell and Rowan, and the other by Fannin and Moore, who were to go +down the James River in a small boat to Richmond, join the troops in +the trenches in front of Petersburg, and, deserting to the Union +lines, deliver their tidings into General Grant's hands. Each set of +messengers got through, but the copy confided to Campbell and Rowan +was first at Grant's headquarters. + +I halted for one day at Columbia to let my trains catch up, for it +was still raining and the mud greatly delayed the teams, fatiguing +and wearying the mules so much that I believe we should have been +forced to abandon most of the wagons except for the invaluable help +given by some two thousand negroes who had attached themselves to the +column: they literally lifted the wagons out of the mud. From +Columbia Merritt, with Devin's division, marched to Louisa Court +House and destroyed the Virginia Central to Frederick's Hall. +Meanwhile Custer was performing similar work from Frederick's Hall to +Beaver Dam Station, and also pursued for a time General Early, who, +it was learned from despatches captured in the telegraph office at +Frederick's Hall, was in the neighborhood with a couple of hundred +men. Custer captured some of these men and two of Early's staff- +officers, but the commander of the Valley District, accompanied by a +single orderly, escaped across the South Anna and next day made his +way to Richmond, the last man of the Confederate army that had so +long contended with us in the Shenandoah Valley. + +At Frederick's Hall, Young's scouts brought me word from Richmond +that General Longstreet was assembling a force there to prevent my +junction with Grant, and that Pickett's division, which had been sent +toward Lynchburg to oppose my march, and Fitzhugh Lee's cavalry, were +moving east on the Southside railroad, with the object of +circumventing me. Reasoning that Longstreet could interpose +effectually only by getting to the White House ahead of me, I pushed +one column under Custer across the South Anna, by way of Ground +Squirrel bridge, to Ashland, where it united with Merritt, who had +meanwhile marched through Hanover Junction. Our appearance at +Ashland drew the Confederates out in that direction, as was hoped, +so, leaving Colonel Pennington's brigade there to amuse them, the +united command retraced its route to Mount Carmel church to cross the +North Anna. After dark Pennington came away, and all the troops +reached the church by midnight of the 15th. + +Resuming the march at an early hour next morning, we took the road by +way of King William Court House to the White House, where, arriving +on the 18th, we found, greatly to our relief, the supplies which I +had requested to be sent there. In the meanwhile the enemy had +marched to Hanover Court House, but being unable either to cross the +Pamunkey there or forestall me at the White House on the south side +of the river, he withdrew to Richmond without further effort to +impede my column. + +The hardships of this march far exceeded those of any previous +campaigns by the cavalry. Almost incessant rains had drenched us for +sixteen days and nights, and the swollen streams and well-nigh +bottomless roads east of Staunton presented grave difficulties on +every hand, but surmounting them all, we destroyed the enemy's means +of subsistence, in quantities beyond computation, and permanently +crippled the Virginia Central railroad, as well as the James River +canal, and as each day brought us nearer the Army of the Potomac, all +were filled with the comforting reflection that our work in the +Shenandoah Valley had been thoroughly done, and every one was buoyed +up by the cheering thought that we should soon take part in the final +struggle of the war. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +TRANSFERRED TO PETERSBURG--GENERAL RAWLINS CORDIAL WELCOME--GENERAL +GRANT's ORDERS AND PLANS--A TRIP WITH MR. LINCOLN AND GENERAL GRANT-- +MEETING GENERAL SHERMAN--OPPOSED TO JOINING THE ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE +--OPENING OF THE APPOMATTOX CAMPAIGN--GENERAL GRANT AND GENERAL +RAWLINS. + +The transfer of my command from the Shenandoah Valley to the field of +operations in front of Petersburg was not anticipated by General +Grant; indeed, the despatch brought from Columbia by my scouts, +asking that supplies be sent me at the White House, was the first +word that reached him concerning the move. In view of my message the +general-in-chief decided to wait my arrival before beginning spring +operations with the investing troops south of the James River, for he +felt the importance of having my cavalry at hand in a campaign which +he was convinced would wind up the war. We remained a few days at +the White House resting and refitting the cavalry, a large amount of +shoeing being necessary; but nothing like enough horses were at hand +to replace those that had died or been disabled on the mud march from +Staunton to the Pamunkey River, so a good many of the men were still +without mounts, and all such were sent by boat to the dismounted camp +near City Point. When all was ready the column set out for Hancock +Station, a point on the military railroad in front of Petersburg, and +arriving there on the 27th of March, was in orders reunited with its +comrades of the Second Division, who had been serving with the Army +of the Potomac since we parted from them the previous August. +General Crook, who had been exchanged within a few days, was now in +command of this Second Division. The reunited corps was to enter +upon the campaign as a separate army, I reporting directly to General +Grant; the intention being thus to reward me for foregoing, of my own +choice, my position as a department commander by joining the armies +at Petersburg. + +Taking the road across the Peninsula, I started from the White House +with Merritt's column on the 25th of March and encamped that night at +Harrison's Landing. Very early next morning, in conformity with a +request from General Grant, I left by boat for City Point, Merritt +meanwhile conducting the column across the James River to the point +of rendezvous, The trip to City Point did not take long, and on +arrival at army headquarters the first person I met was General John +A. Rawlins, General Grant's chief-of-staff. Rawlins was a man of +strong likes and dislikes, and positive always both in speech and +action, exhibiting marked feelings when greeting any one, and on this +occasion met me with much warmth. His demonstrations of welcome +over, we held a few minutes' conversation about the coming campaign, +he taking strong ground against a part of the plan of operations +adopted, namely, that which contemplated my joining General Sherman's +army. His language was unequivocal and vehement, and when he was +through talking, he conducted me to General Grant's quarters, but he +himself did not enter. + +General Grant was never impulsive, and always met his officers in an +unceremonious way, with a quiet "How are you" soon putting one at his +ease, since the pleasant tone in which he spoke gave assurance of +welcome, although his manner was otherwise impassive. When the +ordinary greeting was over, he usually waited for his visitor to open +the conversation, so on this occasion I began by giving him the +details of my march from Winchester, my reasons for not joining +Sherman, as contemplated in my instructions, and the motives which +had influenced me to march to the White House. The other provision +of my orders on setting out from Winchester--the alternative return +to that place--was not touched upon, for the wisdom of having ignored +that was fully apparent. Commenting on this recital of my doings, +the General referred only to the tortuous course of my march from +Waynesboro' down, our sore trials, and the valuable services of the +scouts who had brought him tidings of me, closing with the remark +that it was, rare a department commander voluntarily deprived himself +of independence, and added that I should not suffer for it. Then +turning to the business for which he had called rne to City Point, he +outlined what he expected me to do; saying that I was to cut loose +from the Army of the Potomac by passing its left flank to the +southward along the line of the Danville railroad, and after crossing +the Roanoke River, join General Sherman. While speaking, he handed +me a copy of a general letter of instructions that had been drawn up +for the army on the 24th. The letter contained these words +concerning the movements of my command: + +"The cavalry under General Sheridan, joined by the division now under +General Davies, will move at the same time (29th inst.) by the Weldon +road and the Jerusalem plank-road, turning west from the latter +before crossing the Nottoway, and west with the whole column before +reaching Stony Creek. General Sheridan will then move independently +under other instructions which will be given him. All dismounted +cavalry belonging to the Army of the Potomac, and the dismounted +cavalry from the Middle Military Division not required for guarding +property belonging to their arm of the service, will report to +Brigadier-General Benham to be added to the defenses of City Point." + +When I had gone over the entire letter I showed plainly that I was +dissatisfied with it, for, coupled with what the General had outlined +orally, which I supposed was the "other instructions," I believed it +foreshadowed my junction with General Sherman. Rawlins thought so +too, as his vigorous language had left no room to doubt, so I +immediately began to offer my objections to the programme. These +were, that it would be bad policy to send me down to the Carolinas +with a part of the Army of the Potomac, to come back to crush Lee +after the destruction of General Johnston's army; such a course would +give rise to the charge that his own forces around Petersburg were +not equal to the task, and would seriously affect public opinion in +the North; that in fact my cavalry belonged to the Army of the +Potomac, which army was able unaided to destroy Lee, and I could not +but oppose any dispersion of its strength. + +All this was said in a somewhat emphatic manner, and when I had +finished he quietly told me that the portion of my instructions from +which I so strongly dissented was intended as a "blind" to cover any +check the army in its general move, to the left might meet with, and +prevent that element in the North which held that the war could be +ended only through negotiation, from charging defeat. The fact that +my cavalry was not to ultimately join Sherman was a great relief to +me, and after expressing the utmost confidence in the plans unfolded +for closing the war by directing every effort to the annihilation of +Lee's army, I left him to go to General Ingalls's quarters. On the +way I again met Rawlins, who, when I told him that General Grant had +intimated his intention to modify the written plan of operations so +far as regarded the cavalry, manifested the greatest satisfaction, +and I judged from this that the new view of the matter had not +previously been communicated to the chief-of-staff, though he must +have been acquainted of course with the programme made out on the +24th of March. + +Toward noon General Grant sent for me to accompany him up the river. +When I joined the General he informed me that the President was on +board the boat--the steamer Mary Martin. For some days Mr. Lincoln +had been at City Point, established on the steamer River Queen, +having come down from Washington to be nearer his generals, no doubt, +and also to be conveniently situated for the reception of tidings +from the front when operations began, for he could not endure the +delays in getting news to Washington. This trip up the James had +been projected by General Meade, but on account of demands at the +front he could not go, so the President, General Grant, and I +composed the party. We steamed up to where my cavalry was crossing +on the pontoon-bridge below the mouth of the Dutch Gap canal, and for +a little while watched the column as it was passing over the river, +the bright sunshine presaging good weather, but only to delude, as +was proved by the torrents of rain brought by the succeeding days of +March. On the trip the President was not very cheerful. In fact, he +was dejected, giving no indication of his usual means of diversion, +by which (his quaint stories) I had often heard he could find relief +from his cares. He spoke to me of the impending operations and asked +many questions, laying stress upon the one, "What would be the result +when the army moved out to the left, if the enemy should come down +and capture City Point?" the question being prompted, doubtless, by +the bold assault on our lines and capture of Fort Steadman two days +before by General Gordon. I answered that I did not think it at all +probable that General Lee would undertake such a desperate measure to +relieve the strait he was in; that General Hartranft's successful +check to Gordon had ended, I thought, attacks of such a character; +and in any event General Grant would give Lee all he could attend to +on the left. Mr. Lincoln said nothing about my proposed route of +march, and I doubt if he knew of my instructions, or was in +possession at most of more than a very general outline of the plan of +campaign. It was late when the Mary Martin returned to City Point, +and I spent the night there with General Ingalls. + +The morning of the 27th I went out to Hancock Station to look after +my troops and prepare for moving two days later. In the afternoon I +received a telegram from General Grant, saying: "General Sherman will +be here this evening to spend a few hours. I should like to have you +come down." Sherman's coming was a surprise--at least to me it was-- +this despatch being my first intimation of his expected arrival. +Well knowing the zeal and emphasis with which General Sherman would +present his views, there again came into my mind many misgivings with +reference to the movement of the cavalry, and I made haste to start +for Grant's headquarters. I got off a little after 7 o'clock, taking +the rickety military railroad, the rails of which were laid on the +natural surface of the ground, with grading only here and there at +points of absolute necessity, and had not gone far when the +locomotive jumped the track. This delayed my arrival at City Point +till near midnight, but on repairing to the little cabin that +sheltered the general-in-chief, I found him and Sherman still up +talking over the problem whose solution was near at hand. As already +stated, thoughts as to the tenor of my instructions became uppermost +the moment I received the telegram in the afternoon, and they +continued to engross and disturb me all the way down the railroad, +for I feared that the telegram foreshadowed, under the propositions +Sherman would present, a more specific compliance with the written +instructions than General Grant had orally assured me would be +exacted. + +My entrance into the shanty suspended the conversation for a moment +only, and then General Sherman, without prelude, rehearsed his plans +for moving his army, pointing out with every detail how he would come +up through the Carolinas to join the troops besieging Petersburg and +Richmond, and intimating that my cavalry, after striking the +Southside and Danville railroads, could join him with ease. I made +no comments on the projects for moving, his own troops, but as soon +as opportunity offered, dissented emphatically from the proposition +to have me join the Army of the Tennessee, repeating in substance +what I had previously expressed to General Grant. + +My uneasiness made me somewhat too earnest, I fear, but General Grant +soon mollified me, and smoothed matters over by practically repeating +what he had told me in regard to this point at the close of our +interview the day before, so I pursued the subject no further. In a +little while the conference ended, and I again sought lodging at the +hospitable quarters of Ingalls. + +Very early the next morning, while I was still in bed, General +Sherman came to me and renewed the subject of my joining him, but +when he saw that I was unalterably opposed to it the conversation +turned into other channels, and after we had chatted awhile he +withdrew, and later in the day went up the river with the President, +General Grant, and Admiral Porter, I returning to my command at +Hancock Station, where my presence was needed to put my troops in +march next day. + +During the entire winter General Grant's lines fronting Petersburg +had extended south of the Appomattox River, practically from that +stream around to where the Vaughn road crosses Hatcher's Run, and +this was nearly the situation Wilien the cavalry concentrated at +Hancock Station, General Weitzel holding the line north of the +Appomattox, fronting Richmond and Bermuda Hundred. + +The instructions of the 24th of March contemplated that the campaign +should begin with the movement of Warren's corps (the Fifth) at +3 o'clock on the morning of the 29th, and Humphreys's (the Second) at +6; the rest of the infantry holding on in the trenches. The cavalry +was to move in conjunction with Warren and Humphreys, and make its +way out beyond our left as these corps opened the road. + +The night of the 28th I received the following additional +instructions, the general tenor of which again disturbed me, for +although I had been assured that I was not to join General Sherman, +it will be seen that the supplemental directions distinctly present +that alternative, and I therefore feared that during the trip up the +James River on the morning of the 28th General Grant had returned to +his original views: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"City Point, Va., March 28, 1865. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN: + +"The Fifth Army Corps will move by the Vaughn road at 3 A.M. +tomorrow morning. The Second moves at about 9 A.M., having but about +three miles to march to reach the point designated for it to take on +the right of the Fifth Corps, after the latter reaches Dinwiddie +Court House. + +"Move your cavalry at as early an hour as you can, and without being +confined to any particular road or roads. You may go out by the +nearest roads in rear of the Fifth Corps, pass by its left, and +passing near to or through Dinwiddie, reach the right and rear of the +enemy as soon as you can. It is not the intention to attack the +enemy in his intrenched position, but to force him out if possible. +Should he come out and attack us, or get himself where he can be +attacked, move in with your entire force in your own way, and with +the full reliance that the army will engage or follow the enemy, as +circumstances will dictate. I shall be on the field, and will +probably be able to communicate with you; should I not do so, and you +find that the enemy keeps within his main intrenched line, you may +cut loose and push for the Danville road. If you find it practicable +I would like you to cross the Southside road, between Petersburg and +Burkeville, and destroy it to some extent. I would not advise much +detention, however, until you reach the Danville road, which I would +like you to strike as near to the Appomattox as possible; make your +destruction of that road as complete as possible; you can then pass +on to the Southside road, west of Burkeville, and destroy that in +like manner. + +"After having accomplished the destruction of the two railroads, +which are now the only avenues of supply to Lee's army, you may +return to this army, selecting your road farther south, or you may go +on into North Carolina and join General Sherman. Should you select +the latter course, get the information to me as early as possible, so +that I may send orders to meet you at Goldsboro'. + +"U. S. GRANT, Lieut.-General." + + +These instructions did not alter my line of march for the morrow, and +I trusted matters would so come about as not to require compliance +with those portions relative to the railroads and to joining Sherman; +so early on the 29th I moved my cavalry out toward Ream's Station on +the Weldon road, Devin commanding the First Division, with Colonels +Gibbs, Stagg, and Fitzhugh in charge of the brigades; the Third +Division under Custer, Colonels Wells, Capehart and Pennington being +the brigade commanders. These two divisions united were commanded by +Merritt, as they had been since leaving Winchester. Crook headed the +Second Division, his brigades being under General Davies and Colonels +John I. Gregg and Smith. + +Our general direction was westward, over such routes as could be +found, provided they did not embarrass the march of the infantry. +The roads, from the winter's frosts and rains, were in a frightful +state, and when it was sought to avoid a spot which the head of the +column had proved almost bottomless, the bogs and quicksands of the +adjoining fields demonstrated that to make a detour was to go from +bad to worse. In the face of these discouragements we floundered on, +however, crossing on the way a series of small streams swollen to +their banks. Crook and Devin reached the county-seat of Dinwiddie +about 5 o'clock in the evening, having encountered only a small +picket, that at once gave way to our advance. Merritt left Custer at +Malon's crossing of Rowanty Creek to care for the trains containing +our subsistence and the reserve ammunition, these being stuck in the +mire at, intervals all the way back to the Jerusalem plank-road; and +to make any headway at all with the trains, Custer's men often had to +unload the wagons and lift them out of the boggy places. + +Crook and Devin camped near Dinwiddie Court House in such manner as +to cover the Vaughn, Flatfoot, Boydton, and Five Forks roads; for, as +these all intersected at Dinwiddie, they offered a chance for the +enemy's approach toward the rear of the Fifth Corps, as Warren +extended to the left across the Boydton road. Any of these routes +leading to the south or west might also be the one on which, in +conformity with one part of my instructions, I was expected to get +out toward the Danville and Southside railroads, and the Five Forks +road would lead directly to General Lee's right flank, in case +opportunity was found to comply with the other part. The place was, +therefore, of great strategic value, and getting it without cost +repaid us for floundering through the mud. + +Dinwiddie Court House, though a most important point in the campaign, +was far from attractive in feature, being made up of a half-dozen +unsightly houses, a ramshackle tavern propped up on two sides with +pine poles, and the weatherbeaten building that gave official name to +the cross-roads. We had no tents--there were none in the command--so +I took possession of the tavern for shelter for myself and staff, and +just as we had finished looking over its primitive interior a rain +storm set in. + +The wagon containing my mess equipment was back somewhere on the +road, hopelessly stuck in the mud, and hence we had nothing to eat +except some coffee which two young women living at the tavern kindly +made for us; a small quantity of the berry being furnished from the +haversacks of my escort. By the time we got the coffee, rain was +falling in sheets, and the evening bade fair to be a most dismal one; +but songs and choruses set up by some of my staff--the two young +women playing accompaniments on a battered piano--relieved the +situation and enlivened us a little. However, the dreary night +brought me one great comfort; for General Grant, who that day had +moved out to Gravelly Run, sent me instructions to abandon all idea +of the contemplated raid, and directed me to act in concert with the +infantry under his immediate command, to turn, if possible, the right +flank of Lee's army. The despatch made my mind easy with respect to +the objectionable feature of my original instructions, and of course +relieved me also from the anxiety growing out of the letter received +at Hancock Station the night of the 28th; so, notwithstanding the +suspicions excited by some of my staff concerning the Virginia +feather-bed that had been assigned me, I turned in at a late hour and +slept most soundly. + +The night of the 29th the left of General Grant's infantry--Warren's +corps--rested on the Boydton road, not far from its intersection with +the Quaker road. Humphreys's corps was next to Warren; then came +Ord, next Wright, and then Parke, with his right resting on the +Appomattox. The moving of Warren and Humphreys to the left during +the day was early discovered by General Lee. He met it by extending +the right of his infantry on the White Oak road, while drawing in the +cavalry of W. H. F. Lee and Rosser along the south bank of Stony +Creek to cover a crossroads called Five Forks, to anticipate me +there; for assuming that my command was moving in conjunction with +the infantry, with the ultimate purpose of striking the Southside +railroad, Lee made no effort to hold Dinwiddie, which he might have +done with his cavalry, and in this he made a fatal mistake. The +cavalry of Fitz. Lee was ordered at this same time from Sunderland +depot to Five Forks, and its chief placed in command of all the +mounted troops of General Lee's army. + +At daylight on ttie 3oth I proceeded to make dispositions under the +new conditions imposed by my modified instructions, and directed +Merritt to push Devin out as far as the White Oak road to make a +reconnoissance to Five Forks, Crook being instructed to send Davies's +brigade to support Devin. Crook was to hold, with Gregg's brigade, +the Stony Creek crossing of the Boydton plank road, retaining Smith's +near Dinwiddie, for use in any direction required. On the 29th W. H. +F. Lee conformed the march of his cavalry with that of ours, but my +holding Stony Creek in this way forced him to make a detour west of +Chamberlin's Run, in order to get in communication with his friends +at Five Forks. + +The rain that had been falling all night gave no sign of stopping, +but kept pouring down all day long, and the swamps and quicksands +mired the horses, whether they marched in the roads or across the +adjacent fields. Undismayed, nevertheless, each column set out for +its appointed duty, but shortly after the troops began to move I +received from General Grant this despatch, which put a new phase on +matters: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"GRAVELLY RUN, March 30, 1865. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL SHERIDAN: + +"The heavy rain of to-day will make it impossible for us to do much +until it dries up a little, or we get roads around our rear repaired. +You may, therefore, leave what cavalry you deem necessary to protect +the left, and hold such positions as you deem necessary for that +purpose, and send the remainder back to Humphrey's Station where they +can get hay and grain. Fifty wagons loaded with forage will be sent +to you in the morning. Send an officer back to direct the wagons +back to where you want them. Report to me the cavalry you will leave +back, and the position you will occupy. Could not your cavalry go +back by the way of Stony Creek depot and destroy or capture the store +of supplies there? + +"U. S. GRANT, Lieut.-General." + + +When I had read and pondered this, I determined to ride over to +General Grant's headquarters on Gravelly Run, and get a clear idea of +what it was proposed to do, for it seemed to me that a suspension of +operations would be a serious mistake. Mounting a powerful gray +pacing horse called Breckenridge (from its capture from one of +Breckenridge's staff-officers at Missionary Ridge), and that I knew +would carry me through the mud, I set out accompanied by my Assistant +Adjutant-General, Colonel Frederick C. Newhall, and an escort of +about ten or fifteen men. At first we rode north up the Boydton +plank-road, and coming upon our infantry pickets from a direction +where the enemy was expected to appear, they began to fire upon us, +but seeing from our actions that we were friends, they ceased, and +permitted us to pass the outposts. We then struggled on in a +northeasterly direction across-country, till we struck the Vaughn +road. This carried us to army headquarters, which were established +south of Gravelly Run in an old cornfield. I rode to within a few +yards of the front of General Grant's tent, my horse plunging at +every step almost to his knees in the mud, and dismounted near a +camp-fire, apparently a general one, for all the staff-officers were +standing around it on boards and rails placed here and there to keep +them from sinking into the mire. + +Going directly to General Grant's tent, I found him and Rawlins +talking over the question of suspending operations till the weather +should improve. No orders about the matter had been issued yet, +except the despatch to me, and Rawlins, being strongly opposed to the +proposition, was frankly expostulating with General Grant, who, after +greeting me, remarked, in his quiet way: "Well, Rawlins, I think you +had better take command." Seeing that there was a difference up +between Rawlins and his chief, I made the excuse of being wet and +cold, and went outside to the fire. Here General Ingalls met me and +took me to his tent, where I was much more comfortable than when +standing outside, and where a few minutes later we were joined by +General Grant. Ingalls then retired, and General Grant began talking +of our fearful plight, resulting from the rains and mud, and saying +that because of this it seemed necessary to suspend operations. I at +once begged him not to do so, telling him that my cavalry was already +on the move in spite of the difficulties, and that although a +suspension of operations would not be fatal, yet it would give rise +to the very charge of disaster to which he had referred at City +Point, and, moreover, that we would surely be ridiculed, just as +General Burnside's army was after the mud march of 1863. His better +judgment was against suspending operations, but the proposition had +been suggested by all sorts of complaints as to the impossibility of +moving the trains and the like, so it needed little argument to +convince him, and without further discussion he said, in that manner +which with him meant a firmness of purpose that could not be changed +by further complainings, "We will go on." I then told him that I +believed I could break in the enemy's right if he would let me have +the Sixth Corps; but saying that the condition of the roads would +prevent the movement of infantry, he replied that I would have to +seize Five Forks with the cavalry alone. + +On my way back to Dinwiddie I stopped at the headquarters of General +Warren, but the General being asleep, I went to the tent of one of +his staff-officers. Colonel William T. Gentry, an old personal +friend with whom I had served in Oregon. In a few minutes Warren +came in and we had a short conversation, he speaking rather +despondently of the outlook, being influenced no doubt by the +depressing weather. + +From Warren's headquarters I returned, by the Boydton road to +Dinwiddie Court House, fording Gravelly Run with ease. When I got as +far as the Dabney road I sent Colonel Newhall out on it toward Five +Forks, with orders for Merritt to develop the enemy's position and +strength, and then rode on to Dinwiddie to endeavor to get all my +other troops up. Merritt was halted at the intersection of the Five +Forks and Gravelly Church roads when Newhall delivered the orders, +and in compliance moving out Gibbs's brigade promptly, sharp +skirmishing was brought on, Gibbs driving the Confederates to Five +Forks, where he found them behind a line of breastworks running along +the White Oak road. The reconnoissance demonstrating the intention +of the enemy to hold this point, Gibbs was withdrawn. + +That evening, at 7 o'clock, I reported the position of the +Confederate cavalry, and stated that it had been reinforced by +Pickett's division of infantry. On receipt of this despatch, General +Grant offered me the Fifth Corps, but I declined to take it, and +again asked for the Sixth, saying that with it I believed I could +turn the enemy (Pickett's) left, or break through his lines. The +morning of the 31st General Grant replied the the Sixth Corps could +not be taken from its position in the line, and offered me the +Second; but in the mean time circumstances had changed, and no corps +was ordered. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +BATTLE OF DINWIDDIE COURT HOUSE--PICKETT REPULSED--REINFORCED BY THE +FIFTH CORPS--BATTLE OF FIVE FORKS--TURNING THE CONFEDERATE LEFT--AN +UNQUALIFIED SUCCESS--RELIEVING GENERAL WARREN--THE WARREN COURT OF +INQUIRY--GENERAL SHERMAN'S OPINION. + +The night of March 30 Merritt, with Devin's division and Davies's +brigade, was camped on the Five Forks road about two miles in front +of Dinwiddie, near J. Boisseau's. Crook, with Smith and Gregg's +brigades, continued to cover Stony Creek, and Custer was still back +at Rowanty Creek, trying to get the trains up. This force had been +counted while crossing the creek on the 29th, the three divisions +numbering 9,000 enlisted men, Crook having 3,300, and Custer and +Devin 5,700. + +During the 30th, the enemy had been concentrating his cavalry, and by +evening General W. H. F. Lee and General Rosser had joined Fitzhugh +Lee near Five Forks. To this force was added, about dark, five +brigades of infantry--three from Pickett's division, and two from +Johnson's--all under command of Pickett. The infantry came by the +White Oak road from the right of General Lee's intrenchments, and +their arrival became positively known to me about dark, the +confirmatory intelligence being brought in then by some of Young's +scouts who had been inside the Confederate lines. + +On the 31st, the rain having ceased, directions were given at an +early hour to both Merritt and Crook to make reconnoissances +preparatory to securing Five Forks, and about 9 o'clock Merritt +started for the crossroads, Davies's brigade supporting him. His +march was necessarily slow because of the mud, and the enemy's +pickets resisted with obstinacy also, but the coveted crossroads fell +to Merritt without much trouble, as the bulk of the enemy was just +then bent on other things. At the same hour that Merritt started, +Crook moved Smith's brigade out northwest from Dinwiddie to +Fitzgerald's crossing of Chamberlain's Creek, to cover Merritt's +left, supporting Smith by placing Gregg to his right and rear. The +occupation of this ford was timely, for Pickett, now in command of +both the cavalry and infantry, was already marching to get in +Merritt's rear by crossing Chamberlain's Creek. + +To hold on to Fitzgerald's ford Smith had to make a sharp fight, but +Mumford's cavalry attacking Devin, the enemy's infantry succeeded in +getting over Chamberlain's Creek at a point higher up than +Fitzgerald's ford, and assailing Davies, forced him back in a +northeasterly direction toward the Dinwiddie and Five Forks road in +company with Devin. The retreat of Davies permitted Pickett to pass +between Crook and Merritt, which he promptly did, effectually +separating them and cutting off both Davies and Devin from the road +to Dinwiddie, so that to get to that point they had to retreat across +the country to B. Boisseau's and then down the Boydton road. + +Gibbs's brigade had been in reserve near the intersection of the Five +Forks and Dabney roads, and directing Merritt to hold on there, I +ordered Gregg's brigade to be mounted and brought to Merritt's aid, +for if Pickett continued in pursuit north of the Five Forks road he +would expose his right and rear, and I determined to attack him, in +such case, from Gibbs's position. Gregg arrived in good season, and +as soon as his men were dismounted on Gibbs's left, Merritt assailed +fiercely, compelling Pickett to halt and face a new foe, thus +interrupting an advance that would finally have carried Pickett into +the rear of Warren's corps. + +It was now about 4 o'clock in the afternoon and we were in a critical +situation, but having ordered Merritt to bring Devin and Davies to +Dinwiddie by the Boydton road, staff-officers were sent to hurry +Custer to the same point, for with its several diverging roads the +Court House was of vital importance, and I determined to stay there +at all hazards. At the same time orders were sent to Smith's +brigade, which, by the advance of Pickett past its right flank and +the pressure of W. H. F. Lee on its front, had been compelled to give +up Fitzgerald's crossing, to fall back toward Dinwiddie but to +contest every inch of ground so as to gain time. + +When halted by the attack of Gregg and Gibbs, Pickett, desisting from +his pursuit of Devin, as already stated, turned his undivided +attention to this unexpected force, and with his preponderating +infantry pressed it back on the Five Forks road toward Dinwiddle, +though our men, fighting dismounted behind barricades at different +points, displayed such obstinacy as to make Pickett's progress slow, +and thus give me time to look out a line for defending the Court +House. I selected a place about three-fourths of a mile northwest of +the crossroads, and Custer coming up quickly with Capehart's brigade, +took position on the left of the road to Five Forks in some open +ground along the crest of a gentle ridge. Custer got Capehart into +place just in time to lend a hand to Smith, who, severely pressed, +came back on us here from his retreat along Chamberlain's "bed"--the +vernacular for a woody swamp such as that through which Smith +retired. A little later the brigades of Gregg and Gibbs, falling to +the rear slowly and steadily, took up in the woods a line which +covered the Boydton Road some distance to the right of Capehart, the +intervening gap to be filled with Pennington's brigade. By this time +our horse-artillery, which for two days had been stuck in the mud, +was all up, and every gun was posted in this line. + +It was now near sunset, and the enemy's cavalry thinking the day was +theirs, made a dash at Smith, but just as the assailants appeared in +the open fields, Capehart's men opened so suddenly on their left +flank as to cause it to recoil in astonishment, which permitted Smith +to connect his brigade with Custer unmolested. We were now in good +shape behind the familiar barricades, and having a continuous line, +excepting only the gap to be filled with Pennington, that covered +Dinwiddie and the Boydton Road. My left rested in the woods about +half a mile west of the Court House, and the barricades extended from +this flank in a semicircle through the open fields in a northeasterly +direction, to a piece-of thick timber on the right, near the Boydton +Road. + +A little before the sun went down the Confederate infantry was formed +for the attack, and, fortunately for us, Pennington's brigade came up +and filled the space to which it was assigned between Capehart and +Gibbs, just as Pickett moved out across the cleared fields in front +of Custer, in deep lines that plainly told how greatly we were +outnumbered. + +Accompanied by Generals Merritt and Custer and my staff, I now rode +along the barricades to encourage the men. Our enthusiastic +reception showed that they were determined to stay. The cavalcade +drew the enemy's fire, which emptied several of the saddles--among +others Mr. Theodore Wilson, correspondent of the New York Herald, +being wounded. In reply our horse-artillery opened on the advancing +Confederates, but the men behind the barricades lay still till +Pickett's troops were within short range. Then they opened, Custer's +repeating rifles pouring out such a shower of lead that nothing could +stand up against it. The repulse was very quick, and as the gray +lines retired to the woods from which but a few minutes before they +had so confidently advanced, all danger of their taking Dinwiddie or +marching to the left and rear of our infantry line was over, at least +for the night. The enemy being thus checked, I sent a staff-officer- +-Captain Sheridan--to General Grant to report what had taken place +during the afternoon, and to say that I proposed to stay at +Dinwiddie, but if ultimately compelled to abandon the place, I would +do so by retiring on the Vaughn road toward Hatcher's Run, for I then +thought the attack might be renewed next morning. Devin and Davies +joined me about dark, and my troops being now well in hand, I sent a +second staff-officer--Colonel John Kellogg--to explain my situation +more fully, and to assure General Grant that I would hold on at +Dinwiddie till forced to let go. + +By following me to Dinwiddie the enemy's infantry had completely +isolated itself, and hence there was now offered the Union troops a +rare opportunity. Lee was outside of his works, just as we desired, +and the general-in-chief realized this the moment he received the +first report of my situation; General Meade appreciated it too from +the information he got from Captain Sheridan, en route to army +headquarters with the first tidings, and sent this telegram to +General Grant: + +"HEADQUARTERS OF THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC, +"March 31, 1865. 9:45 p.m. + +"LIEUTENANT-GENERAL GRANT: + +"Would it not be well for Warren to go down with his whole corps and +smash up the force in front of Sheridan? Humphreys can hold the line +to the Boydton plank-road, and the refusal along with it. Bartlett's +brigade is now on the road from G. Boisseau's, running north, where +it crosses Gravelly Run, he having gone down the White Oak road. +Warren could go at once that way, and take the force threatening +Sheridan in rear at Dinwiddie, and move on the enemy's rear with the +other two. + +"G. G. MEADE, Major-General." + + +An hour later General Grant replied in these words: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"DABNEY'S MILLS, March 311, 1865. 10:15 P. M. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL MEADE, +"Commanding Army of the Potomac. + +Let Warren move in the way you propose, and urge him not to stop for +anything. Let Griffin (Griffin had been ordered by Warren to the +Boydton road to protect his rear) go on as he was first directed. + +"U. S. GRANT, Lieutenant-General." + + +These two despatches were the initiatory steps in sending the Fifth +Corps, under Major-General G. K. Warren, to report to me, and when I +received word of its coming and also that Genera Mackenzie's cavalry +from the Army of the James was likewise to be added to my command, +and that discretionary authority was given me to use all my forces +against Pickett, I resolved to destroy him, if it was within the +bounds of possibility, before he could rejoin Lee. + +In a despatch, dated 10:05 p.m., telling me of the coming of Warren +and Mackenzie, General Grant also said that the Fifth Corps should +reach me by 12 o'clock that night, but at that hour not only had none +of the corps arrived, but no report from it, so believing that if it +came all the way down to Dinwiddie the next morning, our opportunity +would be gone, I concluded that it would be best to order Warren to +move in on the enemy's rear while the cavalry attacked in front, and, +therefore, at 3 o'clock in the morning of April 1 sent this despatch +to General Warren: + +"CAVALRY HEADQUARTERS, DINWIDDIE C. H., +"April 1, 1865--3. A.M. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL WARREN, +"Commanding Fifth Army Corps. + +"I am holding in front of Dinwiddie Court House, on the road leading +to Five Forks, for three-quarters of a mile with General Custer's +division. The enemy are in his immediate front, lying so as to cover +the road just this side of A. Adams's house, which leads across +Chamberlain's bed, or run. I understand you have a division at J.[G] +Boisseau's; if so, you are in rear of the enemy's line and almost on +his flank. I will hold on here. Possibly they may attack Custer at +daylight; if so, attack instantly and in full force. Attack at +daylight anyhow, and I will make an effort to get the road this side +of Adams's house, and if I do, you can capture the whole of them. +Any force moving down the road I am holding, or on the White Oak +road, will be in the enemy's rear, and in all probability get any +force that may escape you by a flank movement. Do not fear my +leaving here. If the enemy remains, I shall fight at daylight. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + +With daylight came a slight fog, but it lifted almost immediately, +and Merritt moved Custer and Devin forward. As these divisions +advanced the enemy's infantry fell back on the Five Forks road, Devin +pressing him along the road, while Custer extended on the left over +toward Chamberlain's Run, Crook being held in watch along Stony +Creek, meanwhile, to be utilized as circumstances might require when +Warren attacked. + +The order of General Meade to Warren the night of March 31--a copy +being sent me also--was positive in its directions, but as midnight +came without a sign of or word from the Fifth Corps, notwithstanding +that was the hour fixed for its arrival, I nevertheless assumed that +there were good reasons for its non-appearance, but never once +doubted that measures would be taken to comply with my despatch Of +3 A. M. and therefore hoped that, as Pickett was falling back slowly +toward Five Forks, Griffin's and Crawford's divisions would come in +on the Confederate left and rear by the Crump road near J.[G] +Boisseau's house. + +But they did not reach there till after the enemy had got by. As a +matter of fact, when Pickett was passing the all-important point +Warren's men were just breaking from the bivouac in which their chief +had placed them the night before, and the head of Griffin's division +did not get to Boisseau's till after my cavalry, which meanwhile had +been joined by Ayres's division of the Fifth Corps by way of the +Boydton and Dabney roads. By reason of the delay in moving Griffin +and Crawford, the enemy having escaped, I massed the Fifth Corps at +J.[G] Boisseau's so that the men could be rested, and directed it to +remain there; General Warren himself had not then come up. General +Mackenzie, who had reported just after daybreak, was ordered at first +to stay at Dinwiddie Court House, but later was brought along the +Five Forks road to Dr. Smith's, and Crook's division was directed to +continue watching the crossings of Stony Creek and Chamberlain's Run. + +That we had accomplished nothing but to oblige our foe to retreat was +to me bitterly disappointing, but still feeling sure that he would +not give up the Five Forks crossroads without a fight, I pressed him +back there with Merritt's cavalry, Custer advancing on the Scott +road, while Devin drove the rearguard along that leading from J.[G] +Boisseau's to Five Forks. + +By 2 o'clock in the afternoon Merritt had forced the enemy inside his +intrenchments, which began with a short return about three-quarters +of a mile east of the Forks and ran along the south side of the White +Oak road to a point about a mile west of the Forks. From the left of +the return over toward Hatcher's Run was posted Mumford's cavalry, +dismounted. In the return itself was Wallace's brigade, and next on +its right came Ransom's, then Stewart's, then Terry's, then Corse's. +On the right of Corse was W. H. F. Lee's division of cavalry. Ten +pieces of artillery also were in this line, three on the right of the +works, three near the centre at the crossroads, and four on the left, +in the return. Rosser's cavalry was guarding the Confederate trains +north of Hatcher's Run beyond the crossing of the Ford road. + +I felt certain the enemy would fight at Five Forks--he had to--so, +while we were getting up to his intrenchments, I decided on my plan +of battle. This was to attack his whole front with Merritt's two +cavalry divisions, make a feint of turning his right flank, and with +the Fifth Corps assail his left. As the Fifth Corps moved into +action, its right flank was to be covered by Mackenzie's cavalry, +thus entirely cutting off Pickett's troops from communication with +Lee's right flank, which rested near the Butler house at the junction +of the Claiborne and White Oaks roads. In execution of this plan, +Merritt worked his men close in toward the intrenchments, and while +he was thus engaged, I ordered Warren to bring up the Fifth Corps, +sending the order by my engineer officer, Captain Gillespie, who had +reconnoitred the ground in the neighborhood of Gravelly Run Church, +where the infantry was to form for attack. + +Gillespie delivered the order about 1 o'clock, and when the corps was +put in motion, General Warren joined me at the front. Before he +came, I had received, through Colonel Babcock, authority from General +Grant to relieve him, but I did not wish to do it, particularly on +the eve of battle; so, saying nothing at all about the message +brought me, I entered at once on the plan for defeating Pickett, +telling Warren how the enemy was posted, explaining with considerable +detail, and concluding by stating that I wished his troops to be +formed on the Gravelly Church road, near its junction with the White +Oak road, with two divisions to the front, aligned obliquely to the +White Oak road, and one in reserve, opposite the centre of these two. + +General Warren seemed to understand me clearly, and then left to join +his command, while I turned my attention to the cavalry, instructing +Merritt to begin by making demonstrations as though to turn the +enemy's right, and to assault the front of the works with his +dismounted cavalry as soon as Warren became engaged. Afterward I +rode around to Gravelly Run Church, and found the head of Warren's +column just appearing, while he was sitting under a tree making a +rough sketch of the ground. I was disappointed that more of the +corps was not already up, and as the precious minutes went by without +any apparent effort to hurry the troops on to the field, this +disappointment grew into disgust. At last I expressed to Warren my +fears that the cavalry might expend all their ammunition before the +attack could be made, that the sun would go down before the battle +could be begun, or that troops from Lee's right, which, be it +remembered, was less than three miles away from my right, might, by +striking my rear, or even by threatening it, prevent the attack on +Pickett. + +Warren did not seem to me to be at all solicitous; his manner +exhibited decided apathy, and he remarked with indifference that +"Bobby Lee was always getting people into trouble." With unconcern +such as this, it is no wonder that fully three hours' time was +consumed in marching his corps from J.[G] Boisseau's to Gravelly Run +Church, though the distance was but two miles. However, when my +patience was almost worn out, Warren reported his troops ready, +Ayres's division being formed on the west side of the Gravelly Church +road, Crawford's on the east side, and Griffin in reserve behind the +right of Crawford, a little different from my instructions. The +corps had no artillery present, its batteries, on account of the mud, +being still north of Gravelly Run. Meanwhile Merritt had been busy +working his men close up to the intrenchments from the angle of the +return west, along the White Oak road. + +About 4 o'clock Warren began the attack. He was to assault the left +flank of the Confederate infantry at a point where I knew Pickett's +intrenchments were refused, almost at right angles with the White Oak +road. I did not know exactly how far toward Hatcher's Run this part +of the works extended, for here the videttes of Mumford's cavalry +were covering, but I did know where the refusal began. This return, +then, was the point I wished to assail, believing that if the assault +was made with spirit, the line could be turned. I therefore intended +that Ayres and Crawford should attack the refused trenches squarely, +and when these two divisions and Merritt's cavalry became hotly +engaged, Griffin's division was to pass around the left of the +Confederate line; and I personally instructed Griffin how I wished +him to go in, telling him also that as he advanced, his right flank +would be taken care of by Mackenzie, who was to be pushed over toward +the Ford road and Hatcher's Run. + +The front of the corps was oblique to the White Oak road; and on +getting there, it was to swing round to the left till perpendicular +to the road, keeping closed to the left. Ayres did his part well, +and to the letter, bringing his division square up to the front of +the return near the angle; but Crawford did not wheel to the left, as +was intended. On the contrary, on receiving fire from Mumford's +cavalry, Crawford swerved to the right and moved north from the +return, thus isolating his division from Ayres; and Griffin, +uncertain of the enemy's position, naturally followed Crawford. + +The deflection of this division on a line of march which finally +brought it out on the Ford road near C. Young's house, frustrated the +purpose I had in mind when ordering the attack, and caused a gap +between Ayres and Crawford, of which the enemy quickly took +advantage, and succeeded in throwing a part of Ayres's division into +confusion. At this juncture I sent word to General Warren to have +Crawford recalled; for the direction he was following was not only a +mistaken one, but, in case the assault at the return failed, he ran +great risk of capture. Warren could not be found, so I then sent for +Griffin--first by Colonel Newhall, and then by Colonel Sherman--to +come to the aid of Ayres, who was now contending alone with that part +of the enemy's infantry at the return. By this time Griffin had +observed and appreciated Crawford's mistake, however, and when the +staff-officers reached him, was already faced to the left; so, +marching across Crawford's rear, he quickly joined Ayres, who +meanwhile had rallied his troops and carried the return. + +When Ayres's division went over the flank of the enemy's works, +Devin's division of cavalry, which had been assaulting the front, +went over in company with it; and hardly halting to reform, the +intermingling infantry and dismounted cavalry swept down inside the +intrenchments, pushing to and beyond Five Forks, capturing thousands +of prisoners. The only stand the enemy tried to make was when he +attempted to form near the Ford road. Griffin pressed him so hard +there, however, that he had to give way in short order, and many of +his men, with three pieces of artillery, fell into the hands of +Crawford while on his circuitous march. + +The right of Custer's division gained a foothold on the enemy's works +simultaneously with Devin's, but on the extreme left Custer had a +very severe combat with W. H. F. Lee's cavalry, as well as with +Corse's and Terry's infantry. Attacking Terry and Corse with +Pennington's brigade dismounted, he assailed Lee's cavalry with his +other two brigades mounted, but Lee held on so obstinately that +Custer gained but little ground till our troops, advancing behind the +works, drove Corse and Terry out. Then Lee made no further stand +except at the west side of the Gillian field, where, assisted by +Corse's brigade, he endeavored to cover the retreat, but just before +dark Custer, in concert with some Fifth Corps regiments under Colonel +Richardson, drove ihe last of the enemy westward on the White Oak +road. + +Our success was unqualified; we had overthrown Pickett, taken six +guns, thirteen battle-flags, and nearly six thousand prisoners. When +the battle was practically over, I turned to consider my position +with reference to the main Confederate army. My troops, though +victorious, were isolated from the Army of the Potomac, for on the +31st of March the extreme left of that army had been thrown back +nearly to the Boydton plank-road, and hence there was nothing to +prevent the enemy's issuing from his trenches at the intersection of +the White Oak and Claiborne roads and marching directly on my rear. +I surmised that he might do this that night or early next morning. +It was therefore necessary to protect myself in this critical +situation, and General Warren having sorely disappointed me, both in +the moving of his corps and in its management during the battle, I +felt that he was not the man to rely upon under such circumstances, +and deeming that it was to the best interest of the service as well +as but just to myself, I relieved him, ordering him to report to +General Grant. + +I then put Griffin in command of the Fifth Corps, and directed him to +withdraw from the pursuit as quickly as he could after following the +enemy a short distance, and form in line of battle near Gravelly Run +Church, at right angles with the White Oak road, with Ayres and +Crawford facing toward the enemy at the junction of the White Oak and +Claiborne roads, leaving Bartlett, now commanding Griffin's division, +near the Ford road. Mackenzie also was left on the Ford road at the +crossing of Hatcher's Run, Merritt going into camp on the Widow +Gillian's plantation. As I had been obliged to keep Crook's division +along Stony Creek throughout the day, it had taken no active part in +the battle. + +Years after the war, in 1879, a Court of Inquiry was given General +Warren in relation to his conduct on the day of the battle. He +assumed that the delay in not granting his request for an inquiry, +which was first made at the close of the war, was due to opposition +on my part. In this he was in error; I never opposed the ordering of +the Court, but when it was finally decided to convene it I naturally +asked to be represented by counsel, for the authorization of the +Inquiry was so peculiarly phrased that it made me practically a +respondent. + + +"NEW YORK CITY, May 3, 1880 + +"MAJOR-GENERAL W. S. HANCOCK, U. S. A. +"President Court of Inquiry, Governor's Island. + +"Sir: Since my arrival in this city, under a subpoena to appear and +testify before the Court of which you are president, I have been +indirectly and unofficially informed that the Court some time ago +forwarded an invitation to me (which has not been received) to appear +personally or by counsel, in order to aid it in obtaining a knowledge +as to the facts concerning the movements terminating in the battle of +'Five Forks,' with reference to the direct subjects of its inquiry. +Any invitation of this character I should always and do consider it +incumbent on me to accede to, and do everything in my power in +furtherance of the specific purposes for which courts of inquiry are +by law instituted. + +"The order convening the Court (a copy of which was not received by +me at my division headquarters until two days after the time +appointed for the Court to assemble) contemplates an inquiry based on +the application of Lieutenant Colonel G. K. Warren, Corps of +Engineers, as to his conduct while major-general commanding the Fifth +Army Corps, under my command, in reference to accusations or +imputations assumed in the order to have been made against him, and I +understand through the daily press that my official report of the +battle of Five Forks has been submitted by him as a basis of inquiry. + +"If it is proposed to inquire, either directly or indirectly, as to +any action of mine so far as the commanding general Fifth Army Corps +was concerned, or my motives for such action, I desire to be +specifically informed wherein such action or transaction is alleged +to contain an accusation or imputation to become a subject of +inquiry, so that, knowing what issues are raised, I may intelligently +aid the Court in arriving at the facts. + +"It is a long time since the battle of Five Forks was fought, and +during the time that has elapsed the official reports of that battle +have been received and acknowledged by the Government; but now, when +the memory of events has in many instances grown dim, and three of +the principal actors on that field are dead--Generals Griffin, +Custer, and Devin, whose testimony would have been valuable--an +investigation is ordered which might perhaps do injustice unless the +facts pertinent to the issues are fully developed. + +"My duties are such that it will not be convenient for me to be +present continuously during the sessions of the Court. In order, +however, that everything may be laid before it in my power pertinent +to such specific issues as are legally raised, I beg leave to +introduce Major Asa Bird Gardner as my counsel. + +"Very respectfully, + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Lieut.-General." + + +Briefly stated, in my report of the battle of Five Forks there were +four imputations concerning General Warren. The first implied that +Warren failed to reach me on the 1st of April, when I had reason to +expect him; the second, that the tactical handling of his corps was +unskillful; the third, that he did not exert himself to get his corps +up to Gravelly Run Church; and the fourth, that when portions of his +line gave way he did not exert himself to restore confidence to his +troops. The Court found against him on the first and second counts, +and for him on the third and fourth. This finding was unsatisfactory +to General Warren, for he hoped to obtain such an unequivocal +recognition of his services as to cast discredit on my motives for +relieving him. These were prompted by the conditions alone--by the +conduct of General Warren as described, and my consequent lack of +confidence in him. + +It will be remembered that in my conversation with General Grant on +the 30th, relative to the suspension of operations because of the +mud, I asked him to let me have the Sixth Corps to help me in +breaking in on the enemy's right, but that it could not be sent me; +it will be recalled also that the Fifth Corps was afterward tendered +and declined. From these facts it has been alleged that I was +prejudiced against General Warren, but this is not true. As we had +never been thrown much together I knew but little of him. I had no +personal objection to him, and certainly could have none to his +corps. I was expected to do an extremely dangerous piece of work, +and knowing the Sixth Corps well--my cavalry having campaigned with +it so successfully in the Shenandoah Valley, I naturally preferred +it, and declined the Fifth for no other reason. But the Sixth could +not be given, and the turn of events finally brought me the Fifth +after my cavalry, under the most trying difficulties, had drawn the +enemy from his works, and into such a position as to permit the +realization of General Grant's hope to break up with my force Lee's +right flank. Pickett's isolation offered an opportunity which we +could not afford to neglect, and the destruction of his command would +fill the measure of General Grant's expectations as well as meet my +own desires. The occasion was not an ordinary one, and as I thought +that Warren had not risen to its demand in the battle, I deemed it +injudicious and unsafe under the critical conditions existing to +retain him longer. That I was justified in this is plain to all who +are disposed to be fair-minded, so with the following extract from +General Sherman's review of the proceedings of the Warren Court, and +with which I am convinced the judgment of history will accord, I +leave the subject: + +"....It would be an unsafe and dangerous rule to hold the commander +of an army in battle to a technical adherence to any rule of conduct +for managing his command. He is responsible for results, and holds +the lives and reputations of every officer and soldier under his +orders as subordinate to the great end--victory. The most important +events are usually compressed into an hour, a minute, and he cannot +stop to analyze his reasons. He must act on the impulse, the +conviction, of the instant, and should be sustained in his +conclusions, if not manifestly unjust. The power to command men, and +give vehement impulse to their joint action, is something which +cannot be defined by words, but it is plain and manifest in battles, +and whoever commands an army in chief must choose his subordinates by +reason of qualities which can alone be tested in actual conflict. + +"No one has questioned the patriotism, integrity, and great +intelligence of General Warren. These are attested by a long record +of most excellent service, but in the clash of arms at and near Five +Forks, March 31 and April 1, 1865, his personal activity fell short +of the standard fixed by General Sheridan, on whom alone rested the +great responsibility for that and succeeding days. + +"My conclusion is that General Sheridan was perfectly justified in +his action in this case, and he must be fully and entirely sustained +if the United States expects great victories by her arms in the +future." + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +RESULT OF THE BATTLE OF FIVE FORKS--RETREAT OF LEE--AN INTERCEPTED +DESPATCH--AT AMELIA COURT HOUSE--BATTLE OF SAILOR'S CREEK--THE +CONFEDERATES' STUBBORN RESISTANCE--A COMPLETE VICTORY--IMPORTANCE OF +THE BATTLE. + +When the news of the battle at Five Forks reached General Grant, he +realized that the decisive character of our victory would necessitate +the immediate abandonment of Richmond and Petersburg by the enemy; +and fearing that Lee would escape without further injury, he issued +orders, the propriety of which must be settled by history, to assault +next morning the whole intrenched line. But Lee could not retreat at +once. He had not anticipated, dissster at Five Forks, and hence was +unprepared to withdraw on the moment; and the necessity of getting +off his trains and munitions of war, as well as being obliged to +cover the flight of the Confederate Government, compelled him to hold +on to Richmond and Petersburg till the afternoon of the 2d, though +before that Parke, Ord, and Wright had carried his outer +intrenchments at several points, thus materially shortening the line +of investment. + +The night of the 1st of April, General Humphreys's corps-the Second- +had extended its left toward the White Oak road, and early next +morning, under instructions from General Grant, Miles's division of +that corps reported to me, and supporting him with Ayres's and +Crawford's divisions of the Fifth Corps, I then directed him to +advance toward Petersburg and attack the enemy's works at the +intersection of the Claiborne and White Oak roads. + +Such of the enemy as were still in the works Miles easily forced +across Hatcher's Run, in the direction of Sutherland's depot, but the +Confederates promptly took up a position north of the little stream, +and Miles being anxious to attack, I gave him leave, but just at this +time General Humphreys came up with a request to me from General +Meade to return Miles. On this request I relinquished command of the +division, when, supported by the Fifth Corps it could have broken in +the enemy's right at a vital point; and I have always since regretted +that I did so, for the message Humphreys conveyed was without +authority from General Grant, by whom Miles had been sent to me, but +thinking good feeling a desideratum just then, and wishing to avoid +wrangles, I faced the Fifth Corps about and marched it down to Five +Forks, and out the Ford road to the crossing of Hatcher's Run. After +we had gone, General Grant, intending this quarter of the field to be +under my control, ordered Humphreys with his other two divisions to +move to the right, in toward Petersburg. This left Miles entirely +unsupported, and his gallant attack made soon after was unsuccessful +at first, but about 3 o'clock in the afternoon he carried the point +which covered the retreat from Petersburg and Richmond. + +Merritt had been sent westward, meanwhile, in the direction of Ford's +Station, to break the enemy's horse which had been collecting to the +north of Hatcher's Run. Meeting, with but little opposition, Merritt +drove this cavalry force in a northerly direction toward Scott's +Corners, while the Fifth Corps was pushed toward Sutherland's depot, +in the hope of coming in on the rear of the force that was +confronting Miles when I left him. Crawford and Merritt engaged the +enemy lightly just before night, but his main column, retreating +along the river road south of the Appomattox, had got across Namozine +Creek, and the darkness prevented our doing more than to pick up some +stragglers. The next morning the pursuit was resumed, the cavalry +again in advance, the Fifth Corps keeping up with it all the while, +and as we pressed our adversaries hundreds and hundreds of prisoners, +armed and unarmed, fell into our hands, together with many wagons and +five pieces of artillery. At Deep Creek the rearguard turned on us, +and a severe skirmish took place. Merritt, finding the enemy very +strong, was directed to await the arrival of Crook and for the rear +division of the Fifth Corps; but by the time they reached the creek, +darkness had again come to protect the Confederates, and we had to be +content with meagre results at that point. + +From the beginning it was apparent that Lee, in his retreat, was +making for Amelia Court House, where his columns north and south of +the Appomattox River could join, and where, no doubt, he expected to +meet supplies, so Crook was ordered to march early on April 4 to +strike the Danville railroad, between Jettersville and Burkeville, +and then move south along the railroad toward Jettersville, Merritt +to move toward Amelia Court House, and the Fifth Corps to +Jettersville itself. + +The Fifth Corps got to Jettersville about 5 in the afternoon, and I +immediately intrenched it across the Burkeville road with the +determination to stay there till the main army could come up, for I +hoped we could force Lee to surrender at Amelia Court House, since a +firm hold on Jettersville would cut him off from his line of retreat +toward Burkeville. + +Accompanied only by my escort--the First United States Cavalry, about +two hundred strong--I reached Jettersville some little time before +the Fifth Corps, and having nothing else at hand I at once deployed +this handful of men to cover the crossroads till the arrival of the +corps. Just as the troopers were deploying, a man on a mule, heading +for Burkeville, rode into my pickets. He was arrested, of course, +and being searched there was found in his boots this telegram in +duplicate, signed by Lee's Commissary General. + +"The army is at Amelia Court House, short of provisions. Send +300,000 rations quickly to Burkeville Junction." One copy was +addressed to the supply department at Danville, and the other to that +at Lynchburg. I surmised that the telegraph lines north of +Burkeville had been broken by Crook after the despatches were +written, which would account for their being transmitted by +messenger. There was thus revealed not only the important fact that +Lee was concentrating at Amelia Court House, but also a trustworthy +basis for estimating his troops, so I sent word to Crook to strike up +the railroad toward me, and to Merritt--who, as I have said, had +followed on the heels of the enemy--to leave Mackenzie there and +himself close in on Jettersville. Staff-officers were also +despatched to hurry up Griffin with the Fifth Corps, and his tired men +redoubled their strides. + +My troops too were hard up for rations, for in the pursuit we could +not wait for our trains, so I concluded to secure if possible these +provisions intended for Lee. To this end I directed Young to send +four of his best scouts to Burkeville Junction. There they were to +separate, two taking the railroad toward Lynchburg and two toward +Danville, and as soon as a telegraph station was reached the telegram +was to be transmitted as it had been written and the provisions thus +hurried forward. + +Although the Fifth Corps arrived at Jettersville the evening of April +4, as did also Crook's and Merritt's cavalry, yet none of the army of +the Potomac came up till about 3 o'clock the afternoon of the 5th, +the Second Corps, followed by the Sixth, joining us then. General +Meade arrived at Jettersville an hour earlier, but being ill, +requested me to put his troops in position. The Fifth Corps being +already intrenched across the Amelia Court House road facing north, I +placed the Sixth on its right and the Second on its left as they +reached the ground. + +As the enemy had been feeling us ever since morning--to learn what he +was up to I directed Crook to send Davies's brigade on a +reconnoissance to Paine's crossroads. Davies soon found out that Lee +was trying to escape by that flank, for at the crossroads he found +the Confederate trains and artillery moving rapidly westward. Having +driven away the escort, Davies succeeded in burning nearly two +hundred wagons, and brought off five pieces of artillery. Among +these wagons were some belonging to General, Lee's and to General +Fitzhugh Lee's headquarters. This work through, Davies withdrew and +rejoined Crook, who, with Smith and Gregg, was established near Flat +Creek. + +It being plain that Lee would attempt to escape as soon as his trains +were out of the way, I was most anxious to attack him when the Second +Corps began to arrive, for I felt certain that unless we did so he +would succeed in passing by our left flank, and would thus again make +our pursuit a stern-chase; but General Meade, whose plan of attack +was to advance his right flank on Amelia Court House, objected to +assailing before all his troops were up. + +I then sent despatches to General Grant, explaining what Davies had +done, and telling him that the Second Corps was arriving, and that I +wished he himself was present. I assured him of my confidence in our +capturing Lee if we properly exerted ourselves, and informed him, +finally, that I would put all my cavalry, except Mackenzie, on my +left, and that, with such a disposition of my forces, I could see no +escape for Lee. I also inclosed him this letter, which had just been +captured: + +"AMELIA C. H., April 5, 1865. + +"DEAR MAMMA: + +"Our army is ruined, I fear. We are all safe as yet. Shyron left us +sick. John Taylor is well--saw him yesterday. We are in line of +battle this morning. General Robert Lee is in the field near us. My +trust is still in the justice of our cause, and that of God. General +Hill is killed. I saw Murray a few minutes since. Bernard, Terry +said, was taken prisoner, but may yet get out. I send this by a +negro I see passing up the railroad to Mechlenburg. Love to all. + +"Your devoted son, + +"Wm. B. TAYLOR, Colonel." + + +General Grant, who on the 5th was accompanying General Ord's column +toward Burkeville Junction, did not receive this intelligence till +nearly nightfall, when within about ten miles of the Junction. He +set out for Jettersville immediately, but did not reach us till near +midnight, too late of course to do anything that night. Taking me +with him, we went over to see Meade, whom he then directed to advance +early in the morning on Amelia Court House. In this interview Grant +also stated that the orders Meade had already issued would permit +Lee's escape, and therefore must be changed, for it was not the aim +only to follow the enemy, but to get ahead of him, remarking during +the conversation that, "he had no doubt Lee was moving right then." +On this same occasion Meade expressed a desire to have in the +proposed attack all the troops of the Army of the Potomac under his +own command, and asked for the return of the Fifth Corps. I made no +objections, and it was ordered to report, to him. + +When, on the morning of the 6th, Meade advanced toward Amelia Court +House, he found, as predicted, that Lee was gone. It turned out that +the retreat began the evening of the 5th and continued all night. +Satisfied that this would be the case, I did not permit the cavalry +to participate in Meade's useless advance, but shifted it out toward +the left to the road running from Deatonsville to Rice's station, +Crook leading and Merritt close up. Before long the enemy's trains +were discovered on this road, but Crook could make but little +impression on them, they were so strongly guarded; so, leaving +Stagg's brigade and Miller's battery about three miles southwest of +Deatonsville--where the road forks, with a branch leading north +toward the Appomattox--to harass the retreating column and find a +vulnerable point, I again shifted the rest of the cavalry toward the +left, across-country, but still keeping parallel to the enemy's line +of march. + +Just after crossing Sailor's Greek, a favorable opportunity offering, +both Merritt and Crook attacked vigorously, gained the Rice's Station +road, destroyed several hundred wagons, made many prisoners, and +captured sixteen pieces of artillery. This was important, but more +valuable still was the fact that we were astride the enemy's line of +retreat, and had cut off from joining Longstreet, waiting at Rice's +Station, a corps of Confederate infantry under General Ewell, +composed of Anderson's, Kershaw's, and Custis Lee's divisions. +Stagg's brigade and Miller's battery, which, as I have said, had been +left at the forks of the Deatonsville road, had meanwhile broken in +between the rear of Ewell's column and the head of Gordon's, forcing +Gordon to abandon his march for Rice's Station, and to take the +right-hand road at the forks, on which he was pursued by General +Humphreys. + +The complete isolation of Ewell from Longstreet in his front and +Gordon in his rear led to the battle of Sailor's Creek, one of the +severest conflicts of the war, for the enemy fought with desperation +to escape capture, and we, bent on his destruction, were no less +eager and determined. The capture of Ewell, with six of his generals +and most of his troops, crowned our success, but the fight was so +overshadowed by the stirring events of the surrender three days +later, that the battle has never been accorded the prominence it +deserves. + +The small creek from which the field takes its name flows in a +northwesterly direction across the road leading from Deatonsville to +Rice's Station. By shifting to the left, Merritt gained the Rice's +Station road west of the creek, making havoc of the wagon-trains, +while Crook struck them further on and planted himself square across +the road. This blocked Ewell, who, advancing Anderson to some high +ground west of the creek, posted him behind barricades, with the +intention of making a hard fight there, while the main body should +escape through the woods in a westerly direction to roads that led to +Farmville. This was prevented, however, by Crook forming his +division, two brigades dismounted and one mounted, and at once +assaulting all along Anderson's front and overlapping his right, +while Merritt fiercely attacked to the right of Crook. The enemy +being thus held, enabled the Sixth Corps--which in the meantime I had +sent for--to come upon the ground, and Ewell, still contending with +the cavalry, found himself suddenly beset by this new danger from his +rear. To, meet it, he placed Kershaw to the right and Custis Lee to +the left of the Rice's Station road, facing them north toward and +some little distance from Sailor's Creek, supporting Kershaw with +Commander Tucker's Marine brigade. Ewell's skirmishers held the line +of Sailor's Creek, which runs through a gentle valley, the north +slope of which was cleared ground. + +By General Grant's directions the Sixth Corps had been following my +route of march since the discovery, about 9 o'clock in the morning, +that Lee had decamped from Amelia Court House. Grant had promptly +informed me of this in a note, saying, "The Sixth Corps will go in +with a vim any place you may dictate," so when I sent word to Wright +of the enemy's isolation, and asked him to hurry on with all speed, +his gallant corps came as fast as legs could carry them, he sending +to me successively Major McClellan and Colonel Franklin, of his +staff, to report his approach. + +I was well advised as to the position of the enemy through +information brought me by an intelligent young soldier, William A. +Richardson, Company "A," Second Ohio, who, in one of the cavalry +charges on Anderson, had cleared the barricades and made his way back +to my front through Ewell's line. Richardson had told me just how +the main body of the enemy was posted, so as Seymour's division +arrived I directed General Wright to put it on the right of the road, +while Wheaton's men, coming up all hot and out of breath, promptly +formed on Seymour's left. Both divisions thus aligned faced +southwest toward Sailor's Creek, and the artillery of the corps being +massed to the left and front of the Hibbon house, without waiting for +Getty's division--for I feared that if we delayed longer the enemy +might effect his escape toward Farmville--the general attack was +begun. Seymour and Wheaton, moving forward together, assailed the +enemy's front and left, and Stagg's brigade, too, which in the mean +time had been placed between Wheaton's left and Devin's right, went +at him along with them, Merritt and Crook resuming the fight from +their positions in front of Anderson. The enemy, seeing little +chance of escape, fought like a tiger at bay, but both Seymour and +Wheaton pressed him vigorously, gaining ground at all points except +just to the right of the road, where Seymour's left was checked. +Here the Confederates burst back on us in a counter-charge, surging +down almost to the creek, but the artillery, supported by Getty, who +in the mean time had come on the ground, opened on them so terribly +that this audacious and furious onset was completely broken, though +the gallant fellows fell back to their original line doggedly, and +not until after they had almost gained the creek. Ewell was now +hemmed in on every side, and all those under his immediate command +were captured. Merritt and Crook had also broken up Anderson by this +time, but he himself, and about two thousand disorganized men escaped +by making their way through the woods toward the Appomattox River +before they could be entirely enveloped. Night had fallen when the +fight was entirely over, but Devin was pushed on in pursuit for about +two miles, part of the Sixth Corps following to clinch a victory +which not only led to the annihilation of one corps of Lee's +retreating army, but obliged Longstreet to move up to Farmville, so +as to take a road north of the Appomattox River toward Lynchburg +instead of continuing toward Danville. + +At the close of the battle I sent one of my staff--Colonel Redwood +Price--to General Grant to report what had been done; that we had +taken six generals and from nine to ten thousand prisoners. On his +way Price stopped at the headquarters of General Meade, where he +learned that not the slightest intelligence of the occurrence on my +line had been received, for I not being under Meade's command, he had +paid no attention to my movements. Price gave the story of the +battle, and General Meade, realizing its importance, sent directions +immediately to General Wright to make his report of the engagement to +the headquarters of the Army of the Potomac, assuming that Wright was +operating independently of me in the face of Grant's despatch Of +2 o'clock, which said that Wright was following the cavalry and would +"go in with a vim" wherever I dictated. Wright could not do else +than comply with Meade's orders in the case, and I, being then in +ignorance of Meade's reasons for the assumption, could say nothing. +But General Grant plainly intending, and even directing, that the +corps should be under my command, remedied this phase of the matter, +when informed of what had taken place, by requiring Wright to send a +report of the battle through me. What he then did, and what his +intentions and orders were, are further confirmed by a reference to +the episode in his "Memoirs," where he gives his reasons for ordering +the Sixth Corps to abandon the move on Amelia Court House and pass to +the left of the army. On the same page he also says, referring to +the 6th of April: "The Sixth Corps now remained with the cavalry +under Sheridan's direct command until after the surrender." He +unquestionably intended all of this, but his purpose was partly +frustrated by General Meade's action next morning in assuming +direction of the movements of the corps; and before General Grant +became aware of the actual conditions the surrender was at hand. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +LINCOLN'S LACONIC DESPATCH--CAPTURING LEE'S SUPPLIES--DELIGHTED +ENGINEERS--THE CONFEDERATES' LAST EFFORT--A FLAG OF TRUCE--GENERAL +GEARY'S "LAST DITCH" ABSURDITY--MEETING OF GRANT AND LEE--THE +SURRENDER--ESTIMATE OF GENERAL GRANT. + +The first report of the battle of Sailor's Creek that General Grant +received was, as already stated, an oral message carried by Colonel +Price, of my staff. Near midnight I sent a despatch giving the names +of the generals captured. These were Ewell, Kershaw, Barton, Corse, +Dubose, and Custis Lee. In the same despatch I wrote: "If the thing +is pressed, I think that Lee will surrender." When Mr. Lincoln, at +City Point, received this word from General Grant, who was +transmitting every item of news to the President, he telegraphed +Grant the laconic message: "Let the thing be pressed." The morning of +the 7th we moved out at a very early hour, Crook's division marching +toward Farmville in direct pursuit, while Merritt and Mackenzie were +ordered to Prince Edward's Court House to anticipate any effort Lee +might make to escape through that place toward Danville since it had +been discovered that Longstreet had slipped away already from the +front of General Ord's troops at Rice's Station. Crook overtook the +main body of the Confederates at Farmville, and promptly attacked +their trains on the north side of the Appomattox with Gregg's +brigade, which was fiercely turned upon and forced to re-cross the +river with the loss of a number of prisoner's, among them Gregg +himself. When Crook sent word of this fight, it was clear that Lee +had abandoned all effort to escape to the southwest by way of +Danville. Lynchburg was undoubtedly his objective point now; so, +resolving to throw my cavalry again across his path, and hold him +till the infantry could overtake him, I directed everything on +Appomattox depot, recalling Crook the night of the 7th to Prospect +Station, while Merritt camped at Buffalo Creek, and Mackenzie made a +reconnoissance along the Lynchburg railroad. + +At break of day, April 8, Merritt and Mackenzie united with Crook at +Prospect Station, and the cavalry all moved then toward Appomattox +depot. Hardly had it started when one of the scouts--Sergeant White- +-informed me that there were four trains of cars at the depot loaded +with supplies for Lee's army; these had been sent from Lynchburg, in +compliance with the telegram of Lee's commissary-general, which +message, it will be remembered, was captured and transmitted to +Lynchburg by two of Young's scouts on the 4th. Sergeant White, who +had been on the lookout for the trains ever since sending the +despatch, found them several miles west of Appomattox depot feeling +their way along, in ignorance of Lee's exact position. As he had the +original despatch with him, and took pains to dwell upon the pitiable +condition of Lee's army, he had little difficulty in persuading the +men in charge of the trains to bring them east of Appomattox Station, +but fearing that the true state of affairs would be learned before +long, and the trains be returned to Lynchburg, he was painfully +anxious to have them cut off by breaking the track west of the +station. + +The intelligence as to the trains was immediately despatched to +Crook, and I pushed on to join him with Merritt's command. Custer +having the advance, moved rapidly, and on nearing the station +detailed two regiments to make a detour southward to strike the +railroad some distance beyond and break the track. These regiments +set off at a gallop, and in short order broke up the railroad enough +to prevent the escape of the trains, Custer meanwhile taking +possession of the station, but none too soon, for almost at the +moment he did so the advance-guard of Lee's army appeared, bent on +securing the trains. Without halting to look after the cars further, +Custer attacked this advance-guard and had a spirited fight, in which +he drove the Confederates away from the station, captured twenty-five +pieces of artillery, a hospital train, and a large park of wagons, +which, in the hope that they would reach Lynchburg next day, were +being pushed ahead of Lee's main body. + +Devin coming up a little before dusk, was put in on the right of +Custer, and one of Crook's brigades was sent to our left and the +other two held in reserve. I then forced the enemy back on the +Appomattox road to the vicinity of the Court House, and that the +Confederates might have no rest, gave orders to continue the +skirmishing throughout the night. Meanwhile the captured trains had +been taken charge of by locomotive engineers, soldiers of the +command, who were delighted evidently to get back at their old +calling. They amused themselves by running the trains to and fro, +creating much confusion, and keeping up such an unearthly screeching +with the whistles that I was on the point of ordering the cars +burned. They finally wearied of their fun, however, and ran the +trains off to the east toward General Ord's column. + +The night of the 8th I made my headquarters at a little frame house +just south of the station. I did not sleep at all, nor did anybody +else, the entire command being up all night long; indeed, there had +been little rest in the, cavalry for the past eight days. The +necessity of getting Ord's column up was so obvious now that staff- +officer after staff-officer was sent to him and to General Grant +requesting that the infantry be pushed on, for if it could get to the +front, all knew that the rebellion would be ended on the morrow. +Merritt, Crook, Custer, and Devin were present at frequent intervals +during the night, and everybody was overjoyed at the prospect that +our weary work was about to end so happily. Before sun-up General +Ord arrived, and informed me of the approach of his column, it having +been marching the whole night. As he ranked me, of course I could +give him no orders, so after a hasty consultation as to where his +troops should be placed we separated, I riding to the front to +overlook my line near Appomattox Court House, while he went back to +urge along his weary troops. + +The night before General Lee had held a council with his principal +generals, when it was arranged that in the morning General Gordon +should undertake to break through my cavalry, and when I neared my +troops this movement was beginning, a heavy line of infantry bearing +down on us from the direction of the village. In front of Crook and +Mackenzie firing had already begun, so riding to a slight elevation +where a good view of the Confederates could be had, I there came to +the conclusion that it would be unwise to offer more resistance than +that necessary to give Ord time to form, so I directed Merritt to +fall back, and in retiring to shift Devin and Custer to the right so +as to make room for Ord, now in the woods to my rear. Crook, who +with his own and Mackenzie's divisions was on my extreme left +covering some by-roads, was ordered to hold his ground as long as +practicable without sacrificing his men, and, if forced to retire, to +contest with obstinacy the enemy's advance. + +As already stated, I could not direct General Ord's course, he being +my senior, but hastily galloping back to where he was, at the edge of +the timber, I explained to him what was taking place at the front. +Merritt's withdrawal inspired the Confederates, who forthwith began +to press Crook, their line of battle advancing with confidence till +it reached the crest whence I had reconnoitred them. From this +ground they could see Ord's men emerging from the woods, and the +hopelessness of a further attack being plain, the gray lines +instinctively halted, and then began to retire toward a ridge +immediately fronting Appomattox Court House, while Ord, joined on his +right by the Fifth Corps, advanced on them over the ground that +Merritt had abandoned. + +I now directed my steps toward Merritt, who, having mounted his +troopers, had moved them off to the right, and by the time I reached +his headquarters flag he was ready for work, so a move on the enemy's +left was ordered, and every guidon was bent to the front. As the +cavalry marched along parallel with the Confederate line, and in +toward its left, a heavy fire of artillery opened on us, but this +could not check us at such a time, and we soon reached some high +ground about half a mile from the Court House, and from here I could +see in the low valley beyond the village the bivouac undoubtedly of +Lee's army. The troops did not seem to be disposed in battle order, +but on the other side of the bivouac was a line of battle--a heavy +rear-guard--confronting, presumably, General Meade. + +I decided to attack at once, and formations were ordered at a trot +for a charge by Custer's and Devin's divisions down the slope leading +to the camps. Custer was soon ready, but Devin's division being in +rear its formation took longer, since he had to shift further to the +right; Devin's preparations were, therefore, but partially completed +when an aide-decamp galloped up to with the word from Custer, "Lee +has surrendered; do not charge; the white flag is up." The enemy +perceiving that Custer was forming for attack, had sent the flag out +to his front and stopped the charge just in time. I at once sent +word of the truce to General Ord, and hearing nothing more from +Custer himself, I supposed that he had gone down to the Court House +to join a mounted group of Confederates that I could see near there, +so I, too, went toward them, galloping down a narrow ridge, staff and +orderlies following; but we had not got half way to the Court House +when, from a skirt of timber to our right, not more than three +hundred yards distant, a musketry fire was opened on us. This halted +us, when, waving my hat, I called out to the firing party that we +were under a truce, and they were violating it. This did not stop +them, however, so we hastily took shelter in a ravine so situated as +to throw a ridge between us and the danger. + +We traveled in safety down this depression to its mouth, and thence +by a gentle ascent approached the Court House. I was in advance, +followed by a sergeant carrying my battleflag. When I got within +about a hundred and fifty yards of the enemy's line, which was +immediately in front of the Court House, some of the Confederates +leveled their pieces at us, and I again halted. Their officers kept +their men from firing, however, but meanwhile a single-handed contest +had begun behind me, for on looking back I heard a Confederate +soldier demanding my battle-flag from the color-bearer, thinking, no +doubt, that we were coming in as prisoners. The sergeant had drawn +his sabre and was about to cut the man down, but at a word from me he +desisted and carried the flag back to my staff, his assailant quickly +realizing that the boot was on the other leg. + +These incidents determined me to remain where I was till the return +of a staff-officer whom I had sent over to demand an explanation from +the group of Confederates for which I had been heading. He came back +in a few minutes with apologies for what had occurred, and informed +me that General Gordon and General Wilcox were the superior officers +in the group. As they wished me to join them I rode up with my +staff, but we had hardly met when in front of Merritt firing began. +At the sound I turned to General Gordon, who seemed embarrassed by +the occurrence, and remarked: "General, your men fired on me as I was +coming over here, and undoubtedly they are treating Merritt and +Custer the same way. We might as well let them fight it out." He +replied, "There must be some mistake." I then asked, "Why not send a +staff-officer and have your people cease firing; they are violating +the flag." He answered, "I have no staff-officer to send." Whereupon +I said that I would let him have one of mine, and calling for +Lieutenant Vanderbilt Allen, I directed him to carry General Gordon's +orders to General Geary, commanding a small brigade of South Carolina +cavalry, to discontinue firing. Allen dashed off with the message +and soon delivered it, but was made a prisoner, Geary saying, "I do +not care for white flags: South Carolinians never surrender...." By +this time Merritt's patience being exhausted, he ordered an attack, +and this in short order put an end to General Geary's "last ditch" +absurdity, and extricated Allen from his predicament. + +When quiet was restored Gordon remarked: "General Lee asks for a +suspension of hostilities pending the negotiations which he is having +with General Grant." I rejoined: "I have been constantly informed of +the progress of the negotiations, and think it singular that while +such discussions are going on, General Lee should have continued his +march and attempted to break through my lines this morning. I will +entertain no terms except that General Lee shall surrender to General +Grant on his arrival here. If these terms are not accepted we will +renew hostilities." Gordon replied: "General Lee's army is +exhausted. There is no doubt of his surrender to General Grant." + +It was then that General Ord joined us, and after shaking hands all +around, I related the situation to him, and Gordon went away agreeing +to meet us again in half an hour. When the time was up he came back +accompanied by General Longstreet, who brought with him a despatch, +the duplicate of one that had been sent General Grant through General +Meade's lines back on the road over which Lee had been retreating. + +General Longstreet renewed the assurances that already had been given +by Gordon, and I sent Colonel Newhall with the despatch to find +General Grant and bring him to the front. When Newhall started, +everything on our side of the Appomattox Court House was quiet, for +inevitable surrender was at hand, but Longstreet feared that Meade, +in ignorance of the new conditions on my front might attack the +Confederate rearguard. To prevent this I offered to send Colonel J. +W. Forsyth through the enemy's lines to let Meade know of my +agreement, for he too was suspicious that by a renewed correspondence +Lee was endeavoring to gain time for escape. My offer being +accepted, Forsyth set out accompanied by Colonel Fairfax, of +Longstreet's staff, and had no difficulty in accomplishing his +mission. + +About five or six miles from Appomattox, on the road toward Prospect +Station near its intersection with the Walker's Church road, my +adjutant-general, Colonel Newhall, met General Grant, he having +started from north of the Appomattox River for my front the morning +of April 9, in consequence of the following despatches which had been +sent him the night before, after we had captured Appomattox Station +and established a line intercepting Lee: + +"CAVALRY HEADQUARTERS, April 8, 1865--9:20 P. M. + +"LIEUTENANT-GENERAL U. S. GRANT, +"Commanding Armies of the U. S. + +"General: I marched early this morning from Buffalo Creek and +Prospect Station on Appomattox Station, where my scouts had reported +trains of cars with supplies for Lee's army. A short time before +dark General Custer, who had the advance, made a dash at the station, +capturing four trains of supplies with locomotives. One of the +trains was burned and the others were run back toward Farmville for +security. Custer then pushed on toward Appomattox Court House, +driving the enemy--who kept up a heavy fire of artillery--charging +them repeatedly and capturing, as far as reported, twenty-five pieces +of artillery and a number of prisoners and wagons. The First Cavalry +Division supported him on the right. A reconnoissance sent across +the Appomattox reports the enemy moving on the Cumberland road to +Appomattox Station, where they expect to get supplies. Custer is +still pushing on. If General Gibbon and the Fifth Corps can get up +to-night, we will perhaps finish the job in the morning. I do not +think Lee means to surrender until compelled to do so. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + + +"HEADQUARTERS CAVALRY, April 8, 1865--9:40 p.m. + +"LIEUTENANT-GENERAL U. S. GRANT. +"Commanding Armies U. S. + +"GENERAL: Since writing tne accompanying despatch, General Custer +reports that his command has captured in all thirty-five pieces of +artillery, one thousand prisoners--including one general officer--and +from one hundred and fifty to two hundred wagons. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, Major-General." + + +In attempting to conduct the lieutenant-general and staff back by a +short route, Newhall lost his bearings for a time, inclining in +toward the enemy's lines too far, but regained the proper direction +without serious loss of time. General Grant arrived about 1 o'clock +in the afternoon, Ord and I, dismounted, meeting him at the edge of +the town, or crossroads, for it was little more. He remaining +mounted, spoke first to me, saying simply, + +"How are you, Sheridan?" I assured him with thanks that I was +"first-rate," when, pointing toward the village, he asked, "Is +General Lee up there?" and I replied: "There is his army down in that +valley, and he himself is over in that house (designating McLean's +house) waiting to surrender to you." The General then said, "Come, +let us go over," this last remark being addressed to both Ord and me. +We two then mounted and joined him, while our staff-officers +followed, intermingling with those of the general-in-chief as the +cavalcade took its way to McLean's house near by, and where General +Lee had arrived some time before, in consequence of a message from +General Grant consenting to the interview asked for by Lee through +Meade's front that morning--the consent having been carried by +Colonel Babcock. + +When I entered McLean's house General Lee was standing, as was also +his military secretary, Colonel Marshall, his only staff-officer +present. General Lee was dressed in a new uniform and wore a +handsome sword. His tall, commanding form thus set off contrasted +strongly with the short figure of General Grant, clothed as he was in +a soiled suit, without sword or other insignia of his position except +a pair of dingy shoulder-straps. After being presented, Ord and I, +and nearly all of General Grant's staff, withdrew to await the +agreement as to terms, and in a little while Colonel Babcock came to +the door and said, "The surrender had been made; you can come in +again." + +When we re-entered General Grant was writing; and General Lee, having +in his hand two despatches, which I that morning requested might be +returned, as I had no copies of them, addressed me with the remark: +"I am sorry. It is probable that my cavalry at that point of the +line did not fully understand the agreement." These despatches had +been sent in the forenoon, after the fighting had been stopped, +notifying General Lee that some of his cavalry in front of Crook was +violating the suspension of hostilities by withdrawing. About +3 o'clock in the afternoon the terms of surrender were written out +and accepted, and General Lee left the house, as he departed +cordially shaking hands with General Grant. A moment later he +mounted his chunky gray horse, and lifting his hat as he passed out +of the yard, rode off toward his army, his arrival there being +announced to us by cheering, which, as it progressed, varying in +loudness, told he was riding through the bivouac of the Army of +Northern Virginia. + +The surrender of General Lee practically ended the war of the +rebellion. For four years his army had been the main-stay of the +Confederacy; and the marked ability with which he directed its +operations is evidenced both by his frequent successes and the length +of time he kept up the contest. Indeed, it may be said that till +General Grant was matched against him, he never met an opponent he +did not vanquish, for while it is true that defeat was inflicted on +the Confederates at Antietam and Gettysburg, yet the fruits of these +victories were not gathered, for after each of these battles Lee was +left unmolested till he had a chance to recuperate. + +The assignment of General Grant to the command of the Union armies in +the winter of 1863-64 gave presage of success from the start, for his +eminent abilities had already been proved, and besides, he was a +tower of strength to the Government, because he had the confidence of +the people. They knew that henceforth systematic direction would be +given to our armies in every section of the vast territory over which +active operations were being prosecuted, and further, that this +coherence, this harmony of plan, was the one thing needed to end the +war, for in the three preceding years there had been illustrated most +lamentable effects of the absence of system. From the moment he set +our armies in motion simultaneously, in the spring of 1864, it could +be seen that we should be victorious ultimately, for though on +different lines we were checked now and then, yet we were harassing +the Confederacy at so many vital points that plainly it must yield to +our blows. Against Lee's army, the forefront of the Confederacy, +Grant pitted himself; and it may be said that the Confederate +commander was now, for the first time, overmatched, for against all +his devices--the products of a mind fertile in defense--General Grant +brought to bear not only the wealth of expedient which had hitherto +distinguished him, but also an imperturbable tenacity, particularly +in the Wilderness and on the march to the James, without which the +almost insurmountable obstacles of that campaign could not have been +overcome. During it and in the siege of Petersburg he met with many +disappointments--on several occasions the shortcomings of generals, +when at the point of success, leading to wretched failures. But so +far as he was concerned, the only apparent effect of these +discomfitures was to make him all the more determined to discharge +successfully the stupendous trust committed to his care, and to bring +into play the manifold resources of his well ordered military mind. +He guided every subordinate then, and in the last days of the +rebellion, with a fund of common sense and superiority of intellect, +which have left an impress so distinct as to exhibit his great +personality. When his military history is analyzed after the lapse +of years, it will show, even more clearly than now, that during these +as well as in his previous campaigns he was the steadfast Centre +about and on which everything else turned. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +ORDERED TO GREENSBORO', N. C.--MARCH TO THE DAN RIVER--ASSIGNED TO +THE COMMAND WEST OF THE MISSISSIPPI--LEAVING WASHINGTON--FLIGHT OF +GENERAL EARLY--MAXIMILIAN--MAKING DEMONSTRATIONS ON THE UPPER RIO +GRANDE--CONFEDERATES JOIN MAXIMILIAN--THE FRENCH INVASION OF MEXICO +AND ITS RELATIONS TO THE REBELLION--ASSISTING THE LIBERALS-- +RESTORATION OF THE REPUBLIC. + +The surrender at Appomattox put a stop to all military operations on +the part of General Grant's forces, and the morning of April 10 my +cavalry began its march to Petersburg, the men anticipating that they +would soon be mustered out and returned to their homes. At Nottoway +Court House I heard of the assassination of the President. The first +news came to us the night after the dastardly deed, the telegraph +operator having taken it from the wires while in transmission to +General Meade. The despatch ran that Mr. Lincoln had been, shot at +10 o'clock that morning at Willard's Hotel, but as I could conceive +of nothing to take the President there I set the story down as a +canard, and went to bed without giving it further thought. Next +morning, however, an official telegram confirmed the fact of the +assassination, though eliminating the distorted circumstances that +had been communicated the night before. + +When we reached Petersburg my column was halted, and instructions +given me to march the cavalry and the Sixth Corps to Greensboro', +North Carolina, for the purpose of aiding General Sherman (the +surrender of General Johnston having not yet been effected), so I +made the necessary preparations and moved on the 24th of April, +arriving at South Boston, on the Dan River, the 28th, the Sixth Corps +having reached Danville meanwhile. At South Boston I received a +despatch from General Halleck, who immediately after Lee's surrender +had been assigned to command at Richmond, informing me that General +Johnston had been brought to terms. The necessity for going farther +south being thus obviated we retraced our steps to Petersburg, from +which place I proceeded by steamer to Washington, leaving, the +cavalry to be marched thither by easy stages. + +The day after my arrival in Washington an important order was sent +me, accompanied by the following letter of instructions, transferring +me to a new field of operations: + + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES. +"Washington, D. C., May 17, 1865. + +"GENERAL: Under the orders relieving you from the command of the +Middle Military Division and assigning you to command west of the +Mississippi, you will proceed without delay to the West to arrange +all preliminaries for your new field of duties. + +"Your duty is to restore Texas, and that part of Louisiana held by +the enemy, to the Union in the shortest practicable time, in a way +most effectual for securing permanent peace. + +"To do this, you will be given all the troops that can be spared +by Major-General Canby, probably twenty-five thousand men of +all arms; the troops with Major-General J. J. Reynolds, in Arkansas, +say twelve thousand, Reynolds to command; the Fourth +Army Corps, now at Nashville, Tennessee, awaiting orders; and +the Twenty-Fifth Army Corps, now at City Point, Virginia, ready +to embark. + +"I do not wish to trammel you with instructions; I will state, +however, that if Smith holds out, without even an ostensible +government to receive orders from or to report to, he and his men are +not entitled to the considerations due to an acknowledged +belligerent. Theirs are the conditions of outlaws, making war +against the only Government having an existence over the territory +where war is now being waged. + +"You may notify the rebel commander west of the Mississippi--holding +intercourse with him in person, or through such officers of the rank +of major-general as you may select--that he will be allowed to +surrender all his forces on the same terms as were accorded to Lee +and Johnston. If he accedes, proceed to garrison the Red River as +high up as Shreveport, the seaboard at Galveston, Malagorda Bay, +Corpus Christi, and mouth of the Rio Grande. + +"Place a strong force on the Rio Grande, holding it at least to a +point opposite Camargo, and above that if supplies can be procured. + +"In case of an active campaign (a hostile one) I think a heavy force +should be put on the Rio Grande as a first preliminary. Troops for +this might be started at once. The Twenty-Fifth Corps is now +available, and to it should be added a force of white troops, say +those now under Major-General Steele. + +"To be clear on this last point, I think the Rio Grande should be +strongly held, whether the forces in Texas surrender or not, and that +no time should be lost in getting troops there. If war is to be +made, they will be in the right place; if Kirby Smith surrenders, +they will be on the line which is to be strongly garrisoned. + +"Should any force be necessary other than those designated, they can +be had by calling for them on Army Headquarters. + +"U. S. GRANT, +"Lieutenant-General. + +"To MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN, +"United States Army." + + +On receipt of these instructions I called at once on General Grant, +to see if they were to be considered so pressing as to preclude my +remaining in Washington till after the Grand Review, which was fixed +for the 23d and 24th of May, for naturally I had a strong desire to +head my command on that great occasion. But the General told me that +it was absolutely necessary to go at once to force the surrender of +the Confederates under Kirby Smith. He also told me that the States +lately in rebellion would be embraced in two or three military +departments, the commanders of which would control civil affairs +until Congress took action about restoring them to the Union, since +that course would not only be economical and simple, but would give +the Southern people confidence, and encourage them to go to work, +instead of distracting them with politics. + +At this same interview he informed me that there was an additional +motive in sending me to the new command, a motive not explained by +the instructions themselves, and went on to say that, as a matter of +fact, he looked upon the invasion of Mexico by Maximilian as a part +of the rebellion itself, because of the encouragement that invasion +had received from the Confederacy, and that our success in putting +down secession would never be complete till the French and Austrian +invaders were compelled to quit the territory of our sister republic. +With regard to this matter, though, he said it would be necessary for +me to act with great circumspection, since the Secretary of State, +Mr. Seward, was much opposed to the use of our troops along the +border in any active way that would be likely to involve us in a war +with European powers. + +Under the circumstances, my disappointment at not being permitted to +participate in the review had to be submitted to, and I left +Washington without an opportunity of seeing again in a body the men +who, while under my command, had gone through so many trials and +unremittingly pursued and, assailed the enemy, from the beginning of +the campaign of 1864 till the white flag came into their hands at +Appomattox Court House. + +I went first to St. Louis, and there took the steamboat for New +Orleans, and when near the mouth of the Red River received word from +General Canby that Kirby Smith had surrendered under terms similar to +those accorded Lee and Johnston. But the surrender was not carried +out in good faith, particularly by the Texas troops, though this I +did not learn till some little time afterward when I was informed +that they had marched off to the interior of the State in several +organized bodies, carrying with them their camp equipage, arms, +ammunition, and even some artillery, with the ultimate purpose of +going to Mexico. In consequence of this, and also because of the +desire of the Government to make a strong showing of force in Texas, +I decided to traverse the State with two columns of cavalry, +directing one to San Antonio under Merritt, the other to Houston +under Custer. Both commands were to start from the Red River-- +Shreveport and Alexandria--being the respective initial points--and +in organizing the columns, to the mounted force already on the Red +River were added several regiments of cavalry from the east bank of +the, Mississippi, and in a singular way one of these fell upon the +trail of my old antagonist, General Early. While crossing the river +somewhere below Vicksburg some of the men noticed a suspicious +looking party being ferried over in a rowboat, behind which two +horses were swimming in tow. Chase was given, and the horses, being +abandoned by the party, fell into the hands of our troopers, who, +however, failed to capture or identify the people in the boat. As +subsequently ascertained, the men were companions of Early, who was +already across the Mississippi, hidden in the woods, on his way with +two or three of these followers to join the Confederates in Texas, +not having heard of Kirby Smith's surrender. A week or two later I +received a letter from Early describing the affair, and the capture +of the horses, for which he claimed pay, on the ground that they were +private property, because he had taken them in battle. The letter +also said that any further pursuit of Early would be useless, as he +"expected to be on the deep blue sea" by the time his communication +reached me. The unfortunate man was fleeing from imaginary dangers, +however, for striking his trail was purely accidental, and no effort +whatever was being made to arrest him personally. Had this been +especially desired it might have been accomplished very readily just +after Lee's surrender, for it was an open secret that Early was then +not far away, pretty badly disabled with rheumatism. + +By the time the two columns were ready to set out for San Antonio and +Houston, General Frank Herron,--with one division of the Thirteenth +Corps, occupied Galveston, and another division under General Fred +Steele had gone to Brazos Santiago, to hold Brownsville and the line +of the Rio Grande, the object being to prevent, as far as possible, +the escaping Confederates from joining Maximilian. With this purpose +in view, and not forgetting Grant's conviction that the French +invasion of Mexico was linked with the rebellion, I asked for an +increase of force to send troops into Texas in fact, to concentrate +at available points in the State an army strong enough to move +against the invaders of Mexico if occasion demanded. The Fourth and +Twenty-fifth army corps being ordered to report to me, accordingly, I +sent the Fourth Corps to Victoria and San Antonio, and the bulk of +the Twenty-fifth to Brownsville. Then came the feeding and caring +for all these troops--a difficult matter--for those at Victoria and +San Antonio had to be provisioned overland from Indianola across the +"hog-wallow prairie," while the supplies for the forces at +Brownsville and along the Rio Grande must come by way of Brazos +Santiago, from which point I was obliged to construct, with the labor +of the men, a railroad to Clarksville, a distance of about eighteen +miles. + +The latter part of June I repaired to Brownsville myself to impress +the Imperialists, as much as possible, with the idea that we intended +hostilities, and took along my chief of scouts--Major Young--and four +of his most trusty men, whom I had had sent from Washington. From +Brownsville I despatched all these men to important points in +northern Mexico, to glean information regarding the movements of the +Imperial forces, and also to gather intelligence about the ex- +Confederates who had crossed the Rio Grande. On information +furnished by these scouts, I caused General Steele to make +demonstrations all along the lower Rio Grande, and at the same time +demanded the return of certain munitions of war that had been turned +over by ex-Confederates to the Imperial General (Mejia) commanding at +Matamoras. These demands, backed up as they were by such a +formidable show of force created much agitation and demoralization +among the Imperial troops, and measures looking to the abandonment of +northern Mexico were forthwith adopted by those in authority--a +policy that would have resulted in the speedy evacuation of the +entire country by Maximilian, had not our Government weakened; +contenting itself with a few pieces of the contraband artillery +varnished over with the Imperial apologies. A golden opportunity was +lost, for we had ample excuse for crossing the boundary, but Mr. +Seward being, as I have already stated, unalterably opposed to any +act likely to involve us in war, insisted on his course of +negotiation with Napoleon. + +As the summer wore away, Maximilian, under Mr. Seward's policy, +gained in strength till finally all the accessible sections of Mexico +were in his possession, and the Republic under President Juarez +almost succumbed. Growing impatient at this, in the latter part of +September I decided to try again what virtue there might be in a +hostile demonstration, and selected the upper Rio Grande for the +scene of my attempt. Merritt's cavalry and the Fourth Corps still +being at San Antonio, I went to that place and reviewed these troops, +and having prepared them with some ostentation for a campaign, of +course it was bruited about that we were going to invade Mexico. +Then, escorted by a regiment of horse I proceeded hastily to Fort +Duncan, on the Rio Grande just opposite the Mexican town of Piedras +Negras. Here I opened communication with President Juarez, through +one of his staff, taking care not to do this in the dark, and the +news, spreading like wildfire, the greatest significance was ascribed +to my action, it being reported most positively and with many +specific details that I was only awaiting the arrival of the troops, +then under marching orders at San Antonio, to cross the Rio Grande in +behalf of the Liberal cause. + +Ample corroboration of the reports then circulated was found in my +inquiries regarding the quantity of forage we could depend upon +getting in Mexico, our arrangements for its purchase, and my sending +a pontoon train to Brownsville, together with which was cited the +renewed activity of the troops along the lower Rio Grande. These +reports and demonstrations resulted in alarming the Imperialists so +much that they withdrew the French and Austrian soldiers from +Matamoras, and practically abandoned the whole of northern Mexico as +far down as Monterey, with the exception of Matamoras, where General +Mejia continued to hang on with a garrison of renegade Mexicans. + +The abandonment of so much territory in northern Mexico encouraged +General Escobedo and other Liberal leaders to such a degree that they +collected a considerable army of their followers at Comargo, Mier, +and other points. At the same time that unknown quantity, Cortinas, +suspended his free-booting for the nonce, and stoutly harassing +Matamoras, succeeded in keeping its Imperial garrison within the +fortifications. Thus countenanced and stimulated, and largely +supplied with arms and ammunition, which we left at convenient places +on our side of the river to fall into their hands, the Liberals, +under General Escobedo--a man of much force of character--were +enabied in northern Mexico to place the affairs of the Republic on a +substantial basis. + +But in the midst of what bade fair to cause a final withdrawal of the +foreigners, we were again checked by our Government, as a result of +representations of the French Minister at Washington. In October, he +wrote to Mr. Seward that the United States troops on the Rio Grande +were acting "in exact opposition to the repeated assurances Your +Excellency has given me concerning the desire of the Cabinet at +Washington to preserve the most strict neutrality in the events now +taking place in Mexico," and followed this statement with an emphatic +protest against our course. Without any investigation whatever by +our State Department, this letter of the French Minister was +transmitted to me, accompanied by directions to preserve a strict +neutrality; so, of course, we were again debarred from anything like +active sympathy. + +After this, it required the patience of Job to abide the slow and +poky methods of our State Department, and, in truth, it was often +very difficult to restrain officers and men from crossing the Rio +Grande with hostile purpose. Within the knowledge of my troops, +there had gone on formerly the transfer of organized bodies of ex- +Confederates to Mexico, in aid of the Imperialists, and at this +period it was known that there was in preparation an immigration +scheme having in view the colonizing, at Cordova and one or two other +places, of all the discontented elements of the defunct Confederacy-- +Generals Price, Magruder, Maury, and other high personages being +promoters of the enterprise, which Maximilian took to readily. He +saw in it the possibilities of a staunch support to his throne, and +therefore not only sanctioned the project, but encouraged it with +large grants of land, inspirited the promoters with titles of +nobility, and, in addition, instituted a system of peonage, expecting +that the silver hook thus baited would be largely swallowed by the +Southern people. + +The announcement of the scheme was followed by the appointment of +commissioners in each of the Southern States to send out emigrants; +but before any were deluded into starting, I made to General Grant a +report of what was going on, with the recommendation that measures be +taken, through our State Department, looking to the suppression of +the colony; but, as usual, nothing could be effected through that +channel; so, as an alternative, I published, in April, 1866, by +authority of General Grant, an order prohibiting the embarkation from +ports in Louisiana and Texas, for ports in Mexico, of any person +without a permit from my headquarters. This dampened the ardor of +everybody in the Gulf States who had planned to go to Mexico; and +although the projectors of the Cordova Colonization Scheme--the name +by which it was known--secured a few innocents from other districts, +yet this set-back led ultimately to failure. + +Among the Liberal leaders along the Rio Grande during this period +there sprang up many factional differences from various causes, some +personal, others political, and some, I regret to say, from downright +moral obliquity--as, for example, those between Cortinas and Canales- +-who, though generally hostile to the Imperialists, were freebooters +enough to take a shy at each other frequently, and now and then even +to join forces against Escobedo, unless we prevented them by coaxing +or threats. A general who could unite these several factions was +therefore greatly needed, and on my return to New Orleans I so +telegraphed General Grant, and he, thinking General Caravajal (then +in Washington seeking aid for the Republic) would answer the purpose, +persuaded him to report to me in New Orleans. Caravajal promptly +appeared, but he did not impress me very favorably. He was old and +cranky, yet, as he seemed anxious to do his best, I sent him over to +Brownsville, with credentials, authorizing him to cross into Mexico, +and followed him myself by the next boat. When I arrived in +Brownsville, matters in Matamoras had already reached a crisis. +General Mejia, feeling keenly the moral support we were giving the +Liberals, and hard pressed by the harassing attacks of Cortinas and +Canales, had abandoned the place, and Caravajal, because of his +credentials from our side, was in command, much to the +dissatisfaction of both those chiefs whose differences it was +intended he should reconcile. + +The, day after I got to Brownsville I visited Matamoras, and had a +long interview with Caravajal. The outcome of this meeting was, on +my part, a stronger conviction than ever that he was unsuitable, and +I feared that either Canales or Cortinas would get possession of the +city. Caravajal made too many professions of what he would do--in +short, bragged too much--but as there was no help for the situation, +I made the best of it by trying to smooth down the ruffled feathers +of Canales and Cortinas. In my interview with Caravajal I +recommended Major Young as a confidential man, whom he could rely +upon as a "go-between" for communicating with our people at +Brownsville, and whom he could trust to keep him informed of the +affairs of his own country as well. + +A day or two afterward I recrossed the Gulf to New Orleans, and then, +being called from my headquarters to the interior of Texas, a +fortnight passed before I heard anything from Brownsville. In the +meanwhile Major Young had come to New Orleans, and organized there a +band of men to act as a body-guard for Caravajal, the old wretch +having induced him to accept the proposition by representing that it +had my concurrence. I at once condemned the whole business, but +Young, having been furnished with seven thousand dollars to recruit +the men and buy their arms, had already secured both, and was so +deeply involved in the transaction, he said, that he could not +withdraw without dishonor, and with tears in his eyes he besought me +to help him. He told me he had entered upon the adventure in the +firm belief that I would countenance it; that the men and their +equipment were on his hands; that he must make good his word at all +hazards; and that while I need not approve, yet I must go far enough +to consent to the departure of the men, and to loan him the money +necessary to provision his party and hire a schooner to carry them to +Brazos. It was hard in deed to resist the appeals of this man, who +had served me so long and so well, and the result of his pleading was +that I gave him permission to sail, and also loaned him the sum asked +for; but I have never ceased to regret my consent, for misfortune +fell upon the enterprise almost from its inception. + +By the time the party got across the Gulf and over to Brownsville, +Caravajal had been deposed by Canales, and the latter would not +accept their services. This left Young with about fifty men to whom +he was accountable, and as he had no money to procure them +subsistence, they were in a bad fix. The only thing left to do was +to tender their services to General Escobedo, and with this in view +the party set out to reach the General's camp, marching up the Rio +Grande on the American side, intending to cross near Ringgold Bar +racks. In advance of them, however, had spread far and wide the +tidings of who they were, what they proposed to do, and where they +were going, and before they could cross into Mexico they were +attacked by a party of ex-Confederates and renegade Mexican +rancheros. Being on American soil, Young forbade his men to return +the fire, and bent all his efforts to getting them over the river; +but in this attempt they were broken up, and became completely +demoralized. A number of the men were drowned while swimming the +river, Young himself was shot and killed, a few were captured, and +those who escaped--about twenty in all--finally joined Escobedo, but +in such a plight as to be of little use. With this distressing +affair came to an end pretty much all open participation of American +sympathizers with the Liberal cause, but the moral support afforded +by the presence of our forces continued, and this was frequently +supplemented with material aid in the shape of munitions of war, +which we liberally supplied, though constrained to do so by the most +secret methods. + +The term of office of Juarez as President of the Mexican Republic +expired in December, 1865, but to meet existing exigencies he had +continued himself in office by proclamation, a course rendered +necessary by the fact that no elections could be held on account of +the Imperial occupation of most of the country. The official who, by +the Mexican Constitution, is designated for the succession in such an +emergency, is the President of the Supreme Court, and the person then +eligible under this provision was General Ortega, but in the interest +of the Imperialists he had absented himself from Mexico, hence the +patriotic course of Juarez in continuing himself at the head of +affairs was a necessity of the situation. This action of the +President gave the Imperialists little concern at first, but with the +revival of the Liberal cause they availed themselves of every means +to divide its supporters, and Ortega, who had been lying low in the +United States, now came forward to claim the Presidency. Though +ridiculously late for such a step, his first act was to issue a +manifesto protesting against the assumption of the executive +authority by Juarez. The protest had little effect, however, and his +next proceeding was to come to New Orleans, get into correspondence +with other disaffected Mexicans, and thus perfect his plans. When he +thought his intrigue ripe enough for action, he sailed for Brazos, +intending to cross the Rio Grande and assert his claims with arms. +While he was scheming in New Orleans, however, I had learned what he +was up to, and in advance of his departure had sent instructions to +have him arrested on American soil. Colonel Sedgwick, commanding at +Brownsville, was now temporary master of Matamoras also, by reason of +having stationed some American troops there for the protection of +neutral merchants, so when Ortega appeared at Brazos, Sedgwick +quietly arrested him and held him till the city of Matamoras was +turned over to General Escobedo, the authorized representative of +Juarez; then Escobedo took charge, of Ortega, and with ease prevented +his further machinations. + +During the winter and spring of 1866 we continued covertly supplying +arms and ammunition to the Liberals--sending as many as 30,000 +muskets from Baton Rouge Arsenal alone--and by mid-summer Juarez, +having organized a pretty good sized army, was in possession of the +whole line of the Rio Grande, and, in fact, of nearly the whole of +Mexico down to San Louis Potosi. Then thick and fast came rumors +pointing to the tottering condition of Maximilian's Empire-first, +that Orizaba and Vera Cruz were being fortified; then, that the +French were to be withdrawn; and later came the intelligence that the +Empress Carlotta had gone home to beg assistance from Napoleon, the +author of all of her husband's troubles. But the situation forced +Napoleon to turn a deaf ear to Carlotta's prayers. The brokenhearted +woman besought him on her knees, but his fear of losing an army made +all pleadings vain. In fact, as I ascertained by the following +cablegram which came into my hands, Napoleon's instructions for the +French evacuation were in Mexico at the very time of this pathetic +scene between him and Carlotta. The despatch was in cipher when I +received it, but was translated by the telegraph operator at my +headquarters, who long before had mastered the key of the French +cipher: + +"PARIS, January 10, 1867. FRENCH CONSUL, New Orleans, La. + +"To GENERAL CASTELNAU, at Mexico. + +"Received your despatch of the 9th December. Do not compel the +Emperor to abdicate, but do not delay the departure of the troops; +bring back all those who will not remain there. Most of the fleet +has left. + +"NAPOLEON." + + +This meant the immediate withdrawal of the French. The rest of the +story--which has necessarily been but in outline--is soon told. +Maximilian, though deserted, determined to hold out to the last, and +with the aid of disloyal Mexicans stuck to his cause till the spring. +When taken prisoner at Queretaro, he was tried and executed under +circumstances that are well known. From promptings of humanity +Secretary Seward tried hard to save the Imperial prisoner, but +without success. The Secretary's plea for mercy was sent through me +at New Orleans, and to make speed I hired a steamer to proceed with +it across the Gulf to Tampico. The document was carried by Sergeant +White, one of my scouts, who crossed the country from Tampico, and +delivered it to Escobedo at Queretaro; but Mr. Seward's +representations were without avail--refused probably because little +mercy had been shown certain Liberal leaders unfortunate enough to +fall into Maximilian's hands during the prosperous days of his +Empire. + +At the close of our war there was little hope for the Republic of +Mexico. Indeed, till our troops were concentrated on the Rio Grande +there was none. Our appearance in such force along the border +permitted the Liberal leaders, refugees from their homes, to +establish rendezvous whence they could promulgate their plans in +safety, while the countenance thus given the cause, when hope was +well-nigh gone, incited the Mexican people to renewed resistance. +Beginning again with very scant means, for they had lost about all, +the Liberals saw their cause, under the influence of such significant +and powerful backing, progress and steadily grow so strong that +within two years Imperialism had received its death-blow. I doubt +very much whether such, results could have been achieved without the +presence of an American army on the Rio Grande, which, be it +remembered, was sent there because, in General Grant's words, the +French invasion of Mexico was so closely related to the rebellion as +to be essentially a part of it. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +A. J. HAMILTON APPOINTED PROVISIONAL GOVERNOR OF TEXAS--ASSEMBLES A +CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION--THE TEXANS DISSATISFIED--LAWLESSNESS-- +OPPRESSIVE LEGISLATION--EX-CONFEDERATES CONTROLLING LOUISIANA--A +CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTION--THE MEETING SUPPRESSED--A BLOODY RIOT--MY +REPORTS OF THE MASSACRE--PORTIONS SUPPRESSED BY PRESIDENT JOHNSON-- +SUSTAINED BY A CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE--THE RECONSTRUCTION LAWS. + +Although in 1865-66 much of my attention was directed to +international matters along the Rio Grande, the civil affairs of +Texas and Louisiana required a certain amount of military supervision +also in the absence of regularly established civil authority. At the +time of Kirby Smith's surrender the National Government had +formulated no plan with regard to these or the other States lately in +rebellion, though a provisional Government had been set up in +Louisiana as early as 1864. In consequence of this lack of system, +Governor Pendleton Murray, of Texas, who was elected under +Confederate rule, continued to discharge the duties of Governor till +President Johnson, on June 17, in harmony with his amnesty +proclamation of May 29, 1865, appointed A. J. Hamilton provisional +Governor. Hamilton was empowered by the President to call a +Constitutional convention, the delegates to which were to be elected, +under certain prescribed qualifications, for the purpose of +organizing the political affairs of the State, the Governor to be +guided by instructions similar to those given the provisional +Governor of North Carolina (W. W. Holden), when appointed in May. + +The convening of this body gave rise to much dissatisfaction among +the people of Texas. They had assumed that affairs were to go on as +of old, and that the reintegration of the State was to take place +under the administration of Governor Murray, who, meanwhile, had +taken it upon himself, together with the Legislature, to authorize +the election of delegates to a State Convention, without restriction +as to who should be entitled to vote. Thus encouraged, the element +but lately in armed rebellion was now fully bent on restoring the +State to the Union without any intervention whatever of the Federal +Government; but the advent of Hamilton put an end to such illusions, +since his proclamation promptly disfranchised the element in +question, whose consequent disappointment and chagrin were so great +as to render this factor of the community almost uncontrollable. The +provisional Governor at once rescinded the edict of Governor Murray, +prohibited the assembling of his convention, and shortly after +called, one himself, the delegates to which were to b chosen by +voters who could take the amnesty-oath. The proclamation convening +this assemblage also announced the policy that would be pursued in +governing the State until its affairs were satisfactorily +reorganized, defined in brief the course to be followed by the +Judiciary, and provided for the appointment, by the Governor, of +county officials to succeed those known to be disloyal. As this +action of Hamilton's disfranchised all who could not take the amnesty +oath, and of course deprived them of the offices, it met at once with +pronounced and serious opposition, and he quickly realized that he +had on his hands an arduous task to protect the colored people, +particularly as in the transition state of society just after the +close of the war there prevailed much lawlessness, which vented +itself chiefly on the freedmen. It was greatly feared that political +rights were to be given those so recently in servitude, and as it was +generally believed that such enfranchisement would precipitate a race +war unless the freedmen were overawed and kept in a state of +subjection, acts of intimidation were soon reported from all parts of +the State. + +Hamilton, an able, determined, and fearless man, tried hard to curb +this terrorism, but public opinion being strong against him, he could +accomplish little without military aid. As department commander, I +was required, whenever called upon, to assist his government, and as +these requisitions for help became necessarily very frequent, the +result was that shortly after he assumed his duties, detachments of +troops were stationed in nearly every county of the State. By such +disposition of my forces fairly good order was maintained under the +administration of Hamilton, and all went well till the inauguration +of J. W. Throckmorton, who, elected Governor in pursuance of an +authorization granted by the convention which Hamilton had called +together, assumed the duties of the office August 9, 1866. + +One of Governor Throckmorton's first acts was to ask the withdrawal +or non-interference of the military. This was not all granted, but +under his ingenious persuasion President Johnson, on the 13th of +August, 1866, directed that the new State officials be entrusted with +the unhampered control of civil affairs, and this was more than +enough to revive the bulldozing methods that had characterized the +beginning of Hamilton's administration. Oppressive legislation in +the shape of certain apprentice and vagrant laws quickly followed, +developing a policy of gross injustice toward the colored people on +the part of the courts, and a reign of lawlessness and disorder +ensued which, throughout the remote districts of the State at least, +continued till Congress, by what are known as the Reconstruction +Acts, took into its own hands the rehabilitation of the seceded +States. + +In the State of Louisiana a provisional government, chosen by the +loyal element, had been put in operation, as already mentioned, as +early as 1864. This was effected under encouragement given by +President Lincoln, through the medium of a Constitutional convention, +which met at New Orleans in April, 1864, and adjourned in July. The +constitution then agreed upon was submitted to the people, and in +September, 1864, was ratified by a vote of the few loyal residents of +the State. + +The government provided under this constitution being looked upon as +provisional merely, was never recognized by Congress, and in 1865 the +returned Confederates, restored to citizenship by the President's +amnesty proclamation, soon got control of almost all the State. The +Legislature was in their hands, as well as most of the State and +municipal offices; so, when the President, on the 20th of August, +1866, by proclamation, extended his previous instructions regarding +civil affairs in Texas so as to have them apply to all the seceded +States, there at once began in Louisiana a system of discriminative +legislation directed against the freedmen, that led to flagrant +wrongs in the enforcement of labor contracts, and in the remote +parishes to numbers of outrages and murders. + +To remedy this deplorable condition of things, it was proposed, by +those who had established the government of 1864, to remodel the +constitution of the State; and they sought to do this by reassembling +the convention, that body before its adjournment having provided for +reconvening under certain conditions, in obedience to the call of its +president. Therefore, early in the summer of 1866, many members of +this convention met in conference at New Orleans, and decided that a +necessity existed for reconvening the delegates, and a proclamation +was issued accordingly by B. K. Howell, President-pro-tempore. + +Mayor John T. Monroe and the other officials of New Orleans looked +upon this proposed action as revolutionary, and by the time the +convention assembled (July 30), such bitterness of feeling prevailed +that efforts were made by the mayor and city police to suppress the +meeting. A bloody riot followed, resulting, in the killing and +wounding of about a hundred and sixty persons. + +I happened to be absent from the city at the time, returning from +Texas, where I had been called by affairs on the Rio Grande. On my +way up from the mouth of the Mississippi I was met on the night of +July 30 by one of my staff, who reported what had occurred, giving +the details of the massacre--no milder term is fitting--and informing +me that, to prevent further slaughter, General Baird, the senior +military officer present, had assumed control of the municipal +government. On reaching the city I made an investigation, and that +night sent the following report of the affair: + +"HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE GULF, +"NEW ORLEANS, LA., Aug. 1, 1866. + +"GENERAL U. S. GRANT: + +"You are doubtless aware of the serious riot which occurred in this +city on the 30th. A political body, styling themselves the +Convention of 1864, met on the 30th, for, as it is alleged, the +purpose of remodeling the present constitution of the State. The +leaders were political agitators and revolutionary men, and the +action of the convention was liable to produce breaches of the public +peace. I had made up my mind to arrest the head men, if the +proceedings of the convention were calculated to disturb the +tranquility of the Department; but I had no cause for action until +they committed the overt act. In the meantime official duty called +me to Texas, and the mayor of the city, during my absence suppressed +the convention by the use of the police force, and in so doing +attacked the members of the convention, and a party of two hundred +negroes, with fire-arms, clubs, and knives, in a manner so +unnecessary and atrocious as to compel me to say that it was murder. +About forty whites and blacks were thus killed, and about one hundred +and sixty wounded. Everything is now quiet, but I deem it best to +maintain a military supremacy in the city for a few days, until the +affair is fully investigated. I believe the sentiment of the general +community is great regret at this unnecessary cruelty, and that the +police could have made any arrest they saw fit without sacrificing +lives. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General Commanding." + + +On receiving the telegram, General. Grant immediately submitted. it +to the President. Much clamor being made at the North for the +publication of the despatch, Mr. Johnson pretended to give it to the +newspapers. It appeared in the issues of August 4, but with this +paragraph omitted, viz.: + +"I had made up my mind to arrest the head men, if the proceedings of +the convention were calculated to disturb the tranquility of the +Department, but I had no cause for action until they committed the +overt act. In the mean time official duty called me to Texas, and +the mayor of the city, during my absence, suppressed the convention +by the use of the police force, and in so doing attacked the members +of the convention, and a party of two hundred negroes, with fire- +arms, clubs, and knives, in a manner so unnecessary and atrocious as +to compel me to say it was murder." + +Against this garbling of my report-done by the President's own order- +I strongly demurred; and this emphatic protest marks the beginning of +Mr. Johnson's well-known personal hostility toward me. In the mean +time I received (on August 3) the following despatch from General +Grant approving my course: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"WAR DEPT., WASHINGTON, D. C., "August 3, 1866--5 p.m. + +"MAJOR-GENERAL P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Commanding Mil. Div. of the Gulf, +"New Orleans, La. + +"Continue to enforce martial law, so far as may be necessary to +preserve the peace; and do not allow any of the civil authorities to +act, if you deem such action dangerous to the public safety. Lose no +time in investigating and reporting the causes that led to the riot, +and the facts which occurred. + +"U. S. GRANT, +"Lieutenant-General." + + +In obedience to the President's directions, My report of August 1 was +followed by another, more in detail, which I give in full, since it +tells the whole story of the riot: + +"HEADQUARTERS MILITARY DIVISION OF THE GULF, +"NEW ORLEANS, LA., August 6, 1866. + +"His EXCELLENCY ANDREW JOHNSON, +"President United States + +"I have the honor to make the following reply to your despatch of +August 4. A very large number of colored people marched in +procession on Friday night, July twenty-seven (27), and were +addressed from the steps of the City Hall by Dr. Dostie, ex-Governor +Hahn, and others. The speech of Dostie was intemperate in language +and sentiment. The speeches of the others, so far as I can learn, +were characterized by moderation. I have not given you the words of +Dostie's speech, as the version published was denied; but from what I +have learned of the man, I believe they were intemperate. + +"The convention assembled at twelve (12) M. on the thirtieth (30), +the timid members absenting themselves because the tone of the +general public was ominous of trouble. I think there were about +twenty-six (26) members present. In front of the Mechanics +Institute, where the meeting was held, there were assembled some +colored men, women, and children, perhaps eighteen (18) or twenty +(20), and in the Institute a number of colored men, probably one +hundred and fifty (150). Among those outside and inside there might +have been a pistol in the possession of every tenth (10) man. + +"About one (1) p. m. a procession of say from sixty (60) to one +hundred and thirty (130) colored men marched up Burgundy Street and +across Canal Street toward the convention, carrying an American flag. +These men had about one pistol to every ten men, and canes and clubs +in addition. While crossing Canal Street a row occurred. There were +many spectators on the street, and their manner and tone toward the +procession unfriendly. A shot was fired, by whom I am not able to +state, but believe it to have been by a policeman, or some colored +man in the procession. This led to other shots and a rush after the +procession. On arrival at the front of the Institute there was some +throwing of brickbats by both sides. The police, who had been held +well in hand, were vigorously marched to the scene of disorder. The +procession entered the Institute with the flag, about six (6) or +eight (8) remaining outside. A row occurred between a policeman and +one of these colored men, and a shot was again fired by one of the +parties, which led to an indiscriminate fire on the building through +the windows by the policemen. This had been going on for a short +time, when a white flag was displayed from the windows of the +Institute, whereupon the firing ceased, and the police rushed into +the building. + +"From the testimony of wounded men, and others who were inside the +building, the policemen opened an indiscriminate fire upon the +audience until they had emptied their revolvers, when they retired, +and those inside barricaded the doors. The door was broken in, and +the firing again commenced, when many of the colored and white people +either escaped throughout the door or were passed out by the +policemen inside; but as they came out the policemen who formed the +circle nearest the building fired upon them, and they were again +fired upon by the citizens that formed the outer circle. Many of +those wounded and taken prisoners, and others who were prisoners and +not wounded, were fired upon by their captors and by citizens. The +wounded were stabbed while lying on the grgund, and their heads +beaten with brickbats. In the yard of the building, whither some of +the colored men had escaped and partially secreted themselves, they +were fired upon and killed or wounded by policemen. Some were killed +and wounded several squares from the scene. Members of the +convention were wounded by the police while in their hands as +prisoners, some of them mortally. + +"The immediate cause of this terrible affair was the assemblage of +this Convention; the remote cause was the bitter and antagonistic +feeling which has been growing in this community since the advent of +the present Mayor, who, in the organization of his police force, +selected many desperate men, and some of them known murderers. +People of clear views were overawed by want of confidence in the +Mayor, and fear of the thugs, many of which he had selected for his +police force. I have frequently been spoken to by prominent citizens +on this subject, and have heard them express fear, and want of +confidence in Mayor Monroe. Ever since the intimation of this last +convention movement I must condemn the course of several of the city +papers for supporting, by their articles, the bitter feeling of bad +men. As to the merciless manner in which the convention was broken +up, I feel obliged to confess strong repugnance. + +"It is useless to disguise the hostility that exists on the part of a +great many here toward Northern men, and this unfortunate affair has +so precipitated matters that there is now a test of what shall be the +status of Northern men--whether they can live here without being in +constant dread or not, whether they can be protected in life and +property, and have justice in the courts. If this matter is +permitted to pass over without a thorough and determined prosecution +of those engaged in it, we may look out for frequent scenes of the +same kind, not only here, but in other places. No steps have as yet +been taken by the civil authorities to arrest citizens who were +engaged in this massacre, or policemen who perpetrated such +cruelties. The members of the convention have been indicted by the +grand jury, and many of them arrested and held to bail. As to +whether the civil authorities can mete out ample justice to the +guilty parties on both sides, I must say it is my opinion, +unequivocally, that they cannot. Judge Abell, whose course I have +closely watched for nearly a year, I now consider one of the most +dangerous men that we have here to the peace and quiet of the city. +The leading men of the convention--King, Cutler, Hahn, and others-- +have been political agitators, and are bad men. I regret to say that +the course of Governor Wells has been vacillating, and that during +the late trouble he has shown very little of the man. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General Commanding." + + +Subsequently a military commission investigated the subject of the +riot, taking a great deal of testimony. The commission substantially +confirmed the conclusions given in my despatches, and still later +there was an investigation by a select committee of the House of +Representatives, of which the Honorables Samuel Shellabarger, of +Ohio, H. L. Elliot, of Massachusetts, and B. M. Boyer, of +Pennsylvania, were the members. The majority report of the committee +also corroborated, in all essentials, my reports of the distressing +occurrence. The committee likewise called attention to a violent +speech made by Mr. Johnson at St. Louis in September, 1866, charging +the origin of the riot to Congress, and went on to say of the speech +that "it was an unwarranted and unjust expression of hostile feeling, +without pretext or foundation in fact." A list of the killed and +wounded was embraced in the committee's report, and among other +conclusions reached were the following: "That the meeting of July 30 +was a meeting of quiet citizens, who came together without arms and +with intent peaceably to discuss questions of public concern.... +There has been no occasion during our National history when a riot +has occurred so destitute of justifiable cause, resulting in a +massacre so inhuman and fiend-like, as that which took place at New +Orleans on the 30th of July last. This riotous attack upon the +convention, with its terrible results of massacre and murder, was not +an accident. It was the determined purpose of the mayor of the city +of New Orleans to break up this convention by armed force." + +The statement is also made, that, "He [the President] knew that +'rebels' and 'thugs' and disloyal men had controlled the election of +Mayor Monroe, and that such men composed chiefly his police force." + +The committee held that no legal government existed in Louisiana, and +recommended the temporary establishment of a provisional government +therein; the report concluding that "in the meantime the safety of +all Union men within the State demands that such government be formed +for their protection, for the well being of the nation and the +permanent peace of the Republic." + +The New Orleans riot agitated the whole country, and the official and +other reports served to intensify and concentrate the opposition to +President Johnson's policy of reconstruction, a policy resting +exclusively on and inspired solely by the executive authority--for it +was made plain, by his language and his acts, that he was seeking to +rehabilitate the seceded States under conditions differing not a whit +from those existing before the rebellion; that is to say, without the +slightest constitutional provision regarding the status of the +emancipated slaves, and with no assurances of protection for men who +had remained loyal in the war. + +In December, 1866, Congress took hold of the subject with such vigor +as to promise relief from all these perplexing disorders, and, after +much investigation and a great deal of debate, there resulted the so- +called "Reconstruction Laws," which, for a clear understanding of the +powers conferred on the military commanders, I deem best to append in +full: + +AN ACT to provide for the more efficient government of the rebel +States. + +WHEREAS, no legal State governments or adequate protection for life +or property now exist in the rebel States of Virginia, North +Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana, +Florida, Texas, and Arkansas; and whereas, it is necessary that peace +and good order should be enforced in said States until loyal and +republican State governments can be legally established; therefore, + +BE IT ENACTED by the Senate and House of Representatives of the +United States of America in Congress assembled, That said rebel +States shall be divided into military districts and made subject to +the military authority of the United States as hereinafter +prescribed; and for that purpose Virginia shall constitute the first +district; North Carolina and South Carolina, the second district; +Georgia, Alabama, and Florida, the third district; Mississippi and +Arkansas, the fourth district; and Louisiana and Texas, the fifth +district. + +SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of the +President to assign to the command of each of said districts an +officer of the army not below the rank of brigadier-general, and to +detail a sufficient military force to enable such officer to perform +his duties and enforce his authority within the district to which he +is assigned. + +SEC. 3. And be it further enacted, That it shall be the duty of each +officer assigned as aforesaid to protect all persons in their rights +of person and property, to suppress insurrection, disorder, and +violence, and to punish, or cause to be punished, all disturbers of +the public peace and criminals, and to this end he may allow local +civil tribunals to take jurisdiction of and to try offenders, or, +when in his judgment it may be necessary for the trial of offenders, +he shall have power to organize military commissions or tribunals for +that purpose, and all interference, under cover of State authority, +with the exercise of military authority under this act, shall be null +and void. + +SEC. 4. And be it further enacted, That all persons put under +military arrest by virtue of this act shall be tried without +unnecessary delay, and no cruel or unjust punishment shall be +inflicted; and no sentence of any military commission or tribunal +hereby authorized affecting the life or liberty of any person, shall +be executed untill it is approved by the officer in command of the +district; and the laws and regulations for the government of the army +shall not be affected by this act except in so far as they conflict +with its provisions: Provided, That no sentence of death, under the +provisions of this act, shall be carried into effect without the +approval of the President. + +SEC. 5. And be it further enacted, That when the people of any one of +said rebel States shall have formed a constitution of government in +conformity with the Constitution of the United States in all +respects, framed by a convention of delegates elected by the male +citizens of said State twenty-one years old and upward, of whatever +race, color, or previous condition, who have been resident in said +State for one year previous to the day of such election, except such +as may be disfranchised for participation in the rebellion, or for +felony at common law; and when such constitution shall provide that +the elective franchise shall be enjoyed by all such persons as have +the qualifications herein stated for electors of delegates; and when +such constitution shall be ratified by a majority of the persons +voting on the question of ratification who are qualified as electors +for delegates, and when such constitution shall have been submitted +to Congress for examination and approval, and Congress shall have +approved the same; and when said State, by a vote of its legislature +elected under said constitution, shall have adopted the amendment to +the Constitution of the United States proposed by the Thirty-ninth +Congress, and known as article fourteen; and when said article shall +have become a part of the Constitution of the United States, said +State shall be declared entitled to representation in Congress, and +senators and representatives shall be admitted therefrom on their +taking the oath prescribed by law; and then and thereafter the +preceding sections of this act shall be inoperative in said State: +Provided, That no person excluded from the privilege of holding +office by said proposed amendment to the Constitution of the United +States shall be eligible to election as a member of the convention to +frame a constitution for any of said rebel States, nor shall any such +person vote for members of such convention. + +SEC. 6. And be it further enacted, That until the people of said +rebel States shall be by law admitted to representation in the +Congress of the United States, any civil government which may exist +therein shall be deemed provisional only, and in all respects subject +to the paramount authority of the United States at any time to +abolish, modify, control, or supersede the same; and in all elections +to any office under such provisional governments all persons shall be +entitled to vote, and none others, who are entitled to vote under the +fifth section of this act; and no person shall be eligible to any +office under any such provisional governments who would be +disqualified from holding office under the provisions of the third +article of said constitutional amendment. + +SCHUYLER COLFAX, +Speaker of the House of Representatives. + +LAFAYETTE S. FOSTER, +President of the Senate pro tempore. + + +AN ACT supplementary to an act entitled "An act to provide for the +more efficient government of the rebel States," passed March second, +eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, and to facilitate restoration. + +Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the +United States of America in Congress assembled, That before the first +day of September, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, the commanding +general in each district defined by an act entitled "An act to +provide for the more efficient government of the rebel States," +passed March second, eighteen hundred and sixty-seven, shall cause a +registration to be made of the male citizens of the United States, +twenty-one years of age and upwards, resident in each county or +parish in the State or States included in his district, which +registration shall include only those persons who are qualified to +vote for delegates by the act aforesaid, and who shall have taken and +subscribed the following oath or affirmation: "I,------, do +solemnly swear (or affirm), in the presence of the Almighty God, that +I am a citizen of the State of ---------; that I have resided in said +State for----- months next preceding this day, and now reside in the +county of -------, or the parish of --------, in said State, (as the +case may be); that I am twenty-one years old; that I have not been +disfranchised for participation in any rebellion or civil war against +the United States, nor for felony committed against the laws of any +State or of the United States; that I have never been a member of any +State Legislature, nor held any executive or judicial office in any +State, and afterwards engaged in insurrection or rebellion against +the United States, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof; +that I have never taken an oath as a member of Congress of the United +States, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any +State Legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any +State, to support the constitution of the United States, and +afterwards engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the United +States or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof; that I will +faithfully support the Constitution and obey the laws of the United +States, and will, to the best of my ability, encourage others so to +do: so help me God."; which oath or affirmation may be administered +by any registering officer. + +SEC. 2. And be it further enacted, That after the completion of the +registration hereby provided for in any State, at such time and +places therein as the commanding general shall appoint and direct, of +which at least thirty days' public notice shall be given, an election +shall be held of delegates to a convention for the purpose of +establishing a constitution and civil government for such State loyal +to the Union, said convention in each State, except Virginia, to +consist of the same number of members as the most numerous branch of +the State Legislature of such State in the year eighteen hundred and +sixty, to be apportioned among the several districts, counties, or +parishes of such State by the commanding general, giving each +representation in the ratio of voters registered as aforesaid as +nearly as may be. The convention in Virginia shall consist of the +same number of members as represented the territory now constituting +Virginia in the most numerous branch of the Legislature of said State +in the year eighteen hundred and sixty, to be apportioned as +aforesaid. + +SEC. 3. And be it further enacted, That at said election the +registered voters of each State shall vote for or against a +convention to form a constitution therefor under this act. Those +voting in favor of such a convention shall have written or printed on +the ballots by which they vote for delegates, as aforesaid, the words +"For a convention," and those voting against such a convention shall +have written or printed on such ballot the words "Against a +convention." The persons appointed to superintend said election, and +to make return of the votes given thereat, as herein provided, shall +count and make return of the votes given for and against a +convention; and the commanding general to whom the same shall have +been returned shall ascertain and declare the total vote in each +State for and against a convention. If a majority of the votes given +on that question shall be for a convention, then such convention +shall be held as hereinafter provided; but if a majority of said +votes shall, be against a convention, then no such convention shall +be held under this act: Provided, That such convention shall not be +held unless a majority of all such registered voters shall have voted +on the question of holding such convention. + +SEC. 4. And be it further enacted, That the commanding general of +each district shall appoint as many boards of registration as may be +necessary, consisting of three loyal officers or persons, to make and +complete the registration, superintend the election, and make return +to him of the votes, list of voters, and of the persons elected as +delegates by a plurality of the votes cast at said election; and upon +receiving said returns he shall open the same, ascertain the persons +elected as delegates, according to the returns of the officers who +conducted said election, and make proclamation thereof; and if a +majority of the votes given on that question shall be for a +convention, the commanding general, within sixty days from the date +of election, shall notify the delegates to assemble in convention, at +a time and place to be mentioned in the notification, and said +convention, when organized, shall proceed to frame a constitution and +civil government according to the provisions of this act, and the act +to which it is supplementary; and when the same shall have been so +framed, said constitution shall be submitted by the convention for +ratification to the persons registered under the provisions of this +act at an election to be conducted by the officers or persons +appointed or to be appointed by the commanding general, as +hereinbefore provided, and to be held after the expiration of thirty +days from the date of notice thereof, to be given by said convention; +and the returns thereof shall be made to the commanding general of +the district. + +SEC. 5. And be it further enacted, That if, according to said +returns, the constitution shall be ratified by a majority of the +votes of the registered electors qualified as herein specified, cast +at said election, at least one-half of all the registered voters +voting upon the question of such ratification, the president of the +convention shall transmit a copy of the same, duly certified, to the +President of the United States, who shall forthwith transmit the same +to Congress, if then in session, and if not in session, then +immediately upon its next assembling; and if it shall moreover appear +to Congress that the election was one at which all the registered and +qualified electors in the State had an opportunity to vote freely, +and without restraint, fear, or the influence of fraud, and if the +Congress shall be satisfied that such constitution meets the approval +of a majority of all the qualified electors in the State, and if the +said constitution shall be declared by Congress to be in conformity +with the provisions of the act to which this is supplementary, and +the other provisions of said act shall have been complied with, and +the said constitution shall be approved by Congress, the State shall +be declared entitled to representation, and senators and +representatives shall be admitted therefrom as therein provided. + +SEC. 6. And be it further enacted, That all elections in the States +mentioned in the said "Act to provide for the more efficient +government of the rebel States" shall, during the operation of said +act, be by ballot; and all officers making the said registration of +voters and conducting said elections, shall, before entering upon the +discharge of their duties, take and subscribe the oath prescribed by +the act approved July second, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, +entitled "An act to prescribe an oath of office": Provided, That if +any person shall knowingly and falsely take and subscribe any oath in +this act prescribed, such person so offending and being thereof duly +convicted, shall be subject to the pains, penalties, and disabilities +which by law are provided for the punishment of the crime of wilful +and corrupt perjury. + +SEC. 7. And be if further enacted, That all expenses incurred by the +several commanding generals, or by virtue of any orders issued, or +appointments made, by them, under or by virtue of this act, shall be +paid out of any moneys in the treasury not otherwise appropriated. + +SEC. 8. And be it further enacted, That the convention for each State +shall prescribe the fees, salary, and compensation to be paid to all +delegates and other officers and agents herein authorized or +necessary to carry into effect the purposes of this act not herein +otherwise provided for, and shall provide for the levy and collection +of such taxes on the property in such State as may be necessary to +pay the same. + +SEC. 9. And be it further enacted, That the word "article," in the +sixth section of the act to which this is supplementary, shall be +construed to mean, "section." + +SCHUYLER COLFAX, +Speaker of the House of Representatives. + +B. F. WADE, +President of the Senate pro tempore. + + + + +CHAPTER X1. + +PASSAGE OF THE RECONSTRUCTION ACT OVER THE PRESIDENT'S VETO--PLACED +IN COMMAND OF THE FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT--REMOVING OFFICERS--MY +REASONS FOR SUCH ACTION--AFFAIRS IN LOUISIANA AND TEXAS--REMOVAL OF +GOVERNOR WELLS--REVISION OF THE JURY LISTS--RELIEVED FROM THE COMMAND +OF THE FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT. + +The first of the Reconstruction laws was passed March 2, 1867, and +though vetoed by the President, such was the unanimity of loyal +sentiment and the urgency demanding the measure, that the bill became +a law over the veto the day the President returned it to Congress. +March the 11th this law was published in General Orders No. 10, from +the Headquarters of the Army, the same order assigning certain +officers to take charge of the five military districts into which the +States lately in rebellion were subdivided, I being announced as the +commander of the Fifth Military District, which embraced Louisiana +and Texas, a territory that had formed the main portion of my command +since the close of the war. + +Between the date of the Act and that of my assignment, the Louisiana +Legislature, then in special session, had rejected a proposed repeal +of an Act it had previously passed providing for an election of +certain municipal officers in New Orleans. This election was set for +March 11, but the mayor and the chief of police, together with +General Mower, commanding the troops in the city, having expressed to +me personally their fears that the public peace would be disturbed by +the election, I, in this emergency, though not yet assigned to the +district, assuming the authority which the Act conferred on district +commanders, declared that the election should not take place; that no +polls should be opened on the day fixed; and that the whole matter +would stand postponed till the district commander should be +appointed, or special instructions be had. This, my first official +act under the Reconstruction laws, was rendered necessary by the +course of a body of obstructionists, who had already begun to give +unequivocal indications of their intention to ignore the laws of +Congress. + +A copy of the order embodying the Reconstruction law, together with +my assignment, having reached me a few days after, I regularly +assumed control of the Fifth Military District on March 19, by an +order wherein I declared the State and municipal governments of the +district to be provisional only, and, under the provisions of the +sixth section of the Act, subject to be controlled, modified, +superseded, or abolished. I also announced that no removals from +office would be made unless the incumbents failed to carry out the +provisions of the law or impeded reorganization, or unless willful +delays should necessitate a change, and added: "Pending the +reorganization, it is, desirable and intended to create as little +disturbance in the machinery of the various branches of the +provisional governments as possible, consistent with the law of +Congress and its successful execution, but this condition is +dependent upon the disposition shown by the people, and upon the +length of time required for reorganization." + +Under these limitations Louisiana and Texas retained their former +designations as military districts, the officers in command +exercising their military powers as heretofore. In addition, these +officers were to carry out in their respective commands all +provisions of the law except those specially requiring the action of +the district commander, and in cases of removals from and appointment +to office. + +In the course of legislation the first Reconstruction act, as I have +heretofore noted, had been vetoed. On the very day of the veto, +however, despite the President's adverse action, it passed each House +of Congress by such an overwhelming majority as not only to give it +the effect of law, but to prove clearly that the plan of +reconstruction presented was, beyond question, the policy endorsed by +the people of the country. It was, therefore, my determination to +see to the law's zealous execution in my district, though I felt +certain that the President would endeavor to embarrass me by every +means in his power, not only on account of his pronounced personal +hostility, but also because of his determination not to execute but +to obstruct the measures enacted by Congress. + +Having come to this conclusion, I laid down, as a rule for my +guidance, the principle of non-interference with the provisional +State governments, and though many appeals were made to have me +rescind rulings of the courts, or interpose to forestall some +presupposed action to be taken by them, my invariable reply was that +I would not take cognizance of such matters, except in cases of +absolute necessity. The same policy was announced also in reference +to municipal affairs throughout the district, so long as the action +of the local officers did not conflict with the law. + +In a very short time, however, I was obliged to interfere in +municipal matters in New Orleans, for it had become clearly apparent +that several of the officials were, both by acts of omission and +commission, ignoring the law, so on the 27th of March I removed from +office the Mayor, John T. Monroe; the Judge of the First District +Court, E. Abell; and the Attorney-General of the State, Andrew S. +Herron; at the same time appointing to the respective offices thus +vacated Edward Heath, W. W. Howe, and B. L. Lynch. The officials +thus removed had taken upon themselves from the start to pronounce +the Reconstruction acts unconstitutional, and to advise such a course +of obstruction that I found it necessary at an early dav to replace +them by men in sympathy with the law, in order to make plain my +determination to have its provisions enforced. The President at once +made inquiry, through General Grant, for the cause of the removal, +and I replied: + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT, +"New Orleans, La., April 19, 1867. + +"GENERAL: On the 27th day of March last I removed from office Judge +E. Abell, of the Criminal Court of New Orleans; Andrew S. Herron, +Attorney-General of the State of Louisiana; and John T. Monroe, Mayor +of the City of New Orleans. These removals were made under the +powers granted me in what is usually termed the 'military bill,' +passed March 2, 1867, by the Congress of the United States. + +"I did not deem it necessary to give any reason for the removal of +these men, especially after the investigations made by the military +board on the massacre Of July 30, 1866, and the report of the +congressional committee on the same massacre; but as some inquiry has +been made for the cause of removal, I would respectfully state as +follows: + +"The court over which judge Abell presided is the only criminal court +in the city of New Orleans, and for a period of at least nine months +previous to the riot Of July 30 he had been educating a large portion +of the community to the perpetration of this outrage, by almost +promising no prosecution in his court against the offenders, in case +such an event occurred. The records of his court will show that he +fulfilled his promise, as not one of the guilty has been prosecuted. + +"In reference to Andrew J. Herron, Attorney-General of the State of +Louisiana, I considered it his duty to indict these men before this +criminal court. This he failed to do, but went so far as to attempt +to impose on the good sense of the whole nation by indicting the +victims of the riot instead of the rioters; in other words, making +the innocent guilty and the guilty innocent. He was therefore, in my +belief, an able coadjutor with judge Abell in bringing on the +massacre of July 30. + +"Mayor Monroe controlled the element engaged in this riot, and when +backed by an attorney-general who would not prosecute the guilty, and +a judge who advised the grand jury to find the innocent guilty and +let the murderers go free, felt secure in engaging his police force +in the riot and massacre. + +"With these three men exercising a large influence over the worst +elements of the population of this city, giving to those elements an +immunity for riot and bloodshed, the general-in-chief will see how +insecurely I felt in letting them occupy their respective positions +in the troubles which might occur in registration and voting in the +reorganization of this State. + +"I am, General, very respectfully, your obedient servant, + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General U. S. A. + + +"GENERAL U. S. GRANT, +"Commanding Armies of the United States, +"Washington, D. C." + + +To General Grant my reasons were satisfactory, but not so to the +President, who took no steps, however, to rescind my action, for he +knew that the removals were commended by well-nigh the entire +community in the city, for it will be understood that Mr. Johnson +was, through his friends and adherents in Louisiana and Texas, kept +constantly advised of every step taken by me. Many of these persons +were active and open opponents of mine, while others were spies, +doing their work so secretly and quickly that sometimes Mr. Johnson +knew of my official acts before I could report them to General Grant. + +The supplemental Reconstruction act which defined the method of +reconstruction became a law despite the President's veto on March 23. +This was a curative act, authorizing elections and prescribing +methods of registration. When it reached me officially I began +measures for carrying out its provisions, and on the 28th of March +issued an order to the effect that no elections for the State, +parish, or municipal officers would be held in Louisiana until the +provisions of the laws of Congress entitled "An act to provide for +the more efficient government of the rebel States," and of the act +supplemental thereto, should have been complied with. I also +announced that until elections were held in accordance with these +acts, the law of the Legislature of the State providing for the +holding over of those persons whose terms of office otherwise would +have expired, would govern in all cases excepting only those special +ones in which I myself might take action. There was one parish, +Livingston, which this order did no reach in time to prevent the +election previously ordered there, and which therefore took place, +but by a supplemental order this election was declare null and void. + +In April. I began the work of administering the Supplemental Law, +which, under certain condition of eligibility, required a +registration of the voter of the State, for the purpose of electing +delegate to a Constitutional convention. It therefore became +necessary to appoint Boards of Registration throughout the election +districts, and on April 10 the boards for the Parish of Orleans were +given out, those for the other parishes being appointed ten days +later. Before announcing these boards, I had asked to be advised +definitely as to what persons were disfranchised by the law, and was +directed by General Grant to act upon my own interpretation of it, +pending an opinion expected shortly from the Attorney-General--Mr. +Henry Stanbery--so, for the guidance of the boards, I gave the +following instructions: + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT. +"New Orleans, La., April 10, 1867. + +"Special Orders, No. 15. + +"....In obedience to the directions contained in the first section of +the Law of Congress entitled "An Act supplemental to an Act entitled +'An Act to provide for the more efficient government of the rebel +States'" the registration of the legal voters, according to that law +in the Parish of Orleans, will be commenced on the 15th instant, and +must be completed by the 15th of May. + +"The four municipal districts of the City of New Orleans and the +Parish of Orleans, right bank (Algiers), will each constitute a +Registration district. Election precincts will remain as at present +constituted. + +"....Each member of the Board of Registers, before commencing his +duties, will file in the office of the Assistant-Inspector-General at +these headquarters, the oath required in the sixth section of the Act +referred to, and be governed in the execution of his duty by the +provisions of the first section of that Act, faithfully administering +the oath therein prescribed to each person registered. + +"Boards of Registers will immediately select suitable offices within +their respective districts, having reference to convenience and +facility of registration, and will enter upon their duties on the day +designated. Each Board will be entitled to two clerks. Office-hours +for registration will be from 8 o'clock till 12 A. M., and from 4 +till 7 P. M. + +"When elections are ordered, the Board of Registers for each district +will designate the number of polls and the places where they shall be +opened in the election precincts within its district, appoint the +commissioners and other officers necessary for properly conducting +the elections, and will superintend the same. + +"They will also receive from the commissioners of elections of the +different precincts the result of the vote, consolidate the same, and +forward it to the commanding general. + +"Registers and all officers connected with elections will be held to +a rigid accountability and will be subject to trial by military +commission for fraud, or unlawful or improper conduct in the +performance of their duties. Their rate of compensation and manner +of payment will be in accordance with the provisions of sections six +and seven of the supplemental act. + +"....Every male citizen of the United States, twenty-one years old +and upward, of whatever race, color, or previous condition, who has +been resident in the State of Louisiana for one year and Parish of +Orleans for three months previous to the date at which he presents +himself for registration, and who has not been disfranchised by act +of Congress or for felony at common law, shall, after having taken +and subscribed the oath prescribed in the first section of the act +herein referred to, be entitled to be, and shall be, registered as a +legal voter in the Parish of Orleans and State of Louisiana. + +"Pending the decision of the Attorney-General of the United States on +the question as to who are disfranchised by law, registers will give +the most rigid interpretation to the law, and exclude from +registration every person about whose right to vote there may be a +doubt. Any person so excluded who may, under the decision of the +Attorney-General, be entitled to vote, shall be permitted to register +after that decision is received, due notice of which will be given. + +"By command of Major-General P. H. SHERIDAN, + +"GEO. L. HARTSUFF, +"Assistant Adjutant-General." + + +The parish Boards of Registration were composed of three members +each. Ability to take what was known as the "ironclad oath" was the +qualification exacted of the members, and they were prohibited from +becoming candidates for office. In the execution of their duties +they were to be governed by the provisions of the supplemental act. +It was also made one of their functions to designate the number and +location of the polling-places in the several districts, to appoint +commissioners for receiving the votes and in general to attend to +such other matters as were necessary, in order properly to conduct +the voting, and afterward to receive from the commissioners the +result of the vote and forward it to my headquarters. These +registers, and all other officers having to do with elections, were +to be held to a rigid accountability, and be subject to trial by +military commission for fraud or unlawful or improper conduct in the +performance of their duties; and in order to be certain that the +Registration Boards performed their work faithfully and +intelligently, officers of the army were appointed as supervisors. +To this end the parishes were grouped together conveniently in +temporary districts, each officer having from three to five parishes +to supervise. The programme thus mapped out for carrying out the law +in Louisiana was likewise adhered to in Texas, and indeed was +followed as a model in some of the other military districts. + +Although Military Commissions were fully authorized by the +Reconstruction acts, yet I did not favor their use in governing the +district, and probably would never have convened one had these acts +been observed in good faith. I much preferred that the civil courts, +and the State and municipal authorities already in existence, should +perform their functions without military control or interference, but +occasionally, because the civil authorities neglected their duty, I +was obliged to resort to this means to ensure the punishment Of +offenders. At this time the condition of the negroes in Texas and +Louisiana was lamentable, though, in fact, not worse than that of the +few white loyalists who had been true to the Union during the war. +These last were singled out as special objects of attack, and were, +therefore, obliged at all times to be on the alert for the protection +of their lives and property. This was the natural outcome of Mr. +Johnson's defiance of Congress, coupled with the sudden conversion to +his cause of persons in the North--who but a short time before had +been his bitterest enemies; for all this had aroused among the +disaffected element new hopes of power and place, hopes of being at +once put in political control again, with a resumption of their +functions in State and National matters without any preliminary +authorization by Congress. In fact, it was not only hoped, but +expected, that things were presently to go on just as if there had +been no war. + +In the State of Texas there were in 1865 about 200,000 of the colored +race-roughly, a third of the entire population--while in Louisiana +there were not less than 350,000, or more than one-half of all the +people in the State. Until the enactment of the Reconstruction laws +these negroes were without rights, and though they had been liberated +by the war, Mr. Johnson's policy now proposed that they should have +no political status at all, and consequently be at the mercy of a +people who, recently their masters, now seemed to look upon them as +the authors of all the misfortunes that had come upon the land. +Under these circumstances the blacks naturally turned for protection +to those who had been the means of their liberation, and it would +have been little less than inhuman to deny them sympathy. Their +freedom had been given them, and it was the plain duty of those in +authority to make it secure, and screen them from the bitter +political resentment that beset them, and to see that they had a fair +chance in the battle of life. Therefore, when outrages and murders +grew frequent, and the aid of the military power was an absolute +necessity for the protection of life, I employed it unhesitatingly-- +the guilty parties being brought to trial before military +commissions--and for a time, at least, there occurred a halt in the +march of terrorism inaugurated by the people whom Mr. Johnson had +deluded. + +The first, Military Commission was convened to try the case of John +W. Walker, charged with shooting a negro in the parish of St. John. +The proper civil authorities had made no effort to arrest Walker, and +even connived at his escape, so I had him taken into custody in New +Orleans, and ordered him tried, the commission finding him guilty, +and sentencing him to confinement in the penitentiary for six months. +This shooting was the third occurrence of the kind that had taken +place in St. John's parish, a negro being wounded in each case, and +it was plain that the intention was to institute there a practice of +intimidation which should be effective to subject the freedmen to the +will of their late masters, whether in making labor contracts, or in +case these newly enfranchised negroes should evince a disposition to +avail themselves of the privilege to vote. + +The trial and conviction of Walker, and of one or two others for +similiar outrages, soon put a stop to every kind of "bull-dozing" in +the country parishes; but about this time I discovered that many +members of the police force in New Orleans were covertly intimidating +the freedmen there, and preventing their appearance at the +registration offices, using milder methods than had obtained in the +country, it is true, but none the less effective. + +Early in 1866 the Legislature had passed an act which created for the +police of New Orleans a residence qualification, the object of which +was to discharge and exclude from the force ex-Union soldiers. This +of course would make room for the appointment of ex-Confederates, and +Mayor Monroe had not been slow in enforcing the provisions of the +law. It was, in fact, a result of this enactment that the police was +so reorganized as to become the willing and efficient tool which it +proved to be in the riot of 1866; and having still the same +personnel, it was now in shape to prevent registration by threats, +unwarranted arrests, and by various other influences, all operating +to keep the timid blacks away from the registration places. + +That the police were taking a hand in this practice of repression, I +first discovered by the conduct of the assistant to the chief of the +body, and at once removed the offender, but finding this ineffectual +I annulled that part of the State law fixing the five years' +residence restriction, and restored the two years' qualification, +thus enabling Mayor Heath, who by my appointment had succeeded +Monroe, to organize the force anew, and take about one-half of its +members from ex-Union soldiers who when discharged had settled in New +Orleans. This action put an end to intimidation in the parish of +Orleans; and now were put in operation in all sections the processes +provided by the supplemental Reconstruction law for the summoning of +a convention to form a Constitution preparatory to the readmission of +the State, and I was full of hope that there would now be much less +difficulty in administering the trust imposed by Congress. + +During the two years previous great damage had been done the +agricultural interests of Louisiana by the overflow of the +Mississippi, the levees being so badly broken as to require extensive +repairs, and the Legislature of 1866 had appropriated for the purpose +$4,000,000, to be raised by an issue of bonds. This money was to be +disbursed by a Board of Levee Commissioners then in existence, but +the term of service of these commissioners, and the law creating the +board, would expire in the spring of 1867. In order to overcome this +difficulty the Legislature passed a bill continuing the commissioners +in office but as the act was passed inside of ten days before the +adjournment of the Legislature, Governor Wells pocketed the bill, and +it failed to become a law. The Governor then appointed a board of +his own, without any warrant of law whatever. The old commissioners +refused to recognize this new board, and of course a conflict of +authority ensued, which, it was clear, would lead to vicious results +if allowed to continue; so, as the people of the State had no +confidence in either of the boards, I decided to end the contention +summarily by appointing an entirely new commission, which would +disburse the money honestly, and further the real purpose for which +it had been appropriated. When I took this course the legislative +board acquiesced, but Governor Wells immediately requested the +President to revoke my order, which, however, was not done, but +meanwhile the Secretary of War directed me to suspend all proceedings +in the matter, and make a report of the facts. I complied in the +following telegram: + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT, +"NEW ORLEANS, La., June 3, 1867. + +"SIR: I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of your telegram of +this date in reference to the Levee Commissioners in this State. + +"The following were my reasons for abolishing the two former boards, +although I intended that my order should be sufficiently explanatory: + +"Previous to the adjournment of the Legislature last winter it passed +an act continuing the old Levee board in office, so that the four +millions of dollars ($4,000,000) in bonds appropriated by the +Legislature might be disbursed by a board of rebellious antecedents. + +"After its adjournment the Governor of the State appointed a board of +his own, in violation of this act, and made the acknowledgment to me +in person that his object was to disburse the money in the interest +of his own party by securing for it the vote of the employees at the +time of election. + +"The board continued in office by the Legislature refused to turn +over to the Governor's board, and each side appealed to me to sustain +it, which I would not do. The question must then have gone to the +courts, which, according to the Governor's judgment when he was +appealing to me to be sustained, would require one year for decision. +Meantime the State was overflowed, the Levee boards tied up by +political chicanery, and nothing done to relieve the poor people, now +fed by the charity of the Government and charitable associations of +the North. + +"To obviate this trouble, and to secure to the overflowed districts +of the State the immediate relief which the honest disbursement of +the four millions ($4,000,000) would give, my order dissolving both +boards was issued. + +"I say now, unequivocally, that Governor Wells is a political +trickster and a dishonest man. I have seen him myself, when I first +came to this command, turn out all the Union men who had supported +the Government, and put in their stead rebel soldiers who had not yet +doffed their gray uniform. I have seen him again, during the July +riot of 1866, skulk away where I could not find him to give him a +guard, instead of coming out as a manly representative of the State +and joining those who were preserving the peace. I have watched him +since, and his conduct has been as sinuous as the mark left in the +dust by the movement of a snake. + +"I say again that he is dishonest, and that dishonesty is more than +must be expected of me. + +"P. H. SHERIDAN, +"Major-General, U. S. A. + +"Hon. E. M. STANTON, +"Secretary of War, Washington, D. C." + + +The same day that I sent my report to the Secretary of War I removed +from office Governor Wells himself, being determined to bear no +longer with the many obstructions he had placed in the way of +reorganizing the civil affairs of the State. I was also satisfied +that he was unfit to retain the place, since he was availing himself +of every opportunity to work political ends beneficial to himself. +In this instance Wells protested to me against his removal, and also +appealed to the President for an opinion of the Attorney-General as +to my power in the case; and doubtless he would have succeeded in +retaining his office, but for the fact that the President had been +informed by General James B. Steadman and others placed to watch me +that Wells was wholly unworthy. + + +"NEW ORLEANS, June 19, 1867. +"ANDREW JOHNSON, President United States, +"Washington City: + +"Lewis D. Campbell leaves New Orleans for home this evening. Want +of respect for Governor Wells personally, alone represses the +expression of indignation felt by all honest and sensible men at the +unwarranted usurpation of General Sheridan in removing the civil +officers of Louisiana. It is believed here that you will reinstate +Wells. He is a bad man, and has no influence. + +"I believe Sheridan made the removals to embarrass you, believing the +feeling at the North would sustain him. My conviction is that on +account of the bad character of Wells and Monroe, you ought not to +reinstate any who have been removed, because you cannot reinstate any +without reinstating all, but you ought to prohibit the exercise of +this power in the future. + +"Respectfully yours, + +"JAMES B. STEADMAN." + + +I appointed Mr. Thomas J. Durant as Wells's successor, but he +declining, I then appointed Mr. Benjamin F. Flanders, who, after I +had sent a staff-officer to forcibly eject Wells in case of +necessity, took possession of the Governor's office. Wells having +vacated, Governor Flanders began immediately the exercise of his +duties in sympathy with the views of Congress, and I then notified +General Grant that I thought he need have no further apprehension +about the condition of affairs in Louisiana, as my appointee was a +man of such integrity and ability that I already felt relieved of +half my labor. I also stated in the same despatch that nothing would +answer in Louisiana but a bold and firm course, and that in taking +such a one I felt that I was strongly supported; a statement that was +then correct, for up to this period the better classes were disposed +to accept the Congressional plan of reconstruction. + +During the controversy over the Levee Commissioners, and the +correspondence regarding the removal of Governor Wells, registration +had gone on under the rules laid down for the boards. The date set +for closing the books was the 3oth of June, but in the parish of +Orleans the time was extended till the 15th of July. This the +President considered too short a period, and therefore directed the +registry lists not to be closed before the 1st of August, unless +there was some good reason to the contrary. This was plainly +designed to keep the books open in order that under the Attorney- +General's interpretation of the Reconstruction laws, published June +20, many persons who had been excluded by the registration boards +could yet be registered, so I decided to close the registration, +unless required by the President unconditionally, and in specific +orders, to extend the time. My motives were manifold, but the main +reasons were that as two and a half months had been given already, +the number of persons who, under the law, were qualified for registry +was about exhausted; and because of the expense I did not feel +warranted in keeping up the boards longer, as I said, "to suit new +issues coming in at the eleventh hour," which would but open a "broad +macadamized road for perjury and fraud." + +When I thus stated what I intended to do, the opinion of the +Attorney-General had not yet been received. When it did reach me it +was merely in the form of a circular signed by Adjutant-General +Townsend, and had no force of law. It was not even sent as an order, +nor was it accompanied by any instructions, or by anything except the +statement that it was transmitted to the 11 respective military +commanders for their information, in order that there might be +uniformity in the execution of the Reconstruction acts. To adopt +Mr. Stanbery's interpretation of the law and reopen registration +accordingly, would defeat the purpose of Congress, as well as add to +my perplexities. Such a course would also require that the officers +appointed by me for the performance of specified duties, under laws +which I was empowered to interpret and enforce, should receive their +guidance and instructions from an unauthorized source, so on +communicating with General Grant as to how I should act, he directed +me to enforce my own construction of the military bill until ordered +to do otherwise. + +Therefore the registration continued as I had originally directed, +and nothing having been definitely settled at Washington in relation +to my extending the time, on the 10th of July I ordered all the +registration boards to select, immediately, suitable persons to act +as commissioners of election, and at the same time specified the +number of each set of commissioners, designated the polling-places, +gave notice that two days would be allowed for voting, and followed +this with an order discontinuing registration the 31st of July, and +then another appointing the 27th and 28th of September as the time +for the election of delegates to the State convention. + +In accomplishing the registration there had been little opposition +from the mass of the people, but the press of New Orleans, and the +office-holders and office-seekers in the State generally, antagonized +the work bitterly and violently, particularly after the promulgation +of the opinion of the Attorney-General. These agitators condemned +everybody and everything connected with the Congressional plan of +reconstruction; and the pernicious influence thus exerted was +manifested in various ways, but most notably in the selection of +persons to compose the jury lists in the country parishes it also +tempted certain municipal officers in New Orleans to perform illegal +acts that would seriously have affected the credit of the city had +matters not been promptly corrected by the summary removal from +office of the comptroller and the treasurer, who had already issued a +quarter of a million dollars in illegal certificates. On learning of +this unwarranted and unlawful proceeding, Mayor Heath demanded an +investigation by the Common Council, but this body, taking its cue +from the evident intention of the President to render abortive the +Reconstruction acts, refused the mayor's demand. Then he tried to +have the treasurer and comptroller restrained by injunction, but the +city attorney, under the same inspiration as the council, declined to +sue out a writ, and the attorney being supported in this course by +nearly all the other officials, the mayor was left helpless in his +endeavors to preserve the city's credit. Under such circumstances he +took the only step left him--recourse to the military commander; and +after looking into the matter carefully I decided, in the early part +of August, to give the mayor officials who would not refuse to make +an investigation of the illegal issue of certificates, and to this +end I removed the treasurer, surveyor, comptroller, city attorney, +and twenty-two of the aldermen; these officials, and all of their +assistants, having reduced the financial credit of New Orleans to a +disordered condition, and also having made efforts--and being then +engaged in such--to hamper the execution of the Reconstruction laws. + +This action settled matters in the city, but subsequently I had to +remove some officials in the parishes--among them a justice of the +peace and a sheriff in the parish of Rapides; the justice for +refusing to permit negro witnesses to testify in a certain murder +case, and for allowing the murderer, who had foully killed a colored +man, to walk out of his court on bail in the insignificant sum of +five hundred dollars; and the sheriff, for conniving at the escape +from jail of another alleged murderer. Finding, however, even after +these removals, that in the country districts murderers and other +criminals went unpunished, provided the offenses were against negroes +merely (since the jurors were selected exclusively from the whites, +and often embraced those excluded from the exercise of the election +franchise) I, having full authority under the Reconstruction laws, +directed such a revision of the jury lists as would reject from them +every man not eligible for registration as a voter. This order was +issued August 24, and on its promulgation the President relieved me +from duty and assigned General Hancock as my successor. + + +"HEADQUARTERS FIFTH MILITARY DISTRICT, +"NEW ORLEANS, LA., August 24, 1867. + +"SPECIAL ORDERS, No. 125. + +"The registration of voters of the State of Louisiana, according to +the law of Congress, being complete, it is hereby ordered that no +person who is not registered in accordance with said law shall be +considered as, a duly qualified voter of the State of Louisiana. All +persons duly registered as above, and no others, are consequently +eligible, under the laws of the State of Louisiana, to serve as +jurors in any of the courts of the State. + +"The necessary revision of the jury lists will immediately be made by +the proper officers. + +"All the laws of the State respecting exemptions, etc., from jury +duty will remain in force. + +"By command of Major-General P. H. SHERIDAN. + +"GEO. L. HARTNUFF, Asst. Adj't-General." + + +Pending the arrival of General Hancock, I turned over the command of +the district September 1 to General Charles Griffin; but he dying of +yellow fever, General J. A. Mower succeeded him, and retained command +till November 29, on which date General Hancock assumed control. +Immediately after Hancock took charge, he revoked my order of August +24 providing for a revision of the jury lists; and, in short, +President Johnson's policy now became supreme, till Hancock himself +was relieved in March, 1868. + +My official connection with the reconstruction of Louisiana and Texas +practically closed with this order concerning the jury lists. In my +judgment this had become a necessity, for the disaffected element, +sustained as it was by the open sympathy of the President, had grown +so determined in its opposition to the execution of the +Reconstruction acts that I resolved to remove from place and power +all obstacles; for the summer's experience had convinced me that in +no other way could the law be faithfully administered. + +The President had long been dissatisfied with my course; indeed, he +had harbored personal enmity against me ever since he perceived that +he could not bend me to an acceptance of the false position in which +he had tried to place me by garbling my report of the riot of 1866. +When Mr. Johnson decided to remove me, General Grant protested in +these terms, but to no purpose: + +"HEADQUARTERS ARMIES OF THE UNITED STATES, +"WASHINGTON, D. C., August 17, 1867 + +"SIR: I am in receipt of your order of this date directing the +assignment of General G. H. Thomas to the command of the Fifth +Military District, General Sheridan to the Department of the +Missouri, and General Hancock to the Department of the Cumberland; +also your note of this date (enclosing these instructions), saying: +'Before you issue instructions to carry into effect the enclosed +order, I would be pleased to hear any suggestions you may deem +necessary respecting the assignments to which the order refers.' + +"I am pleased to avail myself of this invitation to urge--earnestly +urge--urge in the name of a patriotic people, who have sacrificed +hundreds of thousands of loyal lives and thousands of millions of +treasure to preserve the integrity and union of this country--that +this order be not insisted on. It is unmistakably the expressed wish +of the country that General Sheridan should not be removed from his +present command. + +"This is a republic where the will of the people is the law of the +land. I beg that their voice may be heard. + +"General Sheridan has performed his civil duties faithfully and +intelligently. His removal will only be regarded as an effort to +defeat the laws of Congress. It will be interpreted by the +unreconstructed element in the South--those who did all they could to +break up this Government by arms, and now wish to be the only element +consulted as to the method of restoring order--as a triumph. It will +embolden them to renewed opposition to the will of the loyal masses, +believing that they have the Executive with them. + +"The services of General Thomas in battling for the Union entitle him +to some consideration. He has repeatedly entered his protest against +being assigned to either of the five military districts, and +especially to being assigned to relieve General Sheridan. + +"There are military reasons, pecuniary reasons, and above all, +patriotic reasons, why this should not be insisted upon. + +"I beg to refer to a letter marked 'private,' which I wrote to the +President when first consulted on the subject of the change in the +War Department. It bears upon the subject of this removal, and I had +hoped would have prevented it. + +"I have the honor to be, with great respect, your obedient servant, + +"U. S. GRANT, +"General U. S. A., Secretary of War ad interim. + +"His Excellency A. JOHNSON, +"President of the United States." + + +I was ordered to command the Department of the Missouri (General +Hancock, as already noted, finally becoming my successor in the Fifth +Military District), and left New Orleans on the 5th of September. I +was not loath to go. The kind of duty I had been performing in +Louisiana and Texas was very trying under the most favorable +circumstances, but all the more so in my case, since I had to contend +against the obstructions which the President placed in the way from +persistent opposition to the acts of Congress as well as from +antipathy to me--which obstructions he interposed with all the +boldness and aggressiveness of his peculiar nature. + +On more than one occasion while I was exercising this command, +impurity of motive was imputed to me, but it has never been +truthfully shown (nor can it ever be) that political or corrupt +influences of any kind controlled me in any instance. I simply tried +to carry out, without fear or favor, the Reconstruction acts as they +came to me. They were intended to disfranchise certain persons, and +to enfranchise certain others, and, till decided otherwise, were the +laws of the land; and it was my duty to execute them faithfully, +without regard, on the one hand, for those upon whom it was thought +they bore so heavily, nor, on the other, for this or that political +party, and certainly without deference to those persons sent to +Louisiana to influence my conduct of affairs. + +Some of these missionaries were high officials, both military and +civil, and I recall among others a visit made me in 1866 by a +distinguished friend of the President, Mr. Thomas A. Hendricks. The +purpose of his coming was to convey to me assurances of the very high +esteem in which I was held by the President, and to explain +personally Mr. Johnson's plan of reconstruction, its flawless +constitutionality, and so on. But being on the ground, I had before +me the exhibition of its practical working, saw the oppression and +excesses growing out of it, and in the face of these experiences even +Mr. Hendricks's persuasive eloquence was powerless to convince me of +its beneficence. Later General Lovell H. Rousseau came down on a +like mission, but was no more successful than Mr. Hendricks. + +During the whole period that I commanded in Louisiana and Texas my +position was a most unenviable one. The service was unusual, and the +nature of it scarcely to be understood by those not entirely familiar +with the conditions existing immediately after the war. In +administering the affairs of those States, I never acted except by +authority, and always from conscientious motives. I tried to guard +the rights of everybody in accordance with the law. In this I was +supported by General Grant and opposed by President Johnson. The +former had at heart, above every other consideration, the good of his +country, and always sustained me with approval and kind suggestions. +The course pursued by the President was exactly the opposite, and +seems to prove that in the whole matter of reconstruction he was +governed less by patriotic motives than by personal ambitions. Add +to this his natural obstinacy of character and personal enmity toward +me, and no surprise should be occasioned when I say that I heartily +welcomed the order that lifted from me my unsought burden. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +AT FORT LEAVENWORTH--THE TREATY OF MEDICINE LODGE--GOING TO FORT +DODGE--DISCONTENTED INDIANS--INDIAN OUTRAGES--A DELEGATION OF CHIEFS- +-TERRIBLE INDIAN RAID--DEATH OF COMSTOCK--VAST HERDS OF BUFFALO--PRE +PARING FOR A WINTER CAMPAIGN--MEETING "BUFFALO BILL"--HE UNDERTAKES A +DANGEROUS TASK--FORSYTH'S GALLANT FIGHT--RESCUED. + +The headquarters of the military department to which I was assigned +when relieved from duty at New Orleans was at Fort Leavenworth, +Kansas, and on the 5th of September I started for that post. In due +time I reached St. Louis, and stopped there a day to accept an +ovation tendered in approval of the course I had pursued in the Fifth +Military District--a public demonstration apparently of the most +sincere and hearty character. + +From St. Louis to Leavenworth took but one night, and the next day I +technically complied with my orders far enough to permit General +Hancock to leave the department, so that he might go immediately to +New Orleans if he so desired, but on account of the yellow fever +epidemic then prevailing, he did not reach the city till late in +November. + +My new command was one of the four military departments that composed +the geographical division then commanded by Lieutenant-General +Sherman. This division had been formed in 1866, with a view to +controlling the Indians west of the Missouri River, they having +become very restless and troublesome because of the building of the +Pacific railroads through their hunting-grounds, and the +encroachments of pioneers, who began settling in middle and western +Kansas and eastern Colorado immediately after the war. + +My department embraced the States of Missouri and Kansas, the Indian +Territory, and New Mexico. Part of this section of country--western +Kansas particularly--had been frequently disturbed and harassed +during two or three years past, the savages every now and then +massacring an isolated family, boldly attacking the surveying and +construction parties of the Kansas-Pacific railroad, sweeping down on +emigrant trains, plundering and burning stage-stations and the like +along the Smoky Hill route to Denver and the Arkansas route to New +Mexico. + +However, when I relieved Hancock, the department was comparatively +quiet. Though some military operations had been conducted against +the hostile tribes in the early part of the previous summer, all +active work was now suspended in the attempt to conclude a permanent +peace with the Cheyennes, Arapahoes, Kiowas, and Comanches, in +compliance with the act of Congress creating what was known as the +Indian Peace Commission of 1867. + +Under these circumstances there was little necessity for my remaining +at Leavenworth, and as I was much run down in health from the +Louisiana climate, in which I had been obliged to live continuously +for three summers (one of which brought epidemic cholera, and another +a scourge of yellow fever), I took a leave of absence for a few +months, leaving Colonel A. J. Smith, of the Seventh Cavalry, +temporarily in charge of my command. + +On this account I did not actually go on duty in the department of +the Missouri till March, 1868. On getting back I learned that the +negotiations of the Peace Commissioners held at Medicine Lodge, about +seventy miles south of Fort Larned had resulted in a treaty with the +Cheyennes, Arapahoes, Kiowas, and Comanches, by which agreement it +was supposed all troubles had been settled. The compact, as +concluded, contained numerous provisions, the most important to us +being one which practically relinquished the country between the +Arkansas and Platte rivers for white settlement; another permitted +the peaceable construction of the Pacific railroads through the same +region; and a third requiring the tribes signing the treaty to retire +to reservations allotted them in the Indian Territory. Although the +chiefs and head-men were well-nigh unanimous in ratifying these +concessions, it was discovered in the spring of 1868 that many of the +young men were bitterly opposed to what had been done, and claimed +that most of the signatures had been obtained by misrepresentation +and through proffers of certain annuities, and promises of arms and +ammunition to be issued in the spring of 1868. This grumbling was +very general in extent, and during the winter found outlet in +occasional marauding, so, fearing a renewal of the pillaging and +plundering at an early day, to prepare myself for the work evidently +ahead the first thing I did on assuming permanent command was to make +a trip to Fort Larned and Fort Dodge, near which places the bulk of +the Indians had congregated on Pawnee and Walnut creeks. I wanted to +get near enough to the camps to find out for myself the actual state +of feeling among the savages, and also to familiarize myself with the +characteristics of the Plains Indians, for my previous experience had +been mainly with mountain tribes on Ehe Pacific coast. Fort Larned I +found too near the camps for my purpose, its proximity too readily +inviting unnecessary "talks," so I remained here but a day or two, +and then went on to Dodge, which, though considerably farther away +from the camps, was yet close enough to enable us to obtain easily +information of all that was going on. + +It took but a few days at Dodge to discover that great discontent +existed about the Medicine Lodge concessions, to see that the young +men were chafing and turbulent, and that it would require much tact +and good management on the part of the Indian Bureau to persuade the +four tribes to go quietly to their reservations, under an agreement +which, when entered into, many of them protested had not been fully +understood. + +A few hours after my arrival a delegation of prominent chiefs called +on me and proposed a council, where they might discuss their +grievances, and thus bring to the notice of the Government the +alleged wrongs done them; but this I refused, because Congress had +delegated to the Peace Commission the whole matter of treating with +them, and a council might lead only to additional complications. My +refusal left them without hope of securing better terms, or of even +delaying matters longer; so henceforth they were more than ever +reckless and defiant. Denunciations of the treaty became outspoken, +and as the young braves grew more and more insolent every day, it +amounted to conviction that, unless by some means the irritation was +allayed, hostilities would surely be upon us when the buffalo +returned to their summer feeding-grounds between the Arkansas and the +Platte. + +The principal sufferers in this event would be the settlers in middle +and western Kansas, who, entirely ignorant of the dangers hanging +over them, were laboring to build up homes in a new country. Hence +the maintenance of peace was much to be desired, if it could be +secured without too great concessions, and although I would not meet +the different tribes in a formal council, yet, to ward off from +settlers as much as possible the horrors of savage warfare, I showed, +by resorting to persuasive methods, my willingness to temporize a +good deal. An abundant supply of rations is usually effective to +keep matters quiet in such cases, so I fed them pretty freely, and +also endeavored to control them through certain men who, I found, +because of former associations, had their confidence. These men, +employed as scouts, or interpreters, were Mr. William Comstock, Mr. +Abner S. Grover, and Mr. Richard Parr. They had lived on the Plains +for many years with different tribes of Indians, had trapped and +hunted with them, and knew all the principal chiefs and headmen. +Through such influences, I thought I saw good chances of preserving +peace, and of inducing the discontented to go quietly to their +reservations in the Indian Territory as soon as General Hazen, the +representative of the Peace Commissioners, was ready to conduct them +there from Fort Larned. + +Before returning to Leavenworth I put my mediators (as I may call +them) under charge of an officer of the army, Lieutenant F. W. +Beecher, a very intelligent man, and directed him to send them out to +visit among the different tribes, in order to explain what was +intended by the treaty of Medicine Lodge, and to make every effort +possible to avert hostilities. Under these instructions Comstock and +Grover made it their business to go about among the Cheyennes--the +most warlike tribe of all--then camping about the headwaters of +Pawnee and Walnut creeks, and also to the north and west of Fort +Wallace, while Parr spent his time principally with the Kiowas and +Comanches. + +From the different posts--Wallace, Dodge, and Larned Lieutenant +Beecher kept up communication with all three scouts, and through him +I heard from them at least once a week. Every now and then some +trouble along the railroad or stage routes would be satisfactorily +adjusted and quiet restored, and matters seemed to be going on very +well, the warm weather bringing the grass and buffalo in plenty, and +still no outbreak, nor any act of downright hostility. So I began to +hope that we should succeed in averting trouble till the favorite war +season of the Indians was over, but the early days of August rudely +ended our fancied tranquility. + +In July the encampments about Fort Dodge began to break up, each band +or tribe moving off to some new location north of the Arkansas, +instead of toward its proper reservation to the south of that river. +Then I learned presently that a party of Cheyennes had made a raid on +the Kaws--a band of friendly Indians living near Council Grove--and +stolen their horses, and also robbed the houses of several white +people near Council Grove. This raid was the beginning of the Indian +war of 1868. Immediately following it, the Comanches and Kiowas came +to Fort Larned to receive their annuities, expecting to get also the +arms and ammunition promised them at Medicine Lodge, but the raid to +Council Grove having been reported to the Indian Department, the +issue of arms was suspended till reparation was made. This action of +the Department greatly incensed the savages, and the agent's offer of +the annuities without guns and pistols was insolently refused, the +Indians sulking back to their camps, the young men giving themselves +up to war-dances, and to powwows with "medicine-men," till all hope +of control was gone. + +Brevet Brigadier-General Alfred Sully, an officer of long experience +in Indian matters, who at this time was in command of the District of +the Arkansas, which embraced Forts Larned and Dodge, having notified +me of these occurrences at Larned, and expressed the opinion that the +Indians were bent on mischief, I directed him there immediately to +act against them. After he reached Larned, the chances for peace +appeared more favorable. The Indians came to see him, and protested +that it was only a few bad young men who had been depredating, and +that all would be well and the young men held in check if the agent +would but issue the arms and ammunition. Believing their promises, +Sully thought that the delivery of the arms would solve all the +difficulties, so on his advice the agent turned them over along with +the annuities, the Indians this time condescendingly accepting. + +This issue of arms and ammunition was a fatal mistake; Indian +diplomacy had overreached Sully's experience, and even while the +delivery was in progress a party of warriors had already begun a raid +of murder and rapine, which for acts of devilish cruelty perhaps has +no parallel in savage warfare. The party consisted of about two +hundred Cheyennes and a few Arapahoes, with twenty Sioux who had been +visiting their friends, the Cheyennes. As near as could be +ascertained, they organized and left their camps along Pawnee Creek +about the 3d of August. Traveling northeast, they skirted around +Fort Harker, and made their first appearance among the settlers in +the Saline Valley, about thirty miles north of that post. Professing +friendship and asking food at the farm-houses, they saw the +unsuspecting occupants comply by giving all they could spare from +their scanty stores. Knowing the Indian's inordinate fondness for +coffee, particularly when well sweetened, they even served him this +luxury freely. With this the demons began their devilish work. +Pretending to be indignant because it was served them in tin cups, +they threw the hot contents into the women's faces, and then, first +making prisoners of the men, they, one after another, ravished the +women till the victims became insensible. For some inexplicable +reason the two farmers were neither killed nor carried off, so after +the red fiends had gone, the unfortunate women were brought in to +Fort Harker, their arrival being the first intimation to the military +that hostilities had actually begun. + +Leaving the Saline, this war-party crossed over to the valley of the +Solomon, a more thickly settled region, and where the people were in +better circumstances, their farms having been started two or three +years before. Unaware of the hostile character of the raiders, the +people here received them in the friendliest way, providing food, and +even giving them ammunition, little dreaming of what was impending. +These kindnesses were requited with murder and pillage, and worse, +for all the women who fell into their hands were subjected to horrors +indescribable by words. Here also the first murders were committed, +thirteen men and two women being killed. Then, after burning five +houses and stealing all the horses they could find, they turned back +toward the Saline, carrying away as prisoners two little girls named +Bell, who have never been heard of since. + +It was probably the intention to finish, as they marched back to the +south, the devilish work begun on the Saline, but before they reached +that valley on the return, the victims left there originally had fled +to Fort Harker, as already explained, and Captain Benteen was now +nearing the little settlement with a troop of cavalry, which he had +hurriedly marched from Fort Zarah. The savages were attacking the +house of a Mr. Schermerhorn, where a few of the settlers had +collected for defense, when Benteen approached. Hearing the firing, +the troopers rode toward the sound at a gallop, but when they +appeared in view, coming over the hills, the Indians fled in all +directions, escaping punishment through their usual tactics of +scattering over the Plains, so as to leave no distinctive trail. + +When this frightful raid was taking place, Lieutenant Beecher, with +his three scouts--Comstock, Grover, and Parr--was on Walnut Creek. +Indefinite rumors about troubles on the Saline and Solomon reaching +him, he immediately sent Comstock and Grover over to the headwaters +of the Solomon, to the camp of a band of Cheyennes, whose chief was +called "Turkey Leg," to see if any of the raiders belonged there; to +learn the facts, and make explanations, if it was found that the +white people had been at fault. For years this chief had been a +special friend of Comstock and Grover. They had trapped, hunted, and +lived with his band, and from this intimacy they felt confident of +being able to get "Turkey Leg" to quiet his people, if any of them +were engaged in the raid; and, at all events, they expected, through +him and his band, to influence the rest of the Cheyennes. From the +moment they arrived in the Indian village, however, the two scouts +met with a very cold reception. Neither friendly pipe nor food was +offered them, and before they could recover from their chilling +reception, they were peremptorily ordered out of the village, with +the intimation that when the Cheyennes were on the war-path the +presence of whites was intolerable. The scouts were prompt to leave, +of course, and for a few miles were accompanied by an escort of seven +young men, who said they were sent with them to protect the two from +harm. As the party rode along over the prairie, such a depth of +attachment was professed for Comstock and Grover that, +notwithstanding all the experience of their past lives, they were +thoroughly deceived, and in the midst of a friendly conversation some +of the young warriors fell suddenly to the rear and treacherously +fired on them. + +At the volley Comstock fell from his horse instantly killed. Grover, +badly wounded in the shoulder, also fell to the ground near Comstock +Seeing his comrade was dead, Grover made use of his friend's body to +protect himself, lying close behind it. Then took place a remarkable +contest, Grover, alone and severely wounded, obstinately fighting the +seven Indians, and holding them at bay for the rest of the day. +Being an expert shot, and having a long-range repeating rifle, he +"stood off" the savages till dark. Then cautiously crawling away on +his belly to a deep ravine, he lay close, suffering terribly from his +wound, till the following night, when, setting out for Fort Wallace, +he arrived there the succeeding day, almost crazed from pain and +exhaustion. + +Simultaneously with the fiendish atrocities committed on the Saline +and Solomon rivers and the attack on Comstock and Grover, the +pillaging and murdering began on the Smoky Hill stage-route, along +the upper Arkansas River and on the headwaters of the Cimarron. That +along the Smoky Hill and north of it was the exclusive work of, the +Cheyennes, a part of the Arapahoes, and the few Sioux allies +heretofore mentioned, while the raiding on the Arkansas and Cimarron +was done principally by the Kiowas under their chief, Satanta, aided +by some of the Comanches. The young men of these tribes set out on +their bloody work just after the annuities and guns were issued at +Larned, and as soon as they were well on the road the rest of the +Comanches and Kiowas escaped from the post and fled south of the +Arkansas. They were at once pursued by General Sully with a small +force, but by the time he reached the Cimarron the war-party had +finished its raid on the upper Arkansas, and so many Indians combined +against Sully that he was compelled to withdraw to Fort Dodge, which +he reached not without considerable difficulty, and after three +severe fights. + +These, and many minor raids which followed, made it plain that a +general outbreak was upon us. The only remedy, therefore, was to +subjugate the savages immediately engaged in the forays by forcing +the several tribes to settle down on the reservations set apart by +the treaty of Medicine Lodge. The principal mischief-makers were the +Cheyennes. Next in deviltry were the Kiowas, and then the Arapahoes +and Comanches. Some few of these last two tribes continued friendly, +or at least took no active part in the raiding, but nearly all the +young men of both were the constant allies of the Cheyennes and +Kiowas. All four tribes together could put on the war-path a +formidable force of about 6,000 warriors. The subjugation of this +number of savages would be no easy task, so to give the matter my +undivided attention I transferred my headquarters from Leavenworth to +Fort Hays, a military post near which the prosperous town of Hays +City now stands. + +Fort Hays was just beyond the line of the most advanced settlements, +and was then the terminus of the Kansas-Pacific railroad. For this +reason it could be made a depot of supplies, and was a good point +from which to supervise matters in the section of country to be +operated in, which district is a part of the Great American Plains, +extending south from the Platte River in Nebraska to the Red River in +the Indian Territory, and westward from the line of frontier +settlements to the foothills of the Rocky Mountains, a vast region +embracing an area of about 150,000 square miles. With the exception +of a half-dozen military posts and a few stations on the two overland +emigrant routes--the Smoky Hill to Denver, and the Arkansas to New +Mexico--this country was an unsettled waste known only to the Indians +and a few trappers. There were neither roads nor well-marked trails, +and the only timber to be found--which generally grew only along the +streams--was so scraggy and worthless as hardly to deserve the name. +Nor was water by any means plentiful, even though the section is +traversed by important streams, the Republican, the Smoky Hill, the +Arkansas, the Cimarron, and the Canadian all flowing eastwardly, as +do also their tributaries in the main. These feeders are sometimes +long and crooked, but as a general thing the volume of water is +insignificant except after rain-falls. Then, because of unimpeded +drainage, the little streams fill up rapidly with torrents of water, +which quickly flows off or sinks into the sand, leaving only an +occasional pool without visible inlet or outlet. + +At the period of which I write, in 1868, the Plains were covered with +vast herds of buffalo--the number has been estimated at 3,000,000 +head--and with such means of subsistence as this everywhere at hand, +the 6,000 hostiles were wholly unhampered by any problem of food- +supply. The savages were rich too according to Indian standards, +many a lodge owning from twenty to a hundred ponies; and +consciousness of wealth and power, aided by former temporizing, had +made them not only confident but defiant. Realizing that their +thorough subjugation would be a difficult task, I made up my mind to +confine operations during the grazing and hunting season to +protecting the people of the new settlements and on the overland +routes, and then, when winter came, to fall upon the savages +relentlessly, for in that season their ponies would be thin, and weak +from lack of food, and in the cold and snow, without strong ponies to +transport their villages and plunder, their movements would be so +much impeded that the troops could overtake them. + +At the outbreak of hostilities I had in all, east of New Mexico, a +force of regulars numbering about 2,600 men--1,200 mounted and 1,400 +foot troops. The cavalry was composed of the Seventh and Tenth +regiments; the infantry, of the Third and Fifth regiments and four +companies of the Thirty-Eighth. With these few troops all the posts +along the Smoky Hill and Arkansas had to be garrisoned, emigrant +trains escorted, and the settlements and routes of travel and the +construction parties on the Kansas-Pacific railway protected. Then, +too, this same force had to furnish for the field small movable +columns, that were always on the go, so it will be rightly inferred +that every available man was kept busy from the middle of August till +November; especially as during this period the hostiles attacked over +forty widely dispersed places, in nearly all cases stealing horses, +burning houses, and killing settlers. It was of course impossible to +foresee where these descents would be made, but as soon as an attack +was heard of assistance was always promptly rendered, and every now +and then we succeeded in killing a few savages. As a general thing, +though, the raiders escaped before relief arrived, and when they had +a few miles the start, all efforts to catch them were futile. I +therefore discouraged long pursuits, and, in fact, did not approve of +making any at all unless the chances of obtaining paying results were +very evident, otherwise the troops would be worn out by the time the +hard work of the winter was demanded from them. + +To get ready for a winter campaign of six months gave us much to do. +The thing most needed was more men, so I asked for additional +cavalry, and all that could be spareds--even troops of the Fifth +Cavalry--was sent tome. Believing this reinforcement insufficient, +to supplement it I applied for a regiment of Kansas volunteers, which +request being granted, the organization of the regiment was +immediately begun at Topeka. It was necessary also to provide a +large amount of transportation and accumulate quantities of stores, +since the campaign probably would not end till spring. Another +important matter was to secure competent guides for the different +columns of troops, for, as I have said, the section of country to be +operated in was comparatively unknown. + +In those days the railroad town of Hays City was filled with so +called "Indian scouts," whose common boast was of having slain scores +of redskins, but the real scout--that is, a 'guide and trailer +knowing the habits of the Indians--was very scarce, and it was hard +to find anybody familiar with the country south of the Arkansas, +where the campaign was to be made. Still, about Hays City and the +various military posts there was some good material to select from, +and we managed to employ several men, who, from their experience on +the Plains in various capacities, or from natural instinct and +aptitude, soon became excellent guides and courageous and valuable +scouts, some of them, indeed, gaining much distinction. Mr. William +F. Cody ("Buffalo Bill"), whose renown has since become world-wide, +was one of the men thus selected. He received his sobriquet from his +marked success in killing buffaloes for a contractor, to supply fresh +meat to the construction parties, on the Kansas-Pacific railway. He +had given up this business, however, and was now in the employ of the +quartermaster's department of the army, and was first brought to my +notice by distinguishing himself in bringing me an important despatch +from Fort Larned to Fort Hays, a distance of sixty-five miles, +through a section infested with Indians. The despatch informed me +that the Indians near Larned were preparing to decamp, and this +intelligence required that certain orders should be carried to Fort +Dodge, ninety-five miles south of Hays. This too being a +particularly dangerous route--several couriers having been killed on +it--it was impossible to get one of the various "Petes," "Jacks," or +"Jims" hanging around Hays City to take my communication. Cody +learning of the strait I was in, manfully came to the rescue, and +proposed to make the trip to Dodge, though he had just finished his +long and perilous ride from Larned. I gratefully accepted his offer, +and after four or five hours' rest he mounted a fresh horse and +hastened on his journey, halting but once to rest on the way, and +then only for an hour, the stop being made at Coon Creek, where he +got another mount from a troop of cavalry. At Dodge he took six +hours' sleep, and then continued on to his own post--Fort Larned-- +with more despatches. After resting twelve hours at Larned, he was +again in the saddle with tidings for me at Fort Hays, General Hazen +sending him, this time, with word that the villages had fled to the +south of the Arkansas. Thus, in all, Cody rode about 350 miles in +less than sixty hours, and such an exhibition of endurance and +courage was more than enough to convince me that his services would +be extremely valuable in the campaign, so I retained him at Fort Hays +till the battalion of the Fifth Cavalry arrived, and then made him +chief of scouts for that regiment. + +The information brought me by Cody on his second trip from Larned +indicated where the villages would be found in the winter, and I +decided to move on them about the 1st of November. Only the women +and children and the decrepit old men were with the villages, however +enough, presumably, to look after the plunder most of the warriors +remaining north of the Arkansas to continue their marauding. Many +severe fights occurred between our troops and these marauders, and in +these affairs, before November 1 over a hundred Indians were killed, +yet from the ease with which the escaping savages would disappear +only to fall upon remote settlements with pillage and murder, the +results were by no means satisfactory. One of the most noteworthy of +these preliminary affairs was the gallant fight made on the +Republican River the 17th of September by my Aide, Colonel George A. +Forsyth, and party, against about seven hundred Cheyennes and Sioux. +Forsyth, with Lieutenant Beecher, and Doctor J. H. Mooers as surgeon, +was in charge of a company of citizen scouts, mostly expert rifle- +shots, but embracing also a few Indian fighters, among these Grover +and Parr. The company was organized the latter part of August for +immediate work in defense of the settlements, and also for future use +in the Indian Territory when the campaign should open there. About +the time the company had reached its complement--it was limited to +forty-seven men and three officers--a small band of hostiles began +depredations near Sheridan City, one of the towns that grew up over- +night on the Kansas-Pacific railway. Forsyth pursued this party, but +failing to overtake it, made his way into Fort Wallace for rations, +intending to return from there to Fort Hays. Before he started back, +however, another band of Indians appeared near the post and stole +some horses from the stage company. This unexpected raid made +Forsyth hot to go for the marauders, and he telegraphed me for +permission, which I as promptly gave him. He left the post on the +10th of September, the command consisting of himself, Lieutenant +Beecher, Acting Assistant Surgeon Mooers, and the full strength, +forty-seven men, with a few pack mules carrying about ten days' +rations. + +He headed north toward the Republican River. For the first two days +the trail was indistinct and hard to follow. During the next three +it continued to grow much larger, indicating plainly that the number +of Indians ahead was rapidly increasing. Of course this sign meant a +fight as soon as a large enough force was mustered, but as this was +what Forsyth was after, he pushed ahead with confidence and alacrity. +The night of the 16th of September he encamped on the Arickaree +branch of the Republican, not far from the forks of the river, with +the expectation of resuming the march as usual next day, for the +indications were that the main body of the savages must be still a +long way off, though in the preceding twenty-four hours an occasional +Indian had been seen. + +But the enemy was much nearer than was thought, for at daybreak on +the morning of the 17th he made known his immediate presence by a +sudden dash at Forsyth's horses, a few of which were stampeded and +captured before the scouts could reach them. This dash was made by a +small party only to get the horses, so those engaged in it were soon +driven off, but a few minutes later hundreds of savages--it was +afterward learned that seven hundred warriors took part in the fight- +-hitherto invisible, showed themselves on the hills overlooking the +camp and so menacingly as to convince Forsyth that his defense must +be one of desperation. The only place at hand that gave any hope of +successful resistance was a small island in the Arickaree, the +channel on one side being about a foot deep while on the other it was +completely dry; so to this position a hurried retreat was made. All +the men and the remaining animals reached the island in safety, but +on account of the heavy fire poured in from the neighboring hills the +packs containing the rations and medicines had to be abandoned. + +On seeing Forsyth's hasty move, the Indians, thinking they had him, +prepared to overwhelm the scouts by swooping down on one side of the +island with about five hundred mounted warriors, while about two +hundred, covered by the tall grass in the river-bottom attacked the +other side, dismounted. But the brave little band sadly disappointed +them. When the charge came it was met with such a deadly fire that a +large number of the fiends were killed, some of them even after +gaining the bank of the island. This check had the effect of making +the savages more wary, but they were still bold enough to make two +more assaults before mid-day. Each of these ending like the first, +the Indians thereafter contented themselves with shooting all the +horses, which had been tied up to some scraggy little cottonwood- +trees, and then proceeded to lay siege to the party. + +The first man struck was Forsyth himself. He was hit three times in +all--twice in one leg, both serious wounds, and once on the head, a +slight abrasion of the scalp. A moment later Beecher was killed and +Doctor Mooers mortally wounded: and in addition to these misfortunes +the scouts kept getting hit, till several were killed, and the whole +number of casualties had reached twenty-one in a company of forty- +seven. Yet with all this, and despite the seeming hopelessness of +the situation, the survivors kept up their pluck undiminished, and +during a lull succeeding the third repulse dug into the loose soil +till the entire party was pretty well protected by rifle-pits. Thus +covered they stood off the Indians for the next three days, although +of course their condition became deplorable from lack of food, while +those who were hurt suffered indescribable agony, since no means were +at hand for dressing their wounds. + +By the third day the Indians, seeming to despair of destroying the +beleaguered party before succor might arrive, began to draw off, and +on the fourth wholly disappeared. The men were by this time nearly +famished for food. Even now there was nothing to be had except +horse-meat from the carcasses of the animals killed the first day, +and this, though decidedly unpalatable, not to say disgusting, had to +be put up with, and so on such unwholesome stuff they managed to live +for four days longer, at the end of which time they were rescued by a +column of troops under Colonel Bankhead, which had hastened from Fort +Wallace in response to calls for help, carried there by two brave +fellows--Stilwell and Truedell--who, volunteering to go for relief, +had slipped through the Indians, and struck out for that post in the +night after the first day's fight. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII, + +FITTING OUT THE WINTER EXPEDITION--ACCOMPANYING THE MAIN FORCE--THE +OTHER COLUMNS--STRUCK BY A BLIZZARD--CUSTER'S FIGHT ON THE WASHITA-- +DEFEAT AND DEATH OF BLACK KETTLE--MASSACRE OF ELLIOTT'S PARTY--RELIEF +OF COLONEL CRAWFORD. + +The end of October saw completed the most of my arrangements for the +winter campaign, though the difficulties and hardships to be +encountered had led several experienced officers of the army, and +some frontiersmen like Mr. James Bridger, the famous scout and, guide +of earlier days, to discourage the project. Bridger even went so far +as to come out from St. Louis to dissuade me, but I reasoned that as +the soldier was much better fed and clothed than the Indian, I had +one great advantage, and that, in short, a successful campaign could +be made if the operations of the different columns were energetically +conducted. To see to this I decided to go in person with the main +column, which was to push down into the western part of the Indian +Territory, having for its initial objective the villages which, at +the beginning of hostilities, had fled toward the head-waters of the +Red River, and those also that had gone to the same remote region +after decamping from the neighborhood of Larned at the time that +General Hazen sent Buffalo Bill to me with the news. + +The column which was expected to do the main work was to be composed +of the Nineteenth Kansas Volunteer Cavalry, commanded by Colonel +Crawford; eleven troops of the Seventh United States Cavalry, under +General Custer, and a battalion of five companies of infantry under +Brevet Major John H. Page. To facilitate matters, General Sully, the +district commander, was ordered to rendezvous these troops and +establish a supply depot about a hundred miles south of Fort Dodge, +as from such a point operations could be more readily conducted. He +selected for the depot a most suitable place at the confluence of +Beaver and Wolf creeks, and on his arrival there with Custer's and +Page's commands, named the place Camp Supply. + +In conjunction with the main column, two others also were to +penetrate the Indian Territory. One of these, which was to march +east from New Mexico by way of Fort Bascom was to be composed of six +troops of the Third Cavalry and two companies of infantry, the whole +under Colonel A. W. Evans. The other, consisting of seven troops of +the Fifth Cavalry, and commanded by Brevet Brigadier-General Eugene +A. Carr, was to march southeast from Fort Lyon; the intention being +that Evans and Carr should destroy or drive in toward old Fort Cobb +any straggling bands that might be prowling through the country west +of my own line of march; Carr, as he advanced, to be joined by Brevet +Brigadier-General W. H. Penrose, with five troops of cavalry already +in the field southeast of Lyon. The Fort Bascom column, after +establishing a deepot of supplies at Monument Creek, was to work down +the main Canadian, and remain out as long as it could feed itself +from New Mexico; Carr, having united with Penrose on the North +Canadian, was to operate toward the Antelope Hills and headwaters of +the Red River; while I, with the main column was to move southward to +strike the Indians along the Washita, or still farther. south on +branches of the Red River. + +It was no small nor easy task to outfit all these troops by the time +cold weather set in, and provide for them during the winter, but by +the 1st of November I had enough supplies accumulated at Forts Dodge +and Lyon for my own and Carr's columns, and in addition directed +subsistence and forage for three months to be sent to Fort Gibson for +final delivery at Fort Arbuckle, as I expected to feed the command +from this place when we arrived in the neighborhood of old Fort Cobb, +but through some mismanagement few of these stores got further than +Gibson before winter came on. + +November 1, all being ready, Colonel Grawford was furnished with +competent guides, and, after sending two troops to Fort Dodge to act +as my escort, with the rest of his regiment he started from Topeka +November 5, under orders to march straight for the rendezvous at the +junction of Beaver and Wolf creeks. He was expected to reach his +destination about the 20th, and there unite with the Seventh Cavalry +and the battalion of infantry, which in the mean time were on the +march from Dodge. A few days later Carr and Evans began their march +also, and everything being now in motion, I decided to go to Camp +Supply to give the campaign my personal attention, determined to +prove that operations could be successfully conducted in spite of +winter, and bent on showing the Indians that they were not secure +from punishment because of inclement weather--an ally on which they +had hitherto relied with much assurance. + +We started from Fort Hays on the 15th of November, and the first +night out a blizzard struck us and carried away our tents; and as the +gale was so violent that they could not be put up again, the rain and +snow drenched us to the skin. Shivering from wet and cold, I took +refuge under a wagon, and there spent such a miserable night that, +when at last morning came, the gloomy predictions of old man Bridger +and others rose up before me with greatly increased force. As we +took the road the sleet and snow were still falling, but we labored +on to Dodge that day in spite of the fact that many of the mules +played out on the way. We stayed only one night at Dodge, and then +on the 17th, escorted by a troop of cavalry and Forsyth's scouts, now +under the command of Lieutenant Lewis Pepoon, crossed the Arkansas +and camped the night of the 18th at Bluff Creek, where the two troops +of the Nineteenth Kansas, previously detailed as my escort, were +awaiting our coming. As we were approaching this camp some +suspicious looking objects were seen moving off at a long distance to +the east of us, but as the scouts confidently pronounced them +buffalo, we were unaware of their true character till next morning, +when we became satisfied that what we had seen were Indians, for +immediately after crossing Beaver Creek we struck a trail, leading to +the northeast, of a war party that evidently came up from the head- +waters of the Washita River. + +The evening of November 21we arrived at the Camp Supply depot, having +traveled all day in another snowstorm that did not end till twenty- +four hours later. General Sully, with Custer's regiment and the +infantry battalion, had reached the place several days before, but +the Kansas regiment had not yet put in an appearance. All hands were +hard at work trying to shelter the stores and troops, but from the +trail seen that morning, believing that an opportunity offered to +strike an effective blow, I directed Custer to call in his working +parties and prepare to move immediately, without waiting for +Crawford's regiment, unaccountably absent. Custer was ready to start +by the 23d, and he was then instructed to march north to where the +trail had been seen near Beaver Creek and follow it on the back +track, for, being convinced that the war party had come from the +Washita, I felt certain that this plan would lead directly to the +villages. + +The difficulties attending a winter campaign were exhibited now with +their full force, as the march had to be conducted through a snow- +storm that hid surrounding objects, and so covered the country as to +alter the appearance of the prominent features, making the task of +the guides doubly troublesome; but in spite of these obstacles +fifteen miles had been traversed when Custer encamped for the night. +The next day the storm had ceased, and the weather was clear and +cold. The heavy fall of snow had of course obliterated the trail in +the bottoms, and everywhere on the level; but, thanks to the wind, +that had swept comparatively bare the rough places and high ground, +the general direction could be traced without much trouble. The +day's march, which was through a country abounding with buffalo, was +unattended by any special incident at first, but during the +afternoon, after getting the column across the Canadian River--an +operation which, on account of the wagons, consumed considerable +time--Custer's scouts (friendly Osages) brought back word that, some +miles ahead, they had struck fresh signs, a trail coming into the old +one from the north, which, in their opinion, indicated that the war +party was returning to the villages. + +On the receipt of this news, Custer, leaving a guard with the wagons, +hastily assembled the rest of his men' and pushing on rapidly, +overtook the scouts and a detailed party from his regiment which had +accompanied them, all halted on the new trail awaiting his arrival. +A personal examination satisfied Custer that the surmises of his +scouts were correct; and also that the fresh trail in the deep snow +could at night be followed with ease. After a short halt for supper +and rest the pursuit was resumed, the Osage scouts in advance, and +although the hostile Indians were presumed to be yet some distance +off, every precaution was taken to prevent detection and to enable +our troops to strike them unawares. The fresh trail, which it was +afterward ascertained had been made by raiders from Black Kettle's +village of Cheyennes, and by some Arapahoes, led into the valley of +the Washita, and growing fresher as the night wore on, finally +brought the Osages upon a campfire, still smoldering, which, it was +concluded, had been built by the Indian boys acting as herders of the +ponies during the previous day. It was evident, then, that the +village could be but a few miles off; hence the pursuit was continued +with redoubled caution until, a few hours before dawn of the 27th, as +the leading scouts peered over a rise on the line of march, they +discovered a large body of animals in the valley below. + +As soon as they reported this discovery, Custer determined to +acquaint himself with the situation by making a reconnoissance in +person, accompanied by his principal officers. So, sending back word +to halt the cavalry, he directed the officers to ride forward with +him; then dismounting, the entire party crept cautiously to a high +point which overlooked the valley, and from where, by the bright moon +then shining, they saw just how the village was situated. Its +position was such as to admit of easy approach from all sides. So, +to preclude an escape of the Indians, Custer decided to attack at +daybreak, and from four different directions. + +The plan having been fully explained to the officers, the remaining +hours of the night were employed in making the necessary +dispositions. Two of the detachments left promptly, since they had +to make a circuitous march of several miles to Teach the points +designated for their attack; the third started a little later; and +then the fourth and last, under Custer himself, also moved into +position. As the first light grew visible in the east, each column +moved closer in to the village, and then, all dispositions having +been made according to the prearranged plan, from their appointed +places the entire force to the opening notes of "Garry Owen," played +by the regimental band as the signal for the attack--dashed at a +gallop into the village. The sleeping and unsuspecting savages were +completely surprised by the onset; yet after the first confusion, +during which the impulse to escape principally actuated them, they +seized their weapons, and from behind logs and trees, or plunging +into the stream and using its steep bank as a breastwork, they poured +upon their assailants a heavy fire, and kept on fighting with every +exhibition of desperation. In such a combat mounted men were +useless, so Custer directed his troopers to fight on, foot, and the +Indians were successively driven from one point of vantage to +another, until, finally, by 9 o'clock the entire camp was in his +possession and the victory complete. Black Kettle and over one +hundred of his warriors were killed, and about fifty women and +children captured; but most of the noncombatants, as well as a few +warriors and boys, escaped in the confusion of the fight. Making +their way down the river, these fugitives alarmed the rest of the +Cheyennes and Arapahoes, and also the Kiowas and Comanches, whose +villages were in close proximity--the nearest not more than two miles +off. + +Then of course all the warriors of these tribes rallied to attack +Custer, who meantime was engaged burning Black Kettle's camp and +collecting his herds of ponies. But these new foes were rather wary +and circumspect, though they already had partial revenge in an +unlooked for way by cutting off Major Elliott and fifteen men, who +had gone off in pursuit of a batch of young warriors when the fight +was going on at the village. In fact, the Indians had killed +Elliott's whole party, though neither the fate of the poor fellows, +nor how they happened to be caught, was known till long afterward. +It was then ascertained that the detachment pursued a course due +south, nearly at right angles to the Washita River, and after +galloping a couple of miles over the hills, crossing a small branch +of the Washita on the way, they captured some of the fugitives. In +bringing the prisoners back, Elliott was in turn attacked on the open +prairie by a large number of savages from farther down the Washita, +who by this time were swarming to the aid of Black Kettle's village. +The little band fought its way gallantly to within rifle-range of the +small creek referred to, but could get no farther, for the Indians +had taken up a position in the bed of the stream, and from under +cover of its banks Elliott and all his remaining men were quickly +killed. No relief was sent them, for Custer, not having seen Elliott +set out, knew nothing of the direction taken, and, besides, was busy +burning the villages and securing the ponies, and deeply concerned, +too, with defending himself from the new dangers menacing him. +Elliott and his brave little party were thus left to meet their fate +alone. + +While Custer was burning the lodges and plunder and securing the +ponies, the Indians from the villages down the Washita were gathering +constantly around him till by mid-day they had collected in +thousands, and then came a new problem as to what should be done. If +he attacked the other villages, there was great danger of his being +overwhelmed, and should he start back to Camp Supply by daylight, he +would run the risk of losing his prisoners and the ponies, so, +thinking the matter over, he decided to shoot all the ponies, and +keep skirmishing with the savages till nightfall, and then, under +cover of the darkness, return to Camp Supply; a programme that was +carried out successfully, but Custer's course received some severe +criticism because no effort was made to discover what had become of +Elliott. + +Custer had, in all, two officers and nineteen men killed, and two +officers and eleven men wounded. The blow struck was a most +effective one, and, fortunately, fell on one of the most villanous of +the hostile bands that, without any provocation whatever, had +perpetrated the massacres on the Saline and Solomon, committing +atrocities too repulsive for recital, and whose hands were still red +from their bloody work on the recent raid. Black Kettle, the chief, +was an old man, and did not himself go with the raiders to the Saline +and Solomon, and on this account his fate was regretted by some. But +it was old age only that kept him back, for before the demons set out +from Walnut Creek he had freely encouraged them by "making medicine," +and by other devilish incantations that are gone through with at war +and scalp dances. + +When the horrible work was over he undertook to shield himself by +professions of friendship, but being put to the test by my offering +to feed and care for all of his band who would come in to Fort Dodge +and remain there peaceably, he defiantly refused. The consequence of +this refusal was a merited punishment, only too long delayed. + +I received the first news of Custer's fight on the Washita on the +morning of November 29. It was brought to me by one of his white +scouts, "California Joe," a noted character, who had been +experiencing the ups and downs of pioneer life ever since crossing +the Plains in 1849. Joe was an invaluable guide and Indian fighter +whenever the clause of the statute prohibiting liquors in the Indian +country happened to be in full force. At the time in question the +restriction was by no means a dead letter, and Joe came through in +thirty-six hours, though obliged to keep in hiding during daylight of +the 28th. The tidings brought were joyfully received by everybody at +Camp Supply, and they were particularly agreeable tome, for, besides +being greatly worried about the safety of the command in the extreme +cold and deep snows, I knew that the immediate effect a victory would +be to demoralize the rest of the hostiles, which of course would +greatly facilitate and expedite our ultimate success. Toward evening +the day after Joe arrived the head of Custer's column made its +appearance on the distant hills, the friendly Osage scouts and the +Indian prisoners in advance. As they drew near, the scouts began a +wild and picturesque performance in celebration of the victory, +yelling, firing their guns, throwing themselves on the necks and +sides of their horses to exhibit their skill in riding, and going +through all sorts of barbaric evolutions and gyrations, which were +continued till night, when the rejoicings were ended with the hideous +scalp dance. + +The disappearance of Major Elliott and his party was the only damper +upon our pleasure, and the only drawback to the very successful +expedition. There was no definite information as to the detachment, +--and Custer was able to report nothing more than that he had not +seen Elliott since just before the fight began. His theory was, +however, that Elliott and his men had strayed off on account of +having no guide, and would ultimately come in all right to Camp +Supply or make their way back to Fort Dodge; a very unsatisfactory +view of the matter, but as no one knew the direction Elliott had +taken, it was useless to speculate on other suppositions, and +altogether too late to make any search for him. I was now anxious to +follow up Custer's stroke by an immediate move to the south with the +entire column, but the Kansas regiment had not yet arrived. At first +its nonappearance did not worry me much, for I attributed the delay +to the bad weather, and supposed Colonel Crawford had wisely laid up +during the worst storms. Further, waiting, however, would give the +Indians a chance to recover from the recent dispiriting defeat, so I +sent out scouting parties to look Crawford up and hurry him along. +After a great deal of searching, a small detachment of the regiment +was found about fifty miles below us on the North Canadian, seeking +our camp. This detachment was in a pretty bad plight, and when +brought in, the officer in charge reported that the regiment, by not +following the advice of the guide sent to conduct it to Camp Supply, +had lost its way. Instead of relying on the guides, Crawford had +undertaken to strike through the canyons of the Cimarron by what +appeared to him a more direct route, and in the deep gorges, filled +as they were with snow, he had been floundering about for days +without being able to extricate his command. Then, too, the men were +out of rations, though they had been able to obtain enough buffalo +meat to keep from starving. As for the horses, since they could get +no grass, about seven hundred of them had already perished from +starvation and exposure. Provisions and guides were immediately sent +out to the regiment, but before the relief could reach Crawford his +remaining horses were pretty much all gone, though the men were +brought in without loss of life. Thus, the regiment being dismounted +by this misfortune at the threshold of the campaign, an important +factor of my cavalry was lost to me, though as foot-troops the Kansas +volunteers continued to render very valuable services till mustered +out the next spring. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +A WINTER EXPEDITION--HERDS OF BUFFALO--WOLVES--BLIZZARDS--A TERRIBLE +NIGHT--FINDING THE BODIES OF ELLIOTT'S PARTY--THE ABANDONED INDIAN +CAMPS--PUSHING DOWN THE WASHITA--THE CAPTURED CHIEFS--EVANS'S +SUCCESSFUL FIGHT--ESTABLISHING FORT SILL--"CALIFORNIA JOE"--DUPLICITY +OF THE CHEYENNES--ORDERED TO REPAIR TO WASHINGTON. + +A few days were necessarily lost setting up and refitting the Kansas +regiment after its rude experience in the Cimarron canyons. This +through with, the expedition, supplied with thirty days' rations, +moved out to the south on the 7th of December, under my personal +command. We headed for the Witchita Mountains, toward which rough +region all the villages along the Washita River had fled after +Custer' s fight with Black Kettle. My line of march was by way of +Custer's battle-field, and thence down the Washita, and if the +Indians could not sooner be brought to terms, I intended to follow +them into the Witchita Mountains from near old Fort Cobb. The snow +was still deep everywhere, and when we started the thermometer was +below zero, but the sky being clear and the day very bright, the +command was in excellent spirits. The column was made up of ten +companies of the Kansas regiment, dismounted; eleven companies of the +Seventh Cavalry, Pepoon's scouts, and the Osage scouts. In addition +to Pepoon's men and the Osages, there was also "California Joe," and +one or two other frontiersmen besides, to act as guides and +interpreters. Of all these the principal one, the one who best knew +the country, was Ben Clark, a young man who had lived with the +Cheyennes during much of his boyhood, and who not only had a pretty +good knowledge of the country, but also spoke fluently the Cheyenne +and Arapahoe dialects, and was an adept in the sign language. + +The first day we made only about ten miles, which carried us to the +south bank of Wolf Creek. A considerable part of the day was devoted +to straightening out matters in the command, and allowing time for +equalizing the wagon loads, which as a general thing, on a first +day's march, are unfairly distributed. And then there was an +abundance of fire-wood at Wolf Creek; indeed, here and on Hackberry +Creek--where I intended to make my next camp--was the only timber +north of the Canadian River; and to select the halting places near a +plentiful supply of wood was almost indispensable, for as the men +were provided with only shelter-tents, good fires were needed in +order to keep warm. + +The second day, after marching for hours through vast herds of +buffalo, we made Hackberry Creek; but not, however, without several +stampedes in the wagon-train, the buffalo frightening the mules so +that it became necessary to throw out flankers to shoot the leading +bulls and thus turn off the herds. In the wake of every drove +invariably followed a band of wolves. This animal is a great coward +usually, but hunger had made these so ravenous that they would come +boldly up to the column, and as quick as a buffalo was killed, or +even disabled, they would fall upon the carcass and eagerly devour +it. Antelope also were very numerous, and as they were quite tame-- +being seldom chased--and naturally very inquisitive, it was not an +unfrequent thing to see one of the graceful little creatures run in +among the men and be made a prisoner. Such abundance of game +relieved the monotony of the march to Hackberry Creek, but still, +both men and animals were considerably exhausted by their long tramp, +for we made over thirty miles that day. + +We camped in excellent shape on the creek and it was well we did, for +a "Norther," or "blizzard," as storms on the Plains are now termed +struck us in the night. During the continuance of these blizzards, +which is usually about three days, the cold wind sweeps over the +Plains with great force, and, in the latitude of the Indian +Territory, is weighted with great quantities of sleet and snow, +through which it is often impossible to travel; indeed, these +"Northers" have many times proved fatal to the unprotected +frontiersman. With our numbers the chance of any one's being lost, +and perishing alone (one of the most common dangers in a blizzard), +was avoided; but under any circumstances such a storm could but +occasion intense suffering to all exposed to it, hence it would have +been well to remain in camp till the gale was over, but the time +could not be spared. We therefore resumed the march at an early hour +next morning, with the expectation of making the south bank of the +main Canathan and there passing the night, as Clark assured me that +timber was plentiful on that side of the river. The storm greatly +impeded us, however, many of the mules growing discouraged, and some +giving out entirely, so we could not get to Clark's "good camp," for +with ten hours of utmost effort only about half a day's distance +could be covered, when at last, finding the struggle useless, we were +forced to halt for the night in a bleak bottom on the north bank of +the river. But no one could sleep, for the wind swept over us with +unobstructed fury, and the only fuel to be had was a few green +bushes. As night fell a decided change of temperature added much to +our misery, the mercury, which had risen when the "Norther" began, +again falling to zero. It can be easily imagined that under such +circumstances the condition of the men was one of extreme discomfort; +in truth, they had to tramp up and down the camp all night long to +keep from freezing. Anything was a relief to this state of things, +so at the first streak of day we quit the dreadful place and took up +the march. + +A seemingly good point for crossing the Canadian was found a couple +of miles down the stream, where we hoped to get our train over on the +ice, but an experiment proving that it was not strong enough, a ford +had to be made, which was done by marching some of the cavalry +through the river, which was about half a mile wide, to break up the +large floes when they had been cut loose with axes. After much hard +work a passage-way was thus opened, and by noon the command was +crossed to the south bank, and after thawing out and drying our +clothes before big fires, we headed for a point on the Washita, where +Clark said there was plenty of wood, and good water too, to make us +comfortable till the blizzard had blown over. + +We reached the valley of the Washita a little before dark, and camped +some five or six miles above the scene of Custer's fight, where I +concluded to remain at least a day, to rest the command and give it a +chance to refit. In the mean time I visited the battle-field in +company with Custer and several other officers, to see if there was a +possibility of discovering any traces of Elliotts party. On arriving +at the site of the village, and learning from Custer what +dispositions had been made in approaching for the attack, the +squadron of the escort was deployed and pushed across the river at +the point where Elliott had crossed. Moving directly to the south, +we had not gone far before we struck his trail, and soon the whole +story was made plain by our finding, on an open level space about two +miles from the destroyed village, the dead and frozen bodies of the +entire party. The poor fellows were all lying within a circle not +more than fifteen or twenty paces in diameter, and the little piles +of empty cartridge shells near each body showed plainly that every +man had made a brave fight. None were scalped, but most of them were +otherwise horribly mutilated, which fiendish work is usually done by +the squaws. All had been stripped of their clothing, but their +comrades in the escort were able to identify the bodies, which being +done, we gave them decent burial. Their fate was one that has +overtaken many of our gallant army in their efforts to protect the +frontiersmen's homes and families from savages who give no quarter, +though they have often received it, and where the possibility of +defeat in action carries with it the certainty of death and often of +preceding torture. + +From the meadow where Elliott was found we rode to the Washita, and +then down the river through the sites of the abandoned villages, that +had been strung along almost continuously for about twelve miles in +the timber skirting the stream. On every hand appeared ample +evidence that the Indians had intended to spend the winter here, for +the ground was littered with jerked meat, bales of buffalo robes, +cooking utensils, and all sorts of plunder usually accumulated in a +permanent Indian camp. There were, also, lying dead near the +villages hundreds of ponies, that had been shot to keep them from +falling into our hands, the scant grazing and extreme cold having +made them too weak to be driven along in the flight. The wholesale +slaughter of these ponies was a most cheering indication that our +campaign would be ultimately successful, and we all prayed for at +least a couple of months more of cold weather and plenty of snow. + +At the Kiowa village we found the body of a white woman--a Mrs. +Blynn--and also that of her child. These captives had been taken by +the Kiowas near Fort Lyon the previous summer, and kept close +prisoners until the stampede began, the poor woman being reserved to +gratify the brutal lust of the chief, Satanta; then, however, Indian +vengeance demanded the murder of the poor creatures, and after +braining the little child against a tree, the mother was shot through +the forehead, the weapon, which no doubt brought her welcome release, +having been fired so close that the powder had horribly disfigured +her face. The two bodies were wrapped in blankets and taken to camp, +and afterward carried along in our march, till finally they were +decently interred at Fort Arbuckle.. + +At an early hour on December 12 the command pulled out from its cosy +camp and pushed down the valley of the Washita, following immediately +on the Indian trail which led in the direction of Fort Cobb, but +before going far it was found that the many deep ravines and canyons +on this trail would delay our train very much, so we moved out of the +valley and took the level prairie on the divide. Here the traveling +was good, and a rapid gait was kept up till mid-day, when, another +storm of sleet and snow coming on, it became extremely difficult for +the guides to make out the proper course; and fearing that we might +get lost or caught on the open plain without wood or water--as we had +been on the Canadian--I turned the command back to the valley, +resolved to try no more shortcuts involving the risk of a disaster to +the expedition. But to get back was no slight task, for a dense fog +just now enveloped us, obscuring all landmarks. However, we were +headed right when the fog set in, and we had the good luck to reach +the valley before night-fall, though there was a great deal of +floundering about, and also much disputing among the guides as to +where the river would be found Fortunately we struck the stream right +at a large grove of timber, and established ourselves, admirably. By +dark the ground was covered with twelve or fifteen inches of fresh +snow, and as usual the temperature rose very sensibly while the storm +was on, but after night-fall the snow ceased and the skies cleared +up. Daylight having brought zero weather again, our start on the +morning of the 17th was painful work, many of the men freezing their +fingers while handling the horse equipments, harness, and tents. +However, we got off in fairly good season, and kept to the trail +along the Washita notwithstanding the frequent digging and bridging +necessary to get the wagons over ravines. + +Continuing on this line for three days, we at length came to a point +on the Washita where all signs indicated that we were nearing some of +the villages. Wishing to strike them as soon as possible, we made a +very early start next morning, the 17th. A march of four or five +miles brought us to a difficult ravine, and while we were making +preparations to get over, word was brought that several Indians had +appeared in our front bearing a white flag and making signs that they +had a communication to deliver. We signaled back that they would be +received, when one of the party came forward alone and delivered a +letter, which proved to be from General Hazen, at Fort Cobb. The +letter showed that Hazen was carrying on negotiations with the +Indians, and stated that all the tribes between Fort Cobb and my +column were friendly, but the intimation was given that the +Cheyennes and Arapahoes were still hostile, having moved off +southward toward, the Red River. It was added that Satanta and Lone +Wolf--the chiefs of the Kiowas--would give information of the +whereabouts of the hostiles; and such a communication coming direct +from the representative of the Indian Department, practically took +the Kiowas--the village at hand was of that tribe--under its +protection, and also the Comanches, who were nearer in to Cobb. Of +course, under such circumstances I was compelled to give up the +intended attack, though I afterward regretted that I had paid any +heed to the message, because Satanta and Lone Wolf proved, by +trickery and double dealing, that they had deceived Hazen into +writing the letter. + +When I informed the Klowas that I would respect Hazen's letter +provided they all came into Fort Cobb and gave themselves up, the two +chiefs promised submission, and, as an evidence of good faith, +proposed to accompany the column to Fort Cobb with a large body of +warriors, while their villages moved to the same point by easy +stages, along the opposite bank of the river--claiming this to be +necessary from the poor condition of the ponies. I had some +misgivings as to the sincerity of Satanta and Lone Wolf, but as I +wanted to get the Kiowas where their surrender would be complete, so +that the Cheyennes and Arapahoes could then be pursued, I agreed to +the proposition, and the column moved on. All went well that day, +but the next it was noticed that the warriors were diminishing, and +an investigation showed that a number of them had gone off on various +pretexts--the main one being to help along the women and children +with the villages. With this I suspected that they were playing me +false, and my suspicions grew into certainty when Satanta himself +tried to make his escape by slipping beyond the flank of the column +and putting spurs to his pony. Fortunately, several officers saw +him, and quickly giving chase, overhauled him within a few hundred +yards. I then arrested both him and Lone Wolf and held them as +hostages--a measure that had the effect of bringing back many of the +warriors already beyond our reach. + +When we arrived at Fort Cobb we found some of the Comanches already +there, and soon after the rest. of them, excepting one band, came in +to the post. The Kiowas, however, were not on hand, and there were +no signs to indicate their coming. At the end of two days it was +plain enough that they were acting in bad faith, and would continue +to unless strong pressure was brought to bear. Indeed, they had +already started for the Witchita Mountains, so I put on the screws at +once by issuing an order to hang Satanta and Lone Wolf, if their +people did not surrender at Fort Cobb within forty-eight hours. The +two chiefs promised prompt compliance, but begged for more time, +seeking to explain the non-arrival of the women and children through +the weak condition of the ponies; but I was tired of their duplicity, +and insisted on my ultimatum. + +The order for the execution brought quick fruit. Runners were sent +out with messages, by the two prisoners, appealing to their people to +save the lives of their chiefs, and the result was that the whole +tribe came in to the post within the specified time. The two +manacled wretches thus saved their necks; but it is to be regretted +that the execution did not come off; for some years afterward their +devilish propensities led them into Texas, where both engaged in the +most horrible butcheries. + +The Kiowas were now in our hands, and all the Comanches too, except +one small band, which, after the Custer fight, had fled toward the +headwaters of the Red River. This party was made up of a lot of very +bad Indians--outlaws from the main tribe--and we did not hope to +subdue them except by a fight, and of this they got their fill; for +Evans, moving from Monument Creek toward the western base of the +Witchita Mountains on Christmas Day, had the good fortune to strike +their village. In the snow and cold his approach was wholly +unexpected, and he was thus enabled to deal the band a blow that +practically annihilated it. Twenty-five warriors were killed +outright, most of the women and children captured, and all the +property was destroyed. Only a few of the party escaped, and some of +these made their way in to Fort Cobb, to join the rest of their tribe +in confinement; while others, later in the season, surrendered at +Fort Bascom. + +This sudden appearance of Evans in the Red River region also alarmed +the Cheyennes and Arapahoes, and their thoughts now began to turn to +submission. Food was growing scarce with them, too, as there was but +little game to be found either in the Witchita Mountains or on the +edge of the Staked Plains, and the march of Carr's column from +Antelope Hills precluded their returning to where the buffalo ranged. +Then, too, many of their ponies were dead or dying, most of their +tepees and robes had been abandoned, and the women and children, +having been kept constantly on the move in the winter's storms, were +complaining bitterly of their sufferings. + +In view of this state of things they intimated, through their +Comanche-Apache friends at Fort Cobb, that they would like to make +terms. On receiving their messages I entered into negotiations with +Little Robe, chief of the Cheyennes, and Yellow Bear, chief of the +Arapahoes, and despatched envoys to have both tribes understand +clearly that they must recognize their subjugation by surrendering at +once, and permanently settling on their reservations in the spring. +Of course the usual delays of Indian diplomacy ensued, and it was +some weeks before I heard the result. + +Then one of my messengers returned with word that Little Robe and +Yellow Bear were on their way to see me. They arrived a few days +later, and, promptly acceding to the terms, promised to bring their +people in, but as many of them would have to come on foot on account +of the condition of the ponies, more time was solicited. Convinced +of the sincerity of their professions I gave them a reasonable +extension, and eventually Yellow Bear made good his word, but Little +Robe, in spite of earnest and repeated efforts, was unable to deliver +his people till further operations were begun against them. + +While these negotiations were in progess I came to the conclusion +that a permanent military post ought to be established well down on +the Kiowa and Comanche reservation, in order to keep an eye on these +tribes in the future, Fort Cobb, being an unsuitable location, +because too far to the north to protect the Texas frontier, and too +far away from where it was intended to permanently place the Indians. +With this purpose in view I had the country thoroughly explored, and +afterward a place was fixed upon not far from the base of the +Witchita Mountains, and near the confluence of Medicine Bluff and +Cash creeks, where building stone and timber could be obtained in +plenty, and to this point I decided to move. The place was named +Camp Sill-now Fort Sill--in honor of my classmate, General Sill, +killed at Stone River; and to make sure of the surrendered Indians, I +required them all, Kiowas, Comanches, and Comanche-Apaches, to +accompany us to the new post, so they could be kept under military +control till they were settled. + +During the march to the new camp the weather was not so cold as that +experienced in coming down from Camp Supply; still, rains were +frequent, and each was invariably followed by a depression of +temperature and high winds, very destructive to our animals, much +weakened by lack of food. The men fared pretty well, however, for on +the rough march along the Washita, and during our stay at Fort Cobb, +they had learned to protect themselves materially from the cold. For +this they had contrived many devices, the favorite means being +dugouts--that is, pits dug in the ground, and roofed over, with +shelter-tents, and having at one end a fire-place and chimney +ingeniously constructed with sod. In these they lived very snugly-- +four men in each--and would often amuse themselves by poking their +heads out and barking at the occupants of adjacent huts in imitation +of the prairie-dog, whose comfortable nests had probably suggested +the idea of dugouts. The men were much better off, in fact, than +many of the officers, for the high winds frequently made havoc with +our wall-tents. The horses and mules suffered most of all. They +could not be sheltered, and having neither grain nor grass, the poor +beasts were in no condition to stand the chilling blasts. Still, by +cutting down cottonwood-trees, and letting the animals browse on the +small soft branches, we managed to keep them up till, finally even +this wretched food beginning to grow scarce, I had all except a few +of the strongest sent to Fort Arbuckle, near which place we had been +able, fortunately, to purchase some fields of corn from the half- +civilized Chickasaws and Choctaws. + +Through mismanagement, as previously noted, the greater part of the +supplies which I had ordered hauled to Arbuckle the preceding fall +had not got farther on the way than Fort Gibson, which post was about +four hundred miles off, and the road abominable, particularly east of +Arbuckle, where it ran through a low region called "boggy bottom." +All along this route were abandoned wagons, left sticking in the mud, +and hence the transportation was growing so short that I began to +fear trouble in getting subsistence up for the men. Still, it would +not do to withdraw, so I made a trip to Arbuckle chiefly for the +purpose of reorganizing the transportation, but also with a view to +opening a new route to that post, the road to lie on high ground, so +as to avoid the creeks and mud that had been giving us so much +trouble. If such a road could be made, I hoped to get up enough +rations and grain from the cornfields purchased to send out a +formidable expedition against the Cheyennes, so I set out for +Arbuckle accompanied by my quartermaster, Colonel A. J. McGonigle. +"California Joe" also went along to guide us through the scrub-oaks +covering the ridge, but even the most thorough exploration failed to +discover any route more practicable than that already in use; indeed, +the high ground was, if anything, worse than the bottom land, our +horses in the springy places and quicksands often miring to their +knees. The ground was so soft and wet, in fact, that we had to make +most of the way on foot, so by the time we reached Arbuckle I was +glad to abandon the new road project. + +Finding near Arbuckle more fields of corn than those already +purchased, I had them bought also, and ordered more of the horses +back there to be fed. I next directed every available mule to be put +to hauling rations, having discovered that the full capacity of the +transportation had not yet been brought into play in forwarding +stores from Gibson, and with this regulation of the supply question I +was ready to return immediately to Camp Sill. But my departure was +delayed by California Joe, who, notwithstanding the prohibitory laws +of the Territory, in some unaccountable way had got gloriously tipsy, +which caused a loss of time that disgusted me greatly; but as we +could not well do without Joe, I put off starting till the next day, +by which time it was thought he would sober up. But I might just as +well have gone at first, for at the end of the twenty-four hours the +incorrigible old rascal was still dead drunk. How he had managed to +get the grog to keep up his spree was a mystery which we could not +solve, though we had had him closely watched, so I cut the matter +short by packing him into my ambulance and carrying him off to Camp +Sill. + +By the time I got back to Sill, the Arapahoes were all in at the +post, or near at hand. The promised surrender of the Cheyennes was +still uncertain of fulfillment, however, and although Little Robe and +his family had remained with us in evidence of good faith, the +messages he sent to his followers brought no assurance of the tribe's +coming in--the runners invariably returning with requests for more +time, and bringing the same old excuse of inability to move because +the ponies were so badly off. But more time was just what I was +determined not to grant, for I felt sure that if a surrender was not +forced before the spring grass came, the ponies would regain their +strength, and then it would be doubtful if the Cheyennes came in at +all. + +To put an end to these delays, Custer proposed to go out and see the +Cheyennes himself, taking with him for escort only such number of men +as could be fairly well mounted from the few horses not sent back to +Arbuckle. At first I was inclined to disapprove Custer's +proposition, but he urged it so strongly that I finally consented, +though with some misgivings, for I feared that so small a party might +tempt the Cheyennes to forget their pacific professions and seek to +avenge the destruction of Black Kettle's band. However, after +obtaining my approval, Custer, with characteristic energy, made his +preparations, and started with three or four officers and forty +picked men, taking along as negotiators Yellow Bear and Little Robe, +who were also to conduct him to the head-waters of the Red River, +where it was supposed the Cheyennes would be found. His progress was +reported by couriers every few days, and by the time he got to the +Witchita foot-hills he had grown so sanguine that he sent California +Joe back to me with word that he was certain of success. Such +hopeful anticipation relieved me greatly, of course, but just about +the time I expected to hear that his mission had been achieved I was +astonished by the party's return. Inquiring as to the trouble, I +learned that out toward the Staked Plains every sign of the Cheyennes +had disappeared. Surprised and disappointed at this, and discouraged +by the loneliness of his situation--for in the whole region not a +trace of animal life was visible, Custer gave up the search, and none +too soon, I am inclined to believe, to save his small party from +perishing. + +This failure put a stop to all expeditions till the latter part of +February, by which time I had managed to lay in enough rations to +feed the command for about thirty days; and the horses back at +Arbuckle having picked up sufficiently for field service they were +ordered to Sill, and this time I decided to send Custer out with his +own and the Kansas regiment, with directions to insist on the +immediate surrender of the Cheyennes, or give them a sound thrashing. +He was ordered to get everything ready by March 1, and then move to +the mouth of Salt Creek, on the North Fork of the Red River, at which +place I proposed to establish a new depot for feeding the command. +Trains could reach this point from Camp Supply more readily than from +Arbuckle, and wishing to arrange this part of the programme in +person, I decided to return at once to Supply, and afterward rejoin +Custer at Salt Creek, on what, I felt sure, was to be the final +expedition of the campaign. I made the three hundred and sixty miles +from Sill to Supply in seven days, but much to my surprise there +found a despatch from General Grant directing me to repair +immediately to Washington. These orders precluded, of course, my +rejoining the command; but at the appointed time it set out on the +march, and within three weeks brought the campaign to a successful +close. + +In this last expedition, for the first few days Custer's route was by +the same trail he had taken in January--that is to say, along the +southern base of the Witchita Mountains--but this time there was more +to encourage him than before, for, on getting a couple of marches +beyond old Camp Radziminski, on all sides were fresh evidences of +Indians, and every effort was bent to strike them. + +From day to day the signs grew hotter, and toward the latter part of +March the game was found. The Indians being in a very forlorn +condition, Custer might have destroyed most of the tribe, and +certainly all their villages, but in order to save two white women +whom, it was discovered, they held as captives, he contented himself +with the renewal of the Cheyennes' agreement to come in to Camp +Supply. In due time the entire tribe fulfilled its promise except +one small band under "Tall Bull," but this party received a good +drubbing from General Carr on the Republican early in May. After +this fight all the Indians of the southern Plains settled down on +their reservations, and I doubt whether the peace would ever again +have been broken had they not in after years been driven to +hostilities by most unjust treatment. + +It was the 2d of March that I received at Camp Supply Grant's +despatch directing me to report immediately in Washington. It had +been my intention, as I have said, to join Custer on the North Fork +of the Red River, but this new order required me to recast my plans, +so, after arranging to keep the expedition supplied till the end of +the campaign, I started for Washington, accompanied by three of my +staff--Colonels McGonigle and Crosby, and Surgeon Asch, and Mr. Deb. +Randolph Keim, a representative of the press, who went through the +whole campaign, and in 1870 published a graphic history of it. The +day we left Supply we, had another dose of sleet and snow, but +nevertheless we made good time, and by night-fall reached Bluff +Creek. In twenty-four hours more we made Fort Dodge, and on the 6th +of March arrived at Fort Hays. Just south of the Smoky Hill River, a +little before we got to the post, a courier heading for Fort Dodge +passed us at a rapid gait. Suspecting that he had despatches for me, +I directed my outrider to overtake him and find out. The courier +soon turned back, and riding up to my ambulance handed me a telegram +notifying me that General Grant, on the day of his inauguration, +March 4, 1869, had appointed me Lieutenant-General of the Army. When +I reported in Washington, the President desired me to return to New +Orleans and resume command of the Fifth Military District, but this +was not at all to my liking, so I begged off, and was assigned to +take charge of the Division of the Missouri, succeeding General +Sherman, who had just been ordered to assume command of the Army. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +INSPECTING MILITARY POSTS IN UTAH AND MONTANA--DESIRE TO WITNESS THE +FRANCO-GERMAN WAR--ON A SAND-BAR IN THE MISSOURI--A BEAR HUNT--AN +INDIAN SCARE--MYRIADS OF MOSQUITOES--PERMISSION GIVEN TO VISIT +EUROPE--CALLING ON PRESIDENT GRANT--SAILING FOR LIVERPOOL--ARRIVAL IN +BERLIN. + +After I had for a year been commanding the Division of the Missouri, +which embraced the entire Rocky Mountain region, I found it necessary +to make an inspection of the military posts in northern Utah and +Montana, in order by personal observation to inform myself of their +location and needs, and at the same time become acquainted with the +salient geographical and topographical features of that section of my +division. Therefore in May, 1870, I started west by the Union- +Pacific railroad, and on arriving at Corinne' Station, the next +beyond Ogden, took passage by stage-coach for Helena, the capital of +Montana Territory. Helena is nearly five hundred miles north of +Corinne, and under ordinary conditions the journey was, in those +days, a most tiresome one. As the stage kept jogging on day and +night, there was little chance for sleep, and there being with me a +sufficient number of staff-officers to justify the proceeding, we +chartered the "outfit," stipulating that we were to stop over one +night on the road to get some rest. This rendered the journey more +tolerable, and we arrived at Helena without extraordinary fatigue. + +Before I left Chicago the newspapers were filled with rumors of +impending war between Germany and France. I was anxious to observe +the conflict, if it was to occur, but reports made one day concerning +the beginning of hostilities would be contradicted the next, and it +was not till I reached Helena that the despatches lost their doubtful +character, and later became of so positive a nature as to make it +certain that the two nations would fight. I therefore decided to cut +short my tour of inspection, so that I could go abroad to witness the +war, if the President would approve. This resolution limited my stay +in Helena to a couple of days, which were devoted to arranging for an +exploration of what are now known as the Upper and the Lower Geyser +Basins of the Yellowstone Park. While journeying between Corinne and +Helena I had gained some vague knowledge of these geysers from an old +mountaineer named Atkinson, but his information was very indefinite, +mostly second-hand; and there was such general uncertainty as to the +character of this wonderland that I authorized an escort of soldiers +to go that season from Fort Ellis with a small party, to make such +superficial explorations as to justify my sending an engineer officer +with a well-equipped expedition there next summer to scientifically +examine and report upon the strange country. When the arrangements +for this preliminary expedition were completed I started for Fort +Benton, the head of navigation on the Missouri River, on the way +passing through Fort Shaw, on Sun River. I expected to take at +Benton a steamboat to Fort Stevenson, a military post which had been +established about eighty miles south of Fort Buford, near a +settlement of friendly Mandan and Arickaree Indians, to protect them +from the hostile Sioux. From there I was to make my way overland, +first to Fort Totten near Devil's lake in Dakota, and thence by way +of Fort Abercrombie to Saint Cloud, Minnesota, the terminus of the +rallroad. + +Luckily I met with no delay in getting a boat at Benton, and though +the water was extremely low, we steamed down the channel of the +Missouri with but slight detention till we got within fifty miles of +Fort Buford. Here we struck on a sandbar with such force of steam +and current as to land us almost out of the water from stem to +midships. This bad luck was tantalizing, for to land on a bar when +your boat is under full headway down-stream in the Missouri River is +no trifling matter, especially if you want to make time, for the +rapid and turbid stream quickly depositing sand under the hull, makes +it commonly a task of several days to get your boat off again. As +from our mishap the loss of much time was inevitable, I sent a +messenger to Fort Buford for a small escort, and for horses to take +my party in to the post. Colonel Morrow, the commandant, came +himself to meet us, bringing a strong party of soldiers and some +friendly Indian scouts, because, he said, there were then in the +region around Buford so many treacherous band of Sioux as to make +things exceedingly unsafe. + +Desiring to reach the post without spending more than one night on +the way, we abandoned our steamer that evening, and set off at an +early hour the next morning. We made camp at the end of the day's +march within ten miles of Buford, and arrived at the post without +having had any incident of moment, unless we may dignify as one a +battle with three grizzly bears, discovered by our friendly Indians +the morning of our second day's journey. While eating our breakfast- +-a rather slim one, by the way--spread on a piece of canvas, the +Indians, whose bivouac was some distance off, began shouting +excitedly, "Bear! bear!" and started us all up in time to see, out on +the plain some hundreds of yards away, an enormous grizzly and two +almost full-grown cubs. Chances like this for a bear hunt seldom +offered, so there was hurried mounting--the horses being already +saddled--and a quick advance made on the game from many directions, +Lieutenant Townsend, of the escort, and five or six of the Indians +going with me. Alarmed by the commotion, bruin and her cubs turned +about, and with an awkward yet rapid gait headed for a deep ravine, +in which there was brushwood shelter. + +My party rode directly across the prairie and struck the trail not +far behind the game. Then for a mile or more the chase was kept up, +but with such poor shooting because of the "buck fever" which had +seized most of us, that we failed to bring down any of the grizzlies, +though the cubs grew so tired that the mother was often obliged to +halt for their defense, meanwhile urging them on before her. When +the ravine was gained she hid the cubs away in the thick brushwood, +and then coming out where we could plainly see her, stood on the +defense just within the edge of the thicket, beyond the range of our +rifles though, unless we went down into the canyon, which we would +have to do on foot, since the precipitous wall precluded going on +horseback. For an adventure like this I confess I had little +inclination, and on holding a council of war, I found that the +Indians had still less, but Lieutenant Townsend, who was a fine shot, +and had refrained from firing hitherto in the hope that I might bag +the game, relieved the embarrassing situation and saved the credit of +the party by going down alone to attack the enemy. Meanwhile I +magnanimously held his horse, and the Sioux braves did a deal of +shouting, which they seemed to think of great assistance. + +Townsend, having descended to the bottom of the ravine, approached +within range, when the old bear struck out, dashing into and out of +the bushes so rapidly, however, that he could not get fair aim at +her, but the startled cubs running into full view, he killed one at +the first shot and at the second wounded the other. This terribly +enraged the mother, and she now came boldly out to fight, exposing +herself in the open ground so much as to permit a shot, that brought +her down too, with a broken shoulder. Then the Indians and I, +growing very brave, scrambled down to--take part in the fight. It +was left for me to despatch the wounded cub and mother, and having +recovered possession of my nerves, I did the work effectively, and we +carried off with us the skins of the three animals as trophies of the +hunt and evidence of our prowess. + +As good luck would have it, when we reached Buford we found a +steamboat there unloading stores, and learned that it would be ready +to start down the river the next day. Embarking on her, we got to +Stevenson in a few hours, and finding at the post camp equipage that +had been made ready for our use in crossing overland to Fort Totten, +we set out the following forenoon, taking with us a small escort of +infantry, transported in two light wagons, a couple of Mandans and +the post interpreter going along as mounted guides. + +To reach water we had to march the first day to a small lake forty +miles off, and the oppressive heat, together with the long distance +traveled, used up one of the teams so much that, when about to start +out the second morning, we found the animals unable to go on with any +prospect of finishing the trip, so I ordered them to be rested forty- +eight hours longer, and then taken back to Stevenson. This +diminished the escort by one-half, yet by keeping the Indians and +interpreter on the lookout, and seeing that our ambulance was kept +closed up on the wagon carrying the rest of the detachment, we could, +I thought, stand off any ordinary party of hostile Indians. + +About noon I observed that the scouts in advance had left the trail +and begun to reconnoitre a low ridge to their right, the sequel of +which was that in a few minutes they returned to the wagons on a dead +run and reported Sioux just ahead. Looking in the direction +indicated, I could dimly see five or six horsemen riding in a circle, +as Indians do when giving warning to their camp, but as our halt +disclosed that we were aware of their proximity, they darted back +again behind the crest of the ridge. Anticipating from this move an +immediate attack, we hastily prepared for it by unhooking the mules +from the wagon and ambulance, so that we could use the vehicles as a +barricade. This done, I told the interpreter to take the Mandan +scouts and go over toward the ridge and reconnoitre again. As the +scouts neared the crest two of them dismounted, and, crawling slowly +on their bellies to the summit, took a hasty look and returned at +once to their horses, coming back with word that in the valley beyond +was a camp of at least a hundred Sioux lodges, and that the Indians +were hurriedly getting ready to attack us. The news was anything but +cheering, for with a village of that size the warriors would number +two or three hundred, and could assail us from every side. + +Still, nothing could be done, but stand and take what was to come, +for there was no chance of escape--it being supreme folly to +undertake in wagons a race with Indians to Fort Stevenson, sixty +miles away. To make the best of the situation, we unloaded the +baggage, distributing and adjusting the trunks, rolls of bedding, +crackerboxes, and everything else that would stop a bullet, in such +manner as to form a square barricade, two sides of which were the +wagons, with the mules haltered to the wheels. Every man then +supplied himself with all the ammunition he could carry, and the +Mandan scouts setting up the depressing wail of the Indian death- +song, we all awaited the attack with the courage of despair. + +But no attack came; and time slipping by, and we still unmolested, +the interpreter and scouts were sent out to make another +reconnoissance. Going through just such precautions as before in +approaching the ridge, their slow progress kept us in painful +suspense; but when they got to the crest the strain on our herves was +relieved by seeing them first stand up boldly at full height, and +then descend beyond. Quickly returning, they brought welcome word +that the whole thing was a mistake, and no Sioux were there at all. +What had been taken for a hundred Indian lodges turned out to be the +camp of a Government train on its way to Fort Stevenson, and the +officer in charge seeing the scouts before they discovered him, and +believing them to be Sioux, had sent out to bring his herds in. It +would be hard to exaggerate the relief that this discovery gave us, +and we all breathed much easier. The scare was a bad one, and I have +no hesitation in saying that, had we been mounted, it is more than +likely that, instead of showing fight, we would have taken up a +lively pace for Fort Stevenson. + +After reciprocal explanations with the officer in charge of the +train, the march was resumed, and at the close of that day we camped +near a small lake about twenty miles from Fort Totten. From Totten +we journeyed on to Fort Abercrombie. The country between the two +posts is low and flat, and I verily believe was then the favorite +abiding-place of the mosquito, no matter where he most loves to dwell +now; for myriads of the pests rose up out of the tall rank grass-- +more than I ever saw before or since--and viciously attacked both men +and animals. We ourselves were somewhat protected by gloves and +head-nets, provided us before leaving Totten, but notwithstanding +these our sufferings were well-nigh intolerable; the annoyance that +the poor mules experienced must, therefore, have been extreme; +indeed, they were so terribly stung that the blood fairly trickled +down their sides. Unluckily, we had to camp for one night in this +region; but we partly evaded the ravenous things by banking up our +tent walls with earth, and then, before turning in, sweeping and +smoking out such as had got inside. Yet with all this there seemed +hundreds left to sing and sting throughout the night. The mules +being without protection, we tried hard to save them from the vicious +insects by creating a dense smoke from a circle of smothered fires, +within which chain the grateful brutes gladly stood; but this relief +was only partial, so the moment there was light enough to enable us +to hook up we pulled out for Abercrombie in hot haste. + +From Abercrombie we drove on to Saint Cloud, the terminus of the +railroad, where, considerably the worse for our hurried trip and +truly wretched experience with the mosquitoes, we boarded the welcome +cars. Two days later we arrived in Chicago, and having meanwhile +received word from General Sherman that there would be no objection +to my going to Europe, I began making arrangements to leave, securing +passage by the steamship Scotia. + +President Grant invited me to come to see him at Long Branch before I +should sail, and during my brief visit there he asked which army I +wished to accompany, the German or the French. I told him the +German, for the reason that I thought more could be seen with the +successful side, and that the indications pointed to the defeat of +the French. My choice evidently pleased him greatly, as he had the +utmost contempt for Louis Napoleon, and had always denounced him as a +usurper and a charlatan. Before we separated, the President gave me +the following letter to the representatives of our Government abroad, +and with it I not only had no trouble in obtaining permission to go +with the Germans, but was specially favored by being invited to +accompany the headquarters of the King of Prussia: + +"LONG BRANCH, N. J., July 25, 1870. + +"Lieutenant-General P. H. Sheridan, of the United State Army, is +authorized to visit Europe, to return at his own pleasure, unless +otherwise ordered. He is commended to the good offices of all +representatives of this Government whom he may meet abroad. + +"To citizens and representatives of other Governments I introduce +General Sheridan as one of the most skillful, brave and deserving +soldiers developed by the great struggle through which the United +States Government has just passed. Attention paid him will be duly +appreciated by the country he has served so faithfully and +efficiently. + +"U. S. GRANT." + + +Word of my intended trip was cabled to Europe in the ordinary press +despatches, and our Minister to France, Mr. Elihu B. Washburn, being +an intimate friend of mine, and thinking that I might wish to attach +myself to the French army, did me the favor to take preliminary steps +for securing the necessary authority. He went so far as to broach +the subject to the French Minister of War, but in view of the +informality of the request, and an unmistakable unwillingness to +grant it being manifested, Mr. Washburn pursued the matter no +further. I did not learn of this kindly interest in my behalf till +after the capitulation of Paris, when Mr. Washburn told me what he +had done of his own motion. Of course I thanked him gratefully, but +even had he succeeded in getting the permission he sought I should +not have accompanied the French army. + +I sailed from New York July 27, one of my aides-de-camp, General +James W. Forsyth, going with me. We reached Liverpool August 6, and +the next day visited the American Legation in London, where we saw +all the officials except our Minister, Mr. Motley, who, being absent, +was represented by Mr. Moran, the Secretary of the Legation. We left +London August 9 for Brussels, where we were kindly cared for by the +American Minister, Mr. Russell Jones who the same evening saw us off +for Germany. Because of the war we secured transportation only as +far as Vera, and here we received information that the Prussian +Minister of War had telegraphed to the Military Inspector of +Railroads to take charge of us on our arrival a Cologne, and send us +down to the headquarter of the Prussian army, but the Inspector, for +some unexplained reason, instead of doing this, sent us on to Berlin. +Here our Minister, Mr. George Bancroft, met us with a telegram from +the German Chancellor, Count Bismarck, saying we were expected to +come direct to the King's headquarters and we learned also that a +despatch had been sent to the Prussian Minister at Brussels directing +him to forward us from Cologne to the army, instead of allowing us to +go on to Berlin, but that we had reached and quit Brussels without +the Minister's knowledge. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +LEAVING FOR THE SEAT OF WAR--MEETING WITH PRINCE BISMARCK--HIS +INTEREST IN PUBLIC OPINION IN AMERICA--HIS INCLINATIONS IN EARLY +LIFE--PRESENTED TO THE KING--THE BATTLE OF GRAVELOTTE--THE GERMAN +PLAN--ITS FINAL SUCCESS--SENDING NEWS OF THE VICTORY--MISTAKEN FOR A +FRENCHMAN. + +Shortly after we arrived in Berlin the Queen sent a messenger +offering us an opportunity to pay our respects, and fixed an hour for +the visit, which was to take place the next day; but as the tenor of +the despatch Mr. Bancroft had received from Count Bismarck indicated +that some important event which it was desired I should witness was +about to happen at the theatre of war, our Minister got us excused +from our visit of ceremony, and we started for the headquarters of +the German army that evening--our stay in the Prussian capital having +been somewhat less than a day. + +Our train was a very long one, of over eighty cars, and though drawn +by three locomotives, its progress to Cologne was very slow and the +journey most tedious. From Cologne we continued on by rail up the +valley of the Rhine to Bingebruck, near Bingen, and thence across +through Saarbrucken to Remilly, where we left the railway and rode in +a hay-wagon to Pont-a-Mousson, arriving there August 17, late in the +afternoon. This little city had been ceded to France at the Peace of +Westphalia, and although originally German, the people had become, in +the lapse of so many years, intensely French in sentiment. The town +was so full of officers and men belonging to the German army that it +was difficult to get lodgings, but after some delay we found quite +comfortable quarters at one of the small hotels, and presently, after +we had succeeded in getting a slender meal, I sent my card to Count +von Bismarck, the Chancellor of the North German Confederation, who +soon responded by appointing an hour--about 9 o'clock the same +evening--for an interview. + +When the Count received me he was clothed in the undress uniform of +the Cuirassier regiment, of which he was the colonel. During the +interview which ensued, he exhibited at times deep anxiety regarding +the conflict now imminent, for it was the night before the battle of +Gravelotte, but his conversation was mostly devoted to the state of +public sentiment in America, about which he seemed much concerned, +inquiring repeatedly as to which side--France or Prussia--was charged +with bringing on the war. Expressing a desire to witness the battle +which was expected to occur the next day, and remarking that I had +not had sufficient time to provide the necessary transportation, he +told me to be ready at 4 o'clock in the morning, and he would take me +out in his own carriage and present me to the King--adding that he +would ask one of his own staff-officers, who he knew had one or two +extra horses, to lend me one. As I did not know just what my status +would be, and having explained to the President before leaving +America that I wished to accompany the German army unofficially, I +hardly knew whether to appear in uniform or not, so I spoke of this +matter too, and the Count, after some reflection, thought it best for +me to wear my undress uniform, minus the sword, however, because I +was a non combatant. + +At 4 o'clock the next morning, the 18th, I repaired to the +Chancellor's quarters. The carriage was at the door, also the +saddle-horse, but as no spare mount could be procured for General +Forsyth, he had to seek other means to reach the battle-field. The +carriage was an open one with two double seats, and in front a single +one for a messenger; it had also a hand-brake attached. + + +Count Bismarck and I occupied the rear seat, and Count Bismarck- +Bohlen--the nephew and aide-decamp to the Chancellor--and Doctor +Busch were seated facing us. The conveyance was strong, serviceable, +and comfortable, but not specially prepossessing, and hitched to it +were four stout horses--logy, ungainly animals, whose clumsy harness +indicated that the whole equipment was meant for heavy work. Two +postilions in uniform, in high military saddles on the nigh horse of +each span, completed the establishment. + +All being ready, we took one of the roads from Pont-a-Mousson to +Rezonville, which is on the direct road from Metz to Chalons, and +near the central point of the field where, on the 16th of August, the +battle of Mars-la-Tour had been fought. It was by this road that the +Pomeranians, numbering about 30,000 men, had been ordered to march to +Gravelotte, and after proceeding a short distance we overtook the +column. As this contingent came from Count Bismarck's own section of +Germany, there greeted us as we passed along, first in the dim light +of the morning, and later in the glow of the rising sun, continuous +and most enthusiastic cheering for the German Chancellor. + +On the way Count Bismarck again recurred to the state of public +opinion in America with reference to the war. He also talked much +about our form of government, and said that in early life his +tendencies were all toward republicanism, but that family influence +had overcome his preferences, and intimated that, after adopting a +political career, he found that Germany was not sufficiently advanced +for republicanism. He said, further, that he had been reluctant to +enter upon this public career, that he had always longed to be a +soldier, but that here again family opposition had turned him from +the field of his choice into the sphere of diplomacy. + +Not far from Mars-la-Tour we alighted, and in a little while an aide- +de-camp was introduced, who informed me that he was there to conduct +and present me to his Majesty, the King of Prussia. As we were +walking along together, I inquired whether at the meeting I should +remove my cap, and he said no; that in an out-of-door presentation it +was not etiquette to uncover if in uniform. We were soon in presence +of the King, where--under the shade of a clump of second-growth +poplar-trees, with which nearly all the farms in the north of France +are here and there dotted--the presentation was made in the simplest +and most agreeable manner. + +His Majesty, taking my hand in both of his, gave me a thorough +welcome, expressing, like Count Bismarck, though through an +interpreter, much interest as to the sentiment in my own country +about the war. At this time William the First of Prussia was +seventy-three years of age, and, dressed in the uniform of the +Guards, he seemed to be the very ideal soldier, and graced with most +gentle and courteous manners. The conversation, which was brief, as +neither of us spoke the other's native tongue, concluded by his +Majesty's requesting me in the most cordial way to accompany his +headquarters during the campaign. Thanking him for his kindness, I +rejoined Count Bismarck's party, and our horses having arrived +meantime, we mounted and moved off to the position selected for the +King to witness the opening of the battle. + +This place was on some high ground overlooking the villages of +Rezonville and Gravelotte, about the centre of the battlefield of +Mars-la-Tour, and from it most of the country to the east toward Metz +could also be seen. The point chosen was an excellent one for the +purpose, though in one respect disagreeable, since the dead bodies of +many of the poor fellows killed there two days before were yet +unburied. In a little while the King's escort began to remove these +dead, however, bearing them away on stretchers improvised with their +rifles, and the spot thus cleared was much more acceptable. Then, +when such unexploded shells as were lying around loose had been +cautiously carried away, the King, his brother, Prince Frederick +Charles Alexander, the chief-of-staff, General von Moltke, the +Minister of War, General von Roon, and Count von Bismarck assembled +on the highest point, and I being asked to join the group, was there +presented to General von Moltke. He spoke our language fluently, and +Bismarck having left the party for a time to go to a neighboring +house to see his son, who had been wounded at Mars-la-Tour, and about +whom he was naturally very anxious, General von Moltke entertained me +by explaining the positions of the different corps, the nature and +object of their movements then taking place, and so on. + +Before us, and covering Metz, lay the French army, posted on the +crest of a ridge extending north, and about its centre curving +slightly westward toward the German forces. The left of the French +position was but a short distance from the Moselle, and this part of +the line was separated from the Germans by a ravine, the slopes, +fairly well wooded, rising quite sharply; farther north, near the +centre, this depression disappeared, merged in the general swell of +the ground, and thence on toward the right the ground over which an +approach to the French line must be made was essentially a natural +open glacis, that could be thoroughly swept by the fire of the +defenders. + +The line extended some seven or eight miles. To attack this +position, formidable everywhere, except perhaps on the right flank, +the Germans were bringing up the combined forces of the First and +Second armies, troops that within the past fortnight had already +successfully met the French in three pitched battles. On the right +was the First Army, under command of General Von Steinmetz, the +victors, August 6, of Spicheren, near Saar, and, eight days later, of +Colombey, to the east of Metz; while the centre and left were +composed of the several corps of the Second Army, commanded by Prince +Frederick Charles of Prussia, a part of whose troops had just been +engaged in the sanguinary battle of Mars-la-Tour, by which Bazaine +was cut off from the Verdun road, and forced back toward Metz. + +At first the German plan was simply to threaten with their right, +while the corps of the Second Army advanced toward the north, to +prevent the French, of whose intentions there was much doubt, from +escaping toward Chalons; then, as the purposes of the French might +be, developed, these corps were to change direction toward the enemy +successively, and seek to turn his right flank. But the location of +this vital turning-point was very uncertain, and until it was +ascertained and carried, late in the afternoon, the action raged with +more or less intensity along the entire line. + +But as it is not my purpose to describe in detail the battle of +Gravelotte, nor any other, I will speak of some of its incidents +merely. About noon, after many preliminary skirmishes, the action +was begun according to the plan I have already outlined, the Germans +advancing their left while holding on strongly with their right, and +it was this wing (the First Army) that came under my observation from +the place where the King's headquarters were located. From here we +could see, as I have said, the village of Gravelotte. Before it lay +the German troops, concealed to some extent, especially to the left, +by clumps of timber here and there. Immediately in front of us, +however, the ground was open, and the day being clear and sunny, with +a fresh breeze blowing (else the smoke from a battle between four +hundred thousand men would have obstructed the view altogether), the +spectacle presented Was of unsurpassed magnificence and sublimity. +The German artillery opened the battle, and while the air was filled +with shot and shell from hundreds of guns along their entire line, +the German centre and left, in rather open order, moved out to the +attack, and as they went forward the reserves, in close column, took +up positions within supporting distances, yet far enough back to be +out of range. + +The French artillery and mitrailleuses responded vigorously to the +Krupps, and with deadly effect, but as far as we could see the German +left continued its advance, and staff-officers came up frequently to +report that all was going on well at points hidden from our view +These reports were always made to the King first, and whenever +anybody arrived with tidings of the fight we clustered around to hear +the news, General Von Moltke unfolding a map meanwhile, and +explaining the situation. This done, the chief of the staff, while +awaiting the next report, would either return to a seat that had been +made for him with some knapsacks, or would occupy the time walking +about, kicking clods of dirt or small stones here and there, his +hands clasped behind his back, his face pale and thoughtful. He was +then nearly seventy years old, but because of his emaciated figure, +the deep wrinkles in his face, and the crow's-feet about his eyes, he +looked even older, his appearance being suggestive of the practice of +church asceticisms rather than of his well-known ardent devotion to +the military profession. + +By the middle of the afternoon the steady progress of the German left +and centre had driven the French from their more advanced positions +from behind stone walls and hedges, through valleys and hamlets, in +the direction of Metz, but as yet the German right had accomplished +little except to get possession of the village of Gravelotte, +forcing the French across the deep ravine I have mentioned, which +runs north and south a little distance east of ihe town. + +But it was now time for the German right to move in earnest to carry +the Rozerieulles ridge, on which crest the French had evidently +decided to make an obstinate fight to cover their withdrawal to Metz. +As the Germans moved to the attack here, the French fire became heavy +and destructive, so much so, indeed, as to cause General Von +Steinmetz to order some cavalry belonging to the right wing to make a +charge. Crossing the ravine before described, this body of horse +swept up the slope beyond, the front ranks urged forward by the +momentum from behind. The French were posted along a sunken road, +behind stone walls and houses, and as the German cavalry neared these +obstructions it received a dreadful fire without the least chance of +returning it, though still pushed on till the front ranks were +crowded into the deep cut of the road. Here the slaughter was +terrible, for the horsemen could make no further headway; and because +of the blockade behind, of dead and wounded men and animals, an +orderly retreat was impossible, and disaster inevitable. + +About the time the charge was ordered, the phase of the battle was +such that the King concluded to move his headquarters into the +village of Gravelotte; and just after getting there, we first learned +fully of the disastrous result of the charge which had been entered +upon with such spirit; and so much indignation was expressed against +Steinmetz, who, it was claimed, had made an unnecessary sacrifice of +his cavalry, that I thought he would be relieved on the spot; though +this was not done. + +Followed by a large staff, General Steinmetz appeared in the village +presently, and approached the King. When near, he bowed with great +respect, and I then saw that he was a very old man though his +soldierly figure, bronzed face, and shortcropped hair gave some +evidence of vigor still. When the King spoke to him I was not close +enough to learn what was said; but his Majesty's manner was +expressive of kindly feeling, and the fact that in a few moments the +veteran general returned to the command of his troops, indicated +that, for the present at least, his fault had been overlooked. + +The King then moved out of the village, and just a little to the east +and north of it the headquarters were located on high, open ground, +whence we could observe the right of the German infantry advancing up +the eastern face of the ravine. The advance, though slow and +irregular, resulted in gradually gaining ground, the French resisting +stoutly with a stubborn musketry fire all along the slopes. Their +artillery was silent, however; and from this fact the German +artillery officers grew jubilant, confidently asserting that their +Krupp guns had dismounted the French batteries and knocked their +mitrailleuses to pieces. I did not indulge in this confidence, +however; for, with the excellent field-glass I had, I could +distinctly see long columns of French troops moving to their right, +for the apparent purpose of making a vigorous fight on that flank; +and I thought it more than likely that their artillery would be heard +from before the Germans could gain the coveted ridge. + +The Germans labored up the glacis slowly at the most exposed places; +now crawling on their bellies, now creeping on hands and knees, but, +in the main, moving with erect and steady bearing. As they +approached within short range, they suddenly found that the French +artillery and mitrallleuses had by no means been silenced--about two +hundred pieces opening on them with fearful effect, while at the same +time the whole crest blazed with a deadly fire from the Chassepot +rifles. Resistance like this was so unexpected by the Germans that +it dismayed them; and first wavering a moment, then becoming panic- +stricken, they broke and fled, infantry, cavalry, and artillery +coming down the slope without any pretence of formation, the French +hotly following and pouring in a heavy and constant fire as the +fugitives fled back across the ravine toward Gravelotte. With this +the battle on the right had now assumed a most serious aspect, and +the indications were that the French would attack the heights of +Gravelotte; but the Pomeranian corps coming on the field at this +crisis, was led into action by Von Moltke, himself, and shortly after +the day was decided in favor of the Germans. + +When the French guns opened fire, it was discovered that the King's +position was within easy range, many of the shells falling near +enough to make the place extremely uncomfortable; so it was suggested +that he go to a less exposed point. At first he refused to listen to +this wise counsel, but yielded finally--leaving the ground with +reluctance, however--and went back toward Rezonville. I waited for +Count Bismarck, who did not go immediately with the King, but +remained at Gravelotte, looking after some of the escort who had been +wounded. When he had arranged for their care, we set out to rejoin +the King, and before going far, overtook his Majesty, who had stopped +on the Chalons road, and was surrounded by a throng of fugitives, +whom he was berating in German so energetic as to remind me forcibly +of the "Dutch" swearing that I used to hear in my boyhood in Ohio. +The dressing down finished to his satisfaction, the King resumed his +course toward Re'zonville, halting, however, to rebuke in the same +emphatic style every group of runaways he overtook. + +Passing through Rezonville, we halted just beyond the village; there +a fire was built, and the King, his brother, Prince Frederick +Charles, and Von Roon were provided with rather uncomfortable seats +about it, made by resting the ends of a short ladder on a couple of +boxes. With much anxiety and not a little depression of spirits news +from the battle-field was now awaited, but the suspense did not last +long, for presently came the cheering intelligence that the French +were retiring, being forced back by the Pomeranian corps, and some of +the lately broken right wing organizations, that had been rallied on +the heights of Gravelotte. The lost ground being thus regained, and +the French having been beaten on their right, it was not long before +word came that Bazaine's army was falling back to Metz, leaving the +entire battle-field in possession of the Germans. + +During the excitement of the day I had not much felt the want of +either food or water, but now that all was over I was nearly +exhausted, having had neither since early morning. Indeed, all of +the party were in like straits; the immense armies had not only eaten +up nearly everything in the country, but had drunk all the wells dry, +too, and there seemed no relief for us till, luckily, a squad of +soldiers came along the road with a small cask of wine in a cart. +One of the staff-officers instantly appropriated the keg, and +proceeded to share his prize most generously. Never had I tasted +anything so refreshing and delicious, but as the wine was the +ordinary sour stuff drunk by the peasantry of northern France, my +appreciation must be ascribed to my famished condition rather than to +any virtues of the beverage itself. + +After I had thus quenched my thirst the King's, brother called me +aside, and drawing from his coat-tail pocket a piece of stale black +bread, divided it with me, and while munching on this the Prince +began talking of his son--General Prince Frederick Charles, popularly +called the Red Prince--who was in command of the Second Army in this +battle--the German left wing. In recounting his son's professional +career the old man's face was aglow with enthusiasm, and not without +good cause, for in the war between Prussia and Austria in 1866, as +well as in the present campaign, the Red Prince had displayed the +highest order of military genius. + +The headquarters now became the scene of much bustle, despatches +announcing the victory being sent in all directions. The first one +transmitted was to the Queen, the King directing Count Bismarck to +prepare it for his signature; then followed others of a more official +character, and while these matters were being attended to I thought I +would ride into the village to find, if possible, some water for my +horse. Just as I entered the chief street, however, I was suddenly +halted by a squad of soldiers, who, taking me for a French officer +(my coat and forage cap resembling those of the French), leveled +their pieces at me. They were greatly excited, so much so, indeed, +that I thought my hour had come, for they could not understand +English, and I could not speak German, and dare not utter +explanations in French. Fortunately a few disconnected German words +came to me in the emergency. With these I managed to delay my +execution, and one of the party ventured to come up to examine the +"suspect" more closely. The first thing he did was to take off my +cap, and looking it over carefully, his eyes rested on the three +stars above the visor, and, pointing to them, he emphatically +pronounced me French. Then of course they all became excited again, +more so than before, even, for they thought I was trying to practice +a ruse, and I question whether I should have lived to recount the +adventure had not an officer belonging to the King's headquarters +been passing by just then, when, hearing the threatenings and +imprecations, he rode up to learn the cause of the hubbub, and +immediately recognized and released me. When he told my wrathy +captors who I was, they were much mortified of course, and made the +most profuse apologies, promising that no such mistake should occur +again, and so on; but not feeling wholly reassured, for my uniform +was still liable to mislead, I was careful to return to headquarters +in company with my deliverer. There I related what had occurred, and +after a good laugh all round, the King provided me with a pass which +he said would preclude any such mishap in the future, and would also +permit me to go wherever I pleased--a favor rarely bestowed. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +SEARCHING FOR QUARTERS--HUNTING UP PROVISIONS--A SLENDER BREAKFAST-- +GOING OVER THE BATTLEFIELD--THE GERMAN ARTILLERY--A GROUP OF WOUNDED- +-DINING WITH THE KING--ON THE MARCH--THE BAVARIANS--KIRSCHWASSER-- +URGING ON THE TROOPS. + +While I was absent, as related in the preceding chapter, it had been +decided that the King's quarters should be established for the night +in the village of Rezonville; and as it would be very difficult, at +such a late hour, to billet the whole party regularly, Count Bismarck +and I went off to look for shelter for ourselves. Remembering that I +had seen, when seeking to water my horse, a partly burned barn with +some fresh-looking hay in it, I suggested that we lodge there. He +too thought it would answer our purpose, but on reaching it we found +the unburned part of the barn filled with wounded, and this +necessitating a further search we continued on through the village in +quest of some house not yet converted into a hospital. Such, +however, seemed impossible to come upon, so at last the Count fixed +on one whose upper floor, we learned, was unoccupied, though the +lower one was covered with wounded. + +Mounting a creaky ladder--there was no stairway--to the upper story, +we found a good-sized room with three large beds, one of which the +Chancellor assigned to the Duke of Mecklenburg and aide, and another +to Count Bismarck-Bohlen and me, reserving the remaining one for +himself. Each bed, as is common in Germany and northern France, was +provided with a feather tick, but the night being warm, these spreads +were thrown off, and discovering that they would make a comfortable +shakedown on the floor, I slept there leaving Bismarck-Bohlen +unembarrassed by companionship--at least of a human kind. + +At daylight I awoke, and seeing that Count Bismarck was already +dressed and about to go down the ladder, I felt obliged to follow his +example, so I too turned out, and shortly descended to the ground-- +floor, the only delays of the toilet being those incident to +dressing, for there were no conveniences for morning ablutions. Just +outside the door I met the Count, who, proudly exhibiting a couple of +eggs he had bought from the woman of the house, invited me to +breakfast with him, provided we could beg some coffee from the king's +escort. Putting the eggs under my charge, with many injunctions as +to their safe-keeping, he went off to forage for the coffee, and +presently returned, having been moderately successful. One egg +apiece was hardly enough, however, to appease the craving of two +strong men ravenous from long fasting. Indeed, it seemed only to +whet the appetite, and we both set out on an eager expedition for +more food. Before going far I had the good luck to meet a sutler's +wagon, and though its stock was about all sold, there were still left +four large bologna sausages, which I promptly purchased--paying a +round sum for them too--and hastening back found the Count already +returned, though without bringing anything at all to eat; but he had +secured a couple of bottles of brandy, and with a little of this--it +was excellent, too--and the sausages, the slim ration of eggs and +coffee was amply reinforced. + +Breakfast over, the Chancellor invited me to accompany him in a ride +to the battle-field, and I gladly accepted, as I very much desired to +pass over the ground in front of Gravelotte, particularly so to see +whether the Krupp guns had really done the execution that was claimed +for them by the German artillery officers. Going directly through +the village of Gravelotte, following the causeway over which the +German cavalry had passed to make its courageous but futile charge, +we soon reached the ground where the fighting had been the most +severe. Here the field was literally covered with evidences of the +terrible strife, the dead and wounded strewn thick on every side. + +In the sunken road the carnage had been awful; men and horses having +been slaughtered there by hundreds, helpless before the murderous +fire delivered from behind a high stone wall impracticable to mounted +troops. The sight was sickening to an extreme, and we were not slow +to direct our course elsewhere, going up the glacis toward the French +line, the open ground over which we crossed being covered with +thousands of helmets, that had been thrown off by the Germans during +the fight and were still dotting the field, though details of +soldiers from the organizations which had been engaged here were +about to begin to gather up their abandoned headgear. + +When we got inside the French works, I was astonished to observe how +little harm had been done the defenses by the German artillery, for +although I had not that serene faith in the effectiveness of their +guns held by German artillerists generally, yet I thought their +terrific cannonade must have left marked results. All I could +perceive, however, was a disabled gun, a broken mitrailleuse, and two +badly damaged caissons. + +Everything else, except a little ammunition in the trenches, had been +carried away, and it was plain to see, from the good shape in which +the French left wing had retired to Metz, that its retreat had been +predetermined by the disasters to the right wing. + +By this hour the German cavalry having been thrown out to the front +well over toward Metz, we, following it to get a look at the city, +rode to a neighboring summit, supposing it would be a safe point of +observation; but we shortly realized the contrary, for scarcely had +we reached the crest when some of the French pickets, lying concealed +about six hundred yards off, opened fire, making it so very hot for +us that, hugging the necks of our horses, we incontinently fled. +Observing what had taken place, a troop of German cavalry charged the +French outpost and drove it far enough away to make safe our return, +and we resumed possession of the point, but only to discover that the +country to the east was so broken and hilly that no satisfactory view +of Metz could be had. + +Returning to Gravelotte, we next visited that part of the battlefield +to the northeast of the village, and before long Count Bismarck +discovered in a remote place about twenty men dreadfully wounded. +These poor fellows had had no attention whatever, having been +overlooked by the hospital corps, and their condition was most +pitiful. Yet there was one very handsome man in the group--a captain +of artillery--who, though shot through the right breast, was +talkative and cheerful, and felt sure of getting well. Pointing, +however, to a comrade lying near, also shot in the breast, he +significantly shook his head; it was easy to see on this man's face +the signs--of fast approaching death. + +An orderly was at once despatched for a surgeon, Bismarck and I doing +what we could meanwhile to alleviate the intense sufferings of the +maimed men, bringing them water and administering a little brandy, +for the Count still had with him some of the morning's supply. When +the surgeons came, we transferred the wounded to their care, and +making our way to Rezonville, there took the Count's carriage to +rejoin the King's headquarters, which in the mean time had been moved +to Pont-a-Mousson. Our route led through the village of Gorze, and +here we found the streets so obstructed with wagons that I feared it +would take us the rest of the day to get through, for the teamsters +would not pay the slightest heed to the cries of our postilions. The +Count was equal to the emergency, however, for, taking a pistol from +behind his cushion, and bidding me keep my seat, he jumped out and +quickly began to clear the street effectively, ordering wagons to the +right and left. Marching in front of the carriage and making way for +us till we were well through the blockade, he then resumed his seat, +remarking, "This is not a very dignified business for the Chancellor +of the German Confederation, but it's the only way to get through." + +At Pont-a-Mousson I was rejoined by my aide, General Forsyth, and for +the next two days our attention was almost wholly devoted to securing +means of transportation. This was most difficult to obtain, but as I +did not wish to impose on the kindness of the Chancellor longer, we +persevered till, finally, with the help of Count Bismarck-Bohlen, we +managed to get tolerably well equipped with a saddle-horse apiece, +and a two-horse carriage. Here also, on the afternoon of August 21, +I had the pleasure of dining with the King. The dinner was a simple +one, consisting of soup, a joint, and two or three vegetables; the +wines vin ordinaire and Burgundy. There were a good many persons of +high rank present, none of whom spoke English, however, except +Bismarck, who sat next the King and acted as interpreter when his +Majesty conversed with me. Little was said of the events taking +place around us, but the King made many inquiries concerning the war +of the rebellion, particularly with reference to Grant's campaign at +Vicksburg; suggested, perhaps, by the fact that there, and in the +recent movements of the German army, had been applied many similar +principles of military science. + +The French army under Marshal Bazaine having retired into the +fortifications of Metz, that stronghold was speedily invested by +Prince Frederick Charles. Meantime the Third Army, under the Crown +Prince of Prussia--which, after having fought and won the battle of +Worth, had been observing the army of Marshal MacMahon during and +after the battle of Gravelotte--was moving toward Paris by way of +Nancy, in conjunction with an army called the Fourth, which had been +organized from the troops previously engaged around Metz, and on the +22d was directed toward Bar-le-Duc under the command of the Crown +Prince of Saxony. In consequence of these operations the King +decided to move to Commercy, which place we reached by carriage, +traveling on a broad macadamized road lined on both sides with +poplar-trees, and our course leading through a most beautiful country +thickly dotted with prosperous-looking villages. + +On reaching Commercy, Forsyth and I found that quarters had been +already selected for us, and our names written on the door with chalk +the quartermaster charged with the billeting of the officers at +headquarters having started out in advance to perform this duty and +make all needful preparations for the King before he arrived, which +course was usually pursued thereafter, whenever the royal +headquarters took up a new location. + +Forsyth and I were lodged with the notary of the village, who over +and over again referred to his good fortune in not having to +entertain any of the Germans. He treated us most hospitably, and +next morning, on departing, we offered compensation by tendering a +sum--about what our bill would have been at a good hotel--to be used +for the "benefit of the wounded or the Church." Under this +stipulation the notary accepted, and we followed that plan of paying +for food and lodging afterward, whenever quartered in private houses. + +The next day I set out in advance of the headquarters, and reached +Bar-le-Duc about noon, passing on the way the Bavarian contingent of +the Crown Prince's army. These Bavarians were trim-looking soldiers, +dressed in neat uniforms of light blue; they looked healthy and +strong, but seemed of shorter stature than the North Germans I had +seen in the armies of Prince Frederick Charles and General von +Steinmetz. When, later in the day the King arrived, a guard for him +was detailed from this Bavarian contingent; a stroke of policy no +doubt, for the South Germans were so prejudiced against their +brothers of the North that no opportunity to smooth them down was +permitted to go unimproved. + +Bar-le-Duc, which had then a population of about 15,000, is one of +the prettiest towns I saw in France, its quaint and ancient buildings +and beautiful boulevards charming the eye as well as exciting deep +interest. The King and his immediate suite were quartered on one of +the best boulevards in a large building--the Bank of France--the +balcony of which offered a fine opportunity to observe a part of the +army of the Crown Prince the next day on its march toward Vitry. +This was the first time his Majesty had had a chance to see any of +these troops--as hitherto he had accompanied either the army of +Prince Frederick Charles, or that of General Steinmetz--and the +cheers with which he was greeted by the Bavarians left no room for +doubting their loyalty to the Confederation, notwithstanding ancient +jealousies. + +While the troops were passing, Count Bismarck had the kindness to +point out to me the different organizations, giving scraps of their +history, and also speaking concerning the qualifications of the +different generals commanding them. When the review was over we went +to the Count's house, and there, for the first time in my life, I +tasted kirschwasser, a very strong liquor distilled from cherries. +Not knowing anything about the stuff, I had to depend on Bismarck's +recommendation, and he proclaiming it fine, I took quite a generous +drink, which nearly strangled me and brought on a violent fit of +coughing. The Chancellor said, however, that this was in no way due +to the liquor, but to my own inexperience, and I was bound to believe +the distinguished statesman, for he proved his words by swallowing a +goodly dose with an undisturbed and even beaming countenance, +demonstrating his assertion so forcibly that I forthwith set out with +Bismarck-Bohlen to lay in a supply for myself. + +I spent the night in a handsome house, the property of an +exceptionally kind and polite gentleman bearing the indisputably +German name of Lager, but who was nevertheless French from head to +foot, if intense hatred of the Prussians be a sign of Gallic +nationality. At daybreak on the 26th word came for us to be ready to +move by the Chalons road at 7 o'clock, but before we got off, the +order was suspended till 2 in the afternoon. In the interval General +von Moltke arrived and held a long conference with the King, and when +we did pull out we traveled the remainder of the afternoon in company +with a part of the Crown Prince's army, which after this conference +inaugurated the series of movements from Bar-le-Duc northward, that +finally compelled the surrender at Sedan. This sudden change of +direction I did not at first understand, but soon learned that it was +because of the movements of Marshal MacMahon, who, having united the +French army beaten at Worth with three fresh corps at Chalons, was +marching to relieve Metz in obedience to orders from the Minister of +War at Paris. + +As we passed along the column, we noticed that the Crown Prince's +troops were doing their best, the officers urging the men to their +utmost exertions, persuading weary laggards and driving up +stragglers. As a general thing, however, they marched in good shape, +notwithstanding the rapid gait and the trying heat, for at the outset +of the campaign the Prince had divested them of all impedimenta +except essentials, and they were therefore in excellent trim for a +forced march. + +The King traveled further than usual that day--to Clermont--so we did +not get shelter till late, and even then not without some confusion, +for the quartermaster having set out toward Chalons before the change +of programme was ordered, was not at hand to provide for us. I had +extreme good luck, though, in being quartered with a certain +apothecary, who, having lived for a time in the United States, +claimed it as a privilege even to lodge me, and certainly made me his +debtor for the most generous hospitality. It was not so with some of +the others, however; and Count Bismarck was particularly unfortunate, +being billeted in a very small and uncomfortable house, where, +visiting him to learn more fully what was going on, I found him, +wrapped in a shabby old dressing-gown, hard at work. He was +established in a very small room, whose only furnishings consisted of +a table--at which he was writing--a couple of rough chairs, and the +universal feather-bed, this time made on the floor in one corner of +the room. On my remarking upon the limited character of his +quarters, the Count replied, with great good-humor, that they were +all right, and that he should get along well enough. Even the tramp +of his clerks in the attic, and the clanking of his orderlies' sabres +below, did not disturb him much; he said, in fact, that he would have +no grievance at all were it not for a guard of Bavarian soldiers +stationed about the house for his safety, he presumed the sentinels +from which insisted on protecting and saluting the Chancellor of the +North German Confederation in and out of season, a proceeding that +led to embarrassment sometimes, as he was much troubled with a severe +dysentery. Notwithstanding his trials, however, and in the midst of +the correspondence on which he was so intently engaged, he graciously +took time to explain that the sudden movement northward from Bar-le- +Duc was, as I have previously recounted, the result of information +that Marshal MacMahon was endeavoring to relieve Metz by marching +along the Belgian frontier; "a blundering manoeuvre," remarked the +Chancellor, "which cannot be accounted for, unless it has been +brought about by the political situation of the French." + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +AFTER MacMAHON--THE BATTLE AT BEAUMONT--THE FRENCH SURPRISED--THE +MARCHING OF THE GERMAN SOLDIERS--THE BATTLE OF SEDAN--GALLANT CAVALRY +CHARGES--DEFEAT OF THE FRENCH--THE SURRENDER OF NAPOLEON--BISMARCK +AND THE KING--DECORATING THE SOLDIERS. + +All night long the forced march of the army went on through Clermont, +and when I turned out, just after daylight, the columns were still +pressing forward, the men looking tired and much bedraggled, as +indeed they had reason to be, for from recent rains the roads were +very sloppy. Notwithstanding this, however, the troops were pushed +ahead with all possible vigor to intercept MacMahon and force a +battle before he could withdraw from his faulty movement, for which +it has since been ascertained he was not at all responsible. Indeed, +those at the royal headquarters seemed to think of nothing else than +to strike MacMahon, for, feeling pretty confident that Metz could not +be relieved, they manifested not the slightest anxiety on that score. + +By 8 o'clock, the skies having cleared, the headquarters set out for +Grand Pre', which place we reached early in the afternoon, and that +evening I again had the pleasure of dining with the King. The +conversation at table was almost wholly devoted to the situation, of +course, everybody expressing surprise at the manoeuvre of the French +at this time, their march along the Belgian frontier being credited +entirely to Napoleon. Up to bed-time there was still much +uncertainty as to the exact positions of the French, but next morning +intelligence being received which denoted the probability of a +battle, we drove about ten miles, to Buzancy, and there mounting our +horses, rode to the front. + +The French were posted not far from Buzancy in a strong position, +their right resting near Stonne and the left extending over into the +woods beyond Beaumont. About 10 o'clock the Crown Prince of Saxony +advanced against this line, and while a part of his army turned the +French right, compelling it to fall back rapidly, the German centre +and right attacked with great vigor and much skill, surprising one of +the divisions of General De Failly's corps while the men were in the +act of cooking their breakfast. + +The French fled precipitately, leaving behind their tents and other +camp equipage, and on inspecting the ground which they had abandoned +so hastily, I noticed on all sides ample evidence that not even the +most ordinary precautions had been taken to secure the division from +surprise, The artillery horses had not been harnessed, and many of +them had been shot down at the picketrope where they had been +haltered the night before, while numbers of men were lying dead with +loaves of bread or other food instead of their muskets in their +hands. + +Some three thousand prisoners and nearly all the artillery and +mitrailleuses of the division--were captured, while the fugitives +were pursued till they found shelter behind--Douay's corps and the +rest of De Failly's beyond Beaumont. The same afternoon there were +several other severe combats along the Meuse, but I had no chance of +witnessing any of them, and just before night-fall I started back to +Buzancy, to which place the King's headquarters had been brought +during the day. + +The morning of the 31st the King moved to Vendresse. First sending +our carriage back to Grand Pre' for our trunks, Forsyth and I mounted +our horses and rode to the battle-field accompanied by an English +nobleman, the Duke of Manchester. The part of the field we traversed +was still thickly strewn with the dead of both armies, though all the +wounded had been collected in the hospitals. In the village of +Beaumont, we stopped to take a look at several thousand French +prisoners, whose worn clothing and evident dejection told that they +had been doing a deal of severe marching under great discouragements. + +The King reached the village shortly after, and we all continued on +to Chemery, just beyond where his Majesty alighted from his carriage +to observe his son's troops file past as they came in from the +direction of Stonne. This delay caused us to be as late as 9 o'clock +before we got shelter that night, but as it afforded me the best +opportunity I had yet had for seeing the German soldiers on the +march, I did not begrudge the time. They moved in a somewhat open +and irregular column of fours, the intervals between files being +especially intended to give room for a peculiar swinging gait, with +which the men seemed to urge themselves over the ground with ease and +rapidity. There was little or no straggling, and being strong, lusty +young fellows, and lightly equipped--they carried only needle-guns, +ammunition, a very small knapsack, a water-bottle, and a haversack- +they strode by with an elastic step, covering at least three miles an +hour. + +It having been definitely ascertained that the demoralized French +were retiring to Sedan, on the evening of August 31 the German army +began the work of hemming them in there, so disposing the different +corps as to cover the ground from Donchery around by Raucourt to +Carignan. The next morning this line was to be drawn in closer on +Sedan; and the Crown Prince of Saxony was therefore ordered to take +up a position to the north of Bazeilles, beyond the right bank of the +Meuse, while the Crown Prince of Prussia was to cross his right wing +over the Meuse at Remilly, to move on Bazeilles, his centre meantime +marching against a number of little hamlets still held by the French +between there and Donchery. At this last-mentioned place strong +reserves were to be held, and from it the Eleventh Corps, followed by +the Fifth and a division of cavalry, was to march on St. Menges. + +Forsyth and I started early next morning, September 1, and in a thick +fog-which, however, subsequently gave place to bright sunshine--we +drove to the village of Chevenges, where, mounting our horses, we +rode in a northeasterly direction to the heights of Frenois and +Wadelincourt, bordering the river Meuse on the left bank, where from +the crest we had a good view of the town of Sedan with its circling +fortifications, which, though extensive, were not so formidable as +those around Metz. The King and his staff were already established +on these heights, and at a point so well chosen that his Majesty +could observe the movements of both armies immediately east and south +of Sedan, and also to the northwest toward Floing and the Belgian +frontier. + +The battle was begun to the east and northeast of Sedan as early as +half-past 4 o'clock by the German right wing--the fighting being +desultory--and near the same hour the Bavarians attacked Bazeilles. +This village, some two miles southeast of Sedan, being of importance, +was defended with great obstinacy, the French contesting from street +to street and house to house the attack of the Bavarians till near +10 o'clock, when, almost every building being knocked to pieces, they +were compelled to relinquish the place. The possession of this +village gave the Germans to the east of Sedan a continuous line, +extending from the Meuse northward through La Moncelle and Daigny to +Givonne, and almost to the Belgian frontier. + +While the German centre and right were thus engaged, the left had +moved in accordance with the prescribed plan. Indeed, some of these +troops had crossed the Meuse the night before, and now, at a little +after 6 o'clock, their advance could be seen just north of the +village of Floing. Thus far these columns, under the immediate eye +of the Crown Prince of Prussia, had met with no opposition to their +march, and as soon as they got to the high ground above the village +they began extending to the east, to connect with the Army of the +Meuse. This juncture was effected at Illy without difficulty, and +the French army was now completely encompassed. + +After a severe fight, the Crown Prince drove the French through +Floing, and as the ground between this village and Sedan is an +undulating open plain, everywhere visible, there was then offered a +rare opportunity for seeing the final conflict preceding the +surrender. Presently up out of the little valley where Floing is +located came the Germans, deploying just on the rim of the plateau a +very heavy skirmish-line, supported by a line of battle at close +distance. When these skirmishers appeared, the French infantry had +withdrawn within its intrenched lines, but a strong body of their +cavalry, already formed in a depression to the right of the Floing +road, now rode at the Germans in gallant style, going clear through +the dispersed skirmishers to the main line of battle. Here the +slaughter of the French was awful, for in addition to the deadly +volleys from the solid battalions of their enemies, the skirmishers, +who had rallied in knots at advantageous places, were now delivering +a severe and effective fire. The gallant horsemen, therefore, had to +retire precipitately, but re-forming in the depression, they again +undertook the hopeless task of breaking the German infantry, making +in all four successive charges. Their ardor and pluck were of no +avail, however, for the Germans, growing stronger every minute by the +accession of troops from Floing, met the fourth attack in such large +force that, even before coming in contact with their adversaries, the +French broke and retreated to the protection of the intrenchments, +where, from the beginning of the combat, had been lying plenty of +idle infantry, some of which at least, it seemed plain to me, ought +to have been thrown into the fight. This action was the last one of +consequence around Sedan, for, though with the contraction of the +German lines their batteries kept cannonading more or less, and the +rattle of musketry continued to be heard here and there, yet the hard +fighting of the day practically ended on the plateau of Floing. + +By 3 o'clock, the French being in a desperate and hopeless situation, +the King ordered the firing to be stopped, and at once despatched one +of his staff--Colonel von Bronsart--with a demand for a surrender. +Just as this officer was starting off, I remarked to Bismarck that +Napoleon himself would likely be one of the prizes, but the Count, +incredulous, replied, "Oh no; the old fox is too cunning to be caught +in such a trap; he has doubtless slipped off to Paris"--a belief +which I found to prevail pretty generally about headquarters. + +In the lull that succeeded, the King invited many of those about him +to luncheon, a caterer having provided from some source or other a +substantial meal of good bread, chops and peas, with a bountiful +supply of red and sherry wines. Among those present were Prince +Carl, Bismarck, Von Moltke, Von Roon, the Duke of Weimar, the Duke of +Coburg, the Grand-Duke of Mecklenburg, Count Hatzfeldt, Colonel +Walker, of the English army, General Forsyth, and I. The King was +agreeable and gracious at all times, but on this occasion he was +particularly so, being naturally in a happy frame of mind because +this day the war had reached a crisis which presaged for the near +future the complete vanquishment of the French. + +Between 4 and 5 o'clock Colonel von Bronsart returned from his +mission to Sedan, bringing word to the King that the commanding +officer there General Wimpffen, wished to know, in order that the +further effusion of blood might be spared, upon what terms he might +surrender. The Colonel brought the intelligence also that the French +Emperor was in the town. Soon after Von Bronsart's arrival a French +officer approached from Sedan, preceded by a white flag and two +German officers. Coming up the road till within a few hundred yards +of us, they halted; then one of the Germans rode forward to say that +the French officer was Napoleon's adjutant, bearing an autograph +letter from the Emperor to the King of Prussia. At this the King, +followed by Bismarck, Von Moltke, and Von Roon, walked out to the +front a little distance and halted, his Majesty still in advance, the +rest of us meanwhile forming in a line some twenty paces to the rear +of the group. The envoy then approached, at first on horseback, but +when within about a hundred yards he dismounted, and uncovering, came +the remaining distance on foot, bearing high up in his right hand the +despatch from Napoleon. The bearer proved to be General Reille, and +as he handed the Emperor's letter to the King, his Majesty saluted +him with the utmost formality and precision. Napoleon's letter was +the since famous one, running so characteristically, thus: "Not +having been able to die in the midst of my troops, there is nothing +left me but to place my sword in your Majesty's hands." The reading +finished, the King returned to his former post, and after a +conference with Bismarck, Von Moltke, and Von Roon, dictated an +answer accepting Napoleon's surrender, and requesting him to +designate an officer with power to treat for the capitulation of the +army, himself naming Von Moltke to represent the Germans. The King +then started for Vendresse, to pass the night. It was after +7 o'clock now, and hence too late to arrange anything more where we +were, so further negotiations were deferred till later in the +evening; and I, wishing to be conveniently near Bismarck, resolved to +take up quarters in Donchery. On our way thither we were met by the +Count's nephew, who assuring us that it would be impossible to find +shelter there in the village, as all the houses were filled with +wounded, Forsyth and I decided to continue on to Chevenge. On the +other hand, Bismarck-Bohlen bore with him one great comfort--some +excellent brandy. Offering the flask to his uncle, he said: "You've +had a hard day of it; won't you refresh yourself?" The Chancellor, +without wasting time to answer, raised the bottle to his lips, +exclaiming: "Here's to the unification of Germany!" which sentiment +the gurgling of an astonishingly long drink seemed to emphasize. The +Count then handed the bottle back to his nephew, who, shaking it, +ejaculated, "Why, we can't pledge you in return--there is nothing +left!" to which came the waggish response, "I beg pardon; it was so +dark I couldn't see"; nevertheless there was a little remaining, as I +myself can aver. + +Having left our carriage at Chevenge, Forsyth and I stopped there to +get it, but a long search proving fruitless, we took lodging in the +village at the house of the cure, resolved to continue the hunt in +the morning. But then we had no better success, so concluding that +our vehicle had been pressed into the hospital service, we at an +early hour on the 2d of September resumed the search, continuing on +down the road in the direction of Sedan. Near the gate of the city +we came on the German picket-line, and one of the Officers, +recognizing our uniforms--he having served in the war of the +rebellion--stepped forward and addressed me in good English. We +naturally fell into conversation, and in the midst of it there came +out through the gate an open carriage, or landau, containing two men, +one of whom, in the uniform of a general and smoking a cigarette, we +recognized, when the conveyance drew near, as the Emperor Louis +Napoleon. The landau went on toward Donchery at a leisurely pace, +and we, inferring that there was something more important at hand +just then than the recovery of our trap, followed at a respectful +distance. Not quite a mile from Donchery is a cluster of three or +four cottages, and at the first of these the landau stopped to await, +as we afterward ascertained, Count Bismarck, with whom the diplomatic +negotiations were to be settled. Some minutes elapsed before he +came, Napoleon remaining seated in his carriage meantime, still +smoking, and accepting with nonchalance the staring of a group of +German soldiers near by, who were gazing on their fallen foe with +curious and eager interest. + +Presently a clattering of hoofs was heard, and looking toward the +sound, I perceived the Chancellor cantering down the road. When +abreast of the carriage he dismounted, and walking up to it, saluted +the Emperor in a quick, brusque way that seemed to startle him. +After a word or two, the party moved perhaps a hundred yards further +on, where they stopped opposite the weaver's cottage so famous from +that day. This little house is on the east side of the Donchery +road, near its junction with that to Frenois, and stands about twenty +paces back from the highway. In front is a stone wall covered with +creeping vines, and from a gate in this wall runs to the front door a +path, at this time bordered on both sides with potato vines. + +The Emperor having alighted at the gate, he and Bismarck walked +together along the narrow path and entered the cottage. Reappearing +in about a quarter of an hour, they came out and seated themselves in +the open air, the weaver having brought a couple of chairs. Here +they engaged in an animated conversation, if much gesticulation is +any indication. The talk lasted fully an hour, Bismarck seeming to +do most of it, but at last he arose, saluted the Emperor, and strode +down the path toward his horse. Seeing me standing near the gate, he +joined me for a moment, and asked if I had noticed how the Emperor +started when they first met, and I telling him that I had, he added, +"Well, it must have been due to my manners, not my words, for these +we're, 'I salute your Majesty just as I would my King.'" Then the +Chancellor continued to chat a few minutes longer, assuring me that +nothing further was to be done there, and that we had better go to +the Chateau Bellevue, where, he said, the formal surrender was to +take place. With this he rode off toward Vendresse to communicate +with his sovereign, and Forsyth and I made ready to go to the Chateau +Bellevue. + +Before we set out, however, a number of officers of the King's suite +arrived at the weaver's cottage, and from them I gathered that there +were differences at the royal headquarters as to whether peace should +be made then at Sedan, or the war continued till the French capital +was taken. I further heard that the military advisers of the King +strongly advocated an immediate move on Paris, while the Chancellor +thought it best to make peace now, holding Alsace and Lorraine, and +compelling the payment of an enormous levy of money; and these rumors +were most likely correct, for I had often heard Bismarck say that +France being the richest country in Europe, nothing could keep her +quiet but effectually to empty her pockets; and besides this, he +impressed me as holding that it would be better policy to preserve +the Empire. + +On our way to the chateau we fell in with a number of artillery +officers bringing up their guns hurriedly to post them closer in to +the beleaguered town on a specially advantageous ridge. Inquiring +the cause of this move, we learned that General Wimpffen had not yet +agreed to the terms of surrender; that it was thought he would not, +and that they wanted to be prepared for any such contingency. And +they were preparing with a vengeance too, for I counted seventy-two +Krupp guns in one continuous line trained on the Chateau Bellevue and +Sedan. + +Napoleon went directly from the weaver's to the Chateau Bellevue, and +about 10 o'clock the King of Prussia arrived from Frenois, +accompanied by a few of his own suite and the Crown Prince with +several members of his staff; and Von Moltke and Wimpffen having +settled their points of difference before the two monarchs met, +within the next half-hour the articles of capitulation were formally +signed. + +On the completion of the surrender--the occasion being justly +considered a great one--the Crown Prince proceeded to distribute +among the officers congregated in the chateau grounds 'the order of +the Iron Cross'--a generous supply of these decorations being carried +in a basket by one of his orderlies, following him about as he walked +along. Meantime the King, leaving Napoleon in the chateau to +ruminate on the fickleness of fortune, drove off to see his own +victorious soldiers, who greeted him with huzzas that rent the air, +and must have added to the pangs of the captive Emperor. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +RIDING OVER THE BATTLEFIELD--DESTRUCTION OF BAZEILLES--MISTAKES OF +THE FRENCH--MARSHAL BAZAINE ON TO PARIS--A WEEK IN MEAUX--RHEIMS--ON +THE PICKETLINE-UNDER FIRE--A SURRENDER--AT VERSAILLES--GENERAL +BURNSIDE AND Mr. FORBES IN PARIS. + +The Crown Prince having got to the bottom of his medal basket-that is +to say, having finished his liberal distribution of decorations to +his officers--Forsyth and I rode off by way of Wadelincourt to +Bazeilles to see what had taken place on that part of the field, and +the sight that met our eyes as we entered the village was truly +dreadful to look upon. Most of the houses had been knocked down or +burned the day before, but such as had been left standing were now in +flames, the torch having been applied because, as it was claimed, +Frenchmen concealed in them had fired on the wounded. The streets +were still encumbered with both German and French dead, and it was +evident that of those killed in the houses the bodies had not been +removed, for the air was loaded with odors of burning flesh. From +Bazeille we rode on toward the north about two miles, along where the +fight had been largely an artillery duel, to learn what we could of +the effectiveness of the Krupp gun. Counting all the French dead we +came across killed by artillery, they figured up about three hundred- +-a ridiculously small number; in fact, not much more than one dead +man for each Krupp gun on that part of the line. Although the number +of dead was in utter disproportion to the terrific six-hour +cannonade, yet small as it was the torn and mangled bodies made such +a horrible sight that we turned back toward Bazeilles without having +gone further than Givonne. + +At Bazeilles we met the King, accompanied by Bismarck and several of +the staff. They too had been riding over the field, the King making +this a practice, to see that the wounded were not neglected. As I +drew up by the party, Bismarck accosted me with, "Well, General, +aren't you hungry? This is just the place to whet one's appetite-- +these burning Frenchmen--Ugh!" and shrugging his shoulders in evident +disgust, he turned away to join his Majesty in further explorations, +Forsyth and I continuing on to Chevenges. Here we got the first +inkling of what had become of our carriage since leaving it two days +before: it had been pressed into service to carry wounded officers +from the field during the battle, but afterward released, and was now +safe at the house in Vendresse where we had been quartered the night +of the 31st, so, on hearing this, we settled to go there again to +lodge, but our good friend, the cure', insisting that we should stay +with him, we remained in Chevenges till next morning. + +On September 3 the King removed from Vendresse to Rethel, where he +remained two days; in the mean while the Germans, 240,000 strong, +beginning their direct march to Paris. The French had little with +which to oppose this enormous force, not more, perhaps, than 50,000 +regular troops; the rest of their splendid army had been lost or +captured in battle, or was cooped up in the fortifications of Metz, +Strasburg, and other places, in consequence of blunders without +parallel in history, for which Napoleon and the Regency in Paris must +be held accountable. The first of these gross faults was the fight +at Worth, where MacMahon, before his army was mobilized, accepted +battle with the Crown Prince, pitting 50,000 men against 175,000; the +next was Bazaine's fixing upon Metz as his base, and stupidly putting +himself in position to be driven back to it, when there was no +possible obstacle to his joining forces with MacMahon at Chalons; +while the third and greatest blunder of all was MacMahon's move to +relieve Metz, trying to slip 140,000 men along the Belgian frontier. +Indeed, it is exasperating and sickening to think of all this; to +think that Bazaine carried into Metz--a place that should have been +held, if at all, with not over 25,000 men--an army of 180,000, +because it contained, the excuse was, "an accumulation of stores." +With all the resources of rich France to draw upon, I cannot conceive +that this excuse was sincere; on the contrary, I think that the +movement of Bazaine must have been inspired by Napoleon with a view +to the maintenance of his dynasty rather than for the good of France. + +As previously stated, Bismarck did not approve of the German army's +moving on Paris after the battle of Sedan. Indeed, I think he +foresaw and dreaded the establishment of a Republic, his idea being +that if peace was made then, the Empire could be continued in the +person of the Prince Imperial who--, coming to the throne under +German influences, would be pliable in his hands. These views found +frequent expression in private, and in public too; I myself +particularly remember the Chancellor's speaking thus most unguardedly +at a dinner in Rheims. But he could not prevent the march to Paris; +it was impossible to stop the Germans, flushed with success. "On to +Paris" was written by the soldiers on every door, and every fence- +board along the route to the capital, and the thought of a triumphant +march down the Champs Elysees was uppermost with every German, from +the highest to the lowest grade. + +The 5th of September we set out for Rheims. There it was said the +Germans would meet with strong resistance, for the French intended to +die to the last man before giving up that city. But this proved all +fudge, as is usual with these "last ditch" promises, the garrison +decamping immediately at the approach of a few Uhlans. So far as I +could learn, but a single casualty happened; this occurred to an +Uhlan, wounded by a shot which it was reported was fired from a house +after the town was taken; so, to punish this breach of faith, a levy +of several hundred bottles of champagne was made, and the wine +divided about headquarters, being the only seizure made in the city, +I believe, for though Rheims, the centre of the champagne district, +had its cellars well stocked, yet most of them being owned by German +firms, they received every protection. + +The land about Rheims is of a white, chalky character, and very poor, +but having been terraced and enriched with fertilizers, it produces +the champagne grape in such abundance that the region, once +considered valueless, and named by the peasantry the "land of the +louse," now supports a dense population. We remained in Rheims eight +days, and through the politeness of the American Consul--Mr. Adolph +Gill--had the pleasure of seeing all the famous wine cellars, and +inspecting the processes followed in champagne making, from the step +of pressing the juice from the grape to that which shows the wine +ready for the market. Mr. Gill also took us to see everything else +of special interest about the city, and there being much to look at-- +fine old churches, ancient fortifications, a Roman gateway, etc.--the +days slipped by very quickly, though the incessant rains somewhat +interfered with our enjoyment. + +For three or four days all sorts of rumors were rife as to what was +doing in Paris, but nothing definite was learned till about the 9th; +then Count Bismarck informed me that the Regency had been overthrown +on the 4th, and that the Empress Eugenie had escaped to Belgium. The +King of Prussia offered her an asylum with the Emperor at +Wilhelmshohe, "where she ought to go," said the Chancellor, "for her +proper place is with her husband," but he feared she would not. On +the same occasion he also told me that Jules Favre--the head of the +Provisional Government--had sent him the suggestion that, the Empire +being gone, peace should be made and the Germans withdrawn, but that +he (Bismarck) was now compelled to recognize the impossibility of +doing this till Paris was taken, for although immediately after the +surrender of Sedan he desired peace, the past few days had made it +plain that the troops would not be satisfied with anything short of +Paris, no matter what form of Government the French should ultimately +adopt. + +The German army having met with no resistance whatever in its march +on Paris, its advance approached the capital rapidly, and by the 14th +of September the royal headquarters moved by a fine macadamized road +to the Chateau Thierry, and on the 5th reached Meaux, about twenty- +eight miles from Paris, where we remained four days awaiting the +reconstruction of some railroad and canal bridges. The town of Meaux +has a busy population of about 10,000 souls, in peaceable times +principally occupied in manufacturing flour for the Paris market, +having a fine waterpower for the many mills. These were kept going +day and night to supply the German army; and it was strange to see +with what zeal Frenchmen toiled to fill the stomachs of their +inveterate enemies, and with what alacrity the mayor and other. +officials filled requisitions for wine, cheese, suits of livery, +riding-whips, and even squab pigeons. + +During our stay at Meaux the British Minister Lord Lyons, endeavored +to bring about a cessation of hostilities, to this end sending his +secretary out from Paris with a letter to Count Bismarck, offering to +serve as mediator. The Chancellor would not agree to this, however, +for he conjectured that the action of the British Minister had been +inspired by Jules Favre, who, he thought, was trying to draw the +Germans into negotiations through the medium of a third party only +for purposes of delay. So the next morning Lord Lyons's secretary, +Mr. Edward Malet, returned to Paris empty-handed, except that he bore +a communication positively declining mediation; which message, +however, led no doubt to an interview between Bismarck and Favre a +couple of days later. + +The forenoon of September 19 the King removed to the Chateau +Ferrieres--a castle belonging to the Rothschild family, where +Napoleon had spent many happy days in the time of his prosperity. +His Majesty took up his quarters here at the suggestion of the owner, +we were told, so that by the presence of the King the magnificent +chateau and its treasures of art would be unquestionably protected +from all acts of vandalism. + +All of the people at headquarters except the King's immediate suite +were assigned quarters at Lagny; and while Forsyth and I, accompanied +by Sir Henry Havelock, of the British army, were driving thither, we +passed on the road the representative of the National Defense +Government, Jules Favre, in a carriage heading toward Meaux. +Preceded by a flag of truce and accompanied by a single, companion, +be was searching for Count Bismarck, in conformity, doubtless, with +the message the Chancellor had sent to Paris on the 17th by the +British secretary. A half-mile further on we met Bismarck. He too +was traveling toward Meaux, not in the best of humor either, it +appeared, for having missed finding the French envoy at the +rendezvous where they had agreed to meet, he stopped long enough to +say that the "air was full of lies, and that there were many persons +with the army bent on business that did not concern them." + +The armies of the two Crown Princes were now at the outskirts of +Paris. They had come from Sedan mainly by two routes--the Crown +Prince of Saxony marching by the northern line, through Laon and +Soissons, and the Crown Prince of Prussia by the southern line, +keeping his right wing on the north bank of the Marne, while his left +and centre approached the French capital by roads between that river +and the Seine. + +The march of these armies had been unobstructed by any resistance +worth mentioning, and as the routes of both columns lay through a +region teeming with everything necessary for their support, and rich +even in luxuries, it struck me that such campaigning was more a vast +picnic than like actual war. The country supplied at all points +bread, meat, and wine in abundance, and the neat villages, never more +than a mile or two apart, always furnished shelter; hence the +enormous trains required to feed and provide camp equipage for an +army operating in a sparsely settled country were dispensed with; in +truth, about the only impedimenta of the Germans was their wagons +carrying ammunition, pontoon-boats, and the field-telegraph. + +On the morning of the 20th I started out accompanied by Forsyth and +Sir Henry Havelock, and took the road through Boissy St. George, +Boissy St. Martins and Noisy Le Grand to Brie. Almost every foot of +the way was strewn with fragments of glass from wine bottles, emptied +and then broken by the troops. There was, indeed, so much of this +that I refrain from making any estimate of the number of bottles, +lest I be thought to exaggerate, but the road was literally paved +with glass, and the amount of wine consumed (none was wasted) must +have been enormous, far more, even, than I had seen evidence of at +any time before. There were two almost continuous lines of broken +bottles along the roadsides all the way down from Sedan; but that +exhibit was small compared with what we saw about Brie. + +At Brie we were taken charge of by the German commandant of the +place. He entertained us most hospitably for an hour or so, and +then, accompanied by a lieutenant, who was to be our guide, I set out +ahead of my companions to gain a point on the picket-line where I +expected to get a good look at the French, for their rifle-pits were +but a few hundred yards off across the Marne, their main line being +just behind the rifle-pits. As the lieutenant and I rode through the +village, some soldiers warned us that the adventure would be +dangerous, but that we could probably get to the desired place unhurt +if we avoided the French fire by forcing our horses to a run in +crossing some open streets where we would be exposed. On getting to +the first street my guide galloped ahead to show the way, and as the +French were not on the lookout for anything of the kind at these +dangerous points, only a few stray shots were drawn by the +lieutenant, but when I followed, they were fully up to what was going +on, and let fly a volley every time they saw me in the open. +Fortunately, however, in their excitement they overshot, but when I +drew rein alongside of my guide under protection of the bluff where +the German picket was posted, my hair was all on end, and I was about +as badly scared as ever I had been in my life. As soon as I could +recover myself I thought of Havelock and Forsyth, with the hope that +they would not follow; nor did they, for having witnessed my +experience, they wisely concluded that, after all, they did not care +so much to see the French rifle-pits. + +When I had climbed to the top of the bluff I was much disappointed, +for I could see but little--only the advanced rifle-pits across the +river, and Fort Nogent beyond them, not enough, certainly, to repay a +non-combatant for taking the risk of being killed. The next question +was to return, and deciding to take no more such chances as those we +had run in coming out, I said we would wait till dark, but this +proved unnecessary, for to my utter astonishment my guide informed me +that there was a perfectly safe route by which we might go back. I +asked why we had not taken it in coming, and he replied that he had +thought it "too long and circuitous." To this I could say nothing, +but I concluded that that was not quite the correct reason; the truth +is that early that morning the young fellow had been helping to empty +some of the many wine bottles I saw around Brie, and consequently had +a little more "Dutch courage"--was a little more rash--than would +have been the case under other conditions. + +I rode back to Brie by the "long and circuitous" route, and inquiring +there for my companions, found Havelock waiting to conduct me to the +village of Villiers, whither, he said, Forsyth had been called to +make some explanation about his passport, which did not appear to be +in satisfactory shape. Accordingly we started for Villiers, and +Havelock, being well mounted on an English "hunter," and wishing to +give me an exhibition of the animal's training and power, led the way +across ditches and fences, but my horse, never having followed "the +hounds," was unsafe to experiment with, so, after trying a low fence +or two, I decided to leave my friend alone in his diversion, and a +few moments later, seeing both horse and rider go down before a ditch +and high stone wall, I was convinced that my resolution was a +discreet one. After this mishap, which luckily resulted in no harm, +I hoped Sir Henry would give up the amusement, but by failure +becoming only the more determined, in a second effort he cleared the +wall handsomely and rode across-country to the villages. Following +the road till it passed under a railway bridge, I there thought I saw +a chance to gain Villiers by a short-cut, and changing my course +accordingly, I struck into a large vineyard to the left, and +proceeding a few hundred yards through the vines, came suddenly upon +a German picket-post. The guard immediately leveled their rifles at +me, when, remembering my Rezonville experience of being taken for a +French officer because of my uniform, I hastily flung myself from the +saddle in token of surrender. The action being rightly interpreted, +the men held their fire, and as my next thought was the King's pass I +reached under my coat-skirt for the document, but this motion being +taken as a grab for my pistol, the whole lot of them--some ten in +number--again aimed at me, and with such loud demands for surrender +that I threw up my hands and ran into their ranks. The officer of +the guard then coming up, examined my credentials, and seeing that +they were signed by the King of Prussia, released me and directed the +recovery of my horse, which was soon caught, and I was then conducted +to the quarters of the commandant, where I found Forsyth with his +pass properly vised, entirely ignorant of my troubles, and +contentedly regaling himself on cheese and beer. Havelock having got +to the village ahead of me, thanks to his cross-country ride, was +there too, sipping beer with Forsyth; nor was I slow to follow their +example, for the ride of the day, though rather barren in other +results, at any rate had given me a ravenous appetite. + +Late that evening, the 20th, we resumed our old quarters at Lagny, +and early next day I made a visit to the royal headquarters at +Ferrires, where I observed great rejoicing going on, the occasion for +it being an important victory gained near Mendon, a French corps of +about 30,000 men under General Ducrot having been beaten by the Fifth +Prussian and Second Bavarian corps. Ducrot had been stubbornly +holding ground near Mendon for two or three days, much to the +embarrassment of the Germans too, since he kept them from closing a +gap in their line to the southwest of Paris; but in the recent fight +he had been driven from the field with such heavy loss as to render +impossible his maintaining the gap longer. The Crown Prince of +Prussia was thus enabled to extend his left, without danger, as far +as Bougival, north of Versailles, and eventually met the right of the +Crown Prince of Saxony, already at Denil, north of St. Denis. The +unbroken circle of investment around Paris being well-nigh assured, +news of its complete accomplishment was momentarily expected; +therefore everybody was jubilant on account of the breaking up of +Ducrot, but more particularly because word had been received the same +morning that a correspondence had begun between Bazaine and Prince +Frederick Charles, looking to the capitulation of Metz, for the +surrender of that place would permit the Second Army to join in the +siege of Paris. + +Learning all this, and seeing that the investment was about +completed, I decided to take up my quarters at Versailles, and +started for that place on the 22d, halting at Noisy le Grand to take +luncheon with some artillery officers, whose acquaintance we had made +the day of the surrender at Sedan. During the meal I noticed two +American flags flying on a couple of houses near by. Inquiring the +significance of this, I was told that the flags had been put up to +protect the buildings--the owners, two American citizens, having in a +bad fright abandoned their property, and, instead of remaining +outside, gone into Paris,--"very foolishly," said our hospitable +friends, "for here they could have obtained food in plenty, and been +perfectly secure from molestation." + +We arrived at Versailles about 7 o'clock that evening and settled +ourselves in the Hotel Reservoir, happy to find there two or three +American families, with whom, of course, we quickly made +acquaintance. This American circle was enlarged a few days later by +the arrival of General Wm. B. Hazen, of our army, General Ambrose E. +Burnside, and Mr. Paul Forbes. Burnside and Forbes were hot to see, +from the French side, something of the war, and being almost beside +themselves to get into Paris, a permit was granted them by Count +Bismarck, and they set out by way of Sevres, Forsyth and I +accompanying them as far as the Palace of St. Cloud, which we, +proposed to see, though there were strict orders against its being +visited generally. After much trouble we managed, through the "open +sesame" of the King's pass, to gain access to the palace; but to our +great disappointment we found that all the pictures had been cut from +the frames and carried off to Paris, except one portrait, that of +Queen Victoria, against whom the French were much incensed. All +other works of art had been removed, too--a most fortunate +circumstance, for the palace being directly on the German line, was +raked by the guns from the fortress of Mont Valerien, and in a few +days burned to the ground. + +In less than a week Burnside and Forbes returned from Paris. They +told us their experience had been interesting, but were very reticent +as to particulars, and though we tried hard to find out what they had +seen or done, we could get nothing from them beyond the general +statement that they had had a good time, and that General Trochu had +been considerate enough to postpone a sortie, in order to let them +return; but this we did not quite swallow. After a day or two they +went into Paris again, and I then began to suspect that they were +essaying the role of mediators, and that Count Bismarck was feeding +their vanity with permits, and receiving his equivalent by learning +the state of affairs within the beleaguered city. + +From about the 1st of October on, the Germans were engaged in making +their enveloping lines impenetrable, bringing up their reserves, +siege guns, and the like, the French meanwhile continuing to drill +and discipline the National Guard and relieving the monotony +occasionally by a more or less spirited, but invariably abortive, +sortie. The most notable of these was that made by General Vinoy +against the heights of Clamart, the result being a disastrous repulse +by the besiegers. After this, matters settled down to an almost +uninterrupted quietude, only a skirmish here and there; and it being +plain that the Germans did not intend to assault the capital, but +would accomplish its capture by starvation, I concluded to find out +from Count Bismarck about when the end was expected, with the purpose +of spending the interim in a little tour through some portions of +Europe undisturbed by war, returning in season for the capitulation. +Count Bismarck having kindly advised me as to the possible date, + +Forsyth and I, on the 14th of October, left Versailles, going first +direct to the Chateau Ferrieres to pay our respects to the King, +which we did, and again took luncheon with him. From the chateau we +drove to Meaux, and there spent the night; resuming our journey next +morning, we passed through Epernay, Rheims, and Rethel to Sedan, +where we tarried a day, and finally, on October 18, reached Brussels. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +BRUSSELS--DECIDING TO VISIT EASTERN EUROPE--AUSTRIA--DOWN THE DANUBE- +-IN CONSTANTINOPLE--THE LADIES OF THE HAREM--THE SULTAN--TURKISH +SOLDIERS--A BANQUET--A VISIT IN ATHENS--KING GEORGE OF GREECE--VICTOR +EMMANUEL--"BEDEVILED WITH CARES OF STATE"--DEER SHOOTING--A MILITARY +DINNER--RETURN TO VERSAILLES--GERMANS ENTERING PARIS--CRITICISM ON +THE FRANCO-PRUSSIAN WAR--CONCLUSION. + +On reaching Brussels, one of the first things to do was to pay my +respects to the King of Belgium, which I did, accompanied by our +Minister, Mr. Russell Jones. Later I dined with the King and Queen, +meeting at the dinner many notable people, among them the Count and +Countess of Flanders. A day or two in Brussels sufficed to mature +our plans for spending the time up to the approximate date of our +return to Paris; and deciding to visit eastern Europe, we made Vienna +our first objective, going there by way of Dresden. + +At Vienna our Minister, Mr. John Jay, took charge of us--Forsyth was +still with me--and the few days' sojourn was full of interest. The +Emperor being absent from the capital, we missed seeing him; but the +Prime Minister, Count von Beust, was very polite to us, and at his +house we had the pleasure of meeting at dinner Count Andrassy, the +Prime Minister of Hungary. + +From Vienna we went to Buda-Pesth, the Hungarian capital; and thence, +in a I small, crowded, and uncomfortable steamboat, down the Danube +to Rustchuck, whence we visited Bucharest--all who travel in eastern +Europe do so--and then directing our course southward, we went first +to Varna, and from that city by steamer through the Black Sea to +Constantinople. + +We reached the Turkish capital at the time of Ramadan, the period of +the year (about a month) during which the Mohammedans are commanded +by the Koran to keep a rigorous fast every day from sunrise till +sunset. All the followers of the Prophet were therefore busy with +their devotions--holding a revival, as it were; hence there was no +chance whatever to be presented to the Sultan, Abdul Aziz, it being +forbidden during the penitential season for him to receive +unbelievers, or in fact any one except the officials of his +household. However, the Grand Vizier brought me many messages of +welcome, and arranged that I should be permitted to see and salute +his Serene Highness on the Esplanade as he rode by on horseback to +the mosque. + +So, the second day after arrival, the Grand Vizier drove me in a +barouche to the Esplanade, where we took station about midway of its +length an hour or so before the Sultan was to appear. Shortly after +we reached the Esplanade, carriages occupied by the women of the +Sultan's harem began to appear, coming out from the palace grounds +and driving up and down the roadway. Only a few of the women were +closely veiled, a majority of them wearing an apology for veiling, +merely a strip of white lace covering the forehead down to the +eyebrows. Some were yellow, and some white-types of the Mongolian +and Caucasian races. Now and then a pretty face was seen, rarely a +beautiful one. Many were plump, even to corpulence, and these were +the closest veiled, being considered the greatest beauties I presume, +since with the Turk obesity is the chief element of comeliness. As +the carriages passed along in review, every now and then an occupant, +unable or unwilling to repress her natural promptings, would indulge +in a mild flirtation, making overtures by casting demure side- +glances, throwing us coquettish kisses, or waving strings of amber +beads with significant gestures, seeming to say: "Why don't you +follow?" But this we could not do if we would, for the Esplanade +throughout its entire length was lined with soldiers, put there +especially to guard the harem first, and later, the Sultan on his +pilgrimage to the mosque. + +But as it was now time for His Serene Highness to make his appearance +the carriages containing his wives drove off into the palace grounds, +which were inclosed by a high wall, leaving the Esplanade wholly +unencumbered except by the soldiers. Down between the two ranks, +which were formed facing each other, came the Sultan on a white +steed--a beautiful Arabian--and having at his side his son, a boy +about ten or twelve years old, who was riding a pony, a diminutive +copy of his father's mount, the two attended by a numerous body- +guard, dressed in gorgeous Oriental uniforms. As the procession +passed our carriage, I, as pre-arranged, stood up and took off my +hat, His Serene Highness promptly acknowledging the salute by raising +his hand to the forehead. This was all I saw of him, yet I received +every kindness at his hands, being permitted to see many of his +troops, to inspect all the ordnance, equipment, and other military +establishments about Constantinople, and to meet numbers of the high +functionaries of the Empire. + +Among other compliments tendered through his direction, and which I +gladly accepted, was a review of all the troops then in Stamboul- +about 6,000--comprising infantry, cavalry, and artillery. + +They were as fine looking a body of soldiers as I ever saw--well +armed and well clothed, the men all large and of sturdy appearance. + +After the review we attended a grand military dinner given by the +Grand Vizier. At the hour set for this banquet we presented +ourselves at the palace of the Grand Vizier, and being ushered into a +large drawing-room, found already assembled there the guests invited +to meet us. Some few spoke French, and with these we managed to +exchange an occasional remark; but as the greater number stood about +in silence, the affair, thus far, was undeniably a little stiff. +Just before the dinner was announced, all the Turkish officers went +into an adjoining room, and turning their faces to the east, +prostrated themselves to the floor in prayer. Then we were all +conducted to a large salon, where each being provided with a silver +ewer and basin, a little ball of highly perfumed soap and a napkin, +set out on small tables, each guest washed his hands. Adjacent to +this salon was the dining-room, or, rather, the banqueting room, a +very large and artistically frescoed hall, in the centre of which +stood a crescent-shaped table, lighted with beautiful silver +candelabra, and tastefully decorated with flowers and fruits. The +viands were all excellent; cooked, evidently, by a French chef, and +full justice was done the dishes, especially by the Turks, who, of +course, had been fasting all day. + +At the close of the banquet, which consisted of not less than fifteen +courses, we withdrew to a smoking-room, where the coffee was served +and cigarettes and chibouks offered us--the latter a pipe having a +long flexible stem with an amber mouthpiece. I chose the chibouk, +and as the stem of mine was studded with precious stones of enormous +value, I thought I should enjoy it the more; but the tobacco being +highly flavored with some sort of herbs, my smoke fell far short of +my anticipations. The coffee was delicious, however, and I found +this to be the case wherever I went in Constantinople, whether in +making calls or at dinner, the custom of offering coffee and tobacco +on these occasions being universal. + +The temptations to linger at Constantinople were many indeed, not the +least being the delightful climate; and as time pressed, we set out +with much regret on the return journey, stopping a few days at +Athens, whence we made several short excursions into the interior. +King George and Queen Olga made our stay in Athens one of extreme +interest and exceeding pleasure. Throwing aside all ceremony, they +breakfasted and dined us informally, gave us a fine ball, and in +addition to these hospitalities showed us much personal attention, +his Majesty even calling upon me, and the Queen sending her children +to see us at our hotel. + +Of course we visited all that remained of the city's ancient +civilization--the Acropolis, temples, baths, towers, and the like; +nor did we oinit to view the spot where St. Paul once instructed the +Athenians in lessons of Christianity. We traveled some little +through the country districts outside of Athens, and I noticed that +the peasantry, in point of picturesqueness of dress and color of +complexion, were not unlike the gypsies we see at times in America. +They had also much of the same shrewdness, and, as far as I could +learn, were generally wholly uneducated, ignorant, indeed, except as +to one subject--politics--which I was told came to them intuitively, +they taking to it, and a scramble for office, as naturally as a duck +to water. In fact, this common faculty for politics seems a +connecting link between the ancient and modern Greek. + +Leaving Athens with the pleasantest recollections, we sailed for +Messina, Sicily, and from there went to Naples, where we found many +old friends; among them Mr. Buchanan Reed, the artist and poet, and +Miss Brewster, as well as a score or more of others of our +countrymen, then or since distinguished, in art and letters at home +and abroad. We remained some days in Naples, and during the time +went to Pompeii to witness a special excavation among the ruins of +the buried city, which search was instituted on account of our visit. +A number of ancient household articles were dug up, and one, a terra +cotta lamp bearing upon its crown in bas-relief the legend of "Leda +and the Swan," was presented to me as a souvenir of the occasion, +though it is usual for the Government to place in its museums +everything of such value that is unearthed. + +From Naples to Rome by rail was our next journey. In the Eternal +City we saw picture-galleries, churches, and ruins in plenty, but all +these have been so well described by hundreds of other travelers that +I shall not linger even to name them. While at Rome we also +witnessed an overflow of the Tiber, that caused great suffering and +destroyed much property. The next stage of our tour took us to +Venice, then to Florence--the capital of Italy--for although the +troops of the King of Italy had taken possession of Rome the +preceding September, the Government itself had not yet removed +thither. + +At Florence, our Minister, Mr. Marsh, though suffering with a lame +foot, took me in charge, and in due course of time I was presented to +King Victor-Emmanuel. His Majesty received me informally at his +palace in a small, stuffy room--his office, no doubt--and an untidy +one it was too. He wore a loose blouse and very baggy trousers; a +comfortable suit, certainly, but not at all conducing to an ideal +kingliness of appearance. + +His Majesty's hobby was hunting, and no sooner had I made my bow than +he began a conversation on that subject, thrusting his hands nearly +up to the elbows into the pockets of his trousers. He desired to +learn about the large game of America, particularly the buffalo, and +when I spoke of the herds of thousands and thousands I had seen on +the plains of western Kansas, he interrupted me to bemoan the fate +which kept him from visiting America to hunt, even going so far as to +say that "he didn't wish to be King of Italy, anyhow, but would much +prefer to pass his days hunting than be bedeviled with the cares of +state." On one of his estates, near Pisa, he had several large herds +of deer, many wild boars, and a great deal of other game. Of this +preserve he was very proud, and before we separated invited me to go +down there to shoot deer, adding that he would be there himself if he +could, but feared that a trip which he had to take to Milan would +interfere, though he wished me to go in any event. + +I gladly accepted the invitation, and in two or three days was +notified when I would be expected at the estate. At the designated +time I was escorted to Pisa by an aide-de-camp, and from there we +drove the few miles to the King's chateau, where we fortified +ourselves for the work in hand by an elaborate and toothsome +breakfast of about ten courses. Then in a carriage we set out for +the King's stand in the hunting-grounds, accompanied by a crowd of +mounted game-keepers, who with great difficulty controlled the pack +of sixty or seventy hounds, the dogs and keepers together almost +driving me to distraction with their yelping and yelling. On +reaching the stand, I was posted within about twenty' yards of a +long, high picket-fence, facing the fence and covered by two trees +very close together. It was from behind these that the King usually +shot, and as I was provided with a double-barreled shot-gun, I +thought I could do well, especially since close in rear of me stood +two game-keepers to load and hand me a second gun when the first was +emptied. + +Meantime the huntsmen and the hounds had made a circuit of the park +to drive up the game. The yelps of the hounds drawing near, I +cautiously looked in the direction of the sound, and the next moment +saw a herd of deer close in to the fence, and coming down at full +speed. Without a miss, I shot the four leading ones as they tried +to run the gauntlet, for in passing between the stand and the fence, +the innocent creatures were not more than ten to fifteen paces from +me. At the fourth I stopped, but the gamekeepers insisted on more +butchery, saying, "No one but the King ever did the like" (I guess no +one else had ever had the chance), so, thus urged, I continued firing +till I had slaughtered eleven with eleven shots--an easy task with a +shot-gun and buckshot cartridges. + +The "hunt" being ended--for with this I had had enough, and no one +else was permitted to do any shooting--the aide-decamp directed the +game to be sent to me in Florence, and we started for the chateau. +On the way back I saw a wild boar the first and only one I ever saw-- +my attention being drawn to him by cries from some of the game- +keepers. There was much commotion, the men pointing out the game and +shouting excitedly, "See the wild boar!" otherwise I should not have +known what was up, but now, looking in the indicated direction, I saw +scudding over the plain what appeared to me to be nothing but a +halfgrown black pig, or shoat. He was not in much of a hurry either, +and gave no evidence of ferocity, yet it is said that this +insignificant looking animal is dangerous when hunted with the spear +--the customary way. After an early dinner at the chateau we +returned to Florence, and my venison next day arriving, it was +distributed among my American friends in the city. + +Shortly after the hunt the King returned from Milan, and then honored +me with a military dinner, his Majesty and all the guests, numbering +eighty, appearing in full uniform. The banqueting hall was lighted +with hundreds of wax candles, there was a profusion of beautiful +flowers, and to me the scene altogether was one of unusual +magnificence. The table service was entirely of gold--the celebrated +set of the house of Savoy--and behind the chair of each guest stood a +servant in powdered wig and gorgeous livery of red plush. I sat at +the right of the King, who--his hands resting on his sword, the hilt +of which glittered with jewels--sat through the hour and a half at +table without once tasting food or drink, for it was his rule to eat +but two meals in twenty-four hours--breakfast at noon, and dinner at +midnight. The King remained silent most of the time, but when he did +speak, no matter on what subject, he inevitably drifted back to +hunting. He never once referred to the Franco-Prussian war, nor to +the political situation in his own country, then passing through a +crisis. In taking leave of his Majesty I thanked him with deep +gratitude for honoring me so highly, and his response was that if +ever he came to America to hunt buffalo, he should demand my +assistance. + +From Florence I went to Milan and Geneva, then to Nice, Marseilles, +and Bordeaux. Assembled at Bordeaux was a convention which had been +called together by the government of the National Defense for the +purpose of confirming or rejecting the terms of an armistice of +twenty-one days, arranged between Jules Favre and Count Bismarck in +negotiations begun at Versailles the latter part of January. The +convention was a large body, chosen from all parts of France, and was +unquestionably the most noisy, unruly and unreasonable set of beings +that I ever saw in a legislative assembly. The frequent efforts of +Thiers, Jules Favre, and other leading men to restrain the more +impetuous were of little avail. When at the sittings a delegate +arose to speak on some question, he was often violently pulled to his +seat and then surrounded by a mob of his colleagues, who would throw +off their coats and gesticulate wildly, as though about to fight. + +But the bitter pill of defeat had to be swallowed in some way, so the +convention delegated M. Thiers to represent the executive power of +the country, with authority to construct a ministry three +commissioners were appointed by the Executive, to enter into further +negotiations with Count Bismarck at Versailles and arrange a peace, +the terms of which, however, were to be submitted to the convention +for final action. Though there had been so much discussion, it took +but a few days to draw up and sign a treaty at Versailles, the +principal negotiators being Thiers and Jules Favre for France, and +Bismarck on the part of the Germans. The terms agreed upon provided +for the occupation of Paris till ratification should be had by the +convention at Bordeaux; learning of which stipulation from our +Minister, Mr. Washburn, I hurried off to Paris to see the conquerors +make their triumphal entry. + +In the city the excitement was at fever heat, of course; the entire +population protesting with one voice that they would never, never +look upon the hated Germans marching through their beloved city. No! +when the day arrived they would hide themselves in their houses, or +shut their eyes to such a hateful sight. But by the 1st of March a +change had come over the fickle Parisians, for at an early hour the +sidewalks were jammed with people, and the windows and doors of the +houses filled with men, women, and children eager to get a look at +the conquerors. Only a few came in the morning, however--an advance- +-guard of perhaps a thousand cavalry and infantry. The main column +marched from the Arc-de-Triomphe toward the middle of the afternoon. +In its composition it represented United Germany--Saxons, Bavarians, +and the Royal Guard of Prussia--and, to the strains of martial music, +moving down the Champ Elysees to the Place de la Concorde, was +distributed thence over certain sections of the city agreed upon +beforehand. Nothing that could be called a disturbance took place +during the march; and though there was a hiss now and then and +murmurings of discontent, yet the most noteworthy mutterings were +directed against the defunct Empire. Indeed, I found everywhere that +the national misfortunes were laid at Napoleon's door--he, by this +time, having become a scapegoat for every blunder of the war. + +The Emperor William (he had been proclaimed German Emperor at +Versailles the 18th of January) did not accompany his troops into +Paris, though he reviewed them at Long Champs before they started. +After the occupation of the city he still remained at Versailles, and +as soon as circumstances would permit, I repaired to the Imperial +headquarters to pay my respects to his Majesty under his new title +and dignities, and to say good-bye. + +Besides the Emperor, the only persons I me at Versailles were General +von Moltke and Bismarck. His Majesty was in a very agreeable frame +of mind, and as bluff and hearty as usual. His increased rank and +power had effected no noticeable change of any kind in him, and by +his genial and cordial ways he made me think that my presence with +the German army had contributed to his pleasure. Whether this was +really so or not, I shall always believe it true, for his kind words +and sincere manner could leave no other conclusion. + +General von Moltke was, as usual, quiet and reserved, betraying not +the slightest consciousness of his great ability, nor the least +indication of pride on account of his mighty work. I say this +advisedly, for it is an undoubted fact that it was. his marvelous +mind that perfected the military system by which 800,000 men were +mobilized with unparalleled celerity and moved with such certainty of +combination that, in a campaign of seven months, the military power +of France was destroyed and her vast resources sorely crippled. + +I said good-bye to Count Bismarck, also, for at that busy time the +chances of seeing him again were very remote. The great Chancellor +manifested more joy over the success of the Germans than did anyone +else at the Imperial headquarters. Along with his towering strength +of mind and body, his character partook of much of the enthusiasm and +impulsiveness commonly restricted to younger men, and now in his +frank, free way be plainly showed his light-heartedness and +gratification at success. That which for years his genius had been +planning and striving for--permanent unification of the German +States, had been accomplished by the war. It had welded them +together in a compact Empire which no power in Europe could disrupt, +and as such a union was the aim of Bismarck's life, he surely had a +right to feel jubilant. + +Thanks to the courtesies extended me, I had been able to observe the +principal battles, and study many of the minor details of a war +between two of the greatest military nations of the world, and to +examine critically the methods followed abroad for subsisting, +equipping, and manoeuvring vast bodies of men during a stupendous, +campaign. Of course I found a great deal to interest and instruct +me, yet nowadays war is pretty much the same everywhere, and this one +offered no marked exception to my previous experiences. The methods +pursued on the march were the same as we would employ, with one most +important exception. Owing to the density of population throughout +France it was always practicable for the Germans to quarter their +troops in villages, requiring the inhabitants to subsist both +officers and men. Hence there was no necessity for camp and garrison +equipage, nor enormous provision trains, and the armies were +unencumbered by these impedimenta, indispensable when operating in a +poor and sparsely settled country. As I have said before, the only +trains were those for ammunition, pontoon-boats, and the field +telegraph, and all these were managed by special corps. If +transportation was needed for other purposes, it was obtained by +requisition from the invaded country, just as food and forage were +secured. Great celerity of combination was therefore possible, the +columns moving in compact order, and as all the roads were broad and +macadamized, there was little or nothing to delay or obstruct the +march of the Germans, except when their enemy offered resistance, but +even this was generally slight and not very frequent, for the French +were discouraged by disaster from the very outset of the campaign + +The earlier advantages gained bythe Germans may be ascribed to the +strikingly prompt mobilization of their armies, one of the most +noticeable features of their perfect military system, devised by +almost autocratic power; their later successes were greatly aided by +the blunders of the French, whose stupendous errors materially +shortened the war, though even if prolonged it could, in my opinion, +have had ultimately no other termination. + +As I have previously stated, the first of these blunders was the +acceptance of battle by MacMahon at Worth; the second in attaching +too much importance to the fortified position of Metz, resulting in +three battles Colombey, Mars-la-Tour, and Gravelotte--all of which +were lost; and the third, the absurd movement of MacMahon along the +Belgian frontier to relieve Metz, the responsibility for which, I am +glad to say, does not belong to him. + +With the hemming in of Bazaine at Metz and the capture of MacMahon's +army at Sedan the crisis of the war was passed, and the Germans +practically the victors. The taking of Paris was but a sentiment-- +the money levy could have been made and the Rhine provinces held +without molesting that city, and only the political influences +consequent upon the changes in the French Government caused peace to +be deferred. + +I did not have much opportunity to observe the German cavalry, either +on the march or in battle. The only time I saw any of it engaged was +in the unfortunate charge at Gravelotte. That proved its mettle good +and discipline fair, but answered no other purpose. Such of it as +was not attached to the infantry was organized in divisions, and +operated in accordance with the old idea of covering the front and +flanks of the army, a duty which it thoroughly performed. But thus +directed it was in no sense an independent corps, and hence cannot +be, said to have accomplished anything in the campaign, or have had a +weight or influence at all proportionate to its strength. The method +of its employment seemed to me a mistake, for, being numerically +superior to the French cavalry, had it been massed and manoeuvred +independently of the infantry, it could easily have broken up the +French communications, and done much other work of weighty influence +in the prosecution of the war. + +The infantry was as fine as I ever saw, the men young and hardy in +appearance, and marching always with an elastic stride. The infantry +regiment, however, I thought too large--too many men for a colonel to +command unless he has the staff of a general--but this objection may +be counterbalanced by the advantages resulting from associating +together thus intimately the men from the same district, or county as +we would call it; the celerity of mobilization, and, in truth, the +very foundation of the German system, being based on this local or +territorial scheme of recruiting. + +There was no delay when the call sounded for the march; all turned +out promptly, and while on the road there was very little straggling, +only the sick falling out. But on such fine, smooth roads, and with +success animating the men from the day they struck the first blow, it +could hardly be expected that the columns would not keep well closed +up. Then, too, it must be borne in mind that, as already stated, +'campaigning' in France--that is, the marching, camping, and +subsisting of an army--is an easy matter, very unlike anything we, +had during the war of the rebellion. To repeat: the country is rich, +beautiful, and densely populated, subsistence abundant, and the +roads--all macadamized highways; thus the conditions; are altogether +different from those existing with us. I think that under the same +circumstances our troops would have done as well as the Germans, +marched as admirably, made combinations as quickly and accurately, +and fought with as much success. I can but leave to conjecture how. +the Germans would have got along on bottomless roads--often none at +all--through the swamps and quicksands of northern Virginia, from, +the Wilderness to Petersburg, and from Chattanooga to Atlanta and the +sea. + +Following the operations of the German armies from the battle of +Gravelotte to the siege of Paris, I may, in conclusion, say that I +saw no new military principles developed, whether of strategy or +grand tactics, the movements of the different armies and corps being +dictated and governed by the same general laws that have so long +obtained, simplicity of combination and manoeuvre, and the +concentration of a numerically superior force at the vital point. + +After my brief trip to Versailles, I remained in Paris till the +latter part of March. In company with Mr. Washburn, I visited the +fortifications for the defense of the city, and found them to be +exceptionally heavy; so strong, indeed, that it would have been very +hard to carry the place by a general assault. The Germans, knowing +the character of the works, had refrained from the sacrifice of life +that such an attempt must entail, though they well knew that many of +the forts were manned by unseasoned soldiers. With only a combat +here and there, to tighten their lines or repulse a sortie, they +wisely preferred to wait till starvation should do the work with +little loss and absolute certainty. + +The Germans were withdrawn from Paris on the 3d of March, and no +sooner were they gone than factional quarrels, which had been going +on at intervals ever since the flight of the Empress and the fall of +her regency on the 4th of September, were renewed with revolutionary +methods that eventually brought about the Commune. Having witnessed +one or two of these outbreaks, and concluding that while such +turbulence reigned in the city it would be of little profit for me to +tarry there, I decided to devote the rest of the time I could be away +from home to travel in England, Ireland, and Scotland. My journeys +through those countries were full of pleasure and instruction, but as +nothing I saw or did was markedly different from what has been so +often described by others, I will save the reader this part of my +experience. I returned to America in the fall, having been absent a +little more than a year, and although I saw much abroad of absorbing +interest, both professional and general, yet I came back to my native +land with even a greater love for her, and with increased admiration +for her institutions. + + + + +End of this Project Gutenberg Etext Personal Memoirs of Sheridan, v2 +By Philip Henry Sheridan + diff --git a/old/2shdn11.zip b/old/2shdn11.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..22de082 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/2shdn11.zip |
