’Mid pleasures and palaces though
we may roam,
Be it ever so humble, there’s no place
like home;
A charm from the skies seems to hallow us there,
Which seek through the world, is ne’er
met with elsewhere.
PAYNE.
If one longs for home while roaming
amidst pleasures and palaces, how much more intense,
suppose you, must be the nostalgia of the soldier
confined in a far distant prison?
March 14, 1865, was one of the happiest
days of my life. After a captivity of twenty
months, I was led out of the prison with the three
hundred others, conducted to a steamboat, and homeward
bound transported to Sandusky. The thick ice
that for three months had covered the bay was floating
in broken pieces on the surface, through which the
boat struggled with so much difficulty that I feared
it would be necessary to put back to the island; but
the trip was made at the expense of some broken paddles.
Why we were selected rather than our less fortunate
compatriots I cannot guess, unless it was to save the
annoyance and the expense of burial, for some of our
party had been wounded, others as well as myself,
had recently recovered from serious sickness, and all
were adjudged to be unfit for military service; or
perhaps there was the same number in Southern prisons
that for special reasons the Federal War Office desired
to have exchanged.
The train that was to convey us southward
was made up of box-cars, upon the floors of which
there was a thin covering of straw. We were so
crowded that we all could not lie down at the same
time. The sleepers lay with their heads at the
sides of the cars, while their legs interlaced in
the middle. We took the situation in good humor,
and slept by turns, those who could not find room
standing amidst entangled legs and feet. Thus
we traveled several days and nights, our train being
frequently switched for the passage of regular trains.
Our route was by Bellaire to Baltimore, or rather
to Locust Point, where we took passage on a steamboat
for James river. Having landed the next day, we
walked across a neck of land formed by a bend of the
river to the wharf where a boat from Richmond was
expected to meet us. A company of negroes made
a show of conducting us across the neck, though a
company of children armed with cornstalks would have
been equally efficient.
We had not long to wait until the
smokestack of the Confederate steamboat could be seen
winding along as she tracked the serpentine course
of the river. As she neared the wharf the band
on board struck up that sweetest of tunes, “Home,
Sweet Home.” Some of my companions laughed,
some threw their caps into the air, others hurrahed,
while my own emotions were expressed only by tears
of joy that coursed down my cheeks. When, however,
the music glided into the exhilarating notes of “Dixie”
I joined in the cheering that mingled with the strain.
We arrived in Richmond on the 22d
of March, the eighth day after we had started.
I was pained to notice in the city so many signs of
delapidation and poverty, and to learn that Confederate
money had depreciated to the point of sixty for one.
The captain’s salary that the government owed
me for two years was worth only about fifty dollars
in specie, which a friend in the treasury department
advised me to collect at once, inasmuch as he thought
that the capital would be soon evacuated. I took
him for a timorous prophet, and told him I would wait
until I rejoined the army, when I should need it.
I did not know, as he did, the impoverished and critical
condition of the Confederacy.
I was not exchanged, but “paroled
for thirty days unless sooner exchanged.”
I set out for the Northern Neck in company with Lieutenant
Purcell, of Richmond county, and Captain Stakes, of
Northumberland. We rode on a train as far as
Hanover and then struck out afoot across the country.
Notwithstanding the fact that one of my companions
limped on a leg that had been wounded at Gettysburg
and the other was a little lame from frosted toes,
it taxed all my powers to keep up with them. If
I had rejoiced to see the James, I was happier still
to set foot once more upon the bank of the Rappahannock.
When we had crossed over we went to the home of Lieutenant
Purcell, where we spent the night, and the next day,
Monday, March 27, I arrived at home. I supposed
that I should take them by surprise, but somehow they
had received intelligence of my coming; and as I approached
the house I found them all lined up in the yard, white
and black. “And they began to be merry.”
I found John in the stable, having
been ridden home by my faithful man, Charles Wesley,
who supposed that he had left me dead at Falling Waters.
On the 14th of April, Good Friday,
when I was thinking of returning to Richmond to inquire
whether I had been exchanged and was still hoping
for the independence of the Southern Confederacy, I
attended religious services at a church in the neighborhood.
When these had been concluded and the congregation
were talking as usual in the yard a messenger arrived
with a newspaper, which the Yankees had sent ashore
from one of their gunboats, and which contained the
details of General Lee’s surrender of his army
five days previously at Appomattox. My heart sank
within me. My fondest hopes were crushed.
The cause for which I had so often exposed my life,
and for which so many of my friends had died, had
sunk into the gloomy night of defeat.
I was thankful that out of the horrid
conflict I had escaped with my life, a gray coat,
and a silver quarter of a dollar. Although I had
participated in all the battles that were fought by
the Army of Northern Virginia, I was never seriously
hurt. At Manassas one bullet struck my leg, and
another forcibly wrenched my sword from my hand.
At Chancellorsville a bomb exploded just in front
of me, making a hole in the ground and covering me
with dirt, the pieces flying away with discordant
noises. Countless balls whizzed by my ears, and
men fell all around me, some of them while touching
my side. Am I not justified in appropriating
the words of David addressed to Jéhovah, “Thou
hast covered my head in the day of battle?”
Withdrawal from the Union was the
right of the Southern States, as appears from the
history of the making and adoption of the federal
constitution; and great was the provocation to use
it. It is not, however, always wise, either
for persons or communities, to exercise
their rights. Secession in the year 1860 was a
hot headed and stupendous political blunder, a
blunder recognized by the majority of the people of
Virginia, who refused to follow the example of her
southern sisters until there was forced upon her the
cruel alternative of waging war either against them
or against the States of the North.
Though secession was a grievous error,
nevertheless the war that was waged by the Federal
Government was a crime against the constitution, humanity,
and God. But now, as we view the present and retrospect
the past, who may say that all has not turned out
for the best? We find consolation in the belief
that the Lord’s hand has shaped our destiny,
and we meekly submit to his overruling providence.
“If it were done,
when ’tis done, then ’twere well
It were done quickly.”
But the war, like Duncan’s murder,
was not done after it was done. There supervened
the unnecessary, vindictive, and malignant reconstruction
acts of the Federal Congress.
On the 14th of April, only nine days
after Lee had surrendered, a great calamity befell
the South in the foolish and infamous assassination
of President Lincoln, who was the only man who could
have restrained the rage of such men as Sumner in
the Senate and Stephens in the House of Representatives.
The hatred of the Northern politicians was intensified
by the supposition that his death was instigated by
Southern men, and it did not abate even after they
were convinced that the supposition was unfounded.
It is a singular fact that while the
war was in progress the acts of secession were considered
null and void, and the Southern States were declared
to be parts of an indissoluble union, but when the
war had ended they were dealt with as alien commonwealths
and conquered territories. For four years Virginia
was not a co-equal State in the Union but “Military
District N,” governed by a Federal general,
who appointed the local officers in the several counties.
The affairs of the State were managed by carpetbaggers
in close agreement with despicable scalawags and ignorant
negroes. The elective franchise was granted to
the emancipated slaves regardless of character or intelligence,
while it was denied to many white men. In Lancaster
county the negroes had a registered majority of a
hundred voters; it was represented in a constitutional
convention by a carpetbagger, and after the adoption
of the constitution it was represented in the Legislature
by a negro. To injury were added hatred and insult.
It was not enough that the South was conquered, it
must be humiliated by African domination!
The Southern people did not go to
war war came to them. Not to gain
military glory did they fight, although this meed must
be awarded to them. Nor was the perpetuation
of African slavery the object for which they took
up arms, for in Virginia nineteen-twentieths of the
citizens owned no slaves, and there was perhaps the
same proportion in the other States of the Confederacy.
Neither was it for conquest that they so long waged
the unequal contest; for though they twice crossed
the Potomac it was not to gain an acre of territory,
but only to relieve their own beleaguered capital.
From first to last it was a purely defensive struggle
to maintain for themselves the freedom they cheerfully
accorded to other communities, and to make good the
inherited belief that “all just government derives
its power from the consent of the governed.”
They simply resisted subjugation by a hostile government
whose right to rule them they denied.
As we review the history of that gigantic
struggle we are not surprised that the South was subdued,
the only wonder being that it was not sooner done.
It required two and a quarter millions of soldiers
four years to overcome one-third of that number.
The South had no navy to open her ports, no commerce
for her products, no foundries for the manufacture
of arms. During the first year there were not
muskets enough to supply her volunteers, though later
on sufficient numbers were taken on the fields of
battles, fifty-two cannon and thirty thousand small
arms being captured in the battles around Richmond,
besides the many thousands that were taken in subsequent
engagements.
That the South for so long a time
resisted the attempts of her powerful enemy, and during
that period gained so many remarkable victories, is
attributable to the skill of her generals and the valor
of her soldiers. In these respects only was the
advantage on her side.
The fame of her generals has spread
throughout the world, and their campaigns enrich the
text-books of the military students of Europe and
Asia. They rank with the most famous commanders
that ever led armies to victory. Their names
are immortal, and their memory is enshrined not only
in poetry and history, in marble and bronze, but also
in the admiration of mankind and in the affections
of the Southern people.
But what could strategy have achieved
unless there had been soldiers to make it effective?
The men had confidence in their commanders and were
responsive to their genius. In attack they exhibited
impulsive courage, and in defense possessed unyielding
firmness. They made days and places forever historic,
when their pay was money in little more than name,
their garments torn, their rations coarse and scant.
Footsore they charged against the dense Blue lines,
or made those rapid marches that bewildered opposing
forces.
When the end had come both officers
and men surrendered as they had fought, without
mental reservation. Sadly they furled and yielded
up the bullet-riddled battleflags they had carried
so proudly. Now while they manfully accept the
hard arbitrament of war, and yield unaffected loyalty
to the United States, they make no confession of criminality.
While the war continued they were asserting what they
believed was a God-given right, and now they recall
with pride the valor and victories of the Southern
armies.
Those armies are rapidly disappearing
from the land they loved so well. Many of the
men fell in battle, and many died in prisons and hospitals,
and since the close of the war more of them have fallen
asleep in peaceful homes. Those who have departed
and those who survive will not want a eulogist while
one remains; and when the last of the men who wore
the gray shall have joined his comrades beyond the
river of death, coming generations will celebrate
their heroism and scatter flowers upon the mounds
that mark the places where their ashes repose.