1863Result of Pope’s CampaignBest
and Recruit at Hall’s Hill“My
Maryland:” Its
InvasionOffensive Policy of the Rebellion
Pennsylvania and the Whole
Country ArousedBattle of South
MountainHarper’s
FerryColonel MilesHis Treachery
and Death.
Bloody Battle
of AntietamDrilling RecruitsThe
Harris Light
again at the FrontAt
ChantillySudley ChurchLeesburg
McClellan again Relieved from
Command.
By the almost continual fighting of
General Pope’s campaign, our ranks had been
greatly depleted. Of the cavalry in general one
correspondent makes the following remark: “They
picket our outposts, scout the whole country for information,
open our fights, cover our retreats, or clear up and
finish our victories, as the case may be. In short,
they are never idle, and rarely find rest for either
men or horses.” We had felt the influence
of this wear and tear so sadly, that our once full
and noble regiment was now reduced to about three
hundred and fifty men, scarcely one third of our original
number. Nearly every regiment of cavalry which
had participated in the misfortunes of the campaign,
had suffered a like decimation. To replenish
our weakened ranks and to infuse new vigor and discipline
into the various commands, became a question of no
little moment. Consequently a large number of
regiments, under the direct supervision of General
Bayard, were ordered to Hall’s Hill, about ten
miles from Washington, where we established camps of
instruction and drill.
During the disasters of the Peninsular
campaign, and the subsequent defeats and retreats
from the Rapidan to the Potomac, the country had awakened
to the importance of increasing the army by new organizations,
and of filling up the broken ranks by fresh levies
of recruits. This feeling was greatly intensified
by the exposure of Washington to the victorious and
advancing enemy, and by the invasions of Northern soil,
which the triumphs of the Rebellion made imminent.
Hence multitudes of recruits were pouring into Washington
principally, and into other places, gladly donning
the uniform, and eager to learn the duties, of the
soldier. Camps of instruction were, of course,
necessary. And as the attention of young men
was turning very favorably to the cavalry service,
our camps at Hall’s Hill were the scenes of daily
arrivals of fine specimens of patriots, whose hands
were warmly grasped by us; and gladly we initiated
them into the mysteries of this new science. We
were not a little elated at the epithet of “Veteran,”
which these recruits lavished upon us.
The experiences and labors of our
old camps “Oregon” and “Sussex”
were repeated with somewhat of new combinations and
interests, as we sought to prepare ourselves and others
more thoroughly than before to meet the foe in coming
campaigns.
We had scarcely reached our new camps
and entered upon our new labors, when we learned that
General Lee was marching his confident hosts into
Maryland. This movement at first was regarded
as a feint only, with the intention of uncovering
Washington; but as column after column was known to
have crossed the Potomac, and to be advancing through
the State with more or less rapidity, the tocsin of
alarm was sounded everywhere, and a general movement
was made to repel the invaders. Pennsylvania was
thoroughly aroused, and her loyal and true governor
issued a proclamation calling upon all the able-bodied
men of the Commonwealth to organize for defence.
The militia promptly responded to the call, and military
preparations were going on, not only in the old Keystone
State, but throughout the land.
Up to this time the attitude of the
Rebels had been defensive, but their recent great
victories had led them to change their tactics, and
thinking that ultimate success was almost within their
grasp, they now assumed the offensive policy.
Aside from this consideration they doubtless hoped
to awaken in the Border States a sympathy and an enthusiasm
on their behalf, which thus far they had failed to
create; and that their brilliant march northward would
not only carry a strong political influence, but that
their ranks would be greatly swollen by accessions
of recruits from those States. This indication
of Rebel thought is evidently found in the address
which General Lee issued to the people of Maryland
on the eighth day of September. In it are found
the following sentences:
“The people of the Confederate
States have long watched with the deepest sympathy
the wrongs and outrages that have been inflicted upon
the citizens of a Commonwealth allied to the States
of the South by the strongest social, political, and
commercial ties, and reduced to the condition of a
conquered province.
“Believing that the people of
Maryland possess a spirit too lofty to submit to such
a Government, the people of the South have long wished
to aid you in throwing off this foreign yoke, to enable
you again to enjoy the inalienable rights of freemen,
and restore the independence and sovereignty of your
State.
“In obedience to this wish,
our army has come among you, and is prepared to assist
you with the power of its arms in regaining the rights
of which you have been so unjustly despoiled.”
But the fond hopes which prompted
this address were destined to be blasted. Lee’s
advancing columns met no resistance, and marched directly
upon Frederick City, where recruiting offices were
opened under the superintendence of General Bradley
T. Johnson, who had left this city, at the beginning
of the war, to serve in the Rebel army. But the
Confederate chiefs were disappointed. The number
who were marshalled under their stars and bars did
not exceed the number of those who, tired of training
in Rebel gray, deserted their banner.
The enemy’s peaceful march through
the State and its quiet possession were not of long
duration; and the invaders soon found other work to
do, than to make political orders and harangues, and
to increase their ranks by recruits. From Washington
the Union army began to advance with considerable
strength and determination, compelling General Lee
to relinquish his design of penetrating into Pennsylvania.
Initiatory steps were now being taken for a great
battle, the first encounter of which took place, under
General Pleasonton, who commanded our cavalry during
this campaign, at the Catoctin Creek, in Middletown,
Maryland. The enemy’s rearguard, consisting
of cavalry, was struck with some force, the prelude
of the battle of South Mountain, at Turner’s
Gap. The enemy having taken possession of this
mountain pass, was driven from it only after the most
obstinate resistance and severe loss, and forced to
leave only before superior numbers. This occurred
on the fourteenth; and the victory, though somewhat
dearly bought, inspired our troops with new courage,
and gave them a foretaste of better days.
HARPER’S FERRY AND ANTIETAM.
But during the day we have received
sad tidings from Harper’s Ferry, a point of
no little importance to the invaders. Unfortunately
for us the place was under the command of Colonel
Miles, who, for his drunkenness and general incompetency,
had made himself conspicuous during the first battle
of Bull Run. Why such a man was left in command
of at least ten thousand men, and at a place of so
much interest, cannot well be accounted for.
Aware as he must have been several
days ago, that this position was a coveted prize and
would undoubtedly be assailed, he neither retreated,
nor fortified himself as he easily could have done
to hold out for a long time against a superior force.
Nothing but imbecility or treachery could have controlled
his conduct. On the eleventh his command was
increased largely by a force under General Julius White,
who had evacuated Martinsburg on the approach of Stonewall
Jackson.
But to-day he was attacked from various
positions, and his forces driven; and on the fifteenth,
being attacked from at least seven commanding positions,
early in the day the white flag was raised, which
the enemy failing to see, continued to fire for several
minutes, during which time Colonel Miles was killed,
some say by a Rebel shell, others assert by some of
his own men. By this shameful surrender there
fell into the hands of the enemy nearly twelve thousand
men, half of them New Yorkers, who had just entered
the service; also seventy-three guns good and bad;
thirteen thousand small arms; two hundred wagons, and
a large supply of tents and camp equipage.
Stonewall Jackson, who had commanded
the expedition from Frederick to Harper’s Ferry,
now moved forward to join Lee’s main army, which
he did on the sixteenth. From South Mountain
General McClellan began to collect his forces well
in hand and to move towards Boonsborough. Here
General Pleasonton again struck the Rebel cavalry
rearguard, capturing two hundred and fifty prisoners
and two field-pieces. Infantry supports were
following our cavalry very closely, and, after marching
about twelve miles, they discovered the Rebels in
force posted on the south bank of Antietam Creek,
just in front of the little village of Sharpsburg.
Our troops entered into bivouacs for the night, expecting
to attack the enemy early next morning. But the
morning and most of the day passed in idleness, while
the Rebels were fortifying their positions, and gathering
their forces which had been more or less scattered.
Had McClellan ordered an advance that morning early,
the sixteenth of September, 1862, would have witnessed
a comparatively easy and complete victory.
At four o’clock P. M., General
Joseph Hooker was sent out on the right. Moving
at a sufficient distance to keep out of sight of the
Rebel batteries, he forded the Antietam, and, soon
afterward turning sharply to the left, came down upon
the enemy near the road to Hagerstown. But darkness
soon coming on put a speedy end to the conflict.
September 17This
day has witnessed the grand and glorious battle of
Antietam, the particulars of which I need not record.
It is enough to say, that the daring of our men and
their heroic deeds upon this field, wiped out forever,
in Rebel blood, the disgrace and foul stain cast upon
our arms in the momentous military blunders and defeats
which have followed us since the beginning of this
great American conflict.
The losses were heavy on both sides,
but the enemy was fairly beaten, and driven from his
chosen positions; and night closed the most sanguinary
day ever known to the American continent. McClellan
ought to have followed up his victory early next morning,
but hesitating, the enemy made good his escape across
the Potomac, leaving only his dead and desperately
wounded, the latter numbering about two thousand, in
our hands.
October 4We are
still in our camps at Hall’s Hill, teaching and
learning the tactics of war. To-day Kilpatrick
detailed me to act as drill-master, and gave me the
command of a detachment of recruits. This gives
me a new phase of army experience, and though it has
its difficulties, as one will always find when he
endeavors to control “men of many minds,”
yet I find a good exercise of my little knowledge of
human nature, and realize that the influence of my
new labor upon myself is very salutary. I had
thought that I was master of all the preliminary steps
of the science and art of a soldier’s discipline,
but in endeavoring to teach the same to others, I
have learned so much myself, that it now seems to
me that what I knew before was the merest rudiment.
This I learn is the experience of others who are engaged
in similar work. Helping others has a wonderful
reflex influence upon ourselves. I often wonder
if this may no explain in part the philosophy of that
passage of Holy Writ, which says, “It is more
blessed to give than to receive.” In this
exercise of drilling, and in the comparative monotony
of camp life, we spent the month of October.
All was quiet along the entire lines
of the great armies. Our ranks had been greatly
swollen by new accessions; yet General McClellan was
constantly calling for reenforcements, and all kinds
of supplies, alleging that the army was in no condition
to move. At length about the twenty-sixth of
October a feeble advance was made across the Potomac.
Several days were spent in putting the Federal army
on the sacred soil and under marching orders.
No opposition was encountered in the march. Our
forces moved along the east side of the Blue Ridge,
the enemy still occupying the Shenandoah Valley, and
moving southward on a line parallel with our own.
November 2The
Harris Light broke camp at Hall’s Hill and advanced
to the Chantilly Mansion, bivouacking on its beautiful
grounds. This property is said to be owned by
one of the Stuarts, who is reported to be a quartermaster-general
in the Rebel service. Pleasant as was the place,
with its fine walks, bordered with flowers and evergreen
shrubbery; its fruitful gardens and groves, the cold
of the night made our stay not the most agreeable.
The next morning we pursued our line of march to Sudley
Church, near Bull Run, where we encountered a strong
force of Stuart’s cavalry. After a sharp
conflict, in which Yankee ingenuity and grit were
fairly tested, the chivalry retired southwestwardly,
acknowledging themselves badly defeated.
November 4To-day
the regiment was ordered to move to Leesburg, near
which we pitched our shelters. This is an old,
aristocratic village, the shire-town of Loudon County.
It is situated in a lovely valley, at the terminus
of the Loudon and Hampshire Railroad, and is only about
two miles from the Potomac, and an equal distance
from Goose Creek, which is a considerable stream.
Though this county sent many brave men into the Union
ranks, probably more than any other county of the same
population in Virginia, yet Leesburg is almost a fac-simile
of Charlestown, the capital of Jefferson County, the
scene of John Brown’s execution, where all the
people, including women and children, are “secession
to a man.”
All this while the Grand Army of the
Potomac was moving southward at a snail’s pace;
and on the seventh of November, just after reaching
Warrenton, General McClellan was relieved from command,
and directed to report to the authorities by letter
from Trenton, New Jersey. Thus ended another
indecisive campaign, which though it had witnessed
a greater victory than ever won before, yet had failed
to reap the fruits thereof.