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The Angel of the Confederacy – Captain Sally Tompkins

Great things come in small packages, they say.  This is certainly true of one hard working young woman named Sally Tompkins.  She stood only 5 feet tall, but her good work and devotion made her a giant among mankind.

Sally came from a proud family with strong military roots. General George Washington had commissioned her grandfather.  Her brother fought in the Mexican War. When she was only 13, she wrote to him: “I hope you will be able to distinguish yourself in the battle and be a second George Washington and come home to receive congratulations from all your friends.”

When the Civil War broke out, Sally opened her own private hospital to care for wounded soldiers in Richmond. She used her own money to buy most of the supplies. Her enforcement of strict rules for a high standard cleanliness and sanitation saved many lives in a time when the causes of infection were barely understood, if at all.  Sally soon became known as “the Angel of the Confederacy.

Some of the other private hospitals were charging a lot of money for soldiers’ care as the war progressed.  As a result, an order came down declaring that only government hospitals run by a commissioned officer could provide care for soldiers.

Sally decided it was time to pay a visit to President Jefferson Davis in person. He was so impressed by her determination and all that she had already accomplished, he commissioned her Captain of Cavalry, to make her hospital official.  With that title, Captain Sally Tompkins became the only female commissioned officer in the Confederate Army. Her patients lovingly and respectfully called her “Captain Sally.”

During the war she cared for 1,333 soldiers, but remarkably only 73 of them died. That was the lowest death rate of any hospital during the Civil War in the North or South.

Sally died in 1916 and was buried with full military honors.

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Hood’s 5th Texas Brigade Flag

The 5th Texas Regiment had created a new and unique design for their Battle Flag.  It looked like the Confederate 1st National Flag, except for one major difference.  There was no circle of stars representing Confederate States, only one “lone star” in the upper corner to symbolize Texas.  They called it the “Lone Star and Bars.” They kept it flying proudly until the army stepped in and declared that all battle flags be standardized to the more well known Southern Cross.  The Lone Star and Bars was put into storage in a Richmond warehouse.  

The Texans had grown very fond of their unique flag, and eventually found the right opportunity to bring back their beloved banner.  General Hood ordered all battle flags be sent back to Richmond for updating with new Battle Honors inscriptions.  Some of the determined officers managed to steal back the Lone Star and Bars and switch it with the authorized flag of the 5th when it returned.

On the following day, General Hood made a grand review of the regiment before it left camp for the Battle of Second Manassas.  The color bearer kept the unauthorized flag hidden in its case. As the general inspected the line, he saw the case and ordered it opened. The beautiful Lone Star and Bars unfurled its colors as it fell from from the case.

An officer described what happened next:

“…when its beautiful folds were given to the breeze a cheer broke loose despite the fact that officers did all they could to restrain it.”  

Hood was not happy, asking, “Adjutant, why do you not have your battle flag, sir?”

Regimental Adjutant Wood, one of the conspirators, replied he had not seen it since it was sent to the depot (maybe so, but he was one of the officers who had brought back the Lone Star and Bars).  

Wood said that since he did not have the authorized flag, “I brought along the Lone Star flag of Texas.”  

Hood replied, “I believe you know more of this than you are willing to tell.”  

True, and that Lone Star and Bars Battle Flag would soon lead the regiment into some of its most famous battles of the Civil War. 

Shortly after the Battle of Antietam, the Lone Star Flag of Texas went to Austin, Texas for display in the State Capitol. It eventually ended up in possession of a veteran’s group, The Hood’s Texas Brigade Association. Since 1920 it has remained in custody of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission.

A Photo of the Original 5th Texas Lone Star and Bars Kept at the Texas State Library and Archives Commission

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“Big Red” The Citadel Flag

In April 1861 South Carolina seceded from the Union and tensions were running high. The Federals, still in possession of Fort Sumter in the harbor at Charleston, were determined to not to give up the sea fort without a fight.

Stationed on nearby Morris Island was a small military post, Fort Morris, manned by cadets from The Citadel, the South Carolina Military Institute.  As the ship “Star of the West“, sent by President Buchanan to supply the garrison at Fort Sumter, cruised into the harbor, the group of student military officers blasted the very first shots of the Civil War.  The “Star of the West” took heed of the warning, turned around, and hightailed it out of the harbor.

The Citadel cadets had a special red flag presented to them by the daughters of the man who owned the island. This flag was known as “Big Red.”  It had a white palmetto and crescent on a field of red.  

Later on in April of 1865, one of the Citadel cadets who had fired the first shot at Fort Sumter was serving as the commander of an artillery unit in Mobile Bay, and had possession of that original flag.  But the banner fell into the hands of the Union’s 20th Iowa.

Although “Big Red” disappeared after the capture, it grew as a symbol of pride for the Citadel’s Corps of Cadets who were using reproductions of the original prized banner.  Miraculously in  2007, the original “Big Red” reappeared in Iowa. The flag had been in storage and remained in surprisingly good condition. Experts were able to determine that it was in fact the original.

The flag went back to South Carolina to it’s rightful place – in the hands of the cadets at The Citadel where it remains on display for all to see.

More about the Citadel:

Of the six Senior Military Colleges that train the branches of the U. S. Armed Forces with the highest of standards, five are in the South.  One of them is the Citadel, established in 1842.

Graduates of the this college have served in every war since that time, beginning with the Mexican-American War of 1846. Many have had outstanding careers including generals, astronauts, and FBI agents.  Who brought to justice John Dillinger, the infamous gangster during the Depression? The FBI agent and Citadel grad Melvin Purvis.

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The Southern Soldier

The Southern Soldier of the American Civil War was truly a force to be reckoned with, pulling off battle victories with dwindled numbers while surrounded by Federal troops.

Washington and Richmond, the two capitals, were only 100 miles apart, but it took four years for the North to win. Why? The North had more men and resources by far. Both sides endured great hardships on the battlefield in a brutal war, but the Southern Soldiers made up a tough crew who fought fiercely to defend their own families, neighbors, and  friends.

A Colonel in Hood’s Texas Brigade wrote:

“…between Washington City and Richmond, Va….our generals and our comrades held at bay for four years the most superb and adequately equipped army ever organized on this Earth, defeating them again and again with often less than half their numbers…”

Since the Civil War ended, brave Americans from all states have volunteered and fought for our nation.  Today, nearly half of our military come from the South. A former Armed Forces recruiter wrote to us recently to say:

“I was a recruiter for the military for many years and most of our men and women came from the southern states.  There was, and may still be, some states that the military does not recruit in, because the people in those states choose not to serve this great nation.”

Southerners have left a legacy of the most highly decorated soldiers of WWI and WWII:

George Keene of Texas was the only man in World War I to earn all three of the Army’s top medals:  Congressional Medal of Honor, Distinguished Service Cross, and two Silver Stars, plus seven Purple Hearts in 26 months of combat service.

Audie Murphy, WWII hero, from Pueblo, Texas,  won every military combat award for valor available from the U.S. Army, as well as French and Belgian awards for heroism.  Pueblo also boasted four other Medal of Honor recipients.

Two men from the small town of Newnan, Georgia, and three men from another small town, Leeds, Alabama, all received the Medal of Honor.

The most decorated soldier in Vietnam, Joe Hooper, was born in South Carolina.

At his retirement in 1992, Robert Lewis Howard was the most highly decorated active duty soldier. He was born in Opelika, Alabama.

And the list goes on.  Just as they fought hard for their states, our Southerners today fight just as hard for their nation.

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The Angel of the Confederacy

Under 5 feet tall, Sally Tomkins was a lot tougher than she looked. She was born to a family with a proud military tradition:  Sally’s grandfather was given his commission by General George Washington himself.  When her brother went off to fight in the Mexican War, 13-year old Sally wrote: “I hope you will be able to distinguish yourself in the battle and be a second George Washington and come home to receive congratulations from all your friends.”

Captain Sally Louise Tomkins

Sally lived in Richmond, Virginia when the Civil War broke out. She opened her own private hospital for wounded soldiers, covering most of her supplies with her own money. Her hard work and devotion earned her the nickname, Angel of the Confederacy. The hospital became known for its cleanliness, Sally forcing in the highest levels of sanitation of any hospital of the period.  This saved many lives during an era when the cause of infection was poorly understood.

As the war went on, some private hospitals were charging a lot of money. Because of this, orders were issued that soldiers could only be cared for at government hospitals run by a commissioned officer.  Sally went to see President Jefferson Davis, who was so impressed that he commissioned Sally Tompkins a Captain of Cavalry, making her hospital official.  And that made her the only female commissioned officer in the Confederate Army.  Her patients usually called her Captain Sally.  Of 1,333 soldiers in her care, only 73 died, the lowest mortality rate of any hospital, North or South.  When Sally died in 1916, she was buried with full military honors.

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7 Facts About the Confederate Flag that Prove It’s Not About Racism

Sometimes, history doesn’t always remember things in a positive light. Events, famous quotes, and symbols of history can be remembered fondly or with contempt. Some things in American history deserve healthy skepticism, such as the Vietnam War, Dennis Rodman, capri pants, and, let’s be honest, most fashion choices of the 1980s.

 

However, some things in history get an undeserved bad rap. In these cases, scholars and the public might paint a picture of the event or symbol that is unfair. In these cases, purposefully or accidentally, history misunderstands the true meaning of what happened.

 

Perhaps the biggest example of American history misunderstood is the Confederate flag. Critics and fans alike have long used the flag to symbolize racism, hatred and oppression. However, the Confederate flag isn’t actually about any of these things. The next time you see Confederate flags for sale, remember these seven facts that prove the Confederate flag isn’t about racism:

 

1. Most southern whites didn’t have slaves.

Contrary to popular opinion, owning slaves was not the norm in the south. For the most part, slaves were owned by the rich, and there were plenty of people in the south who vehemently opposed the concept. Most southerners wouldn’t have signed on to go to war for something they didn’t support.

 

2. It flew over the South Carolina capitol.

South Carolina found it acceptable to display the Confederate flag on its grounds for fifty-four years. Supporters said that the flag stood for tradition, not for hate. To this day, the flag remains at the nearby Confederate Relic Room and Military Museum.

 

3. It’s still on the Mississippi state flag.

Even though South Carolina bowed to loud, public pressure and removed the flag from their state capitol, Mississippi still uses the Confederate battle flag as part of its state flag. In fact, in 2001, efforts to change the flag failed. The state’s pledge to the flag says that the flag is about the state’s history and achievements. School children in the state learn both the pledge to the Mississippi flag and the pledge to the United States flag.

 

4. Most Americans don’t associate the flag with racism.

In 2015, CNN investigated the matter of how people perceive the flag. The results surprised the critics. The survey found that more than half of Americans don’t think the flag is racist. Instead, they see the flag as a symbol of Southern American pride. The results of the 2015 study were virtually unchanged from a previous study conducted in 2000.

 

5. The flag went through several versions.

What you see today associated with the Confederate flag isn’t exactly anything that was ever an official Confederate flag. The Confederate battle flag was square, not the rectangular shape you’re used to seeing today. Other Confederate national flags looked completely different, but some people thought they looked too similar to the Stars and Stripes.

 

6. The flag stood for resistance to federal government.

In 1948, the Dixiecrat party adopted the Confederate flag as its party flag. The Dixiecrat party stood for segregationalism. The short-lived party chose the flag as its symbol because the party stood for the state’s rights principles that the Confederate states stood for in the first place.

 

7. The Civil War was complicated.

There was no single cause of the civil war. Lots of factors were in play, including state’s rights, taxes, tariffs and outright political power. The leaders of both the north and south struggled with all of these issues, and neither group was happy with the other when the Civil War ultimately seemed like the only way to resolve the many conflicts.

 

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Cruelty: Sherman in Atlanta

The words below are not gentle. I will keep this short, but be warned: if you think of General William T. Sherman as a heroic man, you may not like what you learn.

Atlanta is now a prosperous city that looks to the future. After all, its symbol is a phoenix rising from the ashes, with the Latin motto, Resurgens, meaning “Rising again.”

But the ghosts of 1864 still talk, so let me tell you why there will never be a statue of Sherman in Atlanta.

Many know of Sherman’s “March to the Sea.” Fewer know that his Special Field Orders No. 120 changed the way war was fought. Previously, civilians and their homes were officially off limits.  Cities and personal possessions were generally respected. Not after Sherman’s order. Here is part of it:

“To army corps commanders alone is intrusted the power to destroy mills, houses, cotton-gins, etc.; and for them this general principle is laid down: In districts and neighborhoods where the army is unmolested, no destruction of each property should be permitted; but should guerrillas or bushwhackers molest our march, or should the inhabitants burn bridges, obstruct roads or otherwise manifest local hostility, then army commanders should order and enforce a devastation more or less relentless, according to the measure of such hostility.”

“Otherwise manifest hostility?”  “Enforce a devastation more or less relentless, according to the measure of such hostility?” How does one interpret that? Perhaps this will clarify Sherman’s intentions, from one of his 1864 telegrams to Ulysees S. Grant:

“Until we can repopulate Georgia it is useless to occupy it, but utter destruction of its roads, houses, and people will cripple their military resources. … I can make the march and make Georgia howl.”

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A Scene in Atlanta, after Sherman 1864

Grant was already engaged on a campaign of destroying Southern supplies, including food, water, clothing, and transportation. But some historians claim that Special Field Orders No. 120 began a new and “modern” era of warfare, one that has resulted in the loss of countless millions of civilian lives. I would not go so far as to say Sherman alone started it, but his tactics were studied and acted on by later military leaders, even today.

One of Sherman’s officers, John Acheson, helps us understand the effects of Sherman’s “march.” The following quotations are from Acheson’s letters to his parents:

“As for the wealthy planters… nobody sympathized with them in the desolation of their homes, but scores of poor families have I seen, who had had no hand in bringing the present trouble upon the country, left without a mouthful to eat, and not knowing where to turn to get it, or what in the world to do to relive their distress.”

“I have many times heard mothers say that they did not care for themselves if they could only get something for their children to eat; and hundreds of them have come to the General along the march and begged him to let them go with the Army, for if left behind they would surely starve.

“But it is not from legitimate foraging alone that the people suffer. Outrages of every description are committed by the stragglers from our columns. These men know that they can wander off from the column, enter houses and commit whatever depredations they choose without any fear of detection. Dwellings are pillaged – the inhabitants threatened with death, unless they bring forth their money and other hidden valuables; rings and earrings taken by force from persons of women; and outrages of every description perpetrated by men who have slipped away from their commands.”

No doubt things were made worse by some soldiers acting without orders. But once leaders start to act with cruelty, it is only a short trip to “outrages of every description.”

Sherman wrote a two-volume memoir after the war.  It contains a number of his orders from the war. It does not contain No. 12.  It most certainly does not contain his telegram to Grant.  However, I did find things like these:

“…to make a circle of desolation around Atlanta…”

“ Heavy fires in Atlanta all day, caused by our artillery.”

“I peremptorily required that all the citizens and families resident in Atlanta should go away.”

“ We want all the houses of Atlanta for military storage and occupation.”

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A Scene Outside Atlanta, 1864

Ten year-old Carrie Berry was in Atlanta while Sherman’s army shelled the city. In her diary she wrote of the weeks of shelling.  On August 23rd she wrote,  “There is a fire in town nearly every day. I get so tired of being housed up all the time. The shells get worse and worse every day. O that something would stop them.” Carrie was nearly killed by the artillery, but she survived, only to be witness to the burning.  On November 15th she wrote,  “This has been a dreadful day. Things have been burning all around us. We dread to night because we do not know what moment that they will set our house on fire.”

Texas General Hood stood against Sherman in Atlanta.  Hood had been commanding men since the beginning of the war, had lost one leg and the use of an arm from battle injuries.  He was no stranger to the brutality of war.  While negotiating the treatment of civilians in Atlanta, Hood wrote to Sherman:

“And now, sir, permit me to say that the unprecedented measure you propose transcends, in studied and ingenious cruelty, all acts ever before brought to my attention in the dark history of war.”

His scathing messages to Sherman reveal a lot. In one of them he wrote:

“…there are a hundred thousand witnesses that you fired into the habitations of women and children for weeks, firing far above and miles beyond my line of defense.”

Hood, a hardened veteran, recognized the cold glint of evil.

Sherman achieved the status of war hero after the war, but not in the lands where he slashed and burned.

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“Go back, General Lee! Go back…”

It was during Lee’s 34th year as a military officer.  The date was May 6, 1864, and the Battle of The Wilderness was raging.  The Wilderness is an area of dense forest in northeast Virginia.  It was there that Lee had an army of 40,000, facing a Union force of 70,000.

A Texas brigade was advancing forward in a counter-attack.  Lee was there as they passed, atop his iron gray horse Traveller.  Present with Lee was one of his aides, Colonel C.S. Venable, whose description we have today:

“The Texans cheered lustily… Much moved by the greeting of these men and their magnificent behavior, General Lee spurred his horse through an opening in the trenches and followed close on their line as it moved rapidly forward. The men did not perceive that he was going with them until they had advanced some distance in the charge. When they recognized him, there came from the entire line as it rushed on the cry, ‘Go back, General Lee! Go back…  We won’t go on less you go back.’ “

Lee did not turn back, but Colonel Venable intervened:

“Just then I turned his attention to General Longstreet, whom he had been seeking, and who sat on his horse on a knoll to the right of the Texans directing the attack of his divisions.  He yielded with evident reluctance to the entreaties of his men, and rode up to Longstreet’s position.  With the first opportunity I informed General Longstreet of what had just happened, and he with affectionate bluntness urged General Lee to go farther back.”

It was fortunate for Lee’s army that the general did turn and ride to Longstreet.  The Texans “went forward in their charge and did well their duty.  They were eight hundred strong, and lost half their number killed and wounded on that bloody day.”

Civil War generals were not known for leading from the rear, and suffered injury and death at a greater rate than the average soldier. In fact, later that same day General Longstreet was shot while riding in front of his advancing line. Only a year earlier General Stonewall Jackson had been killed, three miles from the same spot.

Not a week later Lee’s army was in another battle.  His men in severe trouble, Lee advanced to the front, where General Gordon’s troops were preparing to charge. Gordon’s men also rushed to protect their commander.  We have this report from General Long:

” ‘No! No! General Lee to the rear! General Lee to the rear!’ cried the men. ‘We will drive them back if General Lee will only go to General Robert E. Leethe rear.’ As Lee retired, Gordon put himself at the head of his division and cried out in his ringing voice, ‘Forward! Charge! And remember your promise to General Lee!’ The charge that followed was fierce….and an impending disaster converted into a brilliant victory.”

General Dwight Eisenhower, a man who ultimately wore five stars on his uniform, wrote:  “From deep conviction I simply say this: a nation of men of Lee’s caliber would be unconquerable in spirit and soul.”  After Eisenhower became President of the United States he kept a photo of Lee on the wall of his Oval Office in the White House.

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Irish Rebels of the Georgia 24th Regiment

A lot of Confederate companies called themselves Irish at the beginning of the war, but there were only two Confederate Irish regiments: the 10th Tennessee Volunteers, and the 24th Georgia Volunteers.  I have written about the 10th Tennessee in another article, known for using the “Sons of Erin” flag.    The 24th Georgia is the more distinguished and famous regiment, one of the finest in the Confederate Army.

The 24th Georgia Infantry Regiment was mobilized in 1861, formed with North Georgia men, mostly of Irish descent.  It saw tough action all the way to Appomattox.  Some its battles have names you may know:  Gettysburg, Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor. There were others, of course, totaling over 50 engagements, but one that must be mentioned is Fredericksburg, where the most famous Irish Rebel regiment clashed with the most famous Irish Union Regiment, the 69th New York Infantry.

It was the 13th of December 1862, and the 24th Georgia was near the crest of Marye’s Heights, using a stone wall for cover.  The 69th, part of the famed Irish Brigade under General Meagher, was in the assault on Marye’s Heights.  It happened that the Irish Brigade attacked the area of Marye’s Heights defended by the 24th Georgia.  One Rebel who saw the Irish green regimental flags called out, “Oh God, what a pity! Here comes Meagher’s fellows.”  Battle flags with the Irish Harp were on both sides of the fight.

Marye’s Heights and the Stone Wall Today

The 69th New York was known for its courage and aggression, and was called the “Fighting 69th.”  (It is said that Robert E. Lee referred to it that way, and the name stuck.)  At Fredericksburg it was the 24th Georgia that won the day, but it is also true that the bravery of the 69th was so great that the Rebel Irish cheered the Union Irish that day.  One of them, Private James Williams, “leaped upon the top of the wall and gave three ringing cheers.”

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A Confederate Blockade Runner

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Commander Maffitt

One of the finest sailors America ever produced was Commander John Newland Maffitt, who began his career in the U.S. Navy.  It was not long before he stablished himself as a highly respected officer.  Not long after the Confederacy was formed, the U.S. government began secret arrests of those suspected of Southern sympathies.  A friend told Maffit that his name was on the list, so he arranged to leave.  Commissioned as a Confederate naval officer, one of his exploits paints the picture of this man.

It was August of 1862, and the CSS Florida was in Caribbean waters, Maffitt in command.   That morning two of his men were ill, but by sundown more than half the crew was sick with Yellow Fever.  Cuba was nearby, and Maffitt managed to make anchor.  He wrote in his journal that only three men were able to report for duty: “By this time the quarter-deck had been converted into a hospital, where at all hours of the day and night my presence was required, for there was none to aid, none to relieve me from the exhausting demand upon my medical attention to the sick and dying. The sun rose and set upon the beautiful Florida.  At her peak the Confederate flag waved in solemn dignity.”

Two days later Maffitt was giving medicine to his sick men when he was suddenly “seized with a heavy chill, pain in my back and limbs, and dimness of vision.”  The captain collapsed with Yellow Fever.  A week later he reported that he awakened to see “three somber-looking individuals,” one of whom said, “I am convinced… that the captain cannot survive.”  Hearing this, Maffitt replied, “You’re a liar, sir; I have too much to do, and cannot afford to die.”

Maffit did survive, and on the 1st of September the Florida left Cuba, on course to Mobile Bay, Alabama.  Federal warships were certain to meet him.  The Union blockade of the Confederate coastline was known as the Anaconda Plan, after the giant snake, the idea being to strangle the South.

mobile-bay    Florida arrived at Mobile Bay three days later, and Federal vessels were there to challenge him. Maffitt raised an English flag to buy time.  The USS Oneida attempted to cut him off, but Maffitt veered toward him.  The Oneida backed away, giving the Confederates a momentary advantage.   Separated by 80 yards, the Oneida fired a warning shot.  Florida raced on, and a second shot was fired.  When the Florida did not slow, “their whole broadside was poured into us.”  Immediately, two other Union ships fired on the Rebel ship.

The Florida was so low on supplies that she could not respond with her own guns.  Maffit later wrote:  “In truth, so terrible became the bombardment, every hope of escape fled from my mind. One gunboat opened on my port bow, the other on our port quarter, and the cannonading became rapid and precise.

Maffit sent men up the masts to adjust the rigging for best speed, and Florida stormed ahead, shells “bursting over and around us, the shrapnel striking the hull and the spars at almost every discharge.”  Many of the men were still ill, including Maffitt, but they had the backbone Blockade Runners were known for, and “everyone acted well his part.”  Finally, Maffitt got his ship clear of the encircling Union ships and began to close on the coast and the protection of the guns of Confederate Fort Morgan.  “…battered and torn, war-worn and weary, with her own banner floating in the breeze, the Florida in safety is welcomed to her anchorage by hearty cheers from the defenders of Fort Morgan. 

Embarrassing as this was for the Union Navy, Maffit poured salt on the wound a few months later when he made his way to sea through the same blockade.  In two years of service, the Florida captured or destroyed millions of dollars in Union goods, including fifty vessels captured.

At the end of the war Commander Maffitt refused to surrender his ship, sailing to Britain instead.  In 1904 Admiral George Dewey – the only American Admiral to ever wear five stars – referred to Maffitt as “the elite of the Navy, the bravest of the brave.”  This was from a man who had fought against Maffitt as a Union naval officer in the Civil war, and who was in command of a U.S. fleet in 1898 that destroyed or captured the entire Spanish Pacific Fleet.  High praise, indeed.

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“They came burning Atlanta today”

Carrie Berry was ten years old in 1864, when Union soldiers entered her hometown of Atlanta.  She kept a diary, and in Part I of this story we learned of her experiences during weeks of artillery shelling.  Union General Sherman now had an appalling plan for her city, which was about to unfold.

Sept. 2. Fri. We all woke up this morning without sleeping much last night. The Confederates had four engines and a long train of box cars filled with ammunition and set it on fire last night which caused a great explosion which kept us all awake. It reminded us of the shells – of all the days of excitement… Every one has been trying to get all they could before the Federals come in the morning. They have been running with saques (sacks) of meal, salt and tobacco. They did act ridiculous breaking open stores and robbing them. About twelve o’clock there were a few federals came in. They were all frightened. We were afraid they were going to treat us badly. It was not long till the Infantry came in. They were orderly and behaved very well. I think I shall like the Yankees very well.

Sept. 3. Sat. 1864. The soldiers have been coming in all day. I went up to Aunties this morning and she said that she had a yankee officer to spend the night with her. We have not seen much of them. Only two of them have been here to beg some thing to eat. We have had a rainy day and we all feel gloomy.

Sun. Sept 4. Another long and lonesome Sunday. How I wish we could have Church and Sunday School. We have been looking at the soldiers all day. They have come in by the thousand. They were playing bands and they seemed to be rejoiced. It has not seemed like Sunday.

Things remained calm for a few more days, then took a turn for the worst:

Thurs. Sept. 8. We all went to work in glad spirits this morning. Me and Tilo went to ironing. Mama was busy regulating things when Papa came and told us that Gen. Sherman had ordered us to move. It broke all into our rangements.

Fri. Sept. 9. We all commenced this morning to prepare for moving. We don’t know how long we will get to stay here. We are all in so much trouble.

Sat. Sept. 10. Every one I see seems sad. The citizens all think that it is the most cruel thing to drive us from our home… Mama seems so troubled and she can’t do any thing…

As discussed in Part I, the burning of Atlanta was part of Sherman’s strategy of wide destruction across Georgia.  But somehow Carrie’s family became one of the very few lucky ones that got to stay.  Her relatives were not so fortunate:

Mon. Sept. 19. I went over to Aunt Healy this morning. She is packing up to move and I feel sorry that she is going away. We will miss her so much.

Tues. Sept. 20. It has been raining nearly all day. I went up to Aunties this evening to see Willie. He is mighty cute and took three or four steps while I was there. Cousin Emma is packing up to leave

While Carrie and her family struggled to hold things together, the destruction of Atlanta began.

Fri. Sept. 30. I have been sewing some to day on my apron. There are so many soldiers pacing backward and forward.

Sun. Oct. 2. This has been a very pretty day. I went around to Mrs. Lesters. Ella and I took a walk to see how the soldiers had torn down the fine houses. It is a shame to see the fine houses torn down.

The things escalated, Sherman’s full plans being put into play:

Mon. Nov. 14. They came burning Atlanta to day. We all dread it because they say that they will burn the last house before they stop. We will dread it.

Tues. Nov. 15. This has been a dreadful day. Things have been burning all around us. We dread to night because we do not know what moment that they will set our house on fire. We have had a guard a little while after dinner and we feel a little more protected.

Wed. Nov. 16. Oh what a night we had. They came burning the store house and about night it looked like the whole town was on fire. We all set up all night. If we had not set up our house would have been burnt up for the fire was very near and the soldiers were going around setting houses on fire where they were not watched. They behaved very badly. They all left the town about one o’clock this evening and we were glad when they left for no body know what we have suffered since they came in.

Thurs. Nov. 17.  Everything was so quiet we were afraid that the yankees will come back and finish burning the houses but they did not. They have left. Some Confederates came in here to day and the town is full of country people seeing what they can find. We have been picking up some things.

Fri. Nov. 18. We children have been plundering about to day seeing what we could find. Mama has been trying to straiten up for the house was torn up so bad.

Sat. Nov. 19. Mama and me have been ironing all day. We have begun to feel at home but it does not look like Atlanta. The Citizens all met at the City Hall. There are eighty men in town.

The occupiers were gone, but winter was coming and there was not much time to prepare: “It is just a week to day since the federals were burning….  We have not got anything but our little house. It is still very cold.” 

Carrie wrote of spending days “picking up nails” and how she was tired and sore.  But repairs were made, and life continued.  Soon she was back in school, “…studying arithmetic, spelling, reading and geography. We are all trying to see which will learn the most.”

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Shelling Atlanta: A Ten Year Old Girl’s View

The burning of Atlanta by Union General Sherman is a notorious incident of the Civil War.  We can read Sherman’s own words, in a telegram to Ulysses S. Grant:

“…utter destruction of its roads, houses, and people will cripple their military resources. …I can make the march and make Georgia howl.”

Sherman’s “March to the Sea” began in the summer of 1864.  Young Carrie Berry was living in Atlanta when it started, recording it in her diary:

“We can hear the canons and muskets very plane, but the shells we dread. One has busted under the dining room which frightened us very much. One passed through the smoke-house and a piece hit the top of the house and fell through… We stay very close in the cellar when they are shelling.”

Carrie gives us an amazing view of this battle.

“Aug. 1. Monday. It was raining this morning and we thought we would not have any shelling today… but before night we had to run to the cellar.”

Young Carrie’s birthday was two days later:

Aug. 3. Wednesday. this was my birthday. I was ten years old, But I did not have a cake times were too hard so I celebrated with ironing. I hope by my next birthday we will have peace in our land so that I can have a nice dinner.

Aug. 4. Thurs. The shells have been flying all day and we have stayed in the cellar. Mama put me on some stockings this morning and I will try to finish them before school commences.

Aug. 5. Friday. I knit all the morning. In the evening we had to run to Auntie’s and get in the cellar. We did not feel safe in our cellar, they fell so thick and fast.

Things went on like this.  On August 11th Carrie wrote, “How I wish the federals would quit shelling us so that we could get out and get some fresh air.”  A few days later she wrote, “I dislike to stay in the cellar so close but our soldiers have to stay in ditches.”  Then she had a close call when she ventured outside:

Aug. 15. Mon. We had no shells this morning when we got up and we thought that we would not have any today (but, my, when will they stop) but soon after breakfast Zuie and I were standing on the platform between the house and the dining room. It made a very large hole in the garden and threw the dirt all over the yard. I never was so frightened in my life. Zuie was as pale as a corpse and I expect I was too. It did not take us long to fly to the cellar…

The situation became even more dangerous.  On the 22nd, Carrie and her family moved into another home, closer to the center of town:

Aug. 23. Tues. We feel very comfortable since we have moved but Mama is fretted to death all the time for fear of fire. There is a fire in town nearly every day. I get so tired of being housed up all the time. The shells get worse and worse every day. O that something would stop them.

A few days later Carrie wrote that they had heard the Union soldiers had abandoned their positions.  Carrie wrote that she hoped they were returning to Tennessee.  Things remained calm, so:

Aug. 27. Sat. We moved home this morning and we have been busy trying to get things regulated. I feel so glad to get home and have no shells around us.

The next few days were pleasant as things seemed to be returning to normal, until the first of September:

Sept. 1. Thurs. We did not get home untill twelve o’clock. We had a very pleasant time and every thing seemed quiet. Directly after dinner Cousin Emma came down and told us that Atlanta would be evacuated this evening and we might look for the federals in the morning. It was not long till the whole town found it out and such excitement there was. We have been looking for them all the evening but they have not come yet.  Mr. came in to tell us that dear Cousin Henry was wounded and he thought he would not get well. We are so sorry to hear it. We loved him so much…

It was now only hours before Union soldiers would begin entering the city.  Carrie tells what happened, and you can read about it in Part II of this series.  Click here.

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