“Only 25 miles to Shelbyville.”
June 23, 1863, ended the Army
of the Cumberland’s six months of wearisome
inaction around Murfreesboro its half-year of tiresome
fort-building, drilling, picketing and scouting.
Then its 60,000 eager, impatient men
swept forward in combinations of masterful strategy,
and in a brief, wonderfully brilliant campaign of
nine days of drenching rain drove Bragg out of his
strong fortifications in the rugged hills of Duck
River, and compelled him to seek refuge in the fastnesses
of the Cumberland Mountains, beyond the Tennessee River.
“Now,” said Shorty, as
they stood in line, waiting the order to move, “as
Old Rosy has clearly waked up to business, I hope to
gracious that Mr. Bragg will be found at home ready
for callers. We’ve wasted six months waiting
for him to get good and ready, and he certainly ought
to be in trim to transact any little business we may
have with him.”
“I think you needn’t trouble
yourself about that, Shorty,” said Capt.
McGillicuddy. “All the news is that Bragg
is down there in Shelbyville in force, and with blood
in his eye. Somebody is going to be terribly
whipped before the end of the week, and I’m pretty
sure it won’t be the Army of the Cumberland.”
“Well, let’s have it over
and done with,” said Si. “It’s
got to be fought out some time, and the sooner the
better. I wish the whole thing could be fought
to a finish to-morrow. Then I’d know at
once whether I’m to live through this war.”
“I don’t think you’ll
be kept long in suspense,” replied Capt.
McGillicuddy. “Shelbyville is only 25 miles
away. We can’t go forward many hours with
out forcing a collision as to the right of way.
If we can whip Bragg behind the works he has been
building for the last six months, we’ll settle
the whole business for the Southern Confederacy in
the West. Grant will take Vicksburg, and then
we’ll have peace.”
“Only 25 miles,” repeated
Shorty. “We ought to be squarely up against
them not later than to-morrow night and one or two
days’ lively pounding ought to make Mr. Bragg
holler enough.”
“Rosenbaum is as certain as
he is of his life,” said Si to the Captain and
the rest, “that Bragg has the bulk of his army
at Shelbyville, which, as you say, is but 25 miles
from here, and that he will draw the rest in and fight
us behind the awfully big forts that he has been building
for the last six months from Shelbyville to War Trace.
Rosenbaum says that he knows it for a fact that 3,000
negroes have been worked on the forts ever since Bragg
retreated there last January.”
“Well, 25 miles isn’t
far to go for a fight,” returned Shorty.
“All that I ask is that the 200th Ind. be given
the advance. We’ll make schedule time to
ward Shelbyville, and bring on the fight before early
candle-lightin’ to-morrow evening.”
“I guess you’ll have your
wish, Shorty,” returned Capt. McGillicuddy.
“We lead the brigade to-day, anyway, and we’ll
try to keep the lead clear through.”
Then the rain poured down so violently
that all the conversation was suspended, except more
or less profane interjections upon the luck
of the Army of the Cumberland in never failing to
bring on a deluge when it started to march.
In the midst of this the bugles sounded
“For ward!” and the 200th Ind. swung out
on the Shelby ville Pike, and set its face sternly
southward. After it trailed the rest of the brigade,
then the ambulances and wagons, and then the rest
of the division.
At times the rain was actually blinding,
but the men plodded on doggedly and silently.
They had ex austed their epithets at the start, and
now settled down to stolid endurance.
“We’ve only got to go
25 miles, boys,” Si would occasionally say, by
way of encouragement. “This rain can’t
last forever at this rate. It’ll probably
clear up bright just as we reach Shelbyville to-morrow,
and give us sunshine to do our work in.”
But when the column halted briefly
at noon, for dinner for the men and mules, it was
raining harder and steadier than ever. It was
difficult to start fires with the soaked rails and
chunks, all were wet to the skin, and rivulets of
water ran from them as they stood or walked. The
horses of the officers seemed shrunken and drawn-up,
and the mud was getting deeper every minute.
“Lucky we had the advance,”
said the optimistic Si. “We have churned
the roads into a mortar-bed, and them that comes after
us will have hard pullin’. I wonder how
many miles we’ve made of them 25?”
“I feel that we’ve already
gone full 25,” said Shorty. “But Tennessee
miles’s made o’ injy-rubber, and stretch
awfully.”
They were too ill-humored to talk
much, but stood around and sipped their hot coffee
and munched sodden crackers and fried pork in silence.
Pork fried in the morning in a half-canteen, and carried
for hours in a dripping haversack, which reduced the
crackers to a tasteless mush, is not an appetizing
viand; but the hunger of hard exercise in the open
air makes it “go.”
Again the bugles sounded “Forward,”
and they plodded on more stolidly than ever.
Increasing evidences of the enemy’s
presence be gan to stimulate them. Through the
sheets of rain they saw a squad of rebel cavalry close
to them. There was much snapping of damp gun-caps
on both sides, a few unavailing shots were actually
fired, and they caught glimpses between the rain-gusts
of the rebel horsemen galloping up the muddy road to
ward the rising hills.
They pushed forward with more spirit
now. They came to insignificant brooks which
were now raging torrents, through which they waded
waist deep, first placing their treasured ammunition
on their shoul ders or heads.
As they were crossing one of these,
Si unluckily stepped into a deep hole, which took
him in over his head. His foot struck a stone,
which rolled, and down he went. Shorty saw him
disappear, made a frantic clutch for him, and went
down himself. For a brief tumultuous instant
they bobbed around against the legs of the other boys,
who went down like tenpins. Nearly the whole
of Co. Q was at once floundering in the muddy
torrent, with the Captain, who had succeeded in crossing,
looking back in dis may at the disaster.
The Orderly-Sergeant and a few others at the head
of the company rushed in and pulled out by the collars
such of the boys as they could grab. Si and Shorty
came to the bank a little ways down, blowing and sputtering,
and both very angry.
“All your infernal clumsiness,”
shouted Shorty. “You never will look where
you’re goin’. No more sense than a
blind hoss.”
“Shut up,” said Si, wrathfully.
“Don’t you talk about clumsiness.
It was them splay feet o’ your’n that
tripped me, and then you downed the rest o’
the boys. Every mite of our grub and ammunition’s
gone.”
How far the quarrel would have gone
cannot be told, for at that instant a regiment of
rebels, which had been pushed out in advance, tried
to open a fire upon the 200th Ind. from behind a rail
fence at the bottom of the hill. Only enough
of their wet guns could be gotten off to announce
their presence. The Colonel of the 200th Ind.
yelled:
“Companies left into line!”
The soggy men promptly swung around.
“Fix bayonets! Forward, double-quick!”
shouted the Colonel.
It was a sorry “double-quick,”
through the pelting rain, the entangling weeds and
briars, and over the rushing streams which flooded
the field, but it was enough to discourage the rebels,
who at once went back in a heavy-footed run to the
works on the hill, and the rebel cannon boomed out
to cover their retreat.
“Lie down!” shouted the
Colonel, as they reached the fence, and a shell struck
a little in advance, filling the air with mud and moist
fragments of vegetation.
As they lay there and recovered their
breath there was much splashing and splattering of
mud, much running to and fro, much galloping of Aids
in their rear. The 200th Ind. was ordered to hold
its place, and be ready for a charge upon the hill
when it received orders. The brigade’s
battery was rushed up to a hill in the rear, and opened
a fire on the rebel guns. The other regiments
were deployed to the right and left to outflank the
rebel position.
Si and Shorty and the rest of Co.
Q put in the time trying to get their guns dry and
borrowing ammunition from the men of the other companies.
Both were jobs of difficulty and doubtful success.
There could be no proper drying of guns in that incessant
drench, and nobody wanted to open up his stock of
cartridges in such a rain.
In the intervals between the heavier
showers glimpses could be had of the “Kankakee
Suckers” and the “Maumee Muskrats”
working their way as fast as they could around toward
the rebel flanks. The rebel artillery, seeing
most danger from them, began throwing shells in their
direction as they could be caught sight of through
the rain and the opening in the trees.
“Why don’t they order
us forward with the bayonets?” fretted Si.
“We can scatter them. Their guns ain’t
in no better shape than ours. If they hold us
here, the Illinoy and Ohio fellers ’ll git all
the credit.”
“The Colonel’s orders
are explicit,” said the Adjutant, who happened
to be near, “not to move until the head of one
of the other regiments can be seen on the hills to
the right or left. Then we’re all to go
forward together.”
“Yes,” grumbled Shorty,
“and we’ll jest git there in time to see
them Illinoy Suckers hog everything. You kin see
’em limberin’ up and preparing to git.
Just our dumbed luck.”
It turned out just as Shorty had predicted.
The rebel commander had kept a wary eye on the other
regiments, and as he saw them gain the point of vantage
in the open, where they could make a rush upon him,
he ordered a quick retreat. The other regiments
raised a yell and charged straight home. By the
time the 200th Ind. could reach the gap the other regiments
were in full possession, and the rebels out of musket-shot
in the valley beyond.
“I told you so,” snorted
the irate Shorty. “Now we’ve lost
the advance. To-morrow we’ll have to take
them other fellers’ mud, and pry their teams
out o’ the holes.”
“I wonder how many o’
them 25 miles toward Shelbyville we’ve made
to-day?” asked Si.
“I heard the Adjutant say,”
said one of his comrades, “that we’d come
just six miles.”
“Jewhillikins,” said Shorty sorrowfully.
Thus ended the first day of the Tullahoma campaign.